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TITLE: SWAN LAKE, Part I
AUTHOR: Windsinger (AKA Sue Esty)
EMAIL: windsinger@aol.com
RATING: PG-13
CATEGORY: X
KEYWORDS: Casefile, MRS, mild Muldertorture
SPOILERS: Through VS9
ARCHIVE: Two weeks exclusively on VS10, then Gossamer and Ephemeral.
Others are fine, though please let me know.
DISCLAIMER: Mulder, Scully and Skinner belong to Chris Carter,
1013 Productions and Fox. No copyright infringement is intended.
SUMMARY: Mulder and Scully travel to Maine to investigate the
story of children who have been lost in a strange, wooded valley and return
changed.
FEEDBACK: Gratefully accepted.
AUTHOR'S NOTES: Many thanks for Suzanne's infinite patience (Of
course, I'm writing this before she has finished editing Part II so her
patience may have given out by now.) Many thanks anyway. Many thanks to
all of the VS Production staff for not making me carve this down to fit
into one part. Many thanks to the original series (the first few seasons
anyway) for continuing to be such an inspiration and bringing such joy
into my life. And, yes, there really is a play called The Swan, which
was the initial inspiration for this story. Chris Lane, the actor who
played 'the swan', has my continuing admiration. He is one incredible
physical actor (and not bad sans-clothing either). I wish him well in
his career, which my friends and I continue to follow in the Washington
area with great zeal.
SWAN LAKE part I
Windsinger (AKA Sue Esty)
TEASER
Sylvan Valley, Maine
Friday, March 21st
"And a handsome young man fell out of this basket, this really big
basket, and he was naked?"
"Completely."
"And your Mom approved?"
"Why not? Mulder, this is the theater. Art."
"And the audience was made up primarily of middle-aged ladies. I
rest my case," her companion declared with satisfaction.
"Well, he didn't stay naked all the time. She eventually got him
to wear clothes. First little skimpy shorts, then jeans, then --"
"On a swan? Was he a swan or did he just think that he was a swan?"
"Ah... both, I guess. Transformed. A swan caught in a man's body.
I don't know how...."
"And they never tried to explain it?"
"This wasn't an X-File, Mulder. That wasn't the point. It was an
allegory."
"For what?"
"A person caught unexpectedly in a strange world. He was really
very confused and very unhappy."
"And very naked."
"Mulder... Okay, forget the story. What was amazing was the actor
--"
"And just how amazing was he?" her partner and lover asked
mischievously, with only the tiniest hint of jealousy. "Was he glad
to see you?"
"As a matter of fact he was. Though it was probably just due to
the anticipation as he waited under that blanket throughout that long
first scene before he actually transformed. No, the really amazing part
was his athleticism. The way he moved his neck, his arms, his body as
if he really was a swan and his feet, his toes! He could leap onto table
tops and counter tops and even onto the top of a refrigerator without
any effort at all. And then there were the noises he made with his throat!"
She rubbed her own. "It hurt just to listen to him."
Furtively, Dana cast an eye towards the passenger seat and there he sat
rolling his eyes in her direction.
"Forget it."
"Swan Lake," he said, suddenly sitting straighter in his seat
and looking behind them from where they had come.
"What?"
"Believe it or not there was a sign just back there for Swan Lake."
He hummed. The Twilight Zone theme was barely recognizable.
"Coming up is also the turn off for Sylvan Valley. If there's time,
perhaps I'll just visit Swan Lake, but if I do, I'm not taking you!"
Deftly, she turned the rental car into a narrow country road. Thick woods,
its trees bedecked with just the fuzz of coming leaves sparkling in the
spring sunlight, grew right up to the pavement. It was the same sight
that had lined the roads since they had left Bangor except for the occasional
small town or lonely house.
"Tell me again what we're doing here? Kidnappings that aren't kidnapping.
One missing woman?"
Mulder didn't even bother to shrug. Her skepticism was an old and pleasant
game.
"Look."
Scully didn't need to be told where to look. Suddenly the world dropped
away on one side while at the same time it rose sharply on the other.
The tall and rugged mountains, a spur of the White Mountains, made a sheer
wall to the right of the deep, bowl-shaped valley and Scully stopped the
car at the very brink between the two. Impressive, but there was something
very odd.
The spread before them was the kind of glorious New England autumn city
dwellers drive hours to see. A little past peak but still breathtaking.
"The foliage certainly is an odd color for March," she said.
"Certainly is, especially since the brochure from the Sylvan Valley
Chamber of Commerce states that protection provided by the mountains actually
gives the valley a three week head start on spring compared to the rest
of the county. The valley should be clothed in all its spring finery."
"Acid rain? Toxic chemicals? Industrial pollutants?"
"None identified," he confirmed.
"This is the X-File part?"
"Not entirely." And his eyes twinkled green in the way that
Scully had long before found highly suspicious.
ACT I
The car dropped into the quiet of Sylvan Valley, Maine and towards the
village of Happenstance. Mulder drove while his partner directed her analytical
mind towards a land unexplainably on its way towards winter rather than
spring. Many of the leaves were brown, but as many were yellow and red
and orange, and had been fully mature before they had begun to turn. No
freshly budded leaves these.
The town boasted one street of a few shops, a county seat, a school,
a store front library, two B&B's and half of dozen well maintained
homes that had to be at least a century old. All in all it was as neat
and picturesque as any New England town as you could hope for. By its
lack of artificial sparkle, however, as well as the fact that it boasted
only two gift shops and no Starbucks, it probably saw less than a quarter
of the tourist trade of most villages its size.
The sheriff's office occupied a vacated store next to the library. Abbott
Abrams was the sheriff, a youngish man for the job. He leaped to his feet
as they entered. His hunger for a more exciting posting was apparent from
the way he positively glowed at the appearance of his distinguished guests
from Washington.
"I heard you were coming but can't imagine why you would. Yeah,
some kids got lost but all returned on their own and none the worse for
a couple of nights in the woods."
"What about your missing woman?" Mulder inquired politely.
Scully noted that her partner was on his best behavior for this case.
"Mrs. Jameson? She hasn't really been missing long enough to be
considered... really missing."
"Two days, I hear," Mulder said. "That isn't cause for
alarm? It would be in most places. Has she made a habit of disappearing
in the past?"
"Reena? Well, no. Just an extra long hike in the woods now and then."
"Personal problems? Family problems?"
Abrams took a moment to think about that. "She and her husband haven't
been here all that long, but to the best of my knowledge they're fine.
Husband's jumpy now but I told him to be patient. Around here, people
show up after a couple of days, just like the kids."
Mulder shifted position just enough to catch Scully's eye. "So in
addition to the children, you've had other disappearances?"
The young sheriff twisted uncomfortably in his cracked leather chair.
"Like Reena, people wander. Seems to be a town pastime. They come
back."
After a rather significant pause, Mulder checked his notes although Scully
knew he had no need to. "A Dr. Hutchinson is not so sure that the
missing children had just gotten lost and found their way back on their
own. He thinks that they may have been assaulted in some way. He also
thinks the missing woman is a sign that there's someone out there responsible,
and that the perpetrator is escalating."
"I have heard Hutch's theory but he and his wife are new here as
well. Less than a year. They're a little rattled by our lack of dependence
upon the almighty clock. Sure, the town counsel is scheduled to meet every
Tuesday, but Wednesday will do as well or next week. They'll get use to
it."
