Title: Purgatory (1/2) (ninth part of the Trefoil Series) Classification: SAR Keywords: implied MSR, AU Rating: R Distribution: Sure, just let me know where Disclaimer: These characters don't belong to me, they belong to Mr. Chris Carter, lucky, bastard Spoilers: None Feedback: yes! to lil_gusty@hotmail.com Thanks: at the end Notes: this is the ninth (and final) part of my Trefoil Series. For missing parts, go to http://sciencex.tzo.com/xf/wips/trefoil.html Summary: Somewhere between Heaven and Hell where the sins are purged and the soul is cleansed. <><><><><><> "Some say life will beat you down, break your heart, steal your crown. So I started out for God knows where; I guess I'll know when I get there." ~ Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers <><><><><><> "Do you see him?" he asks, clutching at my hand desperately. "Do you see him?" I try and say that no, I don't, I have more important things on my mind right now, like why he isn't calling 911 and how I should be mentally assessing my vitals: respiration, heart rate, how much blood is pouring out of the gaping hole in my stomach, but I find it difficult to think in complete sentences, let alone communicate them aloud. Instead, I just breathlessly moan, swallowing reflexively against the blood rising in my throat. My stomach has been perforated, letting the blood seep in: not good. Not good at all. He tilts the camera around his neck up to his face; the lens is broken, blood spilling out of it as well. Undaunted, he reaches for another camera on his table, pointing it at me and focusing, seeming not to notice that I'm dying in front of him and he's doing nothing. Then, suddenly, he puts the camera down, taking hold of my hand again. I can barely feel his old, wrinkled fingers on mine now. "Don't look," he says quietly, afraid that "He" might hear. "Close your eyes." Is he saving me? Telling me his secret, how he avoided Death for over one hundred years? Obligingly, I close my already leaden eyelids. Immediately, I hear a gasp from the old man, then the jarring of the table as he leans back against it, dead. Everything goes white, then, and I hear voices shouting. This is how it ends. In a dark, musty apartment in Brooklyn. Miles from home and people who love me. Alone. In pain, so much pain it makes me nauseous and dizzy. This isn't fair. It's not supposed to end like this. Clyde Bruckman said so. He said that I didn't die. Not that I won't or that I can't, I don't, implying that I was supposed to die but now, for some reason, I just don't. Death doesn't happen to me. It skips me, like Alfred Fellig just taught me: how to skip Death. 'Because I would not stop for Death, he kindly stopped for me...' Except he won't stop for me, ever. I don't die. Not in a dark, musty apartment in Brooklyn. Not from a single friendly-fire gunshot wound to the gut. Never. <><><><><><> When I wake up, the first thing I notice is the cold. So, so cold. I've never been this cold before, even in Antarctica, naked, being pulled out of freezing liquid. I'm shivering violently, but yet, I can't move. I can't feel anything below my wrists and ankles. Maybe my fingers and toes are frostbitten, dead. Am I dead? Is that what this feels like? If Hell is burning hot, it would make sense that Heaven is icy cold, though I can't imagine how that feeling could be Heavenly. Maybe this is Purgatory, the cold a means of making you uncomfortable until God decides what to do with you for All Eternity. I'll save you the trouble, God. I killed myself; therefore, I go to Hell. That's one thing the nuns taught us that I actually still believe. But somehow, I don't think Purgatory gives you a semi-comfortable mattress, thick, warm blankets, a soft pillow, and antiseptic- smelling sheets. I feel like absolute shit. Aside from being so cold my bones ache, my throat is raw and my stomach feels like it's exploded. I feel nauseous, shaky, weak. My head is throbbing behind my eye lids, my skin feels tight and itchy, and my mouth tastes like charcoal smells. Yes, absolute shit. Purgatory also doesn't offer you an oxygen canula and IVs. When I can finally move my fingers again, I ache to scratch my eyes. As I pull my hands up, another thought occurs to me: Purgatory doesn't restrain you, either. I must not be in Purgatory, then. I must be in Hell. I futilely pull at my restraints some more, rattling the plastic bed rails and jostling the IV in the top of my right hand. When my eyelids finally manage to drag themselves over the sand in my eyes, I squint at the midday sun spilling through the blinds on the thick-paned windows and turn my head away. There's another window, one that looks out onto a Nurses' desk and all the people walking up and down the hallway. Some are visiting loved ones, some are taking care of the sick. No one even glances at my room. I look down at my body: straps cross over my legs and hips, pinning me to the bed. My arms, what I can see of them, are faintly blue against the bleach-white of the blanket and the dirty white of the well-used restraints. I must be in the hospital, which means that someone found me in that motel room. I wonder who it was. It wasn't Mulder; he's probably home by now, having forgotten about me. It wasn't Ethan; he's probably drawing up the divorce papers right now. Who else is there? There is no one else. Tears start sliding from the corners of my eyes, down my temples, and into my hair. No one else. I'm alone. Really alone. Just then, the door swings open and a pretty young nurse comes in. "Good afternoon, Dana. It's about time you woke up," she chirps. I look at her, my eyes wide, wondering how she knows my name. "Dr. Jesus wanted to know when you woke up. He wants to talk to you." Finally noticing my bewildered expression, she pats my arm, checking my IV at the same time. "Do you know where you are, honey? Your name is Dana, isn't it?" More tears: how does this woman know me? And why is she being so nice to me? "You're at North Fulton Regional Medical Center, honey. A housekeeper at a motel found you unconscious in bed this morning and called 911." My face crumples as I struggle to hold back anguished sobs. No, no! No one was supposed to find me! No one was supposed to care! "It's all right, honey. You're safe now. You're gonna be just fine. I'll go page Dr. Jesus, okay? Do you need anything? Is there anyone we can call for you? Your husband, maybe?" I strain to sit up, pulling at the straps over my hips. I want out. I want back in that motel with my pills and sleep. "Calm down, baby, it's okay. Who do you want me to call?" she coos, pushing me back into the mattress. Frustrated, I pound my fists against the bed, letting out a yelp when the skin stretches over the needle in the hand. I let the sobs come, not caring who hears me. Who is there to care anyway? The nurse slips her hand into mine, pulling my fingers out of a tight fist. "Calm down," she repeats. "You don't want to pull the IV out." Yes, I do! I want to leave! I want to go and sleep forever! Dammit! I'm too weak to keep fighting, though. My head lolls back onto the pillow and my taut muscles go slack. I whimper miserably and the nurse just smoothes my hair away from my face, making shushing sounds. "You just lay right here, baby. I'll go page the doctor, okay?" She doesn't wait for an answer, just walks slowly out of the door. I watch her as she approaches the desk, picks up a phone, and dials a few numbers. She chats with one of the other nurses, then picks up a chart and walks back down the hallway, away from me. Always away from me. A few minutes later, a tall, dark skinned man knocks on the door, then walks in, scribbling on a chart and not watching where he's going. "Mrs. Minette? I'm Dr. Jesus," he says with a slight accent, finally looking up. "How are you feeling?" The way he's towering over me, steeling his dark eyes on me, intimidates me. I sink further into the mattress, cowering away from him and not answering. "Mrs. Minette, did the nurse tell you what happened?" Yes, she did. My chest heaves, wondering what the repercussions of that will be. "From what the police have told us about the way they found you, it strongly suggests that you took those pills with the alcohol in order to kill yourself. Is that what happened?" More whimpering. I took enough of those pills so that I wouldn't have to worry about this. The doctor makes a gruff, dissatisfied face while he frowns. "You're going to have to talk to me, Mrs. Minette. If you don't, I'm afraid I'll have to assume that your intention was lethal and we'll have to hold you here until we can arrange a transfer to a hospital where you can recover." I squeeze my eyes shut tight, wondering if this is just one of those phases of hell Dante talked about. "Okay, it's your choice. We tried to contact your husband at home and at work, but were unable to reach him. Is there anyone else we can call?" No. No one else. "Mrs. Minette, I've asked that a Psychiatrist come down to talk to you. He's going to evaluate you so that we have a better idea of how to proceed with your care, but you're going to have to talk to him." I don't want to talk to anyone. I don't want to proceed with my care. Dr. Jesus sighs. "He'll be down in a few minutes." With that, he leaves. I don't want to talk to a fucking Psychiatrist. I want to leave here, go someplace warm and secluded where no one can find me and sleep. I just want to sleep... Tapping on the door. "Dana? Are you awake?" What is this, the Bullpen at the Hoover Building? Go the fuck away! He walks in, standing between the window and me, blocking the sunlight. Pulling the chair up from the wall, he settles himself in front of me. "Hi, I'm Dr. Wilson. I'd like to talk to you for a few minutes, okay?" No, not okay. Go back to your Sesame Street. You're not old enough to be a doctor. "Dana, Dr. Jesus has told me that there's a strong suspicion that you tried to kill yourself last night. I want to talk to you about that, okay? You can tell me anything that you feel like you need to and I'll listen. I just want to help you, okay? Can you tell me what happened last night? Why you were in the motel?" Because my husband threw me out after I confessed the truth, my infidelity with a man that I'm irrevocably in love with who, as it turns out, has abandoned me because I wouldn't tell my husband the truth. The doctor waits patiently for me to respond aloud. When I don't, he writes something on his chart, then studies me for a moment, methodically scanning my hair, face, eyes, and what he can see of my body. Unnerved, I turn my head away, towards the Nurses' station and close my eyes. "Can you tell me why you felt like you had to take your own life, Dana?" he asks in a soft, placating tone. Because, I don't want to be alone. I don't want to live a life that I've screwed up so badly. "Dana, are you going to talk to me?" No. Go away. I hear him stand, then, the chair scraping across the tiled floor. "Okay, Dana. I'm not going to force you to talk, but I do want you to listen," he says as he ambles to the other side of the bed to face me. I don't give him the satisfaction of opening my eyes. "I'm going to 1013 you. That means that we're legally allowed to hold you here because we feel that you're a danger to yourself. Tomorrow, we'll probably transfer you to another hospital so that you can rest and get better. If you want to talk to me before you go, though, you can, okay? Is there anyone I can call for you? Someone that you would talk to?" Why do they keep asking me that? Just go away... "Okay, Dana. I'll try and come see you later." His shoes squeak as he walks to the door, opens it, then disappears behind it. No one else comes to bother me until the sun starts to turn orange and gold. A nurse, not the same one as before, comes to change my IV bag and leaves a tray of food. She tells me that it's chicken noodle soup and that Dr. Jesus wants me to eat so that I can start getting my strength back. I don't touch the food, knowing that there's no reason to get my strength back. About an hour later, she comes in to retrieve the food, chiding me when she sees that it's uneaten. When she leaves this time, she tells me goodnight even though it's not even dark outside yet. I'm finally alone. The sounds of the hospital echo around me: machines, people's voices, movement. I turn my head into the pillow as much as I can and let it absorb my silent tears until I finally fall asleep. <><><><><><> At eight a.m., the cheery young nurse from yesterday comes in with my breakfast: cream of wheat, toast, and orange juice. My throat is still scratchy and raw, my stomach still aching, my mouth still tastes like charcoal. I don't feel like eating. "Did you sleep well last night, Dana?" she asks as she changes my IV bag. I turn on my pleading look, wanting sympathy from her, even though I don't know what good it would do me. I didn't wake up at all last night, sleeping for over twelve hours. Now, though, I'm still exhausted and just want to go back to sleep. Maybe I'm pleading with her so she'll give me a sedative that will knock me out. That way, I won't have to deal with the doctors. "I'll bet you're hungry," she says softly, rolling the bed-side table over my legs and pressing the button at my side to raise the head of the bed. "Just don't eat it too fast. Your stomach is still a little weak. Do you need anything? Did you think of anyone I could call for you?" I stare absently at the tray as she unties my restraints. "Dana, I hate to see you all alone. Even if they live far away, I can still try and get in touch with them. I'm sure your family is very worried about you by now." She pats my arm, uncovering the tray. "Well, if you think of anyone, just push this button right here," she indicates the little black button with a white outline of a nurse's head on it, "and I'll be here." She leaves and returns half an hour later with Dr. Jesus at her heels. "It doesn't look like you ate anything, Dana," he states. Wow, what a genius he is. Leave me alone. "Dr. Wilson said that you wouldn't talk to him yesterday. Are you ready to talk today?" I turn my head on my pillow, looking outside the blinds and away from him. "In a few minutes, we'll be transferring you to Ridgeview Hospital. It's not far from here, but they're more equipped to take care of you. I think you'll be more comfortable there." He waits for a reaction, but I don't give him one. Disgusted, he walks out, leaving the nurse with me. "Dana, honey, we finally got in touch with your husband." Her voice tells me what I already suspect: he doesn't care about me. He's probably angry that his insurance is responsible for paying for all of this. "His lawyer actually contacted the police who referred him to one of our Social Workers. She called your husband and told him that you were brought here Thursday night, but she couldn't get him to say whether or not he would come see you. Apparently, his lawyer left some divorce papers with her." She