18 Nov 1997
Abah VI: The Recovery(1/4)
by Susan Proto (STPteach@aol.com) 
Category: Story, Angst, MSR, Mag/Sk Romance
Rating: PG13 for language
Spoilers: Through to Demons 
Summary: The saga continues with Mulder recovering from the trauma he 
experienced while helping to provide Scully with a cure for her cancer. 
(CC has _his_ ideas and I have mine!;->) We got MulderAngst, SkinnerAngst, 
ScullyAngst, MaggieAngst, CSMAngst, a very little MaMulderAngst, and even 
a little SamanthaAngst! 
Archive: Yes
Disclaimer: These characters belong to 10/13 productions and Chris 
Carter. I am merely borrowing them, I won't keep `em unless Mr. Carter 
thinks otherwise (which, of course, I doubt, but I can dream, can't I??) 
I shall return them at the end of the story, and I do believe this is an 
end.. I do, I really, really do! Maybe. 
Introduction: So I thought Abah V: Mothers and Lovers was long. Vickie 
once told me to write a short paragraph or two in order to clarify a 
scene. My idea of a short paragraph is obviously three pages. or 
something like that. Well, Abah VI: The Recovery gives these guys a 
chance to really tell their stories. I hope you agree. I recommend you 
read Abah I, II, III, IV, and V first, because I really think as 
"informative" as this story is, there may be some black holes that can be 
filled in by the previous stories in the series. Besides, this is my 
totally gratuitous groveling and begging for feedback on any and all of my 
stories.
Once again, my very heartfelt thanks to my cyber buddy and cyber editor, 
Vickie Moseley, for all of her help and guidance!! Her keen eye helped me 
keep the "facts" straight and guided me to create a clearer, more 
articulate story that just (I hope) flows in all the right places. Thank 
you, thank you, thank you Vickie!!!!! ;- 
Thanks in advance folks for all of your kind words, past and future. 
Please send e-mail comments to: STPteach@aol.com
Part 1/ 33
Margaret Scully's Home
Baltimore, MD 
Scully stood hidden in the shadow of the doorway to the den and felt as 
though she were spying on him. She clenched and unclenched her hand over 
and over again as she watched. She wanted so badly to go in there and 
just tie the damned things for him, but she realized that would be the 
worst thing she could do. 
Mulder cursed under his breath again at the awkward movements his fingers 
insisted upon making. He was having enough problems maintaining his 
balance while just sitting on the sofa bed, so the additional frustration 
of not being able to manipulate the laces to his liking caused him even 
greater irritation. 
"First make one loop. Hold the loop with your right hand. Okay. This is 
good," he whispered to himself. "Take the second lace with your left 
hand. Okay. Concentrate. Pull the lace around the loop. Okay. Now push 
the left lace into the little space of the right loop, and pull it out 
with your hand and-" 
The whisper became a cry out loud, "__Damn it!__" He looked at the untied 
laces helplessly. "Damn it," he said again, only more softly to himself. 
Scully stepped back momentarily from the doorway. She didn't want him to 
look up and see her. She didn't want him to realize she witnessed what 
had just happened. She didn't want him to see the tears in her eyes. 
Scully wiped her eyes deftly and then called out to him, giving him notice 
of her impending appearance. "Mulder, you in there?" 
There was no response. Scully realized he didn't have his hearing aids 
in. She walked into the room and moved towards the front of him, talking 
to him all the while to make sure she didn't totally startle him. 
"Hey Mulder, so here you are," she called out while looking directly at 
him. 
"Yeah, Scully," he replied, and then added in a voice that resounded of 
defeat, "Where else woul' I be?" 
"Good morning!," she said cheerfully in an attempt to put aside his dark 
mood. As she looked directly at him, she said, "I'm getting ready to 
leave for the office, and I want you to walk me to the door." 
"I can' tie my shoes, Scully," he responded despondently. "I can' ge' the 
secon' loop." 
"Oh Mulder, you will." She cupped his chin and drew his eyes to her face 
so he could watch her closely. "It's just going to take more time, but we 
have plenty of time now, don't we." 
Mulder nodded in agreement, and then shyly asked, "He'p me, please?"
Scully told him to start tying them and go as far as he could go. Mulder 
made the first loop with his right hand and then grasped the second lace 
with his left. He handed the second lace to Scully. 
"This is where I keep screwin' it up," he said. 
"Okay," she responded and then took his hand and guided it around the 
loop. She then pushed the lace through the opening and grasped it, but 
then she manipulated his right hand and left hand in such a way that he 
could finish the process. "There!" she proclaimed, "You did it." 
His face broke into a small smile. They both knew it was more of a pseudo 
victory, but a victory none the less. Over the last three months they 
learned to accept these small victories, and to relish them. They never 
knew how long it would be till the next one.
****Three Months Earlier****
"When did you have the time to get this?" Scully asked. She walked into 
the den to find the sofa bed Fox had been sleeping on pushed over to the 
side wall. Standing conspicuously in its place was a hospital bed. 
"I made some phone calls, Dana," replied Elizabeth Mulder. "The doctors 
felt it would be better for Fox's recovery to have a bed with a good 
supportive mattress and the ability to change positions." 
"Oh. It's so big, yet it's so small," Dana remarked.
Maggie Scully smiled at her daughter's observation. She realized she was 
referring to its width. The sofa bed had a queen sized mattress, so Dana 
could comfortably slip into the bed with Fox for a good night's sleep. 
The hospital bed was a single, and would probably not afford them that 
same luxury. 
"Dana, it's not like he's going to need the hospital bed forever, honey. 
It's just to give him a chance to recover a little bit, okay?" 
As she nodded, Mulder was wheeled in on a gurney by the attendants from 
the treatment center. They brought him up side by side with the hospital 
bed, and on the count of three, lifted him onto his new berth. 
He was still out of it because of the various medications the doctors 
prescribed. There were heavy duty antibiotics, an anticonvulsant, as 
well sedatives to keep him calm during the trip. Mulder had enough tubes 
sticking out of him for five people, between the catheters, the IV's and 
the oxygen. 
Scully still shuddered a little each time she thought of what he went 
through over the last few days in order to save her. Though she still 
felt weakened from the anesthesia and the pain killers for the stitches 
around her face, she was fine. She was cancer free, and it was all 
because of the man in the hospital bed. 
The man that she loved with all of her heart, and who in turn, loved her 
back. Except he was not fine. Not yet. He had a long a long road back 
to recovery. A very long road, and she was planning on being with him 
every step of the way.
**********Present**********
Scully helped Mulder tie his other shoe lace in the same manner. Next, 
she watched him reach for his hearing aids, turn them on, and put them in 
his ear. She knew he could hear without them if the room was totally 
quiet and there was only one person speaking directly to him, but as soon 
there was a crowd in a noisy room, he was lost without the aids. 
He still went to therapy to improve his listening skills. The aids 
definitely amplified the sounds around him. The problem for Mulder was 
distinguishing between all of the sounds and making sense out of them. It 
was a struggle for him when he first learned the hearing loss was going to 
be permanent, and it was a struggle today as well. 
"Come on G-Man, I gotta get my rear in gear and get to work," she said as 
she held out her hands for Mulder to grasp on to. 
"I'm comin', I'm comin'."
"Comin-/g/, Mulder, comin-/g/. Watch the word endings, okay?" she 
admonished. 
"Yeah, yeah," he replied weakly. Not only did he have to practice 
listening to others speak, he had to keep practicing how he, himself, 
spoke. Sometimes he got lazy, because he didn't hear all of the sounds 
clearly, and he had to make a conscious effort to say certain words 
clearly. 
It was harder work than most of his family realized. The effort it took 
to listen attentively and speak clearly exhausted him at times. 
Mulder stood up to his full height facing Scully. He was wearing his 
sweats and what was now an oversized tee shirt. Depending upon the 
clothes he wore, the weight loss wasn't always obvious, but this morning 
she could see his collar bone jutting out a little too clearly. 
"We've got to fatten you up, G-Man," she said this morning, as she had 
been saying for just about every morning for the past three months. 
"I'm eatin'-.eatin-/g/," he repeated carefully. "Your mother watches me 
eat every morsel she coo_ks_." 
"I know you are. I do. You've just always had such a fast metabolism, 
for which I still can't forgive you, you know, and with all of the extra 
energy you exert in therapy and just moving around this place, well, we've 
got to figure out a way of getting more calories into you, that's all," 
she concluded. 
She reached around his thin waist and rested herself against him, all the 
while providing him with the support he needed to remain standing up 
straight. He hugged her back and rested his chin on the top of her head. 
"Your hair smells goo_d_, Scully," he said.
"Thank you," was her muffled reply. "Okay, let's get this show on the 
road. The boss is gonna have my head if I'm late." 
"Right, and we don' wanna tick off the boss, do we?" he replied with a 
small grin. 
She reached for his walker with one hand while she still held onto him 
with the other and placed it in front of him. Next, Scully let go of him 
and watched him steady himself in back of the walker. He looked towards 
her and indicated he was ready. She began walking and he followed her. 
This was the morning ritual since last month. 
Mulder walked Scully to the front door and watched her as she met Walter 
Skinner, their boss and fellow resident of the Scully household. As he 
came upon Skinner, he said, as he'd said for the last month, "Take care of 
my girl." 
"Always," was Skinner's reply as he leaned forward and placed a gentle 
kiss on Mulder's forehead. 
It was an act that began three months ago, on the morning after Mulder was 
first brought home and confined to the dreaded hospital bed. Skinner had 
gone into the den and greeted Mulder with a cheerful good morning. 
Then, acting in his now familiar role of "Abah," Skinner leaned forward 
and gently kissed Mulder's forehead. It became a morning ritual, and 
continued even after said dreaded hospital bed was removed. Walter noted 
that Mulder always closed his eyes when he received the kiss, and did so 
today, as well. 
