Title: COUNTERBALANCE Author: Jean Robinson (jeanrobinson@yahoo.com) Disclaimer: Characters from the X-Files are the property of Ten Thirteen Productions and the Fox Television Network. No infringement is intended. Rating: R Classification: S, A Archive: Please ask permission. Spoilers: Up through "Orison." Summary: When the world is turned upside down, you grab on to anything to maintain your equilibrium. Feedback: Adored at jeanrobinson@yahoo.com Author's notes at the end ***************************** COUNTERBALANCE (1/5) By Jean Robinson If he'd been a minute later coming back to the office after lunch, he would have missed it the first time it happened. Or, rather, the first time he noticed anything peculiar. But the rare trip outside the confines of the Hoover Building to fetch a turkey club that didn't taste like old plastic wrap and coffee that didn't taste like lukewarm engine oil timed itself perfectly, and Walter Skinner found himself six paces behind Fox Mulder and Dana Scully, who, if the grease-spotted white bags they clutched were any indication, had just completed a similar errand. The pair walked side by side, less than a foot apart; the days when little Agent Scully had scuttled along in "Spooky" Mulder's wake were so far in the past Skinner could barely bring them to mind anymore. Just before the turn for the basement stairs, Scully stumbled. At least, that's what Skinner thought at the time. After all, the woman habitually wore three and a half inch heels, ridiculous when one considered her profession so often involved chasing people over rough surfaces or standing still for hours on unforgiving cement floors. The fine black leather pumps she wore that day were no exception to the rule. And he was sure that's what Scully and Mulder both thought when she wobbled and pitched sideways suddenly, falling against her partner. Mulder put out a steadying arm, tipped her upright and waited for her to regain her balance before resuming his pace again. Skinner couldn't hear their conversation above the dull roar of voices and foot traffic resounding through the lunchtime-crowded lobby, but he could read their body English well enough to imagine it. Mulder: You okay, Scully? Scully: I'm fine. Mulder: I warned you about drinking on the job and wearing those heels. Scully: I'm warning you to quit while you're ahead. Or words to that effect. Only later, much later, when Skinner was reviewing the incident again and again in his mind, like a videotape on a continuous playback loop, would it jell that this was indeed the starting point. The beginning of the end, so to speak. Scully had lost her balance, but she hadn't really stumbled. He'd been directly behind her, staring at her legs and marveling at her atrociously inappropriate footwear, and she definitely hadn't tripped. There was nothing on the polished marble floor of the Bureau lobby to warrant a misstep, no sticky wad of gum, no errant scrap of paper, no chipped tile lurking to snag an unwary foot and wrench an unsuspecting ankle. She'd just. . . fallen. But Skinner didn't think about it then. And he didn't think about it two weeks later, when he sat with his two wayward charges, six other agents and another Assistant Director in a conference room at a meeting. A long meeting. A very long, drawn-out, excruciatingly dull meeting. One that should have ended forty-five minutes earlier, but looked as though it would drag on for another hour. Skinner wasn't the only one succumbing to the soporific atmosphere; Mulder was fighting a valiant but losing battle with his eyelids and Scully had discreetly yawned behind her cupped hand at least three times in the last fifteen minutes alone. And still Agent Parkins droned on and on and on about his latest findings regarding. . . regarding. . . Skinner suddenly realized he couldn't even remember the original purpose behind the late-afternoon gathering, let alone why Mulder and Scully were in attendance. Which meant it was long past time to put an end to this farce. "And your conclusion, Agent Parkins?" Skinner asked harshly. Both Mulder and the agent next to him jumped noticeably at the sound of a new voice. Startled by the interruption, Parkins stammered to a semi-incoherent halt. The instant he stopped speaking, the table came alive; everyone began standing, stretching, talking and generally making preparations to get the hell out of Dodge. Mulder was never good in lengthy meetings; the inquisitive little boy inside him simply couldn't stand to be contained for any length of time. Cool and collected for hours on end when interrogating suspects, but give him a roomful of colleagues and Mulder exhibited more nervous tics than anyone Skinner had ever met. Now the man fairly leaped to his feet and bolted for the door, desperate to escape and expend an afternoon's worth of bottled energy. Scully remained seated, calmly gathering her notes, unconcerned about Mulder's hasty retreat. She stood up, reached for her folder. . . and sat back down abruptly, an oddly blank expression settling over her face like a thin veil. "Agent Scully?" Skinner asked. Almost everyone else had fled, although Parkins and his A.D. still lingered in the doorway arguing about something. Scully started to speak, then leaned forward, resting her elbow on the table and her forehead against her closed fist. "Agent Scully, are you all right?" She immediately sat up straight again, dropping her hand. "Yes, sir. I'm fine." "Are you sure?" Because she didn't look fine at all. She looked like the "I'm Fine" Scully of her cancer days, when Mulder wanted to strangle her every time she uttered those defensive words with colorless lips, an expression of extreme defiance in her haunted, washed-out eyes and tiny smears of blood from her latest nosebleed still painting a macabre decoration on her upper lip. Scully seemed to shake herself. "Yes, sir." She rose to her feet again, and did indeed appear to be fine, all traces of whatever malaise had momentarily gripped her gone. "It was a long meeting." "Yes, it was." He watched as she retrieved her file and walked away, moving confidently and easily on those damn heels. Sure. Just a long meeting, the kind that made anyone's head hurt or made them woozy from standing up too fast after being seated for such an extended period of time. Nothing more. The third time brought it all home in a spectacular fashion. A week later he was seated at his desk, going over the latest work of fiction, otherwise known as Mulder's version of an acceptable expense report. Scully and Mulder sat across from him, awaiting the verdict. Scully sat impassively, hands folded, while