Dana Katherine Scully (
faithfulskeptic) wrote in
what_wings_dare2022-09-09 06:57 pm
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🅧 Please explain to me the scientific nature of 'the whammy'

[ n a m e ; ] | Dana Katherine Scully |
[ c a n o n ; ] | The X-Files |
[ g a m e ; ] | spicy times in ![]() |
{ ACTION / NETWORK / VOICE / WHATEVER WELCOME }
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(Maybe, she tells herself, he's worried about having nightmares. He's never slept easily as long as she's known him, and she remembers the aftermath of her own abduction--)
(Maybe he doesn't want to touch her. But then, he's touching her now. Uncertain, uneasy, but he's here.)
"I did downgrade the cable package," she says, leaning on teasing again because she's not sure how to broach anything serious. But the longer they don't, the less reasonable it feels.
"Mulder-- I know it's... There's a lot you've missed, and it must be so overwhelming. We can take things as slowly as you need. But when you're ready-- I guess, I just want to say I'm here to help. Whatever you need."
It sounds so trite she can't help wincing.
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Help me, he wants to say. Tell me that the abduction didn't change anything that mattered. He swallows, reaching up to touch her cheek. She's still soft, softer, even - pregnancy has taken away some of the sharpness of her face's angles. She reminds him of the years before her cancer, how round her cheeks were then.
"Tell me everything." He can't keep a strange sort of grief out of his voice. "How you got to...this point."
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"By the time I realized you were in danger in Oregon it was too late," she says, because to her it seems the obvious place to start. "Those first days are a bit of a blur. There was a task force-- Agent Doggett was assigned to lead. I, uh. Didn't trust him at first. Skinner and I followed some leads on our own but--"
She swallows hard. "Obviously it wasn't you. The Bureau decided, after finding out about your neurological issue, the matter was as good as closed."
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Those first few days are a bit of a blur, she says, and now he understands. She was upset - understandably, he remembers how manic he was after her abduction - and things went some kind of way with Agent Doggett, and now she's going to have a baby. Mulder will play the role of my friend, Mulder, the way he had for Emily, and that'll have to be enough for him.
She hasn't said it, of course, but he doesn't think Scully would. He's only recently back from the dead, and whatever else they aren't, they're still friends. She wouldn't want to hurt him. Explaining through euphemism and allusion is somehow a Scully thing, for all she's plainspoken about science; when feelings get involved, she guards every word a little more carefully.
There's something strangely comforting about the fact that it might have been his little swimmers that were the problem, not her ova. He hopes she's taken some solace from it; infertility had been such a crushing blow for her.
"Tell me about Agent Doggett," he says, and the doorbell rings. That's the food, probably, and a great excuse to distance himself from the pain that the truth's brought with it. He gets up to pay, then to bring the brown paper bag over to the coffee table. He doesn't believe in standing on ceremony - and isn't in the mood to wash dishes - but it feels like he should give her something nicer to eat out of than a takeout carton. Blame the fact that she's pregnant. "I don't remember his name. Want a plate? Or a bowl?"
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"John," she supplies, shifting to sit up a little more so she stands a chance of reaching the table. "He's a good agent. Ah-- after the task force he was assigned to the X-Files. I thought it was the best chance I had to keep looking for you. To keep working."
Of course she'd had moments of doubt and despair but in those months she always believed they'd find him.
And then they did-- one of the worst moments of her life.
"I'm fine with the carton. Are there dumplings?" No, she didn't order those, but stealing Mulder's food is a small pleasure she'd never thought she'd have again.
"It's been... different. John isn't always open to... unusual explanations. I find myself trying to figure out what you'd think of the cases we're called in on."
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Ordering them had been second nature, a long-ingrained habit along with his beef lo mein. Scully likes them, but won't ask for them, and if he gets them fried, she doesn't like them as much; his private theory is that she thinks the frying oil will make her fat, as though she's not the most beautiful woman in the world exactly the way she is. Her diets have never made any sense to him, but he still finds himself deferring to the principles behind them occasionally, like ordering the steamed dumplings because he knows on some level that they'll share. They might be silly diets, but they belong to Scully, and it's starting to look like that kind of thoughtfulness is all that's left now.
He pulls out a pair of chopsticks and starts picking at his food, unsure how to take the idea of cases we're called in on. What's his place on the X-files going to look like now? He doesn't really have one, under the circumstances; she has a new partner. "Any good ones?"
