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#*in all honesty my resolutions are: read the books that have just be decorating my shelves/exercise at least 30 minutes everyday that i can
givethispromptatry · 1 year
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“What are your New Year’s resolutions?”
“Continue to be awesome and inspire more chaos in others.”
“I admire your zest for life.”
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frogsmulder · 3 years
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Maybe There’s Hope: chpt 4 Home is What I’ll be Dreaming of
Starting from the final events of 09x20 The Truth,  Mulder and Scully tackle their new reality as fugitives. When they  finally settle into things, Scully finds out she is pregnant again. A canon divergent AU where I thought, what if Scully got pregnant whilst on the run instead of at the end of season 11?
6k words; rated e; tagging @today-in-fic; read on ao3
  "Mom?"
 "Dana?"
The image of opening the door to her daughter's frightened face flashed before her eyes as she put the key into the lock of Dana's apartment.
 "I'm sorry, mom, I don't have much time... but I'm leaving."
 "Leaving where? Dana, you're not making any sense."
Margaret Scully stepped into her daughter's world still smelling fresh like the owner had popped out to work that morning. She half expected Dana to appear around the corner at any moment.
 "I can't say. I don't even know myself. The trial– it's–"
 "Fox. I understand."
Running her finger along the top of a cabinet, she rubbed the particles into the pad of her digit– the dust had barely started settling on the surface. She remembered embracing her daughter, Dana clutching back like it would be the last time she would get to. Maggie liked to believe she had more faith than to believe that.
 "Mom, there's something I need you to do for me because I won't be there and I don't know if I'll be back."
She picked up the envelope on the side; held it firmly in her hands as she took a long look at the room; all the idiosyncrasies scattered about, neatly organized on bookshelves and the mantelpiece in the way that was so Dana. Sitting down on the couch, she sized up the task at hand: pack a life into boxes, for everything must go. She opened the envelope– the lease on the apartment ended next month.
She started in the bedroom, where all of Fox's possessions hadn't been unpacked yet. They were stuffed into the bottom of the closet, hidden away like bad memories. Maggie knew what it was like with her husband away at sea, not knowing when– if he'd be back. But she'd had her children, her friends, her church group, her faith. She may have felt lonely at times, but she was never alone. She knew her daughter; knew her tendency to shut people out when she needed them most; her need to prove her strength. She worried for Dana.
Pulling the first box out, she lifted the lid and looked inside. Scraps of newspaper clippings littered the bottom, disguising a picture frame and what she suspected was a case file.
"Oh, Fox," she sighed, returning the lid and his privacy. She was transported back to her own doorstep again, hugging Dana before she left. "You promise me one thing: you look after him."
In another box were all of his university books, editions of the Lone Gunmen magazine; another family heirlooms like silverware sets, photographs, inscribed books, a velvet box, a pocket watch. Maggie sat down on her daughter's unmade bed: the only sign that Dana had left in a hurry. The pillow askew revealed a knot of cloth, the top of William's baby hat. "Oh, Dana." She whispered like when she had hugged her tighter on the doorstep. "And you let him look after you."
Maggie shook her head. She wouldn't do it. All of their things, they were not things to be thrown out. She took the hat and carefully folded it, putting it away in a box, saving the good memories, saving all of them.
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 "Mom?"
 "Dana?"
Dana stood dumbfounded on her mother's step, pinching herself with excitement, relief, and nervousness. She rushed into her mother's waiting arms, finally coming home after what had been an eternity. "Oh my God, mom, I've missed you so much!"
The thud of crashing into the embrace jolted Scully, opening her eyes to the bright Mexican sun beating down through the windscreen of the car. Gasping, she bolted upright, clutching her hands by her thighs, before she bolted out of the door. Stood in the bright sunlight, she caught and held her breath. In. Hold. Out. It wasn't the first dream like it she'd had, but she was shocked every time by how real they felt and how tangible her mother seemed. Calmer now, she looked at Mulder in the passenger seat, drifting roughly in and out of sleep. His eyes opened groggily as he slowly stirred, stretched, and groaned. He offered her a warm smile that melted some of the ache in her chest and watered a different, better kind into bloom. When he stumbled out of the car and over the dusty ground to join her, Scully turned away, looking out across the open land. He slipped his hands around her waist from behind, stooping to rest his chin upon her shoulder.
"You had a bad dream again," he mumbled into her shoulder.
Scully leaned her head defeatedly against his. She turned in his arms and buried her face into his t-shirt, breathing in his warm, sleepy scent and sighing. Rubbing her hands up and down his sides, she huffed and pushed herself from the wrap of his arms. "I thought I was home again," she said simply, looking up at him.
