Isolation (8/16) 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 Eight Early in the morning, Frank walked over to unlock the diner and found Gibson sleeping in his car. He tapped on the window, startling the young man. "Did you sleep out here last night?" he asked as Gibson rolled down the window. "Yeah, I didn't want to be late," he said, rubbing his eyes. "Come inside, I'll make you breakfast," Frank offered. "We don't have to get on the road just yet." Gibson sat at the counter while Frank started the coffee and warmed up the flattop. They weren't officially open for the day but he often came in early and never turned anyone away. He checked the food in the walk-in freezer and coolers, and grabbed the supply list from the bulletin board in the office. Almost as an afterthought, he opened the safe and took a stack of twenties from the deposit bag, leaving a dated and signed note with the amount he'd taken in its place. Before leaving the office he stopped and looked around. What was he thinking? This was just his usual trip to Tucson. They'd check out whatever the heck it was Gibson wanted him to see, and get his supplies, and come home again. But in case he didn't...Carla and Luis could hold down the fort for a while; they were old hands. Outside, he could see Carla and Teri pulling into the parking lot, the rising sun catching their windshield so that it flashed in his eyes for just a moment. "Whoa," he said, squeezing his eyes shut. Spots danced before his eyelids. "Are you okay, Frank?" Gibson asked. "Sure, I'm fine," he said, shaking his head. "Just a touch of vertigo, I guess." "Maybe I should drive us to Tucson," Gibson said. "Yeah, maybe you should," Frank said. It crossed his mind that he'd be harder to follow in someone else's car. Where did that come from? He shook his head again. "How do you like your eggs?" he asked Gibson. Something about the way the light had reflected off the windshield had spooked him. He wasn't sure what. Maybe he was just on edge because of all the stuff Gibson had been telling him. Who knew that the government could be so underhanded? But as far-fetched as some of it seemed to be, Gibson wasn't lying. Frank was sure of it. x-x-x It had been a long night. Scully had finally agreed to sleep for an hour or so, only when Mulder promised that he'd wake her if there was any change in Langly at all. They'd had a long discussion about what to do when Frohike and Byers were brought in. Scully maintained that the best place was the hospital where she'd be able to get help immediately if anything went wrong. "But it's not going to be easy," she said. "I didn't expect that Fletcher would show up with any of them needing medical attention like this." "I didn't either," Mulder admitted. "I didn't think beyond the fact that he'd promised to produce the guys, and that we'd have to figure out if it was them, or Memorex. He really threw me for a loop." "Tell me about it. There's no question that when he brings Byers or Frohike, I'll need to admit them, too. That brings up another problem." "What's that?" "I can't endanger the careers or the lives of my staff over this. Dr. Chandra is asking questions and I am not prepared to tell her the truth yet." "Do you think at some point you might?" "I don't know, Mulder. It's a lot to ask. None of them signed up for this." "I'll give it some thought," Mulder promised. "Before the next 'delivery' I'll come up with something." "It had better be sooner rather than later. I doubt that Morris Fletcher will give us any more warning than he did with Langly." "What if we fitted out the warehouse with a full infirmary?" Mulder suggested. "One John Doe admitted to the hospital under your care is one thing -- but three? If Fletcher is contravening some secret program, I think that someone would be watching the hospitals for admissions like this." "That may be true, but do you want to risk their lives further? We have no way of knowing what Fletcher did to Langly, or how the antidote was administered, or anything else about it." "How many times have bad things happened in hospitals? People have disappeared, and worse." Mulder pointed out. "I'm just saying, the more we have control of the situation, the better off we are." "It would take much too long to outfit an infirmary with all the equipment and drugs we'd need. Not to mention the lab we would need to run even simple blood tests. I'd have to take blood samples and get them to the lab here. Langly and the others will need a full work-up. I wouldn't do any less for them than I would for you." When she put it that way, Mulder had to agree. It was now well after dawn. Scully stretched and yawned, glancing over at Langly and then Mulder, sprawled in the chair beside Langly's bed. She checked Langly; he appeared to be sleeping normally, and his breathing was deep and even. The monitors showed all signs normal. She tiptoed out to use the bathroom. The sound of beeping woke him. He felt like he'd been asleep for ages. He stretched but his arm was attached to something and he stopped. Maybe Frohike had wound some computer cables around him. He'd done that before, the little troll. He heard snoring nearby. What weird slumber party was he in the middle of? They'd pulled all-nighters plenty of times, and he'd been known to fall asleep on his keyboard. Usually when that happened Frohike or someone would poke him awake so that he could crawl off to bed. He groped around for his glasses, which were nowhere to be found. He squinted at the figure snoring in the chair next to his bed. His eyes widened in surprise as he saw who it was. Incredible. What was Mulder doing here? Did Scully know? He tried to sit up and was once again restricted by something. "Mulder," Langly said. "Hey Mulder." Mulder opened his eyes, a little disoriented himself. "Hey man," Langly said. "Where'd you come from? I thought you'd disappeared for good." He suddenly realized where he was. The noise in the background wasn't the beeping of a computer alarm; it was the machine next to his bed. "What the hell?" he said, more loudly than he realized. "Where am I? How did I get here?" Mulder sat up and rubbed his eyes. He seemed to try to speak, then put his face in his hands and began to sob. "What's going on?" Langly yelled. "Why am I here? Somebody? Anybody!" Scully came running in. "Langly!" "Agent Scully, you're here too? What's going on? What's wrong with Mulder?" "He's fine," Scully said. "He's just glad to see you. So am I." She had the biggest smile on her face that he'd ever seen, and her eyes seemed to be watering. "It's