Title: THE MASTODON DIARIES Author: "Jake" Rating: NC-17 (Violence, Language, Graphic Sexual Content) Classification: X; MSR; /O; post ep Spoilers: "The Mastodon Diaries" takes place between "Folie A Deux" and "The End." It contains spoilers from throughout the series and is "canon compliant." Summary: Mulder and Scully are thrown back in time...12,000 years. "Although common sense may rule out the possibility of time travel, the laws of quantum physics certainly do not. In case you forgot, Scully, that's from your graduate thesis. You were a lot more open-minded when you were a youngster." -- Mulder in "Synchrony" Disclaimer: Do these characters really belong to Chris Carter, FOX and 1013 Productions? If so, no copyright infringement intended. Fun, yes. Profit, no. Also, Chapter 10 contains a nod to "Dances with Wolves," one of my favorite movies. The paleo-indian terms listed here and used throughout "The Mastodon Diaries" are actually Navajo terms, as described in the Navajo Code Talkers' Dictionary at http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq61-4.htm. For the sake of this story, I followed the X-Files' plotline that posits the Navajo language is similar to the language originally spoken by the Anasazi, a group of Native people who mysteriously vanished without a trace from the American southwest more than 600 years ago. The character Albert Hosteen, Native Navajo and a Code Talker during WWII, told Mulder and Scully that "Anasazi" literally means "ancient aliens." He believed the Anasazi tribe had been abducted "by visitors who come here still." Hosteen later helped translate the symbols discovered on several fragments of an alien spacecraft. His ability to read the extraterrestrial symbols implied a connection, or at least a similarity, between the languages of Anasazi, Navajo and the alien visitors. My profoundest apologies if I have inappropriately used any Navajo terms in this fictional novel. Special thanks to mimic117, Dr. Guts, Jean Helms, jeri and xdks for beta. These "MastoBetas" kept me from sounding like a complete idiot. I can never thank them enough for their generosity and expertise. MWAH, gals! THE MASTODON DIARIES By "Jake" "Survival is the ultimate ideology." -- WMM, Fight the Future PROLOGUE HILL AIR FORCE BASE BOX ELDER COUNTY, UTAH MAY 13, 1998 1:22 AM Scully crouched on all fours, mimicking Mulder's low profile. She whispered into the dark, "I shouldn't have to tell you this, but we're breaking the law." "Shhhhh." Mulder pointed a cautionary finger at her. His hand glowed like a disembodied specter in the waning moonlight, while the rest of him remained cloaked in shadows. He wore black, as did she. Jeans, turtleneck, leather coat. Charcoal- colored face paint camouflaged their cheeks. A faded Baltimore Black Sox baseball cap, circa 1932 and borrowed from Mulder, hid Scully's bright hair. She listened to the snip-snip of his wire cutters, followed by the rattle of chain-link as he pulled aside a section of fence. He slipped through the breach like a cat burglar, then turned to help her trespass onto government property. Jesus, what had she been thinking when she agreed to come here with him? This was foolhardy...not to mention illegal. "Mulder, if we get caught--" "Shhhhh," he hushed her again. His fingers gripped her arm and drew her through the fence. Once on the other side, she knelt next to him...close enough to smell his antiperspirant, which to be honest was giving up the ghost. The hike from the car had been a long one, over rough terrain, and Mulder set a strenuous pace, jogging almost the entire way. She'd worked up a sweat trying to keep up and probably smelled equally sour. "Look," he whispered. She followed the point of his finger to where runway lights illuminated a triangular-shaped aircraft to the east. Mulder was right. The ship was unlike anything they'd ever seen before. Of course, that didn't make it extraterrestrial. Not in her book. "Here they come." Mulder flattened himself in the weeds, stretching out on his stomach while he peered at the runway through a pair of high-powered binoculars. Crickets whined in the scrub around them. Human voices drifted across the desert from the tarmac. The air smelled like dry grass, sage and ten thousand years of wind-scoured sand. "What are they doing?" Scully asked, squinting at the uniformed men who circled the craft. She crouched on hands and knees, hunching low, but refusing to lie on her belly the way Mulder was doing. The ground chilled her palms and she found herself wishing she'd worn gloves. "I think they're gonna do it." "Do it?" "Fly." He adjusted the focus of his binoculars. "Uh-oh." "What's the matter?" Goosebumps sprouted on her arms at his tone. Unable to make out anything from this distance, she had to rely on his eyes, trust his instincts. "I recognize one of them." "Who?" "Lisa Ianelli." Lisa Ianelli -- girlfriend of time traveler Jason Nichols. What was she doing here? "Hang on, Scully--" Mulder dropped his binoculars and grabbed her arm. A chugging rumble emanated from the aircraft, causing the uniformed onlookers to scurry away. When the ship rose from the ground, it floated straight up, like a Harrier jet. It hung there, forty feet in the air, for ten seconds or so. Black and shaped like a shallow pyramid, it carried no insignia, no markings of any kind. Each of its triangular sides looked to be about thirty feet long. The bottom was flat and had a light at each point and a circular depression in the center. Six lights, arranged in a hexagon pattern, glowed around the inner circle. The mysterious craft suddenly shot straight up, vanishing against the backdrop of stars, while causing an aftershock that rippled the sky. Sand and debris blasted the surrounding landscape. A stinging wind howled past Mulder and Scully, pinning them to the desert floor, while a sonic boom vibrated their bones. Scully covered her head as the wind siphoned oxygen from her lungs. The last thing she remembered before losing consciousness was the feel of Mulder's fingers clutching desperately to the sleeve of her jacket. * * * Sun straight overhead. Painfully bright. Buzzing deerflies. Sweet smell of fresh grass...mixed with the musky odor of livestock. Mulder groaned and tried to get his bearings. He was lying face down on the ground. Jesus, his head ached. His mouth felt bone dry and tasted sour, like...vomit. Oh, Christ, he'd thrown up at some point. He wiped his lips on his sleeve, and, blinking against the bright sun, looked around for Scully. She was stretched out on the grass six feet away and appeared to be unconscious. "Sc-scully?" He coughed and swallowed, trying to moisten his mouth. She didn't move, so he pushed himself into a sitting position. Every muscle pained him as he scooted closer and tapped her arm. "Scully?" He could see dried blood caking her hairline, drawing flies. It pissed him off to see them there. What had happened to her cap? His head swiveled stupidly as he searched for it. "Scullee-scullee-scullee," he chanted, patting her hand. He felt queasy and lightheaded. How long had they been lying like this? he wondered. Where the hell was the Air Base? And the desert...? Clearly, they weren't in northwestern Utah anymore. They were on a broad, grassy meadow. About ten yards away, six scrawny vultures formed a semicircle around them. The birds watched him with cautious eyes. One hopped closer. "Get the hell outta here!" he yelled, causing the buzzards to flap their wings and retreat. In the distance, where the field met the forest, there was a herd of large, wooly...what exactly were those things? Too big for cows. Buffalo maybe? No, they had...tusks! Elephants? He searched for his binoculars. Quickly locating them in the grass, he lifted them to his eyes and focused on the animals. "Oh, shhhit." Not elephants. Mastodons. -x-x-x-x-x-x- CHAPTER ONE SOMEWHERE IN NORTHWESTERN UTAH LATE PLEISTOCENE LATE SPRING, MIDDAY Mulder removed his jacket, folded it in half and tucked it beneath Scully's head. Then he sat down beside her, prepared to wait as long as necessary for her to regain consciousness. He passed the time by peering through his binoculars at the herd of mastodons, shooing flies from Scully's pale face, and chucking stones at the persistent vultures. He and Scully were in a hell of a predicament, and although he considered himself an able and brave man -- FBI-trained, with almost a decade of field experience -- he had to admit that the sight of Scully lying there as motionless as one of her cadavers scared the crap out of him. Watching over her, feeling utterly helpless, he was reminded of that terrible night when he was a kid, sitting beside the charred ruins of his boyhood friend's burned house. Would safeguarding Scully from a flock of hungry vultures give him years of nightmares, too? A phobia of buzzards, maybe, to go along with his fear of fire? And what if he lost her...? Please, Scully, he pleaded silently. Open your eyes, pleeease. The gash in her temple looked nasty -- ragged and oozing blood. A purple-black bruise the size of his palm darkened her forehead on the left side of her face, discoloring her skin from her hairline to her cheekbone. The size of the swelling unnerved him. He wished he'd been hurt instead of her, not just because he wanted to take away her suffering, but also because, with her medical knowledge, she would know how to patch him back together. As it was, he had no idea how to treat a head injury. And this one looked serious. He was wallowing in feelings of ineptitude when the mastodons began plodding west across the grassland, disappearing one-by- one into the far off valley. The damn buzzards remained where they were, eyes trained on Scully's motionless form. Mulder hated their presumption, and considered shooting a couple of them with his gun. Common sense prevailed. His clip was full, but every bullet might prove precious later on. Mulder picked up another stone and pitched it like a fastball at the second bird from the end. He caught the buzzard dead center in its chest, causing it to squawk and hop away. Take that, you fucking son-of-a-bitch. The afternoon ticked slowly by. The sun beat down, intense and fiery hot. Mulder rotated his position as the sun moved, trying to keep Scully in the shadow of his body to shield her as much as possible from the sun's harsh rays. Her unprotected skin would burn easily out here in the open. Should he pick her up and carry her into the shade? he wondered. The meadow merged into woodland about 500 yards to the north. He worried that moving her might cause some sort of internal damage. It was possible she had a neck injury or a broken bone. Chiding himself for not thinking of it sooner, he began to check her for breaks. He gently patted her arms and legs, and then unzipped her jacket to run his palms carefully over her ribs. Everything seemed fine. But what did he know? Maybe it wasn't possible to feel a rib fracture. For the next four hours he continued to lean over her, his back bearing the brunt of the sun's rays. The dark fabric of his turtleneck soaked in the heat, making him sweaty and restless. The vultures seemed to sense his discomfort and inched closer. In a fit of irritation, he yanked his shirt up over his head and flung it at them, only to become more aggravated when it fell short of its mark. Thank God, a steady breeze puffed across the open meadow, helping to cool his temper along with the sweat on his bare back. He plucked a blade of grass and chewed it, feeling like some hayseed from East Bumfuck, but thankful for the brief distraction of its tart flavor. Late in the afternoon Scully finally stirred. "Mulder?" "I'm here." Gently, he stroked her hair, combing it back from her bloodied forehead. Her eyelids fluttered and opened. Relief prickled his skin when her eyes focused on his face and she appeared to recognize him. He smiled at her and said, "Hey." She offered him a feeble smile in return, and then looked past him to the field of fresh grass and the semi-circle of vultures. "Where are we?" she asked. "When." "Excuse me?" "Not 'where,' Scully -- 'when.' *When* are we." She rose on one elbow and winced from the effort. The vultures backed away, beating their wings and clucking with almost human disappointment over her apparent recovery. "Mulder, what are you saying?" "How's your American History?" "Why?" Deciding it might be best to ease into the truth, he gave a small shrug and tried to look unconcerned. "It's possible we might have...um...traveled back in time." "Traveled--?" Now she sat bolt upright. "How far back in time?" He wanted to tell her that everything was going to be all right and there was nothing to be overly concerned about. Her physical condition was the most important thing right now, and she needed to be careful not to injure herself any more than she already was. On the other hand, he knew she wouldn't tolerate being kept in the dark; she didn't like being coddled any more than he did. So instead of saying more, he offered her another shrug. "70s? 60s? 50s?" she asked. "Getting warmer." "Jesus, Mulder." She gazed at the meadow, the forest, and, farther away, the snow-covered mountain peaks. No airplanes flew overhead, no traffic passed by, no buildings stood anywhere within view. "Turn of the century?" she asked. "More like...Late Pleistocene." "I don't believe it. It isn't possible." She tentatively prodded the bruise on her forehead as if her injury was the cause of her confusion. "People can't travel back in time." "If you want, I can quote your graduate thesis. 'Although common sense may rule out the possibility of time travel, the laws of quantum physics--'" "I know what I wrote," she snapped. "I was barely out of my teens at the time. What the hell did I know?" He didn't want to make her angrier by saying he agreed with her youthful hypothesis, so instead he kept his tone even and applied the practiced calm he usually reserved for reluctant witnesses. "We've seen something like this before," he reminded her gently. "And Lisa Ianelli was at Hill Air Force Base." The weight of his words sunk in and Scully's shoulders slumped. "Tachyons," she said, understanding the implications. He nodded. "Subatomic particles that can travel faster than the speed of light and go back in time--" "But only for a few seconds and only at a temperature of absolute zero," she interrupted. "Mulder, in case you hadn't noticed, we were never frozen." "I can't explain that, but it's possible Lisa Ianelli discovered another method, a way to travel through time that doesn't require freezing." He reached out and stroked her cheek, careful to avoid the bruise there. "I saw something, Scully." He knew this was going to sound ridiculous. "I saw...mastodons." "Mastodons?" She looked as if she might actually laugh. "Okay, Mulder. Let's assume for the sake of argument that we've somehow traveled back in time...to the Pleistocene...or whenever...not that I believe that. But *if* it were true, then how do we get back?" Well, that was the sixty-four-thousand dollar question, wasn't it? Now it was his turn to study their surroundings. The sun was low in the sky. It would be dark in another couple of hours, and no magic doorways to 1998 seemed to be presenting themselves. "I'm...I'm not sure we can get back." Arching an eyebrow, she waited for him to say more. No doubt she expected him to launch into one of his typical numinous theories, but this was one X-File that had him stumped. It didn't help that he was too thirsty and too hungry to concentrate on gravitational anomalies, event horizons, or para-physics. "We need to find drinking water before the sun sets," he said, rising to his feet. His knees ached from sitting for so long. He reached out a hand to help her up, and hoped she was feeling fit enough to travel. "Do you think you can walk?" She nodded and took his hand, allowing him to pull her to her feet. Swaying on unsteady legs, she asked, "Which way, Mr. Indian Guide?" He pivoted, considering the possibilities. Did it make sense to head toward the mountains? Snowmelt would mean freshwater streams, right? But which mountains? There were mountains on every side. The mastodons had headed west. They would be looking for water, wouldn't they? Or were mastodons like camels? "West," he said, going with his gut and the wisdom of the mastodons. * * * Peach-colored clouds striped the evening sky, promising a spectacular sunset. The sun appeared wedged between two mountain peaks, which Scully guessed were part of the Newfoundland Mountains...assuming she and Mulder were still anywhere on or near Hill Air Force Base in Box Elder County, Utah. Unfortunately, they'd left their map in the car, which would be in the opposite direction, if anywhere at all. She tried to picture what the map had looked like. She knew Hill was a large backward z-shaped parcel of land located between Great Salt Lake to the east and the Great Salt Lake Desert to the west. The Base included the southernmost region of the dry Newfoundland Evaporation Basin, as well as the foothills of the Newfoundland Mountains. Squinting at the tallest rise, she guessed it might be Desert Peak, the range's highest point. Or not. The grassy meadow they were crossing bore no resemblance to the desert they'd been in last night. Mulder was walking several paces ahead of her, leading them along a broad trail of trampled grass. She concentrated on the relentless swing of his jacket, which dangled from his left fist. He had slung his binoculars around his neck so that the strap crossed his back from right shoulder to left hip. His shirt was tied loosely around his waist. Not feeling as warm as he seemed to, she kept her coat on and hugged it tightly across her chest. In the back of her mind, it occurred to her that she might be in shock, a result of the blow to her head. The meadow sloped gradually downhill. Mulder's elongated shadow stretched out behind him, reminding her of Dr. Chester Banton, the dark matter scientist with a lethal shadow. She didn't fear Mulder's shadow; to the contrary, she kept herself purposely inside it, feeling it somehow tethered her to him. If she happened to stumble or fall, it might pull him up short, alerting him to her trouble. Crazy idea, she knew, but she refused to step outside it in any case. "Watch out for the prairie pies," he warned, pointing to an enormous mound of fresh dung. "Told you I saw a mastodon. That ain't no cow patty." Had he really seen mastodons? No, it was impossible; this was just a bad dream, it had to be, and she was going to wake up any minute in her own bed. Maybe she would tell Mulder about her nightmare over coffee and Danish at the cart outside the second-floor bullpen tomorrow morning. He would tease her and then, after they returned to their office, he would pull out a stack of mastodon-related X-Files. "Mastodon Footprints Discovered on Mars" or "Woman Gives Birth to Boy With Tusks and Trunk; Father Was Mastodon in Former Life." "You okay, Scully?" He was suddenly beside her, one arm gripping her shoulders, holding her up. She felt dizzy. Had she stopped walking? "Do you need to rest?" "I'm fi--" Her knees buckled. He lowered her gently to the ground. "Sit for a minute. Your forehead's bleeding again." He untied the shirt from his waist and gently blotted her temple with it. "I'm thirsty." "I know. Me, too." He held her tenderly. "We'll find water soon." She leaned into him, thankful for his company and his care, and wanting more than anything to believe him about the water. Her throat ached for a drink. Then the edges of her vision began to fray, as if her eyes were falling victim to a too- early sunset. Mosquito-sized flecks floated between her and Mulder's worried expression. The flecks swarmed and thickened until Mulder became lost in a gray snowstorm that made her think of all the grainy television sets in all the sleazy motels where they'd stayed over the years. Like the two-room hotel in Home, Pennsylvania, where she watched Mulder rotate the TV antenna, trying to bring its picture into focus. Wild animal sounds came from the staticky set. Not mastodons, but jackals or wolves. Predatory creatures. She'd left Mulder alone in that room, which couldn't be locked because he'd let her have the safer room, the one with the lock that worked. He'd risked his life for her. She suddenly felt as if she were being bent in half and lifted off her feet. Blood rushed to her face as her head hung lower than her heart. Her hands weighed a thousand pounds, it seemed, and she let her arms dangle there, above her head...or below her head, whichever. Someone embraced her legs a million miles away. She guessed she was being carried, not like a fairytale princess, but in the undignified position of a fireman's carry. Was it Mulder who stole her away? Blinded by her lightheadedness and the drape of her upside- down hair, she wanted to cry for help, but her voice wouldn't cooperate. Again she thought of Home, Pennsylvania. Not the Peacock brothers or their bizarre, over-protective mother, but Mulder's romantic notions about country life. //Only place you had to be on time was home for dinner. Never had to lock your doors. No modems, no faxes, no cell phones.// Like here...the Pleistocene, according to Mulder. //If I had to settle down, build a home...be a place like this.// Had he brought them here on purpose, in search of a simpler life? No, that was ridiculous. He was a city boy, despite his protestations. That day in Home, he'd been high on "eau de baseball." She took a sniff. No smell of cowhide. Eau de Mulder? He was right under her nose. Or maybe she was underneath him? God, everything was topsy-turvy. Usually she hated feeling so muddled. But right now, she felt inexplicably calm. Breathing in his familiar scent, she allowed herself to fall deeper into the safe haven of his shadow. * * * //Hopes are dashed People forget Forget they're hiding.// Was Mulder singing? //In a tachyon flux Tachyon flux -- it's a put on Come on join the party...// Yes, Mulder was singing...a butchered rendition of The Who's "Eminent Front." "That isn't how the song goes," she murmured. "Scully?" She felt herself slide from his shoulder. His fingers gripped her hips as he lowered her feet to the ground. "You're awake." "Yes, I'm awake." She put a hand on his arm for balance and looked around. Only the barest hint of sunlight remained, outlining the far-off mountains. A quarter moon rose in the east, brilliant white against a purple-black sky. A spray of stars glittered overhead. Trees dotted the meadow, their leaves whispering in the evening breeze. The landscape was storybook beautiful. "How long was I...?" She gestured at his shoulder. "Not long." "We're not going to find water tonight, are we?" A smile tugged at his lips. "Don't be so pessimistic." He pointed past her, and she turned to see moonlight on water at the bottom of the grassy slope. The prospect of a drink drew her forward. She began to walk, and then run. Water! Thank God! Sprinting down the hill, she suddenly felt as giddy as a child. The cool evening air rushed past her ears, swept her hair away from her overly hot forehead, filled her eyes with a blur of tears. Each breath ballooned her chest with fresh energy. The ground was spongy beneath her feet, making her feel weightless, as if she could fly, and she could smell the sweet scent of fresh grass with every step. Fifty yards from the river, she pulled up short. Something was moving at the water's edge. Several somethings. She heard the splash of water, a muted thud, a chuff of air from large lungs. Mulder caught up with her, and stopped, too, his skin shiny with sweat in the moonlight. He raised his binoculars to survey the riverbank. "What are they?" she asked, trying to steady her breathing. "Mastodons?" He lowered the binoculars and dovetailed his fingers with hers. "No. Just horses. Not even very big ones. Come on." He tugged her toward them. As all trace of sunlight vanished from the western sky, stars multiplied in the heavens and a mirror image of the moon floated on the river's inky surface. Scully could smell the water, and the sharp, dusty odor of the horses. The horses caught wind of them, too, and moved downstream. At the water's edge, she released Mulder's hand and dropped to her knees on the grassy bank. She filled her cupped palms. The water was cold, numbing her fingers, but tasting delicious. She scooped handful after handful into her mouth. Mulder knelt beside her and drank greedily, too, before plunging his whole head beneath the surface to rinse his hair and scrub at his neck. Raising his head, he waggled his eyebrows and asked, "Wanna go skinny dipping?" As far as she could tell in the dark, the river was about a hundred and fifty yards wide, and curved in a giant oxbow. Its current appeared to be slow moving. There were no exposed boulders and no whitewater rapids. "We don't know what's in there." "Nothing, I hope, since we just drank a couple of gallons." "No, I mean like snapping turtles or the equivalent of Pleistocene piranha." "As long as there are no flukemen." He stood, untied his shirt from his waist, and let it drop to the ground on top of his jacket. Was he really going to--? He removed the binoculars from around his neck and set them beside his clothes. "No peeking," he warned as he toed off his shoes and unfastened his pants. "You're not--?" Socks and shorts off, he released a bloodcurdling Tarzan yell, and then bulldozed naked into the water. Well, that was Mulder for you, jumping in feet first. Good to know he hadn't changed, even if the rest of the world was unrecognizable. "Whoa! Water's cold! Come on in." "No thanks." "Don't know what you're missing." He dove beneath the surface as if to prove his point. When his head popped back up a moment later, he shook water from his hair, and then swam in a leisurely circle several yards out from shore. Scully wrapped her arms around her knees and watched him roll onto his back to float with arms outstretched, his skin gilded by moonlight. Fireflies blinked all along the riverbank, dancing above the tall reeds. Bullfrogs harrumphed, marking territory with their deep base voices. A nervous horse whinnied somewhere downstream. Had they really traveled back in time more than ten thousand years? Or was this place a 20th Century Garden of Eden, an untouched oasis in an otherwise modern world? Mulder claimed to have seen mastodons. But did he know the difference between a modern day elephant and a prehistoric one? Suppose an elephant or two had escaped from a local zoo, like the time Ganesha escaped from its cage in Fairfield, Idaho... Wasn't that a more likely explanation than time travel? Scully suddenly missed her comfortable apartment. A hot bubble bath would feel wonderful right now. And some take-out Thai food would hit the spot. She mentally added Ibuprofen for her headache, scented candles for her nerves, and an interesting novel -- maybe Jose Chung's newest thriller -- to take her mind off air bases and time travel. Out in the river, Mulder swam lazily toward shore. He waded the last few yards, rising from the river like a merman. Water poured from his glistening skin as he returned to her. Silhouetted against the moonlit water, liberated from his everyday attire, he looked extraordinarily handsome -- lean, graceful, even a little dangerous. And sexy. Blood rose in her cheeks as a pleasant heaviness settled into her pelvis. The sight of him was arousing her, she realized, and she quickly looked away, averting her stare and feeling voyeuristic and a little ashamed of herself. Mulder was her partner. Their relationship was based on professional respect. She had no right to ogle him. Hand raised to her temple, she worried she was losing her mind. She was feeling dizzy and acting irrationally. Her head was pounding. She heard him drop down on the grass beside her, and she glanced in his direction, being careful to keep her eyes leveled above his shoulders. He used his shirt to briskly dry himself. "No piranha," he said. "Your teeth are chattering." "But I smell better." He began to dress, so she moved away -- to give him privacy, and to wash her face. Crouched at the water's edge, she removed her jacket, and rolled up her shirtsleeves. Again she filled her hands with cold water, but this time she used it to gently clean the gash at her hairline. Her forehead felt tender where it had been cut. She gently rinsed away grit and dried blood, careful not to reopen the wound. "Can I help?" Mulder appeared beside her, fully dressed and carrying a handkerchief in his hand. "It's clean, I promise." He dipped the handkerchief into the water and then used it to dab at her wound. She marveled at the fact he carried something as old-fashioned as a handkerchief. It made her realize she knew almost nothing about his upbringing. The handkerchief brought to mind an image of a well-mannered little boy, dressed and pressed like a gentleman, which contradicted her earlier impression of him as a hellion -- a daredevil who would jump feet first and buck naked into an Ice Age river. As always, Mulder was difficult to peg. "How does it look?" she asked. "Not too bad." He stroked the area, pushing her hair away from the wound. "The mark of an experienced G-Woman." "Wonderf--" She startled when a pair of yellow-green eyes caught her attention on the opposite shore. They peered back at her from behind a veil of tall weeds. She lowered her voice to a whisper. "Mulder, look." "I see it." She heard him release the snap on his holster and pull out his gun. "Let's go," he whispered. "Where?" "Uphill. Away from here." He gripped her arm and hauled her to her feet. She glanced across the river. The green eyes had vanished. She grabbed her coat. Then a growl sounded -- a large cat of some kind. A splash of water told her it was coming after them. Her heart began to hammer in her chest. Her legs felt rubbery, her feet numb. Mulder yanked hard on her arm. "Hurry! Unless you want to become cat food for a saber-toothed tiger." Saber-toothed tiger? The cat suddenly roared, and Scully ran for all she was worth. * * * Mulder sprinted up the hill, clutching Scully's arm. He could hear her gasping for breath. God, please don't let her pass out, he thought. How far back was the damn cat? As soon as they reached the woods, he began searching for a tree to climb. He selected a tall, straight evergreen, not too big around, but with lots of stout branches. "Up," he ordered Scully, shoving her through a veil of lower limbs. Unsure of the cat's location, he quickly grabbed a branch and hauled himself up after her. "Mulder, I can't see." "Just climb." He heard her scrambling for footholds. Grasping her hips, he propelled her higher. "Watch your head." He scaled several more branches. "I think I'm about as high as--" The cat roared beneath them. "Higher." "Mul--" "Go!" Three, four, five more branches. They were nearing the top; he could feel the tree beginning to sway. Below them, the cat growled. Mulder pushed Scully higher. Finally, they could go no further and Scully settled on a sturdy branch. He perched next to her and dug his flashlight from his pocket. Aimed down the trunk of the tree, the light reflected in the cat's yellow-green eyes. Jesus, the animal was huge -- it looked twice as heavy as a modern day lion, although not any taller or longer. Its tail was stubby, like a bobcat, but what it lacked on the rear end, it more than made up for on the front, where foot-long fangs protruded from its enormous upper jaw. No doubt they could rip open a man's belly with one swipe. It was an honest-to-fucking-goodness saber-toothed tiger. "Must be the kitty chow," he commented. Scully sat shivering between him and the tree trunk. He wrapped his gun arm around her to secure himself to her and the tree. With his other hand, he kept his light aimed at the cat. "Can it climb up here?" Scully asked. "If it tries, it won't get past *this*." He waggled his gun. She glanced at the weapon. "Don't drop it." "When have I ever dropped my gun?" She said nothing. After a few moments of silence, he angled his flashlight at her face, revealing her skeptical expression. She arched one graceful eyebrow. "Never," he argued. Her other eyebrow climbed to join the first. He turned the flashlight back on the cat. "Not while sitting in a tree." Suddenly the cat lunged upward and positioned itself on the bottommost branch. The tree shook, and Mulder and Scully both gasped. He leveled his gun at the cat. The motion put her off balance, and she caught herself by latching onto his thigh, squeezing hard. "Not that I'm objecting, Scully, but now may not be the best time," he whispered, indicating her hand with a tilt of his head. "I just...I didn't want to fall." She released him. They watched the cat balance on its hind legs, while it searched with its forepaws for a higher perch. "You won't fall," he assured her, hugging his arm around her again. "I won't let you." The cat jumped back to the ground and resumed its pacing. "There. You see? Nothing to worry about." "We could still fall out of the tree in our sleep," she said. "I won't be sleeping." He tracked the cat with his light. "Maybe you should sing," she suggested. "That way, I'll know you're awake." She leaned into him. Her trembling seemed worse. Okay, he'd sing. Just to keep her mind off their predicament. Hell, to keep *his* mind off their predicament. He cleared his throat. "Mulder and Scully, sitting in a tree, "K-I-S-S-I-N-G." He shined his light at her to see her reaction. She shook her head. "In your dreams, Mulder." He smiled, and continued his sing-songy rhyme, "First comes loooove..." He lightly tapped the tip of her nose with his flashlight, making her frown. She batted his hand away. "Then comes marriage..." She still refused to smile. "And then comes Mulder with a baby carriage," he finished quickly. "Isn't that supposed to be 'and then comes *Scully* with a baby carriage?'" "I'm a man of the 90s, Scully." "Ah." After a minute of silence, she asked, "Mulder, are you afraid?" "Nope," he lied. "It doesn't worry you that we may be thousands of years from where we're supposed to be?" Oh yeah, there was that pesky time travel thing. "Who says we're not supposed to be right here?" "In a tree? With a tiger waiting to devour us the moment we fall?" "I told you, we're not going to fall." Tucking her more firmly into the crook of his arm, he decided to sing some more. Something appropriate for the occasion. Something like... "I see a bad moon rising. I see trouble on the way--" "Oh, brother." -x-x-x-x-x-x-x- CHAPTER TWO Mulder hadn't slept a wink. And it had been a helluva long night. Ass aching, he shifted a bit on his tree branch in an unsuccessful effort to find a more comfortable position without waking Scully. Miraculously, she was asleep, wedged between him and the trunk of the tree, her head resting on his shoulder. The sun was still hidden behind the mountains, but the eastern sky was beginning to lighten above the craggy peaks, and a blond strip of clouds had developed along the horizon. The saber-toothed tiger was gone. It had abandoned its night- long vigil more than an hour ago when a herd of small horses passed close by, skirting the edge of the woods, heading toward the river. The cat followed the ponies. Several minutes later, Mulder was startled by the pitiful bleat of an animal in its death throes. The noise woke Scully from her sleep, and Mulder reassured her, convincing her to settle back against his shoulder. Apparently exhausted, she laid her head on him without argument and dozed off again. The cat was probably up on the hill right now, filling its belly with fresh meat. Mulder's stomach growled. He hadn't had a bite to eat since the day before yesterday when he'd downed two bacon double-cheeseburgers, a pistachio flavored milkshake -- extra large -- and a side order of jumbo onion rings. Shoulda super-sized it, he thought. Damn, he was hungry; the bark on this tree was beginning to look good enough to eat. He was thirsty again, too. And he had to pee. Badly. Looking down at the ground, he estimated they were sitting about twenty feet up. Hmm. If he peed from here, he might be able to hit that pinecone on the second branch from the bottom. He tried to gauge the necessary trajectory. The lack of wind would help his aim, but he wasn't altogether sure he could piss sitting down. And suppose Scully woke up before he was finished. How embarrassing would that be? On the other hand, his bladder felt ready to bust. He had to do *something* -- now. "Scully?" He reached over and traced her jaw from earlobe to chin with his index finger. She stirred and slowly opened her eyes. "Time z'it?" she asked, stifling a yawn. "Sunrise. Almost." She blinked sleepily at the still-dark sky. "No it isn't." "Yeah...well...I gotta whiz, so good morning, sunshine." He slid off the branch and lowered his feet to the limb below him. "No chance you could wait until it's actually light out? The tiger--" "Scully, when a man says he's gotta go, he's gotta go." He pivoted so that he could help her down. "Besides, the tiger left." She gripped his shoulders while he guided her hips off her perch. After setting her feet on the branch beside his, he acted as a spotter while she got herself turned around. "You want me to climb down first?" he asked. "No, I'll go...if you're sure the tiger is gone." "You can see for yourself it's not there." "Yes, but where is it?" Telling her it killed and ate a horse seemed counterproductive to getting her out of the tree, so he dodged the truth by saying, "It's probably peeing." She rolled her eyes, then began to slowly inch her way down to the next branch. Then the next. He stood above her, rocking from foot to foot, his bladder aching. "Any chance you could speed things up a little, Scully?" "I'm going as fast as I can." "Well, you're gonna need an umbrella if you don't pick up the pace," he warned, looking down at the top of her head. "Raindrops keep fallin' on your head--" "All right already." She began to descend more quickly, either out of sympathy or because she was now closing in on terra firma. He followed her down, just a step or two above her head. When she reached the bottom branch, she jumped to the ground. "Little girls' room is around back," she said, circling the tree. "Don't even think about peeking." "I've got something else on my mind, Scully." He jumped the last few feet to the ground, too. "And it has nothing to do with looking at you." He spun to face the trunk, and unzipped his pants...just in the nick of time. Ahhh! Holy Jesus, Joseph and Mary. His head began to clear as his bladder emptied. When he finished, he called to her, "You done?" "Yes." Zipping his fly, he waited another moment or two, just in case. Didn't want to catch her with her pants down -- literally. When he did finally step around the tree, he found that she was standing several paces away, her back to him, pants up, shirt tucked in. She was looking out through the drape of evergreen branches at the distant mountain peaks, where clouds the color of nickel split the morning sun into finger-like rays. Without taking her eyes from the prehistoric dawn, she began to recite a poem: "Way back in the days when the grass was still green, and the pond was still wet and the clouds were still clean..." The verse sounded familiar. Edna St. Vincent Millay? She continued the verse, "And the song of the Swomee-Swans rang out in space, one morning, I came to this glorious place." Not Millay. Dr. Seuss. Honestly, he had expected her to be...well, less than enthusiastic about their circumstances. Yet here she was quoting Dr. Seuss, extolling the beauty of the landscape. A gentle wind wafted through the branches. It carried the scent of pine and it fluttered her hair. He sidled up next to her. God, she was beautiful. Kiss her, his body urged. And although he'd experienced the impulse many times in the past, familiarity didn't keep his desire from sucker-punching the breath from his lungs or turning the bones of his legs to Jell-o. Without even touching her, he could feel their imaginary kiss. Her lips, soft beneath his. Her breath, hot on his mouth. The wetness of her tongue. Stop it! If she suspected what was on his mind, she would knee him in the nugs. Five years as partners, he knew she didn't think of him in a sexual way. Never had and probably never would. No sense fantasizing about things that weren't going to happen. Besides, he owed her more respect than that. To prevent himself from acting on his impulse, he lowered his head, and whispered the last line of Seuss' verse into her ear: "The bright-colored tufts of the Truffula Trees, mile after mile in the fresh morning breeze." She turned to smile up at him. God, her lips were so close. If he leaned in juuust a little more... "Pleistocene air seems to agree with you, Scully," he whispered. "Not at all. I've simply come to the conclusion that this is all a figment of my imagination, a hallucination caused by the blow to my head. I'm going to wake up any minute at Hill Air Force Base." "Scully, we're in the Ice Age." "So you say. But until I see proof, I'm sticking to my hallucination theory. It's more plausible than your time travel idea." "What does it take, Scully? A saber-toothed tiger to bite you on the ass?" Please, not this old song and dance, their perpetual pas de deux. "You saw the cat. We both saw it." "I was tired and dizzy and it was dark. I'm not sure what I saw--" Groaning with frustration, he closed his eyes and threw back his head. It wasn't that he minded debating theories with her. As a matter of fact, he rather enjoyed the way she challenged him. She kept him on his toes, honed his investigative skills, prevented him from becoming analytically lazy. However, it irritated him to hear her refute what she'd seen with her own eyes, or rationalize irrational events by forcing them into more commonly held perspectives. Being rigorous was one thing, but denying the truth was unacceptable. He knew the only way to sway her, however, was to do it logically, and that would take some time. Scully squinted at the sunrise. "I admit I don't know where we are or how we got here, but I can't accept that we're not still in the 20th Century." It was true the landscape looked nothing like modern day Utah. He bent and plucked a flower from a scraggly patch at his feet. "Something happened on that Air Base. Something that sent us back tens of thousands of years." "People can't travel through time," she maintained. As usual she was going to make him work to prove his point. "Physicists like Stephen Hawking have hypothesized the existence of wormholes and closed time loops -- actual portals through which matter can travel backward through time." "Mulder, phenomena like extreme heat and gravity would make the trip lethal for any organism." "Maybe not. Three years ago, Jason Nichols was working on a catalyst for a self-sustaining endothermic reaction that would render those factors inconsequential." He held the flower under her nose. She sniffed it. "Sweet," she said, before continuing her argument. "Jason died before he actually created his rapid freezing agent." "We saw it, Scully. And Lisa Ianelli saw it, too. Suppose she finished Jason's work?" Mulder tucked the flower behind his ear. "Let me repeat what I said yesterday: We were never frozen." "Suppose Lisa discovered another way..." She raised a questioning eyebrow. "To withstand a trip through a wormhole?" "Yes, making time travel possible." "Mulder, Lisa never administered any compound." "Yeah, but suppose the catalyst isn't a compound, but a set of circumstances." "Caused by...?" "Something mechanical, not biological." "That kind of technology doesn't exist." "Unless it's extraterrestrial." She smiled. "You sound like Max Fenig, you know." He supposed he did sound like Max. "I mean it, Mulder. I can see your future crystal clear, and unfortunately, I see myself right there with you." Her expression changed to one of concern. "Mark my words: we're going to end up as two card-carrying MUFON members, wearing matching tinfoil caps to protect our minds from the imaginary rays of extraterrestrial thought-control devices, while we travel from one UFO hotspot to the next shouting to anyone who'll listen 'they're here, they're here,' ad infinitum." "Imaginary rays?" "Don't you ever worry about driving everyone away, all of your friends, your family, winding up old and lonely because you were -- you *are* -- obsessed with things that the rest of the world considers...well, insane, frankly?" "I'll always have you. Won't I?" He nudged her arm until she nodded in agreement. "Scully, I don't care what the rest of the world thinks. Most people have their heads up their asses." She glanced at him. "You really believe that?" "Seeing is believing, isn't it?" He placed his hand on the small of her back, turned her around and steered her out from under the tree branches, intending to head back to the river for a drink. "If it's right in front of your eyes, it must be- -" The river wound like a silver ribbon through the valley below. Animals crowded its banks. Lots of animals. Lots and lots of animals. "Oh, my God," Scully gasped. Her voice rose in pitch. "Are those...?" Yes indeedy. Mastodons. At least two dozen of them. And a herd of small horses. And bison, and something that looked like camels, and a few unrecognizable things. The landscape was a scene out of an African documentary, only these animals weren't zebras or elephants or water buffalo. They were... "Mastodons." * * * "My God," Scully repeated, unable to believe her eyes. The behemoths certainly looked like illustrations she'd seen of mastodons. She'd taken enough anthropology courses at the University of Maryland to recognize the difference between Ice Age proboscideans and their modern day cousins, and these were definitely not elephants escaped from a zoo. Whatever they were, at least two-dozen of them had gathered in the valley along the riverbanks. The mature ones stood about ten feet tall -- somewhat shorter than modern day African and Asian elephants. Their ears were relatively small, and their tusks were straight and parallel to the ground. Scully tried to recall more details from Dr. Diamond's classes. He'd described a wide variety of Pleistocene megafauna, including mastodons, which had ranged across North America from Alaska to central Mexico. Archeologists had discovered mastodon bones alongside prehistoric spear points and stone cutting tools, leading to the assumption that early humans -- Clovis and Folsom cultures, the Paleo-Indians of ancient North America -- had hunted and eaten the giant mammals. If memory served, all genera of megafaunal mammals, like the musk oxen, giant bison, and camels she could see drinking alongside the mastodons at the river below, had died out sometime prior to 11,000 B.P. Which could only mean... Impossible. This had to be a hallucination. She and Mulder were *not* in the Ice Age. She needed to sit. Sinking onto her heels in the grass at the edge of the meadow, she continued to stare at the prehistoric scene in the valley below. Mulder sat, too, and scanned the riverbanks through his binoculars. "Looks like you gotta get up pretty early in the morning to beat the breakfast crowd. Shall we cut the line?" Was he insane? "N-no. We're staying right here until they're gone." "That could be quite a wait." He offered her the binoculars, but she shook her head. She didn't think she was ready to look at the gargantuans up close...not yet. Ten minutes later, the mastodons began migrating slowly downstream toward the forest. A group of camels moved in to take their place. Camels...in northwestern Utah? It boggled the mind. Oversized bison stood shoulder-deep in the river. A variety of unfamiliar birds dotted both banks of the river, looking like crumpled Kleenex from this distance. Horses, deer, and some kind of big-horned sheep shared the watering hole in cautious harmony. Mulder plucked a blade of grass from the field and stuck it in his mouth. He chewed on it for a minute or two before asking, "Is there any significant difference between a mastodon and a mammoth?" "Their teeth," she answered numbly, wondering why he cared. "Their teeth?" "Yes...the word 'mastodon' is derived from the Greek 'mastos,' meaning breast, and 'odont,' meaning tooth. It translates literally to 'breast tooth.'" "Breast...?" A smile nudged his cheek. "That's interesting." "Yes, well...mastodons fed on spruce, primarily. So their teeth had crowns consisting of distinct rounded cusps, which helped them chew tough foliage. Mammoths, on the other hand, grazed on grasses, so their teeth are...uh, *were* dissimilar. Mammoths were also generally bigger than mastodons, with wider heads, and curving tusks. Those..." -- she nodded at the retreating behemoths -- "look like mastodons." God, was she seriously considering the possibility that they had traveled ten or twelve thousand years back in time? Her hope that this was all a hallucination began to dwindle with each new Pleistocene animal she spotted along the riverbank. Faced with such a preponderance of evidence, she felt compelled to acknowledge Mulder's theory of time travel as a possible explanation for their present predicament. "I guess I owe you an apology, Mulder." He nodded his acceptance. That was one of the things she liked most about Mulder. He wasn't an I-told-you-so kind of guy. He didn't gloat. "We've got to find a way back," she said. He chewed his blade of grass with as much zeal as he crunched sunflower seeds. "That might be a problem." If they couldn't find a way back, they were in serious trouble. 