her partner fidgeted sullenly, knowing the ax would soon fall but not knowing how much damage the blade would inflict this time. "Agent Mulder, you are aware that you have a departmental budget?" Mulder squirmed. "Yes." "And that you do not have carte blanche to exploit this budget?" "Everything on there is a legitimate expense," he argued. Skinner dropped the report and adopted an expression of punctiliously polite disbelief. "Oh, really, Agent Mulder? When, exactly, did fifty pounds of almond and peanut M&M's become a legitimate expense?" Mulder resumed wriggling, looking for all the world like a kindergartner in dire need of a bathroom. "The suspect claimed that the combination of the protein in the nuts and the theobromine in chocolate enhanced her psychic abilities. The purchase was required to test the validity of her allegation." "I see." Skinner made a note on the report. "And the fact that your suspect was an extremely overweight woman who had been hospitalized four times in the last year for eating disorders did not cause you any concern?" Mulder's sulky look intensified while Scully sat motionless, her expression serious yet unreadable. She seemed to have ceased breathing. "She'd had visions of murders," Mulder defended himself almost petulantly. "Murders that had taken place." "Well-publicized murders. Ones for which the police chief had already been chastised for leaking information to the press." Skinner cut off Mulder's next words with a raised hand. "I'm not going to continue this discussion, Agent Mulder. The M&M's are out. If you want to indulge your suspect's penchant for junk food, you'll do it on your own dime. That's all." Both of them stood up. Mulder appeared ready to argue further, but Scully arrested him with a slight touch on his arm and an even slighter shake of her head. Mulder contented himself with favoring his boss with one final glare and stalked out, not bothering to wait to see if Scully followed or not. For a second, she didn't. Skinner wondered if she would say anything, offer any defense or excuse for Mulder's behavior, but she remained silent. Perhaps she knew there was no excuse; her partner's single-minded search for the truth had brought her under Skinner's wrath before and it would undoubtedly do so again in the future. It was clear from her posture that all of the points he'd just imparted to Mulder had already been addressed by the more pragmatic half of the X-Files team prior to the meeting, to no avail. Not for the first time, he wondered when Dana Scully would simply call it quits and leave Mulder, the Bureau and the whole circus behind and start a normal life, one that didn't revolve around conspiracies, aliens, the living dead, and pathetically lonely fat psychic housewives. "Did you have something else to discuss with me, Agent Scully?" he inquired, because she was still standing there in front of his desk, staring pensively at the door through which her partner had so hastily exited. "No, sir." She turned and took three brisk steps toward the same door, then halted for no reason he could discern. "Agent?" Instead of answering, Scully put a hand to her temple and closed her eyes, as if she'd suddenly developed a colossal migraine. Skinner stood up and came around his desk, alarmed. "Scully? Are you all. . ." He was still shaping his mouth around the final word of the question when her knees buckled and she collapsed into his arms in a dead faint. Skinner caught her more by reflex than intent, so surprised by her unexpected action that he nearly dropped her. Scully sagged bonelessly against him and he jigged back a step before he could maneuver an arm under her legs and scoop her up. Tilting her body toward him to allow her lolling head to rest against his chest instead of dangling awkwardly over his arm, he rapidly crossed the room and deposited her on his couch. At first glance, she seemed to be breathing normally, which he took to be a marginally encouraging sign. She was also frighteningly pale and showed no signs of recovering, which negated any comfort caused by her steady inhalations and exhalations. His mind automatically brought up the first aid basics learned in Vietnam; he tucked a pillow under her feet to elevate them. What else, what else. More kernels of knowledge came floating back, pushing away the darker thoughts about what this inexplicable development could mean. He stripped off his jacket and draped it over her bare legs to keep her warm; Scully had been wearing skirts more frequently as of late. He was reaching for her suit jacket buttons to loosen the garment to assure unimpeded respiration when a voice behind him exclaimed, "Scully!" in astonishment. Mulder. Apparently he'd finally come in search of his absent better half, retracing his steps until they led him right back to the last place he'd seen her. Skinner wasn't sure if it was the sight of his motionless partner stretched out on the leather cushions or that of his superior kneeling by her side with his hands on her clothing that shocked Mulder more. He fought back the brief surge of guilt, that feeling that he was somehow taking advantage of Scully as she lay vulnerable and defenseless, and covered his discomfiture with a gruff, terse explanation. "She passed out without warning about two minutes ago. Has she been sick? Was she feeling all right this morning?" Mulder recovered admirably, his feet carrying him across the room even before he'd processed the whole scenario. He dropped to his knees as well, picking up Scully's limp hand and rubbing it lightly. "Scully?" he murmured. "Mulder, has she been sick?" Skinner repeated patiently. The agent shook his head, all his attention focused on his unconscious partner. "No, sir. She was fine." He emphasized the past tense of the verb, and Skinner pounced on it. "Don't jump to conclusions, Agent Mulder. There could be a dozen reasons for this." "Scully doesn't faint, sir." As if he needed reminding. No, Scully didn't normally swoon like some eighteenth century maiden suffering from "vapors." Female federal agents who made a habit of passing out on a regular basis did not survive in the field for seven years. Or even one year, for that matter. The two times she had lost consciousness were both harrowing instances with near fatal results. He'd experienced one up close and personal, had heard about the other from Mulder after the fact: Scully, slumping into a chair as a tiny trickle of blood dripped from her nose, a cruelly insignificant indicator of the massive internal hemorrhage that almost took her life before the ambulance could arrive. Scully, crumpling to the floor