Scully sat in the familiar office of her FBI therapist.  They had
been talking for over an hour, but Scully did not feel any progress had
been made.  Nor did the therapist.  "Dana, we've discussed your recent
traumatic experiences, including your brother's accident; we've covered
your recent history from your abduction, to the death of your daughter,
to your cancer.  I feel that we've made excellent progress in resolving
these issues, and you seem to be able to articulate on your feelings in
these matters well.  But when we raise this issue of this crossroads
you feel that you are at, you get very vague as to your reasons for
feeling like this."  The therapist paused.  "I get the feeling that
we're evading another issue here."  
  Scully felt a small surge of annoyance.  "Like what exactly?  I'm
having a career crisis; it's not all that rare...it all seems pretty
cut and dried to me."  
  The therapist looked down at her notes.  "I don't believe you really
came in here for career counselling.  I think subconsciously you feel
you have another unresolved area of your life that you feel you need to
deal with.  Are there any feelings or thoughts that you've had recently
that have in some way distressed you, or made you uncomfortable in some
way?"
  Scully thought for a while.  She was inclined to disagree at first,
but on second thoughts she realized that something had been bugging her
a little.
  "I have found it difficult in my line of work...that is my previous
line of work with Agent Mulder...to have the time to keep up with my
friends...and whenever I did get the opportunity, I felt that we had
less and less in common...I have really drifted away from all of them
over the past few years, and now, especially with my sister's death, I
find that...that I have no one to talk to about things that trouble
me...I don't like talking to my mother or brothers about things like
that...I've certainly given them enough worry over the last few
years...and especially now I find I have no one aside from family to
talk to about anything."
  "You say 'especially now', Dana.  What do you mean by that, do you
think?"
  Scully thought about it.  "Did I say that?" Scully asked, looking
faintly surprised.  "Yes, you did."  She paused for a moment.  "Dana,
you've mentioned before that you quite frequently used to discuss
things with Agent Mulder...When you said 'especially now' is it
possible that you mean especially now that you have reduced your
contact with Agent Mulder quite drastically?"   
  "I...don't...know..." Scully said slowly.  "Over the last couple of
years, we've actually discussed things that bothered us about cases
less and less..."
  The therapist looked sharply at Scully.  _Now_ they were getting
somewhere.  "And why is that Dana?"
  "I think...I feel that we both want to avoid causing each other any
pain, knowing how much each other has gone through...we just don't want
to add to each other's burdens."
  "And how does it make you feel when you know Agent Mulder is holding
back these feelings from you?"
  "Umm, hurt I guess.  And a little angry."
  "Why?"
  "Because I care for him...we've been partners a long time and have
shared so much...he's always been there when I needed him and I know
that he always would be."
  The therapist gave Scully a direct look.  "Because you love him?" she
asked quietly.
  Scully flushed.  "Agent Mulder and myself having always strictly
adhered to the Bureau's policy regarding partners' out of hours
relationships..."
  "Dana, I'm not Assistant Director Skinner here.  I'm your therapist,
and you're avoiding the question."
  Scully was silent for a couple of moments.  Finally she raised her
eyes to meet those of her therapist.  "Yes," she said, half defiantly
and half with surprise.  "Because I love him."
  The therapist sat back in her chair.  "_Now_ we're getting
somewhere," she said in satisfaction.


Bill from Bill's Auto Repairs and Panelworks wiped the back of his
grease-covered hand across his grease-covered forehead.  He leaned
against the damaged car that was their latest project and looked with
some dissatisfaction at the legs protruding from under it.  They
belonged to his assistant Jimmy.  Jimmy had been acting...strange.  For
one thing, he had suddenly become extremely competent.  More so than
Bill himself.  Bill did not like being overshadowed.  For another, he
seemed to have lost his sense of humour.  Bill had told him a great
joke about two blondes and a redhead, and Jimmy had just looked at him
kind of blankly, and then smiled an almost condescending smile.  Bill
did not like being condescended to.  And now, instead of working on the
car that Bill had assigned to him, Jimmy had insisted on mucking around
with this one, and had proceeded to lurk under it for most of the
morning. Bill couldn't understand it.  He doubted that anything short
of a complete rebuild from ground up was going to get this car working
again...but he always liked to have a look at the cars others said were
a write-off...just in case he could squeeze some money out of it
somehow.  At any rate, the only time Jimmy had reappeared was to tell
Bill to turn down the music down.  Tell!  It was time to take steps.
