The Marriage of True Minds by Mary Hugh Ratings: PG for some mature subject matter Classification: MSR Spoilers: Yes, from The X-Files: I Want To Believe and the series. Keywords: The X-Files: I Want To Believe E-mail: maryhugh@live.com Summary: Scully ponders the events of I Want To Believe and the entire past of M&S. Character study. _______________________________ Lying on her right side, she heard his measured breathing with its little, irregular hitches behind her. She was awake, again, and he was sleeping soundly. She wondered when they had exchanged nocturnal habits. Actually, insomnia hadn't plagued Mulder much at all since they'd moved into this dilapidated country place about five years ago. But then, he didn't crash on a worn leather couch anymore or keep a TV running into the wee hours as background noise either. He occupied his customary side of their king-size on her left every night. He had never ventured out the front gate which was always locked with a hefty chain and padlock to keep the curious out on the road. His days of accumulating zillions of preferred traveler miles in pursuit of manic paranormal investigations had been behind him. Yes, they had been behind him. Until FBI Agent Drummy. Until Father Joe. Until the case that nearly lost Mulder his literal head -- No. She would not bring that awful picture of the axe high in the air to mind again. She wanted to sleep, dammit, not screen that waking nightmare. Rewind. Back up. Um...Mulder's sleeping habits. That was a safe, maybe even lulling topic. The man didn't haunt the night as he had so often at 42 Hegel, but he usually stayed awake longer than she did. He didn't have to get up before daybreak but she had to when she had early surgery scheduled the next morning. On those nights before, she tried to be in bed by ten and in sandman's land no later than another half hour. He often read until midnight, downstairs if it was an early night for her, in bed if she was going to the hospital at a more reasonable hour the next day or actually had the entire day off. But tonight -- she didn't really want to look at the alarm clock to see how much time her restless mind had robbed from her body's need to sink into oblivion -- she had been listening to peacefully sleeping Mulder for, she reckoned, still not looking at the noctilucent floating figures, at least two hours. Oh, what the hell. She squinted at the clock. 1:17. Okay, not quite two hours. She turned on her back and stared at the unadorned ceiling. No surgery tomorrow. Still, being sleepless irked her. What was keeping her from dropping into unconsciousness? It wasn't Christian. He had been able to go home two days ago. He was better. The experimental course of epithelial stem cell treatments, completed, had given him a chance at life and he was eagerly grabbing it. Yet, maybe Christian was keeping her awake. As his physician she'd put him through a great deal of pain. His suffering was something his parents, Father Ybarra, and she would always hang around her neck. Blaming her for the boy's agonies went hand in hand with the parents' gratefulness to her for pushing them into giving permission for the string of procedures and giving them back their son. The administrator was another story. Always observant, he now kept a much more vigilant eye on her. She was now a curiosity to him, a bit like a religious statue weeping blood. Before she had been a highly competent staff doctor maintaining a low profile, Now, she stood out. Today he had stopped her in the corridor to ask about Lucy Karnes, the teen with metastasized pancreatic cancer. Her condition? he'd asked. There was no good news. The girl was stage four. There was nothing more they could do. Truly. Lucy was going home, where her parents had arranged for round-the-clock palliative care. Lucy would not see her sixteenth birthday. Father Ybarra seemed to expect that if he waited long enough, Doctor Scully would give him a different answer. If only she could have. She wasn't even Lucy's primary physician. She had only consulted on the case one time. But the tall priest, whose stand-out ears reminded everyone of Alfred E. Newman, knew all this. What, she suspected, he really wanted was to squeeze out of her whether God had sent her a message about Lucy. When Father Joe died that same night Mulder was almost killed, gossip flew around the hospital about the former priest's psychic pronouncements and her, Scully's, connection to him. Somehow, even Father Ybarra had learned that Father Joe had told Scully something that had swayed Christian's fate. If a defrocked pedophile could be the conduit for saving one sick child, perhaps, for example, Louie Billet, the schizophrenic who, when he went off his medication, paced relentlessly a block from the hospital, could also deliver a message about Lucy. Of course, Father Ybarra, a practical man not about to admit lending any credence to psychics bearing messages, didn't actually ask. And she had nothing to tell him in any event. Louie just mumbled 'good day' to her same as he did to every passer-by. She had already put in her request for a two-month leave of absence. In another week, she and Mulder would be on a plane to the Caribbean where they would hop to an island mapped on few charts. They would be its only inhabitants for sixty blissful (she hoped) days. Father Ybarra, a pretty unshakable man, noted with his usual even inflection that she had never taken off more than a couple days in a row before. 