20th Century city slickers lost in an Ice Age landscape, with no survival skills to speak of. They were FBI trained, and could catch your average murderer or mutant easily enough, but what good were handcuffs on saber-toothed tigers? The Pleistocene world was full of larger-than-life threats. And they carried only three guns between them. Ten rounds per automatic plus the six rounds in Mulder's .38. That wasn't going to last long here. Every single bullet would be essential for protection *and* food. Food. She was hungry right now. Mulder must be, too. It'd been almost two days since their last meal. She looked again at the excess of wildlife lining the shore. Tons of protein on the hoof and no way to butcher or cook it. They were without knives, matches, or anything that could hold water. For that matter, they had no shelter, no sunscreen, no insect repellent. No compass, either, or first aid kit. Not even an aspirin. And already she missed the more commonplace comforts of modern life -- like toilet paper. They weren't prepared to last two days let alone... Jesus, how long would they be here? Her heart began to hammer at the thought of a week, a month, a-- "Empty your pockets, Mulder." "Excuse me?" "Inventory. I want to know what we've got to work with." He shoved a fist into his right jacket pocket and pulled out his flashlight and car and house keys, which he laid on the ground beside the binoculars. "And in here..." He pawed through his left coat pocket and produced handcuffs, cell phone, a pair of latex gloves-- Wait! Her cell phone. She snatched her own phone from her pocket, and dialed the local FBI field office. "Why didn't I think of this sooner?" "That's not gonna work." "We'll see--" The display window was lit, but blank. She turned off the phone and tossed it onto the growing pile of useless modern day junk. "Anything else?" she asked, hopeful. A newspaper clipping about UFO sightings at Hill Air Force Base. FBI badge. Pack of sunflower seeds -- empty. That seemed to disappoint Mulder more than anything so far. Dry cleaning receipt. Car rental agreement. A pocketknife. The knife was small, but serviceable. "Wait." He held up a finger and dug into his pants pocket. Handkerchief. Wallet. Comb. "Except for my gun, that's it," he announced. "Don't you mean *guns*?" "No, I brought only one." "But you always carry two guns." "Well...not this trip." Of all the times -- "Twenty rounds. That's all the protection we've got." "I'm pretty sure I have two condoms in my wallet." He grinned at her. "Oh, that's helpful." "Not really. I think they expired in '95." He leaned back on his elbows. "How about you, Scully? You packin' anything useful?" She emptied her pockets. Handcuffs. Latex gloves. Small pad of paper and pen. House keys. Badge. Wallet. Oh! Breath mints! She unwrapped the foil roll, popped one into her mouth and then offered the rest to Mulder. She continued to pull items from her jacket. Emery board. Freebie hotel sewing kit. Compact. Lipstick. Was lipstick edible? "That's all I have," she said, disappointed. "Know what I'm wishing?" Mulder asked. He removed the flower from behind his ear and tossed it to the ground. "For a time machine?" "No, but that's not a bad idea." He gave her a wry smile. "I was wishing I'd been a bigger MacGyver fan." He began to pocket his possessions. "That way I could build a time machine out of our cell phones and my empty packet of sunflower seeds." He waved the cellophane bag at her. "You think MacGyver would need both phones?" She returned her belongings to her pockets, too, and then rose to her feet. "Where are you going?" he asked. "Back to the field where we first arrived. If there's a way to get home, it has to be there." Mulder stood, too, concern creasing his brow. "Not necessarily. We have no idea how we got here -- a wormhole, time loop, something else. The portal may be closed, or located elsewhere, or it may not exist at all." "We came through it once, we have to assume we can go back the same way." She began hiking upland, determined to get away from the river with all its strange creatures and frightening implications. There had to be a portal of some kind back in the field. There just had to be. They hiked for about ten minutes, heading east, when Scully suddenly slowed her pace. She realized she didn't know the way since she'd been unconscious when Mulder carried her to the river last night. "Straight ahead," he said, in response to her confused look. "It's not much further." She pushed on, moving upland into the wind, which was picking up. Clouds were gathering and the air felt considerably cooler than it had yesterday. They hadn't gone far when Mulder pointed to an area of trampled grass thirty yards ahead. Scully jogged to it. "Here?" "This is the place." He joined her at its center. The spot looked entirely unremarkable. No obvious portals, no distortions in space and time, no shimmering doorways to the future. This couldn't be it. "You're sure?" she asked. He pointed to a stain of dried blood in the grass. "That's where you were laying." Okay...the portal must be here then. They just needed to look harder. She walked a tight circle around him, searching the ground for any anomalous signs, waving her arms in front of her, hoping to feel an inconsistent air current or an abnormal gravitational pull. When she found nothing out of the ordinary, she frantically widened her search. There had to be a way out. They would find it; they had to. Just keep looking. She circled him again. And again. Her head throbbed where she'd been injured, and the pain made her stomach queasy. Mulder remained standing over the bloodstain, watching her spiral outward around him. She thoroughly searched the ground, the sky and everything in between. "Scully..." "It's here, Mulder." "Scul--" "It's here, I know it!" It had to be...it had to be! They weren't equipped for the Pleistocene. She didn't want to be stuck tens of thousands of years in the past. Her family and her life were in 1998. She liked living there. She wanted to go home. She didn't belong here. Neither of them belonged here. Why wasn't Mulder looking? Why was he just standing there? "Help me, Mulder!" Three strides and he was in front of her, blocking her search. He took hold of her arms just as she collapsed against him. She felt angry and frightened, and her head hurt so damn much. When she buried her face against his chest, it was all she could do to hold in her tears. He stroked her back and said nothing. His soothing caress and the soft kisses he pressed against the crown of her head helped calm her pounding heart. He felt solid and real beneath her fingers. She breathed him in. Felt his pulse drum beneath her cheek. When he cocooned her in his arms, she began to cry in earnest, because she knew his embrace offered only an illusion of safety. He sank to his knees, taking her with him, cradling her against his chest. "Shhh," he whispered into her hair, and let her cry herself out. * * * For several minutes after Scully's tears stopped, Mulder kept his arms looped around her and smoothed her wind-whipped hair. "Sorry," she sniffled. He shrugged off her apology. "No, really," she insisted. "I'm embarrassed." He wiped tears from her flushed cheeks. The jagged slash at her hairline looked inflamed and painful. Her skin felt fiery beneath his hand. "You're sick, Scully." She stiffened in his arms. "I'm fine." Yeah, right. He'd heard that damn phrase more times than he cared to count. Fuck fine. No one knew better than he did how hard Scully worked to hide her vulnerability -- from the good ol' boys at the Bureau, from her family, from him. Especially from him. The word vulnerable was an insult to her. Yet despite her tough-as-nails demeanor, he'd seen her crack on occasion, allowing him the rare opportunity to play hero. It was a role he simultaneously loathed and aspired to. Loathed because it necessarily meant she was in harm's way. Aspired to because he wanted to be brave when it counted most, stopping at nothing to protect her, trading his life for hers without a moment's hesitation. Truth was she almost never needed his help. She was able to take care of herself and him, too. He made no further comment about her injuries because he knew it would make her uncomfortable, but he planned to keep a close eye on her, whether she liked it or not. A roll of thunder battered the surrounding hills. Storm clouds packed the sky to the east. "Looks like we're in for some bad weather," he said. "We need to find cover." And food. Christ, he felt as hungry as a liver-eating mutant coming off a 30-year hibernation. Another clap of thunder vibrated the air. Closer this time. His decision was made. Shelter first, then food. Rising to his feet, he hauled Scully up after him. All the color drained from her face as she tried to balance on unsteady legs. "Can you walk?" he asked, securing her in the crook of his arm. "Yeah. I'm just a little shaky." Food momentarily vied for the top spot on their To Do list. Scully's condition wasn't going to improve if she didn't get some nourishment into her. "Come on." He steered her toward the forest, which he hoped would provide both food and shelter. Slate-gray clouds blotted out the daylight. Thunder crept closer each time it resounded. Mulder quickened his pace when the first fat raindrop slapped his cheek. He towed Scully across the wind-flogged meadow toward a gnarled evergreen that protruded high above the surrounding pines. Its upper trunk was corkscrewed in an odd s-shape, which he took as a good sign. The deformity was testimony to its stamina and survival. It had endured hardship, but in the end stood tall. A lightning bolt sizzled through the dark sky, followed immediately by a heart-stopping crack of thunder. The storm was upon them and it was going to be a whopper. "You okay?" he shouted, keeping his course. Her answer was lost in the next explosion of thunder. With less than twenty feet to go before they reached the tree, the sky opened, deluging them with cold rain. By the time they ducked beneath the branches, they were soaked to the skin. "Jesus!" she said, shivering. A fork of lightning brightened the sky behind them, and thunder crashed on the heels of the strike. Wind and rain penetrated the boughs. They would need to move deeper into the forest to find adequate cover. "Mulder, look." She pointed overhead, up the trunk of the tree. Near the top was an ancient scorch mark just below the s- shaped trunk. "Lightning?" "Maybe." "Let's get out of here." He snagged her hand and tugged her away from the tree, heading for lower ground and denser cover. Lightning flared again and the sharp odor of ozone fell with the rain. The trees were enormous here, with broad old-growth trunks. Giant ferns filled the understory. When a blowdown the size of a tanker truck blocked their path, they detoured along the rocky edge of a ravine. "Watch your step," he warned. Hopping from one wet, moss- covered stone to the next, he tried to avoid tripping on tree roots that were as thick as his upper thigh. Off to his left, a swift-moving stream ran north-south in a gully thirty feet down. The banks were steep. Slippery pine needles and a layer of last year's rotting leaves made walking hazardous. A fall would be long and painful. "You doing okay?" He glanced back at Scully. Rain had plastered her hair to her head and her teeth were chattering nonstop. Her chalky pallor shocked him. She stared back at him with dull, red-rimmed eyes, the left one entirely surrounded by the ugly bruise on her temple. "I think I need to sit for a minute," she admitted. "Just a little further," he urged, pulling her forward. Her hands were ice cold. Her lips blue. He had to get her out of the rain. A densely needled evergreen up ahead looked like it might provide some cover. It wasn't tall enough to attract lightning, but might be thick enough to keep out most of the rain. He stepped forward, heading for it, when the stones beneath his feet rolled and gave way. "Shit!" He struggled to keep his balance, but the ground dropped out from under him and he stumbled over the edge into the ravine, hitting his hip and shoulder hard as he fell. Rolling and skidding, he grasped frantically for a handhold. Gravity hauled him toward the stream. The wind was knocked from his lungs when his ribs hit an outcropping of stone. He somersaulted several more yards through mud and leaves, until he landed with a splash in the water-filled gully. God damn, the water was cold. Gasping for a breath of air, he struggled to his knees and scanned the trees on the upper embankment for Scully. Fuck. Where the hell was she? "Mulder!" He followed the sound of her voice, and spotted her scrambling down to him. She half-jogged, half-slid between boulders and fallen branches. Getting his feet under him, he staggered from the water. Now his teeth were chattering, too, and he imagined his lips were as blue as hers. "Mulder...?" She made it safely down the embankment and rushed to steady him. Eyes rounded with fear, she patted his arms and legs, presumably checking for broken bones. Then she combed through his rain-soaked hair, no doubt trying to rule out head injury. "I'm fine, Scully. Really." He looked down at his mud- streaked, waterlogged clothes. "Just...wet." His words didn't reassure her; she continued to feel him, squeeze his arms, stroke his cheeks. Her hands were shaking, he realized. Apparently his fall had scared her more than it had him. "I'm okay," he said again, capturing her nervous hands between his palms. He brought her trembling fingertips to his lips and kissed them. "Honest." Tears filled her eyes. She opened her mouth to speak, but nothing came out, so she simply nodded, letting him know she believed him. "Let's find a dry place to sit...relatively speaking." He scanned the ravine, looking for any sort of shelter where they might rest and catch their breath. An outcropping caught his eye about a third of the way up the embankment. Tucked beneath its overhang was a shallow notch that looked big enough to hold them both and provide a modicum of protection from the rain. Gathering Scully beneath one wet arm, he helped her climb. The notch turned out to be wider and deeper than he'd first thought, roomy enough for the two of them to sit side by side. With their knees drawn up, they would be completely out of the rain. Water sluiced over the outcropping above it, but the floor of the little cave was bone dry. Moss softened the hard edges of the stone floor and walls. He climbed in first, then offered a hand to her. She allowed him to tug her in beside him, and once they were seated, they backed as far into the cleft as they could. "Comfy?" he asked. "Mm-hm." She slumped against the wall. Lightning continued to flash outside, while thunder vibrated through the ravine. Rain pounded the forest floor, cutting visibility to no more than twenty or thirty feet. He could barely see the stream from where they sat. "Thirsty?" he asked. "Yeah." He leaned forward and cupped his hands beneath the spout of water that was pouring from the rocks above. He managed to hold onto a small amount, which he offered to her. She drank eagerly from the well of his hands. "More?" he asked. "Please." He reached again for the waterfall. "Mulder! Don't move!" He froze, arms outstretched. "What is it?" "Snake." "Bad snake?" "Is there a good kind?" He heard something slither above his head to his left. Then he caught sight of it out of the corner of his eye. Jesus, it was enormous. It oozed out of a hole in the rocks, dropping its head to his eye level. He held his breath while it dangled there, flicking its tongue at him. Christ, the thing's head was as big as a housecat's and its body was as thick as his arm. Shit, when it rains, it fucking pours. -x-x-x-x-x-x-x- CHAPTER THREE "Mulder, don't move." That was easy for her to say -- she wasn't nose-to-nose with a huge, nasty, probably poisonous snake. Mulder held his breath while it explored the air in front of his face with its tongue. It was so close he could see his own panicked expression reflected in its amber eyes. Its skin was tannish-brown, as far as Mulder could tell with his colorblind vision, and it had diamond-shaped markings along its back. Two diagonal stripes ran from behind its eyes to its upper jaw, just forward of the corners of its mouth. The markings didn't tell him much; he knew next to nothing about snakes...other than they tended to have sharp fangs and gave him the creeps. Not that he was *afraid* of them; he just didn't particularly like them. His eyes widened when its tail rattled. *Now* he was afraid. Even a neophyte herpetologist knew a rattlesnake was poisonous. Scully whispered, "Hold perfectly still." He heard her gun slide from its holster. No, no, no, Scully, don't shoot it! It was only an inch or two in front of his face! And she was weak from fever and exhaustion, arms shaky, vision blurred-- CLICK! He flinched when he heard the safety released. She leaned closer, gun held in outstretched hands. Her arms were trembling...badly. He could hear her panting -- quick, shallow, nervous-sounding breaths. Or maybe that was him. She repeated, "Don't move." As if. Her gun inched closer still and the snake began to rattle more furiously. It opened its mouth. Two fangs, wet with venom, glistened inside its gaping jaws, millimeters from Mulder's nose. Shit, shit, shit. Scully's trigger finger slowly squeezed -- BANG! JESUSFUCKINGCHRIST! The gun went off, and the snake's head exploded. The noise was god-awful. Mulder clapped his hands over his ears, too late to block out the blast. Gunpowder seared his cheek. Bits of snake splattered his face, his clothes, the surrounding rocks. He swiped at his eyes, clawed away scraps of gore, and hoped he wouldn't vomit. Scully was saying something to him, but he couldn't hear a word. His ears were ringing badly from the blast. The headless reptile dangled from its crevice, bleeding from its neck onto the stone floor. He yanked it from its hole. "I may be deaf for the rest of my life, but at least we have something to eat now," he said, unable to hear his own voice. The snake was eight feet long if it was an inch. He coiled its thick body into a pile between his legs, and then dug into his pocket for his knife. Scully tapped his arm. Using hand signals, she volunteered to skin and gut the snake. He was tempted to take her up on the offer -- he didn't relish the idea of slicing and dicing a giant snake -- but Scully looked absolutely drained of energy. She held her gun loosely in her lap, shoulders slumped, eyes shadowed by fatigue and fever. "I'll do it," he said, not certain if she could hear him or not. "You rest." He scooted to the edge of the shelter and out into the pouring rain, hauling the headless snake with him. It was too awkward to carry down the steep embankment, so he heaved it into the gully. It hit a ledge about two thirds of the way down, then skidded and rolled to the bottom, where rainwater was chugging through the valley, roiling around rocks, carrying leaves and other debris with it. He half walked, half slid down the muddy hillside, gathered the carcass and dragged it into the chilly water. Wading up to his knees, he searched for a flat stone to use as a work surface. He quickly located one midway across the stream. Once the snake was laid out on the stone, he had abso-fucking- lutely no idea what to do next. Oh, sure, he knew the skin had to come off, and there were probably bones that needed to be removed, as well as guts of some sort that should come out. But did snakes have lungs? Intestines? And what about the venom? Where the hell was that located? Guessing the poison was probably in or near the head, which was now gone, he decided to not worry about it. He rolled the snake onto its back and exposed its belly. Using his knife, he made a shallow cut lengthwise from neck to rattle. He inserted a finger beneath the skin at the neck and tugged. It was difficult to grasp onto at first, but once he got the hang of it, the skin pulled off easily in one unbroken piece. When he got it stripped down to the tail, he cut it away, rattles and all. Well, that hadn't been too difficult. Now for the messy part. Cutting a deeper slit the entire length of the snake's belly, he exposed its guts. He plowed the viscera out with his thumb, slopping them into the stream. Bile stung the back of his throat as he shook a stubborn, sticky rope of entrails from his fingers. Unlike Scully, he hated touching the insides of things. Slicing the meat into six-inch chunks was easier and less messy than the gutting. He rinsed each piece in the stream, cleaning off any blood and unidentified slime. It surprised him how much the sight of the raw meat made his mouth water. There was no way to cook it, of course, but at this point he was too famished to care. And he doubted Scully would be squeamish about eating it either. Hell, he'd seen her eat a live bug once. The amount of meat was substantial. He needed to find some way to carry it. Leaving it temporarily on the stone, he waded to shore to find an appropriate container or plate. Ferns? Cedar boughs? Bark? He crossed to a birch tree and, using his knife, cut a vertical slit in its smooth white bark. It pulled easily away from the trunk in a large, rectangular sheet. Tah-dah! Instant platter. Eat my dust, MacGyver. He returned to the stream and mounded the meat onto the bark. He estimated he had about ten pounds altogether -- a veritable feast for an Ice Age king and queen. Carrying it proved more awkward than he'd anticipated. Two steps from the stream and the topmost chunk tumbled onto the ground. He stooped to grab it out of the dirt. Dried leaves and mud clung to its sticky surface. "Five second rule." No sense throwing away perfectly good food. He shook off the debris and stuffed it into his mouth. Jesus, it tasted wonderful, even with the dirt. A little stringy. And bony. But firm and fleshy. Different from anything he'd ever eaten, but in a good way. He carefully extracted two needle-sharp bones from between his teeth and flicked them to the ground. That's when he saw it. The distinct imprint of a human foot in the mud beside the stream. The foot was bare, smaller than his own, but considerably larger than Scully's, and the little toe was missing. The print was relatively fresh; water filled the impression, but the mud still held its shape despite the downpour. Mulder glanced over his shoulder and scanned the surrounding woods. The banks of the ravine rose steeply, twenty to thirty feet on either side of the gully. Large old growth evergreens, widely spaced with trunks as big around as train cars, lined the upper rim. The understory was clogged with blowdowns, ferns and large boulders. Plenty of cover for anyone who wanted to hide. Nothing appeared to move on the ridge or in the ravine, but his gut told him he was being watched, and the feeling prickled the back of his neck. He examined the footprint more carefully. Left foot. About a size nine or ten, men's. He wondered what happened to the toe. The track pointed downstream, so he followed it and soon discovered two distinct sets of prints, the second slightly smaller than the first, with all ten toes. The plate of meat was growing heavy. And he was starving. It was still raining hard -- a cold steady deluge that chilled him to the bone. Better eat first and then follow the strangers on a full stomach, he decided. Turning back toward the shelter, he hiked up the embankment. At the cave he found Scully asleep, gun cradled in her lap. Dirt streaked her face and pine needles stuck to her hair. The bruise around her eye reminded him of a Rorschach's inkblot and he was sure he could see the shape of a grim-looking mastodon in its blue-black silhouette. "Scully?" She stirred at the sound of his voice and her eyelids fluttered open. Evidently her hearing was okay. His was slowly returning, too, although noises, including his own voice, still sounded tinny and a million miles away. "Let me help." She reached for the platter and set it on her lap. Hands now free, he eased into the shallow cave, ass end first. It was a cozy fit with the two of them wedged side-by-side. "You're freezing." She wiped water from his dripping chin. "Wanna warm me?" he asked through chattering teeth. He leaned more heavily into her and exaggerated his shivering. Water rained from his hair onto her jacket. "Mulder!" She gave him a gentle nudge with her elbow. "You're soaking wet." True. Water was pooling uncomfortably beneath him. Beneath them both. "Eat up. It's good," he said, hoping to divert her attention from the growing wet spot. "You started without me?" "Just a sample." She selected a chunk and bit into it. "Mmm. Y'right. S'good." "Watch out for bones." He helped himself to a large portion. They ate for several minutes without speaking, eager to fill their empty bellies. The mound dwindled faster than Mulder would have guessed. Scully ate as ravenously as he did, matching him piece for piece. Soon, more than half the meat was gone, replaced by a stack of delicate rib bones. She leaned back with a satisfied moan, and proceeded to lick her fingers clean, one at a time. He watched her, hypnotized by the way each dainty finger disappeared into the circle of her lips. Jesus, she had no idea how sexy she looked. Hair tousled, cheeks flushed, a scrap of raw snake stuck to her chin. It was all he could do to stop himself from grabbing her and licking that lucky piece of meat right off her-- Poised to swoop in like a Pleistocene buzzard on a fresh mastodon carcass, he felt himself growing hard. He was hyper- aware of every move she was making, every breath she was breathing, the way her tongue was swirling seductively around her left thumb. Imagining that pretty little tongue licking snake slime from his own fingers...oh...God... When she slid her middle finger deeply into her mouth, he almost groaned out loud. She stopped mid-lick to look over at him. As if reading his mind, she sloooowly withdrew her finger from her mouth. It made a delightful kissing noise when it popped free. Was she coming on to him? "Did you swallow a, uh, bone, Mulder?" she asked, her tone sultry. Okay, *that* was definitely a come on. She must have noticed the boner in his pants was pressing uncomfortably against his zipper. He wanted like hell to readjust himself. Fuck, he wanted *her* to readjust him. Mouth agape, he racked his brain for a smart-ass retort, but came up blank. Scully had turned the tables on him, upsetting the natural order of their relationship. *He* was supposed to lob the innuendoes and then she was supposed to ignore them. After five years, a precedent had been set, a pattern had been established. This unexpected role reversal made him wonder if there was something in the prehistoric air affecting her, or him, or both of them. Maybe it was the snake meat. "I thought you might have a..." -- Scully selected a slender snake rib from the pile of bones and held it up for him to see -- "caught in your throat." She used the flat edge of the bone to trace a tickling path over his bobbing Adam's apple. She *was* flirting with him. Wasn't she? Or was he just imagining it? Shit. He had no fucking idea. Somewhere he'd read that the human male thinks about sex approximately once every five minutes. At the time, he thought the estimate sounded a bit conservative, but he'd been willing to let it go. Hell, he was younger then, and averages were just averages. Besides, someone had to be on the upper end of the scale to balance out all those politically correct Men of the '90s who never, ever had sexual fantasies about the women they worked with. Lying bastards. Okay, big deal if he *occasionally* pictured Scully...uh...how could he put this delicately? Fucking him blind? Was it really so wrong? Yes, yes, he understood the evils of sexual harassment, he really did; he'd been to the seminars, had the sensitivity training. But come on, his feelings for Scully went waaaay beyond simple lust. For chrissake, he *loved* h-- Don't go there, Mulder, do *not* go there, he told himself. She is *not* interested in you that way. Just concentrate on something unsexy and get past this. Flukeman. Nope. Leonard Betts' head. Nope. Peacock brothers. Nope, nope and nope. This wasn't helping. Okay, bring out the big guns: Bill Scully, Jr. defending his sister's honor by pounding the crap out of her hound dog partner. Bingo. Worked like a charm every time. Ardor diminishing, Mulder signaled to Scully that she had some food on her chin. "You've...uh..." "Oh, thanks." She scrubbed her face with a fingertip. "That was delicious. I'm full." "Mm. Me, too." He selected a bone from the pile and used it to pick meat from between his teeth. "Just like Thanksgiving. All we need now are a couple of La-Z-Boys and a football game." She slid the platter of leftovers to the front of the shelter, out of the way of their feet. "No TV, no remote, no cable -- you're going to slip into catatonic shock. You realize that, don't you?" "I miss my VCR already." Which reminded him, "I'm gonna have a hell of an overdue triple-X bill when I get back." "Am I supposed to feel sorry for you?" "No more than usual." Would Skinner notice if he added the cost of the videos to their expense account? Yeah, he probably would since he'd never signed the 302 in the first place. Their trip to Hill Air Force Base was unauthorized. "Who's your favorite redheaded porn star, Scully?" She arched an eyebrow at him, but said nothing. "Sorry. My five minutes were up." The other eyebrow rose, giving her a "what the hell does that mean?" look. "Never mind." He sighed, feeling full and content. They listened to the rain for a minute or two without speaking. Lightning flashed in the east and Mulder silently counted the seconds between the flash and the rumble of thunder -- a game he and Sam used to play. They would sit on the porch at Quonochontaug, estimating the distance of an approaching storm as thunderclouds, gray as the sea, plowed northward along the coastline, bringing the smell of rainwater and the promise of cooler air. Eight-one-thousand, nine-one- thousand, ten-one-thousand...a soft rumble would ricochet against the shore. Then when the storm finally closed in, Sam snuggled beneath his arm. Goosebumps dotted her bare arms and legs, and she shivered against him, insisting she was chilly, not scared. But he wasn't fooled. She was just putting on a show of bravery, the way she always did whenever she wanted to prove she was as courageous as any boy. A lot like Scully. Instinctively he wrapped an arm around Scully. To his surprise and delight, she didn't shrug him off, but settled comfortably against him. Another flash of lightning brightened the sky. One-one- thousand, two-one-- "Mulder, how are we going to get home?" He had no answer. For all he knew, they might be stuck here permanently. "I don't know." She turned to look up at him. "We can't give up. We have to try *something.*" "I haven't given up. I just don't have any useful suggestions right now." More lightning. The storm seemed to be circling around. "We need to go back to the field where we first arrived," she said, sounding determined. "To do what?" "Wait for the time portal to reopen." "How long do we wait, Scully? There may not be a portal. Ever." He knew she didn't want to hear this. "We have to consider the possibility we may never get back." "I won't accept that. I can't." She targeted him with angry eyes. "Can you?" "I don't know that we have a choice." He didn't want to fight with her. They needed to work on this together. "I saw some footprints," he said, trying to redirect the conversation. "Human footprints?" "Yes. Down by the stream. When I was cutting up the snake." "Who do you think they belong to?" She looked hopeful. Probably not a rescue party, he thought. "You took anthropology in college. You tell me. What do you remember about early human groups in North America?" She frowned and thought for a minute. "The oldest reliably- dated human remains were only about 11,500 radiocarbon years old...that's 13,350 calendar years." "What were the people like? Were they friendly?" "No one knows for sure. The fossil records indicate they were nomadic, living in familial groups of about fifty men, women and children. They were artisans and skilled big-game hunters. They followed migrating animals, like mastodons and mammoths, camels, peccaries, stag-moose, musk-oxen...you can stop me at any time, Mulder." "Sounds like they had plenty to eat." "Mm. For a while. A major megafaunal extinction occurred around 11,400 B.P." That sounded ominous. "Caused by what?" "There are several theories. Some scientists believe early humans hunted the animals to extinction. Others claim that a catastrophic climactic event killed them. A third theory posits that humans brought dogs, birds and other animals with them to the New World, and these Old World animals carried viruses that may have killed or weakened American populations, which had no immunity to the new pathogens. Most likely, the extinction was the result of a combination of stressors." "Something extraterrestrial perhaps?" A laugh chuffed from her nose. "You would ask that, wouldn't you?" He shrugged. "Asteroids are extraterrestrial." "Is that what you were thinking?" "Nah," he admitted. He suddenly felt very tired. Three days and two nights without sleep were catching up with him. "I was thinking more along the lines of visitors from outer space, planetary invasion, the usual stuff. Although..." -- he pointed to the rain and wind outside the shelter -- "maybe the explanation is Biblical. This is looking a lot like Noah's flood." "Let's not go there, Mulder." She yawned and rested her head against his shoulder. "We just ate the serpent in this particular Garden of Eden. I hate to think what ramifications there might be in that." Her yawn sparked one of his own. "Dining on the symbolic cause of The Fall. That can't be good." He leaned his head back against the rocks and closed his eyes. "How are you feeling?" he asked, not really expecting an honest answer. "Better, thanks." He brushed her cheek with the back of his fingers, surreptitiously checking for fever. Her skin felt cooler. Maybe getting some food into her had helped. She folded his hand beneath her own. "I'm fine, Mulder. Really." Wrapped by the warmth of her palm, he let his hand lie in her lap. The two of them were safe for now, their bellies full. It was as good a time as any to catch forty winks. * * * "Let's shoot it," Bill, Jr. says, tossing the garter snake onto the ground and aiming his BB gun. Dana is tempted. She loves her new BB gun -- a birthday gift from her brothers. But... "Dad said we're only supposed to shoot cans, Bill." "Well, Dad's not here, Miss Goody Two Shoes." True, Ahab isn't with them. And Dana hates to be called Miss Goody Two Shoes. Bill, Jr. looms over her left shoulder and chants in her ear, "Dana's a chicken...Dana's a chick--" "I am not." She is a little afraid to disobey her father, but she's not afraid to shoot the snake. Charlie stands off to the side, a big grin on his freckled face. He points his own BB gun at the snake. "Come on, Dane...SHOOT!" The boys fire one shot after another as the snake side-winds, eluding the hailstorm of their BBs. Dana is certain she can hit it. She's a good shot already, as good as her brothers. Better, in fact. She hit five cans out of six! Charlie hit only two. The moving snake is more of a challenge, but she plans to show Bill she's not a chicken or a Miss Goody Two Shoes. Closing one eye, she takes aim. Her heart pounds with excitement. The snake slithers through the autumn leaves, and Dana pulls the trigger. POW! Delight skates up her arms when the gun pops and she sees the snake knocked forward by the impact of her BB. A hit! Dead center! "You got it! You got it!" Charlie's face lights up with admiration. Even Bill, Jr. looks impressed. The three children move closer to inspect the injured animal. Snapped practically in half, it continues to squirm, blood oozing from its wound. Dana kneels and picks it up. It's moving very slowly now. Soon it just hangs limply in her hands. She gives it a little shake. Then a gentle squeeze. A more frantic shake. Nothing rouses it. Is it dead? She didn't mean for it to die. "Starbuck, I warned you. You weren't supposed to shoot at anything but cans." Ahab is sitting at the head of the dinner table, where the family has gathered to eat their supper. His expression is stern and he stares directly at his youngest daughter. She knows he is ashamed of her. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to kill it." She looks down at her dinner plate. Her tears are unstoppable. She wants to put life back into the dead snake, but already her brothers have buried it in the woods and now her father is mad and she can't stop crying. She is to blame for killing the snake and it's going to be dead forever-- "Who are the men who would create a life whose only hope was to die?" Dana hears herself ask, but her plate has disappeared and she is no longer at the dinner table. She is a grown woman, standing in front of a child's coffin. The casket is for Emily, her beloved, lost daughter. Mulder stands beside her. He has brought flowers for her dead child -- a pretty white bouquet, fragile and pale. "I don't know," he answers. "But that you found her and you had a chance to love her...then, maybe she was meant for that too." A chance to give a mother's love to a child. Such a brief blessing and all the more painful because of its brevity. Does Mulder understand how much her heart is breaking over the loss of Emily? She turns away from the coffin to tell him she feels bereft, and is surprised to find he is wearing a flower tucked behind his ear. His suit and tie have vanished; he wears black jeans and hiking boots, and a dead snake is looped around his neck, dangling over his shoulders onto his bare chest. "Touch it," he says. His voice floats past her ears like cottonwood seed on a spring breeze. Puffy clouds slink across a cornflower-blue sky high above his head, while white field flowers nod at his feet. The air smells like fresh grass and cherry blossoms. And him. Masculine. Aroused. She is suddenly aware that her clothes have disappeared and she stands completely naked in front of him. Her partner...oh, God. Embarrassment pounds in her veins, while at the same time, desire tickles her inner thighs, her breastbone, the tips of her breasts. She yearns to touch the snake, and recognizes the urge is Freudian and vaguely inappropriate. Even so... She reaches for it. Tentatively strokes its head. Its amber eyes open and she knows this is going too far. She is crossing a line. "Are you hungry, Scully?" Mulder asks. Concern has etched shadows into his brow. She realizes she is ravenous. The snake stretches forward and prods her palm with its nose. She can't eat it alive, can she? Mulder whispers, "Taste it," and her doubts evaporate at the sound of his voice. Grasping the snake behind its head, she raises it to her lips, opens her mouth, accepts Mulder's gift. The snake glides into her, over her tongue to the back of her throat. It tastes earthy. The texture is surprisingly dry and smooth. It slips past her throat more easily than she would have guessed, considering its size. It feels thick and warm in her neck. She doesn't gag as it wriggles downward toward her belly. "You okay?" Mulder asks. She nods. The serpent now rests in her stomach. She feels deliciously sated and inexplicably happy. Mulder strokes her face and smiles at her. He appears pleased. Satisfied that she is satisfied. "We did it, Scully." He points to her stomach. Her naked belly has grown large. Her skin is stretched tightly across the hard expanse of her abdomen. Mulder strokes the pregnant mound. She feels something move inside her beneath his palm. A baby's kick? Or the uncoiling of a snake? "I'm scared, Mulder." He nuzzles her neck. "Of what?" Hot liquid floods her inner thighs and a painful cramp sizzles in her womb. "Mulder?" In the blink of an eye, she is lying on a hospital bed. The room is familiar. Calumet Mercy Hospital. Chicago. Last week. Only it had been Mulder strapped to the bed rails that time, not her. The Pincus case. A monster that hid in the light. "Mulder?" He is dressed in scrubs and latex gloves. A surgical mask covers the lower half of his face. He stands at the foot of her bed. She feels him grip her ankles, part her legs. "You have to push, Scully." No, no, no. This can't be happening. She can't be pregnant. She is unable to have children. Another stab of pain twists her insides. "Push, Scully! It's up to you." She bears down, unable to stop herself. Oh, God, oh, God, the pain is awful. She can feel herself stretched to the point of tearing as something forces itself from between her legs. The mound of her belly blocks her view. All she can see is the top of Mulder's bowed head as he struggles to help her deliver her child. Suddenly the pain is gone. Mulder looks up, eyes wide with tears. Not tears of joy. He is frightened. Oh, Jesus. Please, no. "I'm sorry." His mask puffs in and out against his face as he pants for breath. She tries to sit up, but the restraints hold her back. "What is it, Mulder?" His head wags with pity. "What *is* it?" "I warned you. You weren't supposed to shoot at anything but cans." He stands straighter and places her baby onto her now- flat belly, only it isn't a baby, just as she knew it wouldn't be, knew it couldn't be. It's the dead, headless snake. Not the little one she killed with her BB gun, but the big Pleistocene one she shot in the cave. "But I *had* to shoot it, Mulder. It was going to kill you. I was trying to save your life!" Mulder tugs the mask from his face, and she sees he is no longer Mulder. He is Ahab. "You made a bad choice, Starbuck." He frowns, turns his back, and walks to the window. His shoulders are broad and stiff. Full of authority and expectation. He draws the curtains back, raises the blinds. Outside is a valley with a silver river winding through it, and on the banks of the river are herds of unfamiliar animals. Saber-toothed cats, camels, giant mastodons. "Dad?" Ahab turns. And he has become Mulder once again. "There's no going back, Scully." "There *has* to be!" She struggles against her bonds. The snake slips off her belly and rolls to the floor. "There has to be...there has to be..." * * * "There has to--" Scully's eyes flew open and she fought to sit upright. Panting, sweat slicking her back, her neck, the palms of her hands, she tried to get her bearings. Restraints no longer bound her wrists. The hospital bed was gone. She was in the rock shelter. Mulder was dozing beside her. A nightmare. She'd had a nightmare. Thank God. None of it was real...except maybe the part about eating the snake. In a way. A very Freudian way. She eyeballed the leftover meat, then kicked it. Bones, bark and meat tumbled out of the cave. Outside in the ravine the rain had stopped and the sun was shining. Evergreen boughs, ferns, moss-covered stones -- everything glistened. Water continued to drip from the upper canopy, slapping the lower branches with an erratic rat-a-tat. Leaning forward to inspect the sky, she squinted against the glare. The west was clear and pale blue, while the east remained dark with clouds. Down in the gully, steam rose from the forest floor as the sun heated the sodden ground. Scully checked her watch. Four-thirty-four. She'd been asleep for more than six hours, and felt better for it. Her headache was gone and it seemed her fever had broken. Mulder stirred beside her, but didn't awaken. This didn't surprise her. He'd been without sleep for three days. His clothes were still saturated and hers weren't much drier. She felt sticky and unclean, and wished she could take a hot shower. Glancing at Mulder's feet, she noticed his boots were soaked. Better get them off him and set them out in the sun to dry. She managed to unlace and gently pull them from his feet without waking him. Deciding to remove his sopping socks while she was at it, she peeled them from his feet one at a time, and found his toes were wrinkled from being wet so long. She placed her palm along the sole of his left foot, testing the temperature of his skin. He felt damp, but warm. He sighed in his sleep when she patted his pruney toes. "I'll be right back," she whispered, intending to climb down to the stream to wash up after setting his footwear out to dry. On an impulse, however, she paused before leaving to stroke his unshaved cheek. His two-day stubble felt prickly against her palm, and it made her realize that he would have a full beard in just a matter of days. She'd never seen him with a beard before. She tried to picture him with his chin and cheeks buried behind a thick layer of whiskers. Unexpectedly, the image caused her to shiver with desire. The Pleistocene air must be making her crazy. On the job, even during off hours, she was usually able to ignore Mulder's physical appeal. Usually. But here in this primeval place, she found herself tantalized by his masculinity. His beard, his height, his weight, the size of his hands, the thickness of his fingers...and just look at those gorgeous feet! Damn it, everything about him seemed to ooze sexuality. All of his manly attributes were conspiring to make her feel, well...horny, to put it bluntly. The depth of his voice, the smell of his sweat, the swell of his Adam's apple, not to mention the bulge-- What the hell was wrong with her? Must be the snake meat. Determined to put temptation behind her, she grabbed his socks and shoes, and scooted out of the shelter. The sunshine felt good on her face and the air smelled earthy after the rain, like Shitake mushrooms and Christmas trees rolled into one delicious natural perfume. She placed Mulder's boots in a sunny spot and laid his socks out to dry on the stone overhang. Then she carefully picked her way to the bottom of the ravine, being watchful of slippery stones. Down in the gully, she took a moment to inspect her surroundings. Mulder had mentioned seeing footprints, but she saw no sign of them. Even his tracks seemed to have been washed away by the rain. She glanced back at the cave where he was sleeping, hidden in the shadows. His boots, perched on a mossy, sun-drenched boulder, and his fluttering socks assured her she wasn't the only living human being left on the entire planet. It was easy to feel alone in this place. And powerless. The world had become gargantuan in the blink of an eye, with its enormous trees, oversized animals, and danger lurking around every corner. How long could they survive here? She wandered upstream a short distance, searching for a spot where the water ran deep enough to take a bath. Eventually she came to a fallen log, which had dammed the stream, creating a wide pool. Mist floated above its inky surface, giving the scene a fairytale feel and reminding her of legendary places like Camelot or Eden. The ravine rose forty feet or more on either side of the stream, banked at a steep angle, craggy with stone and speckled with vegetation. Wild orchids, curly-leafed ferns, emerald-green groundcovers dotted with diminutive, star-shaped blossoms grew on and between the slate-gray ledges. Massive tree roots ran vein-like down the near-vertical embankments, questing for water in the lowlands. The trees themselves guarded the upper banks like giant gnarled soldiers. Sunlight dripped between their splayed fingers to puddle like molten gold on the forest floor. Woodland animals chittered angrily in the branches overhead, making Scully feel she was an unwelcome trespasser. All around, birds screeched -- high-pitched, frantic calls. A desperate, anxious sound. They ballyhooed their territories, extolled their genetic virtues, prepared to drive out unwanted interlopers. The birdcalls prickled her scalp as she stepped to the edge of the pool. She quickly stripped off her coat and draped it over a nearby boulder. Wanting to give herself a thorough washing, including her hair, she removed her turtleneck and her black camisole, and laid them both neatly on top of her coat. The idea of putting the soiled clothes back on after her bath was not a pleasant one, but she was thankful she'd worn several layers. These clothes might have to last a long while, in all sorts of weather. She crouched to untie her boots. A wet knot in her laces stalled her for a minute, but she eventually was able to pick it loose. She stood again and toed off her boots and then removed her socks. Lastly, she unbuckled her belt and slid her pants from her legs, adding them to the pile with her gun, which she balanced on the very top. It felt strange to be standing in the forest wearing nothing but bra and panties, especially since she'd decided to take Mulder's advice literally, and put on something "black and sexy" for their night of funky B&E. Her black silk underwear was a brand new set. Not exactly utilitarian. Made for show more than for wear and tear. What had she been thinking? Kneeling at the edge of the small pool, she dipped her hand into the water. It was startlingly cold -- as icy as if it had just trickled off the Wisconsinan glacier. Well, maybe it had, she realized. She drank from her cupped hands. The water tasted sweet and slightly metallic, and was ice cream-headache cold. A long- legged beetle skated quickly out of her way when she began to wash. Bill used to call insects like these Jesus Bugs, because they were able to walk on water. One time when their mom overheard him using the name she grounded him for a week, which delighted Missy no end. She called him "Bill the Blasphemer" for months afterward. Wishing for a bar of soap, she scrubbed her face and neck with her palms. Then she leaned forward, dipped the crown of her head into the pool, and wetted her hair. Too late she realized she hadn't thought to bring Mulder's comb with her. Water streamed past her ears, preventing her from hearing the approach of footsteps, until a twig snapped behind her. "Mulder?" Twisting to look over her shoulder, she discovered two men standing about an arm's length away, blocking her access to her gun. They had dun-colored eyes set in deeply tanned faces, long corkscrewing beards and dark flyaway hair that fell well below their shoulders. They wore animal skin garments wrapped around their waists and fur capes hung across their muscular shoulders. Each carried a spear and a hide sack. Bone jewelry decorated their ears, necks and upper arms, which were tattooed with dark, geometric patterns. One man, the closest one, was taller than the other by several inches. He was missing a toe on his left foot, and ropey scars scissored up his left leg from his damaged foot to his upper thigh. She guessed they were from animal bites, healed years ago. His forearm was scarred, too. And his face. His left cheek and chin were disfigured by two parallel slashes that ran from his eye to his jaw. Considering the extent of his injuries, it was a wonder he had survived. Both men sniffed the air, their nostrils flaring as they breathed in her scent. The scarred man stepped closer, near enough to jab her bare upper arm with the point of his finger. The poke was so hard it knocked her back on her haunches. He growled something to the smaller man, who smiled. Their proximity set her heart hammering and she chided herself for putting herself at risk this way. "Li-chi tse-gah!" shouted the scarred man, startling her. "Li-chi," the smaller man repeated, more softly. They moved in, crowding her. She wanted to rise up but thought they might mistake any sudden move on her part as a threat, so she hunkered low and hoped like hell they didn't want to harm her. The scarred man reached for her again, and it took all her willpower not to duck out from under his hand. He patted her hair, his touch tentative, curious. "Li-chi," he repeated, this time in a whisper. Combing his fingers through her hair, he suddenly laughed out loud, a harsh, gritty sound that crackled from his throat. The other man laughed, too, then stuttered a few words and pointed at her breasts. Bending low for a closer look, the scarred man studied her black bra. He stroked the fabric, running his index finger down one strap. He hooked his finger behind the silky cup, tested its smoothness by rubbing it between his finger and thumb. "Ne-zhoniiii..." She wasn't sure if that was a word or a sigh. When he suddenly prodded her breast, she slapped his hand. "Don't," she warned. He drew back and began jabbering at her, his tone angry and maybe a little frightened. The other man watched, poised to run or stay, depending on what happened next. She realized this was probably her best opportunity to go for her weapon. Springing to her feet, she tried to lunge past the scarred man. His arm shot out, blocking her. Lightning fast, he grabbed her hair and yanked, bringing her up short and then forcing her to her knees. Both men were yammering now. Damn it, he was dragging her away from the pool. She filled her lungs and screamed as loudly as she could. "Mulllderrrr!" * * * "Scully?" Mulder blinked awake. Had she called out to him or was it just a dream? She wasn't in the shelter, that much was obvious. He sat up and scrubbed sleep from his eyes with the heels of hands. Where were his boots? Bright sunshine jabbed his eyes when he slid from the cave to locate Scully. He squinted against the glare and quickly found his boots and socks, but Scully was nowhere to be seen. Touching one of the socks, he discovered it was still sopping wet, which meant she hadn't been gone long. "Scully?" he shouted, only to hear his own voice echo back to him. "Sculleeee!" There was no answer. Evidently she hadn't just ducked behind a bush to pee. His heart began to race as all manner of irrational fears zigzagged through his mind. "Scully! Scullllleeeee!" He pulled on his boots, leaving the socks behind and not bothering to tie his laces. Which direction had she gone? And why the hell had she gone alone? He scrambled down the embankment. At the bottom her footprints led downstream and he followed them at a jog. When he spotted two additional sets of prints alongside hers -- one with a missing toe -- he broke into a full run. "Scully? Where are you? Sculleee!" He bulldozed through a patch of waist-high ferns only to be stopped dead in his tracks by the sight of her black, silk camisole lying on a boulder. Blood roared in his ears and his legs felt like rubber as he lurched toward it. Fuck, fuck. He grabbed it and hugged it to his chest while he tried to make sense of what might have happened here. Her tracks, now barefoot, and the strangers' clearly showed signs of a struggle. Find her...find her...find her... The footprints led further downstream, where the sides of the ravine were too steep to climb. That meant Scully and the two men would have to stick close to the stream, at least until the land flattened out. But there were so many places to hide. Trees, shrubs, boulders, crevices. Find her! "Sculleee!" Please, please answer. In the distance he heard her faint yell. "Mulder!" He aimed for her voice and ran for all he was worth. x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER FOUR The stream rushed through the ravine like blood through the veins of a hunted beast. Mist shrouded the entire gorge and pointed firs lined the upper embankment like rows of colossal shark's teeth. The scarred man followed the flow of water, hauling Scully by the hair along a swampy, overgrown path, while his companion trotted a few paces behind, lugging the packs, spears, Scully's clothes and her gun. Briars