"Since assault has been mentioned, we'd like to talk to him,"
Scully said, rising. "We'd also like to see some of the children
just to make sure -- as you say -- that there's nothing to it."
The young sheriff also rose and reached for a photocopied map of the
area. There weren't many roads. "As you wish. I'll mark on here where
Hutch's home is. It's also his office. And while you're gone I'll pull
the files on the cases for these missing children. We did look for them,
you know."
"I have no doubt you did," Mulder said, at his most agreeable
as he took the map. "Can you recommend a place to stay, by the way?"
The sheriff leveled his gaze at the two standing so comfortably close
together and made the obvious decision not to ask 'one bed or two'.
"Either of the B&B's will do. Missa at the White Horse is a
better cook, however -- though don't tell her I said so."
Once again at their car, both breathed in the fresh, cool air. Neither
needed to remark on the distinct tang of fresh fallen leaves, a scent
missing in their part of the world since November. Scully's eyes drifted
to the sign for the White Horse B&B. She would have secured their
room as they clearly didn't have many options, but her partner was just
as clearly eager to be sniffing about.
"On the trail of Dr. Hutch?"
"You guessed it." After a pause at the street to check the
angle of the sun and thus orient himself east to west, Mulder turned right
with confidence. Clearly, he'd committed the map to memory already. They
neither passed anyone on the street nor any cars that weren't parked.
"I've heard of laid back towns," Scully remarked, "but
I don't think this one ever bothered to get up this morning."
"Or most mornings, if Sheriff Abrams can be believed."
"You don't believe him?"
"Oh, I do. He's being up front with us. He clearly doesn't believe
that there's a problem." They had left the sleepy town already and
were soon deep in the atypically fall-like forest. "His attitude
just raises the hairs on the back of my neck," he said. "Don't
you find it a little peculiar?"
"I'd like to reserve judgment on that. Not every place has to be
as high stress as D.C. This may, in fact, be normal for here."
Mulder didn't take his eyes from his driving, for the sun was setting
and the deep patches of slanting light and deep shadow made following
the narrow leaf-strewn road tricky. She could tell that he was considering
her words, however.
"Perhaps. We'll soon see. The doctor's a new arrival, the sheriff
said. Let's listen to his point of view."
As if on cue, the forest opened up, or perhaps one should say, was pushed
back by a white frame house of notable size. It had to date from the nineteenth
century if not earlier. This was no Victorian beauty with cupolas and
gingerbread carving, but its simple lines were pleasantly broken by a
wide porch that spanned not only the front but one long side wall. From
this porch hung the shingle for Dr. Matthew Hutchinson, family practice.
"A farm house without the farm," Scully said as she stepped
out onto the gravel drive.
"Oh, it's still there," Mulder said. "The forest has just
taken it back. It doesn't really take so long."
"Why let it disappear?"
"This is New England. Rock farming has never been particularly profitable.
Still, the early settlers thought this a paradise compared to crowded
Europe. When richer lands were discovered out West, however, more than
a few abandoned the black flies and long winters for something better."
Underneath his wrinkled brow, Mulder's New England-bred eyes solemnly
scanned the woods beyond the farmhouse. "There's more than fields
that the woods have taken into themselves. There are stone fences, roads,
chimneys, outhouses, anything that Man in his arrogance believes that
he built to last."
He felt a touch on his hand, skin to skin. It sent a warm flush up his
arm.
"Is my partner waxing poetic?"
The solemnity left his face and there was sweetness in his smile. "From
time to time. But I guess now's not the time. I see a face at the door.
The sheriff must have forewarned the good doctor."
The good doctor was of a goodly size as well. Hutchinson was at least
six foot three and must have been a linebacker in college, though much
of that muscle had softened. His hand dwarfed Scully's upon their greeting
on the wide shaded porch, but he had a gentle touch for all that.
"You've come to talk with me about the missing children. Good, good,"
he said upon Mulder's greeting and "A colleague!" he exclaimed
after Scully gave him her credentials. "Abbott didn't tell me."
"It never came up."
"That's not surprising. Well, come in, come in. I have no patients
at this time of day."
It was nearly evening. The front door opened into a wide hallway with
a waiting room to the right with about a dozen chairs and the business
end of this rural practice in the rooms to the left. He led them past
a small desk intended for a nurse or secretary and through a set of glass-paneled
double doors to what were clearly living quarters in the back of the house.
A small woman of slender bones and light brown hair met them in a small
study. Her handshake was fluttery and brief. Unlike her round and mellow
husband, she asked to see their ID.
"I just want to be sure we know who we're talking to."
"Not a problem," Mulder said. "People should be more cautious."
Hutch joined them then. He'd detoured into his office and returned with
a thick set of about a dozen files. Heading for a Lazy-boy, he dropped
down and spread the files out across two foot stools. Eagerly Mulder pulled
an armchair close by and picked up the first folder.
"Cindy Rivers, age 7," Hutch summarized. "Her mother watched
her head down the path that she took every morning through the woods on
her way to school. She never made it. Turned up at her front door two
days later at suppertime."
"Injuries?" Scully asked.
"Not really. Dirty, hungry, tired, some scrapes, some bruises that
may not have been there before. The trouble is, she was always a brave,
happy little thing. Now she's -- well, not so much timid as private or
solitary."
"After affects from this kind of trauma are to be expected."
"I agree, only this seems permanent." Hutch learned back in
his lounger, his big soft body heavy and sleepy, but his eyes shone with
a passion and vitality that his physical form lacked. "I'm a family
doctor. I left my big city HMO practice because I wanted to attend to
the whole person, the whole family. I prided myself on thinking that I
knew every man, woman and child in this town. But Cindy and the kids like
her have me doubting myself."
"They all show this kind of personality change?"
"A change but not always the same kind. Some open, loving children
have become secretive. Sweet kids have turned sly and violent. A few that
had brought their parents and teachers little but grief are now as pliant
as a parent could wish, too much so in some cases. One set of parents
is convinced that their little boy, Mike, is ill with mono or maybe even
a brain tumor!" The quiet physician's hand came down on the arm of
his chair with surprising fervor. "These kids cannot have just taken
a walk in the woods. Abducted, maybe? I don't know." He pulled himself
up out of his too soft chair. "Let me get you Mike's X-rays, Dr.
Scully. Maybe you can see something I don't but I can't find anything
physical."
When man has scurried back to his office, Scully raised an eyebrow in
her partner's direction. "Abductions, Mulder?"
His hands raised in denial. "The first I've heard of it, I swear.
I'm sure Dr. Hutchinson is not suggesting that kind of abduction, not
the alien kind. I don't think so either."
"You don't?"
"Our extra-terrestrial friends are more circumspect. This is too
obvious."
That relieved a good part of Scully's concern but that meant that it
had to be something else. "Kidnappings, assault -- psychological
if not sexual. If this is true, we're lucky that this guy let the kids
go."
"After the damage was done. But what about Mrs. Jameson? She's an
adult and still missing."
A small sound like a whimper caught their attention. Mrs. Hutchinson,
who clearly moved as silently as a field mouse, stood in the doorway to
the study, a tray of tea nearly dropping from his hands. Mulder rose in
one swift, fluid movement to catch it.
"Are you alright, Mrs. Hutchinson?"