'Is everything all right? Is there something I -- the hospital -- ought to know?' he'd asked. Mulder, due to his legal problems, had never been part of her conversations with anyone at Our Lady of Sorrows. She kept her private life private. Even though Mulder was no longer wanted by the FBI for a sham of a murder conviction, she didn't want to bring him up now. She wasn't embarrassed, of course. That wasn't it. Possibly the long practice of keeping their relationship under cover -- to avoid the FBI and other zealous law enforcement agencies, not to mention supersoldiers or just plain snoops -- was too ingrained. Then again, maybe she just didn't want to open their life to scrutiny and speculation at the hands of the workplace gossips. So she's just told the administrator that she now needed some time to recharge her batteries. He'd looked skeptical. She still hadn't heard back about whether said request had been approved. Whatever. She and Mulder were going, even if she had to quit to get the two months. Next to her Mulder mumbled what sounded like, 'schleroozimmer off..blick com.' His forearm closest to her involuntarily jerked and flung out, lightly grazing her hip then retreating back to the mattress. 'Bin. tar. Scul...." She waited for further acrobatics from him but aside from showing his back to her for the first time tonight, and a sigh, he settled down again. She hoped he wasn't having a nightmare, especially since she seemed to be in there someplace. Over the years, Mulder's sleep habits had toned down considerably. He hardly ever woke bathed in cold sweat anymore, and he didn't do a lot of flailing these days either. When he had been more inclined, their king-size had come in handy; both had slept at the far edges to avoid any chance that she might have to hide an accidental black eye from her medical colleagues. Both of them had slowly shed the nightmare habit, and this was one of the reasons she had opposed letting the 'darkness' back into their life together. But perhaps a reason she was lying here awake with eyes itchy with fatigue was that operating room of Frankensteinian horrors she had followed Walter Skinner into so few weeks ago. Her brain might be staving off a macabre dream about the undead head she had had to disconnect from th blood pump/gas exchange system to save the girl. He would die when she stopped the blood flow from the girl to him. She had told him, 'There's nothing I can do for you. I'm sorry.' And she had been sorry, sorry that he had ended up in this desperate, horrible condition, clinging to life, if it could be called that. A few nights had also been sundered by bile-raising flashes of the killing place where Mulder very nearly lost his head. She was very likely subconsciously avoiding adding another picture show to the list tonight. This just wouldn't do, she told herself sternly. Don't worry about some leftover neuronal discharges that might arise and freak you out. Just sleep. She turned her head toward the window, seeing, through the light curtains the quarter moon just nudging the top sash. She sighed. And then, in the dimness she smiled because next to her slumbering Mulder sighed again too, as if in total sympathy with her. She would have been lost if she hadn't been able to come home to him anymore. Thank God they had a new understanding. Thank God Mulder had reached a stage of maturity where he could make adjustments. She wondered whether, typical of their dance of opposites, she, in juxtaposition, had become someone with less tolerance for making compromises or simply acquiescing. During their X-Files years, Mulder had almost invariably been the partner leading the chase, pulling her along in the wake of his obsessive enthusiasms. Oh, she didn't fool herself. She knew she had followed him of her own free will. She'd been young and her 'brilliant but crackpot' partner had been a free ticket to very unusual experiences. Or so she'd thought. Their adventures hadn't been free at all; shattering prices had to be paid and neither of them came out of the X-Files unscathed. Their battle scars, physical and psychological had been exceedingly deep. Still, Mulder had used any instrument of persuasion at his disposal to get her to accompany him on that journey, and she, younger soul that she'd been, had almost never balked. In those rare times when she had put her foot down, something had always intervened to restart their partnership cycle. This time, she had, selfishly or not, refused him when he had come to the doctor's locker room. Was that what was keeping her from sinking into sleep? Was she still second-guessing herself for not handling that fateful talk better? If she had gone with him, been his trusty back-up, he might not have nearly ended up parted from his head. She knew the stress of just having administered Christian's first treatment had left her few mental or emotional reserves for dealing with Mulder at that time. She remembered not expressing herself too well, and she'd made a bad relationship mistake: she'd delivered an ultimatum. At the time she hadn't been able to see out of the box she thought they'd been crowded into. Strangely, even though she had said she would not be home, that night, she was the one who was at home. Mulder, chasing the suspect in traffic and