"Fox," Walter asked as he watched Mulder's eyes close, "does it bother you 
that I still do that?" 
Mulder looked at Skinner thoughtfully. Then he smiled, and said quietly, 
but firmly, "It would bother me if you stoppe', Abah." 
Scully reached up and kissed Mulder not on the forehead, but smack dab on 
the lips. He held her touch there for an extra moment or two, and then 
released her. "I love you G-Man," she whispered. 
"I lo_ve_ you always, Scully," Mulder responded as Scully and Skinner 
left for work, leaving him behind. He stood by the storm door and watched 
as they drove out of the driveway together. 
End of Part 1/33
Part 2/33
"Fox, breakfast is ready," called out Maggie Scully.
Even if Fox hadn't had his hearing aids in, he would have known what she 
said, since she'd said the same thing to him for the last three months. 
She said it to him while he was still confined to bed and she said it to 
him while he was still stuck in the wheelchair, and she said it to him now 
when he was back using the walker. 
Maggie Scully was, if nothing else, consistent. Which of course was just 
the thing Fox Mulder needed in helping him to recover from this latest 
trauma. 
"Soun's goo'," he replied, which of course was the same thing he'd been 
saying to her for the last three months. He shuffled back through the 
hallway into the large, bright kitchen of the Scully house. Mulder had 
become very much at home in this kitchen during his recovery. 
"Eggs and waffles are coming up, Fox. Drink your juice, dear."
"Yes, Mom." She was a no nonsense person, this Maggie Scully. She 
treated Fox as though his being there were the most normal thing in the 
world. Maggie let him know she had certain expectations of him that would 
help him in his recovery, and she expected him to follow through on them. 
But, on the other hand, she was also unabashedly mothering him like there 
was no tomorrow, and Fox William Mulder was eating it up. Most adults 
would have felt totally smothered, if not humiliated, at the idea of being 
treated in such a manner. 
Not Mulder. He accepted Maggie's care without reservation, and he even 
looked forward to it. Especially on those days his own mother was back in 
Greenwich, tending to her personal business. During that time, Mulder 
could not only anticipate the extra tender loving care, he could really 
enjoy it without feeling guilty. 
Maggie watched as Fox attacked the serving of waffles, and attack was 
just the correct description for it. He held his fork in his right fist, 
much like a young child would hold it. He used the butter knife to "saw" 
apart the waffle, and then awkwardly brought the fork up to his mouth. 
His fine motor skills were still poor, but when compared to what his 
skills were when he first came home, Miss Manners would have been proud of 
him. 
Which was a good example of the difference between Maggie Scully and 
Elizabeth Mulder. While Maggie could see the progress from where he had 
come, Elizabeth could only see how far he had to go. 
Elizabeth Mulder loved her son. No one doubted that. The problem was in 
the way she showed that love, or rather in the way she didn't show it. 
From the day Fox came back from the treatment center Elizabeth kept track 
of all the things he couldn't do. 
In her effort to help him, she hurt him, and she didn't even realize it. 
No matter how many times Fox let it be known that he was well aware of his 
shortcomings, Elizabeth Mulder seemed compelled to remind him of them over 
and over again. In her mind, she felt she was inspiring to achieve more. 
In his mind, he felt she was knocking him down again and again. 
"This is really goo', Mom," Mulder said as he munched on a waffle.
"Goo_d_, then you'll have another one," she replied with a smile.
"Mom, I'm gonna weigh a ton by the time I recover!" he chuckled.
Maggie smiled back at Fox, and thought to herself, *Now, that would be an 
X-File.* He was still so thin, there wasn't an ounce of fat on him, and 
not much skin either. His six foot frame could easily hold another twenty 
pounds. He needed to add some weight, and she decided that she would be 
the one to help him put it on, single handed if necessary! 
Maggie continued to pile on the food, but Fox was unable to keep up. Life 
had changed drastically for Fox since he had the cancer treatment that 
saved Scully's life but nearly took his own, as well as the bout with 
meningitis that had started his entire ordeal in the first place. One of 
the things that changed was Fox's appetite. 
In his pre-meningitis days, Mulder could have easily polished off four to 
five of Maggie Scully's homemade waffles and a three egg omelet, with 
juice and coffee. Today, Maggie was cajoling Fox to finish at least a 
half of the second waffle and half of the omelet. He drank the juice, 
albeit a small six ounce glass instead of an eight ounce glass, as well as 
a cup of decaffeinated coffee. 
"Mom, tha's all. I really can' eat anymore. It's delicious, really, but 
I jus' can'," he pleaded. 
Maggie smiled and took the plate away. She knew if Elizabeth were here 
she would berate him for wasting food, so she kept silent. She really had 
made way too much food, and the only person who should be berated was 
herself. 
She brought another cup of coffee and the various pills that needed to be 
consumed over to the table and joined Fox. "So, what's the plan for 
today?" she asked quietly. 
Mulder took a deep breath as he fingered his medications. This was the 
same question Maggie had asked him each day, and each day he had to come 
up with one goal that he was going to attempt to accomplish. He rarely 
succeeded in mastering the skill he set out for himself, but Maggie was 
always there to point out to him how much he'd improved since the last 
time he attempted it. 
"Well," he replied, "I though' I' try tying my righ' shoelace. I seem to 
be able to kee' my balance better when I try to tie the righ' one than the 
lef' one." 
"That's a good goal." She paused for a moment and then continued, "Fox, 
there's a goal _I_ would like you to keep in mind too," Maggie stated. 
"Wha'?"
"Your word endings, dear. You're leaving a lot of them off, like what_t_, 
and righ_t_. Would you try hard to concentrate on that. It's sometimes 
difficult to understand your meaning when you say the words incorrectly, 
and I don't want to miss any of the wonderful ideas that come out of that 
mouth of yours. Okay?" she urged him so gently. 
"I'm sorry. Scully's been on my case abou'..., abou_t_ tha_t_ too," he 
responded. 
"Then you don't mind if I point it out to you every once in a while when I 
notice?" she asked. Mulder shook his head to indicate he didn't mind in 
the least. 
He picked up and swallowed the multi-vitamin supplements and the two 200 
mg tablets of Tegretrol he took to ward off the grand mal seizures he'd 
developed during his latest medical incident. The Tegretrol was 
introduced slowly to reduce the side effects, and as a result, he'd been 
seizure free for the last two months, much to everyone's relief. 
Some time passed, while the two of them drank their coffee. Mulder was 
the first to speak. "Mom?" he asked. When Maggie looked directly at him 
with a questioning look on her face, he continued. 
"Mom, am I ever goin_g_ to make it back?"
"What do you mean, dear?"
"I'm no_t_ goin_g_ to be able to go back to work, am I?"
"Oh, Fox, of course you will. I think we can safely say that field agent 
will be out as a job opportunity for you, but just because it won't be in 
the same capacity, doesn't mean you won't find your niche in the bureau 
again. You will, dear. You have to believe that." 
When he didn't respond, Maggie continued. "Fox, you do realize that day 
will come a lot sooner now than later." 
"You really thin_k_?" he asked.
"Oh sweetheart, it wasn't that long ago that the thought of you being able 
to sit here at this table, drinking coffee out of a coffee mug was a 
dream. 
"Fox, think about the day you came home. You couldn't sit up long enough 
for the ride home in a car, so they had to bring you home by ambulance. 
They wheeled you in here on a gurney. 
"It took weeks before you were strong enough to sit upright in a 
wheelchair without sliding out, and even then, for the first few days, you 
were strapped in so tightly I thought your circulation would be cut off 
entirely. 
"It took so many weeks before you could hold a spoon without it having to 
be velcroed to your hand. And then it took almost as long before you 
could bring the spoon up to your mouth without spilling half of its 
contents. 
"Fox, look how far you've come, compared to what you were able to do just 
three short months ago. We all knew this wasn't going to be easy, but 
you've been working so hard. And you really are a lot closer now to 
getting back into the world again. I am so proud of you Fox William 
Mulder. Do you hear me? I am so proud of you," Maggie declared as her 
eyes glistened. 
"I'm scare'," he whispered. "I'm so scare' I'm never goin' to leave this 
house... Oh Go_d_, Mom. I didn' mean it like tha'__
I love the house. I love you for letting me stay here with you..__" he 
stammered. 
"Oh sweetie," she interrupted, "don't. I understand exactly what you 
mean. There were days I thought I was never going to be able to leave 
this place either, but now I can! 
"Fox, three months ago, I could never have thought about leaving you alone 
in this house. I didn't know if you were going to start coughing and 
choking on your own saliva. 
"You were having three to four grand mal seizures a day before the 
medication finally kicked in. And now, I think I can go out to run an 
errand or two, even if your mother is not here," Maggie concluded. 
"Right. My mother. When is she due back?" Mulder asked.
"Sunday evening, as usual," she replied.
"Oh."
"Fox, what is it? What's wrong?" Maggie asked.
"I know she loves me, Maggie. I really do. And I love her. I mean she's 
my mother, so I love her. Bu' sometimes she makes me feel," he paused and 
then took a deep breath. "She makes me feel li'e such a such a cripple. 
"She ma'es me feel like I can'_t_ do anythin'. I don' like feelin' like 
tha', Mom. Why does she do tha' to me?" whispered. 
"I don't know, Fox, but it sounds to me like you're ready to have a heart 
to heart with her." 
"A hear' to hear'?" he echoed.
"Yes, a hear_t_ to hear_t_," she replied. "When the children and I needed 
to clear the air between us, we used to say we needed to make time for a 
heart to heart. That meant we could sit down together and get things off 
of our chests without any fear of punishments or angry feelings. 