clawed their bare legs and bit into Scully's unprotected feet. Kicking, cursing, throwing punches, she tried to free herself, but the scarred man ignored her blows and maintained his tight grip on her hair. She dug in her heels at every opportunity, flailed her fists, scratched his arms and face, drawing blood...along with what was undoubtedly a string of caveman curses. She swore back at him. "Bastard! Let me go, you son of a bitch!" They continued on that way for more than three quarters of a mile, with Scully struggling and arguing. Physically she was no match for the scarred man, but even so she was prepared to be as contrary as she needed to be to slow his progress and give Mulder a chance to catch up with them. From somewhere far behind them he called her name again. She returned his shout, screaming at the top of her lungs. Her cry earned her a wallop; the scarred man struck her hard in the mouth, splitting her lower lip. Blood spattered her chest, her arms, the ground, and she hissed with pain. Scarface drew back his fist to strike again, daring her to defy him. Damn Neanderthal. She had no intention of giving in to his bullying. Eight million years out of Africa, and she was being hauled off by the hair? This fucking caveman was pissing her off! Glowering at him, she shouted, "MULLL--" Knuckles plowed into her jaw, causing an explosion of pain that dropped her to her knees. The grip on her hair was the only thing that kept her from falling flat on the ground. The scarred man must have sensed her next scream coming, because he jerked her to her feet and pressed his huge palm tightly over her bruised lips, locking her jaw with granite fingers so that she could neither scream nor bite. Son of a bitch must have done this before. "Tehi," he growled into her ear, securing her with the crook of his arm. He steered her roughly toward the stream. "Kut." She reached up to dig at his eyes, but he dodged her scraping nails and tightened his hold, towing her into the water, hand still clamped over her mouth. Her bare feet slipped and stumbled on the wet stones. Her toes went numb almost instantly in the ice-cold water. Trying to pull away from his one-armed bear hug, she repeatedly punched him -- in the stomach, in the chest. He ignored her blows...until she aimed for his groin. Catching hold of her swinging fist with his free hand, he held it firmly in place. "Nil-ta," he said, chuckling. His companion laughed, too. "A-nah-ne-dzin." They continued wading downstream. The water was picking up speed, sucking at Scully's legs with every step. A waterfall thrummed somewhere up ahead. About a hundred yards short of the falls, the scarred man dragged her to shore. His hand still held her jaw, and her split lip throbbed beneath his palm. Blood filled her mouth. Unable to spit it out, she swallowed it. Scarface manhandled her to the edge of a cliff where the falls tumbled eighty feet or more into a valley. At the bottom, the land flattened out into a floodplain of dense forest and interlocked ponds. The valley appeared trapped in the embrace of two, jagged mountain ranges. Scully looked out across acres of treetops. Pools of wind-scuffed water peeked through the canopy like the glittering eyes of predatory animals, skulking beneath the murky foliage. Without warning, the scarred man seized her around the waist, hoisted her off her feet, and slung her over one shoulder. Jaw finally freed from his iron grip, blood poured from her mouth and she began to shout at the top of her lungs. "Muldermuldermul--" A knife pricked the back of her bare thigh as her captor pressed its sharp stone blade to her leg, silencing her once and for all. He continued to hold the weapon against her as he lugged her down the cliff, where twisted tree roots and slanted stone outcroppings served as steps. Obviously born to this terrain, both men climbed with the natural skill of mountain goats. The added burden of her weight seemed to have little effect on the scarred man; he wasn't even breathing hard when he reached the bottom. "Lit." He pivoted to look back up the hill, raising his nose in the air and sniffing. The smaller man turned and sniffed, too, then rattled off a sentence or two that brought a frown to the other man's face. Concern darkened their eyes and they slipped into the forest's shadows, with Scully still draped over the bigger man's broad shoulder. * * * "Sculleeee!" Clutching her camisole tightly in his fist, Mulder careened toward the sound of her voice. Her tracks disappeared into the stream along with those of the men. Now he had to rely on his FBI training, eyeballing both banks for any sign that she or her kidnappers might have left the water for higher ground. Why wasn't she wearing her boots? Or her camisole? The silky undergarment slapped his thigh with every stride, conjuring up a picture of her with no shirt, no shoes, and two Ice Age Don Juannabees doing things he'd rather not think about. If those bastards harmed her... He pumped his legs faster, taking longer strides. Images of past threats floated unbidden through his mind: Warren Dupre, Donnie Pfaster, Gerry Schnauz. Scully's life was in danger. Again. Adrenaline flooded his body, hammered his chest and thundered in his ears, making him deaf to everything except the memory of Scully's faint cry for help. A dark, shiny blotch on the bank up ahead caught his eye. He waded through briars, ignoring their pull and his god-awful fear. In three strides, he reached the stain, and crouched over it. It was blood. Lots of blood. On the stones, the leaves, the mud. Was it Scully's? Damn it. He would kill those sons of bitches. The men's footprints were clearly visible in the mud. Scully's prints, however, had vanished. One of the men must be carrying her. A spotty trail of fresh blood revealed the kidnappers had taken a path down a near-vertical hillside, where the stream thundered into a valley below. Stuffing Scully's camisole into his jacket pocket, Mulder descended after them. The steep path wound around boulders, over narrow, stone ledges, between trees that clung precariously to the embankment, their twisted roots providing meager footholds. His boots slipped in the mud, skidded over loose gravel. Tangled vines snagged his toes. He was constantly on the brink of losing his balance. Halfway to the bottom, he caught a whiff of woodsmoke. His first thought was that Scully's captors had decided to camp somewhere down below and were preparing a cook fire, until he realized the odor was coming from above, to the south. It was possible there were other men in the area. And they weren't apt to be any friendlier than the two he was following. Mulder scanned the surrounding hillside for more blood. The spots were smaller here and spaced farther apart: on a rock to his left and several feet further down on the bark of a fallen tree. He scrambled past it, his sense of urgency ballooning. * * * Jogging through the forest along a nearly invisible trail, the scarred man kept his knife pressed to Scully's thigh. Its blade scraped painfully with every jouncing step, reminding her to keep silent and still. The second man followed only a pace or two behind the first. Scully tried to memorize the route they were taking, but the trees all looked alike and her upside-down view was confusing. Tree roots, ferns, her captors' running feet...she could see little else. The men's bare feet were heavily calloused, their legs tanned and crisscrossed with scrapes and fine scars. Quiet as cats, they made almost no noise as they navigated through the lowland forest. Scully's jaw throbbed where she'd been struck, but her lip was no longer bleeding. That wasn't necessarily a good thing. No blood meant no trail for Mulder to follow. Her hope of being released or rescued grew dimmer with each new path her captors took. They veered off in yet another direction, where the trees became sparser and the terrain more flat and sandy. It was here that the men finally slowed to a walk and exchanged a few words -- the first they'd uttered since the waterfall. Their tones sounded almost casual now, as if they were confident they had lost Mulder. The smaller man bounded around his bigger companion like an excited child, asking questions, laughing a lot. Too much, evidently. Scarface soon became irritated and growled at the smaller man, effectively shutting him up. They stopped when they reached a clearing where the forest gave way to a view of a small lake. A ratty tent-like structure sat near the shore. It was made of animal hides that had been loosely lashed together and draped over some sort of curving supports, giving the shelter a dome-like shape. Scully was unceremoniously dumped onto the pebbly beach, where she fell hard on her backside, her dignity jarred along with her tailbone. She landed between the tent and the remains of a cooking fire. Traces of smoke still sifted up from the ashes. Small Man tossed his gear, along with Scully's clothes and gun, behind the tent. She desperately wanted to get to the gun, but Scarface was already squatting in front of her, blocking her way. The smaller man tended the fire. "Li-chi tse-gah," the scarred man said, his eyes focused on her hair. She recognized his words from before, back at the pool. He reached for her and combed his thick fingers through her hair. Then his attention dipped to the cross at her neck. With the tip of one ragged finger, he traced its delicate chain down to her cleavage. "Don't touch me." She shoved his hand away. He scowled. "Ha-gade!" He reached for the necklace again and, this time, yanked it off her, breaking its chain and raising a razor-thin welt on the back of her neck. "Ha-gade," he repeated, shaking it in his fist. "Give that back." She grabbed for it, but he quickly tucked it away inside a small pouch he wore around his neck. She loathed the way his glittering eyes studied her. Sitting with her knees drawn up, she tried to hide as much of her body from his curious stare as possible. Nostrils flaring, he leaned forward and sniffed her: her neck, her lips, her shoulder...her cleavage. Suddenly he grabbed her knees, forcefully spread her legs apart, and inhaled deeply. "Stop it!" She scrambled backward. He laughed and grabbed hold of her ankles. She fought him as he dragged her back toward him. The smaller man stopped tending the fire to watch them. "Nih-tsa-goh-al-neh." The scarred man licked his lips and then opened the skins at his waist to reveal his swollen penis. No, she wasn't going to let this happen. She kicked at him. Grabbed a fistful of stones and hurled them at his face. The stones bounced off his upraised arm. He signaled to the smaller man, who rose from the fire to stand behind her. Evidently they had no intention of letting her escape. The scarred man took hold of her upper arms and drew her to him. She pummeled him with her fists, boxed his head and ears, but more quickly than she would have thought possible, he flipped her over onto her hands and knees and then pushed his own knees between her legs, spreading her thighs with his own. He leaned over her back and pressed her head to the ground with his left hand, while he steadied her hips with his right. She struggled to escape, but he held her head firmly and pinned her legs in place by pressing his knees onto her calves. Bent over, she could see nothing but the muddy, calloused feet of the smaller man, who silently waited his turn. "Leave me alone! Get off me, you damn son of a bitch!" The scarred man yanked her panties down, exposing her backside. Anger and embarrassment raged through her. No, no, no! *Please*, no. She held her breath against the stink of her assailant's sweat. Felt the tickle of his beard on her shoulders as he draped himself over her. His engorged penis prodded the backs of her legs. "NOOOOOO!" * * * "Get the hell away from her!" Mulder bellowed from the edge of the woods. Seeing Scully dressed in nothing but her panties and bra and mounted from behind by a hulking Neanderthal filled him with unimaginable rage. It didn't occur to him to pull his gun; the only thing he could think to do was wring the fucker's neck with his bare hands. He launched himself at Scully's assailant, screaming at the top of his lungs as he crossed the clearing. The startled caveman had no time to react before Mulder plowed into him full force, shoulder to ribs, toppling him from Scully's back. He grunted from the impact and they both rolled toward the blazing campfire. Mulder scrambled to his feet. The Neanderthal did the same, rising like a mountain in front of him. The brute was thickset, as muscular as Conan the Barbarian, his limbs, chest and face streaked with deep battle scars. He balled his fists, puffed his chest, and locked eyes with Mulder. Mulder straightened to his full height, a satisfying inch or two taller than his brawny opponent. "You okay, Scully?" he called, not taking his eyes off Conan. When she didn't immediately answer, he chanced a quick glance over his shoulder and discovered the smaller man had her in a hammerlock. She was struggling to free herself, clawing at his arms and elbowing his ribs. "Scull--" Granite knuckles plowed into Mulder's jaw, rocking him back on his heels. He regained his balance and struck back. Missed. Threw a second punch and, this time, connected. Jesus, it felt like he'd hit stone. Conan appeared unfazed by the blow. He sneered and raised his fists...fists that had held Scully hostage only moments ago, fists that had pushed her head to the ground -- Mulder missiled at him, skull to gut. A satisfying yowl exploded from Conan's lungs as he was knocked backward. Mulder pressed his advantage. He threw a haymaker that failed to connect when the other man ducked. Conan responded with a punch of his own. It hit Mulder with astonishing force and sent him tumbling. He landed on the ground with a spine-jarring jolt. Conan wasted no time coming after him. He leapt on top of him, wrapped thick fingers around his throat and pressed forceful thumbs into his larynx. Mulder thrashed and bucked as the pressure on his throat intensified. His lungs hitched for oxygen. Desperate, he clapped the heels of his hands against Conan's ears. The impact knocked the man back. Gulping for air, Mulder scrambled to his feet. "Scully?" he gasped, not daring to take his eyes off the scarred bastard long enough to look for her. He could hear the scuffle of feet several yards behind him, the dull thud of a punch, a low, masculine grunt. "I'm..." -- another grunt from her attacker -- "I'm okay, Mulder." Conan growled and charged, bulldozing Mulder across the campsite toward the shelter, where an uppercut sent him pinwheeling onto the tent. The skins collapsed beneath his weight. Conan leapt on him and began pummeling him in the ribs. Mulder responded by kneeing the Neanderthal in the groin. Conan yelped, curled into a ball, and rolled off him to lie on the ground, moaning, hands clamped over his genitals. Mulder staggered to his feet to help Scully, who was being dragged off into the woods by Little Big Man. Before he could take a step, Conan grabbed his ankle and yanked his legs out from under him. Mulder toppled and hit the ground hard. He twisted onto his back. Conan scrambled to his feet, took hold of his right leg and began dragging him down the beach toward the lake. Mulder grappled for a handhold and craned to get a glimpse of Scully. He was shocked to discover she was no longer on the beach. Little Big Man was gone, too. Fuck, where were they? Desperate to free himself, he fumbled for his gun, chiding himself for not remembering it sooner. He drew the weapon. Aimed-- Conan jerked on his leg and the gun bounced from his hand. It landed with a metallic thud just out of reach. He frantically tried to retrieve it, but Conan pulled him into the water. Jesus, his leg felt like it was being ripped from the socket. Once in the lake, Conan dove on top of him and sank him to the bottom. Mulder tried to keep his head above the surface, but the scarred man pressed his shoulders into the mud. Waves closed over his face. He peered up through a blur of silt and bubbles and churning water to see the bastard was grinning at him. Conan had him pinned in place and was enjoying his escalating panic. Or maybe he was already thinking about what he was going to do to Scully as soon as Mulder was out of the picture. Did he plan to finish what he started? Or was it going to be a repeat performance? Had Mulder been too late? Had the bastard already raped her? And what about the other guy? Was he taking his turn right now? Outraged, Mulder dug down for every ounce of strength in him. He rose up out of the water and shoved Conan back. Bone to muscle, he bullied him toward shore, where he threw his entire six-foot frame at the mother-fucker's goddamned, sorry ass. Nothing, *nothing* was going to stop him until this son of a bitch was dead. He pushed and pushed and pushed, maneuvering the scarred man up the beach, connecting every punch, relishing the surprised look on Conan's bug-eyed face. He landed three more hard hits. Knocked Conan onto his back beside the fire. Lunging, he body-slammed his startled opponent, and pinned him to the ground. They lay nose to nose. Mulder could smell the man's sour breath, the sharp odor of his sweat, the tang of his anger. Conan's eyes fell to half-mast as he studied Mulder's bloodied nose. Suddenly he broke into a satisfied grin. What the hell? Mulder glanced over his shoulder just in time to see Little Big Man swing a charred stick of driftwood at his skull. He ducked and raised an arm, deflecting the blow. The upper end of the club glowed with fire. Smoke and sparks spewed in an outward arc when Little Big Man swung again, clubbing Mulder in the shoulder and dislodging him from the scarred man's chest. "Two against one? That's not fair." Mulder somersaulted out of the way as the club came down a third time. "Guess that's how you cave guys like to operate, huh?" Little Big Man drew back for another strike. He swung the weapon like a Louisville Slugger, connecting this time with Mulder's ribs. Mulder folded in pain. The men laughed and moved in on him. Little Big Man aimed the club at Mulder's bowed head, but was stopped in mid-swing when a blast from Scully's gun bored a hole through his right hand and blew the stick from his grasp. The man's eyes rounded at the sound of the gun and the sudden appearance of the wound. He howled in pain. Conan turned to gape at Scully, who stood twenty feet away, dressed in nothing but her black, silk underwear, her Smith & Wesson now aimed at his chest. The wounded man was the first to run. The other blinked in astonishment, seemingly undecided what to do. When he finally made up his mind, he aimed hateful eyes at Mulder, snarled menacingly and bolted for the woods. "Why do I get the feeling we haven't seen the last of those two?" Mulder rubbed his aching ribs and stiffly retrieved his lost gun. Scully remained where she was, hands shaking, mouth pressed into a tight line, eyes filling with tears. "Scully...?" He limped toward her. Trembling all over, she lowered her gun and sank slowly to her knees. * * * She hurt all over: her jaw, her neck, her calves. Mulder crouched beside her and gathered her into his arms. He held her tenderly, and she responded by leaning into the welcome curve of his over-heated body. She only half-listened as he repeated, "You're okay, you're okay." She concentrated on the rapid thud- thud-thud of his heart beneath her cheek, feeling safe in his embrace, momentarily protected from the evils of the Pleistocene world. Oh God, if he hadn't arrived in time... She bit down on her swollen lip and held back her tears. She wanted to explain to him what had happened while he was fighting with the scarred man. How the smaller man had dragged her into the woods, tied her up with a strip of rawhide so that he could go back to help his friend. She'd managed to loosen the bindings and find her gun. She'd intended to kill the small man when she saw him swing that awful burning log at Mulder's head, but her shot missed its mark. The words wouldn't come, not without tears, and she refused to cry. Mulder was right -- she was okay. He was okay. They would be fine. She felt drained of every ounce of energy, so spent that when Mulder pulled her into his lap, she let him. When he slipped one arm beneath her knees and the other behind her back, lifting her up as he stood, she allowed that, too. And she didn't object when he carried her to the shore and into the water. Gilded by a setting sun, the lake's surface shimmered as he plowed through it. He waded out until he stood thigh deep, then he carefully, slowly lowered himself to his knees, dipping her beneath the waves as he sank. The water was chilly, but it took the sting out of her scratched, bruised skin. And the heat of his legs, chest and arms radiated into her numbed limbs, cushioning her with their warmth. He eased back on his haunches and cradled her in his lap. Wetting one hand, he began to gently wash blood from her cheek. "Too cold?" he asked when she shivered. "No." Her shiver was a reaction to his tender caress, not the temperature of the water. His left arm buoyed her while he scooped clean water over her injuries. Her shoulders, her arms, her fingers. He gave special attention to each scraped knuckle, loosening the dirt and dried blood. He didn't speak as he caressed her raw flesh. She surrendered to his care, allowing him to wash the filth from her body and hair. Again and again his fingers swirled over her, his touch displacing theirs, washing away their ugly intentions. Her blood tinted the water pink around them. She needed him to do this, she realized. She needed him to cleanse away their brutality. His thumb grazed her breast and she gasped. "Sorry." He stopped his ministrations. A streak of mud in the shape of a large handprint stained her cleavage. He stared at it and waited, apparently unwilling to wipe it away without permission. "It's okay," she said. Still, he didn't move. Eyes glossed with uncertainty, he searched her face, her eyes, as if trying to decipher her true feelings. "Really, Mulder. It's okay," she assured him, and to prove it, she took his hand and placed it on her breast. He swallowed hard. A sigh stuttered from his lungs. Then he began to slowly wash her. "Where's your cross?" he asked, his voice tighter than she ever remembered hearing it. He massaged the mud from her skin, sliding his wet thumb over the smooth mound of her breast, dipping, just barely, beneath the satin of her black bra. Although his touch was gentle, she could feel emotion boiling beneath his controlled caress, anger toward the men who did this to her, regret that he hadn't arrived sooner. "He took it," she answered. "The scarred man took it." Mulder shook his head; anger hissed from his nose. A muscle twitched along his jaw and the veins in his neck bulged. He tried to hide his rage beneath lowered lashes, his attention focused on his task, but his breathing was shallow and too fast, and his nostrils flared with every exhalation. As a doctor, she knew he was experiencing a sustained, involuntary physiological reaction to the threat against them. His heart rate, pulse, respiration still soared. Blood sugar, lactic acid, the cortisol that had readied his body to fight still dilated his eyes, quickened his impulses, intensified his awareness. "Scully...did they--" His voice cracked and stalled. "No, Mulder. I'm okay." Two tears slipped from beneath his lowered lashes to drizzle down his flushed cheeks. His mouth opened, but no words came. The sound of swallowed grief hummed faintly, briefly, in the back of his throat. * * * They had no right... No right to touch her... He would have killed them if she hadn't intervened. He wanted to kill them still, for putting their hands on her, hurting her, trying to... Fuck! She was *his*, God damn it! His! He loved her. He had loved her for years, wanted her for years, but had waited, curbed his urges, because he believed he should win her heart before yielding to his physical desires. Now he felt cuckolded by a couple of fucking Neanderthals. His hand lingered on her breast. He couldn't bear to remove it, yet he couldn't bear touching her either. Jesus, he wanted her so damn much! More than anything, more than *everything*, he wanted to pin her to the ground and fuck the bejesus out of her. Right now. In spite of what happened, or maybe because of what happened. He wanted to plunge into her, possess her, mark his territory. Claim her as his, forever and ever. He wanted to assure himself she was alive and safe, belonging only to him. The relief of having her beneath him, around him, would feel so...God...damn...good. He felt himself grow hard and his arousal disgusted him even as it excited him. Avoiding her eyes, he preferred not to know if she felt his desire poking her in the backside. To his surprise, her arms snaked around his neck and her bruised lips brushed his cheek, kissing the stream of his tears. "I want you, too," she whispered. When her swollen mouth slid over his, oh God, he was lost. He gathered her in his arms, rose to his feet, and carried her from the water. Mouth fused to hers, he ached to be inside her. Water streamed from them both, leaving a wet trail up the beach to the shelter. She broke their kiss and shook her head. "Not here." He worried she was changing her mind, refusing him. Maybe she was angry at his presumption and audacity. Hell, he was no better than the men who had assaulted her, wanting her for his own pleasure, disregarding her desires. He loathed his actions, wanted to crawl out of his own skin. But she smiled at him, stroked his face, reassuring him, forgiving him. "The skins smell like them," she said. She nodded at the forest. "Take me beneath the trees." A layer of pine needles carpeted the ground below the evergreen boughs. They smelled spicy, clean, nothing like the sweat of strangers. He laid her there. Kissed her nose, her chin, and, ever so gently, her split, swollen lip. Then he gingerly lowered himself on top of her. "You're sure?" he asked. His timing seemed lousy. His reasons even worse. Their first time together should be inspired by love, not an overdose of testosterone and masculine pride. This was wrong. Scully's fingers careened into his hair and she pulled his face down to hers. "Yes. Please." A beautiful flush crept up her neck into her cheeks, making her the most desirable woman he'd ever seen. Her motives stymied him, but his body didn't seem to need or want explanations. He realized he was grinding his hips into her pubic bone, and his own cheeks blazed. What must she think of him? "Take off your wet clothes," she urged. No. This wasn't right. As much as he wanted her, it couldn't be now. Reluctantly, summoning every ounce of his diminishing willpower, he rolled off her and got to his feet. * * * "Mulder?" What the hell was he doing? Why was he walking away? "It's okay. Really." "No. No it's not. This..." -- he gestured at his crotch -- "makes me no better than them." How could he think that? How could he compare himself to those animals? He was nothing like them. *Nothing*. He was respectful and tender and compassionate. She trusted him with her life. And she was willing to trust him with her body. "You're not like them, Mulder. This isn't the same." Scully sat up, drew up her knees and hugged her bare legs. It seemed Mulder had stolen the heat from her body when he walked away, because now she felt suddenly cold. And absolutely alone. She wanted him, yearned for him in a way she never had before. Her craving was elemental, almost more than she could bear. "Maybe it's something in the air," she whispered. Still in silhouette, he spun to face her, hands on his hips. "What?" "I said maybe there's something in the air." "Why...what makes you say that?" "It was a joke." Only it wasn't. Not really. To be honest, she couldn't remember ever wanting him so much. Sure, she'd thought about him in sexual ways before, had had fantasies. He was a sexy guy. But never in five years had her desire for him overwhelmed her this way. Gravel crunched beneath his boots as he returned to her. He sat and dovetailed his fingers with hers. The setting sun gilded his hair like a halo. "Have you been feeling, um...kinda primal...since we came here?" The depth of his voice caused a pleasant loosening of the organs in her abdomen, as if her womb were melting. "P-primal?" She felt absolutely out of control. "You know. Aroused. Horny." That's exactly how she'd been feeling. For a couple of days now. Earlier today, she'd blamed it on the raw snake meat. "Maybe. A little. Uh...more than a little." He remained quiet for a moment. The warmth of his hand singed her entire body. "That's interesting," he said. "Why is it interesting?" "Suppose... we were somehow changed when we traveled back in time." "In what way?" "Stripped of whatever it is that makes us civilized." "Mulder, civilized behavior is learned, not inherited." "Is it? Psychologists have been arguing the case of nature versus nurture for years." His eyes locked with hers, and in them she saw his familiar I've-got-a-theory-so-hear-me-out look. Clearly, he wasn't going to make love to her, at least not anytime soon. She was surprised at how disappointed that made her feel. "Genetic determinism. I've heard the argument before, Mulder, but scientific evidence doesn't support the claim that our genes are solely responsible for our behavior. We're a product of our biology *and* our experiences. Besides, even if it were true that our behavior was genetically determined, the fact remains: you and I were 'civilized' as recently as two days ago. It doesn't track that we would suddenly be uncivilized today." "Maybe traveling back in time turned back the clock on our genes, too, reducing our evolved behaviors to basic animal instincts." "That theory doesn't hold a drop of water. It flies in the face of at least a dozen scientific principles." "Who said anything about science?" "Mulder, if what you're positing were true, why was it I didn't want sex with them, too? Why just you?" "I can't explain that." "Well, I can. Not everything is an X-File." He smiled softly. "No?" "I admit it's tempting to think we're no more than the sum of our genes. It absolves us of responsibility for our actions. Instead of blaming ourselves, we can blame our genetic heritage. It gives us an excuse for lack of self-control." His tiny smile vanished and he released her hand. "Is that what you think? That I just wanted to fuck you and now I'm looking for a way to defend myself?" "Are you denying you wanted to have sex?" "No...I did...I *do*...but not by force. Never by force. You have to believe that, Scully." She reclaimed his hand. "I do. I believe you. But I think the reason for your actions...and mine...have nothing to do with genetic manipulation or time travel." "Then what?" "We're under a lot of stress here--" "It's *not* stress, Scully. We've both been under stress before -- plenty of times -- and I've never...overreacted...this way." "You've never seen two men sexually assault me before either." The memory made her blush and she was grateful for the low light. She didn't want Mulder to see her embarrassment. She felt foolish for going off on her own back at the cave, putting herself in unnecessary danger. Putting him in danger, too. It was irresponsible. The fault was wholly hers and she didn't want him shouldering the blame. He had nothing to feel guilty about. "Mulder, you didn't force yourself on me." "No? Then why does it feel that way?" "I wanted you, too, every bit as much as you wanted me." She took a deep breath. "I still do." He narrowed his eyes. "Why now? Why here? Why not back home, or in Home, Pennsylvania, for that matter, or Chicago during the Pincus case, or the Apalachicola National Forest?" Why not Florida indeed? If memory served, she'd been more than willing to consort with Mulder in his hotel room that night, but he was the one who had shied away in favor of a mutant hunt. "The Pincus case? Mulder, you wound up in hospital restraints during that case. That's a bit kinky for a first time, don't you think?" she joked, trying to lighten his mood. "You know what I mean." He offered her another small smile. "My point is we've had plenty of opportunity, but seemingly no motive...until now." "I'm not sure I agree, but leaving that argument for later, I think your motives in this case may have been more generous than you think." Disbelief chuffed from his nose. "In what way?" "I think you wanted to assuage the actions of my assailants with your own, for my sake. I wanted the same thing, but my reasons were purely selfish." "You give me too much credit--" He stopped and sniffed the air. "Do you smell that?" She inhaled. "Smoke." "Get dressed." He rose to his feet and pulled her up after him. "What is it?" "I'm not sure." Walking to the shore where the view was unobstructed by trees, he dug his binoculars from his jacket and held them up to his eyes. "Mulder?" She quickly gathered her clothes, pulled on her pants, her socks, her boots. "Forest fire," he said. She yanked her turtleneck over her head. Slipped into her jacket. "Headed this way?" "Uh-huh." "How far off is it?" "In the ravine. By the waterfall. I don't think we have a lot of time." She hurried to join him on the beach. Jesus. The entire southern horizon was ablaze with orange-yellow flames. x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER FIVE Klesh sprinted through the darkening woods of Rabbit Basin chasing after his wounded cousin Tse-e, who bawled like a frightened infant as he ran. Fool. His sniveling, along with the scent of fresh blood, would bring long-toothed cats down on them both. And they had enough trouble already -- the appearance of the strangers, the encroaching forest fire, the loss of their gear. The strangers were mystifying. The woman -- Li-chi Tse-gah, Red Hair -- seemed to possess supernatural powers, like those of a vengeful Spirit. Somehow she had wounded Tse-e, knocked the burning club out of his hand from ten paces away. Klesh's ears still rang from the thunderclap that blasted from her pointed fist. It was the loudest sound he'd ever heard. More deafening than any lightning strike or falling tree. How had she made such an extraordinary noise? Red Hair's angry male companion was equally perplexing. He wore odd, close fitting hides that looked and felt like eel skin, black as a moonless night and as smooth as a woman's cheek. The coverings on his feet were peculiar, too, solid on the soles and laced with rawhide. He was beardless, like a boy who was attending his thirteenth or fourteenth Mastodon Feast, yet he had been a formidable opponent, too strong to be a mere boy. Both of the strangers had defended themselves like trapped bears. They babbled in an undecipherable way. Were they speaking the language of Spirits? Twenty paces ahead, Tse-e was no longer running like a startled elk. He hiccoughed as he tried to suck air into overworked lungs. The men had traveled a considerable distance, well beyond Third Rabbit Pond, desperate to escape the otherworldly strangers. "Tse-e!" Klesh called to his cousin. "Ta-akwai-i! Stop!" Out of breath himself, he slowed to a walk. The trail was swampy here, clotted with poisonous moonseed vines and prickly bullbriars. The hazy quarter moon provided little light. Luckily, their path was a familiar one. Klesh and Tse-e had spent three summers in Rabbit Basin, fishing sticklebacks, trapping beaver, and hunting sloth. They could easily find their way, even after nightfall. Klesh glanced over his shoulder at the southern horizon. The forest fire glowed there like the red bellies of stickleback males during mating season. The smell of smoke was strong. He guessed the fire would raze the forest in the basin before midnight, spreading both east and west to the surrounding hillsides. Eventually, the flames would burn themselves out at the tree line, halted by the rocky, treeless ledges and scant snow-cover that still clung to the higher elevations. The men needed to move upland soon if they were going to escape the blaze. "Tse-e!" Klesh shouted his cousin's name again. This time Tse-e did stop and wait, all the while blubbering about the evil red-haired Spirit woman, his words nearly incomprehensible. "Stop howling like a stuck badger," Klesh demanded when he caught up to his younger cousin. He grabbed hold of Tse-e's arm to examine his wound. The hole went clear through, like a spear wound. It still bled, although not too much; congealing blood was beginning to seal the injury on both sides. Good thing. There was nothing to wrap around it. They had been forced to abandon their packs and camp supplies back at First Rabbit Pond. "You will live." Klesh roughly released Tse-e's arm. "I am scared," he whimpered. "You should not have kidnapped Li- chi Tse-gah. She is a Spirit. She and her male protector will kill us." "You are talking crazy. She is not a Spirit," Klesh said, hoping it was true. "I touched her. I smelled her. She is a woman. Just a woman." "But what about this?" Tse-e held up his hand. "How did she do this if she is just a woman?" Klesh had no answer for that. He'd neither seen nor heard anything like it before -- not in any legend told during Prayer ceremonies, nor in any account of a Shaman's dream journeys. There were countless Spirits, some helpful, most not. All possessed varied magical powers. But to be able to wound a man with nothing but a clap of noise? It seemed impossible, even for a Spirit. The man -- Li-chi Tse-gah's angry companion -- was clearly not a Spirit. He had bled like an ordinary clansman when he was struck. He fought for air when he was nearly drowned. He used his fists to defend himself. He was just a jealous mortal, nothing more. The memory of Li-chi Tse-gah's companion angered Klesh. The man had prevented him from mating with Red Hair. And it had been many moon cycles since he had lain with a woman. Although Li- chi Tse-gah was odd looking, she smelled female and felt as sleek as tanned doeskin beneath his hands. Lifting his fingers to his nose, he sniffed them, searching for a trace of her scent. Yes, she still lingered there, and breathing her in stirred his groin. Desire churned in his gut. He would have her. If not today, then soon. He would return to kill her possessive mate, and then take her for himself. Reaching beneath his beard, he grasped the pouch that hung from his neck, fingered its soft hide. He could feel Red Hair's shiny totem tucked inside. It was his now. Just as she soon would be. "We have more serious concerns than a strange red-haired woman and her jealous mate. We must climb to higher ground before the fire reaches us." Tse-e looked past Klesh's shoulder at the encroaching fire. "Maybe that is the work of the Red Hair Spirit, too," he said, his eyes filled with terror. "Don't be foolish. The morning thunderstorm brought the fire. You saw the lightning yourself." "Maybe Li-chi Tse-gah caused the lightning." Klesh lost all patience. "Maybe yes, maybe no, it does not matter. We must go. Kut. Now!" He shoved past Tse-e, heading upland. "Tehi. Hih-do-nal!" * * * "Let's go, Mulder." Scully waited on the beach, impatient eyes aimed south at the fire. Mulder shouldered the hunters' packs and was about to search their collapsed tent. "They might have left something we can use." He folded back the enormous hide that had once served as the shelter's roof. Underneath it, fallen bone supports lay in a jumble. The bones were massive. Probably mastodon or mammoth, judging from their size. Dirty fur hides carpeted the floor between piles of foul- smelling food. Mulder picked through the stores for anything that might still be edible. It had been hours since they'd last eaten and he was hungry again -- evidently, raw snake didn't stick to the ribs. He lifted a half-eaten bird carcass, causing a blizzard of maggots to rain to the floor. "Jesus. And I thought *my* leftovers were bad." He tossed the carcass back onto the pile. Scully approached, coming to stand behind him. "Mulder, what are you doing? There's no time for this." "I'm ready. Which way do we go?" "Away from the fire." "Very funny. I guessed that much." He looked north, across the lake, which reflected the yellow glow of the approaching fire. Then up at the hills to the east. "I think we should head for the mountains." "I think we should stick to the lake. We can always crawl in it for protection if the fire overtakes us." He eyeballed the lake again and grimaced at the flames that were mirrored in its smooth surface. "We might end up trapped. And the smoke is going to be thick down here in the basin." God, why did it have to be fire? He'd rather face ten saber- toothed tigers or a hundred four-toed Cro-Magnons than one itty-bitty forest fire. He nodded at the hills. "We should be fine up there, if we can get above the tree line." She studied the mountains, barely visible in the twilight, and considered his line of reasoning. "I don't know, Mulder. It looks pretty far." "Then we better get going." He fished his flashlight from his pocket and gave it to her. "You lead." She hesitated, glanced again at the lake, but in the end turned toward higher ground. Mulder snagged the hunters' two spears from beside the shelter and followed after her. "We aren't going to get lost are we?" she asked, aiming her beam at the ground. "Just keep walking uphill. How lost can we get?" She pivoted to spotlight his face. "What?" he asked, with a shrug. "I'm serious." "That's what scares me." She resumed hiking. "You have no idea how to navigate the woods after dark, do you?" Hell, he couldn't follow a map in broad daylight. But as long as they kept the fire to their backs and headed for high ground, they were golden, right? "When have I ever gotten us lost, Scully?" "1994. Steveston, Massachusetts. Ring a bell?" "Oh." The Kindred. Jesus, sometimes her memory was as good as his. "That doesn't count." "Why doesn't that count?" "The map was misleading." "Ah." "I was right about Comity, wasn't I?" "Home of the horned beast." "Something like that." "Mulder, as I recall, there were only two choices in Comity: right turn, left turn. Fifty-fifty chance." "But it was *my* fifty that was right." "Not according to the map." "Well, there's a lesson in that -- we obviously do better without a map. We'll be fine." "Oh, right. I forgot, you were once an Indian Guide." She didn't sound any more convinced now than she'd been six months ago when he'd told her that. Why had he told her that anyway? To impress her? To avoid admitting that he and his father had never shared a single, normal, father-son pastime like playing catch or becoming Indian Guides? "I have something to confess, Scully. I was only *sort of* an Indian Guide." "Sort of?" "Well...I wanted to be one." "Wonderful." It was impossible to see anything beyond the narrow beam of the flashlight. The smell of smoke was getting stronger -- the air was already saturated with specks of floating ash that prickled Mulder's sinuses and scoured the back of his throat. He picked up the pace, herding Scully ahead of him as they scrambled uphill. The ground slanted steeply beneath his boots. He could feel blisters forming on his feet and ankles. Damn, he wished he hadn't left his socks back at the cave. Even if he hadn't put them on, he should have stuffed them into his pockets. Too late now. The wet leather of his boots was rubbing his feet raw and his socks were long gone. Despite the hour, the sky lightened as the fire advanced. Unlike sunset, this light flickered, flowed, stalked the forest. It consumed giant pines, cedars and oaks, hissing and crackling as it ate its way north. The awful noise made Mulder think of vampires eating their death shrouds. Jesus, he hated fire. He had tried to face that particular fear during the L'Ively case. And although he'd managed to save the Marsden children from a fiery death, he hadn't succeeded in conquering his dread of fire. The smell of it, its aliveness, still caused panic to well up in him in a way nothing else did. He had told Scully his fear stemmed from a childhood trauma, a time when his friend's house had burned, and he'd spent the night in the rubble keeping looters away. The story was true, up to a point. What he hadn't told Scully was how the fire had started in the first place. It had happened in 1975, two years after Samantha disappeared, the last weekend in September. His best friend Paul Sanderson lived only a short bike ride away, over on Menemsha Cross Road. Paul's parents were out of town for the night -- they'd taken the ferry over to Quisset to visit relatives -- so Paul asked Mulder over to keep him company, play a little b-ball and watch TV. Mulder leapt at the chance; things were volatile at his own house. His parents fought constantly. About Samantha. Other things. It was a relief to get away from the tension, if only for one night. The evening had started out fine. Great in fact. The boys played basketball until sunset, and then came inside to watch TV and gorge themselves on everything Mrs. Sanderson had left in the fridge -- including Mr. Sanderson's beer, which they drank while watching an episode of Starsky and Hutch. "You sure we should be doing this?" Mulder asked, taking a second can from Paul's outstretched hand. "Fox, if they didn't want us to drink it, they shouldn't have left it out where we could find it." Buzzed on two beers and starting his third, Mulder found himself relaxing for the first time since Samantha's disappearance. "Feelin' good, buddy?" Paulie asked, laughing. Mulder nodded and laughed, too, while Starsky's red and white Torino chased bad guys into another alley on the TV. "I got something to make you feel even better, man." Paulie rose from the couch. He was gone for only a few minutes before returning with a stash of marijuana. He proceeded to roll them each a joint, which they smoked while they finished off the beer. Mulder wasn't sure how many joints they'd smoked by the time the Sanderson's sofa caught fire, but at that point they were too stoned to care. Until the heat became ungodly and the smoke so thick they could barely find their way to the door. The entire house was destroyed, burned flat in what seemed like minutes. Paul was hospitalized for smoke inhalation and some minor second-degree burns. Both boys were questioned by the police, and Mulder told them the truth...up to a point. He said they'd been drinking beer and smoking. He neglected to mention that they smoked marijuana and not cigarettes. Bill Mulder had been livid when he found out about his son's involvement in the fire. Mulder still wondered if that night was the final blow to his parents' failing marriage. Three months later, his dad moved out of their Chilmark house to West Tisbury. Mulder blamed himself, and for years he had nightmares about being trapped in burning buildings. How could he tell Scully all that? How could he explain his sense of culpability, failure and remorse? The truth was, he couldn't, any more than he could bring himself to tell her about his dismal, never-an-Indian-Scout relationship with his dad. He wanted her to see the best side of him, not his many phobias, failings and psychoses. He may chase mutants for a living, but where Scully was concerned, he wanted to be a normal guy. Not her "out there" partner, Spooky Mulder, but the kind of man she might possibly fall in love with. "Fire's getting closer," she said, glancing over her shoulder. They'd been climbing for three-quarters of an hour, and now a wall of flames rose from the forest about 200 yards behind them. "Are we going to make it?" "We're gonna make it." Mulder placed his palm between her shoulders and propelled her forward, lengthening his own stride. Fiery snowflakes sifted down from nearby trees. Evergreens were turned into giant torches when flames leapt from branch to branch, burning ever closer. The blaze was quickly overtaking them and its heat felt like the breath of Lucifer on their backs. The sound of charging hooves startled them both. They turned to see several oversized deer-creatures stampeding through the forest, running for their lives from the blaze. The animals were large, muscular, and crowned with enormous flat, branching antlers, which stretched an astounding seven or eight feet across. Long-legged like moose, but with the faces of elk, the panicked beasts headed straight for them. "Look out!" Scully pulled him out of their path and took refuge behind a tree. The stag-moose galloped by, nostrils flaring, eyes wild with fear. "Jesus," Scully hissed, as the beasts disappeared into the forest's shadows. Mulder's heart hammered and his fear ratcheted up another notch. "Let's go." He snagged her arm and towed her in the direction the moose had gone. Above their heads, upper branches caught fire. Embers rained to the ground. Scully covered her mouth and nose with her hand, trying to filter out smoke and ash as she ran. Mulder saw her struggling, heard her choke. He dug into his pocket for his handkerchief. "Here. Put this over your mouth," he said, raising his voice to be heard above the escalating roar of combustion. Needle-laden branches snapped and popped. Limbs cracked and crashed to the ground in an explosion of sparks. Scully took the handkerchief and quickly tied it over her face to mask out the smoke. Sizzling sparks dripped earthward. Several landed in Scully's hair, singing it before Mulder could brush them away. He dropped the spears and packs, and shed his leather jacket to drape over her head as protection against the falling debris. "Mulder..." She tried to return the jacket to him. He shook his head and bent to retrieve the packs and spears. "Keep going. Hurry." Just then an overhead branch let go and plummeted, spraying sparks and pluming smoke. It pinwheeled as it fell, bringing other blackened limbs down with it. Mulder heard it crashing through the canopy and looked up in time to lunge at Scully, knock her to the ground, and shield her with his body. The branch detonated when it hit the ground beside them, creating a ball of flame that surged over Mulder's back. He gasped, sucking in a scorching breath as he raised his arms to protect Scully's head. Intense heat blasted him, seared his ears, the backs of his hands. Sparks bit holes into his skin and clothes. Jesus, he felt as if he was back at the Sanderson's, the house falling down around him. Only this time there was more at stake. Scully lay beneath him. He could feel her trembling as they waited out the hellish, fiery wave. The fireball roared past and the moment it dissipated, Mulder leapt to his feet, hauling Scully up after him. He grabbed the packs and spears; she retrieved the fallen flashlight. Together they raced uphill, dodging smoldering debris, squinting against the billowing ash. "Not much further," he shouted. Or was it? Up ahead the trees had that stunted, bonsai look of alpine vegetation. The ground was becoming rockier, the soil thinner. Surely they were nearing the tree line and the top. "Up there!" Scully pointed to where a wide stone outcropping lay blanketed beneath a dwindling drift of soot-covered snow. Several massive boulders balanced on the granite ledge, and a narrow crevice appeared to snake between two of them, offering possible shelter. Sprinting out from beneath the burning trees, Mulder quickly crossed the bald mountaintop with Scully in tow. The wind was brisker out in the open, the air fresher. And the boulders were even bigger than they had looked from the woods. The giant stones stood like humpbacked mastodons on the uppermost ridge, forming a crevice between them just wide enough to squeeze into. "Go!" he urged, propelling her into the fissure. She slithered between the boulders. Mulder pushed his way after her. Inside, her flashlight revealed a narrow, curving corridor. "Does it get any wider?" he asked, feeling pinched between the giant stones. She aimed her light and shuffled a few steps forward. "Yeah, I think so." The gap widened to five or six feet, providing sufficient room to sit and wait out the fire. The shelter offered no overhead protection; it was open to the sky. Mulder could see the moon, hazy behind a veil of passing smoke. He let the packs and spears drop to the ground beside his feet. Jesus, he felt winded. Couldn't seem to catch his breath. He tried to clear his throat, but it felt raw and swollen, and his chest ached with every inhalation. "You okay, Mulder?" Scully tugged the handkerchief from her face, exposing her concerned frown. He felt dizzy. His stomach roiled. He bent at the waist, stood with hands on his