Isolation (1/16) by ML email: msnsc21@yahoo.com Rating: PG13 for mild violence and swearing Type: Gen, het. M&S, a character/other pairing Disclaimer: You know the tune, sing it with me now: I don't own them, I'm just borrowing for a while. The original characters: they're mine, all mine. Author's Notes: This was written for the 2010 XF BigBang. I couldn't have done it without Wendy's expert beta. Bouquets of thanks to her! That said, if there are any errors or omissions, that's my fault. More notes at the end of the story. Summary: It's time to come out of hiding and get back to the business of saving the world. Mulder is looking for people to help him and Scully do just that. With so many of his former friends and colleagues either missing or dead, he gets help from an unexpected quarter -- and finds that he's not the only one who's ready to get back into circulation. Takes place in 2008, after the events of "I Want to Believe". We never gave up, we never will. In the end, if that's the best they can say about us, it'll do. -John Fitzgerald Byers x-x-x Chapter One He woke up in a cold sweat, heart pounding from whatever had happened in his dream. He looked over at the sleeping form next to him. He hadn't awakened her for once, he noted gratefully. Very quietly, he got out of bed and went to the bathroom. He turned on the nightlight, looking at his shadowed face in the mirror. The beard was gone; seeing his face in the half-light made it easy to imagine that it was there, like the remnants of a dream. The beard had been the first thing to go when he'd come out of hiding. Too bad he couldn't chase the nightmares away so easily. He rubbed his chin reflectively, then turned on the tap and splashed cool water on his face. As he looked up again, he caught movement behind him in the mirror. So much for not disturbing Scully; he turned to see her standing in the doorway. "Mulder, what's wrong?" Scully asked. "I'm sorry I woke you. Did I wake you?" "I tend to notice when my human blanket leaves," she teased gently. "Seriously, what's wrong?" "Just another nightmare," he muttered. "Guess I should be used to them by now." "It's been a while since you've had one," she said. "It's almost time to get up anyway. Come on, I'll make some tea." He followed her downstairs, into the kitchen of their new house. Even though they'd been here a few months, he wasn't used to the space inside -- and how close the neighbors seemed outside. Scully turned the light on over the stove and switched the burner on under the kettle. Mulder watched as she got mugs out of the dishwasher and tea from the pantry. If anyone should happen to look in the window, it would look like a cozy, domestic scene. Scully sat next to him and took his hand. "Change is coming." That comment sure came out of left field, he thought. "Is that your medical opinion, Dr. Scully, or are you reading my palm?" She let go of his hand and sat up a little straighter. "No, it's my personal opinion. We've had a lot of changes in a short time. More are coming. You can't pretend that everything that's happened in the past few months hasn't had a profound effect on you." "It doesn't take a doctor to know that," he said flatly. "No, it doesn't. I know you, Mulder. One thing that hasn't changed about you is how you plunge into things without stopping to consider the consequences or how they will affect you. So you work through them in other ways. The nightmares come. My mom used to call them 'worry dreams'." "That's quite a scientific sounding diagnosis." Mulder grinned. "It's better than PTSD." The grin died. "Clearing my name was only the beginning. There's a lot of crap that goes along with it. Tell me, Doctor Scully, am I ready to be back in the real world?" "Or should we be asking, is the real world ready for you? It's what we hoped for, isn't it? Your name cleared, and you free to do what you want?" "Oh, I don't know. I was getting used to being a kept man." Scully snorted. "What I was making at Our Lady of Sorrows could barely pay the mortgage and keep you in sunflower seeds." "Point taken. Let me turn the question back to you: change hasn't come just for me. What about you?" The kettle chose this momemt to come to a boil. Scully stood up and switched off the burner, removing the kettle. She turned to face Mulder. "I know we still have a lot to talk about -- what the future looks like to you, to me...to us." "And to the world," Mulder added. "That's the elephant in the room, isn't it? What's the future of the human race, not just us. Not to mention, what are we going to do about it?" "I don't know how to answer that question." She set mugs down on the table. "Frankly, I don't know either," Mulder admitted. "People are starting to contact me again. The word is out. People who -- who knew the guys want to know what's going on now that I'm 'back' as they put it. They have -- expectations." Scully warmed the tea pot with a little hot water, then measured out the loose tea and finished filling the pot. "I have no doubt that they do. I can only hope that they haven't just been waiting around for someone to tell them what needs to be done." She watched the