in Mulder's apartment hallway, gasping out a litany of her symptoms as the alien virus wreaked havoc upon her body, paralyzing her lungs and sending her into a coma. When this redhead hit the canvas for the full count, it was always bad news. "Are they coming?" Why Mulder chose times of crisis to speak in code never ceased to amaze and irritate Skinner. "Mulder, are =who= coming?" "The paramedics. You called them, didn't you?" "No. Give her a minute." "She could be dying!" Skinner stood up, his temper flaring. "And she could have just forgotten to eat breakfast this morning, Agent Mulder. She's breathing. Just give her another minute before we do something rash." Perhaps it was the reminder that Scully would most certainly not appreciate it if he called in the cavalry for a harmless spell of low blood sugar that made Mulder back off. He'd been blistered often enough by her searing anger at his overreactions in the past to make him hesitant to push things now. Instead, he cupped one hand around her cheek, brushing his thumb lightly over the soft, thin skin under her eye. "Scully? Come on, wake up," he encouraged her softly. Until he learned differently, Skinner assumed that she was responding to his touch when she stirred, turning her head slightly and blinking to reveal eyes dark and muddied with confusion. "Mulder?" she mumbled thickly. He smiled, a gentle curving of his mouth forming an expression meant to soothe her fears while hiding his own relief. "Hi. How're you doing?" "What happened?" She sounded more coherent, a bit stronger, but Skinner noticed that she made no attempt to sit up or otherwise move. Definitely a bad sign from someone with her history of injury and recovery. A passive, submissive Scully was a seriously ill Scully. "You fainted," Skinner informed her. "I. . . what?" So much for sounding more coherent. Skinner repeated himself, trying to stamp down on his rising dismay at her dazed tone; before he'd gained Kimberly as his executive assistant, Skinner had suffered through a personable but dense young lady who habitually asked, "Should I answer that?" in exactly the same bewildered manner every time his phone rang. That Scully's limpid blue-eyed stare and puzzled question were somehow reminding him of a loopy frosted blonde named Cyndi who dotted the "i" in her name with a tiny heart was more than a little terrifying. Maybe he =should= have called an ambulance. Mulder was crooning nonsense to her, telling her to just relax and breathe, stroking her cheek all the while. Scully fell silent, for once seeming content to follow her partner's health advice and bask in the apparent comfort of his touch. Which was, of course, another bright scarlet flag flapping a warning that all was not well. Scully was the last person to take Mulder's recommendations about her fitness and she generally rejected overly intimate gestures from anyone. Allowing her partner to fondle her in the presence of their boss was not part of her professional conduct as far as Skinner knew. Could she be drugged? Convinced that Mulder was right and Scully was, if not dying, then at least gravely ill, Skinner turned to go to his phone to summon real medical help when all at once, she recovered. He heard a rustle, and when he turned back she was sitting up, sliding her legs out from under his jacket to set her feet firmly on the floor, and if Scully wasn't yet prepared to test her newfound strength by standing up, she looked miles improved from the befuddled agent who had been unable to grasp the meaning behind a two-word sentence not three minutes ago. Remarkable. Eerie. Mulder remained on his knees in front of her like a proposing suitor, persuading her to stay seated for the time being. While Scully did continue to obey his directives, Skinner sensed that she was doing so because she privately concurred that attempting a completely vertical stance would be unwise for another few moments. She ducked her head, clearly chagrined at all the fuss she'd caused. "I apologize, sir." "How do you feel now?" "Better, thank you." Skinner crossed to his door and leaned out to Kimberly. "Please go down to the cafeteria and get some juice for Agent Scully. She's feeling a bit light-headed." Kimberly stood up with alacrity. "Is she all right?" "She's fine. Just a little dizzy." Kimberly disappeared on her appointed errand, and Skinner came back to his office to find Mulder, now seated beside his partner on the couch, engaged in a quiet but heated debate with her. "I told you, it's. . ." Scully broke off at the sight of her boss. "Of course, you'll make an appointment to see your doctor before you go out in the field again," Skinner intoned dryly, guessing at the source of the argument. She leaned back wearily against the couch, closing her eyes. "Yes, sir. Although I'm sure nothing's wrong." "Good." Skinner hoped Mulder had the presence of mind to wipe that vindicated look off his face before Scully opened her eyes again. The silence that followed was broken by Kimberly, who arrived bearing orange juice and a few cookies as well. Gamely trying to ignore the three sets of eyes fixed on her every move, Scully thanked her and dutifully sipped the drink and nibbled the pastries. When the bottle was empty and the cookies reduced to crumbs on the white napkin in her hand, she looked at the three of them wryly, that familiar expression reassuring Skinner more than anything that she was well on the road to recovery, even if she wasn't ready for an immediate return to the passing lane. "I'm all right, really." She moved to stand, and Mulder was instantly on his feet, supporting her with one arm firmly around her waist, the other grasping her hand. "Mulder, let go. I'm not going to fall." Mulder did not, as bidden, release her, but turned to Skinner with questioning eyes. "See that she gets home, Agent Mulder." "Sir!" Scully protested, still trying to wrest away from her partner's octopus-like embrace. "I'm perfectly capable of driving myself." "I'm sure you are, Agent Scully. But I'm also quite certain Agent Mulder will either somehow confiscate your car keys or follow you home anyway, so I suggest you make it easy on all of us and just let him drive." She subsided, as he'd known she would, at the bare truth in his statement. Mulder didn't appear to care that he'd been cast yet again in the role of the overbearing villain as long as he got his wish to pamper her for another few minutes. Skinner watched them leave. They walked slowly, with Scully insisting that she could move more easily and more rapidly without his assistance and Mulder steadfastly refusing to relinquish his grip on