"Yeah, me too," he hummed. "Well, actually, we were in the office and you were throwing paperwork at me, telling me you would chew my ass before Skinner could even get to me if it wasn't done on time."
She might have chuckled but Mulder doubted that she would share her dream so freely, despite his effort to tease it out of her. He understood her need for privacy but he wished at times she would be a little less unforgiving, building her walls twice as quickly as he could chisel them away. Resolutely, he stood up straighter, holding out his hand out in invitation. She queried him with her eyebrows, so he flexed it imploringly. "Take a walk with me."
"Where?" she laughed.
"Anywhere, everywhere." He chipped away at her guard with a smile. "This fine foreign land has many fruits to offer."
"Okay–" she took his hand cautiously– "but not too far."
They ambled awhile aimlessly with no destination in mind. Taking each step at a time, it was pleasant living in the moment with no expectations. The liberation of no judgement from the open expanse drew them closer together. Between them, they spoke in silences, admiring the craggy landscape decorated with scraggy bushes. As Scully walked along, her thoughts drifted like the thin, wispy clouds on the breeze, back to her mother and the home she no longer had. She hadn't told Mulder yet, not because she couldn't bring herself to tell him, but because with all that had happened, it had slipped her mind. Everything she had now was all ahead of her and everyone to the side of her, holding her hand and swinging it gently like a pendulum. Life seemed simple when reduced to its basic measures: food, water, shelter, Mulder. She wondered how long she could live on that.
Mulder's voice broke through the cloud of her thoughts like a siren returning her to the moment. "Tell me what you're thinking."
Scully looked at him, surprised that he could see into her mind so easily.
"You may keep things closer to yourself these days, but I know your thinking face when I see it." He said it kindly but the honesty of his words punched a hole through her gut. She tried to tell him these things but she also had to figure them out for herself first. She only regretted that she'd ever hurt him in any way being caught in the brunt of her storm.
"It's been a month." The words surprised her as they tumbled out without her knowing.
He cocked his head. "What has?"
"Us..." she breathed. Scully made a point of looking him in the eye, even if it stole the breath from her lungs to see him focused on her so intensely. "... living like this."
His thumb shakily stroked the back of her hand. "You're counting?"
"I find it hard not to."
Mulder nodded.
She sighed. "I– I couldn't tell you what day it is, but I... I don't know– have the need to keep a tally; a record of some kind." It was like her body clock was scratching tally marks on the walls of her mind. Like she was a prisoner in her own skull. "I do it to keep me sane but does it make me mad?"
"Sometimes the only sane response to an insane world is insanity," he answered.
"That's not helping."
"Sorry." He paused in thought, taking a breath whilst trudging onwards. "I know what you mean... When Samantha first went missing and I was waiting for her to come through the bedroom door, I used to count the nights she didn't."
Curiosity claiming the better of her she asked, "When did you stop?"
"If I'm honest, I don't think I have. I just lost count somewhere along the way; found other days to count. Like when I was in hiding–" He took her other hand and pulled them to a stop, standing in front of her and looking into her blue eyes flickering with worry. Mulder could tell she would take what he was about to say the wrong way, so he tried to assure her with a squeeze of his hands and a loving look. "Every night I would cross off another day until I could see you and Will again... Sometimes that was the only thing that kept me going."
He felt her tense in his hands anyway, saw her eyes mist up as the walls grew thicker, yet she refused to let the tears spill. He steadied her at the shoulders, rubbing tender circles gently through the cloth of her t-shirt. Bending lower, he brushed his lips softly over hers, pulling her from the pain she harboured. Yet Scully remained frozen, unresponsive to the warm life of his lips, the hole in her gut tearing a little more. Pulling away to see her stone-faced, he whispered, "Scully, please don't do this to me. You have nothing to be sorry for."
She licked her lips and swallowed, allowing herself to sink to the bottom and the troubled waters calm over the top. Moving out of his grasp, she continued on their wander as if she could physically leave the memories behind.
Mulder's hand loosened on her shoulder, trailing down her arm as she walked away. A sharp tug drew him from the well of despair. As their hands met, she held on tightly coaxing him to follow, which he did so gratefully. She stopped them after a few paces, placing a hand upon his chest. On tiptoes, she raised herself to meet his lips, returning his kiss with mellow grace, not breaking until she had to breathe.
"Scull–" he questioned but was cut off by the press of her lips back against his, delicately answering him.
"I'm sorry," she mumbled against his mouth.
"You have nothing to be sorry for," he repeated in a whisper. His hand rested at the small of her back, guiding her as he turned back the way they had come. "Come on, let's get some breakfast."