knees, and tried not to throw up. * * * "Mulder...?" He sank to a sitting position, dodging the beam of her flashlight. "I'm okay." A raspy cough rattled his chest. She squatted next to him and shined the light in his face, causing him to squint and scowl. "Smoke inhalation can be very serious, Mulder." "Scully..." His voice was hoarse and his lungs wheezed. "I'm fine." She ignored his assurances and checked him for signs of heat injury -- singed eyebrows, burns around and inside the nose, the mouth. "Open," she ordered, aiming her light at his clenched jaws. Begrudgingly, he obliged and she peered at the back of his throat. The tissue was irritated, swollen. Clearly he was having difficulty breathing. She timed his rapid, shallow breaths, and took his pulse, which was racing. "Do you feel sick to your stomach?" "A little." "How about confused, sleepy, irritable?" "All three. Maybe I'm premenstrual." He glared at her and pushed the flashlight away from his face. Then a fit of coughing overtook him. Lungs raling, he tugged at his tight- fitting turtleneck and gasped for air. To relieve the pressure on his neck, she helped him pull the shirt off. His skin felt dry and hot, and looked ghostly pale. His arms trembled. He was going into shock. Edema and particulate matter in his upper airway were causing hypoxia. What he needed was a hyperbaric chamber or at least a non- rebreather mask, and that's what she would have prescribed if they'd been in a hospital. But here, the best she could do was sit him in a semi-reclining position and monitor him. She untied the handkerchief from her neck and passed it to him so that he could cough into it. Please, be okay, Mulder, she silently urged. She crawled behind him and sat with knees bent, a leg on either side of him. "Lean back." She pulled him toward her until his head rested against her breastbone. His chest muscles heaved as he worked to suck in air. "Try to relax," she said, massaging his chest with her palm. Please, be okay. Please. Edema would likely worsen over the next six to twenty-four hours. She hoped the injury was limited to his upper airways rather than extending distally. Images of tracheobronchial and alveolar damage haunted her. Jesus, even if he survived asphyxiation, it was possible, even probable, that he would develop pneumonia in a day or two. Increased airway resistance coupled with decreased compliance and a large dead space, plus pooling of secretions, meant bacterial colonization and ensuing infection...and here they were without antibiotics. Damn it. Gently stroking his face, she could feel the small burns that pocked his cheeks and chin -- tiny pinholes caused by burning ash on his unprotected skin, all because he had given her the handkerchief, which now lay crushed into a ball beneath his curled, sooty fingers. Its once-white fabric was spotted with carbon coughed up from his lungs. His lips already appeared bruised from cyanosis. He stared dully straight ahead. She reached for his jacket, which lay on the ground beside them, and spread it over his bare chest to keep him warm. Please, please, be okay, Mulder. "I feel..." -- panting breaths sifted in and out of his lungs - - "like crap." "You're going to be fine." He suddenly groaned, rolled over and vomited beside her right knee. "Sh-shit, Sc-ully." He choked as his stomach heaved. When he was finished being sick, she drew his head gently back against her chest. He inhaled with effort. "S-s-sorry." "It's okay, Mulder. It's okay." She rearranged the jacket over him and ignored the pool of vomit beside her. Stroking his hair with one hand, she tucked the other beneath his coat, laying her palm on his chest to monitor his breathing. His heart hammered beneath her hand. His chest rose and fell with halting effort. She rubbed him reassuringly. "You rest. I'll be right here." * * * The faint smell of smoke tickled Klizzie's nose. It wasn't coming from the hearth, she realized, waking from a deep sleep. It was outside the lodge. She recognized the smell of burning black spruce, loblolly pine, pin oak, hemlock, and other trees. Somewhere there was a forest fire. She rolled over in her bed of bison hides. "Dzeh?" She whispered her mate's name, not wanting to wake the whole Clan. His place on the skins was empty. All around her, soft snores filled Toh-ta Lodge. Coals still glowed in the hearth, illuminating the lodge's curving bone supports, its skin ceiling, and its sleeping occupants. Dzeh's Clan. Her family now, too, for the past four years. Throwing back the furs, Klizzie rose to her feet, and after a quick look around, she slipped quietly from the lodge. Outside, the air felt cool on her bare skin. She wore only a short skirt of furs and, of course, her totem pouch, which hung from a thong around her neck, resting reassuringly between her breasts. A fog of mosquitoes instantly surrounded her, whining in her ears. They could be intolerable at this time of year, and made her eager for the upcoming summer when the Clan would move to Tabaha Lodge on big Turkey Lake, where bats fed on the pesky insects and it was possible to stand on the shore in the evening and not get chewed to bits. There would be heaps of fresh blueberries, supplejacks, and currants. And fish, turtles, freshwater clams, frogs. Lots of big game, too. Plenty of food and fresh water and a chance to stay in one place for longer than a sunrise or two. Best of all, there would be new babies. Chuo's time was near. Dibeh was pregnant, too. And maybe Dzeh would plant a child in her womb this season. After all, Klizzie was eighteen Mastodon Feasts old. Many women her age already had two or three babies. Some even more. She clutched her totem and whispered a quick prayer to the Spirits. Recently, she'd heard speculation that she was barren, cursed because of her relationship with Klesh, her scarred cousin. She prayed this wasn't so, although she knew it might be the truth. Klizzie had been with Dzeh for four springs now and still she had not produced a child. She worried that he would take another mate if she didn't become pregnant soon, a woman who could fill his lodge with many strong sons and beautiful daughters. Dzeh was nine Mastodon Feasts older than she was, and had already been waiting a long time for offspring when he took her to be his mate. His patience was bound to wear thin at some point. Crossing the quiet campsite, passing the shelters where cousins and uncles slept, Klizzie found Dzeh leaning against a large, gnarled shagbark that overlooked a section of open grassland. He faced west, watching the distant mountains. A faint orange- yellow glow backlit the hills. "What is it?" she asked when she stood beside him. Dzeh was tall for a clansman. His beard was long, the color of bison hide, and his shoulders were marked with the tattoos of his clan. He was a good hunter and wore the teeth of his first kill -- an enormous she-bear -- in his pierced ears. A silvery wolf skin covered his broad, tan back. His eyes were filled with kindness whenever he looked upon her. "Forest fire," he said, keeping his voice low. "In Rabbit Basin." "Will it come this way?" "No. It will stop at the mountains." He embraced her with one muscular arm. Smiling down at her, he said, "But it will force game our way. We will have an easy hunt tomorrow." Before she could respond to this good news, he pushed aside her long hair and bent to nuzzle her bare neck. She loved the slight musky scent of his skin and the coarseness of his beard against her smooth cheeks. "Dawn is a long way off," she whispered, wanting him to lay with her, out here in the open while the others still slept in the lodge. "Then we shall have to find a pleasant way to pass the night," he said before his mouth descended on hers. * * * "Just an old fashioned love song..." -- Scully sang for what must have been the millionth time -- "playing on the radio..." She cradled Mulder's head in her lap while he dozed. It was morning, 6:03 a.m. according to her watch. The night had seemed to last forever. She'd turned off the flashlight hours ago to conserve its batteries, but then felt frightened by the dark. Funny, she'd never been afraid of the night before, not even as a child. But here, death loomed as large as those panicked Pleistocene beasts that had charged through the burning forest last night. The grim prospect of being left alone in this frightening universe grabbed hold of her thoughts and hung on tenaciously throughout the long, dark hours, making her teeth chatter and her arms quake. To lose Mulder... Please, God, no. Don't take him. Please. His breathing remained shallow, uneven, and each stalled breath portended to be his last. At one point, shortly after 3:00 a.m., when his chest suddenly refused to rise on its own, she angrily rubbed his breastbone and begged him not to die. "Don't leave me, Mulder." Her massaging fingers coaxed another lungful of air into him. "Please, don't leave me here alone." It was enough for the time being -- his breathing resumed. Thank God. She hadn't wanted to resort to CPR. Although her lungs were free of particulate from the fire, she'd been exposed to carbon monoxide just as he had. The CO would still be present in her own system and would likely poison Mulder further if she attempted to give him mouth-to-mouth. What seemed like an eternity later, he was breathing a little easier. His cough still lingered, however, and it shuddered his chest now. His eyes fluttered open. "Scully?" "I'm here." She combed his sooty hair away from his forehead, surreptitiously feeling for fever. Again. "Thought I heard singing." "Must've been a dream. I don't sing, remember?" "Oh." He made an effort to clear his throat. "We didn't happen to...pass a Mickey Dees last night...did we?" "You feeling hungry?" "Mm. Could eat a super-sized Egg Mac-Mastodon." That was a good sign. Too bad she didn't have anything to feed him. "Maybe our cavemen friends prepared a picnic," she said, eyeing their packs. She reached for the nearest one, trying not to joggle Mulder too much. Snagging its rawhide strap, she drew the bag to her and opened it. "Looks like we might be in luck. There are two...correction...make that *three* dead squirrels in here, and," -- she dug deeper -- "flint for starting a fire. Tah- dah!" She held up the stones for him to see. "Your turn to skin dinner," he said between coughs. "Fair enough. I need your knife." "Coat pocket." She searched his jacket. When she found the knife, she gave him a fleeting smile, then extricated herself from behind him. She removed and folded her own jacket and tucked it beneath his back to elevate his shoulders as much as possible while she was gone. It would actually be better if he sat up, but she wasn't altogether sure he could stay that way without falling over while left alone. "Don't go anywhere," she whispered, bending close to his ear, adjusting the jacket beneath his neck and head. She planted a gentle kiss on his temple. His skin felt warm. Too warm. Reluctantly, she gathered the squirrels, and left to prepare breakfast. Outside, she found herself at the edge of a no man's land. "Oh, my God..." She looked down into the blackened basin where a series of small, muddy lakes dully reflected the dawn. All around the water, the land was charred black and smoke rose up from the burnt ground like ghostly fingers. Scorched, fallen trees, stripped of their leaves, crisscrossed the ground. There were no bird calls. No whine of insects. Only the hiss of cooling embers. And the desolate stink of lost life. "What a difference a day makes." Mulder's voice, husky, almost unrecognizable, came from behind her. She spun to see him propped against one of the boulders, legs shaky, the skin of his face and chest pale and sweaty beneath a veneer of soot. His dirty hands dangled loosely at his sides. "You should be lying down." "Feels better to stand." He cleared his throat and spat a mouthful of dark mucus onto the ground. "We should go." "Go? Where?" She turned again to face the razed valley. The fire had burned itself out for the most part, but the basin wasn't passable. A few golden flames still licked the northernmost region. Ash and blackened vegetation stretched from the eastern mountains where they were standing all the way across to the western range. The bowl of land was fogged with smoke. "Other side." "Other...?" She looked back at him, unable to make sense of what he was saying. He hooked a thumb behind him toward the rising sun. "East." "But, the field is that way." She pointed south. "Field?" Now he looked confused. "Where we first arrived. We have to go back, Mulder." He nodded once, and then said nothing, evidently reluctant to explain something he understood but she still failed to grasp. His face was pinched with fatigue. His hands quaked. He looked filthy and hungry and thirsty and maybe sadder than she'd ever seen him. Yet he waited patiently, allowing her the time she needed to come to her own conclusion. They weren't going back to the field. She craned to see it from where they stood, but it was too far away, somewhere beyond the basin and the waterfall and the ravine, grayed with ash, no longer recognizable. They weren't going home. Not now anyway. Not soon. Maybe never. The idea was crushing. Fighting back tears, she pivoted to face him, prepared to rail against his infuriating acceptance of their predicament. But when she met his miserable, weary gaze, she realized he was in no condition to do battle. Her arguments would have to wait. Mulder was sick and getting sicker. She composed her angry expression. "You need water. I'll scout ahead while you stay here and rest." "And have you wandering out there alone? No way. Not with Conan around." "Who?" He shook his head. "Never mind. We're not separating." "Mulder, you shouldn't be on your feet. You're in no shape to walk and you'll just end up making yourself sicker. This is no time to try and prove how macho you are." She wanted to add that male emergency patients outnumber females two to one for preventable and neglected injuries, and that a little common sense right now could make the difference between life and death. "We are *not* separating." "Mulder--" "No!" Like it or not she was going to have to accept his wishes. "Fine. But I'm carrying everything. Wait here while I get the rest of our gear." She set the squirrels at his feet while she went to collect the spears, packs, and jackets. Returning a moment later, she handed him his shirt, which he put on. Then she offered him one of the spears. "Here. Lean on this." He took it, then paused to survey the ruined valley. When he spoke, his voice was as brittle as the landscape. "I haven't given up on going home. You know that, don't you?" It relieved her to hear him say the words. "I know. Come on." They started off, slowly rounding the giant boulders, heading east and walking side-by-side, taking their time so that Mulder wouldn't become too winded. The view from the mountain's eastern slope couldn't have been more different than the charred basin they were leaving behind. Trees were sparser here. The slope was more gradual, and a good portion of the hillside was covered with a fresh, green meadow. Big horned sheep grazed on acres of grass, giving the land a polka-dotted appearance. Down in the foothills, perhaps a mile or more away, a narrow lake lay nestled in a verdant, forested hollow, its blue water sparkling beneath the morning sun, reminding Scully of how very thirsty she felt. "Think you can make it to that lake?" she asked. "Sure. Wanna race?" His voice sounded too thin to be convincing. He looked ready to drop where he stood. He needed water and food and rest if he were to have a fighting chance against infection. "No racing. Just watch my back." His focus slid to her backside. "I'd follow that anywhere, G- Woman." She appreciated his attempt at humor, knowing how much pain each breath must be causing him. "So that explains why you always let me lead," she said, starting downhill. "You're on to me." "And all this time I thought you were just being polite." The meadow smelled wonderfully sweet, belying the seriousness of their situation. A spring breeze blew gently from the south, causing the grass to undulate in great, green waves. Bumblebees bounced between flowers, drowsily dodging Scully's legs as she waded through knee-high blossoms. Fat sheep cautiously eyed the newcomers from a distance, but kept on grazing. Mulder stumbled along a step or two behind Scully. He was leaning heavily on his spear, using it for balance. After thirty minutes of hiking, his face was deeply flushed and when he coughed, his lungs sounded clogged and wet. "Still gonna cook our breakfast, Scully?" he asked between bouts of choking. "Sure. Squirrel is my specialty." "I didn't know that." Air scraped in and out of his lungs. "Tell me something else I don't know...about you," he challenged. His request made her think about her snake dream, which she had no intention of discussing. Not now. Probably not ever. "Melissa and I once found a dead squirrel in the road in front of our house. It must have been hit by a car, because it was pretty flat. Missy dared me to skin it, cook it and feed it to Bill and Charlie in a sandwich." "Did you?" "I did skin it. But that's as far as I went, much to Missy's disappointment. She kept the squirrel's tail for a while though. Hung it off the back of her bicycle seat." "How old were you?" "I don't know. Seven or eight." "Slicing and dicing even then." Mulder was walking very slowly. Every breath seemed to take enormous effort. His lips were a frightening shade of purplish-blue and his face was slicked with sweat. Scully moved to his side and wrapped an arm around his waist for support. "No more talking, Mulder. Lean on me. We're almost to the lake. Try to make it a little further." The water was so close. Another five or ten minutes and they'd be there. "Sc-scully, I...can't..." His knees buckled. "Gotta rest." He sank to the ground, pulling her down with him. His decline seemed to be happening incredibly fast. The fire had been only hours ago, and yet here he was, already overcome by fatigue and shortness of breath. The damage to his airway must have been worse than she realized. Either that or his injured lungs had been infected by some virulent Pleistocene uber-bug. Guilt settled over her. He was sick because of her. He had risked his life when he used his body to shield her. He must have sucked in lungful after lungful of scorching debris while she lay tucked safely beneath him. Exhausted and gasping for air, he laid down to rest. Trying to help him get comfortable, she noticed tiny ripe berries dotting the ground all around them. Strawberries! Thousands of them, growing in between the meadow grass. "Mulder, look! Fresh berries." She picked one to show him, only to find he had lost consciousness. * * * Klizzie sat cross-legged on the ground outside the hut and deftly plaited her hair, weaving in fresh sweetgrass and bone beads. It fell nearly to her waist when it was not knotted into dozens of tight braids, and it would curl like moonseed vine if left hanging free. Thanks to the peccary fat she worked into her scalp after each washing, her dark tresses glistened like the hide on a new foal. Many seasons ago, her mother had shown her how to perfume the fat with flower blossoms, cooking them together before applying the sweet-smelling oil to her hair. Klizzie thought of her every time she mixed clover or vetch into the melting fat. She missed her very much and wished she were still alive. "Hurry up, Klizzie," begged Gini, Dzeh's eight-year-old sister. Gini squatted beside her, watching her braid her hair. The girl held a pretty carved comb Dzeh had given to Klizzie after their first mating. Gini resembled her older brother in many ways. They had the same full lips that quirked up on one side whenever they smiled, which was often. Their brows had the smooth curve of owl feathers and the left one arched higher than the right when they showed surprise or doubt. Their eyes were the color of hazelnuts and shone with candor and kindness. Klizzie's heart felt satisfied whenever she looked at Dzeh. He wasn't like the other men in the Clan; he treated her more like an equal than a woman. He was attentive and thoughtful. And smarter than most. A good hunter, too. She was fortunate to be his mate. "You fetch the baskets, Gini. I am almost finished." The girl jumped to her feet and scurried into the lodge. In three heartbeats, she returned carrying two pine needle baskets, perfect for collecting strawberries. Klizzie planned to scour the western slope this morning, picking as many ripened berries as possible before the bears arrived to eat the rest. Every year it became a contest to see who would get the delicious treats first -- the Clan or the bears and birds. Strawberries would taste perfect with the moose meat Dzeh and the other hunters had brought home after the forest fire. He'd been right; the fire had pushed plenty of game their way, making it easy for them to spear three large stag-moose. The younger boys had captured several fat rabbits, too, which they put into blackhaw cages to eat once the moose meat was gone. Now there was plenty of meat to cut up and cook, and more hides to clean and tan. "Ready?" Klizzie asked, seeing that Gini was anxious to get going. When the girl nodded, Klizzie took her hand. "Then let's go pick some berries." * * * For a day and a half Mulder had drifted in and out of consciousness, his breathing becoming more and more labored. The initial airway occlusion from edema and endobronchial debris had made his lungs ripe for infection. His fever continued to rise. Scully examined him every few minutes, checking his pulse, his breathing, and his temperature, which she could only guess at by placing her palm against his fiery skin. When he was more lucid, she tried postural drainage and clapping his chest, hoping to clear his lungs at least a little. When he was unconscious, she went down to the lake where she removed her shirt and soaked it with cold water. She carried it back to him, dripping wet, and squeezed a few drops of water into his parched mouth. Then she would press the cold, wet shirt against his brow, cheeks and neck, trying to cool him. Several times he responded by mumbling in a disoriented way, begging her to loosen imaginary restraints on his wrists and to please, please believe him. She guarded her emotions against his suffering by treating him as a patient, not as her partner, her best friend, her only companion in this entire frightening Ice Age world. Concentrating on his symptoms, she tried to detach herself from her feelings for him. As the hours wore on and night fell, however, she lost her detachment. She'd been without sleep for two days. Mosquitoes harangued her incessantly and her arms grew exhausted from swatting at them, fanning the air above Mulder to keep them from bleeding him dry, too. A sporadic breeze puffed across the field, brushing through the grass, sounding like hushed voices. She imagined she heard them whispering her name. Then she imagined the voices were Mulder, calling to her for help as he breathed his last breath. Not knowing what else to do, she talked to him. From 2:00 a.m. until sunrise, she babbled non-stop about anything and everything she could think of. Eventually she came to the subject of her dream about the snake. "Mulder, the day we ate the snake I had a dream, a nightmare really...you brought me a dead snake, only when I touched it, it wasn't dead any more, it came to life, and I ate it. I know it sounds Freudian, *is* Freudian; the snake is...was...a symbol of...I think...of our sexual relationship...the one we don't have. The snake made me pregnant...impossible of course...for a whole bunch of reasons. I didn't have a baby in the dream...I gave birth to another snake...or maybe it was the same snake, I don't know. You were there, but I once read somewhere that all the characters in our dreams are just varying aspects of our own personalities, which means that you must have been me...not that it matters. I don't know what the snake meant...uh, the snake I gave birth to. At first I thought it might mean that having a sexual relationship with you would end badly. But I don't really think that. I don't." Mulder coughed, but didn't wake. "You were wrong yesterday, Mulder. We've had motive...or at least, *I've* had motive. My feelings for you haven't changed - - not from traveling through time or from some sort of genetic regression process..." She rubbed circles over his heart with her hand. How could he not know she loved him? "Mulder, you once saved me with the strength of your beliefs. You and I...we have so much left to do. I don't believe you're ready to die. Not now. Not here." By mid-morning Mulder's fever burned even hotter and his lungs rattled with every agonizingly slow breath. Scully began to pray, out loud and on her knees. "God, please don't take him, please. I need him more than I ever have before. He is my only ally here, my only hope. I can't lose him." Perhaps God wasn't listening or He had other more pressing things to do because Mulder's chest stopped rising. His heart stopped beating. The sun became too bright in a too blue sky, the smell of strawberries too strong and the drone of bees too loud as Scully felt for his pulse and found none. She bent over him, placed her mouth over his and blew into his lungs. Once. Twice. Still no pulse. Straddling his motionless body, she began chest compressions. "Damn it, Mulder! Don't you dare die! Don't leave me here alone! Mulder? Please!" * * * "What is that?" Gini asked, stopping in her tracks and cocking an ear. She had been skipping ahead of Klizzie along the narrow lakeshore path that led to the strawberry fields. "I hear someone crying." It was true. A woman's cries came from somewhere up ahead. Whoever she was, she sounded grief stricken. "Let's go see," Klizzie said. She took the lead, hurrying toward the crying, but sticking close to the trees where they might hide in the shadows if the sobbing woman turned out to be a stranger and not a member of the Clan. They quickly came to the edge of the strawberry fields where they could see a red-haired woman crouching over an unconscious man about forty paces upland. "Who are they?" Gini whispered, sounding both afraid and curious. "Hush." Klizzie put a hand on the girl to hold her back. "I do not know." "Is the man dead?" He looked dead, even from this distance. His skin appeared bluish and his eyes sunken in their sockets. The red haired woman straddled his waist, while tears streamed down her face, which was badly bruised; she shouted at the man as if angry and pounded his chest. Klizzie wondered if this man had been the one who had given her the black eye and the swollen lip. Maybe she killed him because he beat her. Suddenly the woman bent forward and covered the man's mouth with her own, as if kissing him. His chest rose once before she sat upright and again pushed her fists into him. "What is she doing?" Gini asked. Klizzie had no idea. Maybe the woman was crazy. Grief sometimes made people do strange things. Klizzie felt certain she would lose all common sense if Dzeh were to die. "Should we help her?" Should they? They didn't know this woman or the dead man. Strangers could be dangerous. And what could be done anyway? If the man was dead he was dead and only the Spirits could help him. But the red-haired woman appeared so desperate. "Come on," Klizzie said, leading Gini out into the field, her legs shaking and her stomach feeling knotted, the same way she had felt when Dzeh's mother lay dying three seasons ago, her stillborn baby taking her with it to the Spirit World. Even Dzeh had cried the night his mother's spirit flew away. Klizzie and Gini slowly approached the red haired woman who seemed blind to them as she continued to shove her fists against the dead man's chest. When they stood only six or seven paces away, Klizzie cleared her throat and asked in as strong a voice as she could muster, "Can we help you, Sister?" The woman looked up in startled surprise and slowed her frantic pounding. Tears streaked her bruised cheeks, pooled in her heartbroken eyes...eyes that looked as if her spirit wanted to fly away, too. * * * Klesh and Tse-e crouched behind a clump of blossoming fire cherries overlooking the strawberry fields. They quietly watched Red Hair squawk over her dead companion, while that troublemaking Klizzie and Dzeh's little sister stood by with stunned looks on their faces. "It appears Li-chi Tse-gah has lost her protector," Klesh gloated, keeping his voice low and fondling the pouch he wore around his neck. He grinned at the feel of Red Hair's totem tucked inside. His widening smirk deepened the scar on his left cheek. "What are you going to do?" Tse-e asked. "Take her for myself as payment for the supplies we lost." "What about Klizzie and the girl?" "They are of no consequence." "But they could bring Owl Clan down on us." "You worry too much, Tse-e," Klesh sneered. "The Clan will not care about this woman. She has no kin here. She is alone now and will be grateful to tend my hearth and share my sleeping skins." x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER SIX "Sister?" Klizzie repeated, trying to get the stranger's attention. She felt Gini's small hand slip into hers. The girl was shaking and wide-eyed. The strange woman was wide-eyed, too. Klizzie had never seen a woman who looked like this one. Not only was her hair the color of fox fur, her eyes were as blue as the sky, and those sad, blue eyes gazed at Klizzie and Gini for only a heartbeat before returning their focus to the dead man on the ground. Cradling his jaw in her palm, the fox-haired woman bent to kiss his lips again, making his chest rise. Then she sat upright to pound his breast with clenched fists. She mumbled foreign words, possibly a prayer, or a curse: "Pleasemulderpleasemulderplease..." Klizzie was certain the woman's prayers were useless. The man's spirit had clearly flown from his body. His skin was grayish- blue, his eyes glazed and unseeing beneath half-closed lids. But this woman was stubborn. She continued her chanting, her shoving of fists, and the strange kisses that made the dead man's chest rise. Suddenly a weak cough sputtered from his throat. He gasped, squeezed his eyes shut, moaned. Great Spirit Mother! Klizzie began to tremble. The strange woman sat bolt upright and stared at the man's creased face. "Mulder?" she said. The foreign word hung in the air, unanswered. Although Klizzie didn't understand its meaning, she could hear both hope and fear in the woman's tone. "Pleeeassse...," hissed the fox-haired woman, dropping her ear to the man's chest. Listening, she began to slowly smile. Her reddened eyes flooded with tears. She wrapped her arms around the man, gripped his shoulders, cradled him to her breast. A cry broke in her throat like a stone tossed into a pond. Much to Klizzie's surprise, the man's arm lifted, little by little, quaking like a newborn foal's legs, until the palm of his hand came to rest on the woman's wet cheek. Spirits be praised, the dead man was no longer dead! It was unbelievable! Without a doubt, this fox-haired woman possessed powerful medicine. "Dah-de-yah," Gini whispered, sounding afraid and awestruck. "Kut...na-dzah! He came back!" It was true! They could see the man's fingers moving ever so slightly, caressing the crying woman's cheek, smearing but not stopping her tears. "Gini, run and fetch Dzeh. Hurry!" * * * "I told you she was a Spirit!" Tse-e cried. He squatted next to Klesh behind the cherry bushes, a stone's throw upland from Red Hair and her companion. He pointed a trembling finger at the impossible scene down below. "She has snatched the dead man's spirit out of the air and put it back into him!" "Quiet!" Klesh swung a brawny arm, striking the smaller man hard in the mouth to silence his blathering. "Do you want them to hear you?" Tse-e hid his bruised mouth behind quaking hands and crouched even lower. Klesh could not deny what he had just seen with his own eyes. Red Hair had somehow breathed life back into her dead companion. Was Tse-e right? Was she a Spirit? Or did she merely possess powerful totems, like a Shaman? Reaching into the pouch he wore around his neck, Klesh fished out the tiny amulet he had stolen from Red Hair. The unfamiliar symbol looked like two crossed sticks and it glittered more brightly than any rock crystal. It held magic, he was sure, and once he discovered how to release its power, then Li-chi Tse- Gah would do his bidding. Maybe others would bow to him, too. Klesh pictured himself as chief of his Clan, no longer living his life as an outcast. His first order would be to have Red Hair's companion killed, and then Klesh would take her as his mate. Next he would cast Klizzie from the Clan the same way he and Tse-e had been turned out. Seeing her humiliated and shunned would be even more satisfying than forcing Red Hair to her knees. Down in the field, the girl -- Dzeh's puny sister -- was rushing off in the direction of Toh-ta Lodge. That meant Dzeh and his chindi uncles would be arriving soon. Klesh watched Klizzie drop to her knees beside Li-chi Tse-Gah and the dead man who now lived. Tse-e whimpered, "Klesh, let us leave this place." "And where shall we go? Thanks to Red Hair, we have no shelter, no supplies." He almost added, "and no Clan," but caught himself before the words were out. No matter how much he might want to blame the strangers for all his misfortunes, he couldn't hold them accountable for his and Tse-e's exile. That had happened four Mastodon Feasts ago, long before Red Hair's arrival. Dropping her totem back into his pouch, Klesh wagged his head. "We will stay here." * * * Scully pressed her ear to Mulder's chest, relieved to hear the drumming of his heart. Silently, she repeated "thank God, thank God" timed with each steady beat, grateful beyond words for his miraculous recovery. When the feeble caress of his hand against her cheek abruptly stopped and his arm fell to his side, she sat upright, startled, thinking maybe she had only imagined his heart's beating. But when she examined his face, she could see that his color was returning, though his eyes were now closed. "Mulder?" He didn't respond, so she clutched his wrist, feeling for his pulse. The flow of blood thrummed beneath her fingers. He was alive. Thank God, thank God, thank God... A puff of wind rustled the grassy meadow and siphoned some of the heat from Scully's fiery cheeks, causing her skin to tighten as her tears dried. Crushed strawberries spattered the ground around her, looking like blood clots, and the midday air was so thick with the smell of the ripe fruit that even as empty as she felt she was certain she would never eat another strawberry as long as she lived. "...neh-hecho-da-ne. Yah-a-da-hal-yon-ih..." She glanced at the kneeling woman, who stopped talking as soon as their eyes met. The woman didn't appear dangerous -- she was perhaps only eighteen or nineteen years old and carried no obvious weapons. She sat about ten feet away, her palms held flat atop her tanned thighs. Two woven baskets lay tipped on their sides beside her brown knees. She wore an animal skin wrapped around her narrow hips. A small pouch dangled from a strip of rawhide between her bare breasts. Her skin was the color of coffee lightened with cream and her hair was almost black, long and braided into dozens of neatly woven strands. She had a straight nose and full lips, which quirked up at the corners where two crescent-shaped dimples punctuated her uneasy smile. "Who are you?" Scully asked. The young woman blinked at her, evidently not understanding. It dawned on Scully that the woman's friend, the little girl, was now gone. Pivoting, she searched the edge of the woods and then the upland field for the missing child. "Where did she go?" Scully still straddled Mulder's hips. Feeling protective of him in his vulnerable, unconscious state, she reached for her weapon and let her hand rest on her holster. "Na-dzah." The woman pointed at Mulder. "Na-dzah." She smiled more widely, showing white, strong teeth. When she made no attempt to rise or approach, Scully released her hold on her gun. "Well..." Keeping her eyes on the woman, she swung off Mulder and positioned herself on her knees between them. "What now?" "Wha nauw?" the young woman parroted, a crease forming between her straight brows. "Do you have a name?" "Naym-muh?" "Name. Uh...I'm Dana." Scully pointed to herself, tapping her breastbone with her finger, all the while feeling rather foolish, as if she were an actor in a jungle movie. Me Tarzan, you Jane. "Dana. Daay...nuh." The woman smiled and repeated, "Day-nuh." When Scully nodded, the woman pointed to herself and said, "Klizzie." "Klizzie?" "Lahn." She nodded enthusiastically. Then her eyes fell onto Mulder. Scully placed a hand on his chest, relieved again to feel the beat of his heart there. "Mulder," she said. "Muhl-dar?" asked the woman. "Yes. Mulder." * * * "Muhl-dar," Klizzie repeated, satisfied they now had something to call one another, although these new names were foreign- sounding and meaningless to her, unlike ordinary Clan names that actually stood for something. Her own name was the word for "goat" and Dzeh meant "elk." Gini was "chicken hawk." Dzeh's uncle Lin was "horse." And so on for everyone. Maybe "Day-nuh" was the foreigners' word for Fox Hair or Sky Eyes. And "Muhl-dar"? Klizzie hadn't a clue, unless it meant "Man Who Does Not Die." Neighboring clans sometimes spoke unfamiliar words, but usually they could understand each other at least a little or, if they came from a great distance away, they would use hand signals to make their ideas known. This woman, Day-nuh, appeared to recognize neither Klizzie's words nor her signing. So Klizzie guessed that Day-nuh and Muhl-dar's clan must live many day's run from here. Exactly which clan they might belong to puzzled her. Klizzie had been born to Badger Clan. Now, as Dzeh's mate, she was a member of Owl Clan. There were many clans: Bear, Deer, Rabbit, Cat, Wolf, Eagle, Turtle...the list went on and on. Different clans gathered together in winter for Messenger Feasts or in summer for Mastodon Feasts, like the one coming up in half a moon. Klizzie had attended these feasts all of her life, but couldn't remember ever seeing anyone with red hair or blue eyes before. Nor could she remember hearing such a strange language or seeing such unusual clothing. Looking at the hide of Day- nuh's finely made cloak, Klizzie wondered if these newcomers might come from Eel Clan, a clan she had heard about but had never actually met. She noticed that both strangers wore lovely bracelets made from a shiny material that was quite striking and finely worked. The man's belt glistened, too, at the front of his waist. As did the little glossy holes in his extraordinary footwear, and the gleaming decorations in Day-nuh's pierced ears. The man's ears were not pierced. How odd! All men wore decorations of bone or animal teeth or stone in their ears. Another strange thing: the hair of his beard was very short -- shorter than that on the muzzle of a wolf pup. Was he a boy just becoming a man? Day-nuh's son perhaps, not her mate? Or did he scrape his beard with a flint blade the way women cleaned hair from deer hides? It could be that Eel Clan kept their hair trimmed short to look more like eel skin. The hair on both the newcomers' heads was quite short, which seemed to lend credence to the idea. There were so many things Klizzie wanted to ask. And so much more she wanted to tell! Perhaps most of all, however, she wanted to wash the disturbing expression of worry from Day- nuh's face. "Gini has gone to fetch Dzeh and the others," Klizzie said, trying to relieve the other woman's anxiety. "They will be here soon to help your...um...Muhl-dar." At the mention of his name, Day-nuh bristled like a she-bear protecting her cub, and Klizzie wondered if she had inadvertently shown disrespect. She decided it might be best to lower her eyes and bow her head to the ground. "Klizzie...?" Klizzie kept her head down. "Klizzie." She felt the tap of fingers on her arm and finally lifted her gaze to find Day-nuh had moved closer. She was gesturing toward the man named Muhl-dar and saying things that made no sense. Then, from the direction of the camp, Klizzie heard Dzeh calling her name. Thank the Spirits. Klizzie was at a loss how to help these strangers. Dzeh would know what to do. Gini was running at a gallop toward the strawberry fields, leading Dzeh, Uncle Lin and several of Dzeh's male cousins. The men were armed with spears and knives. They wore frowns on their faces as they jogged upland from the water's edge. Dzeh sounded angry and a little nervous when he shouted to Klizzie to "Move away! Kut! Now!" She scrambled to her feet and backed away, putting several paces between herself and the strangers, not because she feared them but because she was used to obeying the orders of her mate. The men rushed forward, their spears hoisted shoulder high and aimed at the fox-haired woman who still squatted beside her unconscious companion. They formed a wide circle around her and she twisted her head first one way and then the other, trying to keep her eyes on them all. She placed a protective hand on the chest of the man named Muhl-dar. With her other hand, she pulled a gray fist-sized object from behind her back and pointed it at the men like an angry finger. She shouted a string of strong sounding words. Uncle Lin ignored her yelling and stepped close enough to touch the tip of his spear to her chest. "What is the name of your clan?" he demanded. Lin was the oldest member of Owl Clan and the leader. His beard was streaked with gray, yet he was solidly built and tough enough to break a ram's neck with his bare hands. He had the final say in all debates and his words were obeyed without question because he was both very wise and very strong. Klizzie stood off to one side with Gini, biting her tongue because she knew Lin would be cross if she interfered, but she desperately wanted to yell out to the men that they had no reason to fear these newcomers. Her stomach churned at the sight of the fierce, yet desperate woman surrounded by six angry men. "What is the name of your clan?" Lin repeated, his voice roaring like a bear about to charge. He prodded Scully with his spear, hard enough to puncture a small hole in the hide of her pretty cloak. Although tears rose in her eyes, Day-nuh squared her shoulders, clenched her jaw and used both hands to point her gray object at Lin's chest. "Back off," she said. The foreign words had no meaning for the men, but the hardness of her voice and the direct way she stared into their eyes made them nervous. She faced them like a male, like an enemy. They would kill her for sure. Strangers cannot be trusted -- Klizzie had heard this saying all her life, had seen it proven true on more than one occasion. But she knew firsthand that sometimes kin could not be trusted either. Her cousin Klesh, for instance, and her own brother Tse-e. The memory of their transgressions could still knock the breath from her lungs. People were people, some good, some bad, and she felt certain this fox-haired woman was a good person. She had worked hard to save her companion's life. Clearly she had a caring heart, as well as the favor of powerful Spirits. "Do something, Klizzie," Gini whispered as the men tightened their circle. Lin raised his spear. "Stop!" Klizzie shouted, then, realizing her breach of etiquette, she dropped to her knees. "Please," she added, eyes fastened on the ground. "Klizzie!" Dzeh growled, making her flinch. "This is men's business!" Blood rose in Klizzie's cheeks. Men's business, men's business! Everything was men's business! Anger took hold of her and, ignoring the consequences, she rose to her feet, strode over to the men, and shouldered through their circle to stand between them and the strangers. She stared straight at their astonished faces, and said, "There is no threat here. She is but a woman. Her companion is unconscious. Please, do not harm them." Dzeh glowered, embarrassed by her outrageous actions, and it hurt Klizzie to disobey her mate this way. She could scarcely believe she was doing such a thing. It took all her willpower to keep her feet planted where they were. Lin huffed his disapproval and warned Dzeh, "Remove your mate from here." "Why kill them?" Klizzie demanded when Dzeh reached for her arm. "They are not Owl Clan," he said. "I was not Owl Clan either until I became your mate." The fierceness faded from his eyes. She knew he loved her and she felt a stab of guilt for causing him this trouble, bringing the disapproval of the Clan down on both their heads. He glanced at the other men, at the strangers, and then back at Klizzie. "You are Owl Clan now. They are not. They cannot be trusted," he said as if talking to a child. Then an idea struck her. "But what if they become Owl Clan? Like I did." "Klizzie, no one in Owl Clan will take either of these two as mates. They are too strange. They will never be our kin." Lin announced, "We must kill them. Dzeh, get your mate out of our way." The other men nodded in agreement. "No, wait!" Klizzie couldn't believe she was about to argue with Dzeh and his Uncle Lin. The Spirits must be giving her strength, wanting her to help these strangers, because otherwise she would never have dared to stand up against six clansmen this way. "The man could become your Trading Partner, Dzeh," she suggested. She knew Dzeh needed a new Trading Partner -- he had gone four winters without choosing a new alliance, reluctant to take on another partner after all the trouble with Klesh. But it was custom. Trading Partners strengthened clan ties, made for peaceful negotiations, provided food in times of starvation. There had been many winters when the people of Owl Clan could not have survived without the help of their partners in Deer Clan or Turtle Clan or Badger Clan. If Dzeh accepted the man named Muhl-dar as his Trading Partner, the strangers would be considered kin. Dzeh studied the newcomers, particularly the man. "He is too sick. He will not live long enough to make the first trade," he said, shaking his head. "Only the Spirits know that," Klizzie whispered. "Move out of our way, Klizzie," he warned, "or I will move you myself." Just then little Gini surprised them all by plowing into the circle to join Klizzie. Everyone's eyes rounded at the girl's impudence. "If he dies," she said, her voice high and as clear as the call of a bird, "then all of his possessions become yours. Isn't that right, Dzeh?" Ah, Gini was a smart girl! The man's clothes, his footwear, the unusual bracelet he wore on his wrist -- these were unlike anything the Clan had ever seen, making them worth a great deal. And who knew what he carried in his packs. If Dzeh agreed to become Muhl-dar's Trading Partner and then the man died, Dzeh would become the owner of these many fine things. And if he lived, so much the better, because it was obvious his clan was clever and rich. A partnership with them could be a lucrative arrangement. Dzeh and Owl Clan could not lose by agreeing to ally themselves with these strangers. "He is too sick to agree to a partnership," Dzeh pointed out. "We are not leaving Toh-ta Lodge for several days," Klizzie said, seeing that Dzeh was considering the idea. "If we feed him, he might get well enough before we go. And if he gets well, he might show his gratitude by agreeing to become your Trading Partner." Lin suddenly burst out laughing, a deep hearty laugh. "Your clever mate has worked everything out, Dzeh. She may be impudent, but she is right. The plan is a good one." He lowered his spear. "Let's carry the man back to camp. The woman..." -- he glanced at Day-nuh -- "she can follow or not, as she wishes." * * * Scully had no idea what had just happened, but she wasn't about to argue. Obviously Klizzie and the girl had intervened on her and Mulder's behalf. Whether they'd simply been persuasive or had negotiated some sort of agreement remained to be seen. As for now, the big brute with the gray hair was lowering his weapon and laughing, while several of the others were bending over Mulder. "Wait, wait! What are you doing? Be careful." Her words fell on deaf ears. The men lifted Mulder and began carrying him in the direction they'd come. Klizzie was smiling and the little girl looked about to burst with excitement. The tallest man, the one who had done most of the talking, scooped up the two packs she and Mulder had brought from the basin. He eyed her suspiciously but said nothing when she rose to follow after him and the others. "Please, be careful," she begged, seeing Mulder's head loll. "Where are you taking him? He's very sick." They headed for a path that ran along the lakeshore. Klizzie and the girl hung back, walking with Scully. They chattered with each other, obviously in good spirits, despite the dire circumstances. They repeated her and Mulder's names several times. Perhaps they knew of a way to help him, although for the life of her she couldn't imagine what it might be. Mulder's condition was precarious, he needed medical attention, he should be in a hospital where he could get antibiotics, oxygen, fluids...not carried to who knew where. After a few minutes, the group arrived at a tidy campsite overlooking the lake. At least half a dozen structures formed a semicircle beneath the trees not far from a sandy beach. They looked similar to the one that had belonged to Scully's captors in the basin. Some of the dome-shaped shelters were larger than others, as if whole families lived under the same roof. Several dozen men, women and children came running from various locations to get a look at her and Mulder. They gathered around, all talking at once, blinking in surprise. A balding man with a heavily tattooed face came forward out of the crowd, which parted to let him stand beside Mulder. He inspected Mulder's pale face, listened to his raspy breathing and then directed the men to carry him to a small tent set apart from the rest. Scully trailed after them, pushing her way inside the shelter, where she found Mulder was being laid on a bed of furs. Baskets and bowls of unidentifiable powders and liquids were lined up along the hut's outer perimeter. Drying weeds hung in bunches from the shelter's oversized bone supports. The tattooed man knelt beside Mulder and began chanting. He picked up a rattle adorned with colorful feathers, and shook it three times over Mulder's head. Then he reached into one of the small bowls, removed a pinch of reddish powder and sprinkled it over his chest. "What are you doing?" Scully asked, but the tattooed man ignored her. His chanting grew more insistent. She hoped that if he was this tribe's medicine man, he was a good one. Mulder was hanging on to life by a thread and needed all the help he could get. Selecting a place by his feet, Scully knelt to watch over him. * * * "What now?" Tse-e asked. He stood beside Klesh not far from Owl Clan's campsite. They kept to the shadows while they spied on the Clan's comings and goings. "Lin has accepted Red Hair and her companion. Now you must forget the idea of taking her as your mate." "Maybe, maybe not." Old Lin's actions made no sense. The Clan should have killed the strangers, or at the very least, killed the man and taken Li-chi Tse-Gah. It was the proper thing to do. It was custom. Not that Lin and Dzeh and these other Owl Clan chindis always did what was right. Klesh seethed with fresh anger over his unwarranted exile. The Clan had turned their backs on him and Tse-e, forcing them to live on their own. And they were kin! Bound by blood! Why adopt strangers and toss out family? Taking in these two outsiders made no sense. Once again the red-haired woman had managed to slip like a sleek eel through his fingers. "We will camp on the opposite shore where we can keep an eye on things," Klesh said. "I am not ready to fly away just yet." * * * "Day-nuh?" Klizzie waited at the entrance of A-zey-al-ih Lodge for Day-nuh to invite her in. When no invitation came, she ignored protocol and entered anyway. She carried a tray of food, hoping to coax the stoic woman into eating something. It had been two days since the newcomers' arrival, and the woman named Day-nuh had eaten almost nothing in that time. As usual, Gini followed close on Klizzie's heels, curious to see how the man named Muhl-dar was doing. The girl seemed inordinately inquisitive about him and asked Klizzie uncountable questions, most of which she could