TITLE: Synchronicity I SPOILER STATEMENT: Millennium RATING: PG, but only because it can't *possibly* be G. CONTENT STATEMENT: ScullyAngst. MSR/UST CLASSIFICATION: VRA SUMMARY: Scully muses on the damage done to her belief system by her work on the X-Files. AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is not songfic, in the conventional sense. Nobody listens to the radio, and you will not find song lyrics broken out between the paragraphs. But it is inspired or informed or something like that by the song of the same title by The Police, and if you're familiar with that song, you may hear echoes of it here and there. Hopefully, you'll find it interesting even if you *haven't* heard the song. Is it a successful experiment? You tell me. THANKS: To Paulette, Robbie, Sharon & Shawne Synchronicity I by Brandon D. Ray There was a time when she lived in the real world. The world where hard work was rewarded, wrongdoing was punished and flowers grew in the sunlight. The world where she never had to know that time could feel like a heartbeat, and where she didn't have to worry that any one breath might be her last. The world where life proceeded at a steady, even flow, and synchronicity was just an abstract concept; one of many ideas she did not believe in. She still doesn't believe in most of those things, even now. She still doesn't believe in werewolves or vampires; she still does not believe in ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggety beasties, and things that go bump in the night. But this past year has been a hard one, and there are some things she can no longer disavow. Yes, this past year has been difficult, she thinks. Much of the time she's felt as if she's been asleep, or in a trance. As if the controls for her life have been taken from her, leaving her no alternative but to follow the choreography of this dream dance she now finds herself in the middle of. As if someone else is pulling the strings. Such as today, for example. Today is a Saturday, a cold Saturday early in January. She's spent much of the morning working on the files from their most recent case -- the one that involved the Millennium Group's attempt to bring about the end of the world. Their reports have actually been complete for several days, now, and the case is closed, but she brought the files home with her anyway. She's been looking for something here; something personal in this sea of Bureau-mandated paper. Some connecting principle, perhaps. A Rosetta Stone that will allow her to relate her understanding of the natural world and her religious beliefs to the things she saw with her own two eyes. An explanation for how dead men could have been brought back to life, and also why she felt such a visceral fear as the seconds ticked down towards midnight on New Year's Eve. But whatever it is she's been looking for, she hasn't found it. Not yet. The link she wants -- the link she must have -- remains invisible; imperceptible. Just out of sight. But never really out of mind. And so she's given up, at least for today, and now she's in her car and driving. She will return to this subject, of course. She will continue to address the inexpressible need she feels. A need that began growing in her heart within days of her assignment to the X-Files, all those years ago, and which now has all but consumed her. She comes to a stop light, and eases the car to a halt -- and despite her best intentions, she considers the matter for one more moment. Perhaps she's taking the wrong track, she thinks, not for the first time. As always, the very notion causes a shiver of anxiety in the pit of her stomach, but at least now, when she's alone, she's willing to contemplate the possibility. She's known for a long time -- as far back as high school -- that science is not insusceptible to error. She's known for even longer that it can't answer every question posed by man. Those two points have never been in doubt. But she's always thought that she could at least use science as a tool for examining nature, and now even that confidence has been shaken. The light turns green, and she presses down on the gas pedal once again. There's a causal connection there, she thinks distantly. The light changes color, she feeds more fuel to the engine and the car moves forward. Cause. And effect. Everything happens for a reason. This is a lesson she has learned both from her study of science, and from the teachings of her Church. The two differ in their interpretations of those words, of course. But where in the past she has felt that they complemented each other, and filled each other's gaps, she now fears that the rigidity of the Church's dogma and the cool, inflexible logic of the laboratory serve only to reinforce their mutual blind spots. None of which really addresses the problems she's been wrestling with; the problems of her own intellectual and emotional vulnerability. Layer by layer, her cloak of assurance and certitude has been stripped away, until now she stands naked before her fears. Nothing remains between her and this new world she now inhabits. Nothing protects her or keeps her warm. Nothing is invincible; not anymore. She turns a corner, almost at random, and finds herself approaching one of the bridges that leads across the river to Alexandria. She smiles slightly, as she realizes where this road will take her. There is *one* certainty remaining to her, after all: her partnership with Mulder. Through it all, he's been her constant, her touchstone, just as she has been his. There's no point in even trying to deny that; not after all they've been through together. Even when they're angry with each other, even when they're at odds, that connection is still there, and now it's her only remaining lifeline. She feels that if they can just continue to share this nightmare, as dark and horrifying as it may be, somehow they will be able to dream together, as well. Somehow, they will be able to capture the spirit of the world -- or at least, their own small corner of it. On an impulse, she pulls the car to a halt, halfway across the bridge, oblivious to the annoyance and inconvenience she's causing the other drivers. It occurs to her that she should be bothered by her codependence with Mulder, but she is not. She feels that she's finally found her other half, and the kiss he gave her in the hospital waiting room last weekend has only provided the first physical confirmation of something she has known to be true, on some level, for years. That kiss was so typical of their relationship, she thinks, as she climbs out of her car and walks to the rail so she can look down at the water. So typical, and so perfect. As always, they acted without speaking, the thought becoming the deed almost before she could grasp what was happening. The touch of his lips on hers seemed to provide a missing link that night, and she can't escape the eerie feeling of synchronicity she felt when she turned towards him, and saw her own emotions unmistakably reflected in his eyes. Of course, they know each other, she rationalizes. She knows him, and he knows her. There was nothing extrasensory going on that night, she thinks firmly, as the water continues to rush by, far below. It was simply a case of two friends who have been reaching towards each other for a long time, and who finally made contact. There's nothing magic there; nothing mysterious. She does not have to believe in synchronicity to believe in this. So why is she standing here on the middle of this bridge, she wonders, halfway to his home, late on a Saturday afternoon in January? It's perfectly understandable that she might want to see him; the question is, why has she stopped *halfway*? Is she that afraid of taking the next step? She knows that he will respect her desire for deliberation; she even thinks she knows that he's comfortable with taking things slowly, himself. After more than six years of slow, mutual seduction, they're both obviously content with a gradual approach. The world didn't end when he kissed her; would it really be so terribly risky to complete the drive, and knock on his door? Would the stars fall if she pulled out her phone and called him, and asked if he'd like to go out and do something with her? They wouldn't have to call it a date, after all. Not unless they both wanted to. Although it would not surprise her at all if they *did* both want to; not the way things have been going of late. She glances down at the river again, still undecided. It looks so deep and so wide, and she takes comfort in that. She's always taken comfort in the water, especially running water. A legacy of her father, of course, and the fascination for the sea that he transmitted to all his children. Now she stands on a bridge, partway between her home and Mulder's, allowing the smooth flow of the river to calm her. Standing here watching the water seems like the right thing to do. She almost feels as if she's waiting for ... something. She doesn't understand why she feels this way, or what she could be waiting for, but that doesn't seem to be important. She will know when she knows, she decides. For now, for the moment, she feels more relaxed and at ease than she has in a long time. She feels happy and content, as if a decision has been made. As if a switch has been flicked .... And then she looks up from the water, and she sees him standing there, a glint of humor in his eyes and a slight smile on his face. She wonders how long he's been there, watching her watch the water, but then she's stepping into his embrace, and she finds that she doesn't care anymore. Something brought them here, she thinks happily -- or if not, if this is an effect that has no cause, then so be it. She can put her science on hold, at least in this, at least for now. Her other problems are still there, and she still needs to address them, but at least she has this one certainty. And without speaking, she turns her face up to his, and he bends down towards her even as she's stretching up to meet him. Their lips touch. Synchronicity. Fini