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Along the back roads of Mexico, they traveled for some time before they came across a small town. The one street through it was lined with sand-coloured buildings that glinted in the sunlight, some rising tall, others spread wide. All of them looked welcoming and homely and Scully, gazing out of her window, wondered what it would be like to live in one of them. As they drove past, she wondered about the lives of the people who did live in them. Did they argue about who took the trash out? Did the children constantly ask what was for dinner? Did they gather around a television in the evening with their families? It was a life that for the longest time she had dreamed of and at one point had mourned the loss of. Now, she was indifferent to the idea of getting out of the car, hardened by years of abnormalcy, or so she told herself. Home was just a dream; the car was all she had for a life. Yet still a small part of her dared to dream; dared to envy the people in this town of their families and their homely comforts. And at the same time, she feared that normalcy wouldn't be enough for her.
Mulder pulled up outside a storefront, eyeing the swathes of people moving in every direction. Despite its size, the town was full of bustling people going about their daily lives.
"How good's your Spanish, Scully?"
She gave him a withering look. "You know I took German in college."
"Mhmm, and I did French in high school. Where's Monica when you need her?"
Scully followed his line of gaze to the crowds of people. "Mulder, I don't think we should go in together."
"What?" He whipped his head around to look at her. "Scully, we're fine. Nobody knows us out here."
"I still think we'd be better off if only one of us went in."
"But what if one of us needs help?" he questioned quietly, scared by her sudden urge to be alone.
"I'm sure I'll be fine," she smiled, unbuckling her seatbelt. "Anyway, you need to drive the getaway car."
Scully left him in the car to his own thoughts spiraling with concern.
It was eerily quiet inside the store. The jingle of the bell above the door and the radio playing quietly in the background only heightened the silence within. Scully perused the shelves, picking up odd pieces like cereal bars, bottles of water, and a packet of sunflower seeds. By the counter, there was a rack of postcards, mostly just pictures of the map of Mexico or the flag with writing she didn't understand. She picked one up and thought of her mother who had no idea where she was or how she was. It would be too complicated to send without revealing their location, she knew that, but maybe when she got home she could give it to her mother like documentation of where they had been.
Scully had always wondered what it would be like to go traveling– her father's worldly trips had partly inspired her and she had been raised with what he called the Scully Adventurer's Spirit. Charlie had started his world trip in Mexico, although his journey had been an entirely legal affair. He hadn't crossed into new territory miles away from border control. Scully turned the postcard over in her hands, reminding herself how far from home she was. Yet strangest of all, she didn't feel like she was.
"Do I know you?"
The voice made Scully jump and instinctively she held the postcard behind her back.
"I'm sorry?" she asked, trying to keep her tone as calm as possible whilst blood pulsed in her ears.
A man, who looked to be in his late forties, had appeared behind the counter with his brow furrowed in concentration and his sight set on her. He rubbed his chin contemplatively. "I know you. You are American, no?"
Scully stuttered, unsure of how to answer. "No, I– I don't–"
"Yes!" he interrupted her. His smile grew with his enthusiasm, unnerving Scully more by the second. "I see you before somewhere, on the television perhaps?"
"I'm sorry, I have to go."
Scully left some money on the counter and swiftly weaved back through the aisles. At a brief glance, she plucked a random box of hair dye from a shelf, self-conscious of her entire appearance. If she had to, she would scrub down her skin until she looked like someone else, but first, she had to get out.
The man behind the counter clicked his fingers in recognition. «¡Ah! ¡Cops! ¡Y el hombre lobo con el FBI!» he laughed and shook his head.
Mulder saw Scully burst out of the shop, arms laden with groceries and an expression he couldn't fathom. She crumpled into the passenger seat, quickly stuffing the things into the footwell. "You'd be no good in a robbery," she quipped.
"Scully, what's wrong?" he immediately asked.
She gave him her usual answer, passing him a cereal bar and his seeds. "I'm fine. Let's just get out of here."
Mulder took the food and started the engine, driving away despite the uncomfortable feeling that told him she was hiding something. He didn't want to press her further though, so he bit his tongue and focused on the road.
After a couple of minutes, Scully turned to him, worrying her lip between her teeth. She relented, speaking softly. "There was someone in there, Mulder, he recognised me."
Mulder let go of a breath that he didn't know he was holding, relieved that she had finally said something. "Are you sure? I mean they couldn't have been mistaking you for someone else?"
She shook her head, doubting herself already. "I don't know, he said he'd seen me on TV. Mulder, what if they have our pictures out on the news?"
"I don't think they'd do that. They don't want to draw unnecessary attention to themselves," he reasoned.
"But they could dress it up as something else. Get the unsuspecting populous to do their dirty work without telling them who or why. Mulder, seriously, how haven't we been caught yet?"
"Don't know, but I'm not going to question it either."
