Date: Mon, 05 Jul 1999
TITLE: Exaiphnes VIIb: Coming to Terms
AUTHOR: Marti
E-MAIL: oakgirls@yahoo.com
DISTRIBUTION: Gossamer, MTA, and Xemplary okay, others please
ask.
SPOILERS: None (set in season 6)
RATING: R
CLASSIFICATION: X (Homicide), S, A
KEYWORDS: Mulder/other slash
SUMMARY: Mulder and Tim deal with the fallout from Tim's
indiscretion.
AUTHOR'S NOTES: For those who felt that VIIa,
"Fireworks," came to an
unsatisfying end, here's the resolution! If you haven't read
VIIa, it and
the whole series are available at Shirley's MTA site:
http://www.oocities.org:80/Area51/Dimension/3568/Exaiphnes/exaiphnes.html.
Feedback gratefully received at oakgirls@yahoo.com.
This goes out particularly to Gerry, who thought I was a
little hard on
Mulder in the first one. :) And, as always, thanks to Vali for
making
sure I don't get too expository, and to Rachel, without whom I
wouldn't be
doing any of this in the first place.
DISCLAIMER: This story is based on the characters and
situations created by
Chris Carter, the Fox Network and Ten Thirteen Productions as
well as NBC
and Baltimore Pictures. As such, the characters named are the
property of
those entities and are used without permission, although no
copyright
infringements are intended.
Part 1/1
If you had asked Mulder, I'm sure he would have told you
things were back
to normal. We got up, we went to work, we slept in the same bed,
we rented
movies and got take-out on the weekends. Routine, yes, but not
normal as
far as I was concerned. I felt like we were in some kind of
suspended
animation. Twilight sleep, maybe. There had been no blow-up, no
dramatic
exits, no absolution. He had just said, it's in the past, let's
move on.
It had been a little bump in the road, but nothing that we
couldn't roll
right over. He continued to be civil, but guarded, returning my
kiss
goodbye in the morning but still sleeping with his back to me. I
went back
and forth between guilt so strong it made my stomach hurt, and
anger at him
for staying so distant when that was the whole problem in the
first place.
Now that he was back on the X-Files in full force, his work
week quickly
expanded to fill sixty or more hours. And in Baltimore, as
always, the
murder rate increased with the summer heat. I had a few
interesting cases
now and again -- one redball, a guy holding his two kids hostage,
took the
whole squad's attention for a day -- but none of those sprawling
cases that
stretched out for weeks, just drug murders. Yeah, back to normal.
Since Mulder was gone a lot of evenings, I would volunteer to
cover shifts
at the Waterfront, but I don't think that was helping us get past
anything.
I found that I didn't dare start a conversation with any
customers, even
middle-aged women. That's a great way for a bartender to be, huh?
Mulder
wouldn't ask me much about my shifts when I got home, but I felt
like I
needed to detail what had or hadn't happened. Every time I
stepped out the
front door of the bar into the humid July evening and turned to
walk home,
it was like I'd stepped into a movie reel of that night that
wouldn't stop
replaying.
When I'd been in this kind of a funk before -- most memorably,
when I was
first trying to figure out whether there was anything between
Mulder and me
-- Meldrick Lewis had always noticed it and tried to counsel me
during
shifts at the bar. This time, I guess it was so bad that even
John Munch,
that pillar of sensitivity, picked up on it. As I was closing one
night,
he said, "Tim, what the hell is wrong with you? You been
draggin' your ass
for a couple of weeks now." I just said I was fine and that
I would see
him in the morning.
There were still some hours, though, that we couldn't fill up
with work,
and then Mulder and I had to deal with each other. One of those
times was
a Saturday afternoon when neither of us had left the house all
day. I
think the plan for the day had been to take the recycling and
vacuum the
living room, but we hadn't progressed beyond sleeping in and then
reading
the paper silently over breakfast. I was putting some dishes in
the
dishwasher when Mulder came downnstairs and announced, "I'm
going to shoot
some hoops." He grabbed up the ball from the front hall and
left.
I don't know why that should have been the last straw, but it
was. I
couldn't believe he was going without me! That was something we
had always
done together, right from the first or second date. It was *my*
court,
damn it -- I introduced him to it when he first came to visit me
in
Baltimore. Suddenly it seemed like a neon sign proclaiming the
demise of
our relationship. I tried to remember the last invitation he had
extended
to me, and couldn't.
