TITLE: The Light of One Sun (1/1)
AUTHOR: Wayward
EMAIL ADDRESS: wayward@fluffy.com
DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Gossamer; all others please ask
SPOILER WARNING: Season 6
RATING: PG for implications
CONTENT WARNING:
CLASSIFICATION: MSR, V, Angst
SUMMARY: at last, a normal day
AUTHOR NOTES: I will not torment my beta readers Plausible
Deniability,
Ninyo Gaijin, and SusanF. I will not torment my beta readers
Plausible
Deniability, Ninyo Gaijin, and SusanF. I will not torment my beta
readers
Plausible Deniability, Ninyo Gaijin, and SusanF.
Disclaimer: "Yes, dear, Mommy loves you. You know that.
Mommy will always
love you, no matter what. But sometimes, Mommy doesn't like what
you do
very much. Do you understand, Sweetie? Mommy doesn't like it when
you say
that, OK? Just because Mulder said it, doesn't make it right. OK?
Besides,
I'm very sure that Scully told him to make his own damn...err,
ham sandwich
himself."
-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-
It came down to a choice. The day could have been frantic,
stressed, a
frenzied twitching parody of a lifetime of dreams and hopes. But
by
unspoken mutual agreement we chose a normal day, one like any
other.
She made coffee first thing, and our basement morning was filled
with light
banter and all the beloved arguments of old. We sorted case
files, even
plundered a file cabinet drawer of slide carousels for space for
the
promising 'to do' folders. I made her laugh by balancing one
carousel on my
head like a hat, and she in turn graciously helped me retrieve
the
scattered slides when my 'chapeau' fell off.
At lunch we bent our agreement a fraction, and crossed the street
to
McDonald's to get two large fries, then strolled up 9th to a
street vendor
and bought a couple of foot-long dogs with everything. She chided
me for
having ties that didn't betray relish spills, and I returned the
favor by
wiping mustard from the end of her nose.
The afternoon passed quickly, punctuated by follow-up calls and
online
research. In a fit of comical madness we crept up the back stairs
and spent
$4 each on candy and junk food and drinks. She, of course, stored
her loot
in the desk drawer, just as she always did.
I shared my can of iced tea with her.
The call came at 4:50. Kimberley's desk was tidily vacant, but
Skinner's
door was open. The AD seemed lost in thought at first but waved
us in to
the two chairs in front of his desk. The update didn't take long
and no one
seemed in the mood for chit-chat. It wasn't customary for him to
escort us
to the door of the office, nor were the tearful hug she gave him
or the
firm handshake he and I traded everyday events.
For once we left on time, and like headstrong children we decided
to
pretend that it was Friday. We drove in tandem to the video
store, then Lin
Chow's and Amelio's, and took the whole affair to her apartment.
She
agonized over the best wine to serve with Peking Sesame Beef and
Pepperoni-Sausage-Red Pepper pizza, while I assembled our feast
on the
coffee table in front of the television.
We were halfway through "The Truman Show" when her
mother called. Speaking
to Maggie became more and more difficult for her, the charade of
normality
more and more painful to maintain, until at last I wrestled the
phone from
her and told Maggie that her daughter and I had decided to get
married.
Maggie was overcome with joy and asked to speak again with her
daughter.
The rest of the telephone conversation was all on Maggie's side,
with a
thousand and one pre-nuptial details and her plans for telling
Bill and
Charlie.
Even normal days have a few well-intentioned lies.
I knew my mother was away, visiting friends at some exclusive
resort,
playing bridge and talking over old times. So I dialed another
number and
the Lone Gunmen picked up on the third ring. The guys sounded
pizza- and
beer-buzzed and sounds from #34 on the list of The One Hundred
Best Skin
Flicks Ever Made blared in the background. Byers offered that
maybe my
suggestion that UFOs caused Gulf War Syndrome wasn't so weird
after all,
but Langly interrupted to announce that the cookies were ready
and that a
couple would be consumed in our honor. Then I put her on the
phone, and a
wistful Frohike declared his undying love for her yet again. She
waved me
off for a moment for a few private words with him, then gave the
phone
back. They'd engaged the speaker phone at the other end by that
time, and
as #33's opening sequence soundtrack rolled in the background,
they toasted
us with beer and cookies and said that they'd call us tomorrow.