"Granted, sometimes feelings were hurt at first, but by the end of our 
heart to hearts, the air was cleared and everyone always felt better for 
it," she told him. 
"You thin' my mother woul' go for it?" he asked.
"You'll never know unless you try," she replied.
End of part 2/33 
########################################################################
Part 3/33
Herbert Hoover Building
Office of the FBI
Washington, DC 
Skinner told Kim to have Agent Scully come upstairs to his office A/S/A/P. 
He waited patiently for about the first three minutes and then sat 
drumming his fingers on the desk. 
He had never been a patient man, but since Mulder's illness, he found he 
was better able to appreciate the little things in life. He was 
especially better able to appreciate the small gains in Fox's physical 
progress. However, he was still not good at waiting for people, even if 
they weren't late. Even if they really did need a reasonable amount of 
time to make the trip from the basement up to his office. 
"Kim," he spoke into the intercom, "did you tell Agent Scully this was 
urgent?" 
"Yes, Sir, and I'm sure she'll be here momentarily," she replied, her 
voice mutated electronically. "Sir, I believe she's, yes Sir, she's here 
right now. Go on in Agent Scully, he's been waiting for you." 
What Walter Skinner could not see were the exaggerated hand signals Kim 
was giving Scully to let her know the boss was anxious about something, 
and to mind her P's and Q's. 
As she entered the office, she looked carefully at Walter. Something 
wasn't right. She'd been up in this office many times since they'd 
returned to work, and though it took them both a few days to get back into 
the swing of things, neither had any real adjustment problems. 
Walter, she knew, was only working forty hour weeks. That was his major 
concession to Mulder's recuperation and his love for her mother. Since 
Mulder first became ill, Walter and Maggie Scully were becoming closer and 
closer. He refused to let her bear the brunt of Mulder's recovery, and so 
had moved in with them. The once empty nest had become a bustling 
metropolis again. 
So Scully felt confident that she knew Walter Skinner. He had become not 
only her mother's significant other but also a trusted friend and 
confident. He had become not only Mulder's surrogate father but her own 
as well. She really did think of him as her Abah. 
However, while they were at the office, they assumed their professional 
roles. 
"Sir, Kim indicated to me you wanted to see me as soon as possible."
"Yes, Agent Scully. A case has been given to me that I felt should be 
brought to your attention. I thought you might have some ideas on how we 
should best proceed." 
"Certainly. Would you like to brief me or do you want me to look over the 
file myself?" she asked curiously. 
"How about you look at the file while I give you a very brief summary. 
Then you can bring the file to your office and give it a more thorough 
perusal," he replied seriously. 
"Very well, Sir." He motioned for her to take a seat on the couch so she 
might handle the file and its contents more easily. He remained standing 
and paced a bit at first. 
When she took the file, she observed it was neither exceptionally thick 
nor too thin. She noted the label, Case # 222428P and wondered what 
exactly this case entailed to cause her superior such obvious distress. 
"There's been a half a dozen unexplained deaths in the DC and surrounding 
area. The victims had an unusual cause of death." 
"Which is?" Scully interrupted.
"Which is cardiac arrest."
"Sir, I don't understand. What is so unusual about cardiac arrests as the 
cause of death?" 
"Scully, the victims were all, prior to their deaths, healthy, happy, 
eight year old children," he responded somberly. 
"What?," she replied astonished. "When? Where? Why?"
"If we knew the answers to all of those questions we wouldn't have six 
eight year olds dead from heart attacks. Scully, it's the damnedest 
thing. The children were all at their schools when the deaths occurred. 
They had just finished their lunches and went outside to their playgrounds 
for recess. By the end of the recess, they were dead." 
He paused for a few moments. Skinner looked as though he needed to brace 
himself before he continued. 
"Scully, there's one more thing. They found what appeared to be evidence 
of small, black, oily entities by each of the children's nasal passages 
and ears. The little worms were apparently not viable, but from the 
pictures and the description, it looks like they had been infected with 
the Black Cancer," shared Skinner. 
Scully gasped at the words "Black Cancer." "Oh God, Walter, this means 
someone is using children as guinea pigs. They were hosts just like 
Mulder. How could they do that to children? It's bad enough they did it 
to Mulder and innocent men and women, but children?! What kind of animals 
are we dealing with?" she cried. 
"I don't know. Which is why I've called you in here to ask your advice. 
Before you say anything, I do want to let you know I've contacted Jack 
Stein. I figured he must have some clue as to what this is all about," 
Skinner said with resignation. 
Walter observed Dana visibly shudder at the mention of Jack Stein's name. 
Cancerman. The biggest son of a bitch ever put on this planet, in 
Scully's opinion, second only to Mulder's son of a bitch abusive father, 
William Mulder. But Jack Stein was the Black Tarred, Nicotine Stained, 
Smoke Filled Black Lunged, Son of a Bitch. 
And to whom she was indebted for her life.
Sometimes life's a bitch, and then you die. Only she didn't.
Mulder nearly did, because he had to provide the cure for her cancerous 
tumor, and Jack Stein had the knowledge and the means to procure that cure 
from Mulder's body. But Stein went about it in an incredibly frightening, 
dangerous, manner that nearly killed Mulder and set his physical health 
back by many, many, months. 
"Jack Stein?" Scully paused another moment to collect herself. "Of 
course you had to call him," she responded in her most professional tone. 
"He very well may be behind all of this. Do you think he'll respond?" 
she asked. 
"I honestly don't know. I guess it depends how involved he is in these 
deaths. I haven't heard from him in over a month, and Elizabeth hasn't 
given any indication that she's heard from him either." 
"It would be difficult to ascertain that one way or the other Sir, given 
how little Elizabeth speaks about anything personal. She's too busy 
tearing Mulder down every chance she gets." 
"Dana, she's not that bad, is she?" He hesitated, and then said, "I 
don't know, maybe she is. But Fox seems to want her here, doesn't he?" he 
asked. 
"I think he does, but she's become such a double edged sword, hasn't she?"
"We'll just have to help him deal with it," he said, and then in a 
tentative, hesitant manner, added, "along with everything else." 
"Sir, what do you mean?" she asked, but knowing full well what AD Skinner 
was implying. 
"Dana, if there were another way, you know__," he offered.
But she interrupted in a voice that was suddenly made of steel. "You 
can't mean it. Walter, he's not strong enough yet. You know what these 
kind of cases do to him! These are eight year old children for God's 
sake!" she pleaded. 
"Then who do we turn to Dana? Who do we turn to so another eight year old 
doesn't die of a God damned heart attack and have little black worms crawl 
out of her nose. 
"Do you know someone we could trust to find these sons of a bitches? Give 
me a name Dana, and I swear I will call that person so fast both of our 
heads will spin!" Walter shouted. He then took a deep breath and sat 
down heavily on the couch next to Dana. 
Walter Skinner suddenly aged ten years. He knew perfectly well what the 
potential danger was in giving Fox Mulder this file to work on. He knew 
perfectly well what demons might be reawakened in his adopted son. 
And he was scared to death for him, because he was never sure if Fox would 
be able to climb back out of the abyss he so often found himself hurled 
into on cases such as these. 
He was also scared to death for Dana, because he knew how much she loved 
Fox, and now that she had her own life back, she didn't want to live it 
alone. A case such as this could only increase the chances of Fox Mulder 
hairing out for the last time. 
He was scared to death for Maggie, for she had bonded with Fox so long 
ago, and almost lost him too many times for a mother to have to go 
through. To rip him from her protective shelter now would be a very cruel 
act indeed. 
And he was scared for himself. He was Fox's "Abah." He had become the 
one adult male figure that Mulder trusted with his life and with his loved 
ones' lives. If Walter Skinner asked Fox Mulder to jump into a pool of 
fire, Walter knew Mulder would do it, because he trusted him that much. 
Would he be able to trust him now? Should he trust him? For the first 
time since he'd become Fox's "Abah," Walter Skinner didn't have a ready 
answer. 
End of Part 3/33
########################################################################
Part 4/33
Margaret Scully's Home
Baltimore, MD 
Mulder sat at the computer wishing his fingers would do what he wanted 
them to do. He had begun sitting at the computer about six weeks ago, but 
in the beginning his time there was not terribly productive. 
Aside from the fact that he found it very difficult to manipulate the 
mouse and use the keyboard, he also had an extremely short attention span. 
If he had sat at the computer for ten minutes at first, it was a long 
time. 
Gradually though, over the last few weeks, he'd been able to increase the 
amount of productive time on the computer. He found he was able to surf 
the net searching for sites about UFO's and unexplained phenomena for 
almost an hour and half without becoming too sleepy or unable to focus. 
The one frustration that remained was the difficulty he faced in typing on 
the keyboard. His fingers worked clumsily and didn't seem to span wide 
enough to cover the keys. It seemed to take him an interminably long time 
to type out the words, phrases, and sentences before the search engines 
could do their jobs, and as a result, his fingers and hands stiffened up 
even more. 
As he typed in the wrong key again, for what seemed like the hundredth 
time, the phone rang. Mulder twisted in his seat to see if the cordless 
phone was still in its cradle. When he noticed that it indeed was, he 
grasped his walker that stood next to his chair and slowly stood up. 
Mulder was particularly tentative at the moment, since he realized he was 
all alone in the house. Maggie had decided it was time to cut the 
umbilical cord, and she went to the local convenience store for a gallon 
of milk, bread and eggs. That was all she planned to buy, so she wasn't 
going to be long. 
Mulder was delighted that she felt he was capable of staying by himself, 
even if it was for a mere twenty minutes or so. It was the first time he 
was left alone in the house, in any house, for over five months, and it 
felt extraordinarily liberating. 