in an unfinished high-rise and then giving his statement multiple times to police and FBI after Agent Whitney's murder, had only dragged himself home after she had gone to work again. The house creaked and Mulder turned over, facing her. She wanted to reach over and ruffle his chestnut hair, but instead she pulled the ugly midnight blue and silver blanket he'd dislodged up to his shoulders again. More accurately, it wasn't a blanket. It was an old curtain used as a makeshift cover. In winter they kept it on at night since they turned the heater down. Sometimes it reminded her of a starry sky -- mainly because Mulder wisecracked once, "Our own private dome of heaven, Scully." Other times, she thought it looked more like a tarp someone had randomly spray painted. It had been on the window when they'd moved in and Mulder didn't want to throw it away when she put up the new curtains. She tucked it up a little higher. He'd gotten rid of that bursitis only a couple of weeks ago and she didn't want it taking up residence again. Five years, about, they'd slept in this bed. There were some sticks of furniture that, along with the curtain/bedspread and some other household odds and ends, had been leftovers from the previous occupants. But they bought the bed. They had picked it out of a catalog, and then she'd ordered it -- from Beds R Us or some such establishment -- and had had it delivered. Mulder had stayed out of sight when the deliverymen came. She'd ordered the fish tank too, of course, and gone, with a list he'd made, to a pet store to buy the exact species he'd wanted. But back to the bed. She sometimes marveled that they could both sleep (not to mention enjoy other activities) here in harmony. Back in the old X-Files days, her apartment and especially her bed were where she'd gone to decompress from the enervating pressure of going monster hunting with Mulder. Even when, after seven years, they had finally crossed the line and become lovers, they hadn't spent every night together. But, in this house, unless she had an emergency at the hospital, she and he both slept in this bed every night. Wait. She'd already been over that, hadn't she? Oh well. And even during his stretch of flailing about during nightmares, which had prompted a discussion -- initiated by Mulder and nixed by her -- of his sleeping someplace else in the house for a while, she had never wanted it any other way. Oh, all right. Every once in a while, they'd get on each other's nerves and be sorely tempted to stomp down to the lumpy couch. Once, she'd gotten home at 10:30 and gone immediately upstairs, totally exhausted, to find every surface in the bedroom, including the bed, under a blizzard of papers. 'What the hell is all this?' she'd demanded in her most waspish voice as she touched down her hand on the ocean of white and tried vainly to clear a space. 'Hey. Don't move that, Scully! You'll disturb the symmetry.' Symmetry? Try total chaos. That's how had it looked to her at any rate. She had not been in the mood for some kind of physics experiment. 'What is all this?' she'd repeated in a dangerous voice. 'Never mind. I don't care. Why isn't this downstairs in your office, or, needs be, in the living room, Mulder?' 'Not enough room in my office. And the living room doesn't have this big bed in it,' he'd said in the most reasonable voice you could imagine. Obviously. He'd continued fussing with another set of papers. 'This," he'd informed her, 'is a sequence of discrete patterns that flow evolutionarily from monist to manifold in a way that could prove how life traversed space and was seeded here on earth. Each page represents a crucial linkage in the maturation sequence.' 'Put it somewhere else. PUT in on the floor downstairs.' 'But --' 'Fine. I'll go to a motel.' 'Okay, Scully. Okay. I'll number the ones on the bed and get them out of here.' So, crisis averted. She smiled but only fleetingly as the memory reminded her of her more recent threat to sleep elsewhere. She had been so unprepared when Mulder found her in the locker room. She had barely known what she was saying. All she'd really wanted was to stop the conversation, to stop him from repeatedly asking her to work with him on this case. Perhaps if she had not been so immersed in Christian's case, she might have been more open to his pleas, but she'd felt handcuffed to two locomotives charging in opposite directions, about to tear her apart. She simply hadn't felt able to divide herself, and she had chosen Christian, a stand-in of sorts for William, over Mulder at the moment. Darting her eyes rapidly and blinking, she kept them dry. She'd been too prone to crying again recently and she was determined to knock it off. Dear God, once upon a time her armor had kept her dry-eyed for months or even years at a time. Then, Mulder's abduction, temporary death, and lengthy absence had sapped her of so much resilience and left her susceptible to tears far too often. When she and Mulder had gone fugitive in 2002, she had slowly re formed her core of reserves. Within a year they'd stopped leading a nomadic existence. The FBI wasn't actively looking for Mulder anymore (she'd learned through surreptitious calls to Skinner), so they'd left their last temporary hideaway in Indiana and cautiously come east again. They'd found this property and set up house while Scully resurfaced in the medical community and