"But don't you think it's strange that if they really wanted to find us they could have easily done so already?" She looked at his profile, judging the minute movements of his jaw muscles, saw them flex unconsciously as they did whenever he was forced to admit a hard truth.
"Perhaps we're not as important as they would have us believe," he tried, glancing at her for reassurance. "Maybe they're busy developing a vaccine or ordering their super soldiers into neat, indestructible lines. Everyone's got bigger aliens to fry." He chuckled perfunctorily.
"Mulder, they were determined enough to kill you that they rigged your trial," Scully turned to gaze at the roadside zipping past and said quieter, "I think there's something bigger at play here."
Mulder properly laughed and she stared at him with a frown stitched upon her brow.
"You're doing a very good impression of me, Scully," he chortled.
She smiled despite herself, trying to hide it in a dip of her head. She hummed, having to agree. Maybe she was being paranoid, maybe she should be. The little Mulder voice played in her head, It's not paranoia if they're really out to get you. Shifting in her seat, Scully scuffed her feet on the box of hair dye in the footwell. She was reminded of the haunting feeling of being reeled into the snare, the need to change shape and escape. I see you before on the television.
"Could we find a motel tonight?" she asked warily, cognizant of the contradiction to her previous argument.
"Yeah, sure." He reached out for her hand, lacing her fingers with his.  "You sure you're okay?"
"Yes," she smiled. "I'm fine."
----------
Scully stood behind Mulder at the front desk, listening vaguely to him trying to communicate to the owner of the motel. She stared out of the window at the fading light, smiling as she clutched their only bag of belongings. Resting her cheek to Mulder's shoulder, she heard the muffled sound of his broken Spanish.
«Uno habitación. Uno err noche,» he stuttered earnestly.
She chuckled, remembering of all the times they had booked two rooms just to keep up appearances and Human Resources of their backs. It wasn't that both rooms never got used, more the connecting door left open was an invitation too tempting to resist taking. Mostly, she relished the frequent nights he had slipped into her bed under the cover of darkness and fallen asleep curled around her.
«¿Te gustaría una o dos camas?» The man nodded towards Scully and she smiled politely.
«¿Excusa?»
«¿Una cama o dos?» the man repeated.
«Una cama por favor, señor,» Scully answered.
Mulder muttered, "Feel free to save me from looking like an ass any time."
"I was enjoying listening to you butcher a beautiful language," she teased.
As soon as Mulder was through the door, he flopped onto the bed and sighed contentedly. "One day, Scully, we'll have a place of our own and I will never sleep on a couch again."
She eyed him suspiciously as she rummaged through their bag. Was this where he thought this was going? The end goal a house out in the country with a little wooden porch and surrounded by fields to play baseball in? She tried to imagine it, sitting on the porch, drinking ice tea on a sunny day, a good book and Mulder for company. A cozy log fire crackling in the stone fireplace on long winter evenings. She sometimes thought about the fairy-tale ending but she couldn't imagine herself in that story. Somehow, Scully was always on the outside looking in.
Clutching the box of hair dye behind her back, she stood purposefully. "I'm going to use the bathroom."
Mulder followed her with his head until the door clicked shut behind her. Hearing the water run in the en-suite, he turned over on his side. The creaking of the pipes was oddly comforting and he closed his eyes to it. The mechanical lullaby was, however, annoying enough to keep him from drifting off even though it was the first time he'd laid his head down on a pillow in a month.
A month– Scully was counting. Every day he had woken up next to her and gazed into her clear, blue eyes, she had been counting. He now understood half of what had been wearing her thin, forcing her to guard herself as he'd forged ahead to try and break through. Maybe now was not the best time to pick at her walls. Instead, he promised to find a small window and let in some light. He lay flat on his back, exhausted, and rubbed his hands down his face. Maybe he shouldn't find a window. What if he did find one and somehow manage to block the light out against his own intentions? Perhaps all she needed was space and time to heal. Time away from him and pain he brought with his existence. It was so hard to know what to do when she didn't speak to him. Not about the important things; the things that truly mattered. Not that either of them had been very good at it in the past. It had only ever been drips of conversation at a time, providing a Petri dish for overthinking and false assumptions and doubt. Things that built up like a damn over time until the structure burst and it all came flooding out at once. He didn't want to lose Scully and he didn't want her to get lost.
Restless, he turned onto his other side.
Emily's little face peered up at him from over the side of the bed.
"Jeez, Em," Mulder laughed nervously. "You scared me."
Her young face, too innocent still to be morose, hung dejectedly before him. Her eyes were wide, almost tearful, trying to tell him something he wished he could understand.
"Emily, what is it?"
She simply padded over to the bathroom door and pointed.
"Dana," he breathed, rushing onto his feet and knocking on the door. "Scully? You okay in there?" he called urgently.