not answer. "Where did he come from?" "When will he wake up?" "Why does he not have any tattoos?" "Why are his clothes so strange?" "Is he going to live or die?" "Only the Spirits know these things, Little Chick," was Klizzie's unvarying response. It was obvious friendly Spirits had blessed these strangers. Although Muhl-dar remained very sick, the speed of his recovery was astonishing. And Day-nuh seemed determined to make him well. Klizzie hoped that their good fortune would continue and the man would soon be up on his feet and healthy. Day-nuh sat cross-legged on the skins beside Muhl-dar, who was sleeping on a silvery mat of wolf fur. Sweat slicked his pale face and his bare chest. His breathing was labored and he coughed frequently. Day-nuh had been watching him continuously through the last two sunsets, making sure to pour a little water or put a little food into his mouth whenever he happened to be awake, which wasn't often. Mostly he slept. Occasionally he cried out in his sleep, as if he were struggling against evil Spirits in the Dream World. He often shouted a word Klizzie didn't recognize, "skuh-lee," which never failed to seize Day-nuh's attention. She would then talk and sometimes sing to him while he wandered fretfully in his dreams. More often, she just sat quietly, looking exhausted and fearful. "I brought you some strawberries. And roasted rabbit and fresh dandelion greens." Klizzie set her tray down beside the skins. Day-nuh ignored the food and seemed not to hear or notice her visitors, even when Klizzie stirred the ashes of the hearth, bringing the coals back to life. It was well past sunset and most of her kin were busy settling around the hearths of their various lodges, putting their children to sleep and getting ready for bed. Tomorrow was an important day. Owl Clan would be packing to move to Tabaha Lodge on Turkey Lake for the summer season. Klizzie had been hoping the man named Muhl-dar would be well enough to travel with them, but now it looked as if he wouldn't recover his strength before the Clan's departure. He would remain behind and Klizzie had no doubt Day-nuh would stay with him. "Will they be okay here by themselves?" Gini asked, as if reading Klizzie's thoughts. The girl hunkered close to the man's head to get an unobstructed view of him. Klizzie's heart went out to the strangers, particularly the fox-haired woman. She looked bedraggled and exhausted. Her bruises were fading, but the shadows beneath her eyes grew darker each day. Her skin was as pale as a pickerel's belly and was dotted with inflamed mosquito bites. She needed a bath and her clothes could stand washing, too. Her odd garments were covered with mud and smelled a little sour. Klizzie noticed there was blood on her leg-coverings, a large, dark patch between her thighs that looked fresh. Day-nuh must be having her Moon Time, she realized. She was bleeding into her garments without seeming to be aware of it. "Day-nuh?" Klizzie politely tapped her arm and pointed to the blood. Day-nuh looked down. "Dammit..." Her eyes filled with tears and she gave Klizzie a pleading stare. She was obviously apprehensive about leaving her sick companion unattended, but she knew she had to do something about the blood. "Gini, you stay with Muhl-dar while I take Day-nuh to wash up." Day-nuh cast troubled eyes on Muhl-dar. "He will be fine," Klizzie tried to explain. "Gini can fetch us if he wakes up." Frustrated by their lack of common language, she pointed again at the blood and waved Day-nuh toward the lodge's entrance. Reluctantly, she rose and followed Klizzie outside. Because the strangers had arrived in the strawberry field carrying nothing but two hunters' packs and two spears, Klizzie suspected Day-nuh didn't have the necessities for her Moon Time. Sympathy settled like a stone in her stomach when she considered that Day-nuh might have let herself bleed into her garments not because she was intent on the sick man but because she hadn't known how to ask for the things she needed. Taking her by the hand, Klizzie led Day-nuh first to her own lodge, where she gathered clean skins for her to wear after she washed up, as well as her traveling pack. Dzeh wasn't in the hut yet, but several of his cousins were already bedding down. They peered at the fox-haired woman with curious eyes, but said nothing. The newcomers made everyone nervous. Strangers were not kin and could be dangerous, stealing food, weapons and women, sometimes killing the men. The Clan would not begin to relax until the man named Muhl-dar officially became Dzeh's Trading Partner. Until then, he and Day-nuh were considered outsiders and would continue to be regarded with suspicion. "This way." Klizzie smiled and took hold of Day-nuh's hand once more. "You can bathe in the lake, then dress in these clean skins." The fox-haired woman allowed herself to be towed out of the lodge and down to the lakeshore, which wasn't far, just a few rabbit hops. She stumbled as she walked, looking dazed and exhausted. Klizzie worried about her. She was like an orphaned child who had gone too long with too little care. Without a good meal or a long night's rest, she would soon become as sick as her companion. For now, Klizzie was determined to help her, at least until the Clan left the day after tomorrow. She felt in her heart there was nothing to fear from these newcomers, no matter what the rest of the Clan might think. Up ahead, the small crescent-shaped beach glimmered beneath the moonlit sky. The shore was sandy and smooth; it felt cool and soothing against the soles of Klizzie's feet as she padded along its length. Waves gently lapped the shore and the air smelled wet and silty and soft, like the lake itself. This lake was called A-ye-shi, because on nights such as this it glistened like the black, glossy egg of a frog. It held life inside it like a frog's egg, too. Fish, turtles and mussels, beaver and otter, water birds, other things. Gifts from the Spirits. "You can undress here." Klizzie stopped beside a large, branched log of driftwood where she set down her pack. Intending to bathe, too, she unwrapped the furs from her waist and draped them over the log. Giving a quick silent prayer to the spirits, she removed the pouch from around her neck and laid it reverently atop her clothes. Naked, she turned to face Day-nuh. Day-nuh slowly removed her eel-skin cloak and placed it on the log next to Klizzie's things. Then she stood staring at the lake as if uncertain what to do next. "Do you need help?" Klizzie gave a tentative tug at her strange tunic. She wasn't sure how this garment was supposed to come off. It had no apparent fasteners and it felt strange to the touch, elastic like the stomach of a gutted deer, but dry, like lamb's wool. Evidently the garment needed no unfastening. Day-nuh removed it by pulling it up and over her head in one easy motion. Underneath it she wore another garment, the likes of which Klizzie had never seen. It was a small, tight-fitting scrap of black, shiny material. More eel skin, perhaps, shaped into some sort of vest. Reaching behind her back, Day-nuh unfastened the odd garment and let it drop to the ground, revealing nipples the color of pink rose blossoms. Klizzie couldn't help but stare; her own nipples were brown, the color of acorns, as were all of the Clan women's. And Clan skin was tan, not white like Day-nuh's. She was as ivory colored as a mastodon tusk. Paler than a person who was about to fly away to the Spirit World, she seemed to glow with the silvery luminescence of the moon...except where she was bruised, which was in many places. She was also spotted with insect bites and crisscrossed with welts and scratches. It suddenly dawned on Klizzie that Day-nuh wore no totems around her neck. What sort of clan did not wear totems? And which Spirits would help people who prayed to none? There seemed no end to the strangeness of these foreigners. Indifferent to Klizzie's wonderment, Day-nuh knelt to unfasten her footwear. Once the lacings were untied, she stood and kicked the coverings from her feet. Then she removed her thin inner footwear. Next she loosened the waist of her bloodied leggings, which she let drop to her ankles, exposing another odd undergarment. This one was black and shiny like the upper garment, although it was wet with fresh blood. "I can wash your clothes," Klizzie suggested, "while you clean yourself." Hesitating for only a heartbeat, Day-nuh slipped out of her strange undergarment. With Moon Blood staining her inner thighs, she shivered and looked hesitantly at the lake. Klizzie gave her a reassuring smile before digging two amole bulbs from her pack. "Take this." She handed Day-nuh one of the soap-weed roots. The pale fox-haired woman stared at it as if she'd never seen a soap plant before. Klizzie realized that maybe she hadn't. It was possible soap-weed didn't grow in Eel Clan territory. "It will get you clean and will take the sting out of those insect bites. I will show you." She waded into the water, enjoying its coolness on her skin. The surface rippled around her plowing legs, bucking the reflection of stars and moon. Somewhere in the velvet black of the opposite shore, a loon warbled a love song to its mate. Klizzie glanced over her shoulder to watch Day-nuh, lunar- white, trailing behind her. When the water bumped the undersides of Klizzie's breasts, she gasped at its chilliness. "This is far enough," she announced, laughing as she began scrubbing the soap-weed root between her hands, working up a frothy lather. "See? This is how it is done." Day-nuh watched her for a moment before mimicking her motions and sudsing her own hands with the root. Klizzie approached her with soap dripping from her cupped hands. "Hold still," she murmured, and tenderly washed the soot from Day-nuh's face, careful not to press too heavily on her bruises. She half expected the ivory-white skin to feel as strange as it looked, maybe cool and hard like a mastodon tusk, but instead she found it was as soft and warm as her own brown skin. Day-nuh flinched when Klizzie's thumb grazed her swollen, split lip. "Sorry," Klizzie apologized. She circled behind her and began wetting and washing Day-nuh's fox-colored hair. Working up a thick lather, she massaged soap into her scalp, while Day-nuh scrubbed her own arms and neck. "Rinse," Klizzie said, once she felt satisfied that she had removed all the pine pitch, dried blood, twigs and leaves. To demonstrate her request, Klizzie made a show of holding her breath and ducking beneath the surface. Day-nuh ducked beneath the water, too, sending soap bubbles spiraling to the surface. When both women came up for air, Klizzie moved them to shallower water. "I will wash your back." She twirled her finger to indicate she wanted Day-nuh to turn around. "You do the rest." She seemed to understand and turned her back. Klizzie lathered her shoulders, her spine, the backs of her arms, treating every injury with extreme care and wondering how Day-nuh had gotten so many welts and scratches. "You finish while I clean your garments," Klizzie suggested, satisfied that all the cuts on Day-nuh's back were clean. She waded to shore, leaving the pale stranger to scrub the remaining dirt from her arms and the blood from her legs. By the time Day-nuh emerged pink and clean, Klizzie had her clothes soaped, rinsed, wrung out and hanging to dry on the driftwood log. "Let's get you dressed before you bleed all over yourself again." Klizzie rummaged through her pack and pulled out a Moon Time belt and a dried cattail. She handed Day-nuh the belt, then burst the cattail open, producing wads of fluffy, absorbent down. The belt consisted of two parts: a soft deerskin strap about three fingers wide and two hands long attached at both ends to a rawhide cord that was long enough to loop around the waist. After a quick inspection, Day-nuh slid the strap between her legs and held it in place by cinching the string around her waist. Klizzie handed her a clump of cattail down, which she tucked between her legs inside the strap. Klizzie offered her the remaining cattail. "For later," she said. Day-nuh took the down, retrieved her jacket and stuffed the wad into a pocket. The pocket itself amazed Klizzie. A hidden carrying pack, nearly invisible! How clever! Because Day-nuh was shivering, Klizzie didn't take the time to inspect this wondrous carrying device more closely, but handed Day-nuh the fur skirt she'd brought for her. When she fumbled with the fastener, Klizzie hurried to help, showing her how to loop the knot at her hip. Klizzie donned her own skirt before announcing, "Next, I will rid your hair of all those snarls." She searched her pack again, this time for the comb Dzeh had given her. The comb was well made, the tines even, straight and smooth, the handle intricately incised with the symbols of Owl Clan. Other than her totem pouch, it was Klizzie's most prized possession. "Sit," she ordered, pointing at the log. Day-nuh did as she was told and Klizzie began combing the tangles from her hair. She hummed a little song as she worked -- a child's prayer to the Fox Spirit, because Day-nuh's hair reminded her so much of the hair of Ma-e, the Fox. "E ha e... yo e... yo... he ye ye--" "Klizzie! Klizzie!" Gini's voice came from the woods. The girl arrived breathless on the beach. "Muhl-dar is thrashing in his sleep. He yells the strange word 'scuh-lee' over and over. Come quickly!" Before Klizzie could gather their things, Day-nuh was already running toward the camp. * * * "Scully, you *have* to be willing to see!" "Mulder, the case is over." "No, no, you have to believe me. You *have* to. No one else will. Please." Mulder struggles against restraints that bind both wrists to bedrails. He is back in Calumet Mercy Hospital, confined in the Psych Ward. The sheets of his bed have been washed in harsh chemicals to kill germs, and are stiff and rough against his exposed skin. The room smells like disinfectant and fear. Everything is white, white, white. Except for Scully. She is wearing her black satin bra and panties, and nothing else. Her lower lip has been recently split and is swollen. A bruise surrounds her left eye. She massages his chest with her palm while he begs her to help him. "Untie me, please. Scully, please unfasten the restraints." "It's over." "Scully--" Mulder can smell smoke; he hears the crackle of fire. Hidden flames create flickering shadows, animated Rorschach's inkblots that look like demons on the curtain encircling his bed. Panic balloons in his gut and rises to his throat, threatening to choke him. Scully leans over him until her brightly lipsticked mouth is only millimeters from his own dry lips. "I'm going." "Going where? When will you be back?" "I won't be back." No, no, no. Anything but that. He wants to grab her arm as she turns to go, hold onto her as tightly as he can. Losing her is the worst possible thing. Damn these straps! "You've been a child, Fox." "Scully?" She peers back at him over her shoulder, but she is no longer Scully; she is Diana, and an ugly frown cuts across her face. "You've been a child with only the responsibility of a child...to your own dreams and fantasies..." Her goodbye speech, from years ago, before she walked out of his life, before the divorce papers were served -- their last fight. She looks just the way she did that day. Achingly beautiful, despite her disappointed expression. He feels the dead weight of his wedding ring on his finger. He wanted so much for her to understand him, to love him. "I have commitments," he tells her. God, he's repeated these words so many times. "To the X-Files, to my sister--" "You think you know what that means -- commitment. But you won't know the true joy of responsibility until you plant your feet in the world." "Meaning?" He knows what she means; he knows exactly what she's going to say, because she's said it dozens of times, fighting for her dreams just as often and hard as he's argued for his. "Becoming a parent, Fox. Having a child." "*No* children, Diana. We've been over this. A father needs to be able to protect his children. And I don't feel I... I can't..." He couldn't save Sam. He couldn't. He can't... "You have to let go of the past, Fox." "I'm just supposed to slip into domestic bliss? Just like that?" "Yes." "It's not possible. Not for me." Her expression turns sad. Tears glisten in her eyes. She looks away and walks to the door. "Diana?" Please don't go! Please, don't leave me! He struggles against the restraints. But she has passed beyond the door into the hall. The skin of her back is milky white, framed by the black silk of her bra and panties. He wants to put his hand there, but his hands are tied, and besides, someone else is putting his hand there. The stranger's hand is scarred. The man stands with his back to Mulder, but Mulder can see he is muscular. He wears his hair long. He bends to nuzzle Diana's neck and she laughs when his beard tickles her skin. The man's fingers stroke the tattoo on her lower back -- a snake devouring its own tail. Oh, God, it's Scully. "Get away from her!" Mulder shouts, his hips arching off the bed, straps cutting into his wrists. "Scully, don't leave! Scully? Scully! Come back! Come back, Scully! Sculleeeee!" She glances at him and shakes her head. "Not everything is about you, Mulder." Then she's out the door. When he tries to call to her, nothing comes out of his mouth but a silent scream that tastes like woodsmoke. * * * "Mulder, wake up." Scully's voice came from beyond the black of Mulder's closed eyes. He struggled to lift his lids, which felt as if they were weighted by sandbags. When he finally managed to open them a crack, he discovered he was lying on a bed of furs in a low tent-like structure. Only Scully's pale, bruised face looked familiar. She leaned over him, shoulders squared as if prepared for disappointment. Tears glossed her eyes and the way she trapped her lower lip between her teeth made his stomach clench. She was clearly worried about something. Very worried. "That bad?" he whispered. The words scoured his raw, swollen throat. She shook her head, knocking loose a tear. "You're going to be fine." The tear skated down her cheek, and he reached up to wipe away its shimmery track, but she beat him to the punch, eliminating all trace of it with one quick swipe. Sniffing quietly, she transformed into Doctor mode, or maybe Special Agent mode, whatever it took to conceal her fears from him. Craning to see past her, he tried to make sense of his surroundings. Smoke rose from a small campfire off to her left. The place was dim and cramped and smelled like...what was that smell? Mint? Over his head, the roof was made of animal hides stretched across several curving bone supports. Like the Neanderthals' hut. "Where are we?" He tried to sit up, feeling panicky. Scully hushed him and pressed her palm against his chest, prodding him back down onto the furs. "We're at a camp not far from the field where you..." -- her composure wavered -- "where you passed out." How long ago was that? Hours? Days? If those bastards touched her while-- "Mulder, they're helping us," she reassured him, as if reading his mind. "Who? Conan the Barbarian and his weasely sidekick?" A humorless laugh chuffed from her lungs. "No. A woman named Klizzie. She found us two days ago. Her people brought us here." "Her people?" He could feel a cough building in his chest and he cleared his throat in an effort to avert it. "About fifty of them -- men, women, and children. They live here by the lake, at least temporarily. Klizzie convinced them to take us in." "*Convinced* them?" Now he did choke. Deep, wet coughs that doubled him in half. Jesus, his lungs ached. Scully massaged his bare chest while he gasped for air. After several painful minutes, his cough subsided and he was able to speak again. "They didn't want to help us?" "Not really." "That's a bit un-neighborly, given the circumstances." "They're afraid." "Of *us*?" "Strangers in general, I think." Mulder recalled Dr. Diamond's words from several years ago when he and Scully were investigating the Jersey Devil case: "Humans tend to be tribal and aggressively territorial, oriented by selfish sexual and reproductive drives that make cooperation beyond the family tribe extremely hard." If Diamond was right, it made sense that these people would be leery of him and Scully. Scully reached past his shoulder for a shallow bowl. Bringing it to his lips, she urged, "Drink." "What is it?" "Just water." He took a sip and then eyed the odd container. It was roughly circular, about six inches in diameter, and appeared to have scales. "What is that?" "Turtle shell." She set it back down and picked up a basket full of ripe strawberries. "You hungry? You should eat, try to regain your strength." She held a berry up for him to inspect. It looked delicious. He opened his mouth and she fed it to him. God, it tasted wonderful. Like summer at Quonochontaug. Strawberry pie and grilled hamburgers and his mom's potato salad. Seagulls screeching for handouts, pinwheeling in the clear blue sky. The air smelling like the ocean. Sea salt speckling his bare feet and legs. Sam begging him to help her search for seashells and beach glass. None of which had happened yet, he realized, feeling queasy. "More?" Scully asked. He shook his head. "Tell me about them...our hosts." Another cough rattled his chest. She set down the berries and shrugged. "They speak a language I don't understand. They appear healthy, well fed, happy, for the most part." "For the most part?" "There was a lengthy, somewhat intense discussion before they brought us here." "Which is where?" "A camp of about half a dozen shelters near the lake we saw from the top of the hill. They sleep several to a tent. Cook and eat in groups. Seem to have a complex system for divvying up food." She nodded at the basket. "They're skilled artisans. They make baskets and jewelry and stone tools. They wear furs. Seem to love their kids, who have the run of the place." So they weren't all brutes like Conan and his little buddy. "Klizzie and a girl named Gini keep bringing us food and water," she continued, nodding at the strawberries. "Some sort of medicine man drops by every now and again to chant and leave offerings. The mint came from him." She indicated a posy of drying greens that hung like mistletoe from a bone support beside his head. "So that's what smells." "Wild spearmint. I suspect he thinks it helps you breathe better." "Does it?" "Actually...it's been known to have antiseptic qualities, which are most likely contributing to your recovery. He gave you an herbal tea that suppressed your cough enough to let you get some sleep, then another that acted like an expectorant to help clear your secretions. He treated your burns with a salve and so far there hasn't been any sign of infection. His knowledge of medicinal herbs is impressive." "Well, tell him to bring on whatever he's got. I'm feeling as weak as a baby cat." She stroked his cheek, her palm making a scritch-scratchy sound against his sprouting whiskers. "You've been very sick, Mulder. You still are. A full recovery will take time." That wasn't the news he wanted to hear. He was eager to get up and out of bed to start looking for a way home. He'd had about all he could stand of the Pleistocene. He noticed Scully was barelegged and wearing some sort of fur garment beneath her leather coat. "Going native?" he asked, fingering the soft material. "No, I..." Her eyes dodged his as a flush of pink crept up her cheeks. "I needed to clean up." Was she embarrassed? Over what? "I wouldn't mind cleaning up a little myself." He ran his palm over his whiskers. "Not until you're stronger." "Are you talking about my smell or my health?" That coaxed a tiny smile from her. She took hold of his hand and gave it a quick squeeze. "Tell you what, I'll wash your clothes tomorrow. We'll worry about your personal hygiene once you're feeling better." "You could always give me a sponge bath." He waggled his brows. "You are clearly hallucinating again." Deciding to go with the idea, he gently pulled her to his chest. Gathering her into his arms, he stage-whispered into her ear, "Make all my hallucinations come true, Scully." She snaked her arms around his ribs and surprised him by clutching him fiercely. Her show of affection spawned a lump in his throat that swamped his eyes with tears. Not quite trusting his voice, he returned her embrace, held her, sank his fingers into her still-damp hair. If he could have strung more than two comprehensible words together, he would have told her how much he needed her...how much he loved her...how much he had always loved her and now couldn't imagine his life without her. "Scully, I--" was all he managed to say before his voice gave out. "You need to rest," she murmured against his collarbone. She started to rise, but he found he couldn't release her. Not yet. "Stay," he begged. She hesitated, then nodded against his neck. "For a little while," she promised, her words sounding watery and unguarded. She shifted her position so that she lay beside him, her head pillowed on his arm, and he rolled to face her, curving his body to fit with hers. Pressing his lips to the crown of her head, he realized the ache in his chest had nothing at all to do with the fire on the mountain, and everything to do with the fire in his heart. * * * Noontime. Mulder scratched his naked chest and rose on unsteady legs to empty his bladder while Scully continued to sleep on their bed of animal skins. He couldn't believe she'd spent the entire night...and morning...wrapped in his arms. Too bad he'd slept through most of it. Damn smoke inhalation. He shuffled on bare feet out of the shelter. Outside, he discovered half a dozen similar shelters in various stages of deconstruction. Men, women and children chattered in an unfamiliar language around dismantled tents while they rolled up animal hides and packed baskets. The smell of roasting meat drew his attention to a sizzling carcass that was propped up on a wooden spit over an open fire about thirty feet away. Jesus, the aroma made his mouth water. Pee. He'd come out here to pee. Better do it before anyone noticed he was up and about. Ducking behind the nearest tree, he unzipped his pants and took what felt like the longest piss of his life. "Muhl-dar!" A child suddenly appeared behind him, startling him so badly he nearly sprayed himself. He peered over his shoulder. Shit, it was the girl. Gini? Is that what Scully said her name was? "Uh...I'll...uh...be right with you...Gini...in just a jiff--" But the girl was already running off in the direction of the tents and shouting to the others, "Muhl-dar yeh-zihn! Muhl-dar ha-neh-al-enji." He finished his business as quickly as possible and had just barely gotten himself tucked back into his pants when a small crowd began to gather around him. At least twenty people stared at him with unblinking, brown eyes. He offered them an embarrassed smile. "Hey," he said, feeling dizzy and weak. His legs felt like they might give out any second and he couldn't quite catch his breath no matter how hard he tried to suck in a lungful of air. He decided to sit down -- uh, away from the tree -- and took three shaky steps before lowering himself into a squat. All twenty of his curious visitors squatted, too. Except Gini, who ran off once again, presumably to bring back the rest of the camp to watch him either puke or pass out. So now what? "Anyone know any good jokes?" Apparently not. "We could sing All Along the Watchtower." More onlookers joined the widening circle. They seemed to be settling in for some sort of show, although he had no idea what they were expecting from him. He wished Scully would wake up and get her ass out here. Better than that, he wished he would wake up to find out this was all a bad dream. A young woman with braids approached, flanked by a tall guy and an older gray-haired man. The men looked all business as they sidestepped through the crowd, closing in on Mulder. The taller guy moved to the front where he squatted an arm's length away. "Dzeh," he said, tapping his chest and staring straight into Mulder's eyes. Then he pointed at Mulder. "Muhl-dar?" "Yours truly." "Dzeh. Muhl-dar." The man pointed back and forth between them. "Okay, so now we know each other's names. What next, Mister...uh...Dzeh?" Dzeh pulled a knife from his belt. Mulder tensed and reached for his gun, but Dzeh set the knife on the ground between them. The knife had a serviceable stone blade and what appeared to be a bone handle. Dzeh sat back on his haunches and looked up expectantly. Jesus, what the hell did this guy want? Was Mulder supposed to pick up the knife and admire it? Or was it a warning? He guessed that whatever he decided to do next must be very important. Too bad he was clueless about what it should be. Klizzie came to his rescue. Amidst protests from the onlookers, she scurried forward to hunker at Mulder's feet. Keeping her eyes downcast, she tentatively tapped his wristwatch, and then pointed at the knife. Ah! A trade! Mulder unbuckled his watch and held it up for Dzeh to see. Dzeh reached for it, but before he could take it, Mulder shook his head and withdrew the watch. "Mulder, what the hell are you doing?" Scully had joined the outer fringes of the crowd, standing with hands on her hips and an expression of incredulity on her face. "If he wants your watch, give it to him." Mulder studied the crowd's reaction. Scully's interruption had produced frowns all around. The women looked apprehensive and crouched lower to the ground. The men sat up straighter with hands poised over the handles of their knives. Knives that looked very much like the one on the ground in front of him. This was a not a simple trade but a test. And everyone watched to see if he was going to pass or fail. "Scully, I know what I'm doing," he said firmly. "Mulder, these people saved your life. You--" "Scully!" Mulder barked at her, putting as much anger into his voice as he could muster. This was a patriarchal society. These people, men and women alike, weren't apt to respect a man who allowed a woman to tell him what to do -- or a man who made a lousy trade -- and at the moment, respect was absolutely essential. "Scully, do *not* say another word." He would apologize to her later. Right now he fastened his eyes on Dzeh's necklace. Large, curving claws, maybe from a bear, lined a rawhide cord around Dzeh's neck. Intricately carved bone beads separated the claws, making the necklace a showy piece of jewelry. Mulder guessed it was worth far more than an ordinary knife. Mulder held up the watch and pointed at the necklace. Dzeh took a moment to consider the trade. Mulder hoped he was reading this situation right. Otherwise he had ticked off Scully for no good reason and they would probably both be killed before he could apologize. Finally, Dzeh nodded his head and ceremoniously removed his necklace. He held it up, high enough for the entire crowd to see. Mulder imitated his gesture and held his watch aloft, too. Then Dzeh leaned forward and with great deference draped the necklace over Mulder's head. Relieved, Mulder returned the gesture by fastening the watch around Dzeh's wrist. A wide grin split Dzeh's bearded face. He gave Mulder several appreciative whacks on the shoulder, nearly toppling him. He laughed a great belly laugh before rising to his feet, and then everyone began talking at once, coming forward to clap Mulder's shoulder, looking pleased with the outcome of things. Best of all, someone was carving the delicious smelling roast. After the last person had come forward to congratulate him, Scully approached with arms folded across her chest. "What was that all about?" "Looks like we're having a par-tay, Scully," Mulder said, avoiding her frown and pointing at the roasting meat. "I'm hungry enough to eat a mastodon. Aren't you?" Scully's anger melted into concern at the reference to his hunger. She crouched beside him. "How did you know what to do?" she asked. "I didn't. Just went with a gut feeling." She pursed her lips as she watched Klizzie approach with two platters of food. "You know I hate gut feelings." "I know." He accepted a plate of juicy meat and fresh greens. "Thanks for going with it though," he said around a mouthful of the most delicious roast he'd ever tasted. * * * Klizzie's heart felt lighter than goose down. Muhl-dar and Dzeh were Trading Partners! That meant the newcomers were no longer strangers but kin, official members of Owl Clan. She chuckled to herself. It was silly to have become so attached to the newcomers, but, like two lost children, they had needed her and she enjoyed helping them. Caring for them was like caring for the babies of Dzeh's cousins, a task she enjoyed. Since she had no children of her own, her arms were empty enough to lend a willing hand to others in need. Which was exactly what she was doing now. The Clan would be leaving at sunup, so Klizzie was putting together some necessities to leave behind with Day-nuh and Muhl-dar, since he was not yet well enough to travel... certainly not all the way to Turkey Lake, which would take seven or eight days of strenuous walking and climbing. Today's simple celebration feast had worn him out; he'd had to retire to his skins at dusk to rest. Klizzie surveyed the items she'd gathered. Flints for fire, scrapers for cleaning furs, a sheep's bladder for carrying water, a buffalo blanket, three bone hooks and catgut for fishing, two new points for their spears, an amole root, cattails for Day-nuh's Moon Time, a brand new men's garment made from deer hide, and a supply of food that included dried meat, last year's nuts, some greens, berries and four fresh squirrels killed just yesterday. She packed everything but the food into her best travel pack. Then she put the food into a basket. It didn't seem nearly enough. They would have no cooking skins, medicines, axes, snares or bolos, and Klizzie had none to share. Would Muhl-dar and Day-nuh be okay without these things? She wished she had more to give. Taking a deep breath, she tried to calm her fears about the newcomers' uncertain future. They would be fine, she told herself. They had lived many seasons without her help. Obviously they were skilled and intelligent. But to be left alone... No one wanted to be without the protection of their clan. Being without kin meant certain death, sooner or later. And the loneliness would be the most difficult thing of all. Thank the Spirits they at least had each other. Deciding to add one more item to the meager collection of supplies, Klizzie searched her own travel pack for her comb, her Joining Day gift from Dzeh. When she found it, she held it for a moment, tracing the carefully incised design with her finger while she recalled the moment Dzeh had given it to her. He had smiled at her with his handsome, crooked smile. His affection for her had made her heart feel like a pond when the ice goes out, ready for spring and the return of ducks. That feeling had not left her once in all the seasons they had been together. Without regret, she placed the comb in the pack for Day-nuh. Supplies and food ready, she carried them to A-zey-al-ih Lodge. Inside the medicine tent, she found Day-nuh and Muhl-dar sleeping together on the animal skins, his arm curled protectively around her shoulders. Not wanting to disturb them, she set the pack and basket by the entrance as quietly as she could. When she began to tiptoe away, she was stopped by the sound of Day-nuh's voice. "Klizzie?" The fox-haired woman sat up, her blue eyes curious. Klizzie whispered, so as not to wake Muhl-dar, "I brought you some things." She gestured at the packs, trying to get her point across. Day-nuh nodded, so Klizzie once more turned to go. But before she could step outside, Day-nuh was off the furs and coming toward her. "Klizzie..." she said, her gaze grazing the packs. Day-nuh opened her arms and embraced her, bringing tears to her eyes. "Thank you. For everything. Thank you." "Thahn-kew?" Klizzie repeated, returning her hug. "Yes. Thank you." "Yah-a-da-hal-yon-ih Muhl-dar," Klizzie whispered, holding Day- nuh tightly. She could not bring herself to say the word goodbye. * * * "Ow! Mulder!" "Huh?" "You're poking me." Mulder jerked his hips away from Scully's backside, opening up a space of several inches between them on the animal skins. "Sorry." She turned to glare at him over her shoulder. "Not your..." -- she waved a hand in the general direction of his lap -- "Your teeth!" "My tee..." Now he was really confused. He ran his tongue over his front teeth. "These." Scully reached around to give Dzeh's necklace a tug. "Could you take this thing off, please?" "But I like it. Brings out the caveman in me, don't you think?" He grinned and rattled the bone beads. "Go back to sleep, Tarzan." "Tarzan was a *jungle* man, Scully, not a caveman." "Call him whatever you like, I'm sure he slept through the night. Now go to sleep," she said, giving him a slitted, sidelong glance. He let the necklace drop back onto his bare chest. "All I've been doing is sleeping...for *days*. I'm feeling..." -- he snuggled closer and prodded her ear with his nose -- "wide awake." God, she smelled good. She rolled over to face him. He tried to read her expression. Sadness? Fear? Longing? Certainly not dismissal, which was what he was expecting. Her next words were sad and deadly serious. "Mulder, you almost died. You *did* die." Imagined loss wavered in her voice and her obvious anguish cut off his own breath, threatening to strangle him as surely as the smoke that had invaded his lungs several days ago. To steady himself, he stroked her bare shoulder with the backs of his fingers and focused his blurring eyes on the slim strap of her camisole. She must have retrieved it from his coat pocket while he'd been sleeping. What had gone through her mind when she found it there? Memories of her kidnapping? Worries that, if he had died, she would be alone in the Ice Age? That was his greatest fear. Not of being alone here, necessarily, but of being left anywhere without her. Images from his recent dream arose in his mind: Scully leaving him, walking out the door...the way Diana had once done. He felt the need to anchor himself to her, so he folded his arms around her and hugged her to his chest. Urgency ballooned inside him. The words "don't leave me, don't leave me" unnerved him from fingertips to the soles of his feet. He wanted to hear her say, "I'm right here. I will always be with you." Instead she said, "Mulder, I can't breathe." "Welcome to the club," he mumbled, and tried to relax his hold. "Are you feeling okay?" she asked, sounding alarmed. She'd evidently taken his comment literally and thought he was suffering a relapse because she sat up and reached for his wrist to check his pulse. "I'm not having a heart attack, Scully." I'm having an attack of the heart. He couldn't tear his eyes from her lips. "But you're welcome to try mouth-to-mouth, if you like. Just in case." Her right brow arched as he inched his mouth closer to hers. He paused, a millimeter away. Would she let him kiss her? She exhaled, a quivering puff of air warmed by her lungs that fired his skin. His bones turned liquid and his muscles went numb. He leaned in and nudged her lips with his, feather-light. Jesus, sweet Jesus. So little pressure, but enough to set his heart pounding. Please, Scully, want me as much as I want you. The tip of her tongue skated tentatively across his lower lip, jolting him with its unexpected warmth. She teased him with it, advancing and then retreating, only to advance again, delicately skidding into his mouth. How many times had he wished for this...imagined it? God, don't let this be just another dream. Her fingers settled on his chest, timid, inquisitive and so damn fucking hot it sent a tsunami of blood to his groin. And when her nails grazed his nipple, oh, Christ, he was lost. He rolled her underneath him and plunged his tongue to the back of her mouth. Get inside her, inside her, inside her... Take her... Oh, God...could he? Not waiting for God's answer, he thrust a hand beneath her camisole, found her left breast and squeezed. She arched into his palm and her nipple puckered as he alternately clenched and released her. She parted her legs, knees raised on either side of his hips, causing his pulse to roar in his ears. She actually wanted him. She wasn't pulling away. She was going to allow him to do this...to make love to her. He ground his hips into the cradle of her thighs, nipped at her neck, ran his tongue from her collarbone to her jaw, and growled when her lips met his once more. "Mulder." The word echoed inside his mouth. He reluctantly broke their kiss. Had he misunderstood? "Are you up for this?" she asked. Shit, he couldn't be more "up." His erection was straining against the fabric of his jeans. Too many clothes. They had on too damn many clothes. "You're the doctor, Scully," -- he swallowed hard -- "You tell me." "I think..." She finger-painted an invisible stripe down his spine from neck to tailbone, sending a lightning bolt of desire to his crotch. "We need to slow down." Of course. He was rushing things. "I want you more than I've ever wanted anything, Scully." The words spilled out, heartfelt and uncensored. She took a deep breath and said, "I want you, too." She sounded as if she meant it...*really* meant it. "But let's take our time. Okay?" "Okay. I can do slow. I think." He leaned in to kiss her, but she halted him with the touch of her finger to his lower lip. "One more thing." "What's that?" He sucked her finger into his mouth. "I, uh..." She paused, looking embarrassed. "Wha ish it?" he asked around her finger. "I'm having my period." "Oh." Big deal, a little menstrual blood. Did she really think that would turn him off? She was frowning. Maybe the idea of having sex during her period turned *her* off. Or maybe she was physically uncomfortable. Cramps or something. He released her finger. "Would it...uh...hurt you?" "No. It just might be, you know...messy." "Scully, the linens aren't ours. Who cares?" He almost added that sex was always messy -- hell, even masturbating was messy -- but then thought better of it. "I'm fine with it." "Well, it's just...I thought you should know." "Doesn't bother me if it doesn't bother you." "Then lose the pants, G-Man." The husky way she said it made every hair on his body stand at attention. He wasted no time rising to his knees and unfastening his belt and fly. He quickly stripped out of his pants and boxers. Completely naked, he said, "Your turn." She sat up and slowly drew her camisole up and over her head, exposing her bare breasts. The left one was red where he had clutched her a moment ago. Jesus, he could see the pink silhouette of his fingers branded into her white skin. "Did I...did I hurt you?" He pointed to the mark. She looked down, an expression of uncertainty on her face. Then shook her head and traced the pattern of his hand with her index finger. The sight of her topless, touching herself, increased the pressure in his groin. She was stunningly beautiful in the half-light of the dying fire, naked from the waist up, nipples puckered to rigid points. "The rest..." Mulder implored, waving at the skins she wore around her hips. He assumed she'd gotten the skirt from Klizzie, something to wear while her own clothes dried. Her pants and turtleneck were hanging from the shelter's bone supports by the hearth. Right next to her sexy black panties and bra. She fumbled with the knot at her left hip and her breasts joggled as she worked to unfasten the garment. They appeared heavier than he'd imagined, maybe due to her time of month, and it was all he could do not to grip himself and stroke his hard cock to orgasm while she stripped. "I can't seem to--" "Here, let me." He crawled forward, erection bobbing as he knelt in front of her. Nudging her hands aside he took hold of the skirt and yanked. It tore easily away, pulling Scully toward him at the same time. Her breasts bumped his chest and he dropped the skirt. His hands climbed her back, kneaded her ribs, returned to her hips, her ass. He pulled her into his lap and kissed her deeply. She returned his kiss and gripped his arms as if she never intended to release him. God, he was so grateful for that. For her. Hands roving across her backside, he discovered she still wore a slim garment slung between her legs, fastened around her waist by a string of rawhide. "Scully, you're not naked." "Feminine hygiene protection, Pleistocene style." "Ah." That got the better of his curiosity. He pulled back to examine the garment, which looked like a deer-hide g-string. "Makes you look like an Ice Age stripper. Kinda sex-say." He tugged at the belt. "Hardly. But it's keeping your lap clean." "I don't want my lap clean." He found where the belt tied in front and pulled the bow loose. She gathered the garment and its contents, and set it aside, out of view. "It's not disgusting, Scully." "I didn't say it was. I just don't particularly want to roll in it." Now she sat bare-naked in his lap, with nothing at all between them. He could feel the heat of her sex and longed to be inside her. "Scully, it's gotta be now." He barely recognized his own rasping voice. By way of agreement, she leaned back on the skins, knees drawn up, legs separated just enough for him to get a glimpse of curls and pliant lips. Rising onto his knees, he positioned himself between her legs and brushed a knuckle across her curls before sliding his finger into her humid depths. She watched him, wide-eyed, surprising him with her bold stare. He had half expected she might hide behind lowered lashes while making love. But the more he thought about it, the more sense her unabashed gaze made. Scientists are curious and she was above all else a scientist. He delved more deeply into her, making her gasp. Then, desperate to make her gasp again, he pushed even deeper. She rewarded him with a small groan. "I want you inside me," she said. "I am inside you." Heaven help him, he was actually in her and she felt even more wonderful than he had always imagined. His pleasure increased when she reached down to curl her hand around his rigid cock. "I want this," she said, squeezing him, stroking him. Oh, Jesus. "I thought...you said...you wanted to go slow...oohhh, Sculleee." He inhaled as deeply as his congested lungs would allow. "I'm in no hurry." She lay supine, legs splayed, her hand gripping him, his index finger lost in her depths. He grazed her clitoris with his thumb and felt her inner walls contract. She was slick with a heady mixture of desire and her monthly flow. He stirred her juices, and was enchanted when his touch inspired a soft moan. "Is it okay if I use two fingers?" he asked. "Mulder, I want this!" she said, sounding desperate and giving his erection a not-so-gentle tug. "We're getting there." He inserted a second finger into her and her hips lifted to meet his inward thrust. Wanting to see her come, he began to rhythmically glide in and out of her, applying calculated pressure to her clitoris with his thumb on each down-stroke. Her breathing quickened. A sheen of sweat slicked her flushed cheeks, her chest, her abdomen. The palm of her hand felt fiery hot on his erection. And all the while, her eyes never left his. She must have wanted to see his reaction to her orgasm every bit as much as he wanted to see her climax. She was so beautiful. So open. He could scarcely believe they were here, doing this...that she trusted him in this way, wanted him as much as he wanted her, was allowing him to touch her there. The feeling was extraordinary. The emotion overwhelming. He hadn't realized he could love anyone this much. Without warning and almost before he had a chance to appreciate it, she was climaxing, teeth clenched. She inhaled and then held her breath, while her hips rose upward and her eyes finally squeezed shut. She bore down on his hand and he felt moisture seep across his palm. She released her hold on him to grip the fur blankets while waves of pleasure contracted her muscles. "Mulder!" Her lungs expelled his name, and then she was breathing again, gulping for air, relaxing her grip on the furs, pulling back from his hand. "Oh, God." She opened her eyes and caught him staring at her. "Jesus, Scully." His fingers slipped out of her. "You...are..." "A mess?" She frowned at his bloody hand. "Sorry." "For what?" To be honest, he found her blood erotic. Her menstruation was just another facet of her femaleness, like her breasts and her satiny skin and the mind-blowing cleft between her legs. His perfect opposite, alluring because she was nothing like him. He loved their differences -- had always loved their differences. He moved up over her body on hands and knees, and before he laid himself on top of her, he painted the outline of a heart above her own heart with the moisture on his fingertip. "I love you," he whispered to her marked breast. Her eyes brimmed with tears at his quiet confession, and seeing her tears, his own vision blurred. To keep himself from crying, he lowered his body onto hers, and reveled in the feel of her beneath him. "My turn?" he asked. She chuckled. "Yes, Mulder, your turn. Although, I do plan to participate, too, you know." "Please, do." He lifted his hips enough to snake a hand between their bodies to guide himself into her. She tensed when he pressed against her opening, and then relaxed again as he slid into her, pushed forward, deeper. She wrapped her legs around his back and moaned. Jesus, she felt so...god...damn...good. He'd wanted her for so long and it turned out she had been worth every minute of the wait. It was unthinkable to withdraw from her, even a millimeter or two, and yet the desire to start thrusting was unstoppable. Ten thousand years of animal instinct steered this act. Copulation required movement and no amount of restraint could hold him still now. So he withdrew from her, nearly disconnecting their bodies, only to ram home a split second later, causing her to bark out his name. Her fingers dug into his back when he thrust a second time, but he barely felt the bite of her nails. He was focused on nothing but the part of him that was joined to her, driving hard, pushing into her as deeply as he could possibly go. Again. And again. The woman he loved...spirit and body...was under him...around him. While the beat of his heart thrummed in his ears, desire stung his eyes, numbed his fingers, hammered his ribs. He hoped his frantic pounding felt as good to her as it did to him. He rocked against her, relentless and swift, jarring her beneath him, while satisfaction overran him and gratification seemed only a heartbeat away. He felt his orgasm approaching and a pang of guilt slowed his movements. "Scully...I'm not sure...I can hold out..." He felt selfish. Knew he should pull out, slow down. "I... You... Oh..." "Mulder...you talk too much." Oh, Christ, he was at the point of no return. Semen throbbed out of him as the words mine, mine, mine roared through his brain. When there was nothing left in him, he rolled off her and onto his back. They lay there for several minutes without speaking, a sticky mixture of his semen and her blood drying slowly on his thighs. He felt drowsy and sated and happier than he'd felt in a very long time. Maybe happier than he'd ever felt in his entire life. Beside him, glossed with sweat and smelling delicious, Scully was tracing delicate circles on his damp chest with her index finger. So this was "basking." "I'm rethinking my theory," he said, gathering her closer. She continued to languidly stroke his chest. "Which theory?" "The one about us." "You had a theory about us?" "Yeah, the one where we were physically altered on a genetic level when we traveled back in time, affecting the way we felt about each other. I don't believe that now." "Why not?" "Because my attraction for you is normal, not paranormal. You're sexy. There's no X-File in that." Her fingers froze over the spot on his shoulder where she had once shot him. "Mulder?" "Hmm?" "Where is your scar?" "What?" He pushed her hand away to search his shoulder for the familiar, nerveless knot on his skin. Unbelievably, the scar was gone. x-x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER SEVEN "It's not here," Mulder said, his fingers searching for the old, familiar scar on his shoulder. "Where did it go?" Scully sat up on the sleeping skins. The fire had burned down to a few cherry-red coals, making it difficult to see in the dark hut. Mulder crawled from the bed, located his jacket, and dug into the pocket for his