wisely stops there, figuring that I can put two and two together. Of course he won't come, he hates me. The nurse stands silently beside me, stroking my arm reassuringly as the orderlies come in with a gurney. She disconnects my IV and takes my oxygen canula away. When the orderlies ask me to move onto the gurney, I go limp, making them drag my deadweight like a rag doll. As they strap me down and start to wheel me out into the hallway, tears start to roll down my temples again and I try and stifle the sobs in my throat. I'm scared, lonely, and tired. I just want this to end. I want someone to explain to me what's happening. I want that nice, perky nurse to hold my hand and tell me that everything is going to be okay. I want Mulder here to tell me what they think happened to me and what kinds of evaluations they're going to do on me... No, I don't want Mulder. He won't come, even if I tell the nurse to call him. He'll laugh and say that I deserve to be like this. He hates me. I cry quietly in the back of the ambulance on the way to the other hospital. When I get there, the new nurse makes me stand up and dress in white scrub-like pajamas and leads me to my room. She brings me papers and tells me to sign them. My vision is blurry, but I'm supposed to attest that I'm here on my own free will, which is a lie. I don't sign them. The nurse calmly tells me that, until I do, I won't be allowed out of my room which is fine with me. I lay down on my new bed with softer sheets and warmer blankets, curl into a tight fetal position, and cry. In one of my classes in med school, we learned about this Ukrainian immigrant who had been held at a mental institution for nearly fifty years. The police had found her wandering on the streets speaking to people in Ukrainian, which they mistook for schizophrenic babble. She was locked away until a new faculty member at the institution finally realized that she was normal, not schizophrenic, and that she just didn't speak English. I feel like that woman must have. I don't want to be here, I don't need to be here. This is a place where the sick are treated. A place where people come to get better so that they can be released and live their lives again. I don't want to be treated, though, and I don't want to be released. I have nothing waiting for me on the outside. My husband is divorcing me, my mother will disown me, ashamed at my selfishness and cowardice, my only friend in the world, the only person who's ever truly loved me, I pushed away. With a suicide attempt and a stay at a mental institution on my record, I won't be able to get a decent, respectable job. I have little savings, not even enough for a down payment and a month's rent for an apartment. I would just try to kill myself again, knowing that there's nothing better for me here. Hell would be better than living alone, broken, and afraid. At lunch time, someone dressed in white brings me a tray of food, but doesn't speak to me. A half-hour later, they come to collect the untouched tray. At dinner time, a doctor comes to tell me that if I don't eat, he'll put a feeding tube into my stomach. I don't even look at him while he speaks. He asks me more questions as to why I tried to kill myself and I turn away, huddling under my warm, safe cover. When he sends for nurses and orderlies to hold me down, I don't fight them. When he shoves the tube up my nose and down my throat, I don't flinch or cry out. When they leave me alone in my room, I lay still. It's possible for people to will themselves to die. Despite everything that medical science can do, they can't make a person live if they don't want to. And I don't want to. And no one cares. No one will even come to my funeral, I'll bet. They'll just bury me with a non-denominational service. The only person that will be there will be the preacher. How did my life come to this? <><><><><><> The next morning, the nurse comes back with the same papers from yesterday. She hastily explains that they can't help me until I first help myself and again asks me to sign them. I still refuse. She huffs and puffs and finally leaves. Another nurse comes in every four hours just to make sure I'm still alive, I guess. She checks my feeding tube, respiration, and heart rate, then leaves. They always leave. After lunch, a tall, lanky man with graying hair comes in and introduces himself to my back as Dr. Robert Clemmons, my psychiatrist. He recites from his long-memorized script about how they're going to help me, that he's here to talk to me and to be my friend and confidant. That together, I'm going to get well. He says that the doctors at the other hospital told him that I had refused to speak to anyone and that he hopes I'll speak to him now. I have nothing to be afraid of, according to him, and I have no reason not to speak. I focus on taking deep, even breaths, giving every indication that I'm not listening. "Dana," he starts in a soft voice that they teach all psych residents, "I want to do something called a Mental Status Exam. It will help me determine if there are any medical reasons such as dementia explaining why you attempted suicide. I'll just need to ask you a few questions, but you're going to have to respond to them. We can't move forward until you do." That's fine. Let's just stay stuck in neutral forever. Behind my too-thin eye lids, I pretend that my I'm still locked in that perfect stillness between asleep and awake, not answering. Sighing, the man drags a chair over in front of the bed, sitting down heavily and exhaling in relief. "I understand that you haven't been talking much since you woke up the other morning." He pauses, maybe for dramatic effect, maybe to see if I'll talk to him. No luck. "I need to ask you some questions, Dana, and begin evaluating you. The sooner we can get to know each other, the sooner we can understand what's bothering you so that we can fix it." No, no need to fix it. There's nothing to fix; nothing to salvage. Go help someone who wants to get better, I'm a lost cause. "Dana, everyone who tries to kill themselves has their own reasons. I'd like to know yours. Would you share that with me?" Inside me, I can feel the cold, thick liquid from the feeding tube enter my stomach and slide around the shriveled cavity there, reminding me of how I've become dependent on a machine to live against my will. Reminding me of the mockery that my life has become. A year ago, I was a healthy, happy, independent woman who had everything she never knew she'd always wanted but wished for everything she thought she didn't have. Today, I'm a hollow shell of that strong person. "I spend an hour with each of my patients every day, Dana, and you're going to be no different. Part of your treatment here is an individual counseling session in addition to group therapy and medicinal supplements. So, for the next hour, you can talk to me and tell me about why you think you're here or we can sit in silence. It's up to you, but I'll give you the opportunity to make the decision," he says in a slow, soothing tone. I take a deep breath, wincing as the tube scrapes the inside of my throat and nose. Pain means I'm still alive. For the next fifty-five minutes, Dr. Clemmons and I sit in a comfortable silence. I hear him scribbling with his pen intermittently, but he never sighed in frustration or raised his voice in anger. When our time is almost up, he stands and puts the chair back in its proper place, speaking again. "Okay, Dana, I'll be back at the same time tomorrow. Maybe by then, you'll have thought of something to say. This afternoon, if you're feeling up to it, I want you to attend one of our group sessions for suicide survivors. The nurse will let you know when it's time. Good-bye." The door squeaks open and closed as he leaves. Except for the every-four-hours nurse, no one comes into my room for the rest of the day. The nurse doesn't speak to me. I watch the sun as it slides across the floor, elongating the shadows from the slats of the blinds and the bars on the floor, making little checker-board patterns. Occasionally, the silence of the hall is broken by loud vehicles outside and once, the scream from another patient. Nurses and doctors bustle up and down the hallway, having a purpose and being productive. Family and friends visit relatives and loved-ones. I lay still, waiting to die. Shortly before the sun sets, I fall asleep, waking every time the every-four-hours nurse comes in to check on me. At eight a.m., another nurse comes in, waking me as she slams my door closed behind her. "Dana," she coos. "You need to wake up. You have visitors." My eyes fly open, my fists unconsciously squeezing the sheets between my fingers. Visitors...who could it be? Mulder? Did he come after all? I turn my head towards the door, squinting at the bright light from the hallway. "I'll send them in, okay?" The cheery woman says, smiling, then stepping outside the door and telling whoever it is that they can see me now. Footsteps in the hall. My heart is slamming in my chest. No, it's not Mulder. It's my mother with Ethan at her heels like a dutiful puppy dog. Neither of them looks very happy. My mother's eyes are cold and squinted in disbelief and horror; Ethan looks pale, slightly embarrassed. "I'll be right outside if you need me," the nurse tells them quietly, then closes the door softly on her way out. Mom just stares at the floor for a few minutes taking deep breaths which whistle as she exhales through her nose. Ethan takes in the room, peaking into the tiny bathroom and looking out through the bars on the window before returning to his spot behind Mom. In her Sunday best and low-heeled shoes, she taps across the floor to stand within an arm's reach of the bed. Finally, she speaks. "Dana," she declares in her carefully controlled anger voice, in case there was any doubt. Figuring that they've come to officially disown me, I put my head back down, studying the tiny cracks in the paint on the wall. Taking a deep breath and steeling herself, she starts again. "How are you feeling?" I rearrange my arms underneath my head, getting comfortable and not answering. Ethan sighs, walking back to the window. My mother's eyes follow him, then she steps closer to the bed so that she can speak more softly. "The nurse said that you tried to kill yourself. Is that true?" My shoulders start trembling, but I still don't raise my head to look at her face. I couldn't stand what I'd see there. I wasn't supposed to have to worry about all of this. I was supposed to die alone in that motel room; my little secret. It wasn't supposed to be like this. "I told her that that's not what happened. I told her that my daughter would never do something like this, but she was insistent. She said that they found you unconscious in a motel room and that you had taken an overdose of pain pills with alcohol and that if you hadn't vomited most of it after you'd lost consciousness, you'd be dead right now. But I still told her that my daughter would never do something so selfish and irresponsible. She would never do something so immature. But I guess I was wrong," she finishes softly, still studying the floor. In the corner, at the window, Ethan hangs his head, puts his hands on his hips, and looks angry and pensive. "Do you have anything to say to me, Dana? Or to Ethan?" Mom asks. No. Nothing. I close my eyes as a few tears slip out from underneath the lids. "Well, I have a few things to say to you," she snaps. "First of all, I don't understand how you could do something like this after everything that has happened to you. Your cancer, your abduction, when you were shot...after fighting so hard to live, you just want to throw it all away! And what about your sister? She gave her life so that you could keep living! Missy would've never done something like this, Dana! She would've been grateful that her sister had made such a sacrifice for her instead of wasting it, acting like life doesn't mean anything!" My lower lips trembles and I bite it, stifling a sob. "Second, what about your family? Me, Ethan, your brothers, your daughter? What about them? How were we supposed to react to something like this? Did you even stop to consider how this would hurt us? What this would do to us? How could you be so selfish?" Under the blankets, I dig my nails into the skin of my legs, trying not to scream. "And what are you going to do now? This is a sin, Dana! I don't even know if the Church will take you back or excommunicate you...I'm glad your father isn't here to see this. He would be so disappointed..." She dissolves into well-placed, lady-like tears and Ethan comes over to pat her on the back, whispering that it will be okay and dragging the metal chair over for her to sit in. It must be his turn to yell at me now, as he begins pacing the length of my bed, carefully watching the shiny tips of his expensive shoes. I swallow thickly, turning off my emotions and going still like a zombie. "You see what you've done to her, Dana? Imagine how I felt having to call her and tell her what happened. Imagine how I felt getting that call from the Social Worker." He pauses, pivots, and then starts again. "No, don't try and empathize with anyone. It must be beneath you. You just don't care about what you do to other people, do you? It doesn't even matter to you." He stops pacing and crosses his arms. "I told your mother why you were at a motel that night. I told her everything you told me. I half expected to see him here, too. I thought maybe that you'd found him after I threw you out and had gone back to DC with him, but on the way here, I guessed that you had already called him and he had rushed back to be here with you. But no. He's not here, is he? Where is he, Dana? Where is that son of a bitch that you risked everything for?" Mulder. He's not here. He's at home, moving on with his life without me. Forgetting about me. Slow, hot tears start sliding down my cheeks, soaking into the sheets, disappearing. I wish I could be one of those tear drops, just disappearing from everything. "I guess he doesn't love you as much as you thought, huh? He just leaves you here to pick up the pieces of this mess that he helped you create," Ethan finishes snidely, walking over to my mother and asking if she's okay. She's fine, she's just gearing up for another round. This time, though, she actually sits on my bed and touches me. She strokes my dull, matted hair, traces the feeding tube from where it's tucked behind my ear to where it disappears into my nose. She wipes the tear tracks off of my face. I lay still, her touch burning me, mocking me. "Dana, look at me," she requests softly, tilting my chin up to her face and holding it there. "I still love you, you know that. I will always love you." Her voice quivers dramatically, adding an extra hint of genuineness to her otherwise stoic and cold pleas. "I just don't understand this. I don't understand how you thought that dying would fix everything. I don't understand