did a residency that had led to her current attending's position at Our Lady of Sorrows. For years, she had been in the world at large but not of it, while being practically everything to Mulder in their own private little world. For a while she had thrived. But gradually, it took its toll. And lately she'd felt like a knife that had been sharpened too many times and could no longer hold a fine cutting edge. She was worn down and again very low on emotional reserves due simply to the grind of her life. She had gone and seen her mother with reasonable regularity. But she couldn't bring Mulder with her, and she couldn't talk about him to anyone, in case some eager beaver federal agent got the idea to bag a wanted man and asked questions of her family and colleagues. That constraint isolated her again more than was really healthy. So, part of her had been glad when Agent Drummy had appeared at the hospital, not to try to arrest Mulder but, on behalf of the FBI, to ask his help. Getting Mulder out of his isolation, getting him into an occupation again had been her goal then, even though she'd known the cost might be reuniting him with the passions of staring into the abyss of 'darkness' as she'd taken to euphemistically calling where his investigations too often dragged everyone in the vicinity. She'd hoped it could lead to a more normal life for them, not to another engagement with people whose appetites and loves caused them to perpetrate unspeakable acts on fellow human beings. Joe Crissman, whether by genetics or by psychological compulsion, was one of these predators. God, that defrocked priest had been so right: she had loathed him for his crimes against innocent children. He'd literally made her skin crawl, as had his roommate. She still felt angry at herself for going to see him by herself. On the whole that conversation had been confused, desultory, and, in the end, seemingly useless (except for Proverbs 25:2 that, unbelievably, came in handy when she and Skinner were searching for Mulder). She and the pervert priest had pretty much talked around each other. Two blind earthworms yards apart in black soil could communicate better than they had. And what was that 'husband' thing? She rolled her eyes at herself and flopped over on her stomach, burying her face in her pillow. 'Father' (she still resisted this honorific) Joe had assumed Mulder was her husband. 'He's NOT my husband!' she'd snapped. Why in the world had she told him that? As she'd said just a moment afterward, she didn't want to tell him about herself or her life. Wouldn't it have been better to just let him think they were married? Or at least, would it have hurt anything? Yet, she had found it impossible to let that misconception stand. Her need to set the record straight still nagged her. First of all, she rebelled at this hairy supposed psychic apparently being able to intuit how close she and Mulder were. As he'd allowed, he hadn't known anything about her life. Yet, he'd instinctively grasped the basic organically intertwined nature of their (Mulder's and hers) relationship and assumed they were married. That insight, that intimacy had repelled her, and that, she decided, was why she'd immediately and almost savagely corrected him -- as if to say, NO, you don't know me, you can't know me, I won't allow it. So little was in her control at that time (well, actually when, ever, did she or anyone realistically have 'control'). She was so unsure about what to do for Christian. And she had just had that dreadful talk with Mulder earlier. She'd so wanted the former priest to be able to simply tell her why he had looked her straight in the face and said, 'Don't give up.' She'd wanted some clarity. Some direction. Some certainty. Instead, he'd said he didn't know why he'd said it. He was just the messenger. And a messenger who didn't know his master's intent or even, really, his target. That had left her even more at sea. There was nothing to hold onto. She frowned and then more carefully, so as not to wake Mulder, rolled onto her back again. She got numb fingers and a sore neck if she stayed on her stomach too long. Fortunately, she hadn't been as alone then as she'd made out in her own mind. She and Mulder were still connected, even when they were at odds or had said things they soon regretted. And once she and he were back home after his near death experience, Mulder had been able to instill in her the hope and strength she'd needed to accept Father Joe's message as one truly from God. Didn't Jesus take as his apostles some who had sinned mightily? Paul had killed Jesus' followers when he was still called Saul, before he had the vision of Jesus on the road to Damascus. If the son of God could use a murderer as his instrument, there was no reason a disgraced priest couldn't also voice God's will. Mulder, the quicker of them to believe, had given her his unconditional love and support, assuring her that whether she chose to believe and do the surgery or not believe and cancel it, he would be by her side and they would 'get out of here' and dare the 'darkness' to find them. Those dear and selfless words of his had renewed her. She'd gained the fortitude and the desire to dig deep into her own God-given conscience for her answer about whether to continue to treat Christian or not. God, she loved Mulder. She seldom said it (that hospital hallway declaration about having fallen in love with him because of his stubbornness was a decided aberration, brought about by her need to reach out to him as a sign of regret for her earlier ultimatum). But she didn't see how anyone could love another person more than she loved Mulder. What made this all the more confounding and miraculous was that she knew Mulder felt the same way about her. And yet, she knew their 'relationship' did not fit into the conventional or cliched annals of true love. She shook her head wryly. 