teapot on the counter, as if it couldn't steep the tea without her supervision. "I don't think that they have. I think that the problem is there hasn't been any kind of central clearing house for data. Or, as far as I can tell, any attempt at an organized resistance. Each group has been working on its own, and who knows how to put it all together?" "Is that what you see yourself doing?" "The only thing I know for sure is that they haven't given up. I can't stand idly by, either. I don't want to wake up some morning and find out that the invasion's already over, and we've lost. Whatever plans they've been making, they've just gone on with them, I'm sure. "If there are human collaborators -- and you can bet your sweet ass there are -- then I need to find out about it. I can't believe that someone hasn't been paying attention. That's what I need to find out from this 'geek underground' that seems to think that I'm their leader now. The world still needs saving. I can't do it alone." "Mulder, we agreed --" It seemed that it always came back to this. "I can't do both. My ability to do research as part of my job -- the access that I have -- I can't do it alone either, Mulder." Mulder held up his hand. "I'm not going back on my word. Your job is important, and it gives you contacts who may be able to help, not to mention help with research. I just wish" -- he swallowed hard at the unexpected emotional response -- "I just wish the Gunmen were here." "I know, I do too," Scully agreed softly, putting her hand on his shoulder. Mulder cleared his throat. "I'm talking to Skinner today." "I remember. I just don't know why. Would you go back, if he asked you?" "Well, no one has made me an offer yet," Mulder said with a rueful grin. "I'm sure Skinner could make it happen if he wanted. What with the pension reinstatement for me and back pay for both of us, I might owe him." Scully tried to school her expression. She kept her tone as neutral as possible. "Do you want to work for the FBI again, Mulder?" "I don't know," Mulder said. "I honestly don't know. It would mean access to resources I might not otherwise have." "Will you promise me one thing? Talk to me before you agree to anything? I'm not saying that you can't do what you want," she amended quickly. "Just -- just talk to me." Mulder nodded. Her refusal to work on the Bannan case with him and her continued resistance to working with the FBI still stung a little. And she had still saved his ass. Again. They were still partners, he told himself; they just didn't work for the FBI. "I'll let you know tonight what Skinner has to say." x-x-x Annie was already in the car when Brian came out with a backpack containing their lunch and a thermos of hot tea. They could have walked to the beach, but experience with Annie's collecting trips had taught them it was better to drive than to lug a heavy bucket up the steep path from the beach, then walk the mile or so back into town. Brian backed the car carefully onto the street. Annie admired their house, white clapboard with gingerbread trim and a neat white picket fence in front. It was not much different than the other houses in the neighborhood, all built around the same time when logging was the big industry in the area. Now, in midsummer, every front yard seemed to have something blooming. It seemed almost unreal, especially with the wispy fog giving everything a pearly-looking glow. "What do you see?" Brian asked. "Is there a cat on the roof again?" "No, just admiring the house." "I like it, too. Except for the front yard. I feel like we're letting down the neighborhood." All of their neighbors had roses, hydrangeas, or some other kind of flowering plants. The Jordans had a nice patch of green lawn. Compared to other yards, it was a little drab. "I studied biology, not botany. Also, I don't have a green thumb. Do you?" Brian shook his head no. "I bet Mrs. Cotton would help. She thinks you're cute." Brian blushed. If he'd remained a bachelor, Annie was sure that every woman in town would be dropping by with casseroles and introductions to eligible women in the area, young or old. Mrs. Cotton was their neighbor and she took a proprietary interest in them. "If you think she would, I'll ask her," Brian said. She knew that Brian tried hard to deserve the good will of the town. He volunteered for just about any good cause he was asked to help with. He judged the science fair, helped with pancake breakfasts, and was on the volunteer fire brigade. Perdita was the kind of place where all the neighbors knew each other, and watched out for each other. It was a place where you could leave your doors unlocked without fear. It seemed fitting that the town was named Perdita. Oldtimers claimed it had been named by the son of a logging magnate who'd learned Latin in school and thought it was clever to name it the opposite of its much larger sister town up the road. The town was literally off the beaten track, and the townspeople liked it that way. In summer, the road was passable, if you took the right exit from the Interstate and didn't mind driving on roads that were last paved during the Johnson administration. In