why you didn't tell me all of this. I could've helped you, Dana. I still want to help you, but I'm just so angry at you right now!" she spits, disgusted. No, you don't understand, Mom. You don't understand what it feels like to be helpless and alone. You don't understand what it feels like to be dead inside and to only want the outside to match. Ethan just stands still, staring out the window, not saying a word. The only reason that he's here now is because my mother is here, because he has to play the role of the tragically wronged husband. If not for her, he probably wouldn't have come at all. She pushes my hair behind my ears, trying to control her rage. "You're going to have to start eating again and you're going to have to take better care of yourself. You'll have to let the doctors here help you. We can only do so much without your help." I don't want your help. Help won't do me any good. There's nothing to help, nothing to improve, nothing to salvage. It's all wasted, wrecked. I've wasted my life, my body, my only chance for happiness. There's nothing left now but to wait for the end, for my end, to wait to die. Someone knocks on the door, then, and Dr. Clemmons pokes his head in, entering and introducing himself to my visitors as my psychiatrist. My mother, never one for subtlety and grace, gets right to the point. "Doctor, what's wrong with her?" He takes a deep breath, crossing his arms and looking at me out of the corner of his eye. "Right now, all we know is that for some reason, Dana felt like she didn't need to continue living. There are many reasons that people attempt suicide, Mrs. Scully, but until Dana tells us hers, we can't begin to understand what is wrong with her," he explains calmly. "She won't talk to you, either?" Mom asks, frustrated. "No. Dana and I had a session yesterday morning, but she refused to speak." "What does that mean? I don't understand why she won't let you help her." "Right now, Dana's silence tells me more than any words she could say," he says softly, his eyes sliding back over to me. "She may not be ready to admit that she needs help or to accept it. Until she is, I'd like to talk to both you and Mr. Minette about Dana to get a history on her. It'll help me understand more about her current emotional state." Mom looks back at Ethan for a reaction but gets none. He's stone-faced and apathetic. At a loss, she drops her head and stares at the cracked tiles on the floor. "All right." "We can begin to treat Dana medically as well. As you can see, we've already begun feeding her since she refuses to eat. In addition, we can start her on a low-dose anti-depressant or something similar to try and improve her mood. If that's successful, she may begin to talk to us." She nods along. "All right," she repeats. "Since Dana has refused to sign her admission papers, I'll have to get your authorization before we progress. If you could sign right here," he says, holding out a chart and a pen. Mom dutifully signs and hands them back to him. "I'd like to get started on the history as soon as possible, if that's all right with you. Until then, I'm afraid that our visiting hours prohibit you from visiting Dana any longer. You can come back tomorrow, if you like." Ethan sighs and leans on the wall, thankful for the excuse to escape my presence. He must be worried about what to tell the neighbors. "Of course," Mom whispers, then walks back over to the bed, bending down to kiss my cheek. "Rest, Dana. Think about what I said. I'll be back tomorrow." She and Ethan follow the doctor out the door like little baby ducks following their mother to a pond. Dr. Clemmons puts a hand on my mothers back trying to encourage her. "When you come, you'll need to bring Dana some clothes and toiletry items, plus any personal affects you feel that she'd want or need. The nurse can give you a list of items that she can or can't have as you leave," he explains as they walk out into the hallway. He must do this a lot: explain to confused families how their once strong and independent relative is now forced to live in a prison-like facility. The door closes after them, slamming and locking me in. As he'd promised, a large nurse comes in with a syringe a couple of hours later. She doesn't speak as she injects the liquid into my arm or as she checks the bag connected to the feeding tube. My heavy eyes flutter open and closed on the verge of sleep until the drugs start to take effect. Immediately, my pulse and respiration increase. I fight it, closing my eyes firmly, trying to grasp at my peacefulness that was so close. The medication fights back, though, and my body starts to shake in its desperate attempts to move and my attempts to hold it still. Frustrated at my body's betrayal, I start to cry, but no tears come. I'm dehydrated and all that my crying amounts to is pathetic shrieks and a bloody nose. A few minutes later, unconsciousness beckons again, stronger this time, and I finally succumb. A year ago, I could've never imagined myself in this position. I never thought that it could get this bad. <><><><><><> Later, a young, obviously new nurse knocks on my door and announces that it's time for "group." I'm laying on the bed, facing away from her, and I pretend not to hear. She comes over to me, peaking over my shoulder and trying to see if I'm awake, trying hard not to let any part of her body touch mine. Insanity might be contagious. Apparently noticing my irregular breathing, she surmises that I am awake. "Dana," she whispers, "Wake up. It'll be over in an hour and then you can come back and sleep for the rest of the day, okay? C'mon." Getting no response, she peaks over her shoulder, searching for someone to help her. "Dana," she says a little more forcefully before heaving a frustrated sigh and walking to the door. Another nurse comes to the party, squeaking her way across the floor in her rubber-soled shoes. "C'mon now, Dana. Everyone has to go to Group and you're no different." I am different. They want to get well, I don't. Big difference. "Nancy, go get me a wheelchair," she tells the younger nurse, who scampers off to find one. Returning momentarily, the older nurse yanks the covers off of me, picks me up, and sets me down in the chair. She must've gotten her insanity vaccination already. After disconnecting the feeding tube, she starts to wheel me out of the room and down the hall. I let my head loll against the back of the chair and take in my surroundings. My vision is slightly blurry, but I can make out several other doors that dot the walls at regular intervals, hand rails occupying the space between them. At the end of the hall, there's a large lobby with a television and several couches and chairs. Other metal chairs are arranged in a circle, several other people occupying them. At the sound of the wheelchair, they all turn to look at me with their tired, hollow eyes. The older nurse parks my chair in a gap in the circle, disappearing without a word. "Are you Dana?" A sophisticated- looking woman asks me. I wrap my arms around myself, shivering from cold and fear. "I'm Dr. Shipp. Everyone," she addresses the other people in the circle who I take to be the suicide survivors, "this is Dana. She was just admitted Saturday after she attempted to kill herself." They nod, some looking sympathetically at me. I look down, wanting to melt into the floor. "Dana, everyone here has been where you are, so we understand what you're going through. This is a place where you can talk about those feelings openly and honestly, okay?" When I don't respond, she looks to another member and addresses him. "Now, when we left off, you were telling us about when you were fired from your job, right?" The man nods and begins his story, the other members quickly jumping into a discussion with him. They proceed as if I'm not even there. An hour later, young nurse Nancy comes to retrieve me, watching me as I struggle to crawl back into bed. She bites the corner of her lip, looking like she wants to do something but doesn't know what to do, so she just leaves me alone. Just before sunset, another nurse comes in to inject me with more of the medication. I go through the same thing as before, trying to fight its hold on me. With no outlet, the extra energy in my system makes my body shake and my mind buzz. Despite that, I feel so tired all of the sudden. It's well before "lights out" when I fall asleep. <><><><><><> The next morning, Dr. Clemmons comes back, setting up his chair the same way he always does. "How is the medication working, Dana? Any side effects?" I turn my head into the pillow as far as I can without pulling my tube out and stop thinking, still exhausted. "Dr. Shipp told me that you went to Group, but that the nurse had to bring you in a wheelchair. You can walk, Dana, if you try. Did you not want to go?" Hell no, I didn't want to go. Why should I? He scribbles on his charts; I wonder what he's writing about me. "I'm sure you were happy to see your mother yesterday," he begins, expecting me to agree and expand upon my feeling about seeing her. Yes, I was elated to have her tell me how ungrateful and selfish I am, Doctor, it was wonderful. "If there's anything you'd like to talk about, you can. You can say anything to me and it'll be confidential. Your mother never has to know," he says softly, like he's telling me some great and all-powerful secret. I pull the covers up higher, covering my shoulders and chin. Like always, we sit in silence for the remainder of the hour. When he leaves, a nurse gives me another injection and then, everyone leaves me alone. I wonder how long it will be before they just give up on me and leave me alone for good. At ten, there's a knock on my door and, when it opens, my mother follows young nurse Nancy in. Nancy quickly leaves, locking the door on her way out. Mom smiles as she enters, but it fades as she gets closer to the bed. "Good morning, Dana," she says, touching my shoulder, trying to tell if I'm awake. "I brought you some things from home. Some clothes and your pajamas. Some books and," she reaches into a bag, pulling something out. "Emma drew this for you. All Ethan has told her is that you're in the hospital, not why. He couldn't come today; he had to work," she finishes in a rush. I always forget how much more important work is to Ethan than I am. It always was before, but somehow, I thought that this would be different. When I don't answer her, Mom brushes the hair off of my cheek and behind my ear. "Are you going to talk to me today?" No. I don't have anything to say. She sighs harshly, then walks over to my little closet that doesn't have a door or removable hangers and starts emptying my suitcase. "Do you want to change into your pajamas now or some clothes?" she asks over her shoulder, turning to look at me as I don't respond again. "You can decide later," she says finally, returning to her task. When she's done, it looks like she's unpacked all of my clothes. That means two things. One, that Ethan has permanently kicked me out and two, that she expects me to be here for a while. See, even she doesn't expect me to ever get well. She takes something out of the suitcase before she closes it and pushes it to the back of the closet, coming to sit on my bed and holding it in her hands so that I can't see it. "I never knew you had one of these, Dana. I asked Ethan if I should bring it and he said he didn't know about it either." She sets my nameplate on my night stand so that I can barely see it through my blurry eyes. "Dana K. Scully, MD." I remember when I was Dana K. Scully, MD. Now, I'm just a random mental patient. "I thought you'd like to have it back," she says softly, brushing more imaginary hair away from my face. "Dana, I don't know what to do. I tried everything I know to get you to talk to me, to tell me what was bothering you, but you never would. You never talked to me, even before all of this started. Dr. Clemmons said that you can get better, though, but that you have to want to. Until you do, he said there's nothing that he or I or anyone can do to help you. And I don't think that you want to get better, do you? Dana, I don't understand that." Even if I get better, what do I have? I have no home, no husband or family, nothing. Why should I get better? She doesn't understand that there's no reason to. She bends down to kiss my cheek, letting her lips linger on my dry, gray skin. "I can't help you anymore, Dana. I'm sorry. When you're ready to get well, you can call me. I'll be here. I love you." A tiny tear drips onto my skin and she wipes it away before she stands and walks to the door. "I called Fox. I thought that he'd want to know you were here. He wasn't home, but I left him a message. Maybe he can help you; you always would tell him things," she tells the floor before knocking on the door, letting young nurse Nancy know that she's ready to leave. She walks out without saying good-bye, telling Nancy thank you before disappearing down the hall. Wait, she's leaving? How can she leave me here? She's my mother, she's not supposed to leave! I guess this is what happens when people finally give up on you. The sunlight makes the gold shine on my nameplate, drawing my eyes back to it. Mulder gave this to the woman he loved who had no clue about how he felt. She had no clue that the life that she was leaving was everything she had always wanted. She gave that up for what she thought she deserved but that had been taken away from her. Now, she's really getting what she deserves: her identity stripped away from her, her family and friends abandoning her. She's finally learning what it is to be alone. My hand shaking, I reach out for the nameplate, hugging it to my chest and crying quietly, mourning the woman that I'm not anymore until Nancy comes to take me to Group. She has to call for the older nurse to pick me up and wheel me there, but neither of them takes my nameplate away from me. I take special care to notice my surroundings today, knowing that I'll be here for the rest of my life. I should start getting used to it. After Dr. Shipp greets everyone, her eyes linger on me. "Dana, what have you got there?" she asks. Still sniffling, I turn it around so that she can read. "You're a medical doctor?" No. I used to be, but not anymore. "What are you specialized in?" she asks softly. I blink at her, then clutch it to my chest again, bow my head, and sob in front of everyone, not saying a word. <><><><><><> Something outside the room hits the hallway floor, smacking loudly against the tile and waking me from my groggy, all- encompassing sleep. There's yelling outside, but not from the same patient as before. Nurses trying to shush the voice, one hollers for security. Another calling for someone to page a doctor. The voice, a man's, won't be calmed. He's enraged, demanding something. "JUST TELL ME WHERE SHE IS...I DON'T CARE WHAT TIME IT IS, I'M A GODDAMMED FEDERAL AGENT...WHERE'S HER DOCTOR, I WANT TO TALK TO HER