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He probably won't like how dangerous some of it has been. The people of that little town trying to put their parasitic God into her spine. John following Mulder's trail to the soul eater.
"I'll try to get some files for you, when you're ready." When he's ready to come back. If he wants to come back. If they can figure out the paperwork.
She leans over to take a dumpling, the familiar act less graceful with her stomach in the way.
He'll want to get back to the work, won't he? Maybe it's too much to hope he can work with John a while-- she'll need to take leave for the baby.
"I can't-- you're going to have to ask Skinner about finding you." His body. She can't even say that. "And the rest you know, I think," she rushes to add, before memories of Mulder, lifeless and lost, take away any slim chance she'll be able to eat.
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This, of course, is a mimed outline of her belly on his own lean frame. The elephant in the room. The thing they've been talking around ever since he woke up in the hospital.
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She stops short a moment, unsure of his tone, but fortunately has the excuse of chewing a dumpling to buy a moment to answer.
"How are you feeling about it?"
The question is quiet, a little hesitant.
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She'll have a little Doggett to love and raise, and he'll be a doting uncle on the sidelines. It's more than he can stand to think about, but asking questions that hurt him is an especial talent of his. "Have you thought about marriage? Or are you going to do things the modern way?"
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It's not until he asks about marriage that it occurs to her-- possibly-- that they've been having two separate conversations.
(It wouldn't be completely shocking if he was asking to marry her on the spot. But that's not the way he's asking-- he's asking what she thought before he came back, when it's self evident to her that she'd been thinking of herself as a widow, in every way that matters.)
"Are... you thinking about marriage?"
This is not the gentlest way she could respond, but honestly she's too bemused to know what to say.
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Mulder's chewing on a particularly stringy piece of beef, and for a brief, idiotic moment, he wonders if there are still holes in his molars. He's going to have to hit the dentist at some point, it's been more than six months, and maybe their X-rays could pick up the spots where he was drilled. It'd be nice to have some proof left from his ordeal, something that shows he didn't spend nearly a year hallucinating the most physically painful experiences he's ever survived. And then Scully answers his question with a question, and his chest aches with it, pulled back from mental tangents to the reality of her situation.
"Who would I marry?" he asks, unable to keep a morose edge out of his words.
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She shuts her eyes and lifts her chin, taking a calming breath, hand over her belly in an unconsciously protective way.
"Mulder, whose baby do you think I'm having?"
She had a whole speech half on the tip of her tongue-- I don't want you to feel pressured, I know this isn't what you agreed to, but you're the one who told me not to give up on miracles. I wanted to believe you'd be happy about it for yourself.
But all of that follows on the assumption that he realizes he's the father.
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And of everything she could say, he doesn't expect the question he gets. Mulder goes very still, staring at her while an ad for Ponderosa Steakhouse plays in the background. The implication is obvious, but the timing - well, it barely works, if it works at all.
But it could be. It'd be a miracle, but maybe -
"Whose baby are you having, Scully?" he asks gruffly, his throat already going tight. He needs to hear it from her. He needs to know, in no uncertain terms.
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"That's why I was sick-- before you left. You were already-- gone." Taken. Lost. "By the time I got the results."
By now, tears are streaming down her face. It's not worth trying to hold it back; she sniffles, lifts the back of her hand to scrub at her face.
"How could there be anyone else?" Even the idea of it is too terrible to consider.
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"A year's a long time," he murmurs, a lump in his throat. For the first time, he really lets his gaze settle on her stomach, a hand twitching like he can't decide whether he has any right to touch. "And you're your own woman, Scully, I couldn't ask you to wait for me."
Except that he had, somehow. The child growing inside her ended up being the messenger. Part of me is still here. No matter what else happens, I'll never truly leave you. She'd waited, wanting to believe, and she's here now - and he is a colossal jackass.
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"I missed you so much," she gasps, the words soaked with raw grief. Blindly she reaches for his arm, fingers closing around his wrist to drag his hand down to her belly.
"I thought he was all I'd ever have of you."
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He's real, is what he means. He's a real child in there, who really belongs to a sobbing woman and her wet-eyed, staring lover, a child born of miracles. He's the closest Mulder's ever gotten to believing in God - this very moment, feeling the vague outline of baby underneath what he assumes is the latest in stylish maternity wear. I did this. I made this happen. I'm sorry your mother's crying so hard - I didn't mean to do that. You can feel the vibrations, can't you? Has she cried like this the whole time? Promise me she hasn't cried like this the whole time.