her. As a young soldier in Vietnam, Walter Skinner had prayed. The only entreaty God had seen fit to answer was the one that sent him home as a whole man, able to function after the horrors of war. Since then he'd put his faith in the mortal men of power, not that such devotions had gained him anything more helpful than his previous benedictions to an otherworldly spirit being. Maybe it was time to switch back and appeal to the higher realm. Please, God, don't let it be the cancer again. I don't think Mulder could take it. I know I couldn't. Later, Skinner would remember why he'd stopped speaking to God in the first place. Because sometimes God answers your prayers. ~~~~~~~ Two days later Skinner unlocked his apartment door and stepped inside the barren, sterile space in which he kept his belongings and spent his nights but did not call home. It had been an uneasy day from the get-go, when his morning messages from Kimberly included a note from Scully, announcing she would be out of the office all day to see her doctor. Doctors, plural, was more like it, but trust Scully to refrain from dramatics. To keep Mulder from pestering her for hourly updates via cell phone, Skinner had sent the man out of the office all day on a meaningless ride-along with two newer agents. Mulder voiced his objections, but it was a token gesture at best. Skinner sensed he was secretly relieved to be doing something other than fretting in the basement, staring at the file cabinets holding the restored remains of other times that Scully wasn't there. Like the time she wasn't there for three months. Or the times she wasn't there and everyone was quite positive she'd never be back. Scully seemed to possess enough lives to make a whole cat colony envious, but really, how many times could one come back from the dead? Not that she was dead now, of course. Much as he tried, Skinner couldn't stop himself from adding, "Yet." He sighed and shut the door, automatically flipping the deadbolt and attaching the safety chain. A few years overseeing the X-Files taught him more about the need for security and defenses than his entire tour in Vietnam. "Welcome home, sir." Not enough, apparently. Skinner froze still facing the door at that soft, somehow congenial voice. "Krycek," he breathed. "You're looking well." Skinner snatched for his weapon and spun around, aiming it directly at the younger man who stood with studied nonchalance not more than five feet from him, clad in jeans and a black leather jacket. "What the hell are you doing here?" he snarled. Krycek merely stared at the gun with contempt. "I can understand why you're not happy to see me," he said, "but you're going to want to listen to what I have to say." Skinner tightened his finger on the trigger. "I doubt that." "It concerns Agent Scully." That off-kilter, apprehensive feeling that had held him in sway since he'd first sat down at his desk that morning exploded into real fear. Skinner felt his heart shrivel and drop to the pit of his stomach. Here is was. The crunch. Scully was dying, and Krycek had decided to come and midwife the good news to him. "What about her?" he growled, fighting to keep a steady grip on the gun. "I'm not here to hurt you again, so you can put that down. In fact, it might be easier if we both sat down." The world was surely turning on end if Krycek was actually expressing concern for him. Skinner could deal with knowing his renegade agent was a murderer, a traitor, and a lackey for the Consortium, but the thought of Krycek having a conscience was abhorrent. But if Krycek wasn't telling the truth, then by all rights Skinner should have been writhing on the floor by now, nanites multiplying in his bloodstream like a New Age plague and clogging his arteries until his heart blew out like an old, bald tire. He didn't lower the gun, but motioned back into the dimness of the apartment with it, gesturing for Krycek to sit. When they were settled, facing each other across an expanse of beige carpet that was proving neutral in more ways than simple color, he snapped, "Now what are you talking about?" Krycek relaxed, making himself comfortable on the couch. "Agent Scully. She's been under the weather recently, hasn't she?" "So what if she has?" Krycek reached for his pocket. Skinner's weapon came up again in a flash. "Slowly," he instructed tightly. "Whatever you're doing, do it very, very slowly." His adversary complied, carefully drawing a familiar object out of his jacket pocket and holding it toward Skinner on an open palm. The flat, black control device. That little bastardized Palm Pilot that signaled the nanites to commence their insidious destruction of his body. Skinner went cold just looking at it. "You know what it does to you," Krycek remarked softly, "but I don't suppose you ever wondered how it might affect =her=." Skinner couldn't speak, couldn't tear his eyes from that lethal little contraption balanced in Krycek's hand. His uninvited guest nodded as if satisfied, although Skinner hadn't directly answered him one way or the other. "Yes, the chip. The miracle chip in Agent Scully's neck." The microchip she'd discovered after her abduction. The one whose removal had possibly caused or contributed to her cancer. The one that had "called" her to the site of a human bonfire, a conflagration from which she'd escaped by nothing more than dumb luck. He'd wondered if it bothered her, knowing that her life seemed to depend on a piece of science she could neither explain nor comprehend. That her very existence hung on a perversion of all that she held holy outside the confines of her organized religion. Knowing that she lived every day on the edge, that she might be beckoned unwillingly to her death again, and that if something happened to damage the chip, the likelihood of Mulder being able to filch another handy replacement from a covert government storage facility was nil. He suspected it did. And there were times that he thought the cool, collected and poised Agent Scully must be screaming inside, shrieking with fear and rage that her life had spun so completely and totally out of her control with the involuntary addition of this tiny bit of metal. Truth be told, he considered her outward composure on this one issue to be the single greatest testament to her inner strength. Thankfully, there had been no "chip incidents" since that terrifying summons to Ruskin Dam. However fragile it had proven to be in the lab, the minute scrap seemed invincible as long as it stayed embedded under her skin. If her jaunt to Antarctica hadn't destroyed it, nothing would. From what he'd pieced together from Mulder's