DOCTOR...WHAT ROOM IS SHE IN...TELL ME WHERE SHE IS, NOW!" Echoes loudly through the hall as the man paces heavily outside, peaking through the port windows on the doors and reading the name plates beside them. Finding the one he wants, all the voices outside cease for a moment, like the eye of a hurricane; the calm before the storm. "Open this door," the man orders in a low, barely controlled voice. "Sir, I can't do that. It's aft- " "OPEN THIS DOOR NOW!" Another woman's voice. "Sir, please calm down -" "YOU OPEN THIS DOOR OR I'LL KICK IT OPEN!" Good luck; it's metal. The first nurse huffs and jangles her keys, hastily unlocking the door. "You have five minutes before Security will escort you from the premises, sir," she says haughtily, with a slight tone of fear in her voice. "Thank you," he huffs, bursting through the doorway and stopping as soon as he sees me. With my back to him, I can only guess at the look on his face: surprise - no, shock. Shock and horror. Fear. Self- recrimination and guilt. Confusion. Misunderstanding. Helplessness. Hate. He doesn't breath for a few seconds, walking softly over to the bed and placing a hand on my shoulder, trying to turn me or see if I'm alive. The nurse is hovering in the doorway, her fat arms crossed over her double-D cup chest. "She's sleeping, sir, and I'd advise you not to wake her. Even if she was coherent, she hasn't spoken to anyone since she was admitted, not even her mother or husband." "They were here? When?" he asks in a thick tone, trying not to show too much emotion. "Yesterday," the nurse snaps, probably missing her TV show. Mulder leans in close to my shoulder, trying to see my face in the dark and shadows. "Scully?" he calls softly. I'm careful to control my breathing, acting like his whirlwind entrance didn't phase me from my drug-induced stupor. "Scully?" The sounds aren't words so much as they are vibrations, shaking me down to my core: intimate, concerned. More footsteps in the hall. "What in the hell is going on here?" A man asks, angry with the nurse. Mulder turns, stalking towards him. "Are you her doctor?" "I'm the psychiatrist on call this evening yes, can I help you, sir?" "I want to know everything about her condition: when she was admitted, what you've done with her so far. Everything that's happened." "And you are?" "I am Special Agent Fox Mulder with the Federal Bureau of Investigation -" "And what are you doing here?" The doctor interrupts. "Her mother called me." "You know Mrs. Minette?" "Yes, we...we're friends. I'm also ABD in psychology, so please, spare me no detail," he says rudely, getting frustrated. "Then you should be quite familiar with the rules and regulations that we have established so that our patients can rest comfortably. I'll have to ask you to come with me, sir. You can see Mrs. Minette in the morning." Taking a few deep, obviously cowed breaths, Mulder glances over his shoulder at me, then looks down at the floor, his hands on his hips, his lower lip between his teeth. "All right," he finally agrees hesitantly, pulling the door closed behind him as he follows the doctor down the hall. No, he's not supposed to see me like this. Why is he here? Why did he even bother to come? Dammit, Mulder, you weren't supposed to see this! I lay awake the rest of the night, staring at the ceiling and wondering when, if ever, Mulder will come back. I want him here. I want him to sit beside me and hold my hand and make bad jokes about the mean nurses. I want him to smooth my hair away from my face and kiss my forehead and promise me that everything will be okay. I want him to tell me over and over again how much he loves me - how much he still loves me - and that he's still going to take me back after everything I've done. I want him to say that he forgives me. The same nurse as before comes to my room after nine a.m. with Mulder impatiently at her heels. As she swings open the door, though, finally allowing him entrance, he stands in the doorway, starring at the floor instead of moving. When he raises his head, his lower lip is between his teeth, his eyes slightly bloodshot and moist. Slowly, he ambles into the room, pulling the dilapidated metal chair from the corner over in front of the bed, then sitting down heavily in it, burying his face in his hands. The nurse appraises all of this from outside the door, shakes her head, and closes it. We sit in, what is for me, an uncomfortable silence. From Mulder's breathing pattern, I can tell that he's struggling to hold back tears, trying to be the strong one in this. After a few minutes, he sits up and stares at the ceiling, rolling his head around on his neck like he'd slept in this same position and now was paying for it. Finally, he speaks, his voice echoing off the tile floors. "Your mother called me, left a message on my answering machine. She was upset - crying, barely able to talk - and she said that you were in the hospital. I called her back, but she wasn't home. I called Ethan and he wouldn't tell me anything...my God, Scully, do you know how worried I was?" He wipes a tear away from where it's sliding across his temple, determined to get through this. No, Mulder, I don't know how worried you were. It didn't even cross my mind. All I could think about was how it felt when you walked out the door and drove away, leaving me for what would've been the last time, how it felt to know that you hated me, how it would feel to feel nothing. He slumps again, resting his elbows on his knees and bowing his head. "I kept thinking the worst: that you were in a car wreck or something, but I never even considered..." he fades out, shaking his head in disbelief. "You've always been so strong, Scully. I always thought that you could handle anything. You've never needed me or anyone else, you just...you've always been the strong one." My mother said those same words to me years ago, when I was dying of cancer. I didn't believe them then and I don't believe them now. If they only knew how weak I truly was, how much I needed them. He continues, his voice rough and deep. "Everyone has always said that people who try to kill themselves must be selfish and cowardly, but I've never agreed. I don't think that you can ever truly appreciate how much bravery and strength it takes to try to end your own life unless you've been there yourself. Unless you've ever experienced the hopelessness and despair and pain that accompanies it. I've been there, Scully, more times than I care to remember." His voice breaks and he bites his lip again, stifling the sob. "I know what it feels like to want to die enough to take matters into your own hands. When I was fourteen and my parents divorced, I thought it was all my fault. When I moved to England and I was all alone in a place where I couldn't even count the money. When you were taken. When you told me that it was my fault that They gave you cancer. It would've been so easy for me to just...end it all. I wanted to. I had the means and the opportunity." He pauses and takes a deep, shuttering breath, looking everywhere except at me. "I know what it takes, Scully. I know how it feels. I had no one, though. No one that cared about me or if I lived or died. I really felt that my only option was suicide, especially the last time. You're the only person that would've given a damn if I died, but you would've been dead in a matter of months anyway. But that's what stopped me. I never told you this, Scully, but that night that I was in your apartment waiting for you, I had been so close. "But I kept thinking about you," he continues. "I imagined them telling you that I had shot myself and your reaction. I thought about you laying in a hospital bed, sick and weak, without me there. Just you, Scully. You're what kept me living. And it was enough just to be there to support you, to hold your hand and tell you that everything would be okay when we both knew that it wouldn't. I couldn't die quickly and painlessly knowing that you would die slowly and agonizingly." He shakes his head again, finally looking up at me. "I guess my point is that I know how it feels to be suicidal. I never tried it, but I still know what it takes. And I know you. How damn strong and independent you are, how you never, ever give up on something you believe in. I can't put those two together, though. I can't understand how you of all people would think that your only option was suicide." He stands, picking the chair up and setting it back in the corner, then going over to stand in front of the window, hands on his hips. "I know you knew exactly what you were doing, that taking that many pills with that amount of alcohol would kill you. I know that you thought a motel would've been the perfect place to do it because no one knew you were there and no one could save you. You planned all this whether you realize it or not and you executed it almost perfectly. But there's only one flaw in your logic, Scully," he explains to the metal bars on the window. "You didn't really want to die." He pauses then, letting his accusation sink in. In my warm little cavern, I hold my breath, wondering if he can hear my heart pounding all the way across the room. How dare he. How fucking dare he. He comes here days after I tried to fucking kill myself and tells me that I wasn't serious? How fucking dare he! Undaunted, he continues. "You only did it for the attention, just so me and Ethan and your mother would all pity you and realize what horrible people we are. You wanted us to feel sorry for everything that's happened to you over the past year and you wanted us to fix it for you." He turns around, fixing me with a cold gaze. "Your mother told me that you finally confessed your infidelity to Ethan and that he kicked you out, that he's divorcing you. You figured that she would hate you because of that. You thought that I'd finally abandoned you for good that night when I left your house; you thought I hated you. You didn't want to go through the divorce and being all alone again, knowing that you'd failed at what you thought you'd wanted most of all. So, you took the easy way out. You decided to show us what we'd pushed you to." Ambling back over to the door, he stops in front of it and addresses the floor again. "And that is selfish and cowardly. When my mother did this, she did it because she didn't want to face that disease she had, she didn't want to go through all that pain and suffering. That was cowardly and selfish, Scully, but that's not you or, at least, it's not the Scully I know. I know that you don't want to be here and that you didn't think about what would happen when your suicide attempt failed. The doctor says that you haven't spoken to anyone since you were admitted and that you refuse to eat. You're still showing everyone how much you want to die and why we should clamor to help you because this is our fault anyway, but you act like you don't care whether we're here or not, which pushes us away. Then when we do finally get frustrated and give up, you cry and wonder why we left you. So before you develop any explanations of your own, let me tell you why I'm here and why I'm leaving." I finally take a deep breath, my pulse pounding in my temples. He can't be leaving me, after everything he's just said. "I'm here because I love you, despite everything that's happened. I still love you more than anything and nothing will ever change that. I'm here because I want to help you get better because, whether you want to admit this or not, everything that has happened is no one's fault but yours. You've done this to yourself and you're sick, but you can get better, and I want to help you because I love you. But I'm leaving because that's not what you want. You don't want to get better and you don't want anyone's help. Until you do, you're not going to make any progress. You have to do this on your own." He looks at me again with those soft puppy dog eyes, almost in tears. "I know you can, Scully. The nurse told me that all patients have phone privileges everyday between six-thirty a.m. and eleven-thirty p.m. You can call me when you're ready to accept responsibility for your actions and you're ready to move forward. Until then, you can lay here and feel sorry for yourself and be alone, or you can decide to get better, let the doctors help you, and have my support. It's up to you. I'll be ready when you are." He hesitates for a moment, waiting for me to respond. When I don't, he opens the door and walks out, leaving me in my solitude and silence. I lay there, staring at the door, certain that at any minute, Mulder will walk back in and pick me up, hold me and whisper to me that of course he would never say those things to me, of course he would never leave me. He doesn't though. <><><><><><> A year ago today, to the best of my recollection, Mulder stopped by my apartment unannounced. It was a Sunday afternoon and I was shaving my legs, and he came by to talk to me. Having the advantage of hindsight, I know now that he wanted my permission to go out on a date with someone; otherwise, he would've felt like, in a way, he was cheating on me. He was nervous about going out with her because he said that he hadn't been on a date in ten years. So, in a friendly, concerned gesture, I offered to go out with him on a practice date. Mulder is infinitely sweet and caring, gentle, loving, polite, and dumb as a rock about the fairer sex. Our practice date was horrible, uncomfortable, and I feared that he would repeat his performance on his real date. He did, of course, and showed up the next Sunday, two days after his date, to tell me how miserable it was. During the course of our conversation that afternoon, I realized something about my best friend and partner, something that I denied and repressed until eight months later: Mulder was in love with me. He didn't want his date to go well; he wanted the woman to lose all interest in him. I accused him of not trying to find anyone to settle down with, someone who could make him happy and bring love and balance to his world. He accused me of not doing that either. He was right, as he is 98.9% of the time, but I told him that he had a reason to do so while I didn't. I was - and am - damaged goods. I was - and am - simply an empty vessel of no practical use to any man on the planet. Even if I did find someone that I loved and who loved me, I would never do him the injustice of marrying him; it wouldn't be fair. I encouraged Mulder to reach out to happiness, though, to chase it and grasp it with both hands, should it ever come his way. He retaliated by asking me if neither of us were married by the time I retired from the Bureau, we could get married. To each other. I said no. I couldn't do that to him. He got angry because I told him that if I said yes, he would stop looking for anyone else, someone who could give him all the things I couldn't. He yelled at me that he didn't want anyone else, then left. The next day at work, we didn't speak until