Yet it also felt frightening as hell. He hadn't realized just how 
dependent he'd become upon Scully, Maggie, Walter and even his mother, and 
it scared him to death to realize how much of his independence he had 
relinquished. Not that he had a choice, but it was a terrifying thought 
for a man who had been essentially left to his own devices since he was 
twelve years old. 
So, as the phone continued to ring, he grasped the handles on his walker 
and worked hard to steady himself. Just as he began to walk towards the 
phone, the answering machine picked up. 
"Hello, you have reached the Scully residence. We are unable to answer 
your call right now, but if you leave a message after the beep, we'll get 
back to you shortly. Thank you. Beeeeeeeeeeeep." 
"Maggie? Maggie? Where are you? Is everything okay? Maggie, what's 
happened? I know Fox doesn't have any appointments today. Oh my God, 
what's wrong? Maggie, please___" 
"___Mom?" Mulder called out as he picked up the unwieldy phone. "Mom, is 
tha' you?" 
"Oh, Fox, is everything all right?" she asked anxiously.
"Yeah, Mom. Everythin' is fine."
"Well, I had wanted to talk to you anyway, dear. I'm so excited! I've 
bought you an early Hanukah gift!" she said excitedly. 
"You have?" Fox said in amazement. Usually Elizabeth Mulder's idea of a 
Hanukah gift was a sedate tie or sweater. Somehow, those kind of gifts 
didn't seem to warrant the type of giddy excitement his mother was now 
displaying. As a result, Fox's own anticipation increased with excitement 
as well. 
"Yes, I have. You see, I was at Arnold Cohn's office yesterday, you know 
dear, my accountant? Well he was helping me straighten out some of my 
personal affairs when I noticed his secretary was typing on the oddest 
piece of machinery I'd ever seen. 
"Well, she noticed I was staring, and she said, `Weird looking, isn't it?' 
And I agreed with her," Elizabeth recounted. 
"Mom, are you talkin' about a keyboar' a monitor, or a har' drive?" Mulder 
asked. 
"Oh, the keyboard. The monitor and the hard drive were standard, but the 
keyboard was so unusual. It was split into two parts, and the mouse was 
built into the right side. 
"I asked her why she was using it, and she explained to me that she had 
rheumatoid arthritis, and though medication eases her pain on most days, 
there were times when she found it difficult to do her job. She was 
concerned and saw her doctor and asked him if there was anything he could 
do for her in terms of providing stronger medication for those days that 
she was in more discomfort. 
"Well, instead of medication, he handed her a brochure for this odd 
looking keyboard. It's called a Kinesis Ergonomic Keyboard, and it was 
designed to help people with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome.
I figured if it could help Arnold's receptionist get through the day with 
rheumatoid arthritis, why shouldn't it help my brain damaged son?" she 
commented. 
Mulder involuntarily hissed as he drew in a breath at her observation. 
Though he realized immediately she had no idea as to how deeply her words 
just cut into him, it hurt nonetheless. 
"I saw how much you wanted to get back to using your computer, and how 
difficult it's been for you to do so. I've always found it hard to work 
those little mouse things, and I didn't suffer the traumas that you have 
dear. So I thought this might help you become more independent and allow 
you to get back to your work at least a little bit. 
"Well, anyway dear," Elizabeth continued, "I asked Allison, that's the 
receptionist who was a very sweet looking thing, such a shame she has 
rheumatoid arthritis.. it makes the hands become so unsightly... well, 
anyway, I asked Allison if she still had the brochure, and she did! 
"I called up for one of those keyboards right then and there, Fox. I told 
them to ship it overnight express mail. Oh, I was so hoping it would have 
been there by now. Are you sure Maggie didn't take in any packages? 
Sweetheart, why don't you put Maggie on so I might ask her?" Elizabeth 
concluded. 
"I can_t_ Mom."
"Can't? Oh Fox, that's okay, I'll wait. I'm sure she won't take that 
long," she replied. 
"No, Mom, I'm no' sure how long she'll be."
"Fox, for crying out loud, how long can a person stay in the bathroom?" 
Elizabeth snapped. 
"She's no_t_ in the bathroom, Mom. She's no_t_ home."
"Oh. Well, then let me talk to Dana or Walter," she stated in a somewhat 
demanding tone. 
"Mom, they wen' to wor_k_ earlier."
"They left you alone? Fox, you're all by yourself?" she gasped.
"Yes, Mom. I'm all by myself, and I was actually enjoying the little bi' 
of privacy, but then you called," he retorted. 
"Fox, you are too debilitated to be left by yourself. You could fall, you 
could hurt yourself. What's wrong with that woman to leave you alone? Is 
she crazy?!" Elizabeth ranted. 
"Mom, calm dow'. Please. Mom, I'm fi'e. All I was doin' was sittin' at 
the computer table tryin' to surf the ne'. From the soun' of it, your 
gif' soun's like it will really hel' me a lot. Than' you for thinkin' of 
me," he concluded in a vain attempt to calm and placate her all at once. 
The last thing he wanted was for Maggie Scully to be the brunt of his 
mother's wrath. He knew all too well how cutting his mother's words were 
when she was angry, and he never wanted anyone else to fall victim to 
those words. 
"How long has she been gone?" she asked through clenched teeth.
"Mom, Maggie's only been gone abou' fifteen minutes. She drove to the 
corner for mil' and brea'. She shoul' be back any minute. P'ease, calm 
down. We both knew she wouldn' be gone long, an' she has my cellular 
phone with her in case I neede' to contac' her. So, woul' you please cu' 
us some slack here?" he pleaded. 
Mulder heard his mother take several deep breaths. At the same time he 
heard the back door open and Maggie call out, "Fox, I'm home." 
"In the den, Mom," he replied.
This time it was Elizabeth Mulder's turn to draw in a biting gasp. After 
all of these months, she still could not get used to hearing Fox call 
Maggie Scully, "Mom." Rationally, she realized it would happen eventually 
since Fox was going to marry Maggie's daughter. However that would have 
been following protocol, the rules of marriage etiquette, if you will. 
But not now. Now it was just a slap in Elizabeth Mulder's face, and it 
stung her deeply. 
"Put Maggie on the phone, Fox," she said tersely.
"Mom, I don' thin' so. No' until you calm down," he replied.
"Fox, I am calm. Put her on the phone. Now."
Maggie entered the room and saw Fox looked pale and his right hand 
trembled slightly. "Who's on the phone, Fox?" she asked softly, but 
firmly. 
"My mother. She wan's to talk to you," he said tremulously.
"Thank you, Fox. I would love to talk with your mother," she said 
confidently. She smiled broadly as she took the phone from his hand in an 
attempt to let him know she was fully capable of handling his mother, even 
if he, himself, was not. 
"Hello Elizabeth. I hope you're still planning on coming back Sunday 
afternoon," Maggie said lightly. 
"Maggie, how could you leave him alone?" she asked accusingly.
*So that was the problem,* Maggie thought to herself. *Poor dear, she's 
scared to death.* 
"Elizabeth," she began, "I left him alone for a short period of time, 
because he was ready to be left alone for a short period of time. 
"When he is ready to be left for a longer period of time, then we will 
leave him alone for a longer period of time. 
"Elizabeth, I would never do anything to endanger Fox. You know that, 
don't you dear?" she asked gently. 
There were several moments of silence while Elizabeth mulled over Maggie's 
words. She knew Maggie was a bright, competent person who truly loved 
Fox. She also had a great deal of common sense, and Elizabeth knew in her 
heart that if Maggie felt Fox could deal with being left alone for short 
periods of time, than it was most likely the case. 
It just irritated her that another woman was making these kind of 
decisions for her son. Elizabeth felt she should have been involved in 
this decision, and when she returned to Baltimore, Elizabeth vowed to 
herself that she and Maggie would definitely have a serious discussion 
about the chain of command when it came to decisions regarding her son's 
recovery. 
"Of course I know that, Maggie. It's just that I hadn't expected him to 
be left alone so soon, and without my knowledge. It took me by surprise, 
that's all," Elizabeth replied rationally. 
"Well, Elizabeth, I apologize for that. Fox and I should have discussed 
this with you first. I promise we will make an effort not to exclude you 
from any more important decisions," Maggie said seriously. 
Elizabeth murmured her gratitude and then went on to excitedly describe in 
detail the early holiday gift that she felt would surely impact positively 
on her son's recovery. When Elizabeth extracted a guarantee from Maggie 
that she would indeed phone her when the package came, she hung up the 
phone. 
Fox looked admiringly at Maggie, and with a little bit of awe as well. 
"How di' you do tha'? How di' you ge' her eating ou' of your han' like 
tha'?" 
"Oh Fox, William Scully Sr. may have been the captain in this house, but 
_I_ was always the admiral," she said with a smile and a wink. 
Mulder chuckled at that, but then his face took on a somber expression. 
"I don' understan' her, Mom," he said quietly.
"I mean, one momen' she's doing something wonderfully kin' like buyin' 
tha' keyboar' for me, and the nex' minute she's tellin' me it's because 
she fel' it woul' help her brain damage' son," he recounted tentatively. 
"She said what?!" cried out Maggie. "Fox, surely you didn't hear her 
correctly." 
"Mom, believe me, I may no' always understan' why my mother says the 
things she says, but I hear' her correctly. It's kinda typical for my 
mother to say or do somethin' nice for me one momen', and then in the same 
breath say somethin' tha' cu's into me like a knife. An' the crazy thing 
is, I don' think she even realizes she's doin' anything wron',.I mean 
wron_g_, " he corrected when he saw Maggie's expression suddenly turn 
disapprovingly. 
He automatically thought her chastising look was meant for him. After 
all, whenever his own mother looked at him in that manner, it was always 
meant for him. 
Meanwhile, Maggie was well aware of how stress affected Fox's speech 
patterns. When he was at ease and he could focus on the words and how 
they were formed, he spoke clearly. Yet, at the moment she heard him drop 
many word endings, and now he even looked guilty. 