"It's open," she replied and he noticed how she avoided his question. Turning the handily delicately, as if he was intruding, Mulder opened the door ajar and peered inside.
"Scully?"
Her t-shirt was crumpled on the floor with a towel next to the bathtub. She had her head hung over the ledge, damp tresses of hair dangling before her face. Various bottles from a box were scattered around in an unorganised mess that was so unlike her.
"If you need to use the toilet, just be quick," she said.
He cleared a path and kneeled down beside her. "Scully, what are you doing?"
Scully turned her head to look at him, dragging her tongue across her top lip in a condescending manner. "Mulder, what does it look like I'm doing?"
"Is this why you wanted to stay in a motel tonight?"
"Does it matter?"
He carefully reached for her hands, untangling them from the ribbons of her once red hair. "Of course it matters. Why didn't you tell me?"
She looked down at their hands. "Am I obligated to tell you everything, Mulder?" she quizzed, returning her gaze to him as she uttered his name.
"No," he searched her eyes for some meaning, but it was hidden away in some depth he couldn't swim to. "But you hardly tell me anything anymore. I think I see a glimmer of what you keep locked away in your heart, but I don't know if it's just a smokescreen, Scully, I can't tell."
She pulled her hands away, combing her fingers through her hair again. "I would never lie to you, Mulder," she said candidly.
"That's not what I said."
Huffing, she stopped, resting her arms over the rim of the bath and giving him her full attention. "Then what are you saying?"
He didn't know. He'd lost sight of his thoughts when he'd seen her troubled; only ever her in mind. He paused, taking a breath. "Why do you need to change yourself?" he uttered softly.
"I'm not changing myself, I'm just dying my hair. It's nothing new or special."
"Why now? Why so suddenly?"
She stared at him in disbelief. "I told you: someone recognised me. I can't just shrug that off like it didn't happen because it did. This is our reality, Mulder, we can't wander through it blindly an– and just hope we'll make it out alive!"
She caught her breath, taken off guard by her own sudden outburst. Licking her lip, she composed herself, affecting an even tone. "I'm not shutting you out, Mulder, if you'd just listen..."
He watched her silently, absorbing her words. Eventually, he nodded timidly. "Let me help then," he whispered.
"No, I'm fine," she brushed him off.
But he refused to lose her. "Scully, let me help."
She sighed, giving in. Snapping of the rubber gloves, she handed him the pair: they had been too large for her hands anyway. "I've died my hair before, but this is bleach, and all the instructions are in Spanish," she admitted.
"I think you're doing fine, Scully," he smiled, rubbing the mixture from the tips all the way to the roots of her hair. Once he'd checked everywhere was covered, he sat with her, waiting patiently by her side until it needed to be washed out. Grabbing the showerhead, he made sure that the water temperature wasn't too hot and massaged her scalp. Scully hummed in appreciation as the warm water cascaded over her head and his fingers worked their magic.
"Do you think I should bleach my hair too?" he asked, partly to make her laugh and partly because he knew that she was right: this was their reality. And she did laugh: the shaking of her shoulders accompanied by a small chuckle made him sigh in relief.
"What's so funny?" he teased. "Would I not look cool with bleach blond hair? I could take up surfing."
Laughing again, Scully elbowed him playfully, making the shower spray everywhere. Her giggle was a welcome sound for sore ears, breathing life back into the empty silence that had followed the burst of the damn.
He turned off the water and handed her the towel. She sat on the ledge of the tub, patting carefully at her now blonde hair, eyeing the alien colour curiously. Mulder grabbed another towel and started on her other side, drying her hair with just as much care. He seriously thought about how he should change his appearance, although he didn't want to. He didn't want to look in the mirror and see someone else's reflection staring back, his own image lost and forgotten. Seeing Scully now, she didn't look like the same person he had known for nine years. The blonde brought out the ice in her blue eyes; her stares once hot like fire now cold and hard. He knew it was just a costume to wear; an act to play, but he feared it becoming a warped version of reality. He should find his own costume to don too; if not becoming the obnoxious surfer-dude type, then what other outfit should he assume? Mulder doubted novelty glasses with the big nose and moustache would cut it, not least because he already wore reading glasses and his nose– well...
Absentmindedly, he asked, "What if I grow a beard?"
Scully turned suddenly serious. Her icy, blue eyes, still fiery, melted his heart.
"Don't," she said definitively and pulled him into a searing kiss. Her fingers curled through the hair at the nape of his neck, dropping the towel and bringing him closer. She felt a well of hunger for him build in her like she'd been starved of his touch.
His hands traveled from her sides, down around the shape of her thighs, lifting her from her perch on the bathtub. He pulled her body into his, pressing them together, all the while she stole his lips with fever. With his hands under her ass and her legs wrapped around his waist, Mulder maneuvered them towards the bedroom.