lunch, when all was forgotten. Whoever those two people were that had briefly inhabited our bodies on that Sunday afternoon were gone, leaving stoic, rational, Mulder and Scully to avoid the big pink elephant in the center of the room, or office, or Lariat-issue Taurus, or random, nameless motel in Podunkville, USA. A year ago today, I was unaware that Mulder was in love with me and even more unaware that I was in love with him. Ignorance is bliss and I was insanely happy. Only I didn't think I was. I had a good job that I loved and did well. I had a partner who respected me and listened to me (sometimes), with whom I worked well. I had a best friend who would always listen to anything I had to say, who would always help me without having to be asked, who would do anything for me. I had a life, as Daniel had reminded me just a few weeks earlier. I told him that I didn't know what I had. What I had was everything that I never knew I always wanted. What I wanted was everything that I thought didn't have, that thought I should have, that I deserved. And when it offered itself to me, I took it, as I had told Mulder to do. I grabbed it with both hands and ran with it, afraid that if I let it get away again, I would never have another chance. And now, one year later, I'm laying in a tiny bed in a mental institution, being fed by a tube, being kept alive against my will, after trying to kill myself. I'm alone and empty with nothing and no one to respect me, listen to me, or help me. I finally got everything I deserve. At ten o'clock, a nurse comes in and injects me with another dose of whatever medication they have me on. The immediate effects of it are more pronounced each time they give it to me, but I guess that's just a part of the treatment. This time, though, I start to shake more violently and my head gets heavy, cloudy, and I can't think. When my eyelids fall closed on their own, I let them stay like that, slipping blissfully into the thick, dark, welcome unconsciousness. <><><>End Part 1<><><> <><><>Begin Part 2<><><> When I wake up this time, the first thing that I notice is how heavy my body feels. My fingers and toes are tingling and my eye lids are like lead. I'm hot; I feel thick blankets on top of me. I'm not restrained, but I'm still not able to move my arms and legs. My mouth is dry and achy, my ears buzzing so loud I can't hear, and the rest of me is so sore, like I felt that first night on the ice with Mulder in Antarctica after shivering violently for hours. I feel like absolute shit. I guess God finally decided what to do with me and that this is Hell. It makes sense: Purgatory was just a middle ground so that I could be abandoned by my family, so that I could see what I'd done to them, but this is where I'll be spending the rest of eternity. I deserve it though after everything I've done. After rolling my eyes around underneath their lids, which are full of sand, I finally manage to flutter them open and take in my surroundings. I'm in a room - what looks like a hospital room, though neither of the two I've been in lately. It's nicer than those, with what looks like a wooden chest of drawers against one wall and a matching wooden bed frame and night stand. There's a door with a small port window opposite the bed that leads to a darkened hallway, another door behind it in the corner, what I assume is the bathroom. Another, larger window, one without bars, looks out onto a bright, lithium-lit night in the city, thick gray clouds obscuring any stars in the sky. Beside the bed is a comfortable looking chair with a man sleeping there. As my eyes adjust to the darkness, I gradually see the man's features: deep set eyes; strong, enlarged nose; full, pouty lips turned into a slight frown. Mulder. He's slumped in what can't be a very comfortable position, his head nearly touching one shoulder, his glasses, which I rarely have the pleasure of seeing, have slid down his nose to barely hold onto his ears; his mouth is slightly open and his arms are crossed tightly over his chest. From this angle, he looks like he never meant to fall asleep, only to sit and stay for a few minutes, but eventually succumbed to exhaustion. And he does look exhausted. Stressed. Sad. Angry. Beautiful. My Mulder. There's a stack of thick, old looking books on the night stand and one open on his lap. I can't read the spines, but the glare off the gold lettering from the streetlights outside tells me that they're scholarly and important. He must've fallen asleep while reading about something. The buzzing in my ears gradually subsides and I can start to hear the low, angry sounds of car horns outside, the rumble of diesel trucks as they go down the road. Mulder's soft snoring. The bustle of people outside in the hallway. It takes me a minute, but I eventually realize that the feeding tube is gone and there's a tiny IV line running from above the bed to the top of my hand. I'm dressed in my own pajamas, different ones than those I remember putting on at the other hospital. The stifling heat has subsided to comfortable warmth. I relax, knowing that where ever I am, even if it's Hell, I'm safe if Mulder is here, too. Hell can't be too bad. He shifts, then, and I look back at him as he closes his mouth and licks his lips, stirring to a groggy consciousness. I watch him as he opens his eyes and looks around from underneath his eyelashes, trying to place himself, until he finally looks at me. His eyes pop open and he sits upright quickly, inadvertently snapping his book shut and making it slide from his lap onto the floor with a loud, echoing slap against the tile. Instead of speaking, he bends over to pick it up, his glasses sliding off his face to join the book on the floor. He picks both of them up, clumsily placing the book atop the stack of the others, straightening them, then rearranging them in order from largest to smallest, placing his glasses on top. He seems to be avoiding my gaze, but I hold it steady, wondering what, exactly, he's doing here when his last words to me were something along the lines of "I'm leaving." He folds his hands in his lap nervously, then unfolds them and stands, walking to the other side of the bed and sitting down on the edge, his back resting lightly against my hip. Facing the window, not me, he finally speaks in a voice so soft I can barely hear him. "I was wondering how long it would take you to wake up. The doctor said it wouldn't be long, but I didn't know what the long term effects of the medication would be." He clears his throat and turns his body so that he's facing me now, but he's still looking down, picking at a thread on the blanket. "You probably don't remember what happened; you were pretty out of it." Snapping the thread and worrying it between his fingers, he sighs. "The doctor at the hospital in Atlanta talked to Ethan and your mother to get a psychological history, to try and figure out what might have been wrong with you, since you wouldn't talk, and whatever they said, he diagnosed you as having Schizoaffective Disorder, which is closely related to schizophrenia, since they're both characterized by bizarre delusions. The difference is that Schizoaffectives also have a major depressive disorder. He prescribed an anti-psychotic drug to you and it wasn't what you needed, so it messed you up pretty badly. When I called the day after I'd left to check on you, your doctor told me what had happened. He said that you started babbling about not being able to die, then you were completely catatonic..." He ends his rambling, trailing off and running out of steam. No, I don't remember any of that. The last thing I remember was falling asleep after he walked out my door, nothing until now. "Ethan was able to divorce you without your consent on psychological grounds and your insurance was terminated. Your doctor told me that his only option was to send you to a state hospital, so your mother and I had you transferred up here instead." He finally looks at me, his eyes round and soft, his brows climbing towards his hair line. "You're at Potomac Ridge Behavioral Health Center in Rockville, Maryland, Scully. You were unconscious for about thirty six hours while the effects of the medication wore off." That must be why I feel so horrible. "How?" I whisper, my voice rough and scratchy from disuse. "How is she paying for this if I don't have insurance?" My father barely made enough money with the Navy to feed and clothe four kids; his retirement was just enough for him and my mother to live on with hardly any excess. She couldn't have the money for this. Mulder takes a deep breath, looking away again, at his feet that are barely touching the floor. "It was my idea, actually. My father left me two houses on the Vineyard that I've been leasing through a Realtor since he died. One of them sold just over a year ago and I put the money into savings. Besides that, he left me nearly a million in savings bonds. The money's just been sitting there accruing interest, so..." I shake my head, looking away from him. So, he's spending his father's money on me? I can't believe my mother would let him do something like that. She's always been proud, doing what was necessary to make ends meet with her meager income; she never accepted charity or handouts and she raised us not to do so, either. "Scully, your mother and I talked about this. There's no other way for you to get the care you need than to have you treated at a hospital like this. Those state hospitals are dirty and overcrowded, you'd never get well in a place like that. This is what you need and if you need it, we both agreed that no price is too high," he tells me in a low, serious voice that leaves no room for argument. Since when did I ever back down from an argument with Mulder? "No, that's your money. I don't need a hospital. I don't need to be treated -" I start to sit up, but he gently pushes me back down, his hands on my shoulders. Not that I would've made it very far anyway, as all the blood rushed from my head and blackness overtook my vision as soon as I raised my head from the pillow. "Listen to me: I'm gonna tell you the same thing I told your mother. This isn't something that happened over night - your illness, whatever it may be, it's been lurking inside you for years, maybe forever, building and building until something finally set it off. She thought that after we got you re- hydrated and you gained a little weight, she could take you home and help you to get physically better on her own, but that wouldn't fix the problem, Scully, it would only fix one symptom of it. In a few weeks or months or years, something else would set this off again and you'd end up right back here. If we want you to get well, we have to keep you in a place where they understand what's wrong with you and they can help you to overcome it. This is serious - probably more serious than you realize - and it's a disease, just like your cancer. If we don't treat it, it will eat you alive. And I'm not gonna let that happen," he finishes in a raised, angry tone. "You told me that you were leaving," I say thickly, trying not to let any emotion into my voice. "I know. And from what your mother has told me, she said the same thing to you. You've always been so strong and independent, Scully, that she - both of us - thought that you could do this on your own if we gave you the opportunity. I still do, but your mother thinks that this misdiagnosis was some sort of sign from God that she's not doing the right thing. Maybe she's right. Maybe He was trying to show her that she should be more accepting and understanding of you right now, I don't know. What I do know is that this morning, me and her and your new psychiatrist all had a long discussion about where to go from here and we've decided that right now, you need support and patience from both of us." I turn my head on the pillow again, looking for his face in the semi-darkness. "I still don't believe that you actually meant to kill yourself, Scully, and I still think that you're gonna have to do most of this on your own. I just don't think that you should be completely alone." He raises his feet so that they're resting below the mattress, his knees almost touching his chest, and buries his face in his hands. "Earlier, I was trying to imagine what I'd have done if my mother hadn't been successful when she tried to do this. I tried to think if I would've let her recover on her own or if I would've been with her every step of the way, letting her know that I still cared about her and loved her more than almost anything, and the answer was that I never would've left her side." He pauses and looks at me again. "But she wasn't as strong as you are, Scully. She needed me and she needed that reassurance. I'm sorry I left you the way I did. I said some very harsh, impulsive things to you, both at the hospital and that night at Ethan's house, but you hurt me, Scully. You can't begin to imagine how much. I honestly don't know that I can ever fully forgive you for what you've done. But when I got home from the airport after I left Ethan's and heard that message from your mother, I turned around and caught the first flight back. I was afraid...I was terrified that by the time I got there, you'd be dead or gone and I'd never get to tell you that I was sorry." He pauses, then, taking a deep, shaky breath. "I'm sorry for so many things, Scully," he continues after a moment. "I'm sorry I let you get on that plane to go to Atlanta in the first place, I'm sorry that I didn't do everything in my power to stop you from marrying him like I promised you I would. I thought about all those things on the flight and by the time I got there, talked to your doctor, and found out what had happened, I just didn't know what to say to you. The only thing I knew for certain was that I needed to put myself and my feelings first if I was ever going to be able to help you and right then, I was most afraid of you hurting me again. That's the reason I was so harsh to you and that's why I didn't even give you a chance to respond to me. I couldn't let you hurt me again." Hiding his face from me again, I hear him sniffling as he tries not to cry. "I don't know what to do now, though. I don't know if it would be better to just leave you to climb out of this hole you dug by yourself or if I should try and help you however I can. I think I'll let that be your decision. If you want me to go, I will and if you never want to see me or speak to me again, it's up to you. If you want me to stay, I will. I'll be here as often as you'd like. Just tell me what to do, Scully." "I thought I was alone," I begin, my voice shaking. "I thought that I had ruined everything: my marriage, our friendship. I didn't know how to fix it; I didn't want to fix it, I just wanted to sleep forever, pretend none of this had ever happened." "You're only alone if you choose to be," he whispers, turning his body towards me again. "I don't want to be," I breathe. He