As if unaware of what she was doing, she sat limply down in the chair
Scully pushed under her. "Roz, please, as in Rosaline. Sorry, I just
heard you mention Reena and it all just came back to me in a rush."
"You know Reena Jamison then?"
Dr. Hutch had returned, face pale. "Reena's husband, Richard, and
my wife are brother and sister. That makes her our sister-in-law."
As the two agents exchanged glances, the big man shrugged helplessly.
"It's a small community. We moved here together for mutual support
knowing how little towns keep to their own. It's worked out well -- until
these disappearances. Richard is nearly crazy with worry. He'd be worse
if he knew how little the sheriff is doing."
Which is nothing, Scully thought.
"We'd have Richard here with us, but he wants to stay at his place
in case Reena wanders back."
Scully looked at the thick, new file Hutch held and to the others. "I
apologize, but it looks like we're going to be here a while."
Two hours later, the last report had been examined and, in Mulder's case,
committed to memory. Wearily, they stood and stretched. Scully lifted
a curtain of white eyelet. It was completely dark outside now and that
was very dark indeed, considering the lack of city lights and the fact
that the moon had not yet risen.
"Dinner?" Dr. Hutch asked, gesturing towards the kitchen. The
agents exchanged glances. Each knew what the other was thinking. They
didn't normally socialize while on a case, but it was not as if the Hutchinsons
were suspects. There was still doubt that a crime had even been committed.
"It's not fancy but you're not going to find much better after dark
-- if anything."
Having not had anything but soda and pretzels since breakfast, they agreed.
An old round table of country oak set with a white cloth and blue and
white dishes waited for them in the kitchen. They set down to a noodle
and hamburger casserole, succotash and a fruit salad.
"Mrs. Hutchinson, you shouldn't have gone to this much trouble,"
Scully said to the thin, nervous woman. She had been busy in the kitchen
all the time that they had been reviewing cases.
"And do what? Pace the floor. Not only the children, but Reena,
too. Best to keep busy. Would you like some more tea?"
Scully extended her cup. "If it's more of the same that I've been
drinking all evening, yes. What is it? It's delicious."
"Green tea with cockleberry juice." Roz pointed to the dish
of strawberries, still showing frost where they had been packed and frozen
early the previous summer, and small fresh, dark berries. "The dark
ones are cockleberries. They're kind of a local wild blueberry."
Scully lifted an eyebrow and caught Mulder's lips twitch. "I guess
I won't be having any of the fruit salad," he smiled.

"Agent Mulder is allergic to strawberries," she explained to
Roz's puzzled expression, "a fact that he tends to forget from time
to time."
"But he can't be allergic to beer," Dr. Hutch remarked, raising
his large body from its chair. He reached into the refrigerator and pulled
out two plain brown bottles. "I brew it myself. It's so dark you
can eat it with a spoon."
That got Mulder's attention. He didn't drink much -- both because of
his work and because of family history -- and so indulged when he felt
he could in carefully monitored amounts of exotic microbrews. Quality
rather than quantity.
"I'll split one with you. I'm not technically on duty, because up
to now there's no crime, but you never know."
The doctor turned to Scully who was glowering only slightly at her partner.
"And you, Dr. Scully."
"I'll stick to the tea, thank you. And I had a sudden thought: we
don't have reservations anywhere for tonight. Will the B&B's be open?"
"They might be," Roz said, "but you don't have to go there.
Hutch and I would like to offer you the use of our cabin. Richard and
Reena were only there last week so it's clean."
Both agents opened their mouths to decline, only to be stopped by Hutch.
"You might find it useful in your investigation. It's just around
the lake from Richard and Reena's home.
"Lake?" Mulder asked.
Hutch gestured to the map where they had plotted the location from which
every child had disappeared and reappeared. The Jameson home was near
the center, on the edge of a small body of water shaped like crescent
moon. The agent didn't need eye contact. Each felt the other stiffen.
"That lake. Swan Lake."
Act II
Friday night/Saturday (March 21st and 22nd)
After dinner, Mulder drove as they followed Dr. Hutch's white sedan twist
and turn like a ghost through the dense woods. Mulder was anything but
sleepy. The emotion running through him would have kept him alert even
if he had drunk four times the small glass of fine, dark beer he had taken.
After fifteen minutes of careful driving they reached a small frame house.
It rose up white from the headlights. They couldn't see much more of the
grounds. There was a screened porch with comfortable rocking chairs, a
combination kitchen and living room with a fireplace, a utilitarian bathroom
and a king-size bed in the one bedroom. Hutch shrugged. "There's
always the couch," he offered. "As if you'll need it,"
was implied by the unspoken turn at the end of the sentence.
There not being much of interest in the cabin, the agents followed Hutch
back outside as he headed for his car -- or so they thought. Instead he
moved onto the grass heading away from the cabin. From the feel of the
ground under their feet they knew they were heading slightly downhill
but that was all. Though the moon had finally risen, it was only a fuzzy
spot of gray above a blacker treeline. Dr. Hutch didn't go far. They stood
quietly for a moment waiting for him to speak because he obviously had
something to tell them. In that space of silence they heard of gentle
'Plop' a few yards ahead in the inky black and then an mournful, unearthly
cry. Beside Mulder, Scully shivered.
"And that was?" she asked.
"Loon," Mulder answered before Dr. Hutch could.
"Very good," the doctor commended. "Yes, a loon. Quite
a few nest here. Lost souls also cry like that or so they say. You won't
see them though. There's usually a mist over this lake at night."
"What about swans?" Scully found herself asking.
Barely visible, the big man shrugged. "Now and again. The name,
Swan Lake, must come from an earlier time." Another pause. "I
wanted to tell you about another case," the physician finally began.
His voice was hesitant but grew stronger as he spoke.
"Another?" Mulder asked gently, his natural empathy already
suspecting something.
"Yeah, Roz."
"Your wife," Scully said. "She went missing as well?"
Another shrug. "I'm guessing so. It's been several months. Sometimes
I'm away from home for a night or two. Unlike many of my contemporaries
I do make house calls and deliver babies as well though don't tell my
insurance company. It could have happened then. All I know is that she
changed. She used to be so outgoing. After we arrived she joined some
of the civic and church women's groups, and helped out with the school
computer system. She was a network engineer back in Boston. Not much of
that work here but she was happy with the change. She liked being busy."
The agents both thought about the frail and retiring creature who had
served Scully tea. "I gather she doesn't go out much any more,"
Scully said.
"Hardly at all. Even when we need something at the store she wants
me to go with her. I don't know what she does all day. She used to clean
a room in ten minutes, now it takes her half the day. She won't come out
here any more either or go outside after dark." The man's voice had
become thick with emotion as he talked. "Find out what's going on.
The sheriff inquired about you when he heard you were coming. The word
is that you're a little eccentric in your methods but good at this sort
of thing."
The agents exchanged glances. Whatever this sort of thing turned out
to be.
"We'll do our best, Dr. Hutchinson," Mulder assured the man
in his soft voice, the heaviness in it showing that he was not unaffected.
"That's all I can ask." Abruptly, the physician turned and
headed for his car. "I'll come out and check on you tomorrow,"
he said, and was gone.
Still standing in the dark near the unseen lake, Scully felt the warmth
of Mulder's body press lightly against her back. In response, her seeking
hand found his. Both of their palms were chill and damp from the mist
and the night.