reports and Scully's hazy memories of that little excursion, the microchip could give the Timex "takes a licking and keeps on ticking" advertising slogan to a whole new meaning. They'd been lulled, all three of them, by the relative silence over the last two years. Because here was Krycek, claiming to hold the key to Scully's life between the fingers of his one real hand. "She's seen too much," Krycek told him now. "She doesn't believe it." It was a half-hearted lie at best, and Krycek saw through it immediately. "She's not so sure of herself anymore, and that's what makes her all the more dangerous. Since she saw the ship in Africa, she just doesn't know what to think." Skinner raised the gun again. "I will kill you before I let you hurt her." Throwing his head back, Krycek laughed out loud. The sound bounced off the empty walls and reverberated hollowly around the apartment. "I'm not here to hurt her. Or you. I told you that. Don't think I don't know. . . and HE doesn't know. . . what Scully's death would do to Mulder. The man can't function without her. He'd become a bigger pain in the ass than ever before." "So what the hell =is= all this about?" Rolling the control box in his grip, Krycek considered him. "Take her off the X-Files. Reassign her. HE doesn't care where. She can do what she wants; she and Mulder can screw each other until they're blue in the face." He paused, taking in Skinner's stunned expression. "What, you didn't know they were sleeping together? Well, they are. Trust me on that. But they can't stay paired on the X-Files." "I can't just reassign her without a reason." Krycek waggled the device again. "I thought I just gave you one." "I don't. . ." "Listen to me. I can kill her right now if I touch the right button, not that it would do any of us any good. I can also incapacitate her at any time. Suppose what happened in your office the other day were to happen in the field. While she was engaged in a firefight with a suspect. Suppose she were to simply faint at a critical moment." He let his words sink in. "You might lose her. Or Mulder. Or any number of other agents. I've given you a preview of what could happen if you don't take her off the X-Files and reassign her somewhere out of the field and out of the way." "Scully's a better agent than you give her credit for." Krycek gave a wintry smile and Skinner felt a corresponding icy chill seep all the way through to his bones. There was something very, very wrong with that smile; he was quite sure he didn't want to hear Krycek's next words. "There are other ways to convince you than just having her pass out," the man opposite informed him gently. "You may not realize it, but you've already seen a very graphic demonstration of what else that chip can make her do." It was suddenly physically painful to breathe, as if the very air had turned to ground glass and he was inhaling tiny, jagged shards into his lungs instead of oxygen molecules. His whole body felt heavy and numb; the hand holding his weapon thumped gracelessly down to his thigh. For a horrifying second he was absolutely certain he was going to black out. "Pfaster?" he whispered incredulously. Krycek nodded, his expression turning gentle, somehow loving. "She. . . I saw the apartment. I saw her injuries. She was in shock, she didn't know Mulder was even there, let alone whether he had subdued. . . " "Yes," Krycek agreed affably. "All of those things were contributing factors. But the fact remains, she shot an unarmed suspect at point blank range. Has she =ever= done that before?" Wordlessly, Skinner shook his head, his mind drifting back over Dana Scully's checkerboard career, an employment history unlike any other agent he'd ever supervised, including that of her partner. She'd come close to killing her sister's murderer in a fit of passion fueled by grief and fury, but had backed off at the crucial last instant, turning Luis Cardinale over to the legal system rather than squeezing the trigger to slake her own personal thirst for retribution. After she'd removed the chip, prior to becoming ill. "Mulder. . ." "Told you what you wanted to hear," Krycek finished smugly. "She was threatened. Pfaster was going for her again. He didn't have the suspect securely in custody. And you believed him. Because you didn't want to think that she'd actually shoot someone down in cold blood. Well, you can keep your high moral opinion of her, because technically, you're right. Scully didn't kill that slimy piece of shit. We made her do it. Mulder was right about one thing – she had no idea what she was doing. He saw that when he looked in her eyes after she fired the shot. He just veered off into psychobabble to explain why she did it, rather than looking for the scientific reason." "Scully. . ." "No, she doesn't know. Yet. She'll figure it out eventually. HE knows that sooner or later it's going to occur to her. Why she remembers everything so clearly up to the very instant she pulls the trigger, and then it's a blank until Mulder grabs the gun away from her and calls for backup." Krycek tucked the small control gadget back into his pocket. "With any luck, it won't occur to her for a while yet." "Why? Why now?" Skinner demanded. . . or tried to. It came out more like a plaintive whine than an unequivocal order for details justifying this heinous experiment. "It was a test, to see if the chip still functioned as designed after all this time. Pfaster was convenient. He was in the right place in her life at the wrong time. HE knew no one would ever convict her of murder, not after they got a good look at the evidence against that sick slob. Not when Mulder would hedge the truth into a solid case for self-defense. HE knew there might never be an opportunity to see if this particular aspect of the chip's mechanism really worked. Could a person be made to commit an act that went completely against their basic nature as well as their professional training? And the answer was yes." There was a heartbeat of silence. Skinner could hear the blood pounding in his ears, rushing through his head. "But of course, Skinner, you see the bind this puts you in. I =could= just make her lose consciousness the next time she's running around with Mulder." He paused for dramatic effect. "Or I could make her shoot him. Or you. Hell, I could make her take out the whole fourth floor of the Hoover Building and be the next poster child vigilante of the month on all the talk shows." Standing slowly, he pinned Skinner to his chair with a look. "Or you just remove her from the X-Files and send her back to Quantico to teach, and everybody lives a long, happy