"No. Here," she breathed.
"Dana–"
She rested her forehead again at his. "Please."
Mulder turned around and placed Scully on the corner of the sink unit. Grinding softly into her, he traced a hand up to cup her jaw, locking lips reverently. She tightened her grip, pulling him closer at the hips and binding her ankles behind his legs. She sucked his full bottom lip, ripe and refreshing like a plump summer fruit, biting it and soothing it with a swipe of her tongue. He hissed when she continued down his neck, leaving a trail of wet kisses and lovebites until she reached the neckline of his t-shirt. Impatiently, she tugged at it and set him free, dropping it by his feet.
Her hands wandered his torso. It was softer than before, leaner and less muscular. There was still tension in his muscles, a defined shape to them, but she could feel the difference. She reached the waist of his jeans, slipping her hands down further, but Mulder grabbed her wrists, making her look up at him. When Scully saw into his eyes, she understood that he wanted to slow down, but there was a fire unfurling through her, setting her body alight and cultivating an insatiable thirst. The last time they had taken things slow, she'd had too much time to think, and she didn't want to think: just feel.
The moment passed between them, eyes locked onto one another, their telepathy flying with the sparks.
Mulder tenderly let go of her wrists and cupped her cheek, brushing his thumb across the rose flush that tinted it. Scully sighed, leaning into his hand and placing her own on top. He bent down to capture a kiss, his lips soft yet firm with resolution. She responded in kind, opening up to the taste of his tongue, of desperation, of hope, of the sunflower seeds he cracked between his teeth all day. Her fingers wound around his hand, bringing it from her cheek to her hip. She slipped down off the cabinet and he unbuttoned her pants. They fell to the floor with a rumpling sound that seemed to echo off of the tiled walls. She stepped out of them, climbing on top of the unit, tugging him between her legs. A second rumpling of jeans and he was buried inside of her, clutching her closely.
He began to move leisurely, kissing her with indulgence. But his body was strung like an archer's bow, taut with resistance, holding something back. Scully moved against him insistently, one hand scratching at his shoulder, the other twined through his hair. She kissed him like a diver plunging into deep waters; the taste of exploration too sweet not to bite.
"Faster," she pleaded in his ear.
Mulder complied, giving in, releasing built-up tension with the snap of his hips forward. In quick and jarring thrusts he drove into her until it was too much and she came with a gasp, collapsing into his chest. Time seemed to slow. The pulsation of where they were joined throbbed up through him to his ears and pounded through his chest. He heard every lungful of air he took; every small, panting breath Scully puffed. Every plunge pushed him further until he too, gasping for air, broke the surface, floating euphorically on the waves of the ocean.
An indeterminate amount of time later, when it was moving at roughly the normal speed again, Mulder lay in bed, staring up at the ceiling with his arm outstretched and Scully's head resting on it. She was drawing aimless patterns around the scar tissue of where she had shot him. Moby had been rescued from their bag of belongings and the white whale was snuggled in the space between them. Everything should have felt easy.
"Scully..."
"Yes?"
"I– I..." He thought of Emily's face staring up at him. He wanted– needed to tell her about the hallucinations that haunted him but he didn't know if he could place that kind of burden on her. He shuffled onto his side and watched her watch him back. He was about to open his mouth when he saw Emily sat on the bed behind Scully, frantically shaking her head. He itched to make Scully turn over and see for herself the impossible. But there was something in that little girl's eyes, so like her mother's, that made him think of Scully first: how angry she would be if he said he could see her; how broken she would be if she saw her for herself.
"Why did you get those sunflower seeds?" he eventually fabricated to fill the silence, bottling his ghosts up and burying them for another time.
"What?" she asked, understandably bewildered.
Ignoring the nagging feeling that he was walking down the wrong path, aware it was still early enough to go back, Mulder sighed and continued, "You didn't have to get them, so I just wondered why you did."
"Because you like them and I saw them." She leaned away from him, questioning him and trying to gauge what was running through his mind. "Did you not want them?"
"No, it's not that. I wasn't expecting it– I didn't ask you to get them..." he continued to ramble.
She silenced him with a kiss, smiling. "You didn't have to."
When Scully pulled away from him, Emily had disappeared and he wondered why at all he was taking advice from his own deluded mind. Mulder looked up at the ceiling again. There were things he needed to get off of his chest, but Emily was right, even if she was only an apparition or a figment: he couldn't tell Scully, not at the moment. Maybe sometime in the future when the moment was right. Yet the longer he left it, the harder it would be to explain what was happening– to explain why it had taken so long to confide in her. The longer he left it, the harder it pressed against his chest; another weight to carry around. The harder it pressed, the more it weighed on his mind; another thought to worry about. The more he thought about it, the harder it pressed against his chest. It was like something inside him wanted to scream when he reflected upon it. So, he didn't. Instead, he pulled Scully closer and lost himself curled around her. Her warm skin against his own grounded him; her scent wrapped itself around him and tied him down. He focused on her breathing, matching his own to the same pattern until he was made up of a tiny piece of Scully that kept him sane and whole.