  "Jimmy!"  No response.  "Jimmy boy!  Come outta there!"  After a few
moments, Jimmy did so.  He had a dissatisfied expression on his face,
which, while perhaps being a refreshing change from the look of blank
incomprehension it usually wore, was profoundly disconcerting.  
  "What the hell have you been doing down there, all day boy?"  Bill
demanded.  Jimmy looked at him.  Was that an expression of annoyance
that flitted across his features?  "Working."  Jimmy smiled faintly. 
"I found what I was looking for."  Jimmy stood up and brushed past Bill
and headed out the door.  He paused and turned back.  "Thank you." He
said, and then kept on walking.  Bill stared after him.  He then pulled
out the mostly empty bottle of whiskey that he had secreted in his
overalls, looked at it, and through it quickly in the garbage with a
shudder.  The phone rang, causing him to jump.  
  "Yeah?  I mean, Bill's Automotive Repairs and Panelworks here, Bill
speaking."  
  "Bill?  S'me Jimmy.  I'm real sorry...I sure dunno what happened, but
my head is awful sore this morning.  I'll be runnin' a little late
today...Bill?  Hello, Bill?"  Bill had dropped the phone, and had
slowly made his way into his office.  He casually opened his desk
drawer and grabbed the full bottle of whiskey that was lying in it.  He
unscrewed the cap, and drank straight from the bottle.


Mulder walked through the halls of the FBI building, lost in his own
thoughts.  He bumped into somebody.  "Sorry," he mumbled.  "Agent
Mulder?"  Mulder looked up.  The man he bumped into was someone he'd
seen occasionally around the FBI building.  Someone who had always
looked at him with a disconcerting familiarity, as if he knew him well,
but Mulder had no idea who he was.  
  "Agent Mulder, I wonder if you'd mind accompanying me?  I would like
to talk to you."  Mulder looked at him.  "I'm guessing this is less of
a request and more in the nature of an undeniable invitation sir?"
Mulder asked with irony.  The man, who looked to be in his late
fifties, shrugged.  "The decision is yours of course...but I have
something to offer you that you might find...irresistible."  Mulder
looked at him, his expression veiled.  The man returned the look just
as coolly.  "Alright," Mulder said.  "Let's go."  
  "Not here," said the mystery man.  "I'd like to go somewhere where we
are the only people who hear what is said."  Mulder looked at him
sharply, but the man began to walk quickly out of the building. 
Mulder, his interest now and truly piqued, followed after.

Outside they caught a cab to a park, where the older man led Mulder to
a park bench away from the groups of children with their families. 
"All right," said Mulder.  "Let's talk."  The man glanced around
warily.  "You don't know me, Agent Mulder, and you don't need to know
me.  Suffice it to say that I'm in a position that commands quite a bit
of power."  Mulder's face remained impassive.  "Quite an achievement
for a humble government employee," he said blandly.  The man gave the
merest hint of a smile, and he turned his head to watch the children
playing in the distance. "I've said that you don't know me, but you
know others like me.  Others that too have no name, no substance in
this world of ad-breaks, fast-food, carefree commercialism and shopping
networks.  The world you and I live in on the other hand Mr. Mulder, is
much more sinister.  But," the older man looked directly at Mulder. 
"I'm sure that you have been aware of that for some time now."  Mulder
said nothing, but continued to sit in impassive silence.  "Most of my
colleagues are much too extreme for my liking however, which is why
I've begun to distance myself from all of this over the last couple of
years.  There have been steps taken, things done that were completely
unnecessary, and that exposed us to unnecessary risk.  I think most of
them have lost sight of the original simplicity of our, shall we say,
organization?  They seem to get quite a kick out of over-dramatization
and the cheap theatricality of it all.  I almost believe that some of
them are in it just for the joy of lurking in dark corners, forming
half-baked plots, dropping mysterious half-hints...as if the things we
dealt with weren't impressive enough without all these urges for tacky
over-dramatization.  Most of it I find quite amusing, but
assassinations, kidnappings...where does that ever get us?  All it does
is draw attention to us, and every few more that believe, make it a
little more difficult for us to work.  Would you believe, some of us
have had to talk very fast to stop your own untimely demise?"  Mulder
raised an eyebrow.  
  "I'm very flattered I'm sure...but what claim to fame do I have that
should ensure my continued existence?"  