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"Our son," she affirms. It's smaller and desperate than she wants it to sound, her fingers still wrapped around his arm like she's afraid he'll pull away.
Please want this as much as I do, she prays silently. As if she has the right to ask for more than the myriad gifts she's been given-- but she wants so badly for it to be true. When she'd asked him to help her have a baby, she hadn't asked him to be a father, not exactly; but she'd always hoped deep down--
Not even so deep down, really.
"Your son," she repeats, just a whisper. It's half a secret-- though she expects most people have guessed it, even if she won't say. But he deserves to hear it said aloud.
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With effort, he looks up at her again, and he can't bring himself to do anything about the tears that have made paths down his cheeks. He's never been ashamed of crying in front of Scully, and he's not about to start now. "Who knows?"
Everyone knows about the baby, at this point; it's unavoidable. But the baby's origins, its unwitting father, is something else. Has she told people? How much of a secret is he?
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The baby stirs and shifts, indistinct but unquestionably present. Someday she'll tell him how she tried to keep him present-- playing old, saved voicemails so the baby could hear the echo of his father; telling stories late at night when she couldn't sleep. But for now this is enough. It's everything.
"I expect a lot have guessed. No one's dared to ask."
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He tries again, pulling her closer in a one-armed hug. He's not letting go of the baby, or the beginnings of the baby; his hand's restless on her stomach, though, shifting between resting flat and his palm lifting unconsciously, until only his fingertips are touching her. Some instinctive part of him is ready to dribble. I'm going to buy you a basketball. And a ball and glove for catch. A football, a baseball bat, a tennis racket - we're going to try out everything, just to see what you like. I'm going to teach you to swim. We'll go running - "What does your mother think of all of this?"
Mrs. Scully must know; he remembers a look she gave him, years ago now, when Scully was comatose and the doctors didn't have much hope, even if Melissa swore up and down she could feel her soul in there. She's a smart woman, Scully's mother, and she saw it even then. When her daughter came home, partnerless and pregnant, she must have guessed how half of it happened.
Which makes her smarter than me. But it leaves him uncertain still, wondering whether he's going to be welcomed back with open arms or an accusatory glare. He couldn't blame anyone for the latter.
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"I'm sure Skinner knows. And John must have guessed." Mulder, his territorial mistrust aside, knows how hard it is to keep secrets in their basement office.
She threads her hand into his to keep it close. Tomorrow she'll pull out the imaging and dig up a stethoscope to hear the tiny heartbeat; for now she just wants him close to her.
"My mom misses you. She knows-- I mean. I told her about the IVF. After, when it didn't work, and I think she knew..." she shakes her head a little. "When I told her I was pregnant-- I didn't have to say it."
She'd seen the understanding, the mingled joy and horror, on her mother's face.
Putting the memory aside, she presses her cheek against his arm.
"Since--" she pauses, starts over. "We haven't talked about it since the funeral. But I know she'll be so glad to see you."
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Maggie Scully, on the other hand, felt like a less predictable reaction. He always feels like the tagalong neighbor kid when he sees her; it's impossible not to default to calling her Mrs. Scully and hoping vaguely that he'll be invited to dinner rather than sent home. She's never been anything but kind to him, welcoming even when her own son would have rather seen him out of the picture, but that doesn't mean she'd appreciate his knocking Scully up and disappearing into the night.
But it soothes something in him, to know he's not persona non grata in the Scully family. (The part of the Scully family that matters to him, anyway. Who knows what Bill thinks, and more importantly, who cares? And it's not like he has more than a passing familiarity with Charlie Scully's existence.) He doesn't have anyone to offer this kid, only stories of people who died long before his conception. Scully's family will have to be everything to him - and it'll be easier, better, if they're still willing to be something to Mulder, too.
"Call her tomorrow," he says quietly, before he can change his mind. "I don't know how soon they're going to let me back at the files, even with an unbelievably good bill of health. So if you want to do...I don't know, baby stuff..."
Do they have to buy things for it? Does he have to sign paperwork? Under better circumstances, he would have had time to figure this out.
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"We'll call together. I know you're eager to get back to work, but even with a clean bill of health, you'll need time to adjust." That's not much of an argument. With a slight frown, she amends it. "I need time. There's plenty to stay busy with here."
She lifts their joined hands slightly to pat her stomach. She's not above using this distraction to get her way.
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I could swear I already tagged this oops
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