life. Understand? No, don't show me out. I know the way." And he was gone. Just like that, leaving Walter Skinner sitting stiffly on his overstuffed armchair until the cooing pigeons out on the balcony announced the arrival of a pale, pink new morning. ~~~~~~~~~~ He spent the next three days wandering through his office and home routines in a kind of shell-shocked daze. Krycek hadn't given him any definite deadline, but Skinner had no doubt the man would make good on his threat to Scully's well-being should he delay too long about removing her from the X-Files. Scully returned to work. When the medical report from her doctor arrived on his desk, Skinner knew he'd run out of time. Everything was negative. According to the hospital that had run the tests, there was nothing wrong with her blood, her heart, her head or any other organ or tissue or system in her body. The cancer was still sitting dormant, a quiet time bomb that might go off at any moment or might never go off at all. Perplexed at Scully's conflicting symptoms, the consulting physician had scrawled some vaguely non-committal conclusions about getting more sleep and the benefits of regular exercise and proper nutrition, with orders to follow up immediately if another incident occurred. While Skinner couldn't argue with the sleep factor, he scoffed at the doctor's banal findings, which attempted to blame what could not be accounted for with a microscope and a centrifuge on the patient's personal habits. Anyone with half an eye could see that Scully ate sensibly and performed an aerobic routine on her own if she couldn't get to a gym for a more strenuous full-body workout. Keeping up with her hyperactive partner demanded a level of physical fitness far more rigorous than any Bureau standard for field agents. Whereas barely a week ago Skinner had been appealing to God to spare Scully the agony of a relapse, since his visit from Krycek he'd actually dared to hope she was suffering from a physical ailment. One that could be, if not treated and cured, at least identified and understood. When he leafed through the pages of medical double-speak that described in excruciating detail the procedures that had been performed to ascertain the underlying cause for her condition, Skinner felt his spirits sinking. Krycek hadn't lied. Scully wasn't fainting because she was sick; she was doing so at his behest. Or, more accurately, the Smoking Man's behest. And would continue to do so. . . or worse. . . until Skinner transferred her out of the field, away from the X-Files, and back to a position of relative harmlessness to the very people who had sent her down to spy on Mulder in the first place. After last year, he wouldn't have thought enough of them survived to even care, but apparently CGB Spender had ascended to the throne and was making his presence felt. To the average person, Dana Scully rarely appeared happy. On the job she was calm and rigidly controlled; she expressed all the right emotions in all the right places: sympathy for victims, acerbity for suspects and firm confidence for colleagues. Part of that was a smokescreen; Scully carried a double burden in being not only a female in a male-dominated field, but an undersized female at that. To show anything less than complete competence at all times would have spelled her professional doom. In the past seven years, much of the agonies and indignities that had been thrust in her path had come as a direct result of her involvement with the X-Files. Tossing out all issues with the career suicide that could result from being viewed as a bouncy, irrepressibly cheerful woman, Scully didn't have a lot to be giddy about. With that in mind, one would think that the prospect of leaving the X-Files would fill her with more than some small modicum of pleasure, and that the bearer of such glad tidings would be bowled over by an outpouring of rapture and thankfulness. Unfortunately, Skinner knew all too well how Scully would take the news of an alleged "promotion" out of the basement and on to more stable and prestigious rungs on the ladder of success, government-style. She'd refuse. =After= she'd demanded an explanation. And once she heard his reasons behind the maneuver, he wouldn't lay odds on escaping before she took a swing at him, breach of protocol or not. The X-Files were her investment now. The X-Files and Mulder. Learning the truth about what had been done to her, to him, to both of them. And why. Anything less simply wasn't acceptable anymore. The fresh-faced green agent Section Chief Blevins had sent tripping merrily down the stairs to ride herd on the Bureau's most unwanted had vanished a long time ago, replaced by a woman determined to see her assignment through in ways her superiors had never imagined. But the choice before him was her integrity or her life. . . or Mulder's, or a unending list of unnamed, as-yet-unknown hostages. For Skinner, distasteful as it was, it was really no choice at all. He'd been living under one death sentence or another since the Smoking Man first appeared in his office, tapping ashes on the carpet and issuing lofty orders about the disposition of the X-Files agents. But this was different. It went beyond Scully, Mulder and himself, and it had to stop before the situation went too far for any of them to be saved. ~~~~~~~~~~ Skinner waited another two days before approaching her, spending the time shuffling the paperwork and calling in the favors that would assure her a smooth transition back to the best available teaching position at the Academy with all the amenities he could scrounge on short notice. A secretary. A corner office with a view. A salary upgrade. A schedule that didn't require prowler's hours to fulfill, with time specifically allotted for personal research and publications. He told himself that he was not being a coward, that he was merely waiting until the requests were signed and processed and Mulder was out of the office at a speaking engagement at Georgetown University. The lie comforted him and steeled him for what he had to do. It did not inure him to what he found when he trudged down to the basement, after deciding to deal with Scully on her own turf rather than summoning her to his office for a formal showdown. She deserved more, but it was all he could give her without arousing suspicion. As it was, Kimberly looked at him strangely when he announced his destination upon leaving his office. Assistant Directors simply didn't make personal visits to agents under their supervision. The scuffed wooden door – the one that still bore only Mulder's name despite the office's other occupant – was slightly