"We'd better try and get some sleep," he said.
"'Try'? I'm exhausted."
"I don't know if I'll manage any. The man seemed to think we'd need
checking on."
They made gentle and brief love that night in the cabin's king-size bed.
It was seldom that they had such remote accommodations and so they could
have made all the noise they wanted but neither was in the mood for athleticism.
The night seemed to press in on the little cabin and on them. Mulder listened
to the loons and other night birds, to the ripples on the shore from the
occasional fish, and to the slight rustle from the other night creatures.
It was only near morning, when a breeze finally rose to move about the
few out-of-season fallen leaves, that he finally slept. When he woke it
was full light and Scully's place at his side was empty and cold. There
wasn't any answer to his call.
Mulder was out the door in twenty seconds in possession of the bare essentials
only -- suit pants without underwear, zipped but not hooked, and his service
weapon. The air had a bite to it and the driveway was crushed stone. Shoes
and more clothes might not have been a bad idea. Finally his calls yielded
results. Scully's voice came faintly over the lake. Under the gray sky
and the lingering mist, the lake was a sheen of silver, its far bank a
dark streak before the smoky mountain reared up behind tall and watchful.
Tearing his eyes from the inspiring height of the mountain, Mulder followed
that faint call. He found her in a boathouse, its wood silver gray with
age so that it was nearly invisible against the lake. She was inside,
intently absorbed with a mound of something covered in a sheet of old
sailcloth.
"Find something?" he asked trying to sound nonchalant despite
the fright she had given him. It didn't help that the upper half of his
body wore only gooseflesh.
Considering the scare you gave me, this had better be good, he grumbled
under his breath.
"I think you can say that I found something," she said, not
taking her eyes from the mound. "It's the most amazing thing. I found
a swan, an injured swan."
He felt his eyebrows rise. "Like in that play? And you say I'm weird."
"No, not like in the play. This one is not likely to metamorphose
into a handsome young man." Her eyes crinkled in amusement. "Besides,
I have one of those. This is just a swan." Gently she raised the
edge of the sailcloth to reveal a sitting bird, surprisingly large and
snowy white. "Isn't he magnificent!"
Mulder frowned. He remembered when she used that word to refer to particular
parts of his anatomy.
All at once the animal's head pulled out from under his wing, his back
came up and his wings reached out until he seemed ten times the size he
had been before. The wingspan nearly touched the walls of the shed side
to side. The graceful head automatically turned to Mulder and, black eyes
glittering, the beast uttered an ear-splitting 'Caw!' in challenge. At
the same time Mulder leaped back, his bare feet landing onto a patch of
particularly sharp gravel. Mesmerized, Scully stayed where she was.
Hopping awkwardly on his traumatized feet, Mulder growled, "He doesn't
look very injured to me."
"He was holding his wing oddly when I first saw him and he won't
move. This is exactly where I found him."
"Then maybe it would be best to leave him be. Animals seem to know
best when it comes to their own injuries. We should be getting dressed
and getting on with the day, anyway. We have people to see and I want
some of that homemade bread Roz sent with us."
"Sorry," Scully apologized, rising from the dirt floor and
brushing off her slacks." I gave all the bread to Bill."
"'Bill'?" Mulder glowered at the alarmed bird whose beak seemed
well capable of pecking out his eyes.
"Makes sense, despite the fact that that's what she named the swan
in the play. And don't worry," she said lightly as they headed back
to the cabin, Mulder limping, "I'm not hungry. You can have my share
of the fruit."
"Which happens to consist mostly of strawberries," he grumbled.
"Then pick cockleberries. There are bushes of them all around here.
You can eat blueberries so you should be able to tolerate them. To be
on the safe side, start with just a few."
He did and they were a lot like a tart blueberry. Odd time of year, though.
It didn't happen to occur to him until later that he had not asked her
how she had happened to be outside in the morning dew, investigating old
boathouses anyway.
The sun had finally burned through the fog by the time they walked up
to the door of the Jameson cabin. Mulder knocked softly, not wanting to
wake the man who was probably getting little enough sleep as it was. Richard
was awake, however. He came to the door of a second building that was
easily as large as the cabin. One could see the relationship between siblings.
Like Roz, Richard was lean and dark, with prominent cheekbones and light
eyes. At the moment he was also the personification of Misery.
With sympathy, they showed their identification and explained the purpose
of their visit.
"I appreciate the help, but there's not much more I can tell you
that I didn't tell the sheriff. Still," he gestured to the open door
of the outbuilding, "come on it and I'll tell you what I know. Sorry,
I'm in the middle of something I have to finish before the glue sets."
They followed him inside to be met instantly with the sharp, pleasant
scent of freshly cut wood, spiced with that of varnish and glue.
Richard Jameson was an instrument maker and restorer, and clearly a good
one. The walls of his workshop were lined with guitars and violins and
mandolins, as well as less common instruments such as sitars. There was
even one large deep-bodied lute. A new harp lay in pieces on the workbench,
its soundbox held in place by huge C-clamps as the glue dried, its pillar
half carved. The craftsman had gone to a second bench and continued laying
pre-cut pieces of mother-of-pearl into the delicate inlay on the neck
of an ancient guitar. It seemed rather like an injured bird itself, as
it lay there looking naked without its strings.
"Take your time," Mulder said, not wanting to disturb the craftsman.
"We'll wait till you're finished." Mulder watched the man for
a few minutes. Despite his obvious fatigue the man's fingers moved deftly.
Only from time to time did they fumble with the tiny pieces.
It was a pleasure for the two agents to wander around the workshop. Lacquered
wood glowed golden in the sunlight. Large windows looked down upon a lake
now peaceful in the full light of day. Mallards played in the waters,
not a swan or loon in sight.
Scully drifted into a smaller side room. All at once Mulder heard her
gasp and quickened his step to reach her side. She was staring at a most
remarkable vision. A man's face, striking and brown and as seamed as a
nut, stared out from a ring of brilliantly golden leaves. The leaves seemed
to spring from his downturned mouth. It was a carving of a head, life
size, but it was the expression on the face -- at once solemn and tortured,
with beseeching green eyes -- that made one expect to hear the man speak.
Or groan.
Mulder's heart had gone racing in his chest at his first sight of the
carving. Scully's breath was still coming in small puffs as she approached
it for a better look.
"That's real gold leaf on the leaves if I'm not mistaken. There's
no substitute for that kind of glorious shine."
"It's the man..." Mulder said. "It's a version of the
Green Man, but not like most."
"Not like any I've seen. He seems so... troubled."

At that moment a form rose up behind them and uncharacteristically both
agents flinched.
"I'm finished for now," a weary Richard said. "Let's go
to the house to talk."
The house had been built about the same time as the Hutchinson's and
in the same style, but there all resemblance ceased. The Jameson's house
was decorated in the way one would expect for a place where two such artists
lived. Everywhere there were rich colors and the gleam of wood -- floor,
furniture, cabinets, beams on the ceiling and objects on the walls and
tables, most of it handmade. While Richard was gone to wash his hands
and change his sawdust-covered shirt, the partners examined the carvings
with interest. There was nothing else like the man in the gold leaf mask,
but there were other Green Men.
"These are more traditional," Scully said, examining two carvings,
expressionless male face whose beards and hair consisted of thick masses
of grape leaves and vines.