flashlight. Light in hand, he aimed its beam at his chest, high and to the left, where Scully's gunshot had marked him -- presumably for life. Not a trace of his scar remained. "What happened to it?" she asked. Shaking his head, he shined the light on his left thigh, where Lucas Henry's bullet had pierced him four years ago. A quarter- sized scar still puckered his skin. "That one's there." He crooked his knee and inspected the exit wound. "Front and back." Scully crawled closer and ran her fingers over his now unblemished shoulder. "This is impossible." "Maybe not." His paranormal radar was picking up a signal the way it always did when they encountered an X-File. He reached around Scully and probed the back of her neck, feeling for the telltale bump of her implanted chip. It was there. Strange. He'd expected it to be missing. Okay, so maybe his radar was off today. Then again... "Turn around," he ordered. "Why? What's the matter?" She did as he asked and presented him with her bare back. He lifted her hair and ran his light over the tiny scar on her nape, then down her spine to her tattoo. "Um...Scully? Your tattoo..." "What about it?" She craned to see over her shoulder. "It's there, isn't it?" "It's there." He traced it with his finger. "Sort of." "What the hell does that mean?" "It appears to be..." -- he leaned in for a closer look -- "faded." "Faded?" "Mm hm." She pivoted to face him and he found himself unexpectedly spotlighting her bare breasts. He clicked off his light. "Sorry." She drew a sleeping skin over her lap to cover herself. "Mulder, any number of factors can cause a tattoo to lose pigment: substandard inking practices, improper follow-up care, overexposure to the sun--" "Have you been sunbathing in the nude, Scully?" Her frown told him she was in no mood for jokes. "Skin types vary. Some don't hold ink. The fact that my tattoo is fading means nothing in and of itself. It certainly doesn't mean we were physically altered by the...the...time travel thing." "Thing?" "Event, phenomenon, whatever." "Then how do you explain the disappearance of my scar?" "Scar tissue can lighten with age." "Scully, it's completely gone!" He turned the flashlight on it again. Satisfied it truly wasn't there, he said, "I've got a theory, if you'd like to hear it." She took a deep breath, as if steeling herself. "I'm listening." "I think we're regressing." "Regressing?" "Growing younger." He held up a palm to stall her certain objection. "My scar and your tattoo are the most recent marks on us respectively. Now they're gone -- or almost gone in your case -- suggesting a shift to an earlier version of ourselves." She raised an eyebrow. "One missing scar and a faded tattoo are your proof that we're growing younger?" "Suppose time travel isn't like stepping through a door, where you're either on one side or the other." "Then where are we?" "In the broadest sense, we may still be *in* the door. In what's known as Flux Space." "Flux...? Mulder, my undergrad work was in physics. Yet I've never heard of Flux Space." "It's a bit...mystical." "Ahh." Her expression told him she was translating that to mean "paranormal bunk." "Flux Space isn't a portal, per se, but is thought to be an inter-dimension that could serve as one. It doesn't conform to conventional physics." "Why am I not surprised?" "Believers in the phenomenon claim it can be reached by way of technologically-created dimensional portals, or through naturally occurring sub-space anomalies like worm holes." "And what do these believers say is inside 'Flux Space'?" "That's just it…nobody knows for sure. But proponents of the theory hypothesize that it's not a physical 3-D space or even a 4-D space-time." Her tongue skated across her lower lip as she considered such a possibility. "Fifth dimensional." "Exactly. But here's the 64-thousand dollar question: Is the fifth dimension a spatial dimension or a time-related dimension?" "Time has only one dimension." "Does it? A second dimension might explain how we could have traveled here to the Pleistocene where we're moving forward in time while concurrently experiencing a secondary physical regression, which is out of sync with the first." "You're saying we traveled backward 12,000 years...and are now moving simultaneously forward and backward in time?" "That's what I'm saying. We're traveling along two time continuums at once." Although she continued to frown, he could tell she was evaluating his premise, picking through it for reasonable details while casting aside those that would contradict logic. "All right. Let's suppose for the sake of argument that Flux Space exists and is responsible for putting us here in the Pleistocene, where we are moving forward in time, interacting with the locals, while also regressing, going back to younger versions of ourselves..." She looked into his eyes. "Regression? Really?" "Kinda makes your head ache to think about it, huh?" She didn't smile. If anything, her expression became more serious. "Where will it stop, Mulder? Will we regress to infancy? Conception? Past lives?" He was certain there was a Shirley MacLaine joke in there somewhere, but at the moment he was drawing a blank. "I don't know. You shot me in '95. Lucas Henry shot me in '94. If we're growing younger, the scar on my leg should be the next to go. The amount of time it takes for that to happen should tell us when to expect additional changes." Like the disappearance of his fillings and his vaccination scar, or the reappearance of his tonsils and his... He glanced down between his legs at his circumcised penis. "Hopefully, we'll find a way back home before the process goes too far," he said. He noticed Scully was staring at his penis, too, with an odd expression on her face. "What?" he asked, suddenly feeling self-conscious. "I was just thinking about my...um...infertility." Now his eyes fell to her lap. If his Flux Space theory proved correct, then at some point she'd regain her ability to bear children. He wasn't sure how he felt about that. Back in their own time, he'd have been happy for her -- especially after what had happened to Emily -- but here in the Ice Age... Panic fluttered in his gut at the idea of getting her pregnant. He didn't want to have children...anywhere. Here it would be a mistake of gargantuan proportions. Giant snakes, saber-toothed cats, killer cavemen -- danger seemed to be lurking behind every damn Pleistocene tree. How the hell do you keep a kid safe in a place like this? Add to the mix the threat of regression...well, it would be downright irresponsible to bring a child into this world. They'd have to be careful. Watch for signs that Scully might be regressing back to a time when she was still fertile. The chip in her neck -- when it disappeared, then no more sex...it was as simple as that. Christ, who the hell was he kidding? No more sex? Fuck. This had to be the cruelest cosmic joke of all time. Make love once and God tosses a ticking time bomb into their laps. Literally. Hope you're having yourself a mastodon-sized laugh up there, Big Guy. For the first time ever, Mulder began hoping Scully would prove him wrong. Noticing his stare, Scully hugged the sleeping skin to her body. "Mulder, there's an aspect of your theory that doesn't track." Yes! Argue me down, Scully! "Only one?" Her wry smile told him she believed his theory was in fact riddled with holes but she was willing to limit herself to just one for now. "My tattoo is only a little over a year old, much more recent than the scar on your shoulder. Yet it's still visible, whereas your scar has completely vanished." Good point. "Maybe we're regressing at different rates. Some people age faster than others. Doesn't it make sense we might regress differently, too?" "It doesn't make sense that we would regress at all." Her brow furrowed. "Mulder, you do remember being shot by me, don't you?" "How could I forget?" "If you're growing younger, shouldn't your mind be regressing along with your body?" "Losing memories at the same rate as years." Another good point. "I dunno, Scully, but there's some relief in knowing we won't be acting like children, even if we end up looking like them." She cocked an eyebrow. "Okay, so *you* won't," he said with a chuckle. "Maybe I'm already there." She reached across the furs to retrieve her clothes. "Let's continue this conversation after we have something definitive to go on. Right now, I'd like to clean up. You could use a bath, too." He looked down at himself, at his thighs, his penis, the fingers on his right hand, all smeared with traces of her menstrual blood. It made him feel marked by her and he almost hated to wash off this tangible proof of their intimate act so soon. Patting the furs, he waggled his brows. "How 'bout a quickie before we get dressed?" "No, thank you." She was already pulling her camisole over her head. "I'll make breakfast when we get back." Food? Several days of unplanned fasting, followed by an equally unplanned but considerably more appreciated sexual encounter, had left him feeling famished. "You're going to cook?" "Yes, I'm going to cook." He scrambled to his knees and began rummaging through the furs for his boxers. "Which way to the bath house?" * * * Pretending to busy herself with the knot on her fur skirt, Scully surreptitiously watched Mulder dress. No two ways about it, he was a good-looking man. Long-limbed and graceful, body fleeced with a smattering of springy dark hair, muscles toned from miles of running. Whether dressed in a suit or buck-naked like now, he was tempting. She remembered once describing him as "cute" to one of her girlfriends. An understatement, to say the least. She'd ended the conversation by bemoaning the fact that Mulder was excessively devoted to his work and all his good looks were going to waste. In truth, she didn't know that they were wasted. She really had no idea what Mulder did in his off hours. It was entirely possible, even plausible, that some other woman, or several women, enjoyed his company when he wasn't chasing mutants and EBEs with her. Just because he didn't come on to her in any serious way didn't mean he was living the life of a monk. To assume he was having no sex because she was having no sex was projecting. She was the one who had made a conscious decision to devote her life to their work and ultimately to him, not the other way around. His love life -- past and present -- remained as mysterious as Flux Space to her. Not that she'd shared any intimate details of her past romances. He knew only a little about Jack, and nothing at all about Daniel. He'd made some assumptions about Ed Jerse. The fact of the matter was she and Mulder rarely talked about their personal lives. She hoped that might change after this morning. Making love with him had been wonderful, satisfying on both a physical and emotional level. Lying beneath him, having him inside her, had felt-- "Santa must be in town," Mulder said, nodding toward two bulging backpacks that sat just inside the hut's closed entrance. His legs disappeared into his jeans. When he zipped his fly, Scully found herself suppressing a sigh. God, he was clueless about his effect on her. Next to the two packs was an odd stack of fist-sized stones, piled one on top of the other, looking like a small, granite snowman. Scully went to examine the packs while Mulder scrounged through the furs for his shirt. "Klizzie must have left these." She pulled a carved comb from the first container and recognized it as the one Klizzie had used two nights ago at the lake. Mulder located and sniffed his shirt. Wrinkling his nose in disgust, he discarded it and searched for his jacket instead. "Did she leave any food?" There was a basket of strawberries in the second pack. Scully still associated their smell with Mulder's near-death experience, so she gladly passed them on to him. "Help yourself." He showed no similar distaste and ate greedily while she explored the contents of the packs. As she removed each item, she held it up for him to see. "Flint, presumably for starting fires. Several razor-like tools..." These appeared very sharp. She touched a finger to one, testing its edge. "You might be able to shave with it." "I'm willing if you're willing," he said, talking around a mouthful of berries. The idea of unshaved legs and underarms didn't thrill her, but these Pleistocene razors looked a little too risky. She set them aside, deciding they must have some purpose other than hair removal. "What do you suppose this is for?" She held up what appeared to be the bladder of a rather large animal. "Wine skin?" "Or water bag." She set it aside. "Three bone hooks, two fur blankets--" "And a partridge in a pear tree," Mulder sang. When she frowned at him, he shrugged and said, "We're opening presents." She uncoiled a roll of stiff twine. "Catgut...I think." She dug deeper. "A couple of spear points. And two soap roots--" "Those things are soap?" "Yep. Oh, look!" She held up a buttery- soft piece of deerskin. "A change of clothes for you." He inspected the garment through squinted eyes. "I'm supposed to wear that?" "It's the latest in Pleistocene fashion." She tossed him the loincloth before unpacking a wad of cattails. "What are those for?" Finished with the last of the berries, he passed back the empty basket. "You didn't want any of those, did you?" "No, thank you." She took the basket and ignored his cattail question. Sex partner or not, she didn't feel like discussing the finer points of feminine hygiene with him. Instead she listed the contents of the second pack: "Dried meat, nuts...and four dead squirrels." Using his best Homer Simpson impersonation, he hummed, "Mmmmm, squirrel." Then he indicated the odd stack of stones with a wave. "What do you suppose those are for? Pass the nuts, please." She slid the nuts his way and studied the stones. Their presence was clearly no accident. Somebody -- most likely Klizzie -- had placed them there on purpose. Although their meaning was unclear, it was obvious Klizzie wanted to help them, and her generosity was touching. "Let's get cleaned up," she said, collecting the soap roots and comb, planning to take with them with her to the lake. Almost as an afterthought, she grabbed the water bag. Mulder tossed one last nut into his mouth, wiped his hands on his pants and rose to follow her out of the shelter. Outside, they were surprised to find the village was completely deserted. All that remained were half a dozen large semi- circles of mastodon bones -- jawbones from the look of them, interlocked and stacked to form the underlying supports for the abandoned huts. Stripped of their hides, the shelters were now roofless. Not a spear or basket or fur blanket remained in any of them. The campsite must be seasonal, she realized. Hunter-gatherers were nomadic people who pursued migrating game. They followed their food source, rather than staying put and raising their own stock and crops. Agricultural societies wouldn't evolve until much later in history. She pivoted, wondering which direction the tribe had taken. "How are we going to find them?" "Who says we should?" "Mulder, we need this group's help. They know how to survive here; we don't." Concern creased his brow and she guessed he was thinking about how close he'd come to dying a few days ago. "Look at that." He pointed to another pile of fist-sized stones on the far side of the clearing. "Someone left us a trail of bread crumbs." God bless Klizzie, she was showing them the way. * * * Hiking through a foggy, lowland swale, Klizzie and Gini followed the Clan northeast toward the next range of hills. The group moved slowly, every member laden with heavy packs. The ground smelled pungent and peaty, and countless irises dotted the surrounding marshland with bright, purple flowers. Dragonflies the size of Klizzie's hand darted around the travelers' heads. When the Clan passed too close to a flock of nesting geese, the birds rose up from the reeds in a frenzy of flapping wings and raucous calls. Klizzie stopped to collect several fist-sized stones, which she stacked one on top of the other. Then she placed three more in a line upon the ground, pointing in the direction of Tabaha Lodge. Gini watched her arrange the stones. "Will Muhl-dar and Day-nuh find us?" "You have asked me that question more times than a goose hen hides her eggs. My answer is still the same: I do...not...know." Although Klizzie loved Gini like a daughter, the girl's constant pestering was beginning to exhaust her patience. "If Muhl-dar and Day-nuh are meant to find us, then the Spirits will guide them." "With the help of your stones." Gini grinned at her. Klizzie returned the girl's smile. "Yes, with the help of my stones." Turkey Lake was several days hike from Toh-ta Lodge, and it would be lucky indeed if the newcomers could find their way, even with the help of Spirits and stone markers. "They might return to their own clan, you know," Klizzie said. Gini frowned at the idea, her young brow puckering with worry. She looked so much like her brother Dzeh that Klizzie's impatience melted at the sight of her. "They will miss the Mastodon Feast," Gini said, clearly disappointed. "Perhaps Eel Clan has a Mastodon Feast of its own." "With food and gifts and competitions?" "Why not? Owl Clan is not the only clan to have feasts with races and dances and--" "Blanket toss!" The girl's eyes shone with excitement. Blanket toss was the highlight of most Mastodon Feasts. To play, thirty or more Clan members took their places in a circle, grasping the rolled edges of a large blanket made from the skins of mastodons. The object of the game was to use the blanket to toss a person as high into the air as possible, while the player tried to keep his balance. Skilled players did flips and, while in the air, they threw out trinkets of ivory, tobacco and other gifts to the onlookers. As soon as a player lost his footing, another would climb onto the blanket to take his place until everyone -- men, women and all but the youngest children -- had had a chance to participate. Blanket toss was not the only fun to be had at a Feast. There were cord pulling contests, spear-throwing competitions, long distance races, sprints, betting games, storytelling, jokes, songs... And lots of food! Last spring, Turtle Clan had hosted an impressive event. This year, Klizzie's kin from Badger Clan were waiting at Turkey Lake to host the Feast. Klizzie felt enthusiasm blossoming in her breast at the thought of the upcoming celebration. She was eager to see her Aunt Ho- Ya and her many cousins. Oh, there would be hugs and happy- crying and plenty of opportunities to talk. She rose to her feet, retrieved her pack, and began walking again. Gini hurried after her. "Klizzie, what is it like to lay with a man?" she asked. Where in the Spirit World had *that* question come from? Evidently, Gini was growing up faster than Klizzie realized; she tended to think of her as the little four-year-old girl she'd met soon after becoming Dzeh's mate. But in truth, the child was nearly old enough to have a mate of her own. In just two or three summers, Gini would be Joined and move away from Owl Clan. Her going was sure to leave an aching emptiness in Klizzie's chest. She had taken care of this small orphan ever since Gini and Dzeh's mother had died. Saying goodbye to the girl would bring many tears. "If you love a man, there is nothing better than to lay with him on his sleeping skins," Klizzie explained, giving Gini a mother's advice. "He can fill you in a way that is hard to imagine. It is very pleasant." Gini didn't appear convinced. "You love my brother this way?" Klizzie glanced ahead to where Dzeh was walking and joking with several of his cousins. He carried an enormous pack on his back and a long spear in his fist. He was muscular and confident. It made Klizzie's heart feel light to look upon him. "Yes, Gini, I love him. I love him very much." * * * Trailing Scully through the woods, Mulder suddenly burst into song. "Who's the black private dick who's a sex machine with all the chicks?" "Shaft?" she asked, playing along but not going so far as to actually sing. She picked her way between tree trunks and giant ferns toward the lake, while he hung back and watched her hips sway. That cute ass is mine, he thought. "Can you dig it?" "You're in a good mood." Yes, he was in a good mood. Correction -- he was in a *great* mood. Sex in general had a positive effect on his disposition, but sex with Scully had turned out to be the ultimate attitude adjuster. The memory of their joining displaced any and all concerns about time travel, congested lungs or fading tattoos. At the moment, the one and only question that nagged him was "When are we gonna do it again?" "So, Scully, when are we gonna do it again?" he asked, cutting to the chase. She glanced over her shoulder at him. "You might want to give yourself a little time to recover, G-Man. Your respiratory system is compromised. Having sex after an injury like yours...well, you're lucky the parasympathetic and sympathetic outpouring didn't kill you this morning." *Kill* him? He tagged her shoulder. "Can you think of a better way to die?" She humored him with a tiny smile before continuing along the path. He smiled, too, as his eyes drifted once again to her curvy backside. Her hips were wrapped in animal fur and her gun was tucked into her skirt at the small of her back. On top she wore her clingy, black camisole. Her legs and feet were bare and, sweet Jesus, she looked sexy! "They say this cat Shaft is a bad mother. Shut your mouth! Talkin' 'bout Shaft." Scully led them to the lake shore and stopped at a sun- bleached log, spiky with long-armed branches, where she set down her things -- two soap roots, Klizzie's comb, and the odd water bag. Mulder had brought his dirty turtleneck with him, intending to soak it clean in the lake along with his other clothes while he bathed. He also carried the loincloth Klizzie had left, to wear while his clothes dried. Dropping his shirt on the ground, he draped the loincloth over the tree, and then began to strip out of his clothes. He hung his jacket and belt with holster and gun on the branch next to the loincloth, then added his pants and boxers to his pile of dirty clothes. He decided to keep Dzeh's necklace on. It looked manly, he thought, and made him want to beat his chest like a gorilla. Must be the sex that had him so puffed with pride today. "Shaft! Right on." He turned to face the lake, naked, hands on hips, feeling like the king of the jungle as he surveyed his territory. Off to his left, a heron high-stepped cautiously along the shore, eyes trained on the water as it hunted for fish. A bullfrog hid in the nearby reeds, harrumphing the hollow notes of a bass cello. Crickets whined and peepers chirped. Birds squawked, cackled, and trilled from every tree branch. To his right, an enormous beaver lodge created a spiky island in the lake about thirty yards out. Lily pads clotted the cove in front of it, where dragonflies the size of hummingbirds hovered like helicopters. The sun was just beginning to peek above the treetops. The sky was clear, the air smelled sweet, and life was damn good. Particularly since Scully was undressing right in front of him. His eyes slid to watch her carefully remove her clothes, taking her good ol' sweet time like she was performing a slow motion strip-tease. She caught him looking. "Don't you have clothes to wash?" Reluctantly, he gathered his laundry, palmed one of the soap roots and strode to the water's edge, where he waded in up to his ankles. "Bomb's away!" he said, releasing the clothes. They landed with a slap in the lake beside his feet, and then inch-by-inch sank beneath the surface as air burbled through the fabric. He gave the pile a quick swish with his left foot before abandoning it and splashing into the water up to his thighs. "Shee-it!" he hissed, surprised by the lake's cold temperature. Goosebumps sprouted across his shoulders and arms. Wasting no time, he dove headfirst beneath the surface. He'd always loved swimming in the ocean off Martha's Vineyard. He and Sam often spent entire afternoons in the water, there or at Quonochontaug, practicing underwater handstands and somersaults, competing in breath-holding contests, or just letting the waves carry them along, their laughter lost in the sound of surf. Their mom lovingly called them "my two sea monsters" when they returned home, pruney and sun-kissed from their day at the beach. By September their lean bodies were as brown as pennies. Mulder surfaced for air and rolled onto his back to float. His muscles relaxed as the water buoyed him. The lake was chilly, but felt silky smooth, and the morning sun beat down on him, warming his face and chest. Through half-closed eyes, he watched Scully bathe near the shore. Sitting waist deep in the water, she soaped her hands and then lathered her chest, neck and arms. Foam floated away from her in lazy spirals as she rinsed, and her wet skin gleamed in the early morning sun, confounding his eyes and overwhelming his heart with its shimmery beauty. Jesus. Just yesterday, she'd been Scully, his partner and friend; today she was Scully, his lover...her body no longer off limits. Halle-fucking-lujah. All too soon she was finished with her bath and rose from the water, naked and dripping. The sight kindled a fire in his veins and awakened his slumbering penis. As she waded from the shore to the log, he let his legs sink below the lake's surface to hide his growing erection. Treading water, he watched while she combed her wet hair. When are we gonna do it again, Scully? "I'll fix breakfast while you soak," she called out to him. She quickly put on and adjusted the odd belt Klizzie had given her for her menstrual flow, and then wrapped her fur skirt around her hips. "More strawberries?" he asked, hopeful. She pulled her camisole over her head. "Sure. More strawberries," she said before tucking her gun at the small of her back and leaving him to finish his bath. * * * "They are splitting up," Klesh said, watching Red Hair and her companion from the far shore. Tse-e stood beside him in the shadows of a shagbark tree. "You follow Li-chi Tse-Gah and bring her back; I will take care of her mate." "No, she is a Spirit, Klesh. I am not going after her." Tse-e tucked his wounded hand beneath his arm. Fear burned as brightly as fever in his eyes and he shivered like a frightened rabbit at the sight of the red-haired woman. "Then *I* will go after her. You take care of her chindi companion," Klesh sneered. "Do you think you can handle him?" "Y-yes." Tse-e nodded with uncertainty. "Do...do you want me to kill him?" "Yes!" Klesh hissed. "Of course I want you to kill him. Bring his head to me. I want to see for myself that he is dead." A nasty smile deepened the scar on his left cheek. "Then Li-chi Tse-Gah will be my mate and tend my hearth." * * * Mulder's heart thrummed in his water-filled ears. He closed his eyes and let himself drift in the lake, feeling much the way he had earlier this morning after making love. God, he had wanted to lay with Scully forever... Basking. He had never "basked" with anyone before, not even when he'd been married to Diana. Their pre- and post-coital activities had consisted primarily of rushing off to find the next paranormal anomaly. Sex was a wham-bam-I-heard-there-was-a-UFO- sighting-in-Phoenix-let's-go kind of activity. It was performed in hotel rooms and rental cars, while they waited for lab results, autopsy reports or returned phone calls. Who had time to bask when there were cow mutilations or Bigfoot sightings to investigate? Not that the sex hadn't been passionate. It had. Sex with Diana had relieved the stress of the job, and for a while, it relieved Mulder's loneliness, too. She was warm and beautiful and it was pleasant to have her in his bed, fending off his insomnia and his nightmares. With Diana in his arms, he found he could sleep without dreaming...for a while, at least. He had believed he was in love at the time because he had wanted to be in love. As it turned out, she had loved the idea of love, too, albeit for different reasons than his own. She was hoping for a normal kind of life -- a house, kids, dog -- none of which meshed with their endless pursuit of the truth. It took him a while to figure out that their quest had actually been only his and not hers. And although procreation topped her wish list, having kids never made it onto his at all. He believed he possessed neither the skill nor the fortitude to raise children. Not after what had happened to Sam. When Diana began pressing him to start a family, he balked, which made her dig in her heels. At an impasse, she finally left him. THWACK! The slap of a beaver's tail startled him from his reverie. He righted himself and glanced around. Nothing appeared out of the ordinary...except the beaver, which was about three times the size of its modern day descendants. Fortunately, it was swimming away. Deciding to wash up, Mulder headed to shallower water where he stood knee deep and began rubbing the soap root between his palms. "Whaddaya know? This stuff actually works." Lather overflowed his hands and he used it to slather his chest, neck, and arms. It felt good to scrub away several days worth of sweat and grime. Scully's blood vanished from the creases of his knuckles as he dug black dirt from beneath his caked fingernails. Jesus, how had she been able to stand him? He must've smelled funkier than a three-day stakeout. Wanting to remedy the situation, he went to work, scouring his scalp, his face, his armpits. Lather corkscrewed down his limbs, dripped into the water where it drifted in foamy mountains around his knees. When he was finished sudsing, he squatted and ducked his head beneath the surface to rinse his hair. He was underwater when the attack occurred. Out of nowhere, it seemed, someone leapt onto his back and tightened a brawny arm around his neck. Startled, he rose up, lifting his assailant with him. He tried to dislodge the man by falling backward, sinking them both to the bottom. The maneuver worked and the other man released his hold. Mulder turned on him and grabbed his wrist. The man struggled to get free, thrashing his arms and legs, churning the weeds. Bubbles jetted from his nose as he managed to loosen himself from Mulder's grip. He surged to the surface. Mulder popped up beside him. Both men filled their lungs with air. Mulder recognized the small man. He was one of the two Neanderthals who had abducted Scully back in the ravine. "Son of a b--" Mulder's fist shot out and connected with Little Big Man's jaw. The caveman's teeth clacked together and blood spurted from his lips. Mulder struck again, this time a left that clipped the Neanderthal's nose. More blood darkened the lake. Little Big Man howled, then torpedoed into Mulder, ramming the top of his skull at Mulder's throat. Mulder gasped for air and sank. He back- peddled underwater, fighting his way toward the shallows, where he managed to get his feet under him and stand. Little Big Man bulldozed him again and caught him in a crushing bear hug. Both men grappled for an advantage. Unable to free himself, Mulder rolled to his left, dragging the cave man down with him. In retaliation, the determined Cro-Magnon sank his teeth into Mulder's right shoulder. A well-placed elbow dislodged him, but not without a price. Mulder's skin tore painfully from the bite. "Motherfucker!" he shouted. He seized the caveman by the wrist, twisted his arm into a hammerlock, and pressed his thumb hard into the gunshot wound in his palm. Little Big Man shrieked and his knees buckled. Mulder pressed harder, hauling him out of the water and up the beach. He kept the man's arm twisted behind his back and continued to squeeze his injured hand until they reached the driftwood log. Blood poured from the Neanderthal's open mouth as he yammered and bawled. Mulder dug his handcuffs from his jacket pocket and hooked one of the bracelets around Little Big Man's wrist. Then he hauled him to a nearby tree, where he twisted his arms behind the trunk and locked him in place with the other half of the cuffs. "Where's your fucking buddy?" Mulder growled, not really expecting an answer and already guessing Conan had gone after Scully. The small man spat a mouthful of blood at him. "Suit yourself." Mulder quickly gathered his gun and abandoned the blubbering caveman to find Scully. * * * The strawberry field stretched from the lake and its fringe of forest all the way up to the top of the western hills where Scully and Mulder had spent the night of the fire. The slope was long and gradual and dotted with stone outcroppings that rose like islands from a sea of windblown grass. Sweet-smelling clover perfumed the air, while butterflies fought the breeze in search of nectar, their wings winking shut whenever they managed to grab hold of a bobbing flower blossom. About a third of the way up the slope, a herd of fifty or more mastodons were gathered around a brand new baby. They formed a living bastion as solid as any stone fortress, their brawn belying their familial instincts and gentle sense of community. One enormous female watched over them. Ten feet tall from shoulder to ground, she appeared insuperable. It seemed beyond possibility that a human hunter could bring down such a beast with little more than a stone spear and his cunning. Only the leader seemed interested as Scully stepped cautiously out from under the trees into the field. It kept an eye turned her way, but didn't stray from the herd. Watching to be sure the mastodons remained undisturbed, Scully hiked slowly uphill until she came to a patch of strawberries, where she knelt and began to fill her pack. After several minutes, she relaxed a little. Bees buzzed lazily around her. Plump, ripe berries stained her fingers as she picked. The mastodons seemed unconcerned by her presence and her mind soon wandered to other concerns. Like her tattoo. Although she wasn't ready yet to concede to Mulder's theory of Flux Space, she did find the disappearance of her tattoo apropos, since her reason for getting it in the first place was fading, too. She no longer saw herself as the same person she'd once been -- the rebellious woman, trying to assert her autonomy...to the point of foolhardiness. Ironic she'd been so eager to defy Mulder back then, given the current state of their relationship. Only a year ago, she'd felt stifled by him, and fearful she might lose her direction while blinded by his passion for the truth. Resistance had seemed the only option at the time. The Ourobourus once symbolized her desire to move forward with her life. Now, the image struck her as absurdly self-absorbed, arrogant in its overt exclusiveness. What she once perceived as a representation of continual progression, now gave her the impression of being unattached to anything or anyone, self- contained and intersecting with nothing but itself. Fingers blood-red and her pack weighted with fresh fruit, she turned her efforts to picking greens. The only type she could identify as safely edible were dandelions. The others didn't look a thing like the variety Klizzie had brought to them while Mulder was recovering. Scully missed Klizzie's expertise. The tribe obviously possessed extensive knowledge about their environment: food, medicinal herbs, predators...both animal and human. She and Mulder would need the group's collective wisdom if they were to survive for any length of time here. Without their generosity and the medicine man's competence, Mulder would surely be dead. The memory of Mulder's near-death brought a lump to Scully's throat and tears to her eyes. Finding Klizzie and the others had been a godsend and it was paramount she and Mulder rejoin them as soon as he was strong enough to travel. A sudden trumpet from one of the mastodons startled her and she looked up to see the females closing ranks around the baby. The leader tossed her enormous head and delivered a second loud warning. Scully reached behind her back for her gun, in case they headed her way. She was stopped by the grip of strong fingers on her wrist and a menacing growl in her ear. "Li-chi Tse-Gah," a man's voice rasped, before he yanked her to her feet. He twisted her arm and forced her to face him. It was the scarred man. She glared up at him. Had his weasely companion gone after Mulder? He wrestled the gun from her hand. She responded by punching him hard in the groin. When he howled and doubled over, she struck him again, this time in the face. The blow knocked him sideways and sent her gun spinning from his fist. It landed with a thud several yards away in the weeds. She lunged for it, but found herself falling when he latched onto her leg. His grip held and she hit the ground hard. The gun remained just beyond her reach. She kicked at him, inched closer to the gun and managed to snag it with outstretched fingers. Scarface crawled on top of her and pinned her in place. His giant hand clamped over hers and tore the gun from her grasp. He sat up, straddling her and weighting her to the ground. She lashed out, caught hold of the gun, struggled to pull it from his hands. The gun discharged, firing at the sky and missing his right ear by millimeters. He jumped, astonished. Still holding the gun, he stared at it in disbelief. His expression transformed into one of panic. Eyes bulging, he hurled the weapon into the woods. "Dammit!" she shouted, watching the gun vanish into the nearby trees. She was trapped beneath him, pinned by his muscular thighs. He was panting; unconstrained fury darkened his face. "Chindi!" he barked at her, then grabbed her by the hair. He bent over her until their noses almost touched. "Chindiiiii!!" he roared, spraying her with his spit. Struggling to free herself, she felt the ground start to vibrate beneath her. Scarface sat bolt upright, evidently feeling it, too. Silence hung in the air for one empty second before the thunderous crash of stampeding mastodons brought them both scrambling to their feet. The enormous female was charging straight at them. Several more followed, heads bowed, tusks thrust forward. Their speed was astonishing. Scully's legs went numb at the sight. Should she run? Stand still? Every instinct urged her to get out of their way, but her feet seemed to have rooted themselves to the ground. Scarface bolted for the woods. The mastodons kept on coming. The ground shook, rattling Scully's teeth. God, she was going to be trampled. She began to recite the Lord's Prayer. "Our Father, who art in heaven..." The air churned with dust and panic. "Hallowed be thy name." She could smell them, musty and fierce and hell-bent on protecting their own. "Thy kingdom come..." Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, they were right on her, around her, a thundering wall of reddish-brown, broken only by a blur of polished ivory and the ferocious glares of a dozen protective mothers. Their running jolted her spine, quaked the ground, shook her faith... "Thy will be done..." Thy will... Thy will be... The noise was deafening! Warning trumpets, pounding feet, the crash of underbrush as mastodons bulldozed around her, heading into the forest. Vegetation exploded, branches cracked, whole trees fell. The animals razed an alley several yards wide as they continued their forward charge. Scully stood staring after them for several minutes, too astonished to move, even after they were no longer in sight. "Thy will be done..." She looked behind her, upland across the field. The herd and the baby were gone. Only zigzagging trails and the tart smell of trampled grass remained. "Sculleee!" It was Mulder, calling to her from the woods. She turned toward his voice, but couldn't find her own to cry out to him. It didn't matter. He was walking out of the forest, completely naked, one muscled arm hooked around the scarred man's neck. Scully's legs finally gave way and she dropped to her knees. * * * "I say we leave them right where they are." Mulder picked a hunk of squirrel meat from between his teeth before grabbing another diminutive drumstick. The food tasted good, but four itsy-bitsy squirrels were not going to fill him. He sucked the tiny bone clean. Conan and Little Big Man sat sullen and silent a few yards away. They were handcuffed to an enormous mastodon skull and to each other. Mulder had looped the cuffs through one of its eye sockets, using the skull as a sort of Pleistocene ball and chain. Conan sported a nasty looking shiner where Mulder had walloped him "just because." Little Big Man was in worse shape, although his mouth was no longer bleeding. Mulder was pretty sure he'd broken the bastard's nose, as well as his teeth, since both his eyes were swelling shut and he whistled whenever he inhaled. Scully removed the last squirrel from its spit, trying not to singe her fingers. "They could die if we leave them like that." "So? What do you think they intended to do to us?" He tossed a bone into the fire and reached for a third helping of strawberries. "Besides, if they work at it, they can break free...eventually." "That could take them days. They'll need food and water." "Awww. Let 'em drag their sorry asses down to the lake when they get thirsty. Any greens left?" She passed him the pack. "Mulder, I just don't think--" "Scully, a few days ago they tried to rape you," he reminded her. The memory made him want to blacken Conan's other eye. "They've tried to kill me twice." "So...we should do the same? We're living by the law of the jungle now, is that it? Kill or be killed? Since when did we turn into them?" "When they held you to the ground and--" He stopped himself. His anger was meant for them, not her. He lowered his tone. "There's no due process here. What do you want to do?" "If you're well enough, I'd like to go after Klizzie and the others." "I'm good to go right now. And unless you let me kill these two, I have no intention of staying another day here." Seeing her shocked expression, he added, "That was a joke. Sort of." She split the last squirrel in two and gave him the bigger half. "You really think they can free themselves?" "If they're resourceful. It'll take them some time, but that'll give us a head start." He could tell she didn't like the idea. Finished with his meal, he wiped his hands on his bare thighs. "It's not like we have a lot of options." "No, I guess not." "Come on then. I'll help you pack." "Where are your clothes?" "Still in the lake. I have to go back to fill the water bag anyway." Mulder rose stiffly and walked over to the two prisoners. He bent low enough to smell Conan's sour breath. Keeping his voice dead calm, he whispered, "If you ever touch her again," - - he paused to stare directly into the scarred man's eyes -- "I'll rip your fuckin' head off." * * * Klizzie settled beside Dzeh on the sleeping skins. They were camped in the open under a clear, starry sky. She loved this time of night, hearing the sounds of the Clan all around her, some already snoring, others talking in low voices or singing lullabies to their children. She felt safe when surrounded by her family, especially with Dzeh by her side. He was lying on his back, his muscled arm pillowing her head. "The stars are bright tonight," he said, studying the sky. She looked up, too, content to watch the stars as he lightly stroked her bare shoulder. "Gini asked me earlier today what it is like to lay with a man," she said. Dzeh turned to look at her with surprise. "She did?" "Mm hm." "What did you tell her?" Klizzie laughed. "My answer was for women's ears only," she teased. "Women? Gini is only eight Mastodon Feasts old. She is no woman. Not yet." "She will be soon, Dzeh. Some girls begin their Moon Time as early as nine." He grunted, pretending to be offended. "I do not want to hear such talk. That is for 'women's ears only.'" Again Klizzie laughed and then poked him gently in the ribs. "Seriously, it is time for you to start inquiries about a mate for her." "No, my sister is still a little girl...a baby." "She is not. Not if she is asking questions about laying with men." Now he chuckled, a gravelly sound deep within his chest that loosened the muscles in Klizzie's legs and filled her abdomen with fire. "Fine," he said, "I will make inquiries at the Feast. I think your Aunt 'A-Chin' might have a son about Gini's age." She slapped his arm. "My Aunt's name is not 'Nose.' It is 'Ho- Ya' -- 'Smart.'" He shrugged. "Well, she has a big nose. And she is not so very smart, as I recall." It was true. Ho-Ya seemed to have no common sense whatsoever. She could get turned around in her own lodge. And she had made Badger Clan ill on more than one occasion when she added bad mushrooms to the evening meal. But she did have a good spirit and several sons with more sense than their mother. Perhaps one of them would be suitable for Gini. Klizzie scanned the starry sky, as if she might find a mate for Gini there. "Tell me the story of Ant Clan," she asked, never tired of hearing about the Spirits and their heavenly world. "Ant Clan? Klizzie, I have told you that story more times than I can count." "Please, Dzeh? The Mastodon's Eye is visible tonight." The Mastodon's hazy eye was little more than a faint smudge in the sky, visible only on the clearest nights. "So it is." "Tell the story," she urged. Keeping his voice low so as not to disturb the others, he began. "Long before the days of Owl Clan, Badger Clan, Beaver Clan and all the other clans we know today, there was only one clan and it had no name because its people did not worship animal spirits. They killed and ate whichever beasts they desired without asking permission or sending up prayers of thanks. One day they speared and butchered a baby mastodon, and after eating their fill, these wasteful people fell asleep, leaving the remainder of the carcass for the buzzards." Dzeh traced a lazy circle around Klizzie's right breast, bringing her nipple to a point. He whispered into her ear, "I can think of better ways to pass this night than the telling of old tales." "Finish the story," she said, her voice made faint by his caress. He drew a second circle around her left breast. "The Mastodon Spirit became angry at the clan for their carelessness. So, first taking the form of a mortal man, he sneaked into their camp while they slept and lay with the mate of the clan's leader. After planting a child in her womb, he returned to his place in the heavens. Nine moons later, the woman gave birth to a son who eventually grew up to be a powerful shaman." Dzeh tickled her inner thigh. "Are you sure you want me to continue the story?" "Yes." He edged his hand up under her skirt. "One night, the powerful shaman had a dream, and in his dream his real father, the Mastodon Spirit, took him up to heaven and showed him the world of Spirits. He told his earthly son, 'Teach the clan to respect the Spirits. If not, they will be forever cursed.' So the shaman did as he was told and returned to the clan the next morning to tell them they must pray and give thanks to the spirits. The clan was lazy and refused to do as they were asked. Again they killed a mastodon and left its carcass for the buzzards, making the Mastodon Spirit angry. Sssoooo..." Dzeh's thumb brushed the curls at her groin. She felt wetness flow from her womanhood. "Dzeehhh..." "The Mastodon Spirit turned the people of the clan into ants and his son, the shaman, into a giant armadillo and he put them all in the sky where he could keep his eye on them." Much to Klizzie's disappointment, Dzeh removed his hand from between her thighs and pointed at the sky. "And there they are still," he said, "in the northeastern sky. To the east of the Steadfast Star, the Mastodon Spirit waits for the clearest nights to open his eye and watch the cursed Ant Clan crawl like a white river across the heavens while his armadillo son waits to devour them." The legend was a warning. The ways of the Spirits must be followed or there would be a price to pay. Klizzie had heard gossips in Owl Clan say that she was barren because angry Spirits willed it. They claimed her childlessness was a reprisal for her role in Dzeh and Klesh's falling out four summers ago. In the years before Klizzie became Dzeh's mate, Dzeh had been Trading Partners with her cousin Klesh. The men's partnership created a necessary alliance between Owl Clan and Badger Clan, which had been enemies for many generations. Unlike Hunting Partners, who were almost always kin, and Joking Partners, who were usually cross-cousins, Trading Partners were not related by blood. The purpose of their partnership was to create a bond between two clans that had no family ties, ensuring inter-clan cooperation during periods of peace, and tempering the amount of killing in times of war. A clan's survival often depended on the benevolence of its non-kin partners. To reinforce such affiliations, Trading Partners exchanged protection, food, goods and even their mates. Everybody agreed the tradition of exchange -- mate-exchange in particular -- was essential to the alliance, ensuring an intimate bond nearly as strong as blood between partners, their co-mates, and their respective clans. Ritual mate-exchange and the security it offered to clans benefited everyone. The waters had been muddied, however, when Klizzie and Dzeh became mates because she was Klesh's first cousin. Yes, it was custom for Trading Partners to exchange mates, but it was also taboo for Klizzie to be co-mate to her own kin. So of course Dzeh had to insist his partnership with Klesh be dissolved. Klesh had become angry and refused to recognize the breaking of the partnership. He went so far as to demand Klizzie lay as his co-mate during the Mastodon Feast, ignoring the fact that she was his cousin. She had been only fourteen at the time, but that was no excuse. She knew she shared responsibility for what happened. Shame burned her cheeks at the memory of her transgressions against Owl and Badger Clans, against Dzeh. Lying beside Dzeh now, looking up at the stars, Klizzie reminded herself it was pointless to relive those old days in her head. They were "fish down the river," as the elders would say. Klesh had been banished and his partnership with Dzeh ended. All Klizzie could do now was pray to the Spirits for the same forgiveness she had received from Dzeh and Owl Clan. "Were you marking our trail today, Klizzie?" Dzeh asked, returning his hand to her leg. She nodded. "Yes." "For Muhl-dar and Day-nuh?" Would he chastise her for her actions? Her eyes went to the strange bracelet he wore on his wrist, Muhl-dar's bracelet. She wanted to touch it, but kept her hands still for now. "Yes, I left the markers for them." "Klizzie..." He leaned over to kiss her nose. "You are a kind woman and I am hopeful the Spirits will reward you for it with a child this season. Then perhaps you will no longer feel the need to take care of orphans." His words stung her, despite his good intentions. One of the orphans he was referring to was his own sister. "I pray every day," she said. "Good." He cupped her cheek in his palm. "Maybe tonight the Spirits will listen," he said, before lowering his lips to her mouth. He rolled on top of her and she accepted his kiss. Parting her knees, she offered a silent prayer to the Spirits: Please keep Owl Clan safe; help the newcomers, Day-nuh and Muhl-dar, find their way to Turkey Lake; and please, please, bless me with a child. * * * Somewhere in the distance a mastodon trumpeted, waking Mulder from a nightmare about Scully and a four-toed Cro-Magnon. He cocked an ear to listen. Crickets. Frogs. Owls. Nothing treacherous, yet he curled protectively around Scully, who was lying beside him on a fur blanket under the open sky. They were camped on a grassy hill next to one of Klizzie's stone markers. This was the fifth such marker they'd found before he had become too tired to go further. He'd fallen asleep almost immediately after finishing their evening meal and had slept soundly until just moments ago. "Scully. Scully, are you awake?" he whispered into her ear. "M'now. Whassamatter?" "I heard a noise." This roused her. "What noise?" "A voice. It said, 'Wake Scully up.'" Laughter chuffed from her nose. "And why would this voice tell you a crazy thing like that?" "Musta been feelin' lonely." He gave her hip an inviting caress. She rolled onto her back within the circle of his arms and kissed him tenderly on the lips. He wanted to make love to her again. Oh, God, how he wanted to make love to her. She disappointed him by breaking their kiss to stare up at the midnight sky. "The stars are beautiful here." "Mmm. No city lights to spoil the view." "Look, you can see the