ajar. Skinner rapped on it with his knuckles. "Agent Scully?" She didn't answer. The door swung in a bit more with the pressure from his knock, and Skinner stuck his head through the gap. "Scully?" For a second, he thought the place was empty, that she'd just gone out to the ladies room or to refill her coffee cup. Then he looked down. Krycek had grown tired of waiting, it seemed. Scully lay face down on the cold concrete floor, an open file folder next to one outstretched hand, its contents scattered around her head like a white paper halo. Oh, shit. He knelt beside her and pressed two fingers against her neck, relieved to find a pulse and to feel her breath blowing lightly against his other hand, cupped close to her mouth. God only knew how long she'd been lying here. Despite its subterranean location, the X-Files office more closely resembled the attic of an old Virginia manor house occupied by eccentric residents than it did a dank basement. Battered, mismatched office furniture sat cheek and jowl with lovely antique mahogany file cabinets. Objects from the arcane to the mundane littered all available space on shelves. An antique microscope nestled next to a slide projector, further illustrating the incongruity of the place. Books on witchcraft, myths, legends, and the occult were interspersed with more conventional tomes involving Bureau procedure, law and medicine. Colored thumbtacks adorned the walls, holding up newspaper articles with bold headlines and blurry photographs of potential flying objects. Mulder's "I Want To Believe" poster, or rather, its recent replacement, presided over the whole organized mess like a stern sentry. In light of all the chaos it was almost impossible to believe the place had been completely gutted by fire less than two years ago. Somewhere along the line Mulder had acquired a standard Army cot. It stood along the far wall under a pile of dusty cardboard boxes, one of which was labeled "Human Remains" in bold black marker. Skinner didn't even want to hazard a guess at what might be in the rest of them. Agents could come and go to the Hoover Building as they pleased; the time clocks of criminals rarely followed a convenient nine-to-five schedule. Working through the night in the building was part of the drill. =Sleeping= in the building, however, was frowned upon. Agents had homes. They were expected to use them. Yet Skinner suspected Mulder's cot had seen more than its fair share of use over the past seven years. Especially during one three-month period back in 1994. He picked his way over to it and began shifting boxes, thankful to find that most of them, including the "Human Remains" box, were empty and even more pleasantly surprised to discover that the bed underneath was neatly made up with clean sheets, a navy wool blanket and a pillow. He turned back the covers and padded back for Scully. If anyone had told him that he'd be pressed intimately against Dana Scully's warm, pliant body not once, but twice within a fortnight, he'd have told them they were crazy. In a way "they" were indeed crazy. Unresisting though she was, Scully was far from warm. In fact, she was distinctly chilled; he could feel tiny tremors running through her as her body succumbed to its natural instinct to shiver in response to a loss of heat. Skinner laid her carefully on the cot, pulling off her shoes and sliding her under the covers. An ugly bruise was forming along her left temple, an indicator of just how hard she'd hit the floor when she'd gone down this time. It had been so sudden she hadn't had time to put out her hands to break her fall. Mulder took it for granted that the office was not only bugged for sound, but also under video surveillance. Assuming that was true, Krycek probably knew he was here now and wouldn't prolong the charade much longer. Any minute now Scully would open her eyes and jump at the sight of her boss looming over her while she lay in bed in her office. The bump on her head might have changed the game plan; he debated whether to call security and request an ambulance. The unwelcome vision of Krycek tapping a few keys and Scully quietly expiring during the ride to the hospital changed his mind. Krycek had said the Smoking Man didn't want her dead. That didn't mean he wouldn't just order her death anyway if things got too complicated. If a whole platoon of dedicated doctors got their hands on Scully for the sole purpose of learning why a perfectly healthy woman in the prime of her life couldn't stay conscious, one of them was bound to insist on further examination of the chip, dreaming of instant research possibilities, publication glories, endless grants and finally, Nobel prize potential. Scully wouldn't last a day. Neither would the unlucky doctor whose diligence revealed the chip's attendant secrets. So instead of reaching for the telephone, Skinner went back down the hall to run his handkerchief under the spray from the water fountain. Folding the soggy cloth into a rough square, he sat down next to Scully on the cot and gently applied it to the swelling contusion on the side of her face. For several long, worrying minutes, nothing happened. Skinner had just resigned himself to making that phone call when Scully moved, rolling her head away from the uncomfortable wetness he was holding against her. A minute frown of displeasure turned the corners of her mouth down and furrowed her brow. "Agent Scully?" She blinked, her hands moving restlessly under the blanket. "Scully, can you hear me?" Skinner had been prepared for more confusion, more agitation, a scenario similar to what had occurred when she'd awoken to Mulder's caress in his office the previous week. While he wasn't expecting Scully to break down hysterically, sobbing and screaming and generally behaving in a thoroughly uncharacteristic fashion, he was surprised to see her turn extraordinarily calm eyes in his direction in response to his question. Krycek said she'd figure it out eventually. "Eventually" had just come a little sooner than Skinner wanted it to. "Sir." She spoke volumes into that one word, not questioning how she'd come to be swaddled under the covers with him sitting by her like a fond parent indulging a much-loved and fevered child with a cold compress and a bedtime story. Oh, I've got a bedtime story for you, all right, Scully. Unfortunately it reads like one of the original versions of Grimm's Fairy Tales, not those sanitized Disney cartoons where the princess gets kissed by the prince and the wicked witch is banished forever. No, this one is the horror story those brothers intended their anecdotes to be when they first set