"Mulder," she mumbled. "Are you okay?"
"Shh, it's nothing," he whispered. He stroked her hair and kissed her forehead. "Try and get some sleep."
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harryunwin-blog1 · 7 years
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#13 any kingsman ship you wish.
[oh yesssss– a perfect excuse for my old boys
“You didn’t really think I’d let you spend Christmas alone, did you?” Merlin asked, dropping into the chair beside Harry. He had a bottle of whisky in his hand and a tired, content look in his eyes. “I haven’t let that happen in thirty odd years.”
Harry snorted. “I suppose that’s true. Been a while, hasn’t it?”
   Merlin nodded. “That it has. So I don’t know why I had to use my tracker to find you, tonight of all nights.”
   Harry raised an eyebrow dryly. He considered sniping back at Merlin about his damned trackers, but instead he just turned his gaze towards the fireplace again. “Sorry. My glasses were in my pocket. I didn’t even realize.”
   Merlin eyed Harry for a moment, but ultimately decided pouring drinks was better than words. He handed Harry a glass and sat back, both men silently staring into the fire and sipping politely. They’d grown past words, really, after countless nights like this one. When a man gets on in years he finds it just as easy to feel companionship in proximity and shared alcohol as it is in stories or chatter.
   But, then again, words were good too.
   “Galahad and Lancelot have both checked in, home safely,” Merlin commented.
   “Oh, good,” Harry replied.
   “Mmm.”
   “What do you suppose he’s bought for little Daisy? He wouldn’t tell me.”
   “Oh, probably something expensive. Or ‘ninja turtle’ themed. Or both.”
   “She does have good taste,” Merlin granted.
   “And he adores her. As we all do,” Harry said, lips turning up slightly. They dropped a second later. “I wish things were easier for Roxanne, though.”
   “Me too,” Merlin said solemnly. “Two uncles in such a short time.”
   “We’ve all felt the loss. Maybe finally having a week off from saving the world will be good for the young ones.”
Merlin sipped his drink. “You know, the good thing about you never taking time off is that I never had to either. Except, you know… the year you were in that coma.”
“What?”
“Oh, aye, I could hardly let the night pass working while you were laid up in bed all alone.” Harry hadn’t been told about this. It left a warm feeling in his chest to imagine Merlin at his bedside, curling up with a book and a cup of tea.
“I wouldn’t have known the difference.”
“But I would have,” Merlin replied evenly, raising his tumbler to his lips. “It just didn’t feel right. I missed you, Harry. Those months were awfully hard for me.”
Harry let Merlin’s words settle between them, appreciating his oldest friend’s honesty. Something in his chest clenched though, and he had an awful stinging in his one remaining eye as he heard the unspoken words. Those months were difficult, he heard, but at least there was hope then. Harry looked at Merlin, and he was grateful that the Scot was resolutely staring at the fire. He felt immeasurable guilt about leaving Merlin, and Eggsy, and everyone else, leaving them for so long thinking he was dead. It wasn’t his fault, he knew that and his friends had told him so many times over, but he still felt bloody awful looking at Merlin’s strong, familiar face and seeing the toll it had taken. Knowing that in thirty years, he’d only missed one christmas. “I’m sorry, Merlin.”
“Ach, it wasn’t your fault,” he said again, waving his free hand dismissively. “Remember that year everyone requested time off, and you offered to take the big mission?”
“Yes, you absolute scoundrel,” Harry bit back as Merlin laughed heartily. “Why didn’t you warn me?”
“Well, someone had to do it…” Merlin managed through his guffaws. He wiped at an eye. “You should have checked first, like everyone else. And besides, we could spend christmas together over the glasses. Wouldn’t have been the first time.”
“Would have been the first time while I was fighting mother nature for my life,” Harry grumbled, tipping back his glass.
“A little cold never hurt anybody.”
“Yes, actually, it has, and -40 degree weather is absolutely inhumane.” Harry turned his nose up as Merlin laughed again. He cracked a smile himself.
“Will you tell me finally?” Harry asked after a moment.
   “Tell you what?”
   “Why you never went back to see your family over the holidays,” Harry said, as if it were obvious. Right from the start, they’d spent their christmases together. Harry simply didn’t have any family to go back to, or else none that would have him. But he knew that Merlin had relatives that he contacted semi regularly, and young nieces and nephews that must surely be missing their uncle. Yet from their first christmas as colleagues, he’d stayed at HQ.