*Ohmigod!* she thought wildly to herself. *He thinks I'm upset with him!*
"Oh Fox," she cried out to him, "_she_ should know better. It's not your 
fault. You don't deserve to be treated like that. Do you understand me? 
It's not your fault. We'll talk to her, Fox. I promise, we will make 
her understand. I swear to you, we will." 
And with that, Maggie Scully embraced a very tearful, but also very 
relieved, Fox Mulder in her arms.
End of Part 4/33
#########################################################################
Part 5/33
Margaret Scully Home
Baltimore, MD 
Skinner and Scully arrived home to see Mulder sitting at the computer, 
typing away furiously on the strangest looking contraption either of them 
had ever seen. Mulder was so engrossed in what he was doing, he didn't 
notice the couple standing nearby, staring at the device that his fingers 
were manipulating with less awkwardness than they had been used to seeing. 
Elizabeth's package had arrived about twenty minutes after Maggie had hung 
up from their phone conversation. Naturally, and true to her word, Maggie 
called back to let her know her present had arrived. She couldn't quite 
tell who was more excited, Elizabeth or Fox. It was a toss up, that's 
for sure, but Maggie was delighted to see Fox become so animated. It had 
been far too long since she'd seen him so eager about something. 
Mulder and Maggie had sat together amidst all of the Styrofoam packing 
peanuts. The keyboard came with a number of pamphlets, a manual and a 
practice exercise book. It took Maggie and Fox about an hour to decipher 
the directions for hooking up the keyboard to the computer, as well as 
adjusting the keyboard to suit Mulder's needs. 
Once the keyboard was adjusted, Mulder set to work to master it. At first 
his frustration in dealing with something so alien was quite obvious. 
Maggie had left him to his own devices and was tempted a number of times 
to put the keyboard back in its box in order to put Fox out of his misery. 
After a time, however, Maggie heard less cursing out loud, and more 
rhythmic tapping on the keyboard. An occasional "Oh, now I get it," or a 
"So this is it," was heard, so Maggie stayed back. 
It wasn't until she heard Dana and Walter come in the door that she 
realized Fox had been sitting at the computer for almost two and a half 
hours. This was the longest period of time he'd been able to maintain his 
concentration since he'd come home from the treatment center. 
Maggie walked over to where Walter and Dana were watching Fox tap away. 
"Pretty unusual, isn't it?" Maggie asked. 
"What the hell is that thing?" Walter asked in astonishment. "I've never 
seen anything like it." 
"Actually, I have seen something similar to that," Scully began. "It's 
one of those Ergonomic keyboards, isn't it? Where did it come from?" 
"Elizabeth," replied Maggie. "She sent it as an early Hanukah gift. I'd 
say, from the looks of things, her gift is a hit. Dana, between sitting 
with me and reading the directions, putting it together, and practicing 
how to use it, Fox has been sitting with it for over three hours." 
"Three hours?" echoed both Dana and Walter.
Maggie nodded in affirmation, Dana and Walter shook their heads in 
amazement. 
"I guess timing is everything," said Walter.
"What do you mean, Walt?" asked Maggie.
"Mom, we'll talk about it later. Please. Not now, okay? Let's have 
dinner first, please?" Scully pleaded. 
Maggie looked at her daughter and then at Walter. She knew something was 
bothering both of them a great deal. She knew her daughter like the back 
of her hand, and she was fast becoming able to read Walter Skinner like an 
old book as well. 
This, she knew, had something to do with the young man sitting so focused 
at the computer table that he was oblivious to the now very worried trio 
watching over him. 
"Okay, we'll let it rest until after dinner. But then, we talk," declared 
Maggie. 
#####################################################
Unknown Address
Washington, DC 
"What do you have to report?" he asked in his normal, clipped tone.
"Well, sir, apparently the children all died of cardiac arrest. They also 
apparently had nonviable, black entities discharged from their nasal 
passages and ear canals," reported the subordinate. 
"And?" he asked as he lit another Morley.
"And, that's all the information we have at this point, Sir."
"This is not acceptable. I have personally checked with the staff at our 
DC Treatment Center, and they denied ever having inoculated any child with 
the Black Cancer. Where is this renegade group?" he wondered aloud. 
"I don't know, Sir."
"Well then, it is your priority to find out. Do I make myself clear?" he 
queried amid the clouds of smoke. 
"Yes Sir. Perfectly clear."
"I have to make a phone call. You are dismissed," he said as he reached 
for the phone. 
As Jack Stein watched the young drone leave, he punched in the speed dial 
number two and waited patiently as the phone rang. 
####################################################
Elizabeth Mulder's Home
Greenwich, CT 
Brrriiinnnggg, Brrriiinnnggg. Brrriiinnnggg, Brrriiinnnggg.
Elizabeth walked over to the phone, and as she picked it up she noted the 
time. *The man is like clock work,* she thought to herself. She put the 
receiver to her ear and said automatically, "Hello Jack." 
"Elizabeth." he acknowledged. "How are you this evening?"
"I'm fine Jack. How are you?" she queried, repeating the same dialogue 
they said each week when he phoned her in Greenwich. 
"Good. We have some new developments that I thought I would share with 
you. Do you have a few minutes?" he asked, yet he already knew the 
answer. 
"Of course, Jack. What can I do for you?"
"We apparently have some outsiders participating in the game," he stated.
"How so?" she asked.
"They are destroying some merchandise that I was unaware of ever being on 
the market," he replied cryptically. 
"How are they being destroyed?" she asked.
"By a cardiac arrest possibly brought on by an ebony intruder," he 
suggested. 
"What is the nature of the merchandise?" she asked quietly.
"The same type of merchandise that was ripped from us twenty-five years 
ago," he replied. 
"Oh, Jack. Who?"
"I don't know, but it's happening again, Elizabeth. We've got a renegade 
faction acting out," he stated tensely. 
"Jack, they have to be stopped. What are you going to do?" she asked 
anxiously. She was fearful of all the possibilities. 
"I have my people looking into it, but I believe we will need to need to 
take other measures as well. AD Skinner left a message for me to call 
him." He paused momentarily to allow the significance of that remark to 
sink in. "He is aware of the destroyed merchandise." 
"Jack, what are you planning to do?" she asked apprehensively.
"I suspect the same thing AD Skinner is planning to do. We have to hunt 
down these radical outsiders, Elizabeth. What better way to go hunting 
than to add a fox to the mix?" he stated too indifferently. 
"Jack, why can't you leave him alone? He's not yet recovered. I don't 
think he will ever fully recover. Please, Jack, I'm begging you. Leave 
him out of it," she implored. 
"You've played the game for a long time, my dear. It's too late to change 
the rules now. We have to find that renegade group, Elizabeth," he 
replied. 
"But why? Why is it so important now? Why can't you just let the 
authorities handle it?" she pleaded. 
The Smoking Man chuckled hoarsely at that, and said, "Elizabeth, we 
__are__ the authorities, remember?" A long silence stood between them. 
Jack Stein broke it when he quietly added, "Elizabeth, I have a feeling." 
"A feeling?" she echoed.
"I have a feeling about this, Elizabeth," he said. "I'll call you next 
week," and he hung up the phone. 
End of Part 5/33
#####################################################
Part 6/33
Maggie Scully's Residence
Baltimore, MD 
The dinner dishes were cleared by Scully and Maggie, while Skinner went 
into the den with Mulder to do a couple of exercises required by Mulder's 
physical therapist. One of Fox's many, major, remaining deficits was his 
lack of balance, so the therapist designed a simple exercise that would 
help Mulder gain better control of his body in space. 
Skinner stood in front of Mulder in the middle of the den, with thick foam 
mats surrounding them. Mulder stood still without his walker while 
Skinner literally pushed him , however gently, to try to get him off 
balance. In the beginning, Mulder would tip over and fall immediately, 
hence the necessity for the mats. 
Now that a couple of months had passed since they had first tried this 
exercise, it took a lot more to get Mulder on the floor. Skinner pushed 
on a shoulder and Mulder would manage to remain standing, though it was 
often in an ungainly manner. The therapist recently suggested that they 
try to make the exercises even more challenging and do it while Mulder had 
his eyes closed. 
Skinner didn't give it much thought, but Fox was genuinely nervous about 
it. His hearing, though better with the hearing aids, was still 
supplemented by visual cues. Therefore, when he closed his eyes, Mulder 
felt more than just unbalanced. He felt lost. 
Walter held a blindfold up for Mulder to put around his head. He had 
suggested a blindfold, because Mulder kept opening his eyes instead of 
keeping them shut. Walter was oblivious to the slight shudder Fox made 
when he held up the blindfold. Mulder took it from Skinner's hand but 
did not move to tie it over his eyes. 
"C'mon Mulder, it's been a long day. I'm tired, so put the thing on so we 
can finish up," implored Skinner. 
"I _don't_ wan' to," he replied obstinately.
"Mulder, just put it on."
"No, I don' wan' to," he replied tensely. "I'll kee' my eyes close'."
"Fox, your reflexes work against you, and you open them almost 
involuntarily. So just put the damned blindfold on, and let's get this 
done for tonight." 
Fox took the blindfold and brought it up to his face. "I really don' wan' 
to do this, Walter," he said firmly. Walter ignored the comment and just 
pointed to the blindfold. Mulder tried to tie it, but every time he 
raised his arms to place it around his head he kept losing his balance. 
Walter finally intervened. 
"Here, let me tie it," he said impatiently, as he reached around Mulder's 
head to tie the blindfold. When he finished tying it closed, Skinner let 
go and left Mulder standing untethered to anyone or anything. 
"Walter?" Mulder whispered anxiously.
"What, Mulder? What is it?" he replied intolerantly.