When he came back to the apartment, I was sitting on the front
stoop. He
stopped in front of me, dripping with sweat, and raised the tail
of his
shirt to wipe his forehead. "What are you doing out here?
Just sitting?"
"We need to talk."
He rolled his eyes. "Can I at least get some water first?"
"You can't keep putting this off."
"Two minutes. Then you can say whatever you want to."
He came back with a water bottle and took a seat on the stone
step next to
me. We both stared straight ahead.
"Mulder, if you don't want to do this anymore, I think
you should just say
so."
"Do what? Sit outside in this ungodly heat?"
"This. *This.* Sit here with me. Do anything with me."
"I don't know what you mean."
Probably he didn't...I had begun to think he really was that
obtuse.
"You've been walking around here like a zombie for I don't
know how long.
You don't talk to me. It doesn't seem like being here means
anything to
you. You might as well set up a cot in the basement of the Hoover
building."
He was silent. What, no snappy answer?
"Well?" I prodded.
"You're right."
I'd been half expecting that answer, but it still sank to the
bottom of my
stomach. "You think so?"
"Things have changed."
"Irreparably?"
"I don't know."
I paused to watch a couple of kids walk by with a dog across
the street.
"Well, then, I guess...if you want to move out, I
understand."
He whipped around to face me. "Is that what we're talking about?"
"Didn't you just say, basically, that it's over? I'm
trying to make it
easy for you."
"Tim, I...I don't want to move out." He sounded a little panic-stricken.
"You don't?"
"No. I mean, where would I go? I don't want to go back to
the way things
were. Plus, god -- that means we'd have to have those guys back
to help me
move, and we all know how *that* turned out."
I had to smile. Then, a little more softly, I said, "It's
just that you
don't seem happy here, and I don't want to see that
anymore."
"But moving out isn't the answer to that." He wiped
his brow again.
"Listen, it's sweltering out here. Let's finish this in the
air-conditioning."
Inside, we took up our posts at opposite ends of the couch. I
was glad
he'd said what he said, but I had some more questions I needed
answered.
"Are you still mad at me? Is that it?"
"No, I...well, a little. I keep thinking I'm past it, and
I thought I'd
forgiven you, but then I walk through this room and there it
is."
"What? The couch?"
"The fact that you wanted to be with somebody other than
me. I mean, I
guess you can *want* to, but the fact that it happened... "
I actually thought I heard his voice break a little bit. As if
I didn't
feel terrible enough, now I was realizing that stoic,
impenetrable Mulder,
was hurt.
"Mulder, I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. I don't know if I've
even said that,
but I feel it. All the time."
"I know you do. But then I also feel like it's my fault somehow."
"It's not. I mean, a lot of things are conspiring against
us. Back in
March, I really thought we were moving forward, and then the
accident, and
now I waylaid us again."
"There's more than that waylaying us." He closed his
eyes and leaned his
head on the back of the sofa. "What can we do about
this?"
"I don't know." It was the simple truth.
He leaned forward again and looked at me for the first time.
"Listen, why
don't we go out and do something. I don't know what, a water taxi
ride, or
a late lunch."
"Yeah, sounds good." I breathed easily for the first
time all afternoon.
Maybe for the first time in two weeks.
****
We hardly ever went to the Inner Harbor, but that day it
seemed like a good
idea to get away from home for a change of scene. We watched
Fells Point
fade into the distance as we rode the water taxi over, something
else we
hadn't done in a while.
It was still hot, but we got an outside table in the shade
where it was
bearable, which gave us a view of the ships nested next to each
other in
the harbor. As always, it took a little while to decide between
crabs and
crab cakes. After we'd ordered and gotten our drinks, we sat
looking out
over the water in silence. I realized how long it had been since
we'd
really had an extended conversation.
"So, you never really told me much about your trip to
Ithaca," I ventured.
I wondered, briefly, if it might have been a sore subject, but
his eyes
lit up.
"It was *great.*" He had been sprawled back in his
chair, half-facing the
water, but now he drew his legs in and leaned over the table
toward me.
"You make it sound like a vacation or something. Didn't
you spend most of
it with a dead body?"
"Yeah, but it was a fascinating case. I've seen cases of
vampirism a
couple of times before, but nothing like this."