"Yes, very Bacchus-like, similar to those you can find on the signs
of every other English pub in Britain."
"Which you would know, I'm sure, having gone school there. Took
a tour on the weekends did you?"
A crooked smile graced his lips. "Only the first two semesters.
First time away from home and all that. As far as most images of the Green
Man heads go, they're Gothic interpretations of the Roman version. An
image of plenty, where Man rules supreme over nature. Our Troubled Man
behind the gold leaf seems to be inspired by ones I've seen photographs
of -- carvings on the choir of Norwich, early fifteenth century. Almost
all of the images harken back to the Green Man's far older pre-Christian
antecedent of the disembodied oracle heads of pagan Celtic sects, such
as the Druids. Tree worship -- Nature as supreme, not Man." Mulder
sighed. "Of course, then man invented the heavy plow and within generations
almost all nature worship ceased in Europe. Man could too easily scar
the earth. He was less the slave to the lay of the land and the fickleness
of the seasons. Note that in North America where the tribes never invented
the heavy plow, nature worship continued."
"Why thank you, Professor Mulder," Scully teased.
The edges of Mulder's mouth turned up just bit. "Sorry, I always
found mythology fascinating."
Scully went back to studying the more pedestrian Green Man carvings.
"Odd that these heads have no life and our Troubled Man in the workroom
looks ready to --"
"-- Shall we talk now?" Jameson's voice interrupted from behind
them, a clear note of disapproval in his voice. "I have repairs I've
promised to get out. Besides, it helps to keep busy."
"We're only trying to help," Mulder said as he and Scully sat
down on chairs across from where the craftsman sat on a couch cushioned
in red and black tartan. The man didn't look angry any more, only weary
to the point of exhaustion.
"What do you want to know?"
"Only what you told the sheriff... but use different words, as if
you were telling it for the first time."
Richard nodded. He could see the sense in that. "Very well, only
there's not much to tell. I was working in my shop three days ago. It
was barely sun-up, but we're early risers. Reena came to tell me that
she was going to take a walk. She does that from time to time. She collects
wild flowers and herbs to dry, sometimes mushrooms. I didn't think anything
about her being gone until it was nearly dinnertime and she hadn't returned.
That's all I know."
"Any familiar places she might have gone? She could have sprained
an ankle."
"Do you think that I didn't look in all those places first? Not
a sign of her or anyone."
The regular questions followed: What was her mood? Had she been sick?
What had she been wearing? Was she carrying anything?
She had seemed the same as always, maybe a little 'down'. People get
like that. No, she hadn't been sick, but wasn't sleeping well. She had
been wearing jeans, hiking boots and a blue sweater. She had been wearing
her orange daypack, as always, so she would have a way to carry water,
some fruit, and what she collected.
"Why 'down'? Why not sleeping well?" Scully asked.
Richard shrugged. "Reena worked for one of the big art museums before
we left Boston. Though she wanted to get out of the rat race, having no
regular employment has been stressful. She threw herself into fixing up
the cabin and once that was done, then what?"
"Her art?" Mulder suggested, glancing meaningfully at a Green
Man mask with a grape leaf beard that hung on the wall above their heads.
Visibly perturbed, the craftsman frowned. "That's just it - art,
not craft. She had to be inspired. She couldn't find satisfaction in the
work itself. Those," he gestured to lifeless Green Men about them,
"sell well at the upscale craft shows but she wasn't inspired any
more and hasn't done a new one in months."
"There's one in the woodshop," Mulder mentioned meaningfully.
"It's not like these and looks new. I'd say she was sufficiently
inspired when she created that. In fact, it looks as if she carved from
life."
Richard visibly stiffened. "No, not that one," he blurted.
"I never met anyone like that. Neither has she. When you have the
kind of incredible imagination Reena has, you don't need a model."
"Still," Mulder continued, "can you explain the dramatic
change in style? Can it reflect some event --"
"You're just like the others!" Richard shouted, leaping up.
"Abrams and the fire chief and the others. Talk and questions. Why
aren't you out there looking for her?"
"We will," and Mulder pulled a piece of folded paper from his
pocket. "Sheriff Abrams even gave us a map. If you will mark on here
her favorite walks, her favorite places, we'll start today."
Somewhat appeased, the distraught husband marked half a dozen routes
on the map and within five minutes they were out of the comfortably-decorated
house.
Scully pulled a bottle of cold tea from the back seat of their car. "Mr.
Jameson certainly changed the subject abruptly. I don't think he wanted
to talk about our Troubled Man."
"No, he didn't," Mulder agreed, "but I don't want to pressure
him about it just at the moment. Ripping open scabs is not my idea of
fun. We've broached the subject, he must know that we'll come back to
it. Maybe tomorrow. I think we need to give him time to come to grips
with the reality that there might be another person involved. A man. A
real living, breathing man, her inspiration; not just imagination."
"Which as we know is more often the case than not with missing husbands
and wives," Scully sighed.
"Only, what woman would run away with the man in that particular
carving? As you said, that man has troubles. He doesn't appear to be the
yearning-for-love type. If she went away with him, I doubt it was planned,
nor by choice."
"Oh, I don't know..." Scully mused, eyes warm on her own lover.
"A man with troubles can be very attractive."
Mulder felt himself flush. "I guess you would know."
"I certainly would," she smiled and finished the bottle of
tea with a flourish and pulled out a second. "Where to now?"
she asked.
"It's Saturday. We're going to go visit some of the returned children.
I don't know if it's related but we mustn't forget them. They suffered
some trauma in the woods and I doubt that they stayed away as along as
they did by choice."
ACT III
Saturday, March 22nd
From house to house they went during the late morning and early afternoon.
During that time, a thick canopy of gray clouds gradually replaced the
golden sunlight. Because Reena Jameson's disappearance was well known,
the parents of the children no longer lost were surprisingly cooperative.
It was mid-afternoon by the time they pulled into the gravel parking spot
beside the Hutchinson cabin. Mulder carried in some groceries while Scully
cleared empty tea bottles out of the back of the car. "I'd be willing
to try some of that," he said. "Roz Hutchinson gave you those,
right?"
"Sorry," Scully replied as she deposited the last bottle in
the recycling bag. "All gone. It's really delicious stuff."
"I guess I know who's going to be up all night going to the bathroom."
Giving him a look followed by a suggestive pat on the backside as she
passed him, Scully sallied out the door of the cabin. Mulder would have
been heartened by the gesture if he did not know where she was going.
To see the swan, of course.
After putting away the few groceries, Mulder changed into jeans, a long
sleeve shirt, and the oldest pair of athletic shoes he had brought. After
all, they didn't plan on any more visits that day and it was obvious that
nothing was happening in Sylvan Valley that evening. The laptop sat on
the kitchen table but Mulder felt no desire to type up notes. Scully had
her own system and did the bulk of that kind of work and she'd be doing
that now, if she weren't attending to the damn swan.
On the steps of the porch he paused to look down at the lake. One should
have been able to see it clearly as it was daytime and there was no fog,
but it was still little more that a flat silver surface beneath the slate
sky.

Scully was crouched in the boathouse where she had been in the morning,
observing the swan. She'd pulled the sailcloth aside. The impressive bird
lay inert with its head resting on its back. At least it was until Mulder
stepped into the dilapidated shed. In an instant its head flew up, its
back raised, the huge, glorious wings spread out, and the bird emitted
a loud challenge sounding like the caw of a crow produced by a bassoon.