Andromeda Nebula." She pointed to a hazy spot east of the Pole Star. It was true. The faint smudge that marked Andromeda's knee was visible tonight. "That galaxy is the most distant object that can be seen by the unaided human eye," he said, rolling onto his back, too. He kept one arm tucked beneath her, cushioning her head. "It contains more than one hundred billion stars that are more than two million light years away from here. Did you know that?" "I did." "You did?" "Don't sound so surprised." A smile quirked her lips. "I studied astronomy as an undergrad, you know." "Astronomy, anthropology, physics...wow. Frohike was right -- you are hot." Her tiny smile widened into an all-out grin. "I know Greek, too." "Then you know the myth?" "Of Andromeda? Sure. Cassiopeia and Cepheus had a daughter--" "See them there? Cassiopeia and Cepheus? Between Andromeda and the Little Dipper?" "I see them. Cassiopeia boasted about Andromeda's beauty, so much so, she angered the sea nymphs who prevailed upon the god Poseidon to dispatch a sea monster--" "A whale." "Right, a whale, to ravage the coast of Ethiopia. To appease the whale, Cepheus chained Andromeda to a rock to be devoured by the monster." Awful thing to do to your own daughter, Mulder thought. An image of Sam and his dad intruded on his thoughts, making him wince. Back-peddling from the unwelcome association, he focused instead on Scully's voice. "Fortunately Perseus happened by and killed the whale," Scully continued. "He liberated and married Andromeda, and the two of them rode off on Perseus' winged horse, Pegasus." "To live happily ever after?" "Presumably." God, did life ever actually turn out that way? His eyes scoured the heavens while his imagination fleshed out the constellations. Pegasus, Hercules, Ophiuchus holding the two ends of the Serpent. That image seemed more representative of life than Andromeda and Perseus riding off into the sunset. It also reminded Mulder in a free association sort of way of the mark Scully wore on her back. "Scully, why the Ourobourus?" "Excuse me?" "Your tattoo." "Oh, Mulder, I don't... Why is that important now?" "Wasn't it always important? I mean, a tattoo is forever...at least, it's supposed to be. It must have meant something to you when you chose it." "Yes, but I'm not sure I can explain it. I was in a different frame of mind at the time." "Different how?" He honestly wanted to know. "I was feeling like my life was at a standstill. I guess I saw the Ourobourus as a symbol of movement." And what about Ed Jerse? What had he symbolized? Mulder flushed with unexpected jealousy at the thought of that man's hands on Scully. Inappropriate and irrational, he knew. He and Scully hadn't been romantically involved at the time, although, admittedly, he'd always felt a tad territorial about her, long before her sojourn in Philadelphia. Truth be told, he'd assumed an air of proprietorship the day she walked into his office, considering her part and parcel of the X-Files, and therefore "his." God, he could be such an ass sometimes. "Did you sleep with Jerse?" he asked, surprising himself. It was none of his damn business and he hadn't meant to say the words out loud, despite the fact that he'd been wondering if she had or hadn't ever since he'd been called to St. John's Hospital to bring her back from Philadelphia. Christ, it had scared the hell out of him to discover she'd exposed herself to both ergot and a homicidal maniac. Seeing her in that hospital room, pale as the bed linens...fear and jealousy had sucker-punched him. Then when she couldn't even look him in the eye, he'd been convinced she'd done it, gone to bed with the cold-blooded killer. It had taken every ounce of his strength to hide his fury. Hell, he was having a hard time controlling it right now. Scully frowned. "Is it relevant anymore?" "No. I just wondered what it was about him that you found so alluring." She didn't even hesitate before replying. "He listened to me, Mulder. Never underestimate the charm of a man who truly listens." "I don't listen?" Of course he knew he didn't, not always anyway. Shit, if anyone was to blame for Scully's rebellious romp in Philadelphia, he was. He'd practically pushed her into Jerse's tattooed arms. "Mulder, I got my tattoo as a reminder to move forward with my life." He took a deep breath, trying to cool his unwarranted pique. It was water under the bridge and shouldn't bother him like this. "Have you?" he asked, his voice calm, belying his true resentment. "Since then, I mean? Moved forward with your life?" "I think so." Her gentle smile helped mollify his jealousy. She snaked her arms around his neck. He tightened his hold on her. "So..." He murmured into her ear, "when are we gonna, you know, do it again?" She surprised him by rolling on top of him. "Right now, Mulder," she said, her voice muddled with longing. "Right...now." x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER EIGHT Mulder keeps his eyes closed, enjoying the silky warmth of Scully beside him on the furs. They are spooned together, her naked back against his bare chest, his bent knees fitted behind hers, his nose buried in her hair. He inhales, deeply, fully, and feels himself grow hard from the unadulterated scent of her. Wanting to make love, he tries to wake her with a gentle brush of his fingers along her bare arm. She stirs, sighs with contentment, nestles more firmly into his lap, which causes a delightful friction there. "Sculleeee...," he groans. His lips caress the curve of her ear; his tongue searches for the lobe, finds it, sucks. She moans, too, and the sound flows molten in his veins, making him desperate to be inside her. They've made love only twice, yet he has already become addicted to the act, to her. Now he wants to make love to her everyday for the rest of his life. He positions himself so he can enter her from behind. They haven't tried it this way and he's eager. He nudges between her thighs. "Is this okay?" he asks, his voice almost nonexistent. In response, she grinds against him. Oh, God, she feels good. His hands grope her in the dark. Hip, waist... His exploration stops when his fingers encounter the swollen expanse of her belly. She is... Enormously pregnant. No, this can't be. What the hell is going on? "Scully?" Explain this. We never agreed to it. He sits up, rolls her onto her back only to find she isn't Scully. She is Diana. His erection goes soft. Smiling, Diana sweeps her dark hair away from her face, which is flushed with satisfaction. She reaches up to cup Mulder's cheek with her palm. "It's wonderful, isn't it? We're having a baby. You're going to be a father." "No, Diana, I don't want this." "Of course you do." "No, I--" "Mulder, don't question it. It's a miracle." Diana transforms back into Scully, who is still pregnant. Oh, shit...shit...that son-of-a-bitch caveman is lying on the other side of her, his scarred hand placed on her distended abdomen. He sneers at Mulder, arrogant, seemingly victorious. In his free hand he grasps a long snake and the snake's tail rattles, sounding like laughter. Jealousy, anger, and confusion swirl through Mulder in equal measure. Is the caveman the father of Scully's baby? This isn't a miracle. It's a fucking nightmare-- * * * "Mulder, wake up. You're having a bad dream." Scully stroked Mulder's cheek, trying to bring him out of his nightmare as gently as possible. "Scully!" he gasped. His eyes flew open; a look of panic paled his face. Sitting up, he groped the air between them. His hand stopped dead on her stomach, his fingers clutching the fabric of her shirt. "You're dressed." "Yes, so are you. We wore our clothes to bed, remember? It was cold last night." He appeared confused and not entirely awake. "You're not pregnant?" Where the hell had that come from? "No, I'm not pregnant." He released his hold on her shirt, collapsed onto his back and wiped sweat from his face. "Thank God. Wow...that was a *hell* of a night--" His mouth clamped shut so quickly she heard his teeth clack. "You dreamt I was pregnant?" "Uh...the details are kinda fuzzy..." His voice petered out and his eyes looked everywhere but at her. "Which parts do you remember?" "It was just a dream, Scully. It didn't mean anything." He closed his eyes and drew the furs up to his chin as if intending to go back to sleep. She remained sitting up. The pre-dawn sky was crimson above the mountain peaks. They were camped next to one of Klizzie's markers on a hill overlooking a marsh, where weed-choked waters reflected the bloody glow of daybreak. "Mulder, you were the one who once told me a dream is an answer to a question we haven't learned how to ask. What question do you think you need answered?" His eyes opened reluctantly, filled with worry. "I..." Again he stopped. "You what?" He took a breath and made a face that looked as if he were preparing to go sewer diving for flukemen. "I don't think it would be a good idea for you to get pregnant right now." A flare of annoyance heated her cheeks. "I shouldn't have to remind you, Mulder, I can't get pregnant." She threw back the animal skins, intending to rise from the bed. He stopped her with a tug on her shirtsleeve. "We don't know that." "Yes, we do. I don't believe in your regression theory. Your missing scar and my fading tattoo are not proof of anything. We aren't growing younger. Even if we were, it wouldn't necessarily mean I'd become fertile again." Wanting to forego any further discussion about her defunct reproductive system, she rose from the bed. "Where are you going?" he asked, sounding conciliatory and a little nervous. "To the marsh. I want to wash up," she said, tugging her boots on. She located her jacket, then his, in the semi-dark and searched his pockets for the flashlight. Her hand closed around his jackknife. Better take it, too, since she no longer had her gun. The loss of the gun still rankled. They'd spent nearly two hours searching for it, leaving Scarface and his sidekick handcuffed to the mastodon skull while they combed the woods. "Are you *sure* he threw it this way?" Mulder had asked at least half a dozen times. She grew increasingly irritated each time she answered him. "Yes, I'm sure." They both understood the importance of finding the weapon -- for protection and food -- but it had seemingly vanished in the mastodons' chaotic wake as if into Mulder's alleged Flux Space. Downed trees, shredded vegetation and muddy prints stymied their efforts, and eventually forced them to abandon their search. There was some small consolation in the fact that it had been her gun and not his that was lost, since she'd been down three rounds, while his clip remained full. "Take my gun," he suggested when she tucked his knife into her pocket. "Please." She flicked on his flashlight. "I'll be fine." "Maybe I should come with you." He started to get up. "Mulder, I'd prefer a little privacy, if you don't mind." That stopped him, as she knew it would. With a hesitant nod he lay back down on the skins. "Yell if you need me." "I'll only be a few minutes." The marsh was located approximately 600 yards downhill from their camp, where the land formed a shallow V between two sparsely treed slopes. The depression served as a catch basin for rainwater and snowmelt. Cattails and duckweed clogged its outer rim, making access to the water a challenge. Scully picked her way down-slope through thigh-high weeds. Mulder's waking words continued to nag at her as she tried to find solid footing in the spongy soil. It seemed muddier this morning than last night when she'd come down to fill the waterbag. She began to wonder if she'd taken the wrong path. Mulder was right -- this wouldn't be the most opportune time for her to get pregnant. But if a miracle occurred and it happened, she would embrace the prospect of becoming a mother. Wouldn't he be equally pleased? He knew she wanted children; he'd helped her petition for the adoption of Emily. And although he'd never said anything outright about wanting kids himself, he'd been so supportive throughout Emily's illness, Scully had just assumed he wanted children...someday...not necessarily with her, but in a general sense. Had she misread him? She'd also assumed their personal relationship was moving to a more serious level now that they'd slept together. To her, making love meant...well...she wasn't sure exactly what it meant...but it was more than being friends. In light of his behavior this morning, however, she could see they had opposing views about their intimate act. Apparently Mulder wasn't imagining 2.3 kids, a white picket fence, and "happily ever after." It figured her dream-come-true would be his worst nightmare. They disagreed on so many things, why should this be different? Two ducks squabbled for territory several yards to her left. The less dominant flew off, wings thumping the air, indignation nattering from its throat. She panned the reeds with her light. A snake slithered away from her beam. She took a few careful steps forward, inching closer to the water. Maybe she was jumping to conclusions. Mulder had never said that getting her pregnant was his worst nightmare. He'd said now was not a good time. It was possible he'd been having second thoughts about his regression theory. If that were the case, he might be trying to spare her feelings, knowing her fertility was not going to return. Perhaps he was worried he'd gotten her hopes up over nothing. He'd seen her dreams dashed once already, when she lost Emily. Leaping onto a slippery stone at the water's edge, she nearly skidded off. Arms flailing, she caught her balance and steadied herself. Mulder had stood by her when Emily lay dying, until she pushed him away herself, preferring to go through her heartache alone. She'd been afraid to accept his support at the time, fearful his strength would invite her own weakness. And she felt certain if she let herself lose control, she would never, ever recover. In the months following Emily's death, she shrank from the truth, unwilling to confront the fact that she'd lost her one and only child and could never have another. She found it increasingly painful to be around Mulder, knowing he had accepted her infertility a long time ago. Then she noticed she was starting to resent him because he still retained the ability to have children, whereas she no longer had the option, and she felt ashamed of her resentment. Hunkering down on the stone, she blinked away tears, surprised at how angry the inequity still made her feel. She didn't blame Mulder, either directly or indirectly, then or now, for the things that had been done to her. The theft of her ova, her inability to conceive and bear children, Emily's death -- none of these had been his fault. He'd been a victim, too, his family whittled down to almost nothing. Bending forward for a drink, she sank her fingers into the mud. For just a second, she felt as if she were going to be pulled in. She sat up quickly, withdrawing her hands. Murky water quickly filled the indentations she left behind. Sometimes she worried that no man would want her, a barren woman. Ridiculous, she knew. An old-fashioned idea. She could name dozens of women without children who lived happy, satisfied lives, who accomplished remarkable things and bettered the world. But the desire to reproduce was strong. And without the hope of having a family of her own, she often felt incomplete. The sunrise shone upside-down in the water, tinting it copper. An iris floated just beyond her reach, broken from its stem. A frantic insect ran round and round its sodden petals, searching for an escape. The blossom would eventually become waterlogged and sink, brown with rot. The insect would drown. Hugging her knees, watching the dawn break, Scully felt isolated, cut off from creation the same way the lost insect was cut off from shore. Bullfrogs hummed on all sides, ballyhooing their territories. Ducks quacked, protecting their nests. The water smelled fecund, milky with fish eggs, teeming with the promise of life. Scully didn't share their future. She was a genetic dead end. She turned off Mulder's flashlight. The sun had risen high enough to see the silhouette of the surrounding hills, the ducks on the pond, the fluttering rushes. Somewhere up the slope, still in shadow, Mulder waited for her. She had no doubt he was awake, alert, listening intently in the event she cried out for his help. As always, he was watching her back. They had made love twice since coming to this place. She wanted desperately to make love again, but now she didn't know if it was reasonable to encourage him. She loved him with all her heart, and yet in so many ways she hardly knew him. She was unsure how he felt about her, if he had any hope for a future with her, or what his real feelings were on the subject of children. One thing was certain: if he wanted children, the two of them had no future together. He deserved an opportunity to become a father. He deserved a woman who could give him sons and daughters. She would never ask him to forgo a family because of her defect. She ran a finger through the water, causing a ripple. They never should have made love in the first place, not until they'd talked all this out. She'd been caught in a selfish moment, overwhelmed to have him back after coming so close to losing him. And now there was no undoing it. * * * Mulder hefted Conan's spear while gauging the distance to his target. Approximately 100 feet across the weedy meadow, Klizzie's stone marker mocked him. Three throws, three misses. To be fair, he was closing in; his last attempt had sailed mere inches over the top. "Any last words?" he asked the pile of rocks. "No? Then prepare to be annihilated." Three long strides...he hurled the spear, lobbing it like a baseball, high and straight, and with every ounce of power he could put behind it. The shaft wobbled only a little this time. His aim was true. The point made contact, crashed through the stones and toppled the pile with a satisfying clatter. "Yes!" Mulder's fist jabbed the air. "Nice shot, Tarzan." Scully approached carrying a small basket and two skewered, roasted lizards. Big lizards. Two-foot-long lizards, if you counted their charred tails. "Where'd you get those?" he asked, relieved to see her with or without food. When she left their bed this morning, she'd said she needed a few minutes to herself. A "few minutes" had stretched into an hour -- as far as he could tell without his watch -- and he'd become worried. Wanting to go look for her, but not wanting to invade her privacy -- or answer any more questions about his nightmare -- he decided to burn off his nervous energy by practicing with the spear. Scully set the basket on the ground beside her feet and extended one of the skewered lizards like an olive branch. He accepted it, feeling unworthy after this morning's foul up. She was wearing her "I'm fine" expression, but he knew she must have been dissecting and analyzing what he'd said -- and not said. Concern showed in the tightness of her mouth, in the gloss of her eyes. As much as he hated to see her worried, he couldn't tell her the truth: he didn't want children, not now, not ever. Not even with her. Or maybe especially with her. Any kid of his was doomed and he'd be dooming her, too, to a lifetime of disappointment and heartache if she became pregnant by him. He was simply not father material, any more than he was big brother or husband material. For that matter, most of the time he wasn't even good FBI partner material. Best case scenario, their kid would be in therapy for the rest of its life, assuming it wasn't abducted or killed first. And Scully would grow to hate him, assuming she wasn't abducted...again...or killed, too. Then she'd leave him, just as Diana had. Scully was holding her lizard like an ear of corn and nibbling daintily on a hind leg. Humidity from the marsh had curled her hair today and the morning sun was shining through the frizz, giving it the appearance of a coppery halo. A scrap of meat clung to the corner of her mouth. She looked so beautiful he could barely breathe. He reached over to wipe the food from her lips. When she didn't duck away from his hand, he decided to kiss her, wanting...*needing*...the intimacy. Bowing his head, he leaned in and gently pressed his lips to hers. Was it fair to encourage this, knowing she wanted kids and he didn't? Her fertility would return...probably soon. Wouldn't it be better to end things now before that happened? Otherwise, he would end up hurting her...hurting them both. She was responding to his kiss with such tenderness. He hated himself for it. He was leading her on, giving her false hope. He pulled back, uncertain what to do. The idea of losing her scared the hell out of him. Then again, so did fathering a child. "You were going to tell me where you found breakfast," he said, knowing this wasn't the subject they needed to discuss. She waved the lizard. The tension seemed to lessen around her mouth and eyes. "There were dozens of these sunning themselves on the rocks by the marsh." "How'd you catch them?" Digging into her pocket, she produced his jackknife. "With this." "The lizards just sat there while you sliced and diced?" "Hardly." She handed him her half-eaten lizard and then opened his knife to demonstrate. Pointing its blade at an orangey toadstool growing in the damp soil about ten feet away, she said, "See that mushroom?" "Uh-huh." "Watch." The knife pinwheeled through the air and landed dead center in the cap of the toadstool, halving it. "That's pretty fancy knife-throwing, Jane of the Jungle." "You're no slouch with that spear of yours either, Tarzan." "Are you speaking metaphorically?" He let himself smile. She smiled, too, which pleased him even more than usual because it wasn't one of her typical barely-there smiles, but a rare teeth-and-gums grin that made up for all of his failed attempts to make her laugh. Especially now, given the way their morning had started. "Metaphors aside, Mulder, keep practicing. Without my gun, we need all the survival skills we can muster." It was true. Three days of traveling had exhausted their food supply. And although the snapping turtle they'd managed to catch and stone to death last night had filled their stomachs, there'd been no leftovers for breakfast. Procuring food in the Ice Age was evidently going to be a constant struggle since they didn't know which plants were edible and which were lethal. With no way to safely supplement their paltry meat diet, Mulder was finding himself persistently hungry; he'd already lost an inch or two around his waist, enough to make him cinch his belt a couple of holes. Scully walked away to retrieve the knife. He felt a flutter of panic as he watched her retreating back. "Where'd you learn to throw like that?" he asked, needing to connect with her, if only by the sound of her voice. "My dad. He taught Bill, Charlie and me after giving us Swiss Army knives for Christmas one year." She returned with the knife, wiping bits of toadstool from the blade and folding it closed. She traded it to him for her breakfast. Mulder's knife had once belonged to his father. Bill Mulder had acquired it while in the military soon after Mulder was born and had carried it for years. The grip was worn smooth by constant handling. Whether pacing the shore at Quonochontaug or the floor of his study in Chilmark, Bill Mulder kept a hand thrust into his pocket, turning the knife round and round. He occasionally drew it out to slice an apple or open a letter, but most of the time it remained hidden away...like so much of his life. A few months after his father had been killed Mulder was packing his belongings in West Tisbury when he found the knife in a packet from the funeral home. He decided to keep it, hoping the weight of it in his pocket and the feel of it against his palm might somehow bring his dad closer, even if posthumously. While holding it, Mulder could almost believe that under different circumstances he and his father might have been Indian Guides for real. "Melissa didn't get a knife, too?" he asked. "Yes, but as a self-proclaimed pacifist, she declined to use it." Scully's brows pinched together and Mulder guessed she was thinking about the violent way Melissa had died. He quickly steered the subject in what he hoped would be a less painful direction. "Didn't your mom object to giving you kids knives as Christmas gifts?" "Not at all. Mom's a practical woman. And in the days before cell phones, a Swiss Army knife was probably the most practical thing we could carry. She did insist Dad instruct us on proper handling. Besides, we weren't *that* young. And Swiss Army knives were an improvement over the BB guns." Her mention of the BB guns brought to mind that unspeakable afternoon when he'd accompanied her mother to the monument shop to pick up Scully's headstone...which reminded him of Duane Barry and Scully's abduction...which reminded him-- "You were gone a long time this morning," he said. "I thought we decided you weren't going to go off on your own." She stopped chewing. Downcast eyes hid her emotions. "I wasn't very far." "I called to you." The fear he'd felt at that moment returned to him now full force. Could he demand she never leave his sight? "You didn't answer." "Mulder, nothing happened. I'm fine." He nodded, not wanting to argue. Right now all he wanted to do was get back to the way things had been the day they first made love, when he'd felt on top of the world. He didn't want to lose the closeness they'd had at that moment, the happiness he'd felt. He pointed to the basket she'd set on the ground earlier. "What's in your basket, Little Red?" His question brought a smug grin to her face. She picked up the container and lifted the lid so he could see inside. "Fresh duck eggs." Three large eggs sat nestled in the bottom of the basket. His mouth began to water. "Scully, I love you." The words just popped out -- heartfelt and meaning so much more than "thanks for bringing eggs." She seemed to miss his greater meaning, however. Or was purposely ignoring it. "Hope you don't mind eating them raw." "Not at all." He fished an egg from the basket. Using his knife, he chiseled a dime-sized a hole into the top of the shell. He handed her the knife and raised the egg to his lips. "Down the hatch." He sucked out the contents as if drinking from a cup. Yolk and white slid into his mouth and he bit down on it, breaking the yolk with his tongue. God, it tasted wonderful-- "Oh..." Scully's gasp drew his attention. She was staring at the egg she held, a look of revulsion on her face. Tears suddenly swamped her eyes, overflowed her lashes and plummeted in two straight lines past the lowered corners of her mouth. "What is it, Scully?" She handed him the egg. Curled inside was the gray, sticky embryo of an unhatched baby duck. The bird was dead. * * * Tsa-ond was a sacred place, a mountain cave where men had come for generations to express their devotion to the Spirits, to make offerings, and to pray for good hunting, good health, and peace among the clans. This afternoon a central fire warmed the cave with a flickering golden glow. Dzeh crouched in front of the Prayer Wall, his hands cupping a small bone idol, an offering to Hare Spirit. Behind him, the men of Owl Clan chanted individual prayers. Group prayers would come later, after the Shaman led them in a Telling Ceremony, an exchange of stories about personal spiritual encounters. Each man's supernatural experience would be held up for scrutiny by the group, evaluated and accepted or rejected as a true spiritual sign. Today Dzeh had a story to tell -- a dream vision he'd had three nights ago. He was not eager to tell his dream; it was full of mystery and foreboding. Dzeh reverently placed his offering, a small fertility idol, on the ground in front of the Prayer Wall. He'd carved the figurine from the jawbone of a hare hoping the dead rabbit would speak to Hare Spirit on his behalf. Because rabbits mated year-round, producing many offspring, Dzeh was appealing to Hare, hoping the Spirit would bless Klizzie with a child this season. The bone idol had been meticulously crafted. Smaller than Dzeh's thumb, it represented a woman ripe with child, her breasts swollen with milk. She had wide hips, to ensure an easy birth. Too many women were lost during their labor -- like Dzeh's mother and his oldest sister, Ne-zhoni. He did not want to lose Klizzie this way, too. He would rather she had no child at all than to see her fly off with the Spirits as she struggled to give birth. The idea of losing Klizzie made Dzeh feel panicked and queasy. He loved her so much. Too much perhaps. Whenever he looked at her, lay with her, even talked with her about trivial matters, such as the gathering of pine nuts or the cleaning of deer skins, his heart beat like skull drummers at a Mastodon Feast. He had been very fond of his previous mate, but his affection for Klizzie outshone that older love as the sun to the moon. Dzeh's tiny idol had a nearly blank face, as was custom; only a few shallow notches hinted at features. Its hair, however, was crosshatched to represent braids similar to Klizzie's. Dzeh had spent many winter evenings incising each precise line. The hands and feet were simple points with no toes or fingers; the fertility Spirits cared little for these parts of the body, attentive only to the reproductive aspects of the offering, which were exaggerated and detailed. Dzeh had polished the entire figure by rubbing it with sand and then bear fat until its breasts and belly glistened. He murmured placating words to Hare Spirit before leaving the idol and rising to his feet to add a picture to the Prayer Wall. Several other men stood at the Wall painting images. Small bowls of pigment and binder dotted the cave floor. The binder had been made from a mix of albumen and pinyon gum. The pigments ranged in color from black to blue to red to white. Charcoal, azurite, hematite, and white clay had been ground into powders. Brushes had been prepared by chewing the tips of twigs to remove the pulp, leaving fibers for painting small solid areas, clear lines and fine details. Dots were applied with fingertips. Dzeh selected a tortoiseshell bowl filled with binder. He added a pinch of charcoal to it and, using his brush, mixed the materials together, creating a viscous black paint. He wasn't much of an artist -- not nearly as accomplished as his Uncle Lin -- but it was the act of painting itself, not the quality of the image, that mattered. Painting a picture on a Prayer Wall was akin to singing a song to the Spirits during Feast Days or wearing a totem all year round. It was an act of respect, faith, and obedience. It focused a man's thoughts, opening a path of communication to the Spirit World. The Wall already held countless drawings made over many generations. Finding an unmarked area wasn't easy. If a man wanted to paint a large picture, he must draw atop an older one. Feeling humbled by his communication with Hare Spirit, Dzeh decided to paint only a small picture this year. He found a blank space the size of a newborn's palm between the tusks of a bull mastodon and the outstretched arm of Serpent Holder, a Spirit who held a large snake. The image of the Serpent Holder was intimidating, almost life- size, and reminded Dzeh of his dream vision. He wondered again if the elders would deem his vision a true spiritual encounter. In many respects, he hoped not. Using careful strokes, he sketched the delicate outline of a jackrabbit. Additional paint was needed to color the rabbit reddish-brown and give him white eyes that could see their way between this world and the Spirit World. When Dzeh was satisfied with his picture, he put down his brushes and paints, and joined the other men in a circle around the fire pit. Fifteen men and nine boys waited eagerly, yet quietly, for the Shaman to lead them in the Telling Ceremony. Only the smallest children and infants were excluded from this ritual. And women, too, of course, who were busy taking care of the young ones and preparing tonight's Spirit Feast. The Shaman walked a circle around the men. He wore a helmet made from the skullcap of a musk ox, its great horns curled low over his ears. White clay painted his face in hopes the Spirits would mistake him for a ghost and allow him access to their world. A silvery wolf-skin cape, trimmed with owl feathers and bone beads, hung from his broad shoulders, open at the front to expose his Owl Clan tattoos -– circular designs that represented owl's eyes and superior vision. Bracelets of snail shells jangled at his wrists and ankles. Around his neck he wore an impressive amulet made from iridescent heron feathers, clattering muscle shells and the gleaming tusks of a saber-toothed cat. A fog of burning sage, tangy and pleasant smelling, filled the cave as the Shaman paced, holding a smudge-stick aloft in his outstretched hand. In his other hand he carried a tortoiseshell rattle, which he shook to the cadence of his deep-throated chant. The men joined his chant, lifting their collective voices to the Spirit World. Dzeh's heart began to beat faster as the chanting progressed. He felt as if the Spirits sat with him at the hearth fire. This both frightened and made him glad. When the Shaman had gone four times around the circle, cleansing the cave with his trail of smoke and calling to the Spirits with his singing, he took his place among the men, sitting to the right of Lin, the eldest. Now it was time for the Telling Ceremony. Foreboding caused Dzeh's hands to quake and he stilled them by grasping the pouch he wore around his neck. The future held many secrets. Was his dream a premonition or just a simple nightmare? The men proceeded to tell their stories, going in the order of their ages, starting with Lin. Dzeh listened and waited his turn. Several of the stories were deemed true visions, their ramifications were discussed and appropriate prayers were offered. The moment finally came for Dzeh to begin telling his story. "Three nights ago, I had a sleeping vision," he said before dread seized his throat and stole the force from his voice. The men nodded, encouraging him to go on. He squeezed his totem pouch. Took a full breath. Speaking in a hushed tone, like a mourning dove separated from its mate, he continued, "In my dream, the newcomer named Muhl-dar captured a snake, which he placed in a bone cage. When Snake Spirit discovered the caged snake, he became angry. Snake Spirit released the snake and turned it into a man, then sent this snake-man to seek revenge. After much searching, the snake-man found Muhl- dar living with his red-haired mate at the camp of Owl Clan." This brought nervous looks to the other men's faces. He knew they were thinking it had been risky to welcome the strangers in the first place. "Muhl-dar fought with snake-man," he continued, "and defeated him by breaking him into two halves." Dzeh glanced over at the Prayer Wall with its enormous painting of the Serpent Holder. For a heartbeat, it looked as if the snake might be severed in two. A spear of panic slashed into Dzeh's belly. "Snake Spirit became enraged by the death of snake-man, so he disguised himself as a lightning bolt and traveled to earth in the belly of a giant storm, intending to kill Muhl-dar. The night sky was turned inside out. The stars and the moon were moved from their customary positions as the lightning bolt grew to an enormous size. Cottonwood seeds fell like snow, even though it was not the season for them. Clansmen ran in every direction, afraid for their lives." Dzeh closed his eyes, recalling the fear he felt when he discovered Klizzie was not by his side. "Those who remained behind heard the chirping of a bird." Dzeh opened his eyes. "It was followed by the voice of a far-off female Spirit, who spoke to Muhl-dar, and although we could not understand her words, he was able to speak to her in her own strange language, and he became quite excited and happy to talk with her. She took a deep breath and blew the cottonwood seeds back to the Spirit World. Then she swallowed up Muhl-dar and his mate. The people of Owl Clan were sad to see them go." That was the end of the dream. He hoped the elders would decide it was not a prophecy, but only a silly nightmare. Several moments passed while the men considered what they'd heard. Finally Dzeh's Uncle Lin spoke. "I accept Dzeh's vision as a true spiritual sign." "I agree," said his cousin Wol-la-chee, "but what does it mean?" "It is clearly a bad omen," said another man. "Clan members were lost and the man named Muhl-dar was at fault for their hardship." "If that is true, then why does the female Spirit help Muhl- dar and why is the Clan sad to see him go?" Lin asked. "It makes no sense," said Wol-la-chee. "Who is this female Spirit?" "Who is the snake-man?" asked another. "Prophecies are often unclear when they are first revealed," said the Shaman. "Interpreting them is like hunting in fog. Sometimes we must wait until events reveal themselves before we can know whether it is best to charge or run." "But it is never desirable to lose Clan members," argued a man who had recently lost his son to dysentery and fever. "Maybe someone should return to Toh-ta Lodge to kill Muhl-dar before he cages the snake," suggested a boy barely into his thirteenth year. "It might already be too late for that," said Uncle Lin. "Then we should send Muhl-dar away when he comes," said the boy's father. "No." Dzeh shook his head. The dream frightened him, particularly the part about Klizzie. Even so, he was left with the feeling that Muhl-dar was the Clan's only hope against the vengeful Snake Spirit. Dzeh believed the snake-man intended to cause trouble for all of Owl Clan. He couldn't explain how he knew such a thing, only that he felt it like the chill of winter across his back. "Muhl-dar is my Trading Partner. He is Clan now and has given us no reason to either banish or kill him." Dzeh glared at the 13-year-old. The boy lowered his eyes, looking ashamed. "All aspects of the partnership have not been fulfilled," the boy's father reminded Dzeh. "You have made only a single trade." "We will make more," Dzeh said. "You will exchange mates with the stranger?" "Yes, of course," Dzeh said, knowing the ritual would earn the Clan's trust. Mate-exchange was the ultimate demonstration of a man's loyalty -- to the Trading Partner and to the Clan. "Until Dzeh or Muhl-dar choose to sever their partnership, or Muhl-dar breaks a Clan custom, the newcomer and his mate will be treated as members of Owl Clan," Lin said. He looked at each man in turn. "We have accepted Dzeh's vision. We will watch for additional omens." Before moving on to the next man's vision, the Shaman urged, "We must continue to offer prayers to the Spirits for the protection of Owl Clan. I fear difficult times ahead." Dzeh silently agreed. Again he glanced at the painting of the Serpent Holder on the Prayer Wall and again he felt the chill of winter run down his spine. * * * While the men were praying in the cave and the women were preparing the evening's ceremonial meal, Gini and her best friend Jeha hiked down a gravely trail to the stream to fill waterbags for tomorrow's journey. Twins Do and Ehdo followed several paces behind, more interested in playing with their dolls than in fetching water. The twins were a couple of years younger than Gini. Jeha was older -- two Mastodon Feasts older -- and was full of talk about this year's Feast and her imminent Joining Ceremony. Jeha had been promised by an uncle to Moasi, a young man in Badger Clan, one of several clans that would be participating in this year's Feast. Although Jeha had never met Moasi, she'd heard from a cousin that her future mate was a good hunter and very handsome. "Moasi has already killed his first bear, you know," Jeha bragged. "So you have told me." Moasi, Moasi, Moasi. Could Jeha think of nothing else? All this talk about mates and Joining Ceremonies was making Gini's stomach hurt. She had learned from Dzeh only this morning that he was going to inquire about a mate for her at the upcoming Feast. "You are growing up, Gini," he had said after finishing his breakfast. "It is time for you to be mated. I will make arrangements." And that was that; he said nothing more and walked away leaving her too stunned to speak. Which was just as well; it would have been inappropriate for her to object in any case. Gini had gone immediately to find Klizzie, hoping to talk to her about Dzeh's decision, and the bumblebees it had put in her stomach, but Klizzie was too busy preparing the day's Spirit Feast to answer her questions. "We can talk tomorrow. On our way to Turkey Lake." Klizzie kissed her on the head and hurried away to add pine nuts to the Offerings. Gini was as nervous as a trapped goose about the idea of taking a mate, moving away to a strange clan, leaving the only family she had ever known. It seemed so unfair. Why did girls have to leave their clans to be mated and not boys? "My mother is sewing ivory beads and blue jay feathers to my Joining Skirt," Jeha prattled as they neared the stream. The woods thinned here and the twins ran ahead, wanting to be first to the water. "Ma-ma made the skirt from doe skins as white as new-fallen snow. And soft! You have never felt such soft hides." Jeha would look pretty in her Joining Day skins, Gini had to admit. Long hair done up in braids with beads and feathers and a crown of flower blossoms, her perfect skin oiled and perfumed. Jeha stood half a head taller than Gini. Her waist curved in and her hips curved out, and her breasts had begun to swell. Gini's chest remained as flat as any boy's and her narrow hips led straight down into her skinny legs, knobby knees and big feet. Sometimes she felt as ugly as a grasshopper next to her older friend. It struck her this might be a good thing. Maybe Dzeh would not be able to find a boy who would want an ugly girl like her. Then she could stay with Owl Clan and Klizzie. It was sad losing her best friend. Gini and Jeha had been like sisters all their lives. Now they would never again have the opportunity to play string games or dolls or Find Me. Jeha would become a member of Badger Clan. She would be expected to tend her mate's hearth, raise lots of children. She would leave Turkey Lake in the autumn and it would be many seasons before Gini would see her again. If ever. The twins stripped out of their fur skirts and waded into the shallow brook, while Jeha and Gini settled side-by-side on a low moss-covered rock where they could dangle their feet in the cold, clear water. They sat near one of Klizzie's stone markers, set out for the newcomers to follow. Gini wondered if Muhl-dar and Day-nuh had left Toh-ta Lodge yet and if they were following Klizzie's trail. Or had they decided to return to Eel Clan instead? Gini liked the strangers, especially Muhl-dar, and hoped to see them both again soon. Maybe Dzeh could find her a mate like Muhl-dar. Gini guessed he was a good hunter and she knew he was handsome -- in a foreign sort of way. Although she had never met Jeha's future mate, she was quite sure the boy from Badger Clan could not be as good looking as Muhl-dar. "Does it not scare you a little?" Gini asked, watching the twins splash and chase each other in circles. They looked so much alike, it was easy to lose track of who was who. "What are you talking about?" Jeha asked. "Being mated to a man you have not met." Gini could not imagine it. Klizzie had told her that laying with a man was a pleasant thing, and Gini believed her, but she also wondered why women sometimes cried out in the night as if in pain when they laid with their mates. Klizzie herself had cried out just last night. Jeha put on the expression of a grownup. "It is the Clan way. There is no point in being frightened." Gini was not so sure. Last fall she had seen a stallion mount a mare. He had climbed onto her back while she whinnied, the whites of her eyes showing all around. Clearly, she didn't like it. When the stallion finally got off her, his male part hung long and wet-looking. Did that happen to men? "Besides," Jeha said, while drawing shapes in the water with her toe, "it is a worse life to have no mate at all." That was true. A woman without a mate had no status and was always last to get her share of meat or skins. If there was not enough to go around, she went without. A woman alone must rely on the charity of the Clan for all things. "And don't forget, you must lie with a man if you want babies," Jeha said matter-of-factly. "You want babies, don't you?" She supposed she did. "What does laying with a man have to do with getting babies?" Jeha laughed. "You are still a baby yourself if you do not know the answer to that." Gini flushed with embarrassment, although she was uncertain what it was that made Jeha laugh at her. Klizzie prayed to the Spirits to bring her babies; she had never mentioned any other way of getting them. "If you are so smart, tell me where babies come from." Do and Ehdo had stopped their running and now sat in the brook playing a clapping game. Jeha watched them while she explained. "You know that a man puts his be-zonz inside a woman when they lay together, don't you?" "Yes. Of course." Again she pictured the stallion. "Well, the baby crawls through the man's be-zonz into the woman. Ma-ma told me so." Was that true? It didn't seem possible. It didn't even make sense. "Where does the man keep the baby before he puts it in the woman and how does it fit through his be-zonz?" "The baby is very small, silly. It grows to normal size *after* it gets inside the woman." Well, that made sense at least. Pregnant women were not large, not at first. They grew bigger only as their time drew near. Animals were like that, too. The horses mated in the autumn. By spring, the mares were heavy with foals. A man's be-zonz might grow large during mating to allow for the baby's passage, Gini supposed. Still, why did people pray to Spirits for babies if they came from men? Jeha turned away from the twins and lowered her voice to a whisper. "Watch them sometime. See for yourself." "Watch what?" "Our aunts and uncles when they are in their sleeping skins." "Jeha, that is not polite!" Gini said, wanting suddenly to be playing games with Do and Ehdo rather than continuing this conversation. Jeha's talk was making her stomach hurt worse than before. "Let's swim." "If you want." Jeha laughed again. She stood to remove her fur skirt. "But one day you will see I am telling you the truth." Again Gini pictured the stallion's enormous male part and the bumblebees in her stomach began to buzz more violently than ever. * * * Mulder carried the larger pack and the spears, occasionally using one of the spears as a walking stick. Scully lugged the waterbag and the smaller pack, which was intended for storing food but was currently empty. It was late afternoon and they were climbing yet another forested hill. They'd been following Klizzie's markers and traveling northeast for seven days. Mulder guessed they were covering fifteen to twenty miles a day now that he was feeling stronger. "There." Mulder pointed to a stack of fist-sized stones balanced atop a mossy boulder twenty yards upstream. "Camp now?" Scully asked. She had begun talking epigrammatically around mid-morning and had said almost nothing at all since noon. Mulder assumed her terseness was the result of fatigue and hunger. Or a reaction to his own irritability. He felt snappier than A.D. Skinner at an OPR meeting. "We still have several hours of daylight left. Let's keep going. Maybe we can crest the next ridge before dark." They couldn't stop now -- they had nothing to eat. "Fine." Scully switched the waterbag to her other hand and continued hiking. The path was steep here, zigzagging uphill between ghostly aspens and sparse evergreens, following a channel carved by the stream. Loose stones lined the trail. Granite cobbles and tree roots served as irregular steps. Aspens shivered in the chilly breeze, their papery leaves chattering like teeth. The air smelled like pinesap and last year's fermenting chokecherries. The skies were overcast again today. Last night had been downright frigid. He and Scully had huddled together for warmth, fully dressed beneath the sleeping skins. Their all-night embrace had been for practical purposes only. They'd made love only once since Mulder's nightmare, and it had not been particularly satisfying for either one of them. They couldn't seem to get out of each other's way, fumbling with their clothes, bumping noses, elbowing and pinching. It was all over in less than ten minutes, which was probably for the best. Mulder was still embarrassed to think about the welt he'd raised on Scully's chin when he accidentally clipped her with his knuckles. He'd meant to caress her, but was distracted by a biting deerfly and wound up walloping her instead. They'd both been in sour moods ever since. Although unwilling to take the lead in their intimate life -- at least for the time being -- Mulder did volunteer to occupy the forward position on the trail. He set a strenuous pace, hoping to burn off some of his unrequited sexual energy. He wanted to be bone-tired before falling into bed with Scully at the end of each day. That way, he was sure to keep his hands off her and avoid making an ass of himself...again. Something moved in the woods up ahead, just beyond Klizzie's marker. Mulder caught a glimpse of shaggy, reddish-brown fur between the tree trunks. He stopped and held up a cautionary finger to Scully. She came to a standstill a step or two behind him. "See it?" he whispered, never taking his eyes off the animal. It was shuffling slowly downhill, partially obscured by vegetation as it grazed on leaves. Was it a bear? A gorilla? "Megalonyx," Scully whispered, when it came into full view. "Megalo-what?" "Giant Ground Sloth." Jesus, it looked like some sort of mutant hamster. A ten-foot- tall mutant hamster. The bizarre animal rose up on its hind legs, reaching a long- clawed paw into the upper limbs of an aspen. It tore off a leafy branch and stuffed it into its mouth. Its arms were massive. Each paw sported six-inch curved claws. Its head was undersized for its brawny body, with a wide face, a flat snout, short, rounded ears, and pig-like eyes set far back on its skull. "Carnivorous?" Mulder asked. "No, but dangerous from the look of those claws." The sloth hooked another branch and brought it crashing to the ground. It turned an inquisitive eye toward Mulder and Scully and sniffed the air. Seemingly unconcerned, it continued to lazily munch leaves. God, the thing must weigh three tons. Three tons of fresh meat. Thick flank steaks. Tenderloins the size of a man's arm. T- bones to die for. Mulder's empty stomach rumbled. He quickly set everything he carried down on the ground...except his most durable spear. "Mulder, what are you doing?" "I'm gonna bag us dinner, Scully." He hefted the spear, gauged the distance. "Mulder, use your gun," Scully urged through clenched teeth. And waste a bullet? Nnnaaah, the sloth was moving very slowly. "Mulder--" Ignoring her warning, he charged the beast, spear raised shoulder high. The sloth stopped eating when it heard him stampeding up the hill. It turned to face him. Rearing up on its hind legs, it honked a warning that sounded like a cross between a grizzly bear and a Mack Truck. Mulder bellowed right back at him, racing forward, sending a mini avalanche of gravel downhill behind him. He targeted the animal's heart, gripped the spear, and prepared for impact. Twenty feet...fifteen...ten... The sloth swiped the air with an enormous paw as the spear punctured its chest. A thick, curving claw raked Mulder's face and pain exploded along his left cheek. Blood spurted from the wound. Ignoring his injury, Mulder thrust the spear more deeply into the animal's breast. The sloth roared and pivoted, lifting Mulder to his toes. He clung to the weapon, while the beast flailed an enormous arm, trying to bat him off. He dodged the blow, released the spear and dropped to his knees. Quickly, he scrambled back a step or two. The injured sloth attempted a charge but staggered sideways instead. It lashed out again and missed Mulder by mere inches before it lost its balance, tottered, and finally collapsed onto its back. Mulder wasted no time. He clambered up onto the giant's mountainous belly. Using all his weight, he drove the spear as deep into the animal as it would go. The sloth gasped, its head lolled, and its limbs went limp. Balanced on its chest, Mulder let out a victorious whoop. "Mulder!" Scully rushed forward, fear in her eyes. "You're hurt!" "I'm