The
receiver rocked slightly in the cradle as I hung up.
They knew, that much was obvious. I don't know how they found
out.
We followed "The Truman Show" with that classic porn
video "Debbie and Her
21-Gun Salute." The best part was our colorful color
commentary, complete
with rude conjectures about just what *those* were stuffed with.
We laughed
through the whole thing, taking two minutes out for an impromptu
pillow
fight.
As the video rewound, we realized that a normal end to a normal
day would
include my leaving soon. Her eyes brightened as she locked and
chained the
front door, then beckoned me into her bedroom. It wasn't Friday
anymore,
now it was another evening on the road in GodKnowsWhere, Kansas,
in the
last available motel room for miles and flat miles around. She
complemented
me on my better-than-usual choice of accommodations, then scooted
past me
to grab the bathroom first. Ten minutes later and clad in our
normal
on-the-road sleepwear, we climbed in to share the only bed in the
only
available room in GodKnowsWhere, Kansas.
It's lonely and cold on the Kansas prairie, so we cuddled
together for
companionship and warmth. Although it wasn't really necessary, we
let the
cuddling evolve to intimacy, to the physical acknowledgment and
consummation of a bond forged in six years of shared quests.
Satisfying
that hunger wasn't part of our normal day, but we didn't let that
stop us
this once.
Neither of us was sleepy, so after her post-coital turn in the
bathroom,
she unplugged the clock from the wall outlet and crawled back
under the
covers next to me. In low whispers we talked about the truly
important
things in life--why purple SweeTarts were the best flavor, why
God had many
names and voices but no 900 number of His own, whether lost socks
really
ended up in a deep bunker in the Cheyenne Mountains.
Almost certainly the President was there now in the Cheyennes,
deep
underground, perhaps far enough underground to escape what was
about to
happen. The information I'd been given by the remnants of the
Consortium
was specific as to time and place, but not as to the breadth of
the
devastation that would result. The verbiage was terse and
pointed: in 50
hours a device would be detonated over each major city in every
industrialized nation on Earth. It was the aliens' response to
our
discovery of the hybrid research and the bees and the use of
humans as
breeding chambers. It was their response to the development of
the vaccine.
Theirs was now a strategy of sterilization rather than
colonization.
With only two days remaining it had been easy for those in power
to dismiss
the information as a hoax, even as they hustled the President
onto a
helicopter in the dead of night to connect with unidentified
transport
heading out from a local airbase. With less than two days
remaining the
disappearances of an increasing number of key government
officials had gone
unnoticed by the media. We had found ourselves shadowed by
sharpshooters as
governmental insurance against our starting a nationwide panic.
We had
found ourselves with one last day.
The date had been set, but the calendar had been changed. The end
would
come not on a weekend, not during a holiday, not as a conclusion
of an
avalanche of abridgments to liberty and the rule of law. The end
had come
in the middle of a week, free from holiday travel and supersaver
fares. The
end would arrive as a single bright flash in the dead of night,
as if the
light of one sun had been delivered suddenly into the sky. After
the end,
there would be only plains of glass and rivers of dust, choking
clouds of
silt and ash that would wreck the biosphere beyond all hope.
And now, we wait, cradled in each other's arms, our fingertips on
each
other's lips so that these last whispers are felt rather than
heard. We
wait for the bright light of a premature sunrise, so that in that
last
split-second we see each other with calm eyes of trust and love.
We have
been lovers but once, and yet what we have goes beyond the
physical, beyond
this earth, beyond the mundane and the ordinary. We will have
won, even as
the dust of our remains dances in torrential post-apocalyptic
storms. We
will have won, because together we have found the truth.
The moment is here. Our eyes meet, and we feel but a single word
on our lips.
"Partners."
-END-
(1/1)
*******************************
I've been abducted by aliens. Don't worry.
We'll be back from Toys 'R' Us in a while.
*******************************
a scintilla of truth: fan fiction by Wayward
http://www.justanyidiot.com/scintilla
Limited Edition Sci-fi Art
http://www.fluffy.com/gallery