   “Ah, that,” Merlin murmured, swirling his glass slyly. “Well, my family’s a big group of atheists that never bothered with the festivities. Never had a christmas to celebrate.”
   “You what?” Harry stared at Merlin, eye wide. Merlin drained his glass. “But you always celebrated! You even started decorating your station a few years in!”
   “Well, yeah, but not for me,” Merlin said, finally glancing at Harry. “I read your file when you came on. I knew you didn’t have family, but you were raised as a good God fearing Catholic, whole lot of good that did. I thought… you know, I’d give you a taste of home, one you might actually enjoy.”
   Harry stared at Merlin, mouth open. His head spun. All these years, and Merlin didn’t even care about christmas? It was a sweet thing to do, but what a ridiculous con- so many years of acting. “You didn’t have to do all that. You don’t have to.”
   Merlin looked affronted. “Well, fine then. You won’t get your gift.”
   Harry flushed. That hadn’t come out quite right. He didn’t mean to sound ungrateful, he just wasn’t as silver tongued as before the fatal head injury. “I didn’t mean- well- I- I just-”
   Merlin put a big, warm hand on top of his. He squeezed softly, giving Harry a reassuring look. He knew that he got flustered sometimes if he did something largely out of character, frustrated at himself for getting injured and being injured. Harry’s face still flamed, but he stopped stammering. Regretfully, Merlin took his hand back and walked to the doorway.
   “I didn’t mean that I don’t want you to,” Harry said, craning around in his chair. “I still cherish every christmas we’ve had.”
   “I know, I know,” Merlin said, returning with the gift wrapped rectangle he’d left out of sight. “I was just pulling your leg. Here.”
   He handed Harry his gift. Glad for the distraction, Harry set his glass aside and happily tore at the paper.
   “Oh,” Harry breathed, emotion sweeping over him. He dropped the gift wrap and held the frame up for close inspection. It was a beautifully pinned butterfly. And not just any specimen, but one of the same species that he had lauded as his prized possession before Poppy blew up his collection. It must have been incredibly difficult to find, and so perfectly preserved…. “Thank you, Merlin, thank you so much.”
   “You’re welcome, Harry,” Merlin grinned broadly, a rare and dazzling sight. “Only the best for my Arthur.”
   “I still think we ought to change that, I’ve had terrible experiences with the name,” Harry said, but it was only mechanical teasing as his eyes darted back and forth, admiring his new butterfly.
   “Well, we’ll put it to a vote, after christmas,” Merlin said comfortably, rising from his chair and taking Harry’s tumbler. He returned to the mantle to fill their glasses again. He knew the state Harry was in, so he didn’t expect anything in return. He was just glad that he’d gotten the man to genuinely smile again. But when he turned to take his place, there was a thin box in the center of the chair’s cushion. “What’s this now?”
   “Hmmm?” Harry hummed, eyes still trained on the frame.
   Merlin shook his head, taking the box and sitting down. Carefully removing the top, he furrowed his brows. After a second of reading, he barked in laughter. “How in the bloody hell did you find a John Denver cover band in London in 2017?”
   “And one that sells tickets,” Harry added. “I think it’s one guy with a guitar and an unpaid gig at a pub, but… thought you’d like it. I remembered.”
   “Yeah, that’s all it took,” Merlin teased.
   “Oh, and I forgot your other present in my room. Some oil, for when your legs start squeaking.”
   Merlin scoffed. “I designed them better than that, you daft bastard.”
   Harry smirked devilishly. He took a mouthful of whisky and put his glass aside, sinking further into his chair. Letting out a long breath, he ran a hand through his hair. Merlin always thought it was nice. Though no longer a deep chestnut brown, and rather streaked with gray, it was still a pleasant sight. He looked at Harry, Harry looked at the fire. “Thank you, Merlin.”
   “You have already.” Harry smiled at him.
   “Thank you for everything you’ve done. You’re terrific. You’ve rebuilt this organization from the ground up. I have no idea where we’d be without you. You’ve done such amazing things in only a few months. But then again, you’ve always been amazing.”
   Merlin chuckled. “Well, thank you for that.”
   “And thank you… for christmas,” Harry said shyly. He looked down at his hand.
   “No, I should thank you for that one,” Merlin said. “I never much cared for holidays when I was a lad, but now a year just wouldn’t be complete without this one.”
   “I know what you mean,” Harry murmured. He reached out, and suddenly their fingers were intertwined. They were the only ones currently in their new headquarters, but neither one felt alone. Not on christmas.
   “May I kiss you, Harry?” Merlin asked. Harry smiled.
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