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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But saying it-- it feels different. There's a part of her, she thinks, that has always feared admitting her feelings. And another part of her that's faintly, irrationally superstitious; but surely they're past the point of worrying, there. She's already lost him and been lucky enough to find him again.
"But you deserve to hear it."
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It doesn't actually matter, this theoretical world that never was. He'd been taken and tortured for samples, and she'd been tortured, too, if in a different way. That time will never come back, and he might always regret it, but they're here now. And
"Well," he points out, tapping his fingers idly on her belly, "you have plenty of time now. Anything you want to get off your chest, Scully?"
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But after everything-- he deserves better than the assumption, the hint of it.
"I love you," she says, before she loses her nerve. "More than I know what to do with. I thought-- I spent so long trying to understand how I could go on without you."
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And since she's been willing to say it, the whole thing, the exact phrase they've skirted around for years of their lives, he rewards her in turn. "You know what I thought when you first came down to the basement, Scully? Why couldn't they have found an ugly spy? Instead, they found a genius with great legs and banished her to my office.
"I'm not going to lie to you and say I loved you even then, but it wasn't that long after." He'd been drawn to her back then, and maybe that wasn't too far off. Fascination turning to love, given time and a few well-placed near-death experiences. More seriously, his gaze turning intent: "I'd say it every day if I thought you'd want that. I love you. I love you, and the thought of getting back to you was the only thing keeping me alive some days."
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But the world doesn't end. Mulder doesn't disappear.
His words make a fresh round of tears well up, and she sniffles. Not the demure, half-choked polite sniffs from before but a godawful, just-on-the-wrong-side-of-controlled, wet snort. If she were any less a master of ironclad self-control, she'd be wailing. She feels like her heart could break, or burst-- but below that she feels, miraculously, safe. Mulder is one of the only people left who she can trust will put her back together if she falls apart.
"I'm sorry-- everything sets me off these days," she murmurs, scrubbing at her eyes with a sleeve.
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Telling her the kinds of things he's always longed to, how much he loves her and all the ways he does, probably doesn't help. Mulder pecks her head, trying for levity. "Want a tissue, or is my shirt good?"
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"I knew it was going to happen but I still wasn't ready for it," she admits, with another sniffle. "And today has been--"
A lot. A lot.
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Even if it has been, though, it won't be the future. Scully's not going to have reason to weep, from here on out; however close Mulder's allowed to be, he'll be. Theirs might be a lopsided little family, a secretive one, but William's going to grow up with both of them ready to do anything they have to for him. "See, this is why I only tell you I love you on special occasions."
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God, she loves him. If she made herself say it a thousand times it would still feel like an understatement.
"Holidays are special occasions." She's crying, and she's laughing a little, an odd sound like a hiccup. "Not near-death experiences."
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"This is a holiday," he insists, because making her laugh in the middle of a crying jag might be the only real way to deal with anything. They've both come through so much, all for this moment. "We'll celebrate it every year from here on out: Mulder Comes Home Day. There'll be an exchange of gifts in the traditional location, my living room. You and me and William and the fish. And then we'll watch Manos: The Hands of Fate on TV."
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The crying part, that she's less enamored with, but right now she lets herself sob and laugh against him, letting it out.
"And eat soup and dumplings?"
She'll call this a holy day, easily. They could fill a calendar with remembrances-- the day he first called her a spy, the months she spent wasting away, the moment they first kissed. The day she asked him to give her a child and the day he agreed. When he was taken, and when he returned, and when he was resurrected; there are dark days, after all, fasts and solemn remembrances.
"I like it," she mumbles, looking up at him, red-eyed but somehow still beaming. "You can say it more often than that, though."
She'll try not to cry every single time.
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Of course, that assumes they can say it every day without getting tired of it - or worse, without having to stop for Scully to sob into his chest. His fingers play with the hair at the nape of her neck. "Think you can stand a bad movie tonight? Or should we move straight to the part where I try to sweet-talk you into bed with me?"
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The flood of tears is finally abating, thank God. She rests her head against him with a little sigh. Maybe she's not quite ready to say it every day, but she's determined not to let him forget she loves him.
"I like the idea of a movie. I can't swear I won't doze off."
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This shirt needs a wash, thanks to the snot. He pulls it off as he walks away toward the bedroom, balling it up so he can sink a basket in his laundry hamper. When he comes back, it's dressed, and he takes the opportunity to move the food out of the way, too. "You want anything? Don't move a muscle, I'll get you whatever you need."
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"I need you to come back," she says with a coy smile. "But... maybe some water."
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The glass, he hands to her, before he goes in search of his videotapes. They're all neatly lined up, more neatly than if he was the one keeping track of them, and eventually, he pulls the one he wants. Pop it in the VCR, grab the remote, and they're in business.
"I'm back," he tells her, sliding his arms around her as he sits back down on the couch. "Did you miss me?"
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"Terribly," she says, snuggling in, curling around his arm. She presses a kiss to whatever bit of him she can most easily reach, and decides it's worth another.
"I love you."
He's waited so long to hear it at all, and she did probably ruin that shirt.
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But she's not crying, and if he doesn't make too big a deal about it, maybe she won't start again. At some point, she's going to give herself a headache.
He can't resist answering, though, rewarding her just as the Mystery Science Theater 3000 theme song starts playing. (Who, after all, would bother watching Manos without a few robots?) Mulder kisses her forehead. "I love you, too, Scully."
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With a soft sigh she relaxes against him, and apart from the prolonged crying jag that's left her eyes faintly itchy, everything in the world is perfect.
"This is a really bad movie," she murmurs after a bit, quietly delighted.
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"Terrible," he agrees. He's slumped down some, his feet on the coffee table, and onscreen, Torgo's theme music plays. "One of the worst I've ever seen, if you want to know."
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"How many times did you watch Plan 9?"
Maybe they could get married. Maybe it'd be enough, to live like this-- to have him come home to her and William day after day, to give up mystery for stability. Right now-- drowsy and content, worn out with tears and overwhelmed with relief-- it seems possible. (She knows herself, though; she's too stubborn and curious not to want to keep her hand in.)
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Said like a come-on, possibly because it is a come-on. This is so comfortable, so like before the abduction - only better, he thinks, because there's no real sense of secrecy tonight. She's here, she'll stay here, and anyone who's surprised by that can direct their commentary to the nearest hole in the ground. It's enough to make him want to say stay, move in - or I'll move in with you, or we'll find a new place -
It'll look different tomorrow, probably, but right now, he wants to believe.
I could swear I already tagged this oops
"No double feature tonight," she decides. One bad movie is bad enough. But in its way it's a counter come-on-- because after this she plans to let him take her to bed, and while it's probably not the best way to be subtle about William's parentage, she's determined to spend as many nights together as they can get away with, for the foreseeable future.
"But I could fall asleep watching it some other time," she teases.
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Will he even have to deal with that? Imagine Scully with an insomniac baby, woken repeatedly out of a dead sleep by cries of boredom - and Mulder living half an hour away, unaware that his late-night restlessness is playing havoc in a new generation. Moving closer wouldn't help. Moving in would blow their cover.
It's a strange feeling, to realize just how much distance comes with the title of Secret Father Of A Child.
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But Mulder isn't wrong; it'll be harder to deal with, on her own, if he's not a good sleeper. She doesn't really care-- no matter what, she'll love him, she'll manage-- but it's strange to imagine single motherhood in this latest set of changed circumstances. When he's close, but kept at arm's length.
"Tomorrow," she hazards, "you can come see the sonograms. If you want. I have them at home."
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