New! BBQ Series 13: Little Lovings Date: Friday, August 13, 1999 Category: Story, MSR, MulderANGST, ScullyAngst, SkinnerAngst, Lite MulderTorture Rating: PG-13 for language; minimally graphic violence. Spoilers: Let's just say through season 6, to be safe. Summary: There's a crisis in San Diego, and our heroes must deal with it on their own. Archive: Yes Disclaimer: The names you recognize belong to 10/13 productions and Chris Carter. I'm just borrowing them, and since I've learned to play nice in the sandbox, I promise to return them in one piece. Also, mentioned is one of my favorite flicks, "Searching for Bobby Fisher." No foul intended, no monetary gain made. Introduction: It picks up in the Barbecue Series Universe and follows the incidents of # 12, and it would probably make more sense if you knew what how this universe works. Thanks, Vickie, for being my very special muse, but even more so, a very special friend as well. This story was written during my own little crisis, and you allowed yourself to be my sounding board so I could vent and rant over the injustice of it all. Feedback: Oh, please. Pretty please? The Barbecue Series 13: Little Lovings By Susan Proto (STPteach@aol.com) Part 1/6 Shelton Police Department Shelton, CT ~~~~~~~~~~~ "God, I am so tired." "I know, me too," she replies, which startles the hell out of me since I don't realize I've uttered the words aloud. It's been a long day. Too fucking long and it's only going to get longer. We've been on this damned case for the last three weeks without a break. We're stuck in a small, Connecticut town during the worst heat wave the northeast has seen in some time, and to make matters worse, there've been utility company warnings every ten minutes on the news urging reductions of power use. Which of course means the police station we've been working out of has cut the a/c. We bought a couple of those free standing oscillating fans for the little two by four office we've taken over for the duration of the case, but now we gotta weigh all the files and notes down with books and ashtrays so they don't blow away. Damn pain in the ass. On the other hand, we are getting cooperation from the locals; these guys really do want our help in capturing this sonofabitch, so they've given us access to every resource they have. Kind of nice for a change, actually. But then again, it hasn't made a pig's ass worth of difference, because we can't seem to get any closer to finding this bastard who gets his jollies from cutting out the entrails of children, small children. Oh, God, they're just babies. The oldest one was a four year old girl; the youngest a two year old boy. Suddenly, I feel my whole body shudder, and I lean over and put my head into my hands. I want to hold myself together for Scully's sake, but I don't seem to be doing a very good job of it. I hear her step quickly towards me, and I pick my head up. "I'm okay, Scully. Really." She stops in her tracks, looks at me, and says softly, "Well, did you ever think that maybe I'm not?" I think I forget how to breathe. I'm not breathing. My Scully just admitted to me she's not okay. Oh, God, she's killing me here. "Scully," I say, but just barely, and hold my arms out to her. I say a silent thank you to whatever deity is listening for she enfolds herself into my outstretched arms. She's already done two autopsies since we've gotten on the case; thankfully she hasn't found any discrepancies between her findings and those of the ME who completed the first three. But she's got another one to do later today. We've only just returned from the latest crime scene, which is why we're both so totally wasted. We lean into one another while we hold each other for dear life. Neither one of us was sure how it would be to work cases after we became involved on a personal level. I think Scully was more worried than me; I don't think she figured we'd be able to concentrate on cases as fully as we'd done prior to getting romantically involved. Of course, I guess she forgot how single-minded we both become when we get handed a case to solve. She always forgets how much these things affect both of us. She forgets how much we lose ourselves in these cases; okay, how much _I_ lose myself. It's been especially nice to have Scully around to remind me there's a good reason to find myself again. I sigh aloud now, and I feel her squeeze me once more before she says, "Are we okay now?" We? God, I love this woman. "Yes," I murmur back. "We're okay." We disengage ourselves; I feel almost bereft, but I know we've got a long night ahead of us. I want to quickly review the crime scene notes with her before she goes over to the hospital morgue to do the autopsy. I stand up and pour us both another cup of coffee, and then we get to work. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ramada Inn Hotel Shelton, CT I look up at the clock in our hotel room at about the same time I hear the cell phone ringing. I can't believe it's already 6:30; I've been working in the room for almost two hours without a break. The trill of the cellular reminds me to answer the phone. I'm not sure whose it is, but I check mine first since Scully is in the shower. She's walked in a little while ago from completing the autopsy and uttered quietly, "Shower." Though working on a small child is not as physically taxing, it is most certainly more emotionally draining, and I know the shower helps her to release her emotions in private. My Dana especially needs to be able to do this. I can't help but wonder if she sees Emily's face every time she performs a procedure on a child. I know I see Sam's face all the time; sometimes I see Emily's face too. I wonder what Dana sees? I discover it's not my phone and seek out Scully's. I find it in the fanny pack she's taken to wearing, as it's too damn hot to wear a jacket with pockets and it keeps her hands free. I pull it out and hit send. "Hello?" I say hesitantly. For some reason I always feel reluctant at answering Scully's phone. Now I know why. "Where the hell is she?" he asks with as much derision as I've ever heard come out of his mouth. "Bill? She's taking a shower." I'm just about to ask if it's an emergency when something tells me that it is. I can sense the feeling of anxiety and fear right through the phone line. "I'll get her for you, Bill. Hold on one moment, okay?" He grunts in response. I call her out of her shower and immediately hand her the phone. I wrap the towel around her dripping body while she attempts to find out why I'm so insistent that she immediately speaks with her brother. "Bill, it's Dana. What's going on?" she asks, unsure if she should be feeling annoyance or nervousness. She holds the phone at an angle so I can listen to his half of the conversation, too. "Dana, something's happened," he chokes. "Bill? What?" "Dana __?" he cries out. "Bill, please, you're scaring me here," replies Scully in as calm a voice as she can muster. I know she's aching to scream at her brother to just tell her what's wrong, but she's wise enough to know Bill is obviously holding himself together by barely a thread. "He's in the hospital," Bill says. "Hospital? Who, Bill? Who's in the hospital," she asks with a little more panic in her voice. "Matty," he gasps out. He loses whatever control he's had. Oh God, Bill Scully is sobbing over the phone. Even I want to reach out to him and try to comfort him. "Why, Bill?" she asks a little louder so he'll hear her. "What happened?" "Car _ hit_ him," he manages to choke out. "Dana_, it's bad! Please, he's hurt so bad!" he cries. "How, Bill. Tell me, please," she prods urgently. I know she's assuming 'doctor mode,' in order to best understand the situations at hand. I hear Billy still crying, but he's taking deep breaths in an effort to calm down, so he can give his sister the facts. That's what separates Scully and me from other people. We can go into this 'FBI modus operandi affect' and disassociate ourselves from the horrors of what we do. Even when we have to discuss something horrible that's happened to one another. But Bill doesn't' have that skill; that luxury. He's feeling Matty's pain with every word he utters. "We were in the parking lot, the mall parking lot. We'd finished shopping. Tara wanted to buy some crap for the kitchen," he adds angrily, but then he catches himself, takes a deep breath, and continues. "We were going back to the car, and I'd asked Tara if she remembered where we'd parked. She's always ragging on me about my sense of direction," he half chuckles and half chokes on a new stream of tears that fall. Scully remains quiet to give him a chance to regain control, but I know she wishes he'd go on. I know I wish he'd go on. "Suddenly," he rasps, "the baby's jumping up and down, and he's shouting, 'The car! I see the car!' and before I know it he's off and running." I know the man is seeing the events unravel again in his mind's eye as he relates it to us. He doesn't need an eidetic memory to have these images burned into his memory forever. "We were both holding his hand; I swear to you, Dana, we were both holding his hand," he says adamantly, "but he broke loose. He was so excited he just bolted right in front of __, and that's when__. Oh, God, Dana," he weeps uncontrollably again. Oh Lord, my heart is breaking for this man, for his wife, and for his sister whom I can feel trembling at my side. I'm not exactly feeling too much in control, myself. "It was an SUV. The driver was sitting so high up, he didn't even see Matty until after he hit him. Dana, he flew. He flew straight up into the air and landed on the ground. Oh God, Dana, he looked like a broken, little toy doll. My son, my baby __." Bill can't contain himself any longer and he cries, but so are we. I'm holding Dana now, who is trying to form words but can't. Nothing is coming out of her mouth except sobs, so I find my voice and speak. "She's coming on the next flight out, Bill," I manage to croak out. She looks at me with these huge eyes. I know what she's thinking. "Mulder," she says aloud in some kind of protest for both Bill's and my ears to hear. "Scully," I say at the exact same time Bill calls out, "Dana." Oddly enough, it's for the same reason. "You have to go to your family. I can't leave right now, Scully; not right now. I can't leave while this bastard is still out there." Now I see the ambivalence in her expression. My poor Scully is at a loss for the moment of what she should do. Her sense of loyalty to her family is weighted against her sense of duty to the job, and I suppose a little to me, as well. "Dana," Bill calls out to gain his sister's attention, and I suppose mine too, "_Your_ nephew needs _you_ here now." He manages to put the emphasis on just the right syllables to make me feel about two inches high. The man's success rate at keeping me in my place remains high, to say the least. But, he has managed to tip the scales a bit to his side. "Mulder, you can't do this by yourself," she implores. "I'm not by myself. The locals here are actually on our side, remember? I'll be fine, Dana, and as soon as we catch a break, you know I'll be on the next flight out. I __," I pause here, as I realize that my confession of love for Matty may not sit well with the big guy on the other end of this conversation. I don't want to upset him any more than he already is, so I simply say, "I care a lot for Matthew, too." I grab hold of her a little harder and say in little more than a choked whisper, "Go. You have to go." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ End of Part 1/6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Barbecue Series 13: Little Lovings By Susan Proto Disclaimers in Part 1 Part 2/6 San Diego, CA ~~~~~~~~~~~~ I called Mom immediately after I'd hung up with Bill, told her the situation in my most professional tone and informed her I would make the reservations for both of us. I also told her I was going to meet her by the baggage claims in San Diego International. I hung up and while I repacked my suitcase, Mulder called and made the flight reservations for my departure out of Bradley International and for Mom's out of Baltimore International. When all was said and done, I looked at Mulder and told him I'd call him when we arrived at the hospital and knew more of what was going on. He nodded mutely. It was then I broke down and cried. Mulder held me for what seemed like only nanoseconds, but in reality, it was for several minutes. He reminded me that if I was going to make the flight, I had to get going. So, I left. It was then I broke down and cried for what would be the second of many times that day. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We found one another at the airport baggage claims area, and I was amazed how composed Mom was, under the circumstances. I embraced her and asked, "Mom, how are you doing?" "How am I supposed to be doing, Dana?" she asked softly. "I feel as though I'm walking into hell, and there's no exit signs posted. But I have to keep going because there's no guarantee some won't pop up unexpectedly." She paused then, looked at me and asked, "How are you doing, Sweetheart?" "I'm fine," I answered too quickly. In reality, I was in my own brand of hell, and Mom, in her infinite wisdom, realized this. "He'll be okay, Dana. He'll have Walter to support him," she said to me. "Walter? Mom, he's in DC and Mulder's in Shelton, Connecticut," I replied tersely. I knew my tone suggested I was angry with her, and I didn't want her to think that. "Mom, I'm sorry. I'm just so frustrated." "Sweetheart, Walter is meeting Fox in Connecticut," she informed me quietly. I looked at her and obviously my face was a mass of question marks, so she explained, "I phoned him right after I'd spoken with you." "Oh, that's why he hadn't sounded surprised," I muttered. "You spoke to him before me?" "I guess so," she replied. "I told him you were upset about leaving Fox. He said he had to clear up some paperwork, but that he should be able to join Fox in Connecticut tomorrow, or by the latest, Tuesday." All I was able to say was thank you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ San Diego Medical Center ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There is no sadder place in the world than the children's ward of a hospital, with the exception of an ICU with a child in it. All too familiar hushed tones greet us. The livelier banter and jocularity one finds on regular medical floors are a sharp contrast to the humming of machines and soft murmurs of doctors and nurses doing their best to remain alert to the medical needs of their seriously ill patients. Mom and I walk briskly in the direction of Matthew's room. As we get closer, we see Tara and Bill clutching one another outside in the hallway, while they speak with a doctor. I hear Mom try to keep up with me when I hurry my steps. I want to hear what the doctor has to say first hand. "Bill," I hear Mom call out. My brother and sister-in-law turn around quickly at the sound of her voice. I, for the moment at least, have lost mine. "Mom __, Dana!" Bill calls out. "Thank God you're both here." "Has anyone been able to contact Charlie or Karen?" Mom asks. "Yes, but it's going to take a while for them to make it back," Tara says. At my quizzical look, she reminds me, "They've been on vacation in the Caribbean, remember?" I nod mutely. I still haven't found my voice, though I'm aching to find out how my nephew is. My silence is a signal for Tara to continue on about Charlie's travel plans. "We got through to them through the ship to shore telephone number. They're going to try and get a flight out tomorrow. It's kind of difficult this time of year; everything's booked solid with people's vacation plans." I nod and then clear my throat. Finally, I say, "Matthew? How is he?" I hear a sharp intake of breath from Bill; he's been holding it together pretty well, until I make mention of the baby. He steadies himself and then introduces me to the doctor. "Dr. Loudon, this is my sister, Dr. Dana Scully." It's my turn to draw a quick breath. I'm so unaccustomed to being addressed as Dr. Scully; I'm Special Agent Dana Scully. I suppose Bill will never get that, and now is certainly neither the time nor place to argue about it. I simply nod in acknowledgement toward the physician and address my question to him. "Dr. Loudon," I say as I accept his proffered hand, "what can you tell me about my nephew's condition." "Well, Dr. Scully, Matthew has suffered a severe trauma to the head and was brought to the medical center in an unconscious state. He has yet to regain consciousness. He's had an MRI as well as CT scan, and we've been able to determine there is a slight skull fracture which has resulted in edema. We've controlled this swelling of the brain by inserting a temporary shunt to relieve the pressure. "His other injuries include a broken wrist and numerous lacerations on his back and shoulders. Obviously, we are most concerned with the head trauma," the doctor concludes. "How are his vitals?" I ask. He indicates to me Matty is holding his own; the concern is the longer Matty remains unconscious, the more likely there is brain damage. They're also worried about him seizing, which of course would be a potential indicator of brain damage. "Thank you, Doctor. If I have any more questions about my nephew's treatment, I assume I may contact you at any time?" I say with as much of a professional tone that I can muster. He nods in agreement, shakes my hand one more time, and informs us all he'll return to check in Matthew later this evening. I've done the easy part; now I need to go see my nephew. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mom and I enter the room quietly. I try so hard to remain stoic and professional, but this is my nephew, damn it! This is my Matty, and I can't hold it in. I take a shuddery breath and reach for the baby's hand. He looks so small in the oversized crib. I know he'll be so upset to find himself in a crib again. He's so proud of his new big bed; he tells me about it every time I speak to him on the phone. Well, as much as any two and half year old can tell you on the phone. I smile at this thought and Mom immediately picks up on it. "What are you thinking about?" she asks me softly. "That Matty is going to raise holy hell when he sees he's stuck back in a crib," I say. "No, he won't like that at all, will he?" she agrees. Mom begins to move her thumb in gentle circles around the top of Matthew's small hand. "Dana?" she pauses before she asks what I know is the inevitable. "He's going to be all right, isn't he?" I look at her and so desperately want to allay all of her fears; my brother's and sister-in-law's fears; hell, my own fears, but I can't simply brush it all aside and look at my beautiful, but very broken nephew, through rose colored glasses. "I don't know, Mom. We'll know more when he comes out of the coma," is the closest I can be to comforting. I know it's not what she wants to hear, but it's the best I can do for now. I don't even try to stop the flow of tears at this point. Mom just watches me from the other side and continues to draw the small comforting circles on his other hand. I see she now allows herself to shed a few tears now, too. I wish Mulder were here at my side. God, I can't believe how much I've come to depend upon him. I need him here at my side. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I've been in the hospital for over an hour and a half, and I suddenly realize I haven't called Mulder yet to let him know Mom and I arrived safely. I know he's not worried about me, or else my cell phone would have been ringing off the hook by now. I do know he's as anxious about Matthew's condition as anyone, so I excuse myself to Mom and Tara who joined us a little while ago. Bill went to buy a round of coffee for all of us. I go into the waiting room, away from all of the sensitive machinery, and pull out my cellular. I punch in speed dial #1 and wait impatiently to hear his voice respond to my signal. "Mulder," he answers. "It's me," I reply, grateful that he's available to answer my call. I was afraid he might have been out in the field. "Where are you?" I ask, assuming he's in the motel or in the police station. "Out in the field," he replies. So much for my assumptions. "Oh? Anything interesting?" I ask in a neutral voice. "There was another one, Scully,'' he whispers in reply. I don't know if it's because he doesn't want others to hear him giving out the information, or because he's been so deeply affected by this latest ordeal. I pray it's the former. "When?" I ask. "I'd just autopsied the child that was found two days ago. Mulder that child was only missing for two days. That means __." I stop short. I can't voice the horror that runs through my mind, but my partner does. "He's escalating." "Oh God, Mulder. What are you going to do?" I bite my lip as soon as the words pass my lips and wish to God I can take them back. The last thing Mulder needs right now is for anyone, much less me, to insinuate that he is the one and only person who should shoulder the responsibility in finding this sonofabitch. "Mulder __, Fox, I'm sorry. I didn't mean it like that," I offer in apology, but I know he's just going to brush it off. "Don't worry, Scully. I've been asking myself the very same question over and over. We'll come up with something, don't worry." "Have you eaten anything today?" I ask quickly, as I remember we never did get a chance to eat before I left for the airport. It's now a little after 10:00 p.m. here on the west coast, but it's after one in the morning back east. Knowing Mulder, he doesn't even remember if he's eaten or not. When I hear his slight hesitation, I know I'm right. "Mulder, you have to eat," I insist. "I will, Scully, I promise I'll grab a bite at the diner. Now, tell me already," he pleads, and for a split second I forget what the hell he's talking about. "Did you get to speak with the doctor at all?" Jesus! The baby. "Yes," I reply quickly, and I then go on to explain to Mulder about the head trauma and its severity and let him know that all of the appropriate steps are being taken. "Well, ya know if you're in doubt, Scully, you should get a second opinion. You should get the best doctors for him, okay? I mean, if it's a question of money, I have some saved up from my father's inheritance that I'm more than happy to ____," he began. "__No, Sweetheart, it's okay. The doctors are very good here. I've checked them out, believe me. But thank you, Fox. That was very sweet of you to offer," I tell him. "Just so you know it has no expiration date, okay? I mean, Matty's __." I hear him choke on a sob. "Fox, it's okay," I say, but I know it doesn't really help. It's not okay, not by a long shot. When I hear him continue to cry, it suddenly dawns on me why he's so damned emotional. I mean, notwithstanding the lack of food, lack of sleep, and lack of me. "Mulder? Tell me about him," I prod gently. It only takes a moment before he starts describing the latest victim. "Two year old, male, with blond, curly hair and blue eyes. He was wearing blue and white overall shorts and a blue, logo tee shirt,'' he describes in a whisper. Something catches my attention and then I realize what it is. "Logo? What logo?" "NY Knicks basketball. You know, just like the one __, the one I'd gotten for Matty as a belated birthday present." I don't what to say other than, "Yes, I remember." I listen to him take several deep breaths before he speaks again. "Mulder, are you going to be okay?" "Sure, Scully. I'm fine. Listen, go take care of Matthew and your family. I got me a serial killer to catch," he says quickly, knowing the joke falls flat. "Mulder, I love you. I really wish you could be here with me, or that I could be there with you." "Me, too, Scully. Me too." I'm about to hang up when I suddenly hear him call my name, "Dana? Dana, wait! Don't hang up!" "Yes, yes, I'm still here." He breathes a sigh of relief and then I hear him say, "I love you, too." "Me too, Mulder. Me too." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ End of Part 2/6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Barbecue Series 13: Little Lovings By Susan Proto (STPteach@aol.com) Disclaimers in Part 1 Part 3/6 White Hills Section Shelton, CT ~~~~~~~~~ I hang up with Scully and then go about surveying the crime scene again. It's late, and before I realize it, another hour and a half pass by. Time flies when you're having this much fun. I can hardly hold my head up at this point. The others finished about forty minutes ago. I'm grateful for the solitude, though I do wish Scully were here for me to go over this damn case. Oh, hell, I just wish Scully were here for me. Period. Finally, I get into the car and somehow manage to stay awake long enough to drive back to the motel without taking out a light pole or tree. So now I thank heaven for small miracles, because even though I'm in a daze at the moment, it's at least a cooler one. The motel management doesn't control the air conditioner, I do. I turn it up to high and stand right over the ducts for a few minutes. It's still hotter than hell in the room though, so I decide to take a quick, cold shower. I strip my clothes off and step into the bathroom. I reach into the shower stall to turn on the water spray and suddenly feel as if the earth is spinning right off its axis. Shit! I'm dizzy as hell, and I grab onto the shower curtain as tightly as possible. Which of course causes me to pull most of the curtain down on top of me as I slump to the floor. I realize I'm half on the tiled floor and half in the shower stall. I sit quietly now, and the water sprays all over the floor and me. I don't know how long it is before my head feels normal again (a relative term, I know) but I start to stand up. Whoops. Nope, not quite yet, I realize as the room begins spinning again. Several minutes pass; I am shivering now from the pulsating blasts of the ice cold water, and I try again to stand up. I do so a lot more slowly, and this time, I succeed. I gingerly step into the shower and adjust the water temperature. I quickly wash my hair and do a quick swipe of my body with the soap. I rinse and step out of the shower onto the saturated floor mat. I use all of the towels to sop up the misplaced water and then flop into the bed still moist from the shower. I don't care though, because the room has finally cooled off, and I can feel myself actually relaxing for a moment. I close my eyes in anticipation of getting some sleep; a state of being I haven't really enjoyed for almost two weeks now. As I feel my eyes start to shut I realize I've reneged on my promise to Scully. Oh, well, I'll eat something tomorrow. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I hear the phone ringing, but it takes me a couple of moments to regain my senses and figure out where the damn thing is. I stand up gingerly and pull it out of my pants pocket. I open it and answer, "Mulder." "Mulder, where the hell are you. We were supposed to be meeting with the whole team at 0-800 hours, remember?" SAC Donald Bleeker's voice cuts right through me. "Yes, Sir. Sorry," I say as I frantically look for the clock. Shit, it's 8:23. This is not a good omen. "I'm sorry, I must have lost track of time." Forgive me you asshole, I actually managed to get more than two hours of sleep. I got three. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Shelton Police Station Shelton, CT ~~~~~~~~ I walk into the station feeling slightly disoriented and very disheveled. I didn't take the time to shower again, mainly because there wasn't a dry towel to be found. I've slept on my hair while it was wet, so of course the cowlicks have come home to pasture. I couldn't get my fingers to work this morning, so my tie is askew, and to top it off, I've forgotten to send the laundry out, so the one clean shirt I had to put on is the one with the thousand and one wrinkles in it. And it's now 8:55 a.m., and the SAC is not smiling. I murmur my apologies once again and sit down at the large table. One of the officers (I don't know who, but if I weren't so totally and completely in love with Scully, I'd ask him to marry me) passes me a cup of coffee. I nod my head in thanks as the SAC begins the team meeting. I tune him out after about twenty minutes. I keep turning last night's crime scene over and over in my mind. The UNSUB is trying to tell us something, because the bastard is definitely calling out to us. But I'm missing the clues, damn it. I don't see the clues. All I see is Matthew Scully's face on the body of the victim. I want to call California, but it's only going on six-thirty a.m. there. I don't want to take the chance of waking Scully up, in case she's sleeping. I hope she's able to sleep. I hope the baby's condition is better and they can all sleep easier. "Agent Mulder!" the voice sharply calls out to me. I must have startled, because I next hear the SAC say, his voice dripping in sarcasm, "Forgive me for interrupting your daydreaming, Agent Mulder, but I was under the impression you were here to assist us in the apprehension of a serial killer." His voice becomes more irritating and grows louder and harsher as he continues speaking. "This killer, I might add, is escalating which means that there will be more and more small children, babies, yes, Agent Mulder, small babies, will be killed if we don't _all_ do our jobs to help solve this case and arrest this sonofabitch. And that means Agent, _you_ need to pay attention to the team briefings, so _you_ can do _your_ part in catching this killer. Do _you_ understand?" he concludes angrily. "Yes, Sir," I whisper in reply. As much as I would love to take the SAC out with one punch, I know that A.) I couldn't deliver a knockout punch right now if my life depended upon it, and B.) the sonofabitch is right. My head is everywhere but on what he's saying. "SAC Bleeker, you are correct. I was not giving you my undivided attention, and I respectively apologize." When I see the SAC's jaw drop open (alas, apparently my petulant and irritating reputation has preceded me) I continue and say, "It's just there's something that's bothering me about last night's crime scene. I feel as if we're missing something, something important. May I ask your permission to return to the scene for another look?" "Mulder, I thank you for your apology, but we've been over that place with a fine tooth comb. No, I think we need to take the tact Agent Stillwater has suggested," SAC Bleeker concludes. I look at him with unbelieving eyes. I know Stillwater's modus operandi. He's going to have us go through the files and the interviews and go through them word by word to compare and contrast every scenario. Which is not to say it's a totally bad idea. It's just a lousy one for me to have to take part in. I can't sit here and pick through nonessential files. There's a lunatic out there who's stealing babies and taking their lives away from them. And the ironic thing is the bastard is screaming for help. He _wants_ us to find him before he can hurt any more children. He's begging us to get out there and find him, but these idiots can't see this. No, they want to have me nitpicking through papers and words that are not going to find this bastard. "With all due respect, SAC Bleeker," I begin tentatively. "I don't doubt the validity of Agent Stillwater's suggestion. I think there may be something of value to be found if files are combed again, but as a profiler, I wonder if my skills might not be put to better use?" I see Stillwater is ready to verbally object to my words, but Bleeker waves him off. "I'll give you one hour at the site, Agent Mulder. That includes the time it takes to get to and from the site. You will return back here in exactly one hour, and you will report your findings. If you have something new to offer, we will then discuss how to pursue it. If you do not have anything new to offer, then you will sit down immediately and follow any directions Agent Stillwater has for you. Is that clear, Agent?" he asks with a tenacity I've seen in only a few people. "Yes, Sir. It's clear. Thank you, Sir, for your indulgence." Scully will be so proud of me. I'm finally learning how to play nice in the sandbox, but I'm also not foolish enough to not realize the big boys can start throwing sand at any moment. So, when I see the SAC nod in response, I bolt out the door before he can even think of changing his mind. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Crime Scene Shelton, CT ~~~~~~~~~ I know it's here, but I can't see it. I feel like that little kid in that movie about child chess prodigies; what was it called? Oh, yeah, "Searching for Bobby Fisher." There was a scene where the kid knows there's a winning move on the board, but he can't see it. So what does his teacher do? He sweeps his arm over the chess board and all the chessmen scatter all over the floor. He tells the kid, now you can look at it. Now you don't have to be distracted. I know it's here, but I can't see it. I close my eyes and I try to sweep the landscape of all distractions. First, I see the child tied by his hands and feet to the trunk of the tree. Matty's face. Oh, God, it's Matty's face. Sweep the child's body away from the tree. And breathe, Mulder. Breathe. See just the tree from which the child was strapped. There are pieces of clothing still stuck in the bark as well as the threads of rope which were used to tie the victim in place. I know it's here, but I can't see it. I see the tread marks of the truck that carried the child here. I know the truck was a Japanese model. The forensics people can tell just from the tread marks that solidified in the sun struck, hardened, muddy soil of the dirt road. I know it's here, but I can't see it. I see the slightly moist, brown, matted down, grassy path left by the heavy gait of the UNSUB. There's no discernible footprints left in the grass, but it's obvious, less than twenty-four hours or so later, that this is the path he walked with him. He most likely carried the victim, for how heavy were two-year-olds? Not very heavy at all, I remember. I pull my arms around me and imagine I have Matty in them once again. Oh, God, I can't do this. I can't do this. I feel myself begin to break down, when something simply clicks. Remove the chess pieces. Look at the empty board. What's wrong with this picture? I see the tree from where he was tied. I see the tire treads embroiled in the hot, sun-baking mud. I see the moist, matted down, hay-colored grass that leads from the truck to the tree. And I look at the glistening ivy that grows around the tree. It's healthy, and clean, and wet? Wait! There's mud? The grass is like hay, but it's wet? How can that be? The city has been on a drought alert for the past four weeks. I know it's there. I can almost see it. I look at my watch and realize I've missed the hour deadline. But I'm so close to finally seeing it, so close. I guess I've come a long way, but there' still some room for improvement. I pull out my cell and dial the station. I first ask for the Sargent's desk. Sargent Usowski answers, and I let him know it's me. "Agent Mulder, I think your SAC is on the warpath. Where the hell are you?" he asks not unkindly. "I'm at the last site. I'll talk to the SAC in a minute, but I need you to help me out with a couple of questions, okay?" I hear him grunt in response and I ask the most obvious question, "Did it rain at any time last night?" "Hmm, that's a good question. Here in the Valley, ya never know where there's going to be rain squall. Now, I live in the Shelton Center area, and I can tell you there was a helluva lightening show last night around three in the morning, but there wasn't any rain. I don't know about Huntington and White Hills." "Huntington and White Hills?" I echo. "I thought the city was all called Shelton," I wonder aloud. "Yeah, well, technically it is, though you would never get anyone from Huntington to buy that. That's the old money area; it's also known as the Berries. Lots of old money there, big houses, pretty good sized lots. That area is closer to Shelton Center," he explains. "And the White Hills section?" I ask. "Well, that's up where the victims have been found; it's farther from town. It's the new money area, though not near as wealthy as the Berries crowd. White Hills is made up of yuppie families that have both husband and wife working so they can afford the house, and the SUV and the sports car, ya know? It's a nice area, don't get me wrong. I even have a few friends from the force living there. "But I gotta admit I get a hoot out of listening to them bitch and moan about their well water always getting contaminated and their in-ground pools always needing repairs because of soil contamination. I have a nice, simple, three-bedroom cape, Agent Mulder. More than big enough for me and my family. I use the community pool and I have city water. You don't' hear me bitchin' about tainted water." "I hear ya, but did it rain up that way last night?" "Hold on; I see Burnwood over by the coffee pot. Yo, Burnwood, did it rain up around your house last night at any time?" "Shit, I wish! My damned landscaping is going to go into the mulcher if it doesn't rain soon. Since we're on a drought alert, I can't water. Wouldn't exactly look good for the force if I sneak in some watering, ya know? Figures, since I'd just put the new shrubs in this past June. Damn, Mother Nature sure is pissing me off." "Didya hear that, Mulder? No rain up that way either," Usowski commented. "Yeah, thanks," I reply. "Did it help?" he asks. "I'm not sure. I have to think about it, but first, you better transfer me to the SAC. You might want to plug your ears, Usowski," I suggest tongue in cheek. "You're not planning on coming back just yet, are you, Agent Mulder?" he asks rhetorically. "Well, good luck." I hear the clicks over the phone lines and wait to hear Bleeker's voice. I unconsciously brace myself, and as a result, my entire body is practically in spasm. "Sir, this is Mulder. I'm afraid I won't make it back within the hour." I listen to his silence for a moment and wonder if he's going to give in or give me up. "No shit, Agent," he replies tersely. I suspect the man's teeth are clenched so tightly together, it's a wonder any sound escapes from his mouth. "What is the reason for your delay?" "I think I've come up with a missing piece, Sir." "And what might that be?" he asks. I was really hoping to avoid that question for the time being, but apparently that's not to be. "Well, Sir, I think the UNSUB has left us a clue here for me to find. I just need a little more time to search for it. The clue is here. I'm sure of it." "Agent Mulder, return to the base, immediately." "But, Sir," I plea. "Agent, I order you to return to our team base,'' SAC Bleeker commands forcefully. "I'm afraid, with all due respect, Sir, I can't do that," I reply with some sincere regret. "Agent Mulder," booms Bleeker's voice in anger, "are you this insubordinate with Assistant Director Skinner?" "All the time, Sir." I click off my phone. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I clear my chess pieces off the board, and I finally realize what's wrong with the picture. The ivy. It's not been trampled on, in fact it looks newly planted. As if the UNSUB was creating a living grave for the child. The area was watered thoroughly so the plants would survive. The mud is a tip off, but the green, ivy plants looks too healthy given the drought situation. The grass, which lays right next to it, is nothing more than hay, yet there's some remnants of moisture there too. But it hasn't rained. The sarge confirmed this. I bend down by the tree and look at the ivy. I tug gently to see if it will come out willingly. It does; it hasn't been in the ground long enough to establish a viable root system in the ground. I pull it and the one next to it, and then a third and a fourth plant. I put on some laytex gloves and finger the dirt, which allow my hands to act as a filter for it. "Ouch!" I cry aloud. I've hit something hard and sharp, but I don't know exactly what. As I grope about more I am better able to grip the object and pull it out. It's a trough. The little shovel with which the UNSUB planted the ivy. I dig back into the dirt to see if there's anything else, but that's all I can find. If we're lucky, the UNSUB's fingerprints will be picked up by the lab techs. Hopefully, it will be enough. I put the evidence, including the ivy and samples of the grass and mud, into a plastic bag and walk quickly back to my car. The clue is in these bags, somewhere. Now, if the SAC will only allow me to live long enough to find it. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ End of Part 3/6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Barbecue Series 13: Little Lovings By Susan Proto (STPteach@aol.com) Disclaimers in Part 1 Part 4/6 San Diego Medical Center San Diego, CA ~~~~~~~~~~~~ I wake up with a start, for I don't have a clue as to where the hell I am. I look over and see Mom stretched out on the moss green, nondescript couch, with a blanket tossed over her. I notice I have a blanket scrunched up around me as well, but I've apparently been dozing in an oversized chair of the same moss green color and nondescript style. I twist my neck around and immediately catch my breath, for the first thing that comes to my mind is we're in the hospital because Mulder's been hurt again. But I shake that thought off immediately, because I know if it were Mulder, I would be in his room with him, not out here in the waiting room. Then, just as suddenly, I recall with a shudder why I'm here. Matthew's parents are the ones sitting vigil in the room with their son. Our sweet Matty. I remove my blanket and stand up gingerly. I'm stiff from the contortions I've apparently performed in my effort to sleep comfortably in this blasted chair. I check my watch and note the time is 6:30 a.m. Mom is still sleeping, so I step as quietly out of the room as I can. I want to see Matty's chart and check his progress. I say a prayer as I walk toward his room. Tara is on the right side of the bed and, though she is sound asleep, holds Matty's hand with a tender firmness. Bill sits on the left side, facing out towards the room's entrance and, as he is awake, sees me walk in the room. "Hi," I greet quietly. I don't want to wake up Tara. Neither does Bill apparently, and he whispers his hello as well. "Any change?" I ask hopefully. "Not that I know of," he replies dejectedly. "The nurse comes in, checks the machines and the IV's, smiles and leaves. Kind of makes me nuts, but I don't have the strength to get into it with her, you know? I figure I'll wait for the doctor to come," he explains, and then with the first hint of a smile I've seen from him since my arrival, he adds, "I figure I'll let _you_ duke it out with him, Dana." Even I chuckle at this; my brother knows me all too well. I nod at that and pick up the baby's chart at the foot of his bed. I note there have been no changes to speak of, but at least he's stable. At this point, if his condition doesn't degenerate, that's good news. We sit in companionable silence for another twenty minutes or so when Tara wakes up and Mom enters the room. I ask Bill when the doctor was going to stop by, and he said barring any unforeseen circumstances, around nine o'clock. "Okay," I say, "then I'm going to go to the ladies room, freshen up a bit, and run down for some coffee and a bagel." I look at my watch again and realize it's three hours later in Connecticut. "I want to check in with Mulder in a bit, too." At this I see my brother visibly stiffen. I choose to ignore it, since I really do think now is not the time, nor the place, to get into a verbal sparring match with him about Mulder. But I don't know if I'm going to be given this option. Bill stands up, stretches for a moment, and says, "I think I'll walk you down to get the coffee." Before I can object, Mom says, "Okay, I'll keep your seat warm for you, sweetheart. Make mine a tea, please? Cream and one sugar," she instructs. I nod and tell him I'll meet him outside by the elevators, while he takes Tara's breakfast order, and then I walk out and duck into the restroom. I'm tempted to call Mulder now, but I want to speak with the doctor first so I'll have something newsworthy to tell him. Besides, I also want the luxury of talking with him unhindered by time constraints, and my brother is waiting for me. Also, I want a clear mind when I speak with him, and right now I'm feeling a bit irritated with Billy. I shouldn't, I know, because he hasn't even said anything yet. Unfortunately, I know the operative word is 'yet.' I take a little extra time in the bathroom to prolong the inevitable. As I step out, I see Bill pacing back and forth, and he seems to be muttering to himself. Shit. He's practicing. He used to do this when we were kids. If he had something important he wanted to get off his chest, he'd go into his room and literally rehearse what he was going to say. God forbid, if one of us kids ever interrupted his flow of thought, he'd start pummeling us to death, so it became habit to just shut up and let him have his say. I don't know though if I can handle the verbal pummeling today. "Okay, Bill. Let's go get that coffee," I say as I continue to walk toward the elevators. "Dana, I need to say something to you," he says firmly. "Bill, not now. Please," I plea in earnest. I know whom he's going to talk about, I just don't know in what context. I know I'm not in any condition to have to deal with it, and neither, for that matter, is Bill. Why can't the man learn to leave well enough alone? Why can't he realize he has enough on his own plate at the moment? "Dana, it's important. Look at me, please." He stops walking and I know he's waiting for me to stop and turn around. I'm tempted to keep walking, but I don't. I do stop. I do turn around. I'm such a shmuck sometimes. "I don't want you to talk to him about Matty," he says and as I'm about to open my mouth to protest as vehemently as I possibly can, he waves his hand to silence me before I can even say a word. He's rehearsed, you see. "My son is barely alive. He's attached to machines that beep and buzz, only to remind me he is barely alive. Now, Dana, he is your nephew and you are my sister, and I am very grateful you are here to support _our_ family and me. I'd be lying if I didn't admit having you here with your medical expertise is a relief too." I startle a bit at this, for it suddenly dawns on me my brother has yet to realize my first loyalties lay with the Bureau. I am a Special Agent with the FBI first; I am a doctor second. But he has yet to accept this fact about me yet. Well, I have to make this clear to him, so I open my mouth to speak, but he breaks in first. "But you are my family, and you are here to support our family," he repeats himself, and I realize he's now ad-libbing rather than what he's rehearsed. "Obviously, I can not say the same thing for Agent Mulder." "Bill?" I cut in, "What the hell are you talking about?" "For someone who claims how much he feels a part of this family, he sure has a funny way of showing it! Where is he, Dana? Where the hell is he? Three thousand miles away, that's where. Family is supposed to come first, Dana. You're here. Where the hell is he? Not to mention, where's that piece of shit, AD, Mom's been seeing? Where the fuck is he? She sure as hell could use a little moral support while she sits vigil over her grandson, for Christ's sake." It seems Bill's expressed all of this in one breath, and he finally stops long enough to take one. My mouth, on the other hand, must be totally agape, because I'm not able to get a single word out. Yet. Seconds pass and then I take a very needed deep breath and speak. "How dare you?" It comes out almost as a growl. My brother reacts with an expression of surprise mixed with fear; it's one I haven't seen since the day I threatened to tell our parents I'd found out he cheated on a chemistry final exam. "How dare you speak of things you know nothing, absolutely nothing about, Bill Scully. Yes, I am your sister, and I am your son's aunt, of which I am very proud to be. I love that little boy as if he's my own, and since there's not a whole lot of chance that I'll ever have a child of my own, you'd better realize what an important place that baby of yours holds in my heart. "But you stand there, and you dare to say that I do not have the right to call the man I love and keep him informed about this child's condition? You feel it's your right to make this demand of me because you dare to say that Fox Mulder doesn't care about this family? You dare to say he doesn't care about me? About Mom or our family? "My God, Bill, you have the audacity to stand there and dare to say that man does not care for your son? Mulder nearly lost a leg saving your son, because of your own stupidity, if I recall correctly. Remember? Oh, you do remember, don't you, Bill?" I watch him shudder as the memory of that July fourth comes back to him in living technicolor. Good. I want him to remember every last second of horror. "Yes, I'm here, Bill. I'm here because Matthew is my nephew, and I love him with all my heart, but the only reason I am here is because Mulder insisted I come. I didn't want to leave him, and not because I can't stand the thought of not being near him so we can fuck like bunnies, Bill. He jumps at this little news flash. Knowing we live together is one thing, but hearing my crass characterization of the relationship is a bit much for the poor man. Hah! Yeah, you sonofabitch, we fuck like bunnies every chance we get, but I decide it's not necessary to continue to rub his face in that little revelation, so I resume my diatribe. "I didn't want to leave him because of the case we were on; the case he's still on. Yes, Bill, a case. Remember what I do for a living? I'm Special Agent Dana Scully with the Federal Bureau of Investigation! That's F. B. I., big brother. Can you please try and use your long-term memory skills to remember this little fact? I am an agent first, doctor second, and I happen to be a damned fine agent to boot. My skills as a forensic pathologist are also well regarded, and together, with my partner, Special Agent Fox William Mulder, we have the highest, God damned fucking solve rate in our division! "Dana," Bill interrupted. "I don't give a damn about that. You're here, he's not. End of story." "Bullshit," I retort angrily. "There's a reason why our solve rate is even more impressive than just the numbers they bear. It's the cases we deal with, Bill. You have no idea what kinds of cases my partner and I deal with; or moreover, what we are requested to accept. The ones we seek are crazy enough, and the fact that we're able to stamp 'solves' on most of them is a fucking miracle in itself. "But the ones that we're requested to take on; oh, those are the rich ones, Bill. The ones we seek may be crazy, but the ones they order us to take on can make us crazy. No, not us. Mulder. They can make Mulder hare out, and I've seen it, Bill, so don't shake your head, because you don't know dick." He looks at me with an expression of shock. Didn't know your little sister's language ranks right up there with the rest of the fleet, did ya big brother? "I didn't want to leave him, Bill, because I didn't want him to have to face the mutilated bodies of dead two-year-olds all by himself. There's been six of them already, Bill, and on everyone of them, Mulder sees either his sister's face or Matty's. I'm not making it up, Bill. I spoke to him last night, and listened to this man, this so-called uncaring, selfish, no good sonofabitch, as you have so self-righteously called him in the past, sob uncontrollably over the