  "Well, it mightn't have been so bad in the beginning, but after a
while, particularly after Agent Scully joined you, you began to have
some semblance of credibility.  You weren't just some kook who hadn't
been taking his medication...and Agent Scully was the ultimate skeptic
and scientist.  That was bad enough.  But if you were to
be...eliminated?   This would just be taken as a confirmation that you
were on to something that needed to be covered up.  If we look like
we're not taking you seriously, most people will just dismiss you as a
loser, a freak." 
  "Gee, thanks." Mulder drawled.  "Why are you telling me all this?"
  The older man looked at him.  "I need a favour."
  "From me?  Gee, the way you were talking had me thinking that you
were the type that people begged for favours...not the other way
around."
  The man looked off into the distance again.  "I have a daughter."  He
said finally.  "I have never actually met her...when you live the kind
of life I do it's not advisable to have any connections.  Better merely
to exist on the somewhat empty satisfactions of power.  However, I have
allowed myself to keep track of her whereabouts, her progression
through life.  Consequently I was most distressed to hear that she'd
attacked someone recently with no provocation.  I may never have met my
daughter, but I know that this is all wrong.  Something is just not
right.  There has been some diagnosis of schizophrenia or some such
nonsense...but I don't believe that for a second."  Mulder's mind
clicked several things into place.  "Your daughter...her name is
Jessica Maitland?"  The man looked surprised.  "Yes...how did you
know?"
  "I was in the new X-Files office this morning...a file was sitting
out looking like it needed someone to love it."
  "You were in the X-Files office this morning?  Why?"
Mulder regarded the man with a veiled expression.  "What, you're people
haven't bugged it yet?  Or maybe you're getting your reports straight
from the horse's mouth?  Your little friend Agent Fowley wanted to
offer me a job."
  "She what?"  The older man looked surprised and annoyed.  Mulder
smiled a mirthless smile.  
  "I see your newest recruit has been indulging in a little
individualist activity on the side...but I wouldn't worry too much
about it.  I think my ex-wife is just trying to get back into my good
books after betraying everything I hold near and dear."
  "Your what?"
  Mulder's expression registered surprise. 
  "You didn't know that either?  You're obviously over-paying
somebody."  He smiled again.  "To be honest, I thought you and your
little 'organization' had planted her as an attempt to try and subvert
me to your evil cause."
  "No...Agent Fowley seems to have her own agenda."  The man was silent
a couple of moments.  Then he shook his head.  "But we were discussing
my daughter.  You know all the details of the case?"  Mulder nodded
slowly.  "Good.  I would like you to go and investigate it.  It's your
kind of...you know, thing."  Mulder looked into the distance.  
  "Why don't you have your tame agents, Fowley and Spender look into
it?" he asked finally.
  "Like I said, Fowley seems to have her own agenda...besides, this is
not something I would like her to know about.  You never know when
someone will use knowledge to their own advantage, but they will
usually do it sooner or later."
  "What about good ol' agent Spender?  Surely he is this year's winner
of the evil-doer's lackey award."
  The man made a derisive sound. 
  "Spender got given the X-Files on a silver platter and he couldn't
even be remotely successful in dealing with that.  He's a hopeless
incompetent...a self-absorbed jack-ass that postures and squawks around
trying to make someone other than himself aware of his grand
importance.  Instead, he offends people left, right and centre and
proves again and again how woefully incapable of handling anything that
might involve things more complex than monosyllabic instructions spoken
slowly and clearly directly to him followed by slides and brightly
coloured diagrams."
  Mulder, despite some serious disagreements with the purpose of and
general existence of this man, couldn't have summed up his opinion on
Agent Spender any better himself.
  "What's in it for me?" he asked bluntly.
  "I give you all this information, and you still want more?"
  Mulder gave him a chilly look.
  "What have you told me that I don't already know?  That there is some
shadowy organization out there that's really running things?  So what's
new?  That my life is in danger?  Tell me something I don't know.  All
in all you've told me precisely dick, except confirming for me that you
are part of a group that has abducted Scully, killed her sister, taken
her unborn children, implanted her with some chip, the removal of which
led her and several other innocent women to develop cancer, infected
her deliberately with an alien virus for which you did not have a
definite cure...not to mention ordering the death of my father, and the
abduction of my sister.  In fact, the only thing that's preventing me
from pulling out my gun and shooting you is the presence of some
pre-school witnesses, but don't test my patience because there's some
trees and bushes over there that will provide some pretty good cover if
I change my mind.  Now you have about thirty seconds before I either
walk away or shoot you so you'd better do some pretty fast talking."