"Nothin'."
Walter reached over and gently tapped his left shoulder. Mulder would have 
gone down like a pile of sticks, except he grabbed on to Skinner's arm 
immediately. 
"Abah! Don'!" Fox cried out.
"Fox, for crying out loud, I'm right here."
"Abah, I can' do this. I wan' it off," he insisted, as he reached up and 
tried to remove the scarf. 
"I don't think so," said Skinner as he removed Mulder's hand from the 
blindfold. "Let's just give it another try, okay? All right, stand up 
straight. Good." 
And with that Skinner tapped Mulder on the shoulder, and then quickly 
stepped back to prevent Fox from grabbing onto him again. Mulder 
teetered, reached out wildly for Skinner's support, and then collapsed. 
He sat on the floor, groping around as if in search for something. 
Skinner looked at Mulder and realized the younger man was suddenly 
breathing much too rapidly. He was beginning to hyperventilate. 
"Scully!" he called out, as he pulled off the blindfold, "Bring me a paper 
bag." 
A few moments later Dana and Maggie both came running into the den. Dana 
carried the paper bag as requested, and took Walter's place when she knelt 
down beside Mulder. She placed the bag over Fox's nose and mouth so that 
he could breathe in some carbon dioxide and steady his breathing. 
"What happened?" Maggie asked as Dana tended to Mulder.
"I'm really not sure. I guess he got upset about having to wear the 
blindfold. I don't know." Skinner hesitated a moment or two before he 
added, " I suppose I didn't exactly have the patience of Job tonight 
either." 
Dana listened to Skinner explain as she held the bag over Mulder's face 
with one hand, and gently stroked his forehead and hair with the other. 
She cooed softly to him, telling him everything would be fine and to just 
breath normally. 
"Walter," she finally said, "if he didn't want to use the blindfold, then 
why in heaven's name would you force him to wear it?" 
"The therapist said it would help his recovery, Dana. I'd like to see him 
regain his balance a little more, wouldn't you?" he replied defensively. 
"Dana, sweetheart, Walter's been working with him on these exercises for 
the last three months. I think we can trust his judgment," Maggie 
suggested. 
"I think it's time we start trusting Mulder's judgment on some things too, 
don't you think?" questioned Scully. 
At that moment, Mulder pushed the bag away. He looked up at Maggie and 
Walter, as well as across towards Scully. He stated in a breathy voice, 
" Don' you thin' i's time to stop talkin' abou' me as if I'm no' here? 
Damn it, I am here," he added angrily. 
The trio looked at each other guiltily. Skinner then sat down on the 
floor near Fox and spoke first. 
"You're right, of course, and I do apologize for treating you as if you 
weren't here. I also apologize for not talking to you more about why you 
didn't want to wear the blindfold. I am so sorry, Fox. 
"All I can say is," Skinner continued, "I am tired and cranky. I've 
recently had a bitch of a case tossed my way, and it's causing me a great 
deal of stress. It doesn't excuse my behavior, but I hope it at least 
explains it," he concluded. 
Fox looked at Walter and merely nodded. He was still feeling angry about 
being forced into a situation where he felt so vulnerable. He was angry 
with Walter for putting him in that position, and really didn't plan on 
accepting his apology immediately. But something he said intrigued him. 
It intrigued him a lot. 
"Wha' case?" he asked with restrained curiosity.
"Nothing," Scully interrupted. "Nothing you should be concerned about."
"But if it's somethin' tha's givin' Walter agita, then it must be pretty 
importan', or pretty grizzly." 
At that moment the doorbell rang. Maggie excused herself and walked to 
the front door. When she looked in the peephole she let out a small gasp 
of surprise. Maggie opened the door. 
"Hello Mrs. Scully. It's delightful to see you again," he said.
"Mr. Stein. Oh my goodness. Jack Stein. Hello, Jack," she repeated as 
if she needed to remind herself it was not a dream. "To what do we owe 
this honor?" 
"Walter contacted me today, and it seemed rather urgent. I thought it 
might be helpful to come here tonight to see if indeed it was as 
imperative as his message indicated. I hope you forgive me for the 
intrusion, my dear, but it was actually Walter who contacted me first," he 
stated seriously. 
"Of course, Jack. Please do come in. I'll tell Walter you're here," she 
replied while leading him into the little used living room. As Maggie led 
Jack into the room, she thought about how she wanted the larger house to 
accommodate the many social events her husband, the Captain, and she 
hosted when he was on leave. Of course, since his death a couple of years 
ago, the room laid dormant. 
It was only recently that Maggie began thinking about what that room could 
be used for and then knew exactly what would be the next Scully Social 
Event of the Year! Dana and Fox's wedding would occur in there amid the 
grandeur of a wedding gown and gentlemen's morning coats. Someday. Soon. 
She hoped. 
She walked quietly into the den and looked at Walter. He stood up and she 
leaned up to whisper in his ear, "You have a visitor. Jack Stein is 
here." 
"He's here? You're kidding," he remarked. Then, looking across the room, 
he called, "Scully, Jack Stein is here." 
"Let's go see what he wants to use us for now," Dana replied as she rose.
As Skinner and Scully both began to depart, Fox Mulder let his voice be 
heard. "Sto_p_!" he shouted as loudly as he could. "I want to go with 
you," he stated as clearly as he could. 
"I don't think so, G-Man. I don't think you're quite ready to face 
Cancerman." 
"I'm as ready as I thin' I'll ever be, Scully. So you migh' as well hel' 
me up now, because if you don', I'll be yellin' from here to Kingdom 
Come." 
Dana looked at Walter helplessly and prayed she would get some backup in 
her wish for Mulder to avoid this meeting with Jack Stein, a/k/a 
Cancerman. Walter chose to ignore Dana's facial pleas, but not because he 
believed she was wrong. 
Actually, Skinner would have much preferred to have talked with Jack Stein 
without anyone present, and that included Scully. But since he knew that 
would not be a plausible possibility, he figured they might as well have 
Mulder in there from the beginning. It would save a lot of extra 
debriefing time. 
Maggie shook her head when she realized what was about to happen. She 
decided that her presence was, if not expected, would no doubt be 
accepted, since she was going to stay with Fox no matter what. She didn't 
like the smell of this before dinner, and now that Jack Stein was added to 
the salad, she wasn't sure if she had the stomach for anything else he was 
involved with. 
They all joined Jack Stein in the rarely used, formal living room.
End of Part 6/33
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Part 7/33
Jack watched the quartet enter the room. He remembered a time some months 
back when he watched this group, along with Elizabeth Mulder, enter 
another room. It hardly seemed possible that it was only three short 
months since Fox Mulder nearly lost his life in his bid to save Dana 
Scully's. 
Jack hadn't seen Mulder since he had left the treatment center. He 
recalled having watched him depart the center on gurney and leave in an 
ambulance. Fox had been totally and completely helpless. 
He hadn't expected him to make the kind of progress he did. Jack was 
amazed to see him walk into the room with the use of the walker. After 
thinking back to that night when the Black Cancer was removed from his 
body, Jack recoiled at the number of times Fox's heart had gone into 
arrest. The doctors were positive there would be brain damage, the only 
question was how much. 
Jack observed Mulder and wondered about the answer to that very question, 
since Fox Mulder was an important part of the equation in solving the 
mystery behind the cardiac deaths of those six children. 
But there was something else Jack Stein considered very carefully. He was 
certain if they found the solution to this latest puzzle, it would lead to 
the answer of the conundrum that was most important to him, finding his 
daughter, Samantha. 
The foursome acknowledged Jack and sat down. Maggie wondered if she 
should offer to make coffee, but she didn't want to leave the room, so she 
remained quiet. She did listen very carefully, however. 
"Stein, it's been a while since we've seen you," Walter began.
"Yes. Yes, it has, and I am most pleased to see how well Agent Scully 
looks, as well as the remarkable progress Agent Mulder has made." Stein 
turned directly towards Mulder and said, "The last time I saw you I 
wondered if you would ever be mobile without a wheelchair. You have done 
yourself proud, Fox." 
Mulder was just about to snap back that his name was Mulder, when 
something held him back. At first he wasn't sure exactly what it was, but 
then he looked at Stein's face and realized why he held his tongue. 
Jack Stein was being totally sincere. The man really was impressed with 
the progress he had made. "Thank you," he replied feeling slightly 
embarrassed. 
"Stein," Skinner interjected, "I assume you're here for the same reason I 
had contacted you earlier. Am I right?" 
Mulder looked curiously at Walter, for he couldn't imagine for what reason 
Skinner would be contacting Cancerman. In the past it had always been the 
other way around. 
"Yes, AD Skinner, it is for the same reason."
Mulder noticed Scully flinched slightly and realized she was well aware of 
the circumstances behind this meeting. The only two people apparently 
still in the dark were Maggie and himself. 
"So, what do you suggest?" Skinner asked.
"I think we both know what will be required," Stein replied cryptically.
"That shouldn't be allowed," Scully proclaimed.
"Agent Scully, I don't believe we'll have a choice," Stein responded.
"If there's another way to go, I would like to explore that first," 
interjected Skinner. 
The three of them continued to haggle around in circles for anther few 
minutes while Maggie looked on with a puzzled expression, and Mulder felt 
just plain frustrated. Especially when everyone started talking at once, 
including Maggie Scully who eventually decided to jump into the fray. 
"Wai'. Wai_t_. Please, sto_p_!" Mulder finally shouted.
Talking ceased and all eyes looked towards Mulder. He looked at the three 
pairs of surprised expressions and continued, " I can'_t_ understan' you 
if you all talk at the same time. I don'_t_ understan' what you are 
arguing abou', and I would like to because__, because I think it has 
something to do with me, doesn' it?" 