beautiful, curly, blond-haired two year old baby boy he found with his stomach cut out." I watch him cringe. That's right, you bastard, cringe. "All Mulder managed to say was that he kept seeing Matty's face, and he was so scared and so sorry he couldn't be here for him now. But as he told me, it was my job to take care of my family, and it was his job to go catch a baby killer. "So, you don't think Mulder wouldn't rather have the chance to be here to hold my hand? To hold the baby's hand, or even Tara's or your hand, you unfeeling bastard? "Oh, and about that so-called 'shit' of an AD you referred to? "Mom called Walter Skinner right after I'd spoken with her about Matty. It was Mom who told Walter Fox was going to be on his own, because he'd insisted that I fly out immediately to be with you. Mom asked the AD to go to Fox, Bill. She asked him, because she knew she'd have her family to support her. She knew Mulder would have no one." I ran out of breath. I stopped and though I wanted to say more; I needed to say more, I knew there was really nothing much more to say. Well, maybe one more thing. "Bill, you are my brother and I love you, and I will always love you because of that fact. But to be honest, I don't like you very much. I haven't liked you for a very long time, and this is an excellent example of why. You think of yourself, Bill, in the guise of thinking about others. You don't give a damn about how others really feel; all you care about is maintaining control. "You haven't been able to control me for a very long time, Bill, and that eats at you. Worse than my cancer ever ate me, it eats at you. The fact that there's a man in my life whom you see as having that control over me, really gnaws at you. But the irony of all this is, dear brother, is the power that you imagine Mulder having over me is nonexistent. Mulder doesn't control me; he never has, and he never will. Nor would he ever want to, and that my dear Billy, is the rub. "Fox Mulder would no more think to try an control my life than he would yours. Not that he could, even if he wanted to, but the point is, Bill, he would never want to. That's what makes us so good together; that's why we compliment one another so well. We cover each other's backs and we look out for one another, and not just because we love one another. "We've been doing that way before we realized we love each other. We respect each other, Bill. We respect one another's intelligence and wisdom, and the right to make our own choices, even if they weren't always the choices we'd make for the other. We may not like those choices; we may even argue about those choices, but we deal with it and move on. "So, Bill? For God's sake, and for all of our sakes, would you just get over it?" Now I'm finished. Now it's time to call Mulder. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ End of Part 4/6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From: To: Cc: ; ; Subject: New! BBQ Series 13: Little Lovings 5 of 6 Date: Friday, August 13, 1999 1:55 PM The Barbecue Series 13: Little Lovings By Susan Proto (STPteach@aol.com) Disclaimers in Part 1 Part 5/6 Shelton Police Department Shelton, CT ~~~~~~~~~ I arrive back in the Shelton PD and look for one of the 'Agent Gophers' to act as a courier and bring the evidence directly to the labs we've been using at the Yale/New Haven Medical Center. I want the material analyzed as soon as possible and I tell the newbie as much. Before he even has a chance to check in with the SAC I use my best administrator type voice and order him to get to the hospital a/s/a/p. I'll be damned. He goes. I'll be damned. SAC Bleeker has heard of my return. Shit. Suddenly, I don't feel so well. I must look about on par with how I feel, because the first thing out of one of the agent's mouths is, "Mulder, you look like crap. What the hell have you been doing?" "Searching for evidence," I respond. I smell something and realize it's pizza. Pizza? For breakfast? Well, I eat cold, leftover pizza all the time at home, but this stuff smells fresh and hot. "What the hell time is it?" I ask, seriously wondering just how much time has passed by. "Time to decide if I'm going to have an insubordinate, pain in the ass, know-it-all like you stay on this team, Agent Mulder!" booms the SAC. I look at him, but not before I quickly locate the clock in the small office. It's almost noon, and I guess I can understand how Bleeker might be a little annoyed with me, considering I left here at around 9:30 a.m. and basically ignored his direct order to return within an hour. There's not that much of a time differential between 10:30 and noon, is there? Shit. I can't even convince myself on this one. My ass is grass. "Sir, I realize I'm a little later __," I began. "Little? Agent, did you just have the nerve to say a _little_ later?" I nod. Meekly. Shit, I hate nodding meekly. But I do, because I'm afraid if he doesn't think I'm contrite he won't let me follow through on the case. I know the answer is in samples I sent to the lab, but it won't do anyone any good if the SAC decides to send me home with my tail between my legs. "Sir, I really am sorry, but I honestly believe I've found __," I try to explain, but he practically cuts my balls off this time. "__Agent! I don't give a damn about what you honestly think __." "___RING! RING! RING!" It was mine. "Turn that fucking thing off, now!" ordered the SAC. "But it _," I plead, because I'm afraid it may be Scully. In fact, given the time, I'm sure it's Scully. "Please, it may be __." "__OFF! Now!" I turn the cell off. Suddenly I feel sick to my stomach. I'm not sure if it's because I know I just closed myself off to Scully and news of Matty, or the fact that I haven't eaten any solid food in almost forty-eight hours. I suspect it's a combination of the two. Oh God. The room is doing a Chubby Checker and twisting around like it did last summer. Before I can grab onto a desk or a chair, or even an irate SAC, I feel myself slowly slumping to the floor. I seem to be doing that a lot lately. I hear voices surrounding me; they're loud, but the words are garbled. I can't make any sense out of them. Now I feel a pounding in my head, and stomach cramps renew their appearance. I know I'm no longer in control of anything, and I finally give into this fact. I allow myself to close my eyes and wait for the pain and dizziness to pass. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Yale/New Haven Medical Center New Haven, CT I hear a constant 'blip', 'blip,' 'blip', sound and recognize it as a monitor. I wonder what the hell is being monitored. Then I open my eyes a crack and realize it's me. I wonder if I'm alone, but then I hear voices again. I'm still having difficulty discerning the words, but I know they're getting louder, whatever they're saying. I conclude the voices are coming closer, and I can't imagine who they are or what they want from me. I feel so foggy; I can't imagine what the voices will ask me to do. I don't think I'm capable of any reasonable thought at this moment, other than to think I'm not capable of any reasonable thinking right now. "/mm/-/dd/-/rr/," mumbles a voice. All I hear are sounds at the moment; I know sounds make up words, but my ears aren't processing anything more complex than the individual sounds. What the hell is wrong with me? I'm getting a little nervous here. "/Mm/-/Uh/-/DdR/," it says again. I want to respond, if only to see if my own voice breaks apart like the ones I'm hearing. Finally, I hear something recognizable. "Fox," he says. I open my eyes up as wide as my muscles will allow me to, which unfortunately is not that wide. I look in the direction of the source of the sound, and first note I'm on an IV. Oh joy. Then I see him. Big, broad, bald guy. Glasses which reflect too much glare. "Sir?" I manage to croak out. My throat is dry. Why I don't just carry my own personal straw for these occasions is beyond me. I sense the AD moving and he touches my lips with a straw. God, if I wasn't already in love with Scully, I'd ask the man to marry me. (I am getting way too easy in my old age.) I drink greedily and ask for more. He shakes his head and tells me to wait and see if I hold that down. Oh. I guess I've been having some problems in this area which of course explains why I feel parched. "How are you feeling, Mulder?" he asks quietly. "Like shit, Sir." See, I'm learning that honesty is the best policy. Scully really will be so proud of me. SHIT! Scully! What the hell time is it? The baby? Time? What's the time? "Time?" I rasp. "Time?" The AD looks at his watch and says around three. "Oh, not too late," I say with relief. "Not even noon. Call Scully, please?" "Mulder, it's after midnight on the west coast. It's three in the morning here." I must have looked like I'd stuck my hand in the electrical socket, because that's how shocked I felt. I'd been down for the count for over fourteen hours. What the hell happened to me? Oh, God, the baby. How's the baby? "Sir? The baby?" I ask tentatively. "There's no change yet, Mulder. I spoke with Maggie a couple of hours ago. He hasn't shown any improvement, but he's not worsening either," he says with as much optimism as possible. I know he's grown quite fond of the little guy himself, so not being in San Diego and supporting Mom is probably every bit as difficult for him as it is for me. "Scully? Is she __?" I stop myself. It's a ludicrous question that I'm about to ask the AD. How would he know? "No, she's not angry with you, Mulder, just concerned," he completes for me. Oh, he's good. The man is very, very good. I express my thanks. "What happened to me?" I ask now, curious as to exactly what the hell I did to avoid getting shipped back to DC over fourteen hours ago. "You collapsed, Mulder. So what else is new? You haven't eaten solid food, three times a day, for any consistent period of time in over two weeks, and once Scully left, you just stopped eating, period. Mulder, your body needs fuel to keep up the pace you set for yourself. How long do you think you could have kept going without food?" Skinner asks earnestly. I don't know how to answer him. He thinks I willfully stop eating when I profile these kinds of cases. I don't. It took Scully a while to realize this fact. She learned all she needed to do was remind me once in a while and just put the food in my hand. I eat it. I don't realize I'm