  The man looked taken aback.  "I have underestimated you Agent Mulder.
 You want an offer?  How about being reassigned to the X-Files, without
the ever-useless Spender and Agent Fowley?  On satisfactory completion
of this assignment of course."
  "What about Agent Scully?"
  "Well, I don't think..."  Mulder began to walk away.
  "Wait...come back."  Mulder half-turned.  "Alright, Agent Scully will
be reassigned as well...providing of course, that her dedication to her
brother doesn't see her leave the Bureau altogether."  Several things
clicked into place again for Mulder.  Before the man knew what was
happening, Mulder had his gun in the centre of his forehead.  
  "You organized Charles Scully's car accident, didn't you?"  Then as
the man remained silent he raised his voice and pushed the gun harder
against his forehead.  "Didn't you!"  
  The man met Mulder's angry gaze.  "I had nothing to do with the
arrangements...like I said, I have no patience with this kind of thing.
 I didn't even know about this little scheme to separate you and Scully
until it was too late to do anything about it anyway."  Mulder
contemplated him for a second in angry silence.  "I think you're a
liar," he said in a menacing half-whisper.  The man began to shake.  "I
swear to God, Mulder it's the truth.  In fact, I think it was probably
your old cigarette-smoking friend.  This plan has his nicotine-stained
fingerprints all over it."  Mulder was silent for another couple of
moments.  "How do I know that this isn't just some other scheme...why
would you be telling me these things?"
  "If anyone asks why I was talking to you, I'll just tell them a
slightly edited version of the truth, that I was trying to convince you
to work for us.  It's been tried before, as you know.  As for the
other...I can't prove what I'm telling you obviously,"  He almost
smiled.  "You're just going to have to 'trust' me."
  Mulder held the gun to the man's forehead for the space of a couple
more heartbeats.  "Alright," he said at last.  "I'll do it.  But you'd
better hope for Charles Scully's imminent and complete recovery,
because if he dies, I will hunt you down and I will shoot you."  He put
his gun away.  The man rubbed the circular indent on his forehead.  "I
knew partnering you with Agent Scully was a mistake.  And I definitely
knew that trying to use your feelings for her to our advantage was an
even greater mistake.  Nobody listens to me."  Mulder's glare was
stony.  The man pulled out a piece of paper with a name and address on
it.
  "This is the address of where they are holding my daughter.  The name
belongs to one of the more influential people at that institution...he
knows that you're coming and will make sure that you have access to
everything you need."  He smiled faintly.  "One of those empty
satisfactions of power," he said.  Mulder took the piece of paper and
tucked it into the pocket on the inside of his jacket.  Without another
word, he walked away.  The man on the bench took out a creased photo of
a blonde girl, aged about twelve.  "Don't worry sweetie," he said with
tears in his eyes, running his thumb over the photo.  "Daddy's going to
make it all better."

The Man opened the door to his non-descript motel room.  Without
bothering to turn on a lamp, he threw his jacket on to the bed and sat
down on a barely comfortable chair.  The flame from the match lit his
lined face briefly as it lit the inevitable cigarette.  The Man inhaled
deeply, then sat back in his chair, exhaling slowly.  "Still trying so
very hard to reject the gift I gave to you?" came a voice from the
shadows.  With reflexes honed by a life lived on the edge, the Man went
for his gun.  Feeling its unyielding familiarity in his grip, he felt
confidence gradually returning.  He reached over and turned on the
lamp.  "You!" he said in tones from which all confidence had fled.  The
man known as Jeremiah Smith looked at him.  "What, surprised to see me
still alive?  You should know better.  Our existence here depends on
being quite...resilient."  The Man nervously stubbed out his cigarette
in a convenient ashtray.  "They said that you'd been 'taken care of.' 
I know what that means."  He said, trying to grasp at the shreds of his
former confidence.  Jeremiah Smith looked away.  "'They' have made
quite a practice of telling you things that you'd like to
hear...particularly when they are not true.  They seem to think it
increases their power over you.  Don't ask me, I'm the rebel.  If I
understood the way they think I would probably still be one of their
little drones."
  "What do you want from me?" the Man attempted to ask in an
authoritative tone.
  "I am here, to tell you to desist from your attempts to kill, injure
or separate Agents Mulder and Scully," Jeremiah Smith responded coolly.
 "We feel that they will be quite useful in our plans, so I have come
here to warn you to leave them alone in future.  If their work is
discontinued for some reason, or one of them succumbs to an untimely
demise, for you it would prove...unfortunate."