'Relationship' was such a namby-pamby, clinical and imprecise word for what any two lovers felt and lived. For Mulder and her it was even more useless as a description of what they were to each other. She recalled an actress on TV saying something about some fictional couple that went something like this: they are so much more than papers [meaning a marriage license] and sex. She nodded. That described her and Mulder to a tee. And what about marriage? In the last six years, they hadn't been rightly able to walk into any church or civil office together, so getting a marriage license and saying 'I do' in any kind of official ceremony had been out of the question even if they had wanted to make their union legal. Now, of course, they were entirely free to do so. She supposed when she and Mulder went to visit her mother before they took off on their two-month excursion, they might have to address this with her. Well, perhaps not. Mom knew them well enough to leave that alone...unless they brought it up. Bill was another matter, but she doubted he would be there. In fact, she would make sure he wasn't. She would see him again next Christmas. Yes, that would be soon enough to put him and Mulder in the same house again. Mom, though, understood what Mulder and she did: namely that the legalities of civil marriage and even the sacraments of marriage in the church could offer them nothing that they hadn't already committed to long ago. Sixteen years ago, the FBI had arranged the commencement of their partnership, and back then no one, including the two young agents, could have foreseen the destiny it set in motion. That arranged, professional, 'marriage' soon molded them into a team dedicated to each other, but, for years, only platonically. Time and some bitter losses folded them closer, almost like two sides of a piece of paper intricately folded into a delicate origami figure. They were constantly tested, by each other and by the dangerous purpose that bound them. Exactly when comradely love turned into romantic love neither could ever pinpoint, but it happened, despite both being reluctant to actually cross from chaste devotion to sex as a part of their lives. But, then again, one day it just seemed time. It was almost as if they were on a timetable that kept secrets from them until the very moment another change, another deepening of their 'relationship' was 'scheduled.' She supposed William was one of those secrets. Their miracle son. She 'was' a mother, even though she had remained silent when young, scared Mrs. Fearon, Christian's mother, had said, 'If you were a mother, you would understand.' How could she not understand when her heart ached for William every day? Yes, William had been a gift she had never dared hope to receive. Mulder felt the same. Some would say she had committed a terrible crime of motherhood by giving William up for adoption, but no matter how much she herself missed William and how much guilt she felt for depriving Mulder of seeing his son grow up, she believed she had done the right thing. And Mulder felt the same: that she had done what was necessary. So it was just the two of them, no gold rings on their left hands. If Father Ybarra learned of her unsanctified-by-marriage living arrangements he might tell her that as a doctor in a Catholic hospital, not to mention as a practicing Catholic herself, she should not live 'in sin.' Nowadays, even Catholic institutions were not sticklers for such formalities, but then again, Father Ybarra might be looking for a reason to reproach her since she had refused to gamely toe his line when he had recommended Christian be transferred to a hospice. Perhaps not though. He was a rather hidebound administrator (she couldn't help thinking of similarities between him and FBI Deputy Director Kersh), but he was a decent, honorable priest. He was a man who, she had no doubt, conscientiously kept his vows and would never, ever affront either God or man by committing abuses such as Joe Crissman had. He prayed for knowledge of God's will. Joe Crissman, as he'd told her, prayed for his own soul. Did Father Ybarra ever do that? Did she? She prayed too, though, as with many things, she did her praying privately, without fanfare or advertising. But did only those who had done the unthinkable, the seemingly unforgivable really pray? Did the rest just pray half-heartedly? Sometimes, she felt completely unworthy herself. She still carried the burden of having killed a man in cold blood years ago. No matter that if she hadn't killed him, he might have claimed more victims and might have come after her for a third time. She still felt the pangs of a mother's guilt for William. And she had judged Father Joe mercilessly. Oh, she could claim that only his victims were in a position to forgive him, and therefore she didn't have to. But she also knew that he'd been a man, a human