been a long time." She perched on the edge of Mulder's chair and rubbed his back gently while Mulder scrubbed his hands over his eyes and tried to compose himself. "Huh? It hasn't been that long," Langly said, a little less freaked out but still confused. Scully stood up and came over to his bedside. She put her hand on his forehead and checked the machines. "Don't yank your arm around, it'll dislodge the needle," she said. "What are you putting in there?" he asked suspiciously. "What happened? The last thing I remember..." he stopped. "I don't remember the last thing I remember." "Take it easy," Scully said gently. "We have a lot to tell you." x-x-x Connie started to put together a story from the recordings on the cameras. The guy who said he was from the IRS slapped Roger on the back, and Roger wavered and fell forward, the other guy neatly catching him. Next, he supported Roger out the door, and then he was helping him into -- not the car, the ambulance. The ambulance drove away, and the IRS guy followed in his car. Why hadn't anyone called her to tell her that Roger had gotten sick and was probably in the hospital right now, with no one to check on him? Oh yeah. No one knew that she lived here. It wasn't a secret; she just didn't have anyone to tell. It appeared that Roger hadn't told anyone, either. She went back to the kitchen where she thought she'd seen a phone book. She'd call every hospital, and she'd lie and say she was his daughter so they'd have to tell her if he was there. A few hours later, she began to seriously worry. No hospital in the greater Chicago area would admit to having Roger Mintage as a patient. What to do? Hope he just turned up again? Not doing something seemed wrong. The house phone rang, giving her a start, until she remembered that it was also connected to the intercom at the front entrance. "Mintage Sound," she answered. "This is Special Agent John Doggett of the FBI. I'd like to speak to Mr. Mintage." "He's not in at the moment," Connie said, hating that her voice was shaking as she said it. She was not at all sure she should trust anyone who said they worked for the government. "This is Monica Reyes," another voice broke in. "I'm Agent Doggett's partner. Maybe we could talk to you about Mr. Mintage?" Connie didn't know what else to do. If these two were Feds, maybe they could tell her about this IRS guy and where he might have taken Roger. x-x-x When they got to Tucson, Gibson suggested that they check the library first. They got there just as the doors were opening and were able to get one of the public computer terminals quickly. "I'm just going to type in the name, 'Melvin Frohike' in the search box, and see what comes up," Gibson whispered, although libraries no longer seemed to be the temples of silence they once were. Almost as soon as he hit enter, a list of hyperlinks appeared. Gibson picked one at random and a picture of a guy who could be Frank's twin appeared on the website for the Mutual UFO Network. "RIP, Melvin Frohike," the caption under the picture said. There was a short article about his untimely death, dated six years before. The article attributed his death to unnamed government operatives who had decided that Frohike and his two colleagues had gotten just a little too close to Something So Big that it couldn't be named. Gibson hit the back button and showed Frank a few more sites. One had a picture of him with two other men. One man looked like a bureaucrat -- he could be one of the "government operatives" who were supposedly the enemy, if it weren't for his beard. The other looked like a hippie. His stare was full of attitude. He had long blonde hair and wore a Ramones tee shirt. Frank's twin looked mostly like him -- same hair, practically the same glasses, and a wild- looking vest. "You were the Lone Gunmen," Gibson said. "You published a newspaper called 'The Magic Bullet' which uncovered the government's cover-ups. I don't know exactly how you 'died'. Everyone says you were heroes." "Dead," Frank said. "That's an incredible story." "You must believe me now," Gibson said. "Don't you?" "Even if I do, what does it matter? I don't remember any of it, and I wouldn't have the foggiest idea how to go about remembering. Maybe I don't remember for a good reason. Let me just take care of business here and we can go home. Whatever I was before, I'm not that guy now." Gibson looked crestfallen, but he didn't argue. They left the library and visited the restaurant supply warehouse where Frank arranged for delivery of the supplies needed. He suggested they grab a bite before heading back home. "I'll just call the diner and let them know we'll be back later." It took some doing to find a pay phone. Frank plunked coin after coin into the phone, muttering about highway robbery all the while. Once connected, it took forever before someone at the diner picked up. "Must be busy," Frank commented to Gibson. "That's good." Finally, a harried Carla answered. "Frank's Eats," she said. "Carla, it's me," Frank said. "I just wanted to let you know we'll be heading back soon, and to see if you thought of anything else we needed." "Frank," Carla whispered into the phone, "I'm so glad you called. There's a man who says he's from the IRS here to see you: an Agent Morris." He felt a thrill of fear at the news, though he couldn't say exactly why. "That's odd. Did you tell him I'd be gone most of the day?" "I did. He said he'd wait." "Well, he can suit himself. Don't give him anything on the house. He might call it a bribe." "Okay," Carla said. She paused for a few moments. Frank could hear muted clattering in the background. "It's been a weird day here." "Are you in the office?" Frank asked, and Carla confirmed that she was. He hesitated. Should he tell her what he'd found out? That maybe he wasn't who he thought he was? He could trust her, but it would put her in a bad place if she knew something and the IRS guy wanted to know it. If he really was IRS, that is. Some of Gibson's paranoia was rubbing off on him. Instead, he simply said, "It's been a weird day here, too. Listen -- I know you're busy, so I'll let you go. Take care of yourself, and tell the others the same, okay? I'll talk to you when I get back." "Thanks, Frank," Carla said. "See you in a while." A long while, Frank decided as he hung up the phone. "Gibson, how far do you think we can get before dark?" "We should be back well before dark." "I'm not talking about 'back'", Frank said. "I'm talking about heading in the opposite direction. I want to get to the bottom of this." ~*~ Continued in Chapter Nine