"Mulder! You're upsetting him!"
"Upsetting 'him'? I didn't do anything."
They both scuttled outside though they could still hear the wild creature's
loud protests.
"Something leads me to believe that that Bill doesn't like me."
"Maybe because he can sense that you don't like him?"
Mulder waited for the twinkle in the eye, the twitch of the lip but none
came. Scully wasn't joking. He could tell a futile argument when he saw
one and let the matter drop. "I need some exercise. I'm going to
walk up to one of Reena's favorite haunts. Want to come?"
She did consider it, he'd give her that. "If it's alright with you
I'd rather not. I want to go on line and see what information there is
about --"
"--swans?"
Again the hairy eyeball. "Yes," she admitted, "as well
as to see if there is anything new on the affects of trauma on child behavior.
Those children we saw today weren't abnormal."
"That's not the point. Their parents and their doctor clearly feel
that they're abnormal on in terms of their behavior before their experience
in the woods." He started towards the woods.
"Maybe I should go. Promise -- no detours, no getting lost."
He paused, not sure that he liked the fact that she only thought she
should go because she didn't think he could take care of himself. "Scully,
this is the not the wilderness. No old growth forest. This was all fields
less than a century ago. I'm just going up the spring trail and then coming
back. I'll be back in two hours, tops. Besides, I have junior here,"
and he showed her the smaller of his service weapons that he wore in a
shoulder harness. "And I have the map Hutch gave us. What could happen?"
It was a pleasant walk. The woods were cool and calmly dim, and his resentment
of the swan that kept Scully from joining him did not last long. He had
spent too many of his early years alone not to feel at home in his own
company. According to the map, the Odette trail wound from the lake back
and forth up and between a break in the Cahoute Mountain where a spring
gushed forth sweet, naturally carbonated water even in the middle of winter.
But when would winter be in this upside-down place where fall reigned
when it should have been spring? What the map didn't say was that the
trail followed an old logging area that had been replanted by the lumber
people in softwoods. All around him the hundreds of identical straight
trunks of conifers rose into the air, planted so close together that the
only remaining branches were forty feet in the air. His own feet made
no noise on the springy needle-thick trail. Still, there were deciduous
trees close enough so that when the breeze blew, their out-of-season dry
leaves shivered with a bright sound like so many tiny wind chimes. Every
once in a while he heard a rustle not caused by the wind. Some animal.
His thoughts went to the missing woman. Reena came here to think her
private thoughts. Of what? Replaying romantic stories of Robin Hood? Unlikely.
Did the face of her Green Men peer at her from behind the thick, shiny
leaves of the rhododendrons that grew everywhere in this shady place?
Or did she simply walk, allowing her artist eyes and brain to glory in
the possibilities of curve and color?
A branch cracked so close by that Mulder felt his heart leap and hairs
on the back of his neck rose. He had heard gunshots less loud. Automatically,
he turned towards the sound. Above him on a little rise he saw a movement,
but then it was gone. Another animal? Perhaps, but a larger one. Alert
and wishing that he had brought his standard service weapon, he moved
on.
There were no additional odd noises during the remainder of his walk.
He heard the spring before he saw it, the sparkling rush of its waters.
It must have created a small waterfall. Ahead was a great dark space,
a cleft in the mountain eternally deep in shadow. All at once one of those
freak coincidences happened. A break formed in the otherwise solidly overcast
sky and the slanting rays of the nearly setting sun shot through the pattern
of pencil-straight trunks of the softwood forest. The glade turned into
something molten with gold, something magical. Normally seeing no light
and damp from the spring, the deep combe was thick with huge ferns and
moss. Ahead of him a ribbon of white water fell from a shelf of rock a
few feet above his head in the very center of the cleft. He climbed the
short, steep bank through slanting, golden sunbeams. On the top of the
shelf was a pool, a dark oval perfectly mirroring the much lighter sky
behind his right shoulder. He found himself staring into the pool, only
vaguely remembering to wonder if the missing woman also came to this enchanted
place and how often.
There was a movement in the water then, though not 'in' the water --
a movement of an image in the water. His head jerked up and to the right
in time to catch a flash of reddish brown on the slight rise above him,
where a shaft of golden sun glittered.
"Scully?" It was the same color as her hair. Perhaps she had
followed him after all. "Scully, I'm here."
There was no answer.
He reached for the small revolver. It felt tiny and nearly useless in
his hand. Feeling slightly foolish, he called, "FBI. Come out!"
His words that usually carried well seemed to get sucked into the loam
of the dark, rich mountainside.
But something heard him. The light shifted again near the spot where
he had seen the rusty shade of red. There it was again. His brow creased
as he struggled to make out the shape that was man-size but not human
in form.
His gun went back into his holster as he sighed. A deer stood there,
a doe, and a good sized one. It stepped out of the brush and regarded
him solemnly with huge, unblinking brown eyes. She was not the least afraid.
Her head was up; her long soft ears flickered back and forth as if listening.

"Aren't you a brash little thing," he said, feeling his lips
curve into a smile, "and beautiful."
She turned then, without hurrying. At the same time a bit of breeze sent
a puff of sweet air in his direction, from off the ridge where she stood.
And it was sweet. His nostrils flared to catch every molecule. There were
cockleberry bushes everywhere; they had to be the cause. Still, his lungs
held onto the breath. The rush was as startling as it was unexpected.
His heart quickened. A flush went up his skin and into his face. His head
felt oddly light.
A man's body can embarrass him from time to time; he's a highly visual
animal, after all. But scents will do it as well. The billion dollar perfume
industry can't be all hype. His loins twitched as if there were smoldering
coals down there that someone was trying very hard to stoke into flame.
But there was no one, just the doe who still stood on the dark hill above
him, flashing her light-colored rump in his face.
"You little flirt," he called to her, not really believing
that she was the cause.
In answer she merely looked over her shoulder at him, her little white
tail flickering.
There is an almost undeniable urge in humans to touch wild things. There's
the challenge, of course, just to get close but also the desire to get
that close to something so alien. Mulder wasn't ashamed to admit it. He
desired to run his hand along the doe's smooth coat of coarse hair, but
more than anything he wanted to feel the hard, slim muscles vibrating
with life and a little fear under his hand. Standing there as if waiting
for him, he could almost believe that she wanted it as well. Knowing it
was hopeless, he took a step forward as softly as possible. She didn't
move. He took another, unable to keep the ground cover from rustling.
She still didn't move. Before he knew it he was moving carefully, but
unerringly, towards the rise where she stood. She merely stepped about
in a circle, her eyes ever on him, as if impatient.
"Damn, not just a flirt but a vixen," he whispered as he began
to climb. The slope was so steep that he found himself using hands as
well as feet. His shoes slipped from time to time on the damp leaves and
still she stood her ground. He could see her eyelashes now, long and curled,
the perfection of her impossibly tiny hooves, the soft muzzle. He could
almost feel the warmth of her breath in his palm. Only when he came within
ten feet did she move, taking two leaps that defied gravity in their effortless
ease.
As if they were tied by an invisible string, she remained just that far
away, no closer, no farther. Mulder didn't really think he would catch
her but it was a fun game, like playing tag with a much older sibling
who taunted you and always stayed just out of reach. To play with such
a beautiful and wild creature was a child's dream and Mulder had never
entirely given up his childhood dreams, and hoped that he never would.