being, who had hated his own tendencies but had still repeatedly acted upon them. She knew, in her heart, that God, not she, was that man's judge. If God could forgive, then it wasn't her place to do what even God wouldn't, namely condemn him. And yet, as a mother, she could not forgive Father Joe for inflicting grave, possibly irreparable damage on boys and their families. This was something to pray about. She would. And ask for the ability to purge her feelings of outrage against the man. She could do it now. After a few moments of a stilled inner voice that even brought a glimmer of inner peace, she, for the first time that night, felt her eyes going heavy enough to close and stay closed. She even yawned. Lying there next to the only one in the world she could ever see herself with she chuffed softly. Now wasn't that a pretty fair definition of marriage? When she had taken high school Advanced Placement English, Mr. Gilcrest had made them learn Shakespeare Sonnet 116. She could still recite it and did so silently now: Let me not to the marriage of true minds Admit impediments. Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove: O no! it is an ever-fixed mark That looks on tempests and is never shaken; It is the star to every wandering bark, Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken. Love's not time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks Within his bending sickle's compass come: Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, But bears it out even to the edge of doom. If this be error and upon me proved, I never writ, nor no man ever loved. No, she and Mulder had no plans to get a piece of paper declaring them husband and wife. Their marriage of true minds was an ever-fixed mark. It had embedded its uncrushable foundations in them both before they were even conscious of it. They weren't gushy or effusive about their togetherness (was that better than 'relationship' or not). They didn't call each other 'honey' or 'baby' or 'sweetie' or whatever was in fashion. And they were pretty boringly normal about sex. They weren't kids any longer and their love lives reflected that, but they didn't take after some married couples who lived in the same house but went to separate bedrooms at night and had pretty much sworn off sex. Mulder and she enjoyed some good lovin' and the mood overtook them more than one might think. Why not get married? Why not be able to truthfully call Mulder her husband and be his wife? Was it just a remnant of her rebellious streak? Was it a product of some buried fear that formal marriage would do to them what it seemed to do to a great many couples: place stresses on them that caused eventual estrangement and alienation? No, she dismissed those, all of them. Were they just too lazy to even wander into a courthouse and fill out a document and wait for a judge or justice of the peace? No, again. They weren't too lazy. She knew what it was. The plain and simple deal was that she and Mulder were naturally very private people. Couple that with their longstanding requirements for discretion and secrecy to stay alive because people (or aliens) were stalking and hunting them, and there you have it. The two of them wanted to maintain their union. They wanted to live their lives together until life ended. But they had no intention of announcing themselves to the world as a pair in love, let alone formal wedded bliss. Those members of the world that came across them might, like Father Joe, recognize them to be bonded together as tightly as any husband and wife could be, but they were not going to put their names on a marriage license that could be accessed by anyone who cared to plunk down the country clerk's fee for a copy of said license. They were going to keep their enemies guessing about their 'relationship' and, now again, their whereabouts. After the upcoming two-month vacation, she suspected she and Mulder would not come back here. Now that Mulder was no longer a fugitive, he had access to the prodigious assets (his inheritance) that had been frozen by federal fiat since his conviction. They would be able to do as they liked, go wherever they chose. But she wasn't sure yet whether she wanted to continue as a doctor at Our Lady of Sorrows or whether she wanted to move on to something else. She would ponder that and discuss it with Mulder during their vacation. And Mulder would also give thought to what he wanted to do. Now, she felt good. She floated in the warm, hazy space between real consciousness and full-blown sleep. She frankly couldn't wait to get away. They deserved some carefree time. They deserved some unalloyed happiness. She knew Mulder was right that the darkness probably would find them anywhere. But they would do their damnedest to make a very hard job of it. Nearly at that border few if any of us ever consciously get to witness -- the blurry margin we cross into sleep -- she sighed again. This was a contented sigh. She had exhausted her busy mind finally and also found some peace in some of her contemplations, so her mental processes quieted and allowed her passage into rest. Beside her Mulder's sleeping form might have been waiting for it, for that particular sigh of surrender to restorative sleep. The last thing she felt before she finally drifted into unconsciousness was Mulder's hand reaching for and holding hers. Nothing could have been sweeter.