Scully's mouth gaped slightly as she first looked at Mulder and then 
turned to Skinner. Skinner returned her surprised gaze and in turn looked 
at Stein and then Maggie. When he took in Maggie's expression, he could 
tell she was not happy about the situation. 
"Maggie," he began. "We probably don't have a choice."
"Why not?" she asked, since she deduced that the haggling was about 
whether or not Fox Mulder should be brought into a case . "Why don't you 
have a choice? What if he were still incapacitated? What if he were 
totally unable to offer any assistance? What would you do then? 
"For God's sake Walter, you're going to tell me, out of all the people who 
work for the FBI, the only person who can solve this case is a young man 
who is on a desperately needed medical and disability leave?" Maggie 
questioned. 
Jack turned to Maggie and said, "Mrs. Scully, the truth of the matter is 
there will be more lives lost if Fox is not brought in to consult. He is 
the best profiler there is, and with his efforts, we may be able to stave 
off the deaths at six. Six victims of cardiac arrest." 
Stein paused for a moment for effect. It worked because he caught their 
attention. "Six victims that were eight year old children. 
Maggie Scully gasped audibly, while Mulder's face blanched at the details. 
Eight years old was too close to home for Fox to take without discomfort. 
No wonder Scully objected outright and Skinner was hesitant. 
Yet Cancerman indicated he wanted him to join the case. Mulder wondered 
why the Cigarette Smoking Man welcomed him on this case, yet had always 
thwarted him on every other case he worked. 
"When do I get to see the file?" Mulder asked.
"No," Maggie stated vehemently. "No, we cannot have this discussion 
without Elizabeth present. Please. I promised her we would include her 
in discussions that had a major effect upon Fox's well being." 
"Actually," Stein stated, "Elizabeth is already aware of the situation."
"What?" gasped Skinner. "What the hell are you talking about, Stein?"
"I spoke with Elizabeth earlier, and mentioned to her there was a 
possibility that Mr. Mulder might be brought in on a case in a 
consultant's role." 
"Mr. Stein," Scully ventured, "I didn't realize it was policy to discuss 
FBI cases with people not employed by the bureau. 
"If that were the case, my dear Ms. Scully, then your own mother would 
have had to leave before this discussion began." 
"Stein, why do I get a feeling there's something you're not telling us,' 
Skinner said tightly. 
"Mr. Skinner, you know about as much as I do about this case. The only 
other thing I can offer is a hunch." 
"A hunch?" Mulder repeated.
"Yes, Agent Mulder, a hunch. I believe there is something much bigger 
involved here. There is a reason for that of course." 
"And that reason would be...?"
"Found on each of the children were nonviable Black Cancer entities," he 
replied succinctly. 
At the sound of "Black Cancer," Mulder visibly trembled. His mind became 
a jumble of thoughts and worries and apprehensions. He honestly did not 
know if he _could_ handle being assigned to this case. He didn't know if 
he wanted to be this close to his weaknesses again. 
"I don' know wha' I coul' do to be of he'p," Mulder said tentatively. "I 
don' see this as bein' a serial killer, so I don' know wha' I woul' be 
able to profile." 
"Fox, if you don't feel up to this, then you mustn't do this," Maggie said 
protectively. "I can't believe any of you would even consider this. Look 
at him!" and then Maggie did look directly back at him and said, "Fox, 
sweetheart, you have made such strides in these last three months. I am 
so proud of you. 
"But you are not fully recovered, and to be honest you are far from fully 
recovered. I think you would be placing your health and recovery at risk 
if you took on this case," she concluded. 
Mulder looked back at Maggie Scully and saw the worry and concern in her 
eyes. He also saw pride and love and felt it was necessary to acknowledge 
it. 
"Mom, I know you're prou' of me. Hell, I'm prou' of me. I remember wha' 
it was like tryin' to fee' myself. 
"I remember wha' it fel' like the firs' time I go' ou' of the wheelchair 
and they strappe' me in tha' damn standin' boar'. God, I hate' tha' 
thin'. I also remember wha' it fel' like to ta'e steps again on the 
parallel bars. 
"Bu' I also know how I feel abou' sittin' aroun' the house all day with 
nothin' more to do than some physical therapy exercises an' watchin' TV. 
I don' know if I'm ready to go back to work. I don' know if I'm ready to 
handle this case. 
"Wha' I do know is I woul' never be able to forgive myself if there were 
more deaths and I didn' try to do anythin' abou' it. 
I have to try. Even if I fail, at leas' I'll know I trie'. Okay?" 
Scully stood up at this point and walked over to the chair where Mulder 
was sitting. She kneeled on the floor in front of him and placed her arms 
on his knees. She looked up at him with a love and intensity that she 
reserved for only him. 
"Mulder, are you sure about this? You don't have to do this if you're not 
really sure. You work so hard every day just trying to get your strength 
back. Yes, Mulder, you do work hard every day. It's not just sitting 
around watching television. 
"You know you have nothing to prove, at least not to Walter or Mom, and 
certainly not to me. Fox, I love you. I will always love you. You don't 
have to subject yourself to this. The case will get solved with or 
without your assistance. It might take longer without your help, but, 
then again, it might not. 
"Don't let anyone pressure you into doing something you're not absolutely 
sure about. Will you do me a favor? Will you at least think about it 
before you throw yourself into it? Please?" Scully implored. 
"Scully, I don' have to thin' abou' it. I already know wha' I wan' to 
do." He looked over at Jack Stein, paused a moment and then returning his 
gaze towards Scully said, "And for some reason, Dana, I fee' like I have 
to do this. There's a reason for me to be on this case tha's more than 
just solving the case." 
"Mulder, a feeling?"
"Yeah, don' as' me to explain it, bu' it's a very real feeling." He 
clasped Dana's hands and squeezed gently. "Besides, Agen' Scully, I 
assume I can coun' on you, if needed, to sa'e my ass as usual?" 
"Now that's hell of an assumption, Mulder," Skinner said.
"Yes, Sir. It is," Scully said smiling while squeezing back Mulder's 
hands. "It's a dirty job, but somebody has to do it." 
Mulder chuckled and bent down to kiss his partner and love on the lips. 
Scully reciprocated happily and then stood up. "I'm going to get 
something to drink. Any requests?" 
As Scully took the drink orders, Mulder looked over at Jack Stein. He saw 
him twisting and turning a pen in his hands. *Nicotine fit,* thought 
Mulder. He remembered his father and mother going through similar motions 
when they ran out of cigarettes. 
Just then Mulder's eyes met Stein's. Mulder saw something in them he 
rarely saw before. There was raw emotion in Stein's eyes. Mulder felt 
himself shudder, because he felt something familiar in those eyes and he 
didn't understand it, or perhaps, he didn't want to understand it. 
Scully appeared at that moment with the drinks, including Mulder's 
medications. He was still on a low grade antibiotic as well as a muscle 
relaxant and the anticonvulsant medication. 
Mulder took the pills from her as well as the iced tea and swallowed them 
all at once. He lived for the day when he could be medication free. He 
found they left him less focused than before, but of course he had really 
no way of knowing if it were the pills or just the fact that his brain had 
been without oxygen for too long a period of time. 
Mulder always felt self-conscious about taking the pills in front of other 
people, but no one else appeared to notice. Except Stein. Mulder felt 
his gaze on him once again, and it unnerved him. There was something 
Stein wasn't saying, and it was bothering the hell out of Mulder. He knew 
it had something to do with him, but he wasn't sure what. All Mulder knew 
was he had to corner Stein by himself and ask him, point blank, what this 
was all really about. 
End of Part 7/33
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Part 8/33
Mulder swallowed the pills, looked directly at Stein, and then said,
"So Mr. Stein, you spo'e to my mother earlier?" 
"As a matter of fact Mr. Mulder, I did."
"Di' she mention to you the gif' she ha' sen' me?" he asked.
"No, I can't say she did," Stein replied.
"Well, come with me into the den. I'd like to show it to you," Mulder 
said as he grasped his walker to stand up. Both men excused themselves. 
Mulder led the way back into the den while the older man followed. 
Maggie, Dana and Walter looked curiously at the two men leaving the room, 
but when Dana appeared ready to follow them, Walter grasped her arm and 
shook his head. 
"Wait Dana," he said with a gentle firmness. "You know Mulder wouldn't 
normally seek Stein out if he didn't have a reason. He's safe in the 
house. Let him investigate a little on his own." 
Scully looked at Walter Skinner seriously and with her jaw set stated, "I 
don't care what Jack Stein did for me. If it weren't for the that smoking 
bastard, I wouldn't have had the cancer in the first place, and Mulder 
wouldn't have had to go through a second recovery after the meningitis." 
In a whisper, Scully continued, "I don't trust the son of a bitch. I'm 
scared, Abah. I'm scared for him." 
"We'll keep him safe, Dana," he murmured back to her. He placed his arm 
protectively around her, and said, "We'll keep you both safe." 
Meanwhile, the two men in the den were discussing the new keyboard 
Elizabeth Mulder had sent her son. They were discussing the pros and cons 
as well as the similarities and differences between the new one and 
standard keyboards. 
Mulder finally said, "Stein, there's somethin' you're no' tellin' us."
"I have told you everything I know about the case so far."
"But you haven' said why this case interes's you so much. Why involve 
me?" Mulder probed. 
"I told you, I feel you're the best profiler around and could help to 
solve this case quickly." 
Mulder looked at Stein and saw a nervousness in his demeanor that he 
hadn't recalled seeing in him before. "No," Mulder said, "there's 
somethin' else, and if you don' tell me now, you can ta'e your damn case 
and shove it up your ass." 
Stein weighed his thoughts carefully. He wasn't sure if he wanted to let 
Mulder in on all of his suspicions, but realized he had everything to lose 
if he didn't. "I don't know who these people are. This is a renegade 
faction, and I don't know what their plans are." 