  "You're threatening me?"  the Man asked in disbelief.
  "I would have thought you were more than familiar with the process,
and wouldn't need any particular help in identifying it.  I have just
come to remind you that as well as having the power to heal, we can
also choose to have quite the opposite effect.  Lung cancer can be a
terrible way to go...I don't think you'd like to fall victim to
it...again.  Just think these things over next time you have the urge
to have someone tamper with the brakes of someone related to Agents
Mulder and Scully."  Noting the other man's expression of surprise,
Jeremiah nodded.  "Yes, I've examined the car myself.  I recognized
your unique style throughout this whole scheme."  Jeremiah Smith rose
to leave.  As he had his hand on the doorknob to leave, he said, "We
will win you know.  Perhaps you'd better give some thought as to whose
side you'd like to be in when that comes to pass."  Quietly, he turned
the handle and left the room.  The Man sat breathing fast, looking into
the distance, the smoke from his hastily extinguished cigarette still
weaving a languorous pattern in the air.

 
TWO WEEKS LATER

  Mulder made his way to the offices of the mysterious father of
Jessica Maitland.  Without bothering to knock, he went straight in. 
The man looked up, unsurprised by this intrusion.  He leaned back in
his chair.
  "Well?"
  "Your daughter has been discharged from the mental institution.  It
would seem that she had a cut and dried case of possession...not, of
course that that is what is going on any official report."  Mulder was
not being entirely honest...there had been something that annoyed him
about this case, something unusual about the possession that he just
couldn't put his finger on.  In this particular case, however, he
didn't particularly care about being overly stringent.  The girl was
cured, that was the important thing.
  "But, I brought in a priest...it took quite a few hours, but your
daughter returned to normal, with no memory of the events prior to her
attack on Mr. Salinger."
  The man let out a sigh of relief.  "Thank you," he said quietly.  
  "How about just keeping up your end of the bargain?"  Mulder said in
a dangerous tone.
  Without another word, the man picked up his phone.  "Diana?  It's
me...I know, but this is an exception.  Please come and see me right
away... No, not then, I mean right now...Thank you."  He hung up and
looked at Mulder.  "Agent Mulder, please report to the X-Files office
first thing tomorrow morning.  You have been officially reassigned.  I
would appreciate it if you would also let Agent Scully know."
  Mulder looked at him, chewing on the inside of his cheek.
  "The empty satisfactions of power, huh?"  He said in an amused tone. 
He turned to leave.  "Oh, don't forget about Charles Scully, either,"
he warned.  "I meant what I said."  Mulder opened the door and quietly
left the office.  The man breathed a sigh of relief.  No wonder so many
people wanted Agent Mulder out of the way.  He was a dangerous man.  
He heard a knocking at the door.  "Come in," he responded.  Agent Diana
Fowley came in quickly and shut the door behind her.  The man came out
from behind his desk to meet her.  Her arms came up to pull him into an
embrace, but he quickly grabbed them and forced them down.  "What,
what's the matter?" she asked in a mystified tone.  
  "I'm just pondering the significance of the fact that you failed to
tell me that you and Agent Mulder used to be married," he replied
coolly.  "I find it difficult to believe that such an important fact
would just slip your mind."  Fowley began to look uncomfortable and
couldn't maintain eye contact.  "Could it be that you still harboured
some yearning for your old flame?  And here I was thinking I was the
only iron you had in the fire.  Well, either way, it would seem you
have lost both of us my dear.  Mulder has attached himself to Scully
like a limpet...I doubt anything short of the universe imploding would
be sufficient to detach him.  He got quite passionate about her safety
you know, even waved his gun at me.  It would appear that young Miss
Scully feels the same way, if the small electronic devices I have in
the FBI therapist's office are functioning correctly.  All in all, it's
all quite cloying and quite sickening really.  I think the simple lust
that you and I had going was much simpler...but, my dear, I don't
appreciate being used.  Thus, I believe that I will have you sent to,
now, where was it...ah, that's right.  Salt Lake City.  That was where
you wanted Agent Scully sent, was it not?  How pleasing it is when a
pleasantly ironic solution presents itself."  Fowley stood dumbstruck. 
The man made a shooing motion with his hand.  "Quickly, quickly my
dear, before I find a less...amicable way to deal with you."  Fowley
fled.  The man sat at his desk again, and put his feet upon it,
crossing them as he did so.  "Ah," he sighed.  "The empty satisfactions
of power."