eating it, but I eat it. I already had to convince Scully's family once that I wasn't anorexic, I'll be damned if I'm ever going to go through that again. I'm not out to harm myself; I simply forget to eat. That's the bare bones fact of it. If you put a sandwich in my hand, said sandwich will be bitten into, chewed, and swallowed in a timely manner. There just wasn't anyone to put the damned sandwich in my hand. "I'm sorry, Sir. I just forget to eat when Scully's not around to remind me," I say contritely. "Look, I did something that may make you angry," he says way too carefully. When I look at him with warily, he continues. "I called Dr. Shapiro." Before I can even react, he says, "I know I may have stepped over the line here, but you scared me, Mulder. I figured it wouldn't hurt to have him on call, just in case you wanted to touch base with him. I mean, with you being out in the field for the last few weeks, I was pretty sure you hadn't spoken with him in a while, and well, like I said, I'm sorry if you think I overstepped my bounds." I have every right to be angry with him. Just because we happen to share the same therapist, it doesn't give him the right to go and make phone calls to him for me. But I'm not. I think I'm grateful. "Thank you," I say. "What?" "I said thank you. You're right, I haven't had a session with Shapiro since I arrived in Connecticut. It's probably a good idea to check in with him. Thank you, Sir." "You're welcome," he replies with an obvious sense of relief. "You know, Sir," I say earnestly, "I really don't mean to make people worry about me." He nods in acknowledgment, but I don't think he buys into it, not totally at least. The funny thing is, I really didn't mean to. It's just that I was so sure there were some clues back at the site. The evidence! The lab tests! "Sir, the lab tests! Did the results come back?" I ask anxiously. "Lab tests? What lab tests?" Skinner asks in a puzzled tone. "I'd sent samples to the lab at Yale/New Haven for analysis. Did the results get back to the Shelton PD?" "I don't know, but maybe we can call down to the lab now and get copies of the results," he suggests. Oh! I now realize I'm in Yale/New Haven, though why I wasn't brought to one of the more local hospitals I don't understand. When he hangs up the phone, Skinner tells me the results were back, but no, they were never sent to the Shelton PD. They're going to send them up to us now." I nod my thanks and then ask out of curiosity, ''Sir? Why am I at Yale/New Haven instead of one closer to Shelton?" He smiles at that and says, "Yale's not that far away, Mulder. By ambulance it's just down the road a piece; it's only about ten minutes farther." "Sir? I still don't understand," I confess. "Scully called me when she couldn't get through to your cell. She asked me to call the SAC and find out if you were okay. The timing was providence, of course, because you collapsed very shortly after you'd shut your cellular off. When I got through to the SAC's line, one of his underlings gave me the lowdown on what was happening. I informed the SAC's clerk that you were to be brought to Yale/New Haven and absolutely nowhere else." "But why?" I ask, still curious. "Why? It's the best hospital in this area, that's why." Before I can even ponder the significance of that statement, there's a knock at my door. A lab tech enters with the analysis in hand. Skinner graciously hands it to me, but I realize there's a slight problem. "Sir, I can't see the print without my reading glasses and I don't have a clue as to where they may be. Would you do the honors?" I'm actually quite relieved the AD is here to read the results to me. My head has started doing a little samba up around my forehead. He states there were, unfortunately, no fingerprints found on the trough. He then lists the various minerals that were found as well as the numerous chemical compounds they'd picked up in the soil, the grass, and the ivy. I listen carefully, but I don't hear anything that sounds unusual. At least, not until he identifies the missing chess piece. I can see it. I can finally see it. "Say that again, Sir," I request. "Chlorine. They found chlorine on all of the samples." "We've got to check out pool maintenance companies who service the White Hills area. Ask the families of the victims if they've had to have their pools serviced recently, and if so, which company they used. That's going to be our guy, Sir. The chess board is now clear," I say as I cover my eyes conceding defeat to the pounding in my head. "Chess board? I don't understand, Mulder," he says, but at this point exhaustion takes over and I find my eyelids close involuntarily. I go into a second deep sleep in only as many days. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I wake up to find SAC Bleeker and AD Skinner sitting by my bedside. I find it a lot easier to open my eyes now. I almost feel rested. And hungry. Damn, I actually feel hungry. I twist my head around and actually look for a tray of the dreaded hospital food. Amazing how a little sleep can whet the appetite. Suddenly I hear one of the men sitting before me clear his throat. SAC Bleeker, I believe. I look directly at him and wonder what pearls of sarcasm are going to come out of his mouth now. I know I shouldn't resent the guy too much; as SACs go, Bleeker's not too bad. But I just wish these guys would learn that if they're going to request me to work on a serial case, they're going to have to accept the fact that I work a little bit on the edge. Okay, so it's not exactly the edge; it's more like two stars to the right and straight on to morning, but that's me, and that's the way I work best. So, I resent the fact that my AD is sitting next to this guy, and is probably going to insist that I eat crow and make nice and damn it, it's gets tiring. But out of my respect for the AD, (and a mercenary desire to keep my job) I shall do what he asks. "Yes, Sir?" I ask, as I wait for the inevitable. "Agent Mulder, I just want to say __," he pauses a second, and I can feel my newly relaxed body start to tense back up true to form, "__ I want to say, congratulations. Your astute observations at the site yesterday morning led us directly to our UNSUB. "He was a service worker with the White Hills Pool & Water Service. Every victim had a pool, and every victim used that service. It's just that the service took place at various times during the summer, so it was difficult to peg it as a common link among the victims. "So, thank you, Agent Mulder. Your methods may be a little unorthodox, but you do get results. I just want you to know it would be a privilege to work on the same team with you, should the need ever arise," he concludes as he extends his hand to shake mine. I am, for one of the very few times in my life, speechless. Here I was expecting a dressing down with my direct supervisor acting as the head jeer-leader, and the complete opposite happens. God damn! We got the bastard! One thing still looms in the back of my mind. "He didn't have any other victims, did he?" I ask cautiously. "As a matter of fact, Mulder, he did," the AD says gently, but at the sight of the horror in my eyes, he quickly adds, "But we got to him before the bastard could lay a finger on the child. The child is safe and home with his family." I look at Skinner and release the breath I was unaware that I've been holding. I nod my head in gratitude at this news. Now, I can concentrate on another child, one for whom my only wish is that he gets to go home safely to his family. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ End of Part 5/6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Barbecue Series 13: Little Lovings By Susan Proto (STPteach@aol.com) Disclaimers in Part 1 Part 6/6 San Diego Medical Center San Diego, CA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Walter and I arrive at about 11:45 p.m. pacific coast time. We've been traveling all night to get here. The AD tried to convince me to take the morning flight, but I didn't want to wait any longer. We closed the case; it was time to go be with my family. I'm dead on my feet. I can usually sleep without a hitch on flights, but I couldn't close my eyes at all on this one. I guess the anticipation of seeing Dana was the main reason, but an even bigger reason was the fact that I was finally going to see Matthew. I want to talk to him. I gotta let him know it's okay to take a rest and let your body heal, but then there comes a time when it's time to kick some booty and wake up. Oh, jeeze, I keep hoping and yes, even praying occasionally, that he'll finally wake up. We walk through the doors of the ICU and I look for the family. I don't see anyone recognizable until suddenly a flash of red hair appears around the corner. I think my heart stops, but it's not Dana. It's Bill, and I'm quite sure he's not the first Scully I want to have to deal with upon my arrival at the hospital. But, deal I must. "Bill, how is he?" I ask. "He's holding his own," he replies succinctly. "Has he come out of the coma?" Walter asks anxiously. "No, he hasn't come out of the coma," Bill says wearily. "Bill, he's going to pull through this," Walter says earnestly. "Oh, he is? Well thank you Doctor Skinner for that snap prognosis. It's a real comfort to hear you say that," Bill says emotionally. "Bill, Walter didn't mean__," I begin, but before I get to complete my thought, Bill interrupts me angrily. "__What? What didn't he mean, Mulder?" Bill cries out. He then waves his hand disgustedly toward us and says, "Look, you haven't been here, so you don't know dick about what's been going on. The baby just had a seizure, okay? Now, just get the hell out of my way." We get the hell out of his way. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We follow the path Bill has just left behind and find the ICU waiting room. It looks like the remnants of a Scully family reunion. I see Dana sitting in the corner chatting quietly with Karen and Tara. Charlie is sitting and comforting Mom, while Charlie's kids, Daniel and Briana sit quietly and draw pictures on huge drawing tablets. Briana is the first to look up and notice our entrance. She doesn't say a word, but just gets up and scurries over to both Walter and me. She grabs both of our legs in the tightest bear hug I'd ever been privy to, other than her cousin Matthew's of course. I bend down and pick her up. She's getting big, and certainly not the little flyweight she was the last time I saw her. "Hey, Breeka-deeka, what's up?" "Matty's very, very hurted, Uncle Mulder," she says seriously. "And we have to pray very, very hard for him." "Yes, we do, Briana," Walter says as he leans over to give the small child a kiss on the forehead. Daniel is now standing between Walter and I and reaches out to hug both of us. I can't recall either child ever showing either of us this much physical affection before; Matty is always the one to shower me with hugs and kisses, much to his father's chagrin. I suppose the tenseness and anxiety of having their baby cousin in a hospital bed is enough to bring out the emotional neediness in any of us. I put Briana down, kneel down, and extend my arms to Daniel who readily accepts them. "Hey Daniel, how you holdin' up?" "Okay, I guess, but it's hard 'cause they won't let Briana or me in to see Matty. We're too little and have too many germs to give him," he explains dejectedly. "Yeah, that sucks," I say in understanding, "but I know you realize the doctors and nurses are just looking out for Matty, right?" I feel the youngster nod his head, but I also feel him burrow said head further into my collarbone. "Oh, Daniel, I know it's scary, but the doctors are doing everything they can to make Matty well," I say in an attempt to comfort the crying child sniffling into my shirt collar. "I know, and Grandma says we gotta pray real hard to God for him to give Matty strength to get well," he says now with more composure as he straightens up. I nod as I rise and say, "I'm going to go say hi to your folks, and Grandma, and ___." "__and Aunt Dana," says Briana with a giggle. "You're gonna kiss Aunt Dana, aren't you Uncle Mulder?" she now proclaims for everyone, and I do mean everyone, to hear. "Umm__," I hesitate for a second, just long enough for the subject of my hesitation to take a couple of steps towards me and say, "Well? Aren't you, Uncle Mulder?" "Uh-huh, " I agree quickly as I nod my head up and down like one of those little spring dolls you find on a car dashboard. And I do, much to their delight, and it's nice because it's been too long since this family has had anything to delight in. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I've just finished giving Dana and the rest of the Scully clan the PG version of the case we've just solved and then ask if it's okay for me to go see the baby. Scully walks me far enough to point out the room, but then stops and says she thinks I deserve this time alone with him. I whisper thank you and now kiss her gently on the lips, having left the passion in the waiting room. I walk into the Matty's room and find his father sitting with him. I jump a little when I see him there, since I thought he'd left the hospital earlier. I turn around and am about to leave when I hear his voice call out, "Stay." "Are you sure? Bill, I haven't traveled all this way to upset you. I can come back later if you want," I say sincerely. "No," he chokes back. He's been crying, and I suspect he's trying very hard to keep this fact from me. He's not terribly successful. "You can stay." He points to the other chair as a way of inviting me to sit down, so I do. "Do you mind if I talk to him?" I ask. "You talked with Dana when she was in her coma?" he asks. "Yes," I say, "but that's only because Melissa told me to do that. It was all her idea, and I listened to her, Bill, 'cause she cared about Dana so much. I would have done anything anyone told me to do if it meant there was a chance to bring your sister out of her coma," I confess. "Talk to him, Mulder. Bring him back to us," Bill pleads softly. I nod, and I begin to speak to one of my best buddies. "Hey Matty! It's Uncle Mulder here. I know it took me a long time to get here, and I'm really sorry about that, Buddy, but I'm here now. And I promise I won't leave until you show me you're good and ready for me to leave, okay? "I love ya, little Buddy, and a lot of people who love you are here waiting for you to wake up. You can wake up now, Matty. Anytime soon would be a good time, okay, kiddo? I'm kind of ready to play a little with you, ya know?…." I drone on for about thirty more minutes, and then I stand up and stretch. I have to go take a break. Bill left after the first five; he couldn't hold it together anymore and excused himself. I don't blame him. Matty looks too small and too fragile to be the same child who not too long ago demonstrated an alligator's jaw like grip around my legs. The child is one of the strongest two-year-olds I've ever met. (Okay, so I haven't met a whole lot of two-year-olds, but he's got to be one of the strongest, I'm sure of it!) This is so hard. Oh God, if you really are up there, you really need to take another look at what's going on down here. You can't want this child now, not yet. Please. He's got too much to do for his family to be called back to you right now. His parents waited so long for him to be born; please don't take him away from them so soon. Oh, God, please, don't take him away from me so soon. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I look at this child and grasp his hand and wonder what is preventing him from waking up. I sigh with fatigue. It's been a lousy few weeks, but the last couple of days have been the worst I've experienced in a long time. I did speak with Dr. Shapiro before I left Connecticut, and he helped to put some of this in perspective for me, but it still hurts like hell. I promised I'd call him as soon as I returned to D.C. to make an appointment. Strange, there was a time when it would have been impossible for me to follow through on that particular promise. But now? Now I almost look forward to it, because I know the guy is helping me deal with all of my life's little tragedies. It's a little scary to realize I've finally started to grow up at the age of thirty-nine. I stretch again look around the small little fishbowl they call a room. No one has yet to join me, and I don't want to leave him alone, so I find myself hunkering back down a bit into the chair. I've decided it's next to impossible to get comfortable in one of these things. How Scully does it is beyond me. I sigh out loud, and then I give the baby's hand a tender squeeze. I whisper aloud, "I'm still here, Matty. Uncle Mulder is still here, okay?" I close my eyes. I listen to the drone of the machines and their beeps and dings and the blips, and then I hear him. Not out loud, but in my head. Oh God, it has been a long couple of days, hasn't it? Please God, don't let me be losing it. Not here, not now. *It feels funny here. Not funny like when Daddy tickles me. This is the no good funny. *I think I floating, likes when Mommy puts my swimmies on and I jump in the pool to her. But I don't think I swimming. Nah, there's no pool here. But my face is pusht-ed down in the water. *Mommy? I don't likes my face in the water. I wants to go out now. I don't likes playing here. Mommy, pick me up. Mommy? *I know you're here, Unc-key Mulduh," his voice says directly to me. "Grandma Maggie was here too. I hears her say ''Shah, shah, shah" a lot to Mommy. She tells Daddy I be fine; I just too tired to fights the germs right now, that's all. *You knows what? Sometimes Auntie Dana talks to me. She told me when she was sleeping for a long time in the hospital, you talked to her a lots. So, that's why she be reading me from my books and singing me songs from my tapes. *I loves Auntie Dana a lot, Unc-Key Mulduh, but she don't sing too good.* I feel myself chuckle out loud at that. I don't know if I'll ever get over my Scully's rendition of 'Joy to the World.' Then I hear Matty continue talking in my head. *Unc-key Charlie and Auntie Karen camed before, too. But no Daniel and Briana," he sighs with sadness. "Daddy cried a lot when they camed. So did Grandma and Auntie Dana. *You don't cry like Auntie Dana and Mommy and Grandma. You just talks to me. You just likes to be with me, like when I visits Grandma in Balt-e-more. I likes visiting Grandma there. She buys me toys, and then I gets to play with them with you, Unc-key Mulduh.* I smile at this. "I like playing with you too, Matty. C'mon, Little Buddy, wake up so we can play some more," I plead aloud. *Unc-key Mulduh? It's dark here, and I don't want to stay here no more. You can pick me up now, okay? I don't wants to stay here no more. I afraid it's gonna get all crazy and jumpy again like before. I ready to go outta here now. Hey, Unc-key ___.* What, Matty? What is it? "Mmm." I jump up and look immediately inside the crib. I swear I just heard something. I swear I did. "Matty?" "Mmmm." It is him. Oh, dear God, thank you! Thank you! "C'mon, Matty, it's time to wake up now. Unc-key Mulder is waiting to play, but you gotta wake up. C'mon, big guy, wake up now!" "Mmmmwwwaaahhhhh!!" he cries out. Oh, jeeze, he's crying. He's crying! It's like God damned music to my ears! "Okay, Matty, it's okay, I'm gonna get your mom and dad, hang in there big guy!" I call out, but step dead in my tracks when I hear his speak. "Wanna play, Unc-key Mulduh," he cries out. I walk over to the side of the crib and lean over and give him the biggest, fattest, juiciest kiss on his forehead possible. "Yeah, Buddy, I want to play with you too. But I think if I ever hope to get into this family officially, I'd better share the news that you have come back to us sweetheart, okay?" "'kay, Unc-key Mulduh," he now replies with amazing calm, considering he's been comatose for the last couple of days. Oh God, thank you for this. He's back. Totally and completely, he's back. "I love you, Matty. I love you forever and ever, you know that, doncha?" He nods and I see he's already tired from our short conversation. "Hold on Matty, try to stay awake long enough to show everyone you woke up, okay?" The little guy nods and I know (from personal experience, of course) just how hard it is for him to stay awake, but stay awake he does. Then again the whooping and hollering that is going on at the moment can more than likely wake up all of the Scully Ancestors as well. But that's okay, 'cause everyone should be here to welcome this child back. Welcome home, Matty. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ End of Part 6/6 Please send comments, feedback, CyberChocolate to: STPteach@aol.com