Mulder nodded in encouragement for him to continue. Stein hesitated, but 
then said, "I have a feeling there is more involved here. I believe there 
is a reason I am in the dark about this group, Mulder. My suspicions 
leave me to believe there is someone involved in this faction that we both 
share a special interest in." 
Mulder looked at Stein with incredulous eyes. He suddenly felt a little 
light headed and began to sway. Stein startled and grabbed him as quickly 
as he could, but Mulder was in too precarious of a position and fell to 
the ground. 
Scully was the first to react to the crashing sound she heard coming from 
the den. She ran in to find him laying on his side with his knees brought 
up to his chin. 
"Mulder, what's wrong? What did you do to him, Stein?" she screamed in 
fear. 
"I did absolutely nothing, Ms. Scully, I assure you. We were merely 
conversing, and all of sudden he appeared to become dizzy and though I 
tried to reach him, I was unable to prevent him from falling. 
At this point, Maggie and Walter were standing nearby, both looking ready 
to pounce if necessary. 
"Scully," Mulder interrupted, "I'm okay. He didn' do anythin'. I jus' 
go' a little ligh' headed, tha's all." 
"Can you stand up?" she asked, concerned.
"Yeah, I thin' so."
Walter came over to assist Scully in helping Mulder up off the floor. 
Both of them steadied him before they let go. Mulder grasped the walker 
firmly and managed to turn himself so that he was directly across from 
Stein. 
"It's Samantha, isn't it?" Fox asked.
""I don't know what you could possibly be talking about," Stein replied 
tentatively. 
"Yes, you do know. You clearly know wha' I am talkin' abou'. How, Stein? 
How is she involve' in this rebel faction?" Mulder demanded. 
Stein didn't know what to say. Like Mulder, he didn't know who he could 
trust anymore, and wasn't sure if was smart to impart his thoughts on the 
subject. 
However, he also knew that if Mulder was going to get anywhere on this 
case, he would have to be completely honest about it. 
"I don't know how she's involved. Truly, I do not, but I do believe there 
is a connection between this faction rebel group and Samantha. I want to 
find her, Fox, and I need your help," Stein concluded. 
Mulder couldn't believe the tone of voice he heard come out of Jack 
Stein's mouth. He actually sounded like a whole human being. "Stein, I'll 
do wha' I can, but since I'll be only on a consul' basis__," Mulder tried 
to conclude, but was cut off by Scully. 
"___A very limited part-time consultative basis," interjected Dana.
"Part-time consul' basis," continued Fox, "but, I don' know wha' you 
expec' me to fin'." 
"I expect you to help find the people who are the cause of the deaths of 
six innocent children, Mr. Mulder." 
Mulder's gaze locked with Stein's. They stared at one another for a 
moment or two, and then Stein looked away. Mulder continued to look at 
him and wondered just how he came to supposedly be on the same side as 
Cancerman. This was a scenario he never, ever expected to be a part of, 
yet here he was, asked to work on a case that interested the bureau and 
Jack Stein. 
Somehow, Mulder had a feeling he was going to discover a lot more than 
any of them expected. He wasn't sure if he was happy about this or not. 
#####################################################
Baltimore General Hospital
Baltimore, MD
Mulder had been complaining about his hearing aids, so Maggie had made an 
appointment with the audiologist to check them out. 
"Mr. Mulder, what exactly is the problem?" Brooke Anderson asked. "How 
can I help you?" 
"I keep hearin' feedback. It's makin' me crazy," he replied.
"Well, let's check inside your ears. Sometimes it's just a matter of 
removing some wax buildup in the ears," she advised. 
While Brooke Anderson examined Mulder's inner ears, an unidentified 
gentleman, who wore a white lab coat, examined Mulder's hearing aids and 
checked them over for any malfunctions. 
He opened them up to expose the micro wiring, cleaned the mechanism 
carefully, and then deftly inserted a microscopic device into each of the 
aids that would enable those with the right equipment to keep track of Mr. 
Mulder. The fox hunt was to begin shortly. 
After Brooke cleaned out some waxy residue from Mulder's ears, and new 
batteries were inserted into his hearing aids, Mulder felt the aids worked 
more efficiently. He felt a little more self-assured now, and his posture 
was a little taller and straighter as he headed over to the Physical 
Therapy Department. 
He had been working for the last week on adapting to the use of canes 
instead of the walker. Mulder was not at all confident when using the 
canes, but it was just a question of time. 
He held the canes somewhat awkwardly, but at least he was able to maintain 
a grasp. That was an impossibility three months ago. He watched James, 
the PT, as he demonstrated the movements he needed to practice while using 
the cane. 
Next, he asked Mulder how the balance exercises were going. James asked 
for a demonstration, and proceeded to push Mulder around a little bit. 
Somehow, he managed to remain upright. When James asked Mulder how he was 
doing with the exercises with closed eyes, Mulder pleaded the fifth. 
Mulder worked an hour with the PT before going next door to the 
Occupational Therapist's Office. Mulder told the OT all about the new 
keyboard and explained how it was quite possible that the keyboard would 
enable him to go back to work part time. 
Bonnie, the OT, was very happy for him, and in fact noted that Mulder's 
fingers did not seem nearly as stiff. He was convinced that all of the 
practicing on the keyboard was probably responsible. 
Bonnie asked him if there was anything in particular he wished to work on, 
and he replied there was. By the end of the session, Fox Mulder could tie 
his right and left shoes. 
#####################################################
Maggie Scully's Residence
Baltimore, MD 
Elizabeth had arrived the night before last, but elected not to go with 
Fox to his therapy sessions. She was fighting a cold and felt it would be 
best for all concerned if she remained behind. 
She had spoken with Jack after he'd met with Fox, Walter, Dana and Maggie. 
Jack said they were surprised she'd heard from him. He expressed 
surprise that she hadn't mentioned to them she was in touch with him all 
these months. Jack expressed feeling something akin to the black sheep of 
the family, to which Elizabeth chuckled and merely stated, "If the shoe 
fits?" 
Elizabeth didn't have any more information than any of the other members 
of Fox's recovery team, but she was every bit as concerned. She watched 
him like a hawk to make sure he wasn't overtaxing himself. Everyone was 
demonstrating more concern for Fox since Jack's visit. 
When Maggie and Fox arrived home from the hospital appointments, Elizabeth 
greeted him and asked how today went. 
"Great Mom. It went great," he replied succinctly.
"What was great about it, dear?" Elizabeth asked.
Mulder steeled himself for the Inquisition. He knew she would ask the 
same damned questions she been asking for the last three months. 
"What did the doctor say?" she began.
"I didn' see any doctors today, Mom. I saw the audiologis', the Physical 
Therapis' and the Occupational Therapis';. They all said' I was doin' 
fine." 
"Yes, dear, that's very good to hear, but when did the therapist say you 
would be able to walk without your walker? And what about your speech, 
dear? Did the speech therapist say when you would be able to hear clearly 
enough so you would be able to speak more clearly? And how about your 
hands? Did the therapist think the new keyboard would be a help? And 
what about your balance, son? What did they say about your balance?" she 
droned on. 
Mulder pretty much tuned her out after she asked about his ability to walk 
without the walker. He knew she meant well, and she was merely concerned, 
but he was so tired of feeling he needed to be on a specific timetable for 
her benefit. He felt as though he had enough to worry about, and didn't 
think it fair of her to add to those concerns. 
"They don' know, Mo'. I'm tire'. I thin' I'm goin' to ta'e a na' before 
I ge' to wor'," Mulder said tiredly. His speech always seemed to worsen 
around his mother. 
When Mulder awoke from his nap, his mother was sitting in the recliner 
with a book opened on her lap. She had fallen asleep. Mulder felt a 
little guilty for being so short with her before. She was fighting a 
nasty cold, and she was just showing her concern by asking all the 
questions. 
The thing that his mother had yet to learn was all of her questions just 
raised more and more doubts in his own mind with regards to his recovery. 
The more she questioned, the more he questioned. 
Mulder was apprehensive, but he overcame it by pouring himself into the 
work. He sat at the computer reading the downloaded files that Skinner had 
sent to him via E-Mail. He tried to develop a preliminary profile, but 
there was still so little to go on. 
Mulder began to work on establishing a connection between the six children 
that died of cardiac arrest. He delved into their past histories with all 
of the grace and tact of a bulldog. 
Mulder even phoned the unholy trio at the Lone Gunmen.
"Hello boys, it's me. Turn off the tape," Mulder said, enunciating as 
clearly as he could manage. 
"Hey Mulder, what's the good word?" asked Byars kindly.
"Guys, I nee'you to check on the backgroun's of some doctors in the 
Baltimore, Virginia and DC areas. These ki's all wen' to differen' 
doctors, bu' I know the link has gotta be through them somehow. Jus' find 
out everythin' you can abou' these people, okay guys?" Mulder requested. 
"We'll get right on it Mulder." Frohicke asked.
The LG were delighted to hear from their old buddy, who was apparently 
climbing back in the saddle again. He filled them in on everything he 
knew about the case, including the involvement of Jack Stein. 
As happy as they were that Mulder was feeling useful again, they were 
equally nervous about hearing that Cancerman was an active participant in 
this latest investigation. 
"Mulder," continued Frohicke, "be careful around Cancerman. Remember, he 
still works for them, and he will always have his own best interest at 
heart. Okay? Promise me that, please?" 
"Yeah, I promise. I'll be careful. Loo' you guys, anythin' and 
everythin' you can find ou' woul' be apprecia'ed," Mulder replied. 
"Than's guys." 
Mulder heard Langly and Byers shout their "You're welcomes" from over 
their speaker phone and then hung up. 
End of Part 8/33
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