Up this slope and that they went, and down again. He no longer even tried
to keep quiet. When he fell behind, she waited for him, flicking that
tail, her rump always in view.
He fell once and just sat there looking at her gazing at him dispassionately
with her Loren Bacall eyes from less than five feet away. "Oh, you
sexy thing. You must drive the young bucks wild."
That should have triggered a warning in his mind.

He had been working on ascending a heavily wooded slope in black shadow
when he emerged suddenly into the light. At the top of the slope was a
clear space, a meadow. It seemed light only in contrast, for though the
sky was still bright, the sun had set.
He was still pulling himself up when he heard a very loud snort. Something
large moved restlessly nearby and almost immediately let loose with a
tremendous trumpeting bellow. None of this came from the direction where
the doe waited.
Mulder straightened up so quickly that he felt suddenly dizzy. He dropped
back down, hands on knees. Only a few yards away stood a stag, not just
some young buck but a fully mature stag, complete with dark ruff, and
he was very angry. His hot breath came out of his flaring nostrils into
the cooling air in little puffs like a bull's. Mulder's vision was blurred
enough that he couldn't even count the number of menacingly sharp points
on buck's impressive rack. The darkening sky of evening rolled erratically
overhead. The stag bellowed again in challenge. Mulder's limbs felt suddenly
as weak as water and his head felt so heavy that he could barely lift
it. There was no way he could outrun this thing.
"You damn bitch," he hissed at the doe.
Her ears softly flicked back and forth, as she looked from him to the
stag, and back. He could have sworn that he saw a self-satisfied smirk
on her face.
He didn't really have time to move, his body seemed to be dissolving when
it should have been going rigid in preparation for action. Hooves pounded,
there was a dark blur, and his body proved all too solid. Pain erupted
along his left side. He felt his body leave the earth and propel backwards
into black shadow. Down the slope he had climbed for so long he fell,
rolling and rolling, scratched by brambles and stabbed by broken twigs
and rocks. Pain was everywhere.
He didn't remember reaching the bottom.
Act IV
Saturday night/the early hours of Sunday, March 22nd and 23rd.
Firelight was so incredibly beautiful, Scully thought as she sat curled
in the big comfortable chair before it. She simply stared into the flames.
She'd been doing so for what seemed like hours and never tired of the
constant change in form and color. The sound, too, like a chorus of whispering
spirits, was eerie and at the same time fascinating even though she knew
the cause was simply trapped water in the logs escaping as steam. And
the heat! It did things to her where it touched her skin. Languid as she
was, a part of her shifted restlessly. Where on earth was Mulder? She
wanted him home, she wanted him. She wanted to make love to him right
here on the rich, thick Indian rug that sat before this glorious fire
that, surprisingly, never seemed to need tending.
Her hand went out automatically and found the bowl. Half a dozen of the
purple berries went into her mouth. They had bought all those groceries,
she should get up and make something for supper, but these would do, and
they were so good!
She had never logged onto the Internet to check to see if there was any
new trauma studies on children, much less to search for information on
the care and feeding of swans. There really wasn't any need about the
second issue. Before sunset she had looked in on him one last time and
'Bill' had looked fine. What a beautiful, big fellow he was. He had arched
his back and extended his wings for her. Even taken a few steps. Such
grace and strength! He'd be fine, he was fine. After leaving him, she'd
spied an aluminum pail that looked like something her grandmother might
have used and headed out into the woods, still dressed in her better work
shoes and suit. Roz Hutchinson had been right about how thickly the cockleberries
grew near the lake, and it hadn't taken Scully long to fill her bucket
with the plump, dark fruit. Not having had lunch, she'd eaten her fill
during the picking. It had been a pleasant time. The woods were so quiet,
so peaceful, and the picking so easy that the berries seemed to fall off
into her hand. The time seemed to fly by -- yet why was it almost completely
dark by the time she returned to the cabin?
The cabin. She must not have looked at it very well the night before.
She had had the impression then that it was just a box, filled with inexpensive
second-hand furniture. Now it looked to her like a fairy tale cottage.
Ivy and Rose of Sharon framed the doors and windows. A path of colored
pebbles, smooth from the river, led up to the porch on which clean, white
wicker furniture sat accented with colorful pillows. Inside, the air was
filled with the scent of rosemary and lavender from the bunches of herbs
hanging from the rustic rafters as well as from the scent of the ripe
berries she carried. The furniture was rich and lush, covered in chenille
throws in jewel tones. The appliances in the kitchen gleamed in the firelight.
The fire! It was already burning brightly, just like now. Clever man.
Mulder must have set it before he went out. The man must have ulterior
motives. If so, she liked his ulterior motives.
It didn't occur to her to wonder why the fire had not burned down, since
Mulder had been gone for hours and so had she. Instead, she kicked off
her shoes, sank down into the deepest chair with her bucket of berries,
and there she had sat.
Waiting. Waiting and eating.
Her waiting ended, and just at the time when a questing hand into the
bucket came up empty. There came a knock at the door of dark polished
wood. With anticipation she opened it.
It was now totally dark. A tall figure stood on the porch, the only light
coming from the fireplace within.
Reaching out she took his hands and pulled him inside. "Silly, you
don't need to knock. Come on in. Love that shirt."
He wore a poet shirt, open half way down his chest. When he took her
in her arms and pressed his eager lips to hers, the yards and yards of
material in the sleeves billowed around them like great white wings.

* * * * * * * * * * * *
Pain is not a wonderful thing. Oh, sometimes it was nice to be reassured
that you weren't dead, but not when you wake in a night as black as pitch
and the damp cold is working into each and every bone of your body. Groaning
and swearing would have been a good first move if he hadn't found himself
facing downhill, his face in moss and leaves and pine mulch. There was
some of each in his mouth. Mulder spat out what he could but had little
spit. It was when he tried to get up or at least turn over that it really,
really hurt. Hot tears came to his eyes. Shit. More slowly he stretched
individual limbs. Nothing seemed broken but there wasn't a muscle that
wasn't bruised. The cold wind that blew through his shirt to his skin
seemed to be bearing tiny knives. This told him that his jacket had vanished
somewhere, his shirt had been nearly torn from his body, and that the
fall had tried to do the same to the skin of his arms, chest and back.
When he moved his face he felt the tug of some scratches, but not bad.
He must have instinctively protected his head with his arms as he fell.
Yes, he remembered falling, and landing, and rolling. Especially the landing
part. Something had torn then in his left hip, that injury seemed the
worst. Agony pierced up and down from that hip when he tried to put weight
on the leg.
Finally he was able to roll onto his right side enough to keep his face
out of the dirt. Panting, he lay there, frantically thinking of options
and more frantically listening for a search party. There had to be a search
party. Scully knew where he was headed and he would be way overdue by
this time, which he realized by the backlighting of his watch was nearly
midnight. But how far had he strayed from the path he had said he would
be following? The part of his day since leaving the spring was hazy. Even
with his headache -- and he did have a killer headache -- his head was
clearer now. Had he really been playing tag with a deer? That's what he
seemed to remember, but as if in a dream. And there had been a buck, a
lowered crown of antlers. Maybe all the damage to his hip didn't come
from the fall.
Somewhere not close but not nearly far enough away, thunder rumbled.