winter, it was more of a challenge. This was a town where a four wheel drive vehicle was a necessity, not an affectation. Despite the Rabble's resistance, they both knew change was inevitable. Brian wrote about it in the paper, printing both pro and con views. He wrote about preserving the character of the town without turning it into a museum, about the benefits of town improvements. He was against theme restaurants, Starbucks Coffee, and budget motel chains who thought that it would be a good idea to put Perdita on the map. On the other hand, he was in favor of repaving County Road H-2 and wasn't afraid to say so. The Rabble wasn't sure that they agreed with him on that; they were of the opinion that anyone who couldn't handle the road into town had no business being here. So far, proposals for resurfacing had been overwhelmingly defeated. So much for the power of the press. x-x-x University Park, Maryland Scully missed the little house in Virginia. She didn't miss the long commute, however. During her internship it had been especially hard, as she often couldn't get home between shifts. She hated leaving Mulder alone. She still had to fight her fear of losing him again. Thirty miles to Baltimore on mostly well-paved roads wasn't so bad, not compared to the drive to Our Lady of Sorrows. She smiled as she remembered trying to get Mulder to record some of her medical journals so she could listen on the way to and from their little house. It was comforting, listening to his voice, but he'd sometimes spoken in such a suggestive way, it had been extremely difficult to concentrate on the words. She locked the door behind her and stepped into the brightly-lit garage. She set the house alarm before opening the garage door. They lived in a neighborhood now, a "nice" one, one where neighbors would notice if something odd was going on. This, both Mulder and Scully felt, was to their advantage. Drawing on their limited experience impersonating suburbanites, she and Mulder had made a point of meeting the neighbors and being friendly. They wanted to ensure that they'd be missed if they suddenly disappeared. Arcadia it was not, thank goodness. The community wasn't gated, and there were no punishing, restrictive CC&Rs. The first thing Mulder had done was plant a plastic flamingo right by the front door "to prove there's no Tulpa." He'd taken it down himself after a week. Since the FBI contacted them back in January, everything had happened so quickly. The Bannan case had been a wake-up call to both of them, though for different reasons. Mulder had been itching to do something, anything, after so many years of being sidelined. Trying to talk him out of the Bannan case had stemmed from the fear that she would lose him, and herself, to the work again. Sometimes she regretted pushing him into helping the FBI in the first place. What form his work would take now had been the subject of many a late-night discussion. While at the FBI, they'd refined their skills at argument; however, mutual survival had become more important while they were fugitives and they'd fallen out of the habit. It took some practice to get back the sense of give-and-take that had helped them to understand and solve cases, and apply it to their lives. Mulder wanted to be out in the world again, and she couldn't blame him. So far, most of his activities had to do with re-establishing his identity, and making discreet inquiries into who among his former contacts was around and willing to help with what Mulder had taken to calling "the Resistance", with some irony, but also with purpose. The compromise they finally worked out was that Scully would take a job near D.C. so that Mulder could explore his options. That didn't mean that she was interested in abandoning medicine in favor of the FBI. Once Scully's controversial treatment of Christian Fearon began to show positive results, she found herself with a lot of offers. Many were for lectures at medical symposia. A few were from university medical programs. In the end, she accepted an offer from Baltimore. Once upon a time, he'd urged her to leave the FBI. "There's so much more for you to do. There's so much more for you to be." At the time it had almost broken her heart. Leaving the FBI then would have been leaving Mulder. The circumstances were different now. Even though Mulder insisted that he owed her more than he could ever repay, she wasn't going to walk away. The six years they'd spent in more or less forced togetherness hadn't always been easy. If nothing else, it had strengthened their love and commitment. She'd made a choice when she followed him into exile, and she wasn't changing her mind now. Recent events had proved to her that he still needed her help. She couldn't, and wouldn't, let him fight on alone. "Good morning, Doctor Scully," her assistant greeted her as she arrived at her office. "Rounds are at nine a.m., and there's a staff meeting at ten-thirty today." "Thanks, Carol." Scully booted up her laptop to start her day. x-x-x They had the beach to themselves. The sun had burned away the fog and now the cold wind blew in from the ocean, making them grateful for the hot