"That's really what this turned out to be?" I took a
swig of my iced tea
and grabbed a roll out of the breadbasket.
"Yes, but not in the way people usually think of it. No
fang marks or
anything. But once we found the site of the exsanguination, in a
wooded
area near the campus, it became clear that this was a ritual
where the
point was to extract the blood, not to kill the victim."
"So you found the killer?"
"It turned out to be a group of students. They had done
this sort of thing
before, but no one had died. They panicked, moved the body."
"No kidding." I still had moments of being
incredulous over the cases he
worked on, though nothing like when I'd first met him. But it was
great to
hear him talk about them. On the one hand, he made them sound
totally
plausible and part of the everyday landscape; on the other, you
could tell
he thought this was the coolest stuff in the world. "Sounds
like you're
glad to be back at work, huh?"
"Oh, yeah. I mean, I've been spending every waking hour
on the X-Files for
so long. When I was stuck at home in bed, I thought I was going
to go crazy."
"I noticed."
If he thought I sounded accusatory, he didn't show it, but
went blithely
on. "It would be one thing if I had some hobbies. But I
couldn't play
Nintendo, because of my eyes...and you won't let me watch the
porn
anymore." He raised a corner of his lips and looked up at me
from under
his lashes.
It was true that I wasn't crazy about the porn, but I didn't
enforce the
rule very strictly. "Hey, I don't care what you do when
you're at home by
yourself, I just don't want to hear about it," I teased.
He leaned back in his chair, smiling. "If only I'd
known...think of the
missed opportunities."
The food came then, and the conversation paused while we moved
things
around on the table, buttering rolls and passing the ketchup back
and forth.
"You know, Mulder, I tried to keep you from being bored
when you were stuck
at home."
"I know you did, Tim. I was just in such a foul mood that
whole time that
nothing would have helped. Even Scully had enough of me."
"Yeah, didn't she finally get to the point of turning off
her cell phone
since you kept bothering her?"
He smiled, eyes aimed down at the table as he tried to work
the meat out of
a crab leg. "She never would bring me any files to work
on."
"But she did come to visit you. That was nice. It's a
hike up here from
Georgetown. Not all partners would do that. Frank wouldn't have
done that."
"She does go above and beyond the call of duty. To say
the least. I've
never doubted she'd be there for me," he said firmly.
I thought about the implications of this as I moved the food
around on my
plate. "But you know *I'll* always be there too,
right?"
"Sure, Tim." He looked up, surprised. "What makes you say that?"
"I don't know...just, sometimes, when you were sick, I
felt like you
wouldn't *let* me be there. You let Scully do stuff you wouldn't
let me."
"She is a doctor, you know. She's more equipped for some things."
"Right, but it doesn't take a doctor to administer
eyedrops or change
bandages."
For a moment, he didn't have an answer to that. He just ate
the last piece
of crab and sucked the remnants off his fingers. Then he wiped
his hand,
set down his napkin, and looked at me. "I know. It just felt
weird to
have you do those things. I'm used to having Scully look out for
me, but
with you it's different."
I didn't see how, exactly, but I took his word for it.
"Well, I'm glad you
have her, then. She's good to you."
"Yeah. I don't know what work would be like without her."
As he said that, I had a sudden flash of the squadroom, now so
dark and
cold after being repainted the year before. Even though I liked
working
with Diane Russell, it was nothing like the partnership he had
with Scully.
"You know, I haven't looked forward to going to work for a
long time now."
"Really?" He raised an eyebrow. Clearly, it was news
to him. I could
tell he was mentally going through the last few weeks, trying to
see if
he'd missed any signs. "What don't you like about it? I
thought this was
your calling, your vocation."
"I used to think so too, but lately I don't know. You
know what Falsone
said?"
"That greasy-haired weasel?"
I ignored him and kept going. "I heard him tell somebody
'we work for
God.' Frank used to think of it that way too. But I don't."
"I don't either, for that matter."
"No, but you do see it fulfilling some kind of higher purpose."
"I guess so...I don't know what to tell you, Tim."
There was really nothing he could say. "Yeah, well, it's
just good to have
a weekend off. Maybe I'll feel revitalized come Monday
morning."
We paused again to debate whether we should have dessert, and
decided to
have split a tiramisu. I watched him lift a bite to his mouth,
swallow,
lick a dollop of cream off the corner of his lip. Then he spoke
up again.