It had been overcast since early afternoon. Please, not rain; that he
didn't need. In his condition, in his state of undress, in this weather
which would only get colder, hypothermia would have his number.
Light flashed overhead, pale and diffuse, silhouetting the thick interweaving
of bushy branches inches from his face. Thunder rumbled louder. His only
consolation was that he knew now that he wasn't blind.
The wind picked up significantly and there came the scent of rain and
ozone. Whatever was coming was going to be big. This bush would be no
protection. Another flash brought another view of the underside of the
bush he had rolled under. Wait! Feeling foolish, he managed to pull his
cell phone from his back pocket. When it had gotten so late before, why
hadn't he tried to call? As his cold fingers fumbled with the power button,
he grumbled under his breath. With his luck if it hadn't been damaged
by the stag's attack or in his fall, it would be out of batteries. What
a surprise, therefore, when the ghostly green display sprang to life.
No service, however. Exasperated, his head fell back into the leaves.
His urban counterparts in law enforcement certainly had an easier job
in terms of communication. On the other hand, he didn't have to worry
about bears or snakes carrying guns.
Bears... And snakes... Maybe they didn't carry guns but they had fangs
and teeth and claws. He checked for his gun. No gun. That had tumbled
free at some point during the fall. Just in case, he had unsnapped the
holster during one of the times a noise had startled him, and for some
reason had never snapped it again. That was a foolish thing to do. No
-- a criminally incompetent thing to do.
The breeze brought him another fresh scent of earth and mold and wet
and, yes, that sweetness. He knew that scent this time --a cockleberry
bush. A flash of lightning revealed the small dark globes in abundance
just over his head. Eagerly he reached out and pulled in handfuls. They
not only wet his dry mouth but eased his shaky and empty stomach.
He must have become lost in savoring their tangy flavor for far too long,
because all at once the lightning was brighter and came more frequently,
and the thunder was louder. Wind lashed the tops of the trees. Shaken
loose, ripe berries fell onto his face.
He couldn't stay here. He couldn't afford to get wet and he would if the
rain was much heavier than a drizzle. And it was going to be much more
than that.
With an extreme effort that was as much of will as strength, he rolled
out from under the bush and under the open sky. He had to see around him
to find better shelter.
Already it was colder. Desperation gave him the strength to look beyond
the everywhere ache of his body. He was even more dizzy than before, however,
in addition to his body aching like a sonofabitch.
With each tracing of white witches' fingers across the sky, he forced
his head to rise so he could take in another point of the compass. On
the fourth flash he saw it. He must have actually rolled down that steep
hillside and just before the end, a shelf of rock thrust out. There was
a darkness under there that seemed about three feet high. Perhaps there
would be enough of an overhang to give him shelter from the rain that
was surely on its way.
Gritting his teeth he moved forward on his hands and his right knee,
dragging his left leg. The distance wasn't far, less than five yards,
which was fortunate because huge, fat drops of rain began to fall before
he was half way there. He was only damp by the time he reached the overhang.
It was deep enough. He moved farther in and farther yet into the complete
blackness. The sound of the rain muted as the stone closed in around him.
A cave! He could scarcely believe his luck. If this were like other caves,
it would also maintain a rather constant temperature. It wouldn't be anywhere
near comfortably warm but neither would it be perilously cold.
Maybe he wouldn't die this night after all. At the moment, however, a
nearly irresistible desire for warmth and sleep had overtaken him. At
least the cave floor was surprisingly spongy from the years of blown-in
leaves and forest debris. By feel alone he even found a hollow just his
size. With a sigh he curled up there, gradually removing the worst of
the offending sticks and stones and then reaching out for armloads of
more of the flooring material to pile around and over his shivering body.
Sleep was more than insistent now. Before he surrendered to it, however,
a thought of caution worked its way through the fuzziness and pain in
his head, and he worked the cell phone out of his back pocket again. The
light from the display wasn't much, but in that complete blackness it
was surprisingly bright. Fatalistically, he half expected to see petroglyphs
on the walls or maybe satanic verses and pentagrams, bones in the corner
or black candles. Nothing. Completely clean. Completely sterile except
for the overpowering smell of mold and damp and earth. Forcing the phone
clumsily back into place was his last act before blessed silence closed
over his mind.
* * * * * * * * *
It was raining hard. The perfect time to lay warm and safe before the
still perfect fire in your lover's arms. He had been particularly attentive,
cuddling and giving her pleasure but taking none for himself. Odd for
Mulder - well, not the attentive part -- but, heck, why not. Scully wasn't
complaining. He dropped more of the lush, sweet berries into her open
mouth and sealed them with a soft kiss. Life couldn't get much better
than this.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
Rain drummed on the floor of the dark forest, cleaning and reviving,
but inside the cave the sound was most like a lullaby, going on and on.
It was enough to keep Mulder sound asleep despite the occasional stray
twig that he had failed to remove, and the interest of small insects in
his cuts and scratches. He slept, but in time he also began to dream.
They weren't vivid dreams, as if the fuzziness of the evening had carried
over, but he knew where he was. He was in a cave curled up just as he
was and he couldn't move, didn't want to move. With bliss, he remembered
being much younger and smaller and lying under mounds of quilts warm in
his bed on Martha's Vineyard with nothing that needed doing, while some
frigid Nor'easter raged outside. After a while he heard a movement, a
slow and heavy lumbering. Nothing to be scared of, just his dog. It was
a big black dog who resembled his beloved Thor so much. The dog's name
was even Thor, even though in real life Fox and Sam had never been allowed
to have a dog, but this was a dream and sometimes good things were allowed
to happen in dreams.
Thor was up on the bed standing over him now. Even though the room was
black, he could feel the heat radiating off the big body, could hear the
heavy breathing, could smell the heavy breathing! Ugh! What had he been
eating? And rolling in? Thor wasn't allowed on the bed but there he was.
He probably wanted out but Fox didn't feel like moving. He should wash
the damn dog before his mother yelled at him, but he didn't want to do
that either. "Go to Sam," but as happens in dreams, the words
didn't come. His mouth didn't even move but stayed stupidly wide open.
He wanted to raise his arms to push the dog away, but those wouldn't move
either, yet he felt not a trace of fear. No, Thor stayed right there,
breathing out his doggy breath in great gasps. So hot, such a smell. It
was in Fox's lungs now, filling him. By the heat, the animal's muzzle
must be inches from his own. That essence of animal was getting into the
boy's nose and mouth, getting in and filling, filling, filling him with
a great, huge, wild heat. Only when he could take no more, when he felt
near to bursting with that hot breath, the animal moved away. He could
hear its slow heavy tread as is moved into some other corner of the black
room, and with a surprisingly deep grunt settled itself to sleep.
It was only after the animal began to snore softly, a sound very much
like the drumming of the rain, that the spell seemed to break. Mulder
roused, not a lot, but enough to exhale for what seemed like the first
time since the dream began. Odd. Though he breathed out for a long, long
time, he still felt a fullness in his lungs and around his heart. Surprisingly,
it didn't hurt but felt rather comforting, like when a cat sleeps on your
chest. This, however, must be a very big cat for he found it hard to breathe.
When he tried to induce the animal to move, however, he found nothing
there.
I must still be dreaming, he hoped, and, hoping, slipped back into the
chilly dark.
End of Swan Lake, Part I
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