tea Brian had made. Annie came back from the tide pools to find Brian staring out at the ocean. He didn't seem to hear her approach at first. "I got a couple of hermit crabs to add to the tank." "That's nice," he said absently. The sun shining on the waves, or the wind, had made him close his eyes. Annie flopped down next to him and he put his arm around her. She nuzzled his neck with her cold nose. "Hey, what do you call that?" his eyes opening wide. "I call it getting warm. Since you've been sitting here all cozy while I did the dirty work." "It's your class." "You're my Honorary Teacher's Aide, remember? The kids voted." "As long as I don't have to cut anything up, or clean the fish tanks." Annie kept a couple of tanks, sea-water and fresh, in her classroom. She always had a few specimens for the class to observe in preparation for their own trip to the tide pools. At Lost Forest High School, she taught life sciences as well as chemistry. The small school district had a hard time finding and keeping teachers. So many good science teachers ended up working in private industry for pharmaceutical companies or chemical companies. Annie's career had gone in the opposite direction: she'd already worked for Big Pharma. Finding someone who was versed in more than one scientific discipline had been a boon for the school, and Annie found being a teacher, where science was about discovery for the sake of discovery rather than profit, refreshing. "Some assistant you are," she grumbled good-naturedly. "I'll make it up to you in other ways," Brian promised. "It's a deal." She kissed him and snuggled in his arms, looking out over the horizon with him. It was so peaceful, with no sound other than the waves and the occasional cry of a gull. It was easy to not worry or even think about anything. Annie turned in his arms. "What are you thinking about?" "Not much. How nice it is here. How lucky I was to find someone like you." "That's a line of thinking I approve of." "Our anniversary is coming up. It'll be three years in August." "Three years since you came to Perdita," she said. "We've only been married for a little over two." "Three years since I met you. That's at least as significant as our wedding anniversary." "I think so too." She gave him a kiss. "Meeting you opened up a whole new world for me. I was just drifting around before. I needed someone like you, and someplace like this town." "I think we needed you, too. I can't imagine life here without you." "I can't imagine life without you, period. That's a joke, by the way." Trust Brian to announce his jokes. The significance wasn't lost on her. A year ago she couldn't imagine him joking about it. "You just keep surprising me. Who knew you were such a comedian?" "Another hidden facet of my life. Maybe that's what I did before." "Probably not as your day job, sweetie. I love you, but you're not that funny." "And here Abel offered to let me headline on Open Mike Night," Brian said regretfully. Annie did laugh at that, and Brian joined in. "I don't know what's funnier, you at Open Mike Night, or having a dinner show at Abel's," she said. "What on earth made you think of that?" She felt Brian shrug behind her. "We haven't talked about this for a long time." She knew it how much it bothered him not to remember what his life was like before, even if he seldom mentioned it any more. Even if the nightmares he used to have when they were first together had abated. "Why now?" "Maybe the anniversary coming up has gotten me thinking about things." The feeling of his arms around her didn't change, and she couldn't discern any tension in his voice. She wondered what his expression was like. She waited. "Maybe I've gotten tired of waiting around for something that might never happen. If my memories should suddenly come back, I think we'd both notice. I have a life now, a good one. I guess I'm just trying to say that I'm grateful." The boating accident that robbed him of his memories had happened a few years before she met him. Post-traumatic retrograde amnesia, his doctors had told him. He'd been advised to "start over" with his life and not worry whether or not his memories would return, because they might not. He'd told Annie all this on their first date It had been almost too much for her to take in. How could she fall in love with someone who didn't even know his own past? Eventually, he won her over. He was just so sincere, she couldn't believe that in his life before the accident he could have been anything other than the same type of person. In all other ways, he seemed perfectly healthy. His short-term memory was fine, and he had no other issues that she knew about. "I do know one thing for sure. I didn't have anyone like you in my life." He kissed her cheek, then her nose. "Well, as long as you're not living a double life," She inclined her head so that she could kiss him back, settling herself into his arms. "When you say you're working late at the paper, it's not because you're Superman, out saving the world." "I don't think so," Brian said. "I don't look good in tights." "Neither do I," Annie said. "We're a good match." ~*~ Continued in Chapter Two