"See, that was the worst part of July 4th. Well, maybe not
the worst part,
but..."
"What was?"
"Ruining that long weekend off. I mean, it was a great
trip, but I missed
you."
I stopped short, fork poised halfway to my mouth. "You did?"
"Is that such a surprise? When you told me you had all
that stuff planned,
I really hated not being here with you. And I figured, at least
we'd have
that Monday, but then..."
"You can stop there, I know what you mean."
"Well, I guess it's all spilled milk under the bridge."
"Something like that."
****
It appeared that was the last serious declaration I'd get for
a while. On
the way home, Mulder kept up a more or less steady stream of
commentary on
the people we passed by, so the heavier conversation seemed to be
over
with. I just counted myself lucky we'd covered as much as we had
in the
restaurant; hadn't we made some progress? As we headed back to
the
apartment from the water taxi, it seemed that he walked a little
closer to
me than he had on the way over, almost like he would have held my
hand if
we did that kind of thing.
It was still only early evening, and the summer sun was just
starting to
fade. When we got home, I asked him what he wanted to do next.
"I don't know. What's on HBO? Don't they have new movies on Saturday?"
"You'd know better than I would. I'm going to get something to drink."
As I walked into the kitchen, he was sitting on the couch
fumbling with the
remote, but then I heard him come in behind me. "Do you want
something
too?" I was reaching into the cabinet for a glass when I
felt him against
my back, arms on the counter on either side of me. "Is that
a yes?"
His breath brushed across my ear as he whispered, "I
figured out what I
want to do now. Make up for lost time."
"I'm guessing this will be better than the movie on
HBO." I was breathing
hard, and he'd hardly even done anything.
"Way better. More like Cinemax." The tip of his
tongue brushed my ear.
His hands slid around my waist, then down to the bulge in my
shorts which
was already hard as a rock.
Man, I wasn't going to last any time at all if he kept this
up. I'd had
this in the back of my mind as I watched him all through lunch,
wishing I
could lick that tiramisu off him myself.
For a few minutes I just stood there, pinned to the counter,
as he covered
the back of my neck with his wet, sloppy kisses. But then I
turned inside
the circle of his arms and kissed him back, slow and deep, like
I'd been
dreaming about. My hands were in his hair and his crept up my
back, under
my shirt. We barely moved, like there was some kind of force
binding us
together.
How, I wondered, could I have done this with anybody else?
Nobody tastes
like this, slick and sweet and musky. Nobody else knows
intuitively where
I want him to put his hands next -- oh, yeah, right there, I
affirmed
silently as he worked one hand, slowly but deliberately, between
my legs.
Nobody else makes that sound, that little whimpering in the back
of the
throat that you wouldn't think would ever come out of Mulder, but
it tells
me he wants me to kiss harder, press harder, keep doing what I'm
doing.
It briefly occurred to me to go somewhere more comfortable,
but there was
no time. Within seconds, I had pulled his shirt up and over his
head,
watching it peel away from his tawny skin, then took my own off
so I could
feel him against me. Hands and mouths were everywhere as we
explored
places we hadn't touched in a long time. Soon he drew back,
panting, and
made me face the counter again, reaching around to unzip my
shorts and then
his own. He took me in his hand again, skin on skin this time --
god, I
was so close -- and then he leaned in to whisper in my ear.
"Are you ready?"
Like I hadn't been ready for the last month. But all I could
muster was a
nod and a choked sound, hoping that was enough to signal him to
plunge in
and take me, right now. It worked.
A few seconds later, we were both folded limply over the
counter, Mulder
holding me in close with strong arm around my waist. When I
thought I
could move again, I turned back around for another long, slow
kiss.
He reciprocated, then stopped and rested his forehead against mine. "Tim."
"Mulder?"
"Tim, I love you."
"Oh, sure, you get laid for the first time in months and
you'll say that to
*anybody,*" I teased.
"No, Tim, I'm serious." His hazel eyes locked on
mine. "I love you. I
don't want you doing this, here, on the couch or anywhere else,
with
anybody but me."
"Mulder, I *won't.*" I touched my lips to his again,
wondering how many
kisses it was going to take to convince him. "I only want it
to be you. I
just wanted you back."
"I know. It's good to be back."
END
I'm dying for feedback! Please write to oakgirls@yahoo.com.