okay." He jumped to the ground and circled the sloth, practically dancing with excitement. "Do you prefer your steaks medium or well done?" "You're not okay. You're bleeding." She slowed his restless pacing by grabbing his sleeve. "Hold still. Let me see." She reached out to probe the wound on his cheek. "Ow!" He ducked away from her hand, but she was as tenacious as a fat-sucking mutant and was on him again in an instant. "It's nothing," he protested, arm extended to keep her at a distance. "We have meat to cut up. Sirloins to grill." "You need stitches." "Too bad we're twelve thousand *years* from the nearest hospital." He tried again to get around her, but she body- blocked him. He settled for inspecting the carcass over the top of her head. "Look at those drumsticks, Scully. And that rump roast." He pictured a couple of super-sized sloth-burgers, with a side order of onion rings and a large frosty milkshake. "I have needle and thread." "Hm?" Mulder glanced down. Scully was holding one of those cheapo hotel sewing kits in her hand. Oh. Crap. He'd forgotten she had that. She steered him to the boulder that held Klizzie's marker and, with the point of a finger, ordered him to sit. Then she laid out her needle, thread and a pair of miniature scissors that came with the kit. "I'm going to wash and stitch that wound. Give me your handkerchief." He obliged her with the handkerchief but refused to sit. "I killed it, Scully," he said, grinning. "Did you see me?" "Yes, I saw." She washed her hands and soaked the handkerchief in the stream. The minute her attention left him, he returned to the sloth. "Mulder, I told you to sit." She went to him and guided him by the arm back to the rock. "What you did was foolhardy." Foolhardy? He shook his arm loose. "Tell that to the sloth." He was hoping she'd be impressed by his success. Not to mention the gazillion pounds of fresh meat. "Still got all my bullets," he bragged. "And one nasty cut." "How sanitary is that needle?" he asked when she cornered him beside the boulder. "Won't I get an infection?" "That'd be preferable to bleeding to death. *Sit*." He did as she asked and eyeballed her needle, while she inspected his wound. Gently, she swabbed his bloody cheek with the wet handkerchief. "This would be easier without all the whiskers." It had been a week and a half since he'd last shaved and he guessed he must look pretty scruffy. Scully used the waterbag to rinse his cheek. "Hey, you're getting my clothes wet." She continued to pour. "That hurts!" He winced more for effect than from pain. She raised an eyebrow and handed him the waterbag and the blood-soaked handkerchief. "Hold these." "Shouldn't you use some of that soap root or something?" "It isn't antibacterial, Mulder. Your own blood will do a better job of cleansing the wound than that root." She threaded her needle. "Can't you just kiss it and make it better?" "I'm a doctor, Mulder, not your mother." "You're a pathologist." Her needle stung when it pierced his skin. "Ow! Don't forget, I'm not a corpse." "Shhh." "Do I get a reward if I don't cry?" "We'll see." She worked fast, quickly closing his wound with careful stitches. The cut was just below his eye. An inch or two higher-- He didn't want to think about it. He also didn't want to watch her needle popping in and out of his skin, so he avoided looking at her hands and focused on her eyes instead. In them he saw determination, self-control and compassion. She leaned close to tie off the final knots. "Almost finished," she murmured, and tears filled his eyes -- not from the pain she was causing, but from the devotion in her voice. He held perfectly still, waiting... "There," she said at last. "How does that feel?" He pouted. "It hurts." She tucked the scissors and needle back into her kit, and gave him a sympathetic smile. "Sorry." "I didn't cry. You owe me a reward." She gave him a quick kiss on the nose, then took the bloody handkerchief from his hand. "How about we cut up that carcass now? I'm pretty handy with a knife." "That wasn't much of a kiss." Taking a chance, he wrapped his arms around her. Still seated, he had to look up to give her his best puppy-eyed stare. He knew she was more apt to indulge him after he was recently injured. "Kiss me and make me better, Doctor Scully." She smiled, and he felt the tide of tension between them ebb a bit. An apology hung on his lips, but he was afraid to speak of their recent rift for fear he might reopen the gulf between them. "Close your eyes," she said. "I can't watch?" His tone turned petulant but he did as he was told. From behind closed lids he felt her place a feather-light kiss on the lashes of his left eye, just above the wound on his cheek. He tightened his arms around her and mumbled into her neck, "What do you know, it worked." She kissed the crown of his head. "Better?" "Yes, thank you. Much." * * * Klizzie shivered as she looked up through the evergreen boughs at the overcast sky. Clouds marched like mastodons overhead and a bitter wind was blowing in from the north. The air smelled like snow, which wasn't unusual at these altitudes, even in mid-summer. She followed the Clan up the southwestern slopes of Sleeping Wolf Mountain. Spruce and white pine grew tall here. A dense layer of rust-colored needles blanketed the ground, muting their footfalls. "Are we almost there?" Gini asked, whining like a mosquito. She dragged her feet with exaggerated exhaustion. "We will make camp soon. Tomorrow we will be at Turkey Lake," Klizzie said, trying to cheer the girl. Gini had been in a somber mood for the past two days, ever since the Clan had left Tsa-ond Cave. Dzeh had been subdued, too. When Klizzie asked him to share his troubles, he refused to discuss them, saying his head was full of men's business and she was not to worry, which made her worry even more. "I'm hungry," Gini complained. "You are welcome to the pine nuts in my pouch." Klizzie nodded her chin at the bag tied to the belt of her skirt. "I do not want pine nuts." "Well, that is all there is." That wasn't true; Klizzie carried an assortment of berries, burdock root and dried meat, but they were packed away and she didn't feel like stopping to dig them out. "Uncle Lin has a honeycomb," Gini said, looking hopeful. "That is for the Mastodon Feast and you know it." The Clan had brought many gifts for the celebration. Furs, spear points, bone beads, but the most prized was the large comb of honey, stored in a hollowed gourd and wrapped tightly with fresh cattail leaves to keep out insects...and hungry children. "Ask Jeha if she has any more spruce gum," Klizzie suggested. Looking ahead to where Jeha walked with her mother and aunt, Gini frowned. "She is busy." "She is just talking." "Yeah, about Moasi. I have heard enough about him." "You will have a mate of your own soon enough. Then you will talk about nothing but him, too, just as Jeha talks about Moasi." "I will not." Gini's frown deepened. Klizzie was about to ask her to explain her angry face, but the Clan was stopping. The men and boys were circling around something in the path up ahead. "Are we camping here?" Gini asked, curiosity replacing her storm-cloud expression. It was too early to set camp. Something else was going on. "Let's go see," Klizzie said, and she and Gini broke into a trot. They found everyone had gone as quiet as stone while they gaped at something on the ground. Klizzie shouldered her way through the circle to see what it was they were looking at. Mother Earth, it was a baby owl and it mewled pitifully, its wings too underdeveloped to fly. "It must have fallen from up there," Uncle Lin said, his finger aimed skyward. Klizzie lifted her eyes to a notch high in the hemlock that towered over the trail. The mother owl was nowhere to be seen. The baby would not last long. A predator would take it as soon as the Clan moved on. This was a bad omen. The owl was the symbol of the Clan. Its fall from the nest portended a tragedy. Klizzie felt Gini take her hand. "Can we put it back?" the girl asked. "Its mother will not accept it." "Maybe we can take it with us." "It would die just as surely, Gini." "But if we care for it and feed--" The Shaman glared at Gini, silencing her. Turning his attention to the owl, he knelt and spoke loud enough for all the Clan to hear. "The Spirits have thrown this bird here for us to see, and only they can save it." Klizzie glanced at Dzeh, who had gone pale. The young owl squealed and Klizzie felt the soft tread of Spirits passing across her flesh. * * * "We should start cutting up that carcass, Tarzan," Scully said, still locked in his embrace. He was looking past her at something on the hill. Saying nothing, his arms dropped away and he rose to his feet. She turned and tried to make out what it was that caught his attention. " Another sloth?" "Uh-uh. A cave." He walked away from her, heading uphill. She hurried after him, following him between trees and around boulders. He moved faster the higher he climbed and she scrambled to keep pace. Sure enough, a cave came into view. She was amazed he'd been able to spot it from below. Camouflaged by shadows, the entrance was nearly invisible. When they reached it, they found the opening was actually quite large, approximately six feet across and equally tall. It had a wide stone landing, which was flat and offered a spectacular view of the valley below. Mulder paused at the entrance to dig his flashlight from his pocket. "Don't wanna trip on any bears," he said, aiming the beam into the dark. He stepped inside and she followed. His roving flashlight spotlighted bats the size of lab rats hanging by the dozens in clumps overhead. Annoyed by the unexpected visitors, they squeaked and wriggled, but stayed put. The cave was too deep for the flash light to penetrate all the way to the back. "Anybody home?" he yelled, his voice ricocheting off the rock. "What's that smell?" The tangy aroma of burnt herbs and woodsmoke blended with the syrupy odor of the bats. "Sage, I think," Scully said. "Somebody must have been in here recently." "Klizzie's people?" Mulder moved further into the cave. "Probably. Her marker is just down the hill." Mulder's beam revealed a large fire pit in the middle of the rock floor. Scully walked over to it and crouched. "Still a little warm," she announced, fingers testing the ash. Mulder swiveled, painting the cave with his light as he explored their surroundings. "What's that?" she asked when his beam reflected off a small white object lying on the ground by the far wall. She crossed the cave and picked it up. "It's female," Mulder stated the obvious, spotlighting her palm. "Looks like a fertility idol -- like the Venus of Willendorf, found in Austria. Pendulous breasts, pregnant belly, no facial features to speak of. Similar figurines have been found all over the world." "They date as far back as 30,000 years." She turned it over in her hand, impressed by its smoothness. It felt strangely warm, almost alive, as if imbued with the faith of its careful carver. She stroked its roundness with her thumb. For just a moment, she thought she detected a heartbeat there. "Powerful magic." Mulder turned away, taking his light with him, his attention already focused elsewhere. "Why do you say that?" "The 20th Century is full of people, isn't it?" She gripped the idol and was startled when she felt what she could only describe as hope tickle her palm. Damn it, she was being foolish, letting this place get to her. The carving was nothing more than a lucky charm, like a four-leaf clover or a rabbit's foot. "Wow, look at this, Scully." Mulder was examining a painting on the rock wall. He stepped back, broadening the circle of his beam, revealing a stone canvas covered with pictograms. "Jesus, there're hundreds of them," he said, as his light crawled across the wall. Mastodons, bison, men with spears, horses, rabbits, owls...lots of owls. He stopped when he came to a nearly life-size image of a man holding a snake. "Ophiuchus." "Who?" She joined him at the wall for a closer look. "The Serpent Holder." He ran the light along the length of the snake. "You know, in the sky. The constellation." Of course. He'd pointed it out only a few nights ago when they were admiring the Andromeda Nebula. Ophiuchus had been a Healer who was struck dead by a thunderbolt from Zeus at the request of Hades, God of the Dead, because he had brought Orion back to life. Gods' work. "The myth of Ophiuchus is years in the future, Mulder," she reminded him. He nodded absently. "Yeah. Maybe." He was using his I'm- agreeing-with-you-without-really-agreeing-with-you tone, which meant that he was formulating some new theory he wasn't yet ready to share. The Serpent Holder loomed over them, staring out of blank eyes. It was unnerving. The way Mulder's light played across the rock made the snake look as if it were undulating in the Serpent Holder's hands. A tiny reddish-brown jackrabbit with frightened white eyes huddled next to the snake, looking powerless and vulnerable. The carved idol seemed to throb in Scully's palm. She felt suddenly lightheaded, queasy. Doubling over, she cried out as a slash of pain seared her abdomen. "Scully?" Mulder was instantly by her side, arms thrown around her to keep her from falling. "What is it? What's the matter?" "I don't...I don't know..." Oh God, the pain was awful. "It hurts..." "Where?" Mulder's expression was frantic. "Here...ooohhhh!" She clutched her stomach, just above her navel. He aimed his light at her, tugged her shirt up to reveal her bare skin. "I don't see anything. What is it?" She gasped for breath. "I feel...I think...ooohhhh, Mulderrr." Sinking to her knees, she tried to breathe through the pain. "Talk to me, Scully. What can I...how can I help?" "I feel like...I think I've been...shot." But there had been no gun, no bullet. There was no blood. Just pain, terrible pain, burning a straight line through her stomach and out her back. She reached for Mulder, grabbed him around the neck. Oh God, oh God. The idol slipped from her fingers and fell soundlessly to the ground. * * * CHAPTER NINE Scully closes her eyes against the pain that is slicing through her abdomen. Searing white light flashes behind her closed lids. The cave disappears; Mulder's embrace disintegrates. A vast Pleistocene plateau separates them. He is almost indiscernible on the distant horizon, but only for an instant. Just as suddenly, he is back with her...in their basement office. Splashes of light and dark mottle the wall. Mulder is showing slides, crime scene photos of baby killers, murderers posing as Santa Claus and insurance salesmen. Image after image fills Scully's field of vision in a seemingly endless progression. None of the cases look familiar. "Focus, please," Scully tells Mulder, her voice strident. This close-up view of nothing is getting on her nerves. "Can't. Seems to be broken." He fiddles with the lens. Jiggles the carousel. The picture becomes blurrier, if that's possible. He hisses, surrenders by turning off the projector. She sighs with relief when the fan stops spinning. Blinking, she finds they are no longer in the basement; they're riding in a rental car. The light from the projector has been replaced by twin highbeams piercing the desert night. She feels disoriented by the sudden change of scene. Mulder appears unconcerned as he concentrates on acres of emptiness beyond the windshield. He's driving, as usual. "What is your point?" he asks, tone curious, with no trace of judgment. Although she has no idea what her point was or is, she hears herself ask, "Don't you ever just want to stop?" Her tone is petulant, almost whiny. "Get out of the damn car? Settle down and live something approaching a normal life?" She realizes she's wanted to ask him this for a long time, ever since Emily. She also wants to roll down her window and let the night air blast her hair away from her face, but she doesn't. Where are they and why are they here? The car's AC has brought the aroma of sage and sand into the vehicle, and she is reminded of the desert that surrounds Hills Air Force Base in Box Elder County, Utah. Another wild goose chase that led nowhere. Still looking out a window, she is no longer in the car, but in Mulder's apartment. It's night outside and snow is falling in ghostly clumps. She wonders how life can turn on a dime when you're standing still. "You didn't want to be there?" Mulder asks. She doesn't know to what he's referring. His brow furrows as he considers his own question, and he appears disappointed, conciliatory. "Oh, that's, um...that's self-righteous and narcissistic of me to say, isn't it?" Is it? She doesn't understand what he means; she can't make sense of any of this, but hears herself reply, "No, I mean...maybe I did want to be out there with you." Confused, she gapes at him for a moment without speaking. She has no idea where they've been, or why she would or wouldn't want to be there, or even how they got into Mulder's apartment. But she is glad to be with him, not because he is giving her a brightly wrapped Christmas gift but because he's smiling shyly, like he has a secret to share but doesn't quite know where to start. He's speaking in his most gentle voice, the one he reserves for the rare occasions when he's being extraordinarily tender with her, like the time she woke up in a hospital after being abducted by Duane Barry. She has a gift for Mulder, too, and his eyes light up as he takes it from her. His eyelashes look so soft; she wants to reach out, feel their tickle against the pad of her index finger. But that's impossible because he is no longer in the room, which is a doctor's examination room now, not Mulder's apartment. The doctor stands a few feet away beside a sink and removes his latex gloves. Scully sits with her back to a wall, wearing a paper gown, feeling exposed, skin crawling with irritation. "It'll take at least two more sessions to get all the pigment out," the doctor says. A sympathetic smile warms his face. "Getting rid of it hurts more than getting it in the first place," she says, knowing from the sting on her back she must be referring to her tattoo. "A lot of patients tell me that. You can get dressed now." He tosses his gloves into the medical waste bin before leaving the room. Why is she having her tattoo removed? She's beginning to suspect this is a dream, but doesn't remember falling asleep. Wasn't she in a cave? With Mulder? Perhaps this is a hallucination. Rising from the exam table, she casts off her paper gown and dresses in business clothes, planning to return to the office for another hour or two. Mulder wanted to go over a case about...about... She can't remember. It seems the mutants are all beginning to look alike, running one into another, countless genetic freaks strung like mismatched beads on a necklace of abnormal DNA. Emily was such a mutation, she remembers. A miracle that was never meant to be. Mulder is once again with her in his apartment and he's crying over the loss of someone close to him. Her heart goes out to him; she understands bereavement, has felt its miserable ache. Somehow she knows his mother has died of Paget's Carcinoma. She can picture Teena Mulder, split open on an autopsy table, her insides exposed. Heart, lungs…the womb that once cradled Mulder and his sister. She tries to embrace Mulder, but her arms close around nothing. It's night. She is standing on the doorstep of a house she's never seen before; a man she doesn't recognize stands to her left. Mulder waits back at the car. Scully is facing a screen door and an elderly woman is on the other side looking out at her, curious. Scully asks her, "Are you the same Arbutus Ray who worked as a nurse at the Dominic Savio Memorial Hospital in 1979?" "Yes, I am she." Gooseflesh dots Scully's arms. Mulder's sister is dead. She died at age fourteen. God, can that be true? Can any of this be true? Mulder stands beside her, looking up at the stars. "You know, I never stop to think that the light is billions of years old by the time we see it. From the beginning of time right past us into the future," he says. "Nothing is ancient in the universe." She follows his line of vision only to find she's now in an unfamiliar apartment where there are cameras on every shelf. The room smells of chemicals, like a darkroom. A stranger is loading film. He tells her "You're very lucky, you know that?" He barely finishes speaking when a bullet pierces her abdomen. The pain is a shock, buckling her knees, sliding her to the floor. Mulder! Help me, please! What the hell is going on? This is all too much. She feels queasy from the shifts in place and time. She looks down at her hurting stomach and sees blood staining her blouse. Pain rips through her abdomen. Oh, God, oh, God! The apartment vanishes. The blood disappears. Scully is once again in the cave with Mulder. Everything is back at the beginning. And everything hurts. "Mulder..." she groans. "Help me." * * * "Scully...?" Not knowing what else to do, Mulder sat on the ground and embraced her, petted her hair, repeated her name. She clung to him, her nails drawing blood as they dug at the nape of his neck. She moaned and he thought he had never heard such a godawful sound. It stripped him of reason, set him on the edge of panic. "Fuck!" he finally shouted, at wit's end. She didn't respond. A bad sign in itself. So he rocked her, waiting, helpless, biting his lip against another outburst. She didn't need his fear. She was battling her own demons, trying to ride out her pain, probably trying to diagnose it even as it overwhelmed her. What the hell was happening to her? Food poisoning? Could last night's miserable meal have made her sick? It seemed unlikely -- he'd eaten twice as many of those awful snail-things as she had and he felt fine. Maybe she'd contracted a disease...or was bitten by a poisonous insect. It couldn't be her cancer, could it? When her nails finally relaxed their grip in his neck and her trembling eased, he continued to soothe her by rubbing her back and whispering, "Shhh, it's okay, it's okay," trying to persuade himself as much as her. She'd been talking through gritted teeth for the last ten or fifteen minutes -- an eternity under the circumstances. Her conversation was disjointed. One-sided. She didn't respond to any of his questions, but seemed to be speaking with someone else. She mentioned several familiar names -- his mother, Emily, Duane Barry. And a name he didn't recognize: Arbutus Ray. Who the hell was that? "Scully?" He tried to look at her face, but she buried her nose deeply into the crease of his neck. "Are you still in pain?" She tightened her grip and shook her head. "What happened?" he persisted. "Come on, Scully. Say something." Air shuddered audibly from her lungs as she slid out of his arms and rose to her feet. She stood with shoulders hunched and head hanging so that her hair veiled her eyes. He stood, too, and she stepped away from him, putting several feet between them. Her eyes roamed the cave; she looked everywhere but at him. "Scully, talk to me." "I... It felt like I'd been shot." Her hand moved to shield her stomach. "I saw things." "What things?" "Images. Just flashes really." "Can you remember any of them?" Again she avoided looking at him. "Nothing made any sense," she insisted. "It was just a bunch of jumbled, unconnected pictures." "Caused by what?" She shrugged, turned away, shielding her eyes and her expression. "A perceptual disturbance of some kind, like hypnagogic or hypnopompic imagery. It's not uncommon for people to see strange images, or find themselves temporarily unable to move or speak, while in a state between sleep and wakefulness." "Scully, this happened while you were wide awake." He took a step forward and tagged her hand. "You were talking the entire time." "Was I?" Worry creased her brow. "You mentioned Duane Barry. Do you remember that?" Her eyes searched the ground and finally came to rest on the tiny carved idol. He followed her gaze and focused on it, too. His paranormal radar was picking up a signal, loud and clear. The idol was connected in some way to her sudden collapse, to the images she was refusing to discuss. He could feel it as surely as a tap on his shoulder. "Scully, who is Arbutus Ray?" "I don't know. The name isn't familiar." She straightened and finally looked him in the eyes. "We should cut up that sloth." Shouldering past him and out of the cave, she gave him little choice but to follow. * * * Klizzie stood on the uppermost ridge of Crouching Cat Mountain, overlooking a broad valley that cradled Turkey Lake. Gray as stone beneath the low overcast, the big lake stretched all the way to the Traveling Camels, a range of hills named for their rounded, evenly spaced peaks. Dense forest bordered the lake to the northeast, grassland to the southwest. On the nearest shore were the domed shelters of Badger Clan. Klizzie's heart felt lighter than dandelion seeds on a summer breeze. She squeezed the pouch that hung between her breasts and offered a quick prayer of thanks to the Spirits for delivering Owl Clan safely to their destination. The hike down to Tabaha Lodge would be easy, the slope gradual across open meadow. The sky appeared unwilling to release its rain just yet. And although the wind was cool, it wasn't biting. Already a group of children were running ahead, laughing, wanting to be first to reach the lakeside village. The men followed behind them, gathered in knots according to kinships, discussing upcoming events. Dzeh walked with his Uncle Lin and the Shaman, his head bent as he listened to the older men. Klizzie guessed they were reviewing the many upcoming ceremonies and scheduling the rituals. The women brought up the rear, traveling in clusters of three or four. They chatted while they lugged infants and supplies. Occasionally one would shout to the older children whenever they ran too far ahead. Everyone appeared happy and relaxed despite their long trip. Klizzie smiled, too. Tonight she would be sitting at the hearth of her first family. She would embrace her aunts and her cousins. The clans would trade gifts, food and stories. She would learn who had died and who had been born since her last visit. Additional shelters would be constructed tomorrow. She and Dzeh would once again sleep beneath a roof shared by his closest kin. She would miss the stars, but not the chill and the damp and the mosquitoes. In a few days, Turtle Clan would arrive from the south and Otter Clan from the east, and then the Mastodon Feast would officially begin. Klizzie gathered several fist-sized stones and stacked them one on top of the other. This would be her last marker. If Day-nuh and Muhl-dar traveled this far, they could not miss the summer camp below. Stones set in place, Klizzie hurried to catch up with her family. * * * Jogging with an awkward sidestep down the steep mountain path, arms held wide for balance, Mulder kept his eyes glued to Scully's retreating back. Her hair bounced with a determined rhythm as she hurried down the slope. He sped up to catch her. More than a decade as a professional profiler and he still found it impossible to figure out what was on her mind. She had him feeling clueless. Which just made him want to try harder to ferret out her secrets. If history repeated itself she would remain inscrutable, an enigma despite his best efforts. Scully was Mulder's blind spot. There was no seeing into her unless she let him. She was nearing the stream where they'd left the sloth when she suddenly stopped and held up a cautionary hand. He slowed, drew his gun, and stepped carefully, quietly to her side. At first he couldn't see them hidden behind the sloth's bulky carcass. But he could hear them growling, tearing at flesh. Then a pair of silvery heads appeared over the top of the sloth's rounded belly. Pointed ears, blue-white eyes, fangs, muzzles dripping with fresh blood. Wolves. Eating *his* sloth. Fuck. He brushed past Scully and strode downhill, arms waving. "Get the hell outta here! Goddammit!" A third wolf peered over the carcass. Then a fourth and fifth. Shit. Mulder slowed his steps. The first wolf barred its teeth and growled. Mulder's stomach growled back. He was hungry. He hadn't eaten since last night and that was only a handful of berries and a bunch of bitter slug-things. No way was he going to let a bunch of mangy wolves steal his hard-earned supper. "Sorry, boys, no cutting the line. We were here first." He aimed his gun into the trees and fired. The blast startled and scattered the wolves. It also unsettled a bunch of buzzards that had been skulking in the branches overhead, waiting their turn for leftovers. The wolves disappeared into the woods. "That was a waste of a bullet." Scully frowned and marched past Mulder toward the sloth. She examined the dead animal from several angles, fists on her hips. "They didn't look like the sharing types, Scully." "We agreed to use the gun only in life-and-death situations." "I don't know about you, but I happen to be starving to death." "We could have tried chasing them off first." He opened his mouth to argue, but then gave up the idea. He was tired of fighting with her, of being at odds this way. He dug his knife from his pocket and held it out to her. "Why don't you cut up the meat while I build a fire. We can camp in the cave tonight." She took the knife. "Take this, too." He offered his gun. "Mulder, I didn't mean..." She shook her head. "I trust your judgment. Really, I do." "I'm glad. But the wolves might come back and I'll be up in the cave." He resisted saying, "Of course, you could try chasing them off." Instead, he placed the gun in her palm. "Take it." Before she could object, he grabbed the pack with the flint in it and headed back up the hill. * * * Gini searched for colorful snail shells at the water's edge. Wading ankle deep into the lake, she closed her ears to the laughter and talk coming from the camp behind her. So many people! And all of them saying, "How big you have grown!" and "This cannot be little Gini, can it?" Her poor scalp ached from all the yanking on her braids. "They are just being friendly," Klizzie had said before falling into the arms of another cousin. Maybe so, but their tugs hurt just the same. Of course, Jeha and her aunts went immediately to visit the hearth of Moasi's uncle. They were eager to catch a glimpse of Jeha's mate-to-be before the upcoming ceremony. Jeha and Moasi would be officially introduced at tonight's First Night Feast. A few days from now, four clans would celebrate their Joining Ceremony. And sometime during the next several moons, Dzeh would make arrangements for Gini's future mating. She gripped her aching stomach; it hurt almost as much as her scalp. "Who are you?" asked a voice behind her. She peered over her shoulder. A boy stood several paces away, fists on his hips. He appeared to be about eleven or twelve Mastodon Feasts old and he wore his hair in the style of Badger Clan -- cut short along the part and then greased with bear fat to make it stand up like porcupine quills. He wore a fringed loincloth with a knife tucked into his belt. A pair of bear claws hung from his pierced ears and he sported a new tattoo on his right shoulder -- a prickly Badger Clan design. His freshly scabbed skin looked red and sore. "My name is Gini. Who are you?" "Chal," he said, swaggering closer. "Why are you not with the others?" She crouched to pick up a snail and pretended to examine it. "My head hurts." A bored expression settled over the boy's features. He had almond-shaped eyes the color of hazelnuts and his skin was a shade darker than Gini's. He was long-legged and big-nosed, reminding her of a stork. "Are all Owl Clan girls as ugly as you are?" he asked. She glared at him. "Are all Badger Clan boys so rude?" His eyes rounded and he laughed out loud. "You are calling *me* rude?" It was a mean thing for her to say and she was usually not so impolite. "Sorry," she mumbled, hunching over her knees. She wished he would go away and leave her alone. Instead he walked closer and squatted beside her. He looked at her face and proclaimed, "You are Dzeh's sister." "How did you know that?" "You look as he does. Your mouth and eyes." She didn't like him staring so hard at her. He went on, "Klizzie is my cousin. My mother is her aunt." "Almost everyone here is Klizzie's cousin or aunt." "My mother is Ho-Ya. You will be eating at our hearth tonight." Oh great, she would not be rid of him soon. "You frown too much," he said, rising to his feet. "I think you might be prettier if you smiled." Tears sprang to her eyes. He apparently didn't see them or was ignoring them because he ambled slowly away, heading for a group of boys who played wrestling games in the field beyond the camp. She waited until he was all the way to the field before letting her tears fall. * * * "Mulder, come to bed," Scully urged. She lay on the furs, stripped down to her camisole and panties. She and Mulder were back in the cave. Sunset had been hours ago and she was eager to go to sleep and forget her earlier nightmare... hallucination...vision -- whatever the hell it'd been. She felt sated from their supper of roasted sloth meat, but sleep was proving impossible with Mulder wide awake and jabbing at the fire only a few feet away. He was frustrated, she knew, by her reluctance to talk about what had happened earlier. But what was there to say? The images she'd seen were confusing and probably meaningless, and she had no explanation for them. Crouched by the fire, Mulder prodded the coals with a stick, sending sparks into the air. He was shirtless and the blaze painted his chest gold while casting his back in shadow; dark and light stumbled over the muscles of his arms, wrestled across his face. "I'm not tired," he mumbled. "Just come and lay with me then." His back stiffened. He gave the embers a final poke before tossing his stick into the flames. Rising to his feet, he glanced at her, uncertainty shading his eyes. The stitches on his cheek bristled like barbed wire above the dark line of his whiskers. He crossed to the furs and sat down. A sigh -- weighted with fatigue, worry, and frustration -- chuffed from his lungs as he slowly untied his boots. He tugged them from his feet, exposing inflamed skin and broken blisters. "Mulder...your feet..." Scully sat up for a closer look. Grasping his ankle, she held him immobile while she examined the lesions by firelight. "You should wash these." "Tomorrow." "They're becoming infected." "They've been like this for days. A few more hours won't matter." Days? Why hadn't she noticed? Guilt flushed her face. She'd been too immersed in her own worries to see that he'd been suffering. He set his boots aside and lay down on his back on top of the furs, keeping his pants on and taking care not to touch her. Just an inch or two separated them, but the space felt impossibly wide to Scully. Pillowing his head in his hands, he stared at the painted rock wall, eyes focused on the Serpent Holder. "It looks alien, don't you think?" he asked. She had to admit it did. Two horns curled antennae-like out of the top of its head. Round, hollow objects that resembled spaceships floated near its shoulders. It had enormous, blank eyes, and no mouth or nose. "Yes, it does." Her answer evidently surprised him because he twisted to look at her. The distance between them seemed to shrink a little. He was right there, close enough to embrace if she let herself. She breathed him in -- musky, male, edgy. His scent aroused in her an almost crushing desire to take him into her body, give herself over to him while he filled her, spilled into her, bathed her with caresses and sighs. He hadn't touched her in days, other than to comfort her earlier when she'd been gripped by pain, and now she longed to turn the clock back... before today, before Mulder's nightmare a week ago, before their silent arguments. She wanted to go back to the night they'd slept together in the tribe's skin hut, surrounded by the aroma of mint and the scent of their passion, when he had brought her to orgasm and then rode out his own. That night she had been free of all doubts. That night, for the first time in her life, the act of joining with another person had felt unequivocally right. Mulder propped himself on one elbow and searched her face. "Scully, what was it like...your first time?" There were moments, like this one, when he seemed able to see straight into her. Or perhaps she'd tipped her hand, revealing her lust through body language, dilated pupils, a rush of pheromones. "My first time? You mean--?" "Sex. What was it like?" He leaned closer. She recognized his invasive posture for what it was -- a technique he'd perfected over their years together. He was corralling her without making any actual physical contact. Early on, his crowding had irritated her, made her feel awkward and nervous; she'd interpreted it as aggressive, purposefully intimidating. Then when she figured out he wasn't bullying her but was in fact trying to connect with her, get her to focus, dig deeper for her answers, she no longer objected to his looming. She grew to expect it...and even to appreciate it. "What was it like?" she repeated, thinking back. "Predictably dismal, I guess." Age eighteen. First year at college. Jimmy Pendleton, upper classmen. A molecular biology major with grades so high he was already being recruited by Merck Frosst, Nanogen *and* the U.S. Department of Energy. "Well, not dismal, really, but not great either. A little painful." And scary, disappointing, exciting, mysterious, over too soon but not soon enough. "You?" He took a moment before answering, thoughtfully gnawing at the inside of his lower lip. Then a grin nudged his cheek and his eyes sparkled with the golden light of the fire. "It was...intense. Beautiful." His tone made her curious, and a little jealous. "Don't laugh, Scully, but I felt like crying when it was over. I desperately wanted to be back inside her. I guess I was afraid the opportunity wasn't going to present itself again." "Did it present itself again? With her, I mean?" she blurted, not certain she wanted to know the details of his earliest sexual encounters. He smiled, looking both shy and smug. "Yeah. It did. But..." His smile faded. "As sublime as it was, the act of separating always educed a feeling of unspeakable loss. It terrified me to think I might never experience that closeness again." His unexpected candor left her with additional questions. Was sex that way for him still -- a few blissful moments of human contact in an otherwise solitary existence? How alone did he feel? He stared directly into her eyes, evidently trying to tell her something she wasn't hearing, not about his past, but about the present, about her. "Scully, what's your greatest regret?" Jesus, he was in a peculiar mood. He never talked this way. Neither of them did. He moved his hand toward her, bumping the tips of her fingers with his. A light touch, seemingly accidental, but she'd learned a long time ago that nothing was unintentional with Mulder. "Losing Emily," she said without needing to think. He frowned and shook his head. "Doesn't count. You didn't cause Emily's death." That was debatable. Scully knew she wouldn't have treated her daughter even if she'd known how, and that made Emily's death a calculated choice in her book. "I could have done more for her." "No. Pick something else -- something for which you were wholly responsible. What would you most like to go back and undo if you could?" Where was he going with these questions? "I regret a lot of things," she said, hedging. "The loss of my gun, for instance." His hand slid away from hers, breaking their hard-won contact. He said nothing. "Mulder, I don't know what you want to hear." "The truth, Scully. Only the truth." "I don't have any life-altering regrets. I really don't." "None?" He sounded incredulous. "You've never made a decision you wanted to reverse?" "No, not really." Her eyes searched the cave as if her wily regrets were hidden somewhere in its crevices. She focused on the Serpent Holder, which glared back at her through its empty eyes. The way it gripped its twisted snake appeared threatening. Scully suddenly missed her apartment with its tidy rooms, everything in its place. She wanted to be there, not here, preparing for bed, soaking in her tub, sipping wine while reading the latest edition of the NEJM. The steam from her bath would smell like jasmine and the radio would be playing Bach. The fire snapped, sending a flare of sparks toward the cave's roof. Scully felt out of control here, vulnerable, and she hated the way her blood was pulsing too loudly in her ears. "What about you, Mulder? What do you most regret?" Sadness welled in his eyes. "Lots of things, but the one that tops my list happened years ago..." "What was it?" "I broke Samantha's trust." Samantha's trust? This wasn't at all what Scully was expecting him to say. An image of Arbutus Ray returned to her, along with an inexplicable certainty that Mulder's sister had died at age fourteen. She tried to blink it away. "What happened?" Mulder rolled onto his back and spoke to the shadows in the cave's roof, his voice tight and subdued, as muted as wind in a bottle. "We were playing Hide and Seek. Her idea. I hadn't really wanted to -- I felt much too mature to be playing games with my kid sister. But she pleaded and I relented. I hid first, in an obvious spot -- I wanted to hurry the game along. She quickly found me, just as I knew she would, and then it was her turn to hide. As soon as she was out of sight, I took off to spend the afternoon at a friend's house. I figured Sam would wait a few minutes, get bored and give up the game. I should have known better." He paused, grief glittering in his eyes. His lower lip trembled when he began to speak again. "When I came home for supper that night, Mom was livid. She told me she'd found Sam hiding in the garage behind the lawnmower, where she'd been waiting for more than three hours for me to find her. Three hours! When Sam learned I wasn't even looking for her--" Again he stopped, tried to control the emotion in his voice. The fire crackled and hissed. "Sam cried herself to sleep...inconsolable. She gave me the silent treatment for days -- which I deserved. I tried everything to make it up to her. Let her use my telescope. Told her to punch me in the nose. Finally I won her over with a trip to the movies. But things weren't the same and I felt like such a stupid--" "Mulder, you were just a kid. It was a childish lapse of judgment. That's all. You can't blame yourself for that." "She was abducted three weeks later." Oh God. No wonder he refused to give up on her now. //"Are you the same Arbutus Ray who worked as a nurse at the Dominic Savio Memorial Hospital in 1979?"// Sam was dead. Scully felt it as surely as she felt her own heartbeat. Mulder continued speaking. "After she went missing, I kept thinking...I *keep* thinking still, she's out there somewhere, believing I've given up on her. "Mulder..." Scully reached for him and wrapped her arms around him. He slid into her embrace, silken-skinned and over-heated, his whiskers scouring her shoulder as his fingers pressed hard into her back. His weight softened her, unknotted her muscles, and tempered her worries while thawing her resolve. She felt foolish for the times she kept him at arm's length. None of her carefully considered reasons made sense right now. It was impossible to keep her perspective when he caused such desire to blossom in her. She snaked an arm between them, intending to end this conversation, put aside her doubts, and ignore their individual and collective heartaches, if only for the time being. But when she tried to unfasten his fly, he stopped her by loosely securing her wrist in the circle of his fingers. He drew back to look into her eyes and she lost herself in his glistening pupils, bottomless wells of patience grown large with passion. "Tell me what you want, Scully," he murmured. "I'd rather show you." Again she tried for his zipper. And again he stopped her, grasping her more firmly this time. "Tell me...what you want." She wanted to make love, not conversation. "Mulder...not now." Her voice escalated to a weak, desperate whimper. "*Tell*...me," he insisted. Clearly he wasn't going to let her off the hook. "I want a kiss." He nodded but didn't move, so she leaned in and gently kissed him on the mouth. His lips felt warm and pliant beneath hers, but he didn't deepen the kiss and he didn't allow her access to his mouth when she tried to slide her tongue between his teeth. Stymied, she retreated. "What else?" he asked. She took his hand and placed it on her breast. He removed it. "Tell me." "Damn it, Mulder, what is this about?" "I want you to talk to me." "Talking dirty turns you on?" "I didn't say that." What then? Did they really have to play this game? "I want you to put your hand on my breast." He returned his hand to her breast, gently cupped her, but didn't stroke or squeeze her. Even so, the warm weight of his fingers caused her nipple to harden. There was no way for him to miss the transformation, yet his hand remained motionless. "Mulder, why are you acting this way?" "If you don't talk to me, Scully, I can't know what you want." Ah, so that was it. As usual, Mulder was taking the long way to his point. This holding back, his questions about her first time and greatest regrets -- these were strategies intended to open her up. Like his looming. Well, she didn't feel like having a heart-to-heart. She found introspection and revelation difficult in the best of times and this was definitely not the best of times. Right now she needed him to love her without explanations, without reason. "Scully, you hold all the cards here." "Do I?" He was lying to himself if he believed that. The recent wedge of unease between them had begun with his nightmare, not hers. "Are you sure there isn't something you need to say to me?" His mouth opened and then closed. He gave a single nod, conceding her point without argument, and then met her halfway, his lips pressing into hers as fervently as hers pressed his. This time, he allowed her to explore his mouth with her tongue. This time he didn't stop her when she reached between them to unfasten his pants. He leaned into her, onto her, pushed her camisole up, bared her right breast and clutched it in his left fist. We are both in denial, she thought. We are co-conspirators dodging the truths in our hearts. There is no blame for it, beyond our cowardice and false hopes. You want to believe, Mulder, and so do I -- in a future that allows for your devotion and my love, a future in which neither of us must forfeit our happiness. She unzipped his pants, burrowed into his boxers and grabbed hold of him, semi-erect and growing more rigid as his ardor overtook him. She liked the firmness of him in her palm, his heat, his smoothness; she curled her fingers around him, squeezed him, tugged him closer to the V of her legs. He needed no coaxing, and scrambled on top of her, sliding his pants down past his hips as he settled between her spread thighs. Only when he tried to enter her did he discover she was still wearing her panties. "Shit," he said, rising to his knees. With his help, she wriggled out of her underwear. He tossed the silky, black garment aside and repositioned himself between her legs. His erection, fully engorged now, pressed hard against her pubic bone. He kissed her neck, her lips, her brow. His hands traveled up her sides, over her shoulders. He plowed his fingers into her hair; plunged his tongue into her mouth. Oh, God, she loved the weight of him on her. And although she was only able to take in half-breaths, it was him, not air, that she craved. She wanted to inhale him, swallow him, draw him into her. She wanted to feel his pulse vibrate in her veins, invade her bones, renew her soul. She wanted him whole -- to make her whole. "Mulder, I want--" Her words stalled when he lifted his hips and pushed into her. She spread her knees wide to accommodate him. When he filled her, she cried out. "Shhh, it's okay," he breathed into her ear. She shut her eyes against the sudden tide of emotion and tears his soft words inspired. She felt an extraordinary mix of want and satisfaction. Remarkable, perplexing. He rocked against her, fitting his body more tightly into hers. The pressure both alleviated and increased her restless yearning. Her juices slicked her inner thighs with each of his thrusts, allowing him to glide smoothly, lovingly in and out of her. Hugging him to her, she felt his heartbeat. Rapid. Earnest. It rattled her ribs. Set her own heart pounding. She began to meet his thrusts with raised hips. Her timing encouraged him to pick up his pace and she liked the new rhythm. Relentless, forceful. He was breathing more rapidly now. Sweat slicked his neck and chest, dripped from his chin onto her cheek. Each pounding down-stroke drove the air from her lungs. She dug her nails into his back as she felt her orgasm approach. Heat radiated out from her center. Pressure blossomed in her abdomen, making her feel swollen, explosive. Tingly. Warm. Chest, arms, nipples, fingers, thighs...gone numb. Face flushed. She would come in four strokes, three, two-- When it hit, the world seemed to vanish. She heard nothing but a crash of blood in her ears. She felt nothing but the hammer of her heart. No breath, no voice, no strength, no memory or thought. Only now, only him. Mulder. Filling her, pushing her over an edge. Out of herself. Into bliss. She floated in that place of euphoria, beyond sensation, swaddled in cottony nothingness. Safe. Sated. And then she gasped, drawing air and reality back into her lungs. She felt Mulder's solid weight on her, heard his labored breathing. Sensation returned to her fingers and toes. She gripped his back and whispered, "Now, Mulder. Come inside me." That was all it took. He pressed as far into her as he could go and roared with his pleasure. She embraced him as he emptied into her. The intimacy awed her, brought tears to her eyes. This was their most perfect moment. Waiting for his muscles to relax, she lay unhurried and unmoving beneath him, allowing him time to catch his breath, return to reality, just as she had done moments ago. Although the press of him inside her was already diminishing, he remained where he was, spent but evidently unwilling to withdraw just yet. She drew lazy circles on his back with her fingertips. His heart slowed. He sighed. Then he heaved himself off her, slowly, as if reluctant to leave her. Before he could turn away, she glimpsed the look of fear and loss in his eyes. "The opportunity will present itself again," she promised. "Will it, Scully? Are we going to be alright?" Was there any way to know the future? "I'm not ready to give up. Are you?" He shook his head, took her into his arms and hugged her fiercely. "You know me better than that." * * * Klizzie woke to find Gini crawling into her bed. Dzeh had not yet returned from the Prayer Lodge where he and the other men were planning the Mastodon ceremonies, smoking their pipes and drinking wo-chi. It was possible they would spend the entire night there. Tonight Klizzie and Gini were staying at the hearth of her Aunt Ho-Ya. Soft snores came from the skins of her cousin's sleeping sons, worn out from their afternoon games. A fire burned low in the center of the hut and eight beds surrounded it, filled with the sons, some uncles and aunts, a cousin or two. Ho-Ya slept by herself, an arm's length from Klizzie. Her mate was at the Prayer Lodge, too. Klizzie made room for Gini, who snuggled beneath the furs. "What are you doing in my bed, Little Chick?" "I cannot sleep." "What keeps you awake?" Klizzie pulled the furs over the girl's shoulders and tucked her in. "My stomach hurts." "Still? Did you not drink the tea the Shaman gave you?" "Yes. But there are bees buzzing in me." Gini buried her face against Klizzie's shoulder. Klizzie stroked her hair. "What is causing these bees to buzz?" Gini shrugged. Evidently, she needed some coaxing. Kissing the top of the girl's head, Klizzie whispered into her hair, "Usually bees buzz in my stomach when I am afraid." "What makes you afraid?" "Oh, the usual things. Saber-toothed cats. Winters without food. Being left alone while Dzeh travels to faraway clans for supplies." This had happened last winter when Owl Clan had run dangerously low on meat. Dzeh and two cousins set out for Bear Clan. They were gone many days and returned frostbitten and tired, but with enough dried meat, mastodon fat and pine nuts to last until the spring migrations. "What is frightening you