them down on paper. "Are you all right?" Scully reached up and plucked the handkerchief off her face, wincing. She cautiously levered herself into a sitting position and gingerly touched the side of her head, exploring the damage to assure herself that it was indeed minimal, although undoubtedly painful. "Yes, sir." He was about to voice another meaningless inquiry about her health, delaying the inevitable, but Scully beat him to it. She dropped her hand, stared him straight in the eye, and flatly demanded, "Tell me." Up until that point, Skinner had managed to maintain a small pocket of hope, nurturing the fantasy as one would a tiny garden plot. Now the weeds sprang up and choked the life out of the tentatively budding flowers in one violent growth spurt. She knew. She knew something was terribly wrong, and that he had the answers to all her questions, and lying to her or dancing around the truth with nebulous and cryptic statements was not going to satisfy her this time. Of course, such machinations had never satisfied Scully in the past, either, but this time she wouldn't allow him the luxury of retreating. So he told her everything. ~~~~~~~~~~ In his years with the Bureau, Skinner had seen agents broken. He'd watched as some of the strongest men and women he'd ever known fell to their knees and bawled when the atrocities, the viciousness, the utter brutality of the crimes they were investigating became too much to bear. His own conscience was heavy with the abominations he'd witnessed. . . and some that he'd even participated in, however noble his cause had seemed at the moment. Scully's stolid demeanor during his recital put them all to shame. She said nothing as he quietly poured out the sordid tale of Krycek's visit and his bequest, but she grew paler and paler until the bruise stood out like a brand on her face, a colorful new tattoo to mark yet another crushing moment in her life. His original plan had been to judiciously edit out any details of what role the microchip had played in Pfaster's death. Now, mesmerized by Scully's unblinking aquamarine stare and unnerved by her continuing silence, he found himself recounting even that ghastly tidbit. She closed her eyes and pressed her lips together in a thin line, swaying slightly. Fearing she might black out again, this time without any prompting from Krycek's depraved toy, he gripped her arm to steady her. "Scully?" She flinched a little at the contact, but her eyes remained closed, her dark lashes resting on her ashen cheeks like tiny ladies' fans. "It's okay," she said softly, her voice catching just a bit. She took a deep breath and exhaled slowly. "Please go on, sir." There wasn't much more to the narrative other than the ultimatum. Leave the X-Files and live, or stay and run the risk of dying or being the cause of uncountable deaths. When Scully opened her eyes again and regarded him with icy resolve, Skinner realized she'd already elected to follow a different path. A chillingly final third option he'd neglected to consider when he'd made his well-intentioned decision about her future. Aghast, he released her. "No. Scully, you can't." "I have to." She sounded perfectly calm, perfectly rational, as if this was the only reasonable choice to make. "I've arranged for you to go to Quantico. You'll be safe there. Mulder will be safe." Scully laughed, a short, derisive bark. "You of all people should know that HE deals in lies. What's to stop the him from deciding next month that I should leave the Bureau altogether? Or that he needs to do more 'research' on this. . . this =thing=?" Her voice cracked, betraying for the first and only time all the self-doubt and mental castigation she'd inflicted upon herself since she'd ended Donnie Pfaster's miserable life. "I =murdered= a man, sir, because of it and because of HIS whims. There's only one way I'll ever be 'safe' from what you've told me." "You'll die." She shook her head vigorously. "It was never clearly and definitively determined what was the deciding factor in my remission." She paused, then reached out and touched his arm. "Even if it were true, I can't live like this," she continued softly. "You know that, sir." Eyes focused on the small, cold hand resting on the sleeve of his white shirt, Skinner nodded. He did know, and he did understand. She lifted her hand and nodded back. "Thank you, sir." "Scully. . ." Skinner was finally able to meet her gaze again, but his attention drifted sideways when she brushed back a strand of hair that had fallen forward into her eyes. After years of seeing her with a shoulder-length bob, it was still somewhat jarring to adjust to her latest fashion statement, a brutally short clip that left her neck exposed and barely skimmed her jawline. "What, sir?" She cocked her head slightly, fingers playing with the blanket that puddled around her hips. Skinner had been about to plow through a bumbling speech of admiration and support; it seemed to be his style that he could only say such things to Scully when they were faced with dire circumstances and one or both of them were poised on the brink of death. But all thoughts of such a profound and heartfelt oratory were driven from his mind by the sight of her shorn locks, and he covered it by mouthing some platitude about expediting the reversal of her transfer. Scully nodded again, accepting his remark and apparently not noticing anything amiss. "I appreciate it, sir." He stood up to leave and she got to her feet as well, looking shorter and more fragile than ever without her heels to give her that extra dimension of size. Scully retrieved her footwear and her fallen paperwork and returned to her desk. Skinner plodded back up the stairs to the lobby, anxious to avoid the elevator and savor a few more minutes of precious solitude. With her current hairstyle, there would be no way for her to conceal her actions from Mulder when she removed the chip for good. Until that time, however, he would keep to himself all the details about the potential danger she posed to herself, her partner and others as an armed agent whose behavior could be controlled by an outside influence. Scully was good at hiding things. So was he. End Author's notes: Wonders never cease, I wrote a Season 7 piece during Season 7. After pondering all the ramifications of "Orison" long and hard, I decided this was the answer that would allow me to sleep at night. My eternal thanks to my patient and long-suffering betas, Jill Selby and Dasha K, who give me titles, remind me to match my pronouns with my verbs, and do not permit me to embarrass myself. :-) Feedback is adored at jeanrobinson@yahoo.com