nods, almost seeming relieved. "Why are you here now, if you didn't know what to do?" I finally ask him. He grins, laughing slightly and looking away. "I didn't mean for you to catch me. I was doing some reading, trying to find something that would help your mother and me to better understand this, and I fell asleep." Those are psychology books; he's really trying to help me. "Oh." "Speaking of sleep, you need to get some. It's late." He stands, tugging the already tightly tucked covers around me. "And I should go, too. Visiting hours ended at seven - if the nurses knew I was here, there's no telling what they'd do to me." He leans down, brushing imaginary hair from my brow and tucking it behind my ear before pressing his lips against my forehead. "Will you be back tomorrow?" I whisper to him as he straightens up. "If you want me to be." I nod. "Okay, I'll be here. Goodnight, Scully." I watch him as he walks to the other side of the bed and gathers his books and glasses. "'Night, Mulder." He lingers for a few seconds before turning around and walking out the door, closing it softly behind him. This most certainly isn't Hell. It's not quite Heaven, either, but it's definitely not Hell. <><><><><><> Needless to say, I didn't get much sleep after he left. When I had fallen asleep the last time, I was in a confusing, frustrating world where I had no control over anything: my schedule, my body, the people in - or out of - my life. I had resigned myself to being there forever, willing myself to die and wondering why God doesn't put me out of my misery and send me to Hell. When I awoke, it had been in a completely different world, one where I wasn't alone and I wasn't ready to push myself into death. I like this new world better, but I'm afraid that if I fall asleep again, when I awake, I'll be back in the old world. I run over the things that Mulder said to me in my head, trying to figure out how to feel about them. On the one hand, I'm infinitely happy and grateful that he's back and willing to help me. On the other hand, I'm confused about his motives. He said in the other world that he thought it would be best for me to be alone and now, he doesn't think so. Maybe he really was just afraid like he said, maybe the words really were impulsive. Or maybe he feels so responsible for this that he thinks it's his duty to help me now, to pay for my hospital stay and to be with me while I recover. Mulder has gone to some astonishing lengths to assuage his own guilt before and I wouldn't doubt that he was doing the same thing now. He didn't tell me this time that he loved me. Maybe he doesn't anymore. Or maybe he's just as confused about himself now as I am. I honestly can't figure him out sometimes. He'd said I'd hurt him and I know that it's true. I'd honestly never stopped to consider what would happen if I wasn't successful at suicide. I didn't care what it would do to the people around me, how they would react, what they would think about me and themselves. At the time, I thought no one cared, that no one would even notice and, if they did, they would be glad that one burden in their lives was gone. I thought I'd finally pushed him away - for good this time - but I guess I should know by now that Mulder is nothing if not persistent. The only way he'd ever leave me for good is if he were to die. I wonder if he thought the same thing about me a year ago, before Ethan came back into my life: that I would never, ever leave him unless I died. I had almost done that this time, abandoned him for good. And that's what hurt him the most, I think. That I'd willingly, consciously, abandon him. Marriage is only temporary - it can be broken, annulled, ended - it's only a legal ceremony. It's finite. Death is permanent - once you're gone, you don't get another chance to change things. Mulder still believed that even after I'd married Ethan, I would come back to him and to my old life one day. That I'd see the error of my ways, that I'd wake up and realize that I was supposed to be with him forever - maybe I still believed that, too. When I tried to kill myself, though, I was giving up any hope that my life could get any better. I was giving up on myself, on our relationship, and most of all, on him. And that's what hurt him. Part of me thinks that, just for spite, I should tell him to leave me alone forever, tell him that I'll show him that I can do this on my own, that I don't need him. Another part of me didn't want him to leave tonight, doesn't ever want him to leave. Another part of me wants a happy medium, a balance between needing someone for support and needing someone for the continuation of my very existence. I also wonder what Ethan and my mother told the doctor in Atlanta. I'm sure that Ethan, not knowing any better, would've said that I made up wild, impossible stories to explain things in my life: aliens and men working for the government had abducted me and stolen my ova in order to create alien/human hybrids; I had a daughter that was part alien and that she died as a result of her body's alien DNA; I terrified of thunderstorms because they reminded me of my abduction; my cancer had been cured with a metal chip that Mulder had found at the Defense Department and on and on. The doctor probably called those delusions - they certainly sound like delusions. But they don't know what I know. They haven't seen what I've seen. The only person who even comes close to understanding what happened to me is Mulder - that must be why he was here, to tell them the truth. I wonder why they didn't give us adjoining rooms, then, if he reiterated everything that I'd told Ethan. So, Mulder comes to my rescue again, convincing them that I'm not psychotic. I'm just...what, depressed? Confused? Lonely? Does he think that my suicide attempt was merely a cry for help and that now, he needs to answer that cry? Could his motives really be so petty, or do I just underestimate him sometimes? I turn my head towards the window and watch as the sky turns a dark purple, then lavender, then orange, and finally blue as the sun rises. The traffic noises pick up outside as everyone rushes to start their days on time. Voices from outside my room get louder and more numerous as the hospital wakes up. I wait for something to happen: a doctor or nurse to come check on me, Mulder or my mother to visit. When nothing happens, my eye lids begin to get heavy again and I close them, then finally fall asleep. <><><><><><> There's knocking on my door a little later, when the sun is slanting through the blinds in nearly horizontal stripes. A woman enters wearing a long lab coat - this must be my new doctor. Her heels click sharply against the tile floor as she approaches my bed, sitting demurely in the chair that Mulder had vacated just a while ago. "Hello, Dana," she says softly, extending her hand to slip her fingers inside my tiny half-fist. "I'm Dr. Ayers, your psychiatrist. Do you know where you are?" I nod slowly and she smiles, nodding back. "Good, good. Do you know how you got here?" Again, I nod. She seems surprised at this. "How?" She asks. I take a deep breath and lick my lips. "Mulder told me." She grins slightly, understanding. "He was here already?" "Last night." "I thought he left with your mother. I guess he couldn't stay away, huh?" She laughs a little, trying to break some imaginary ice. No, Mulder can never stay away, I guess. "Well, your family is anxious to have you home and I'm sure you're just as anxious, so I think we should get started, what about you?" I nod once, wondering if I even have a home to return to. "I've spoken with your mother and with Mulder at length to get a history on you. I must say, you've had some interesting experiences in your life lately." She pauses, glancing down at her chart. "How would you describe your current emotional state, Dana?" "I don't know, really. I've been depressed, I guess. Irritable, moody. I haven't really felt like doing anything." "Have you had any difficulty sleeping or eating?" "Yes," I admit. She nods. "How long has this been going on?" "A year; since I got married." "Oh." Her eyebrows go up a little and she makes a note on her chart. "Do you think that's just a coincidence?" "No. No, I think it's the reason." "Why is that?" "I didn't like being married." That's oversimplifying the problem, I know. For now, it's as good an answer as any. She makes a sympathetic face. "So, you didn't feel depressed and irritable before you got married?" "No." "How would you describe your emotional state at that time? I hesitate. "Good. I was happy." "Why do you think being married has caused such a dramatic change?" She asks slowly, clearly thinking. "Marriage wasn't what I expected it would be. My husband wasn't what I expected he would be. Nothing had worked out the way I wanted it to," I say softly. Staring at me long enough for it to be unnerving, she doesn't say a word. Maybe she's waiting for me to elaborate. A few seconds later, there's another knock at my door and my mother pokes her head in, dangling a suitcase from her arm. "Oh, I'm sorry," she says to the doctor, looking a little flustered and nervous. Dr. Ayers stands. "It's okay. I think this is a good start, Dana," she says to me, squeezing my hand again. "I'll be back later." She smiles slightly at my mother before walking out the door, closing it firmly behind her. After she's gone, Mom takes the suitcase to the chest of drawers and opens it, emptying my clothes into the drawers and placing my nameplate on top of the chest. A sense of deja vu washes over me as I watch her in silence, waiting for her to say something. When she's finished, she goes to the window and adjusts the blinds so that the morning sun isn't too bright in the room. Happy with the new lighting, she turns towards me, crossing her arms tightly over her chest and looking at the floor. "How are you feeling, Dana?" She asks in a low voice. "Fine," I tell her. She nods at her reflection in the shiny tile. "What were you and Dr. Ayers talking about?" I sigh. "Same things she probably asked you; how I've been feeling lately." "It's better that she hear it from you," she says carefully. "I'm glad you're talking now." I look down at my hands, fisting the blanket in between my fingers. "Dana..." She pulls one of my hands away, holding it between both of hers, and sits on the bed beside me. "Dana, I'm so sorry." "For what?" I whisper. "For everything. For leaving you at that other hospital, for...I feel like, in some way, this is partly my fault." A thin tear slips out of her eye and slides down her cheek. She reaches up with shaking fingers to wipe it away, closing her eyes tightly to stave off any more. "No, Mom. It's not." She nods like she's heard that before. "I had no idea how unhappy you were with Ethan. I just thought," she wipes away another tear. "that you were having trouble adjusting to being married, I didn't realize that you were honestly unhappy." I look away from her, wondering how she could've missed that. How many times did I try to tell her that I was unhappy with the things that Ethan demanded from me? That I not work, that I go to a fertility specialist? How could she just blame that on my not adjusting to him? Maybe it is partly her fault because she didn't realize that I was serious. Maybe it is partly her fault because she didn't offer to listen to me and to help me. I bite my lip and don't give her a response. "Fox told me what happened, Dana. He didn't know that Ethan had already told me, but he confessed that you and he..." she shakes her head, not able to say it. "That we had sex?" "Yes." She sighs, sounding somewhere between disappointed and confused. "There's still no excuse for that. Even if you were unhappy, infidelity wasn't the way to fix that. Neither was trying to kill yourself." "I know, and neither was starving myself or yelling at Emma. I should've left Ethan a long time ago, but I couldn't." "Why not?" "I didn't want you to be ashamed of me. I guess I achieved that anyway, though." She brings her hands up to either side of my face, turning my head towards her and forcing me to look at her. "Dana, you're my daughter. You're the only daughter I have left. I could never be ashamed of you. I may not understand you or what makes you happy, I may be ashamed of some of the things you do, but I could never be ashamed of you." My chest gets tight as tears spring up in my eyes, too. She pulls me to her, wraps her arms around me tightly, and rocks me. "You know I love you, Dana. I could never stop." I rest my head on her shoulder and nod. "I know." "I'm so afraid, Dana. I just don't understand...tell me...tell me that you really didn't mean to kill yourself. Tell me that you still want to live." "I don't want to be unhappy, Mom. I don't want to be miserable and alone. I don't want to live like that," I say through my hiccups. "You don't have to. You don't have to be miserable and alone." "But what do I have left? I don't have a husband, I don't have a job, I don't have any money, I don't have anything." "You have me, don't you? And you have Fox." She pulls back, tucking my hair behind my ears. "You know that both of us love you. We'd never leave you. We both love you so much. More than you can imagine." I collapse into her chest again and she holds me as I cry, shushing and rocking me like a child. We stay like that for a long, long time. <><><><><><> After my mother leaves, a nurse comes in with my breakfast: more cream of wheat. When I was younger, I used to love this stuff with butter and salt. Now, without those things to make it better, it's all I can do to force myself to empty the bowl. I need to eat, though. If I don't, they'll put in another feeding tube, and I certainly don't want that. The nurse also must've paged Dr. Ayers when Mom left, because no sooner than I've swallowed the last bite of food, she knocks softly on my door and enters. "I hope I'm not disturbing you, Dana," she begins, sitting in the chair beside the bed again, crossing her legs and getting comfortable. "No," I answer, staring into the covers. "Did you have a nice visit with your mother?" I nod silently. "Good. I'd like to continue our conversation, if that's all right." I nod again and she glances down at her chart. "Most of our patients only stay here for a couple of weeks at the most, so we have a lot of work to do. Now, you said something about how marriage wasn't what you thought it would be, can you expand on that?" Shrugging a little, I repeat the last thing I'd said. "It just...wasn't what I expected." "Okay, tell me what you expected." "I thought that it would give me a sense of...purpose, I guess. I would feel like someone cared for me, cared whether I came home at night or wasn't feeling well. I thought it would mean someone loved me." "Did it not?" "No, not really." She stares at me, waiting for me to elaborate again. I take a deep breath, blowing it out slowly through my nose and hoping she asks another question. "Well, tell me how it disappointed you." "Mulder said something to me a while ago, that a marriage was a mutual union. My marriage was not mutual," I say tensely. "How so?" "My husband expected me to cater to his every desire and wish without regard for my own. He didn't want me to have a job, even though I nearly begged him to let me work. He just...didn't act like he cared about me as a person, an individual." She nods, again waiting for me to continue. "He worked long hours, odd schedules. Some days, I wouldn't even see him. When I did, he was ordering me to do something for him. Whenever I tried to confront him about it, we would get into an argument. Eventually, I just stopped confronting him. It seemed easier that way." "So, you would've rather repressed your own desires and opinions just to avoid an argument with him?" She asks, writing it down. "Yes." "Why was that?" "I don't know. It was just easier." "So, you were unhappy in your marriage. Why didn't you seek a divorce?" I shake my head, looking out the window. "I couldn't have done that. I would've been disappointing my mother and myself...it would've been like admitting defeat." "Defeat against who?" "That part of me that likes to succeed at everything I do." "Well, from what you're telling me, your marital problems weren't entirely your fault. Some couples just aren't compatible. Did you ever consider that?" I look back at her sharply. "We used to be engaged a long time ago, before we got married last year. When I starting seeing him again, he assured me that he'd changed since then, and I believed him. It wasn't just him; I'd misjudged him by ever thinking he could change." "Then was there something that drew you to him again? Something specific?" Looking down, I grin - or grimace - slightly. "He had a daughter...she was about the same age as a daughter I had, who had died." Dr. Ayers tilts her head, silently apologizing. "I thought that Ethan could give me the life that I hadn't chosen when we'd broken up before, a life where I could've had children and been happy and safe. He filled a void inside me." She sits back in the chair, bracing her chin on her hand. "He filled a void inside you," she repeats, seeming struck by this phrase. "That's a very powerful way to put it." I nod, looking away again. "And he didn't fill that void, I suppose?" "No," I whisper. "Dana, did it ever occur to you that no one can fill that void?" she asks slowly, sitting up again. I blink at her, confused. "Did you ever think that the void inside you has to be filled by you and no one else?" My mouth falls agape. "N-no." "It's definitely something to think about," she says, grinning softly, standing and smoothing her skirt. "I'm going to go now, let you think about it, and we'll talk some more tomorrow, okay?" Before I can respond, she floats out the door, leaving me alone and perplexed. <><><><><><> The rest of the day goes by slowly. Nurses come in and out to check on my IV, bring me food, take away the empty trays. No one else comes to visit and no one calls. I wonder where Mulder is, but remember that he has to work, unlike me, and he's probably too busy to come by. In the past, he would've made time, told the Director himself to kiss his ass if necessary. Now, he's biding his time. Maybe this is a part of that "do-it-yourself" angle he's so intent on. I wonder what he would think about what Dr. Ayers had said, that the void inside me could only be filled by me. It sounds so simple, but when I actually start thinking about it, it's much more complex that I imagined. So, what was the void, first of all? The emptiness I felt without a husband, someone to love me; without children, without a greater responsibility to someone other than myself? I certainly remember having some of those feelings before. I felt like I didn't matter to anyone, that no one, outside my mother, cared if I lived or died or if I was late getting home at night. When I walked into my dark, lonely apartment at night, it was nearly suffocating not to be greeted by someone who had dinner ready and kissed me, telling me he'd missed me all day. When I'd go to bed, I felt so alone not having anyone beside me to curl up to my back, telling me he loved me and keeping me warm. I'd see little girls in airports or grocery stores who looked like Emily and wonder if they were adopted, if they could be my daughters. When I would drive to and from work, I would purposefully take a route that would avoid day cares or schools, not wanting to see all the children and their happy parents, dropping them off or picking them up. My job at the FBI was stimulating and interesting, certainly, but I'd always heard that being a mother was the hardest and most rewarding job a woman could have, and it saddened me deeply to think that I'd never get to experience that myself. I wanted something more, something that the X-Files and Mulder couldn't offer me. I wanted that motherhood. I wanted that omnipotent companion. I wanted what I didn't have, and I felt empty because of it. And, of course, when Ethan came back after eight long, lonely years, offering me those things that I wanted so badly, I was enticed by it. It seemed so easy, like God had just dropped that other life into my lap, and all I had to do was accept it. So, I did. I filled that emptiness with Ethan's life. Emma gave me motherhood and he gave me companionship, but I still felt like something was missing. I assumed what was missing was love. Neither Ethan nor Emma acted like they loved me or appreciated me; I was just the convenient maid, cook, or whore. I still had my companionship and motherhood, but none of the emotions and feelings that went along with it. On the surface, it was everything I had asked for, but on the inside, it was hollow. I was still empty. So, Ethan and Emma didn't fill the void. According to Dr. Ayers, I was in charge of that. Only I had no clue how to do it. Finally, at five thirty, there's another knock on my door and a hesitation before it swings open, revealing a very tired looking Mulder. "Hey," he says softly, crossing to the bed in three strides and sitting next to me. "How're you feeling?" "Fine." He grins a half-angry, half-teasing grin at me and I rephrase that. "Better than I was yesterday, I guess." "Yeah?" "Yeah," I nod. He grins again. "That's good." "How was your day?" "Long, tedious, boring. I got yelled at by three separate ASACs before noon, then had to give a lesson in basic crime scene analysis to two rookie agents who think they know everything there is to know about profiling. Just a usual day at the BSU." We nod at each other, neither knowing what to say, for a minute. "How was your day?" he eventually asks. "Good, I guess. Mom came this morning and we talked for a little while. She..." I sigh. "She thinks this is her fault." "Is it?" He asks, sounding like he already knows the answer. "No." "I don't know, Scully. In a way, I think we all share a little of the blame." "Why do you say that?" "Well, we're the two people who're supposed to know you better than anyone, but yet we failed to recognize how serious this was." "That's what she said, that she didn't know I was truly unhappy." He reaches for my hand, lacing his warm fingers with my cold ones. "Do you think it would've made a difference if she had?" "I don't know," I say honestly. "It would've for me." I look up at him, not understanding. "If I'd have known that you were so unhappy right after you left, you never would've gotten a moment's peace until I'd convinced you to come back here with me. I would've never let you get to this point," he says, his voice deadly serious. But you're the one who wouldn't speak to me during that time, I want to say. Instead, I just avoid his eyes and nod my head. "Did Dr. Ayers come by?" He asks, changing the subject. "Yeah, right before Mom came and again a few hours later." "What do you think of her?" "She seems nice, I guess." "She does, very patient and concerned. I like her." Again, I nod. "She said something to me today that I've been thinking about and I still don't quite understand." His eyebrows go up a little, those vertical creases appearing between them. "I told her that I married Ethan because I thought he could fill some void inside me and she said that I was the only one who could fill that void." "Spoken like a true psychologist," he muses. "What do you think?" "I don't know. I don't know what she means." "Are you sure?" I shrug. "What do you think?" "I think that if you think about it long enough, you'll figure it out." I wonder if he already knows and he's just teasing me. "I need to go," he says, standing up but not releasing my hand. I tighten my fingers around his. "So soon?" "You have some thinking to do, right? And I have some work to do." "But you're coming back tomorrow?" "If you want me to, I will." He bends down to kiss my forehead, then whispers against my skin, "I love you." "I love you, too," I tell him as he pulls away. Impulsively, I lean up to him, closing the slight distance between us and kissing him lightly on his lips. His slight smile falls a little. "I'll definitely be back," he says, though he doesn't sound as serious or mirthful as I'd hoped. As he walks away, I hold onto his hand until the last second. He doesn't look back at me as I let go and watch him walk out the door. <><><><><><> For the next week, all I could think about was how I was supposed to fill this void inside of me. In my sessions with Dr. Ayers, it's all we talked about: had I identified the void? What were the components of it? If Ethan hadn't reappeared in my life, how would I have filled it? Do I think I would've been successful? Why or why not? It's all that Mulder and I talked about, too. He still stopped by every evening, only staying for a few minutes each time. Aside from holding hands and his light kisses on my cheek or forehead, he barely touched me, but he still told me that he loved me every day and I told him that I loved him. He always seemed to leave a little sadder than when he arrived and, after that, I never got much thinking done on my "central issue," as Dr. Ayers had called it. According to her, my actions over the past year had all centered around the same thing, my not feeling fulfilled in whatever I was doing, be it the X-Files or a stay-at-home-step-mom. She said that until I figure out how to fill that void myself, I would continue to feel empty and restless. I was still confused about how I was supposed to fulfill myself and in one of our sessions, she handed me a piece of paper and a pen and asked me to list all the qualities I thought I was missing in my life, characteristics that a perfect companion would have. She sat silently while I wrote down a few words, unsure as to exactly what I was doing, then asked me to read it once I had finished. "Well," I began in a resigned voice. "Qualities would be that what I was doing mattered on a greater scale, beyond just me and my life. I would like to feel that other people accept me and what I'm doing without mocking it or questioning the value of it." I looked up at her then, to see if she was nodding or shaking her head, telling me I'd done the wrong thing. She was nodding, eager for me to continue. "Characteristics of a companion would be intelligent, good sense of humor, confident, open with themselves and their emotions, accepting of me and willing to listen to me, patient, mature...I'd want them to love me, most of all." Dr. Ayers smiled. "Is that all?" "I guess, yeah." "Okay," she took the list from me. "Dana, how many of these qualities and characteristics would you say you possess?" I opened my mouth to speak, stopped myself, then closed my mouth. "What do you mean?" "If you were to make a list of qualities and characteristics about yourself, how many of those would appear on both lists?" "I don't know." "Well, think about it for a minute. Do you think that what you're doing matters on a greater scale? Do you accept yourself and what you're doing?" I gaped at her again. "Do you think you're intelligent? Do you think you have a good sense of humor? Do you think you're confident?" She looked from the list to me, waiting for an answer. I raised my right eyebrow at her. "Well...no, not all the time." "What about the rest of these things, would you say that you have these characteristics?" "N-no." She nodded. "Why do you think you look for these things in other people when you don't have them yourself?" "I don't..." I struggled for a few seconds, eventually just shrugging. Then, I realized what she was getting at. I look to other people to give me these things, to balance myself and my life. And as long as I did that, I'd never be happy with them because I'd never be happy with me. We sat in silence for the rest of the hour as I stared at the list, wondering how I could've missed something so simple and obvious. It makes so much sense now, though. I need other people in my life to give me the things that I lack within myself. I've always felt the need to compete with others, to be the best at things, especially intellectual things. In school and college, I always had to have the highest grades, not just in my family, but among my friends as well. I don't have a good sense of humor - hell, I barely have a sense of humor at all. I'm always so serious about everything, taking jokes and light comments personally. I'm not as confident as most people assume I am. The reason I hold my head high and never back down from conflicts, both mental and physical, with men twice my size is because I don't want them to know how unsure of myself I really am. It makes me feel better about myself to watch a two-hundred pound man stutter over his words and not be able to look me in the eye. I'm not open with myself and my feelings at all. I expect others to talk openly with me about themselves when I can't do that about myself. I don't accept myself as the person that I am, whether I'm middle aged, infertile, and single or married and with a step-child. I have little to no patience with myself and others. I crave maturity around me - maybe that's why I've always been attracted to older, more distinguished men. And most of all, I discovered that I don't love myself. All this time, I've thought that I needed someone else to make me whole when really, I've just needed the other side of me. No wonder I've been miserable no matter what I've tried to do: I wasn't doing it right. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that Ethan didn't have many of those characteristics: he didn't accept me, he wasn't open with me, he had no patience towards me. He was just convenient. He was there and ready when I was. Just as Mulder had been saying all along. Mulder, on the other hand, has all of those characteristics. Maybe that's why I missed him so much this past year - I didn't have a part of myself with me. I wonder what he'll think of that. <><><><><><> At five thirty today, I got out of bed, put on jeans and a thin, button-up sweater, and combed my hair, ready to tell Mulder my big break-through. He knocks on the door at five thirty-seven and enters, pausing his steps when he sees me standing in front of the window, looking out at the city and all the cars zooming by. I turn my head towards him and smile. "Hey," I say softly. "Hey," he repeats. "What's up?" "I think I finally figured it out." He nods, confused, and walks over to the chair on the other side of the bed, sitting down heavily and watching me expectantly. "What's that?" "Why I married Ethan. Why I was so miserable. Why I tried to kill myself." He nods. "I was looking for fulfillment and happiness in the wrong places. I was looking outside myself when I should've been looking within," I finish proudly. He bows his head, leaning over on his knees. When he raises his head, he's smiling slightly, looking off to the side. "Yeah, that's it," he whispers to the floor. Matching his smile, I walk towards him and he stands, meeting me halfway and pulling me against him tightly. "That's definitely progress, Scully." "Progress?" I ask in surprise. "What do you mean? That's it. That's the reason that I wasn't happy on the X-Files or with Ethan, that's it. It explains it." "It does, you're right. But there's more to it than that." "Like what?" He fits my head underneath his chin, his throat vibrating against my forehead as he speaks. "It's something that I figured out about myself, too: that true happiness comes from inside of you, not outside. A few years ago, when I told you that you made me a whole person, I thought that was the truth. When you left, I felt like I'd lost a part of myself and I was miserable. I felt the same way you did: empty, alone. Then, one day, I realized that if I wanted my life to get any better, I'd have to make up for the part of me that you had taken with you. I had to make myself a whole person." I squeeze him tighter, thinking how eloquently he could always phrase things. "I still love you Scully, but not because you fulfill me. I love you because of you, the person that you are and the way that you make me feel when I'm with you." Pulling away, he takes a step back from me and leans against the foot board of the bed. "That's only the beginning, though. The rest is figuring out how to fill that void." "How did you do it?" I ask him, stepping between his legs and laying my head on his shoulder. Hesitating, he strokes my hair but doesn't put his arms around me. "I faced a lot of things in my life that until recently, I had been running from. I forgave my parents for divorcing and my father for letting Samantha be taken away. I forgave her for dying. I forgave my mother for dying. I forgave you for leaving." Shocked, I look up at him, afraid of what, exactly, that means. "I had to, Scully, or it would've eaten me alive. That's what you have do: come to terms with all the things that have happened to you and accept them as part of who you are, not resent them. You have to find peace." "How?" I whisper. He shakes his head. "You have to figure that out on your own." I sigh, so tired of being sick, unhappy. I just want this part of my life to be over with so that I can move on to better things. "You're off to a good start, though," he reassures me. "Just take some time alone, after you get out of here, to try and find that balance within yourself." I take a deep breath and look him directly in the eye. "I don't want to be alone anymore. I want to be with you." He looks very far away for a minute, then says slowly, "We have the rest of our lives for that. Right now, you need to get better. And I," he says after a tense beat of silence. "I still have some work to do, too." "You do?" He looks down at his shoes and nods, biting his lip. "Scully, I still haven't forgiven you for marrying Ethan. Forgiven you for leaving, yes, but not for marrying Ethan, and not for trying to kill yourself. I haven't forgiven you for giving up on me and us. I know that you're anxious to start pursuing a more romantic relationship together and I'm anxious to do that, too, but right now, I'm not ready for that. It's gonna take some time before I can trust you with that part of me again." My face falls and tears spring up in my eyes. "How much time?" I ask desperately. "I don't know, but I don't want to rush it. We need to do this right, Scully, or it's not gonna work." I join him in inspecting the floor, silent. "You're not ready for that either," he says softly. After a minute, I nod. "What about until then?" "Until then, you work on getting better. You're still not completely cured, Scully. You get better and work on you and I'll work on me. Then, we'll work on us. Okay?" I take a deep breath. "Okay," I finally say, leaning into him again. This time, he wraps his arms around my back and holds me. <><><><><><> I have this theory that my life can be explained by a Trefoil, as in a Trefoil knot. One of the simplest knots known. It has three loops, each of which is connected to the other. Two loops cannot be altered without altering each other, but the third can be altered without affecting the other two. I learned about it in one of my math classes in college and it applies to my life in so many odd ways. On one hand, I could assign each loop a person: Mulder, Ethan, and myself. Mulder and I are the two loops that can't be altered without altering each other - no matter what happens to either of us, no matter how far we stray from each other, nothing we do is entirely individual. Everything we do effects the other. Ethan is peripheral, a footnote on my life again, but someone that will always be a part of me. I'm tied to him, too, just as I'm tied to Mulder, but not as firmly. Not as permanently. Since I left Atlanta, I haven't seen him, spoken to him, or heard about him. My last communication with him was through the Church - he requested an annulment after our divorce was finalized. I was able to submit my testimony in writing and it was done: my marriage to Ethan, that year of misery and loneliness, had never happened in the eyes of God. I'm sorry for what I've done to him, though. I cheated on him just as his first wife did, but that was merely a symptom of our problem and not the cause. I know that I hurt him and I truly regret that, but he hurt me too and, somehow, I doubt I'll ever get an apology from him. I'm also sorry for what I've done to Emma. Because of me, she lost another mother and will have to deal with that pain and loss. She's an innocent child and I can't imagine how difficult all of this has been for her. I miss her and I love her, but I can't take her pain away from her and I can't take her away from it. It's not my place to do so, anyway. I still carry the pain of that year with me; my attempts to recapture something that I'd let slip away so many years ago - a part of me named Dana. I'd somehow turned into someone named Scully, someone who had lost so much of herself without her knowledge or consent and who didn't want to be herself anymore. At some point, I began to hate Scully and by marrying Ethan, I thought I could kill her and erase everything that separated her from Dana. That's the other side of this Trefoil knot theory, that Dana, Scully, and someone whose just been born, Dana Scully, who accepts that she's lost things that she can't get back, who knows that there are some things she'll never have, and who believes that she's important, that she matters just because she's herself, are the three loops. Dana can't be altered without altering Scully; Scully can't be altered without altering Dana; but Dana Scully is an individual, she's separate from both the others, but she retains the knowledge and lessons that being both have taught her. She is whole. And I am Dana Scully. I chose my path in life of my own free will; it was the best decision for me at the time. I am a woman who was abducted, who had tests and experiments performed on her by mysterious men for mysterious purposes and, as a result, I can't even have children. I am a woman whose sister was murdered so that I could continue to live and fight. I am a person who has made mistakes and has regrets, but I don't spend my life in the past anymore. I look forward to the future, wondering what it will bring. Whatever that may be, I know that I can face it on my own. After another week of group and individual therapy and some intense introspection, I was released from the hospital. I went back to the ocean like I'd always wanted, to Mulder's house on Martha's Vineyard, and listened to myself. I discovered what it would take to complete me and I tried my best to attain it: acceptance, confidence, purpose, love. It's a battle that I still fight and that I'll fight for the rest of my life. Dana was afraid of not being noticed, not being respected; Scully was afraid of being alone and empty; Dana Scully is afraid of whether or not she'll have sand in her washing machine tonight from her beach towel and if she'll see another sun rise over the ocean. One morning, as I was finishing one of my morning jogs on the beach, I noticed an outline of a man standing near the waves, facing me, waiting. As I got closer, I realized that it was Mulder. He told me that he was ready. I told him that I was, too. I love Mulder because of the person that he is and the way that I feel when I'm with him, not because he's my other half or he fulfills me. I love him for him and he loves me for me. And for the first time, I'm finally happy. <><><>End Part 2<><><> <><><>End Trefoil Series<><><> Long, long, LONG authors notes: I tried my best to make this part as realistically accurate as possible, which is why it took so long. Thanks to everyone who emailed me or otherwise to poke me into hurrying it along, though. It's the end! I was starting to think I'd NEVER get here! Finally! I'm free! Free! Wheeeee! My favorite non-fanfic author, Kurt Vonnegut, has three favorite phrases. One of them, which is very fitting for me in this situation, is, "How the hell did I do that?" I never in my wildest imaginations would've thought that this series (which wasn't even supposed to be a series) would go on this long. What, are we at 1MB yet? Damn. I amaze myself. Writing this fic has been one of the most wonderful, horrible, exciting, stressful, rewarding, torturous experiences of my life. I've learned a lot about Scully and Mulder, but I've also learned a lot about myself as well. It's amazing that fanfic can do that, but I hope that in reading this, you've learned a little about yourself too, if it's only that you have an incredibly high tolerance for long-winded stories. I guess I should explain why I wrote this: I wanted to explore Scully's character in a way that I'd never seen explored in fic. I wanted to address certain issues that had been sort of swept under the rug either by 1013, the fic community, or both. I wanted to do what had never been done before in fic and in a way, I guess everyone wants that. I wanted you, as a reader, to at least sit back after reading these stories and say, "Wow, I've never thought about it like that." This series to me has never been primarily a Scully/Other romance. Ethan was just a vehicle for all these changes to take place from. This has also always been a quasi-sort-of-half-way- MSR to me, too, because we all know, even my NoRomo self, that Mulder and Scully love each other. I knew I couldn't deny that, but I also didn't think that the way the characters were left post-Je Souhaite, that they could ever have any type of successful relationship with each other - they were just too emotionally damaged to ever be happy. I hope that, in this series, I've given them a chance to work through some of their emotions so that now, they can be happy together. I also feel like I've focused on one aspect of the fic more than another, equally important one and, consequently, have missed out on a lot of story telling: Mulder. I never wanted this fic to be exclusively about Scully; I wanted him to partake in the evolution as well. Unfortunately, I suck at third person point of view and needed to write this from either Mulder or Scully's perspective. For the premise of the fic, it was Scully, but I feel that I've shortchanged Mulder here. Let's not forget that he's been through a lot in this series, too. I just couldn't say it all. I hope you've enjoyed reading this as much as I've enjoyed writing it (well, most of the time). Thank you for putting up with me. I certainly hope it's been rewarding for you. Thanks: First of all, to realb. Without her, I would've never started writing. She's been my constant cheerleader, beta, researcher, ass-kicker, and friend throughout this. I'm forever grateful to everything she's contributed to the series. To Karri, who, being a writer herself, knows just what's wrong and just how to fix it. She's also an excellent grammar Nazi. To Liam, Her Juiciness, because without her this story couldn't be so wonderful. I don't know how I could live without her support. She was the best beta ever, the best of the best of the best and this story is hers. Did I write that she really is the best beta ever? I mean, before I met her I didn't know what sense had my life but now I know. Liam is so funny, smart, in a genius way, it's like emailing Einstein, and I really believe that soon she will conquer the world. I'll be very happy to be her slave like all the humans on this planet. I just can't wait! Liam, I wish you a good colonization! Become our leader please! (She told me to say all that, by the way, but really, she never failed to make me laugh or cheer me up and was always the first person in line with her poking stick.) To Vicki, my newest beta, who swears she's never beta'd before. I don't believe her - she's just too good. To all my stalkers at the Haven Fic Board for letting me know someone was paying attention. To everyone who's sent me feedback, you have no idea how much you've contributed to this. To you, dear reader. Without you, this would be just twenty six letters and about six punctuation marks in idiosyncratic arrangements being transmitted through a complex and highly sophisticated network of telephone lines and computers. Now, get your asses in gear and send me feedback, dammit! <><><><><><> RealB Notes: I was there at a Mellow Mushroom in Nowhere, GA eating a pepperoni pizza with Li'l during of the conception of Trefoil. So of course the series are my surrogate child. [Li'l says: Actually, I think it was over your nasty fish sandwich from McDonalds in my dorm room.] Eight months later, and more chimichangas and desserts than anyone should be allowed to eat, I think that all the effort, and trials were more than worth it. Our baby is ready to stand on her own, and I never thought it would be so hard to let it go. Thank you Li'l for trusting me to edit, research, add some lines once in a while, bitch a lot, drive you around Roswell, GA, but most importantly for being a great friend. Writing a fic is hard work, and I commend all writers out there.