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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She's quiet a moment, trying to figure out where he's gone with that.
"Bernard?"
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The scolding is not particularly convincing because she's laughing, swatting lightly at his arm.
"I guess it's better than Melvin."
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"We couldn't do that. And going for three middle names is too much." Worse than William William.
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Absolutely not, and they both know it. But it does bring up the problem of the fact that there isn't really anyone else in his life worth naming a kid after. At that point, they're back to what sounds good, and Mulder's not really sure. Something boring, he guesses - Frank or George or Bill or Tom, anything but Sue.
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"I thought about William Fox." It's a slightly uneasy admission. William after him is subtle, Fox would have left no doubt. With him gone, there might have been plausible deniability-- she could've just been honoring a close friend, her lost partner. But now-- well, it feels obvious.
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And anyway, even as a middle name, Ringo's too much.
"William Fox," he repeats softly, thinking about it. It's not nearly as bad as Fox William, that's for sure, and there'd be no mixing the two of them up. But putting Fox anywhere in there is going to make everyone's ears prick up. William was her father's name, and it's a hell of a lot less embarrassing than sticking the kid with Ahab; there's a reason to use it that has nothing to do with him.
Which, he has to admit, gives new shine to the possibility of getting the middle name to himself. It's a bad idea, not least because he doesn't even like his name, but it's an irrefutable connection to him. He shouldn't want that. He can't put Scully's career in jeopardy that way. "We'd have to give up the game if we did that."
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"It's a little obvious." Which-- though it could cause problems-- is part of what she liked about it, before. Plausibly a tribute, but almost explicitly a statement of what they'd shared. Her only real worry was that it meant she was putting too much of her grief on their son.
Now, there's no question of grief; but there's no reason she'd need to commemorate him.
"Reynard?" she suggests, tone teasing, thinking of various cover identities and pseudonyms through the years.
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Dana Carvey's still relevant, they could still get away with it. No need to put Mulder into the name at all.
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"We'll have to keep looking. We could get a name book to look through."
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(None of the other people who've helped her-- Skinner, of course, and John, much as Mulder doesn't want to hear that-- feel quite right. She's sure they'd be touched, but it would be awkward.)
"We'll need something unimportant to argue about, after all."
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But she's right. They'll figure it out eventually, or they won't. "Maybe when we see him, we'll be hit with inspiration."
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The thought fills her again with a swell of giddiness-- that William will have the chance to meet his father after all, even if they're keeping it more or less on the down-low.
"Or we'll call him William P., for Placeholder."
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But for now, it's all a moot point. He reaches for the remote and flicks off the VCR and TV in quick succession; whatever interest he had in filling the awkward spaces with background noise has evaporated. Things are less awkward now, if still uncertain in places. Everything he needs to know - well, for this very minute, anyway - has been laid out before him, and all of it feels right.
He's left with a Pandora's box worth of emotions: amidst the uncertainty, beside his own concerns with what kind of father he can and will be, there's hope. And that's what he has to hold onto right now. (That, and the fact that he's gotten away without having to explain Great-Grandpa Wolf.) Mulder hefts himself to his feet and holds out a hand to Scully. "On a scale one to ten, how bad is getting off this couch?"
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(She's putting Great-Grandpa Wolf in a pocket; she doesn't need him to tell her a story right now, but it's curious enough to revisit sometime. Now that they have time for untold stories and unasked questions. Now that they have each other, again.)
"Maybe a five. It's not so bad as long as it's not up and down over and over." No standing ovations in her future. She's glad for his hand, though, letting him help her more than she normally would.
"Are you throwing me out?"
She can only stand to make the joke because she's confident he isn't.
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"Actually," he tells her, in just the same tone she asked him, "I was planning on taking you into the other room and ravishing you - but I could show you the door, if you really wanted me to."
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She can't keep her smile under wraps, though. Every time she looks at him-- maybe it's the hormones, or maybe it's having lost and found him again. But she's radiantly, impossibly in love with him.
So she steps closer, though she can't get as close as she used to, sliding her hand into his.
"I think I like your plan, though."
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Tempting as it is to try sweeping her up into his arms, he doesn't. If he managed to drop her in this state, he'd never forgive himself. Instead, once they're in there, he gives her another long, heated look. "You're going to have to tell me what the rules are here."
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"It's going to be some trial and error. It should be safe-- but I'm not sure what's going to be comfortable."
But even that gentle kiss is enough to have her flushed, eyes dark and wide. She starts to unbutton her shirt.
"It doesn't make you uncomfortable?"
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"It's a new look," he tells her, sliding the fabric back from her shoulders, "but I have to say, Scully, it works for you."
Even if it didn't, he thinks he'd still want her right now. Any way he can get closer to her, he'll take.
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God, she loves him.
"I can't lay on my back. On my side might be best," she reasons. "Kiss me again."
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Tomorrow, things will probably look worse. But tonight, he can believe in just about anything, most of all Scully.
With a little laugh, he dips his head down, kissing her soundly. She tastes like Chinese food, familiarly so, and his arms slide around her so he can unhook her bra. Muscle memory's taking over, a hand sliding down her bare back, giving her ass a little squeeze. They're both still wearing entirely too many layers, but once his mouth is on hers, he's loath to move away again, even just to pull off his shirt.
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She chuckles as he grabs her ass, incorrigible man. God, she missed him. It's hard to feel desirable, as heavily pregnant as she is-- she feels beautiful, when she looks at herself, but it's in a different way; admirable like a powerful creature, a miraculous biological machine, a force of nature. But to be wanted is something else, and to be wanted by Mulder--
That has become a part of her, more integral than she could have guessed, grieved in silence when he was taken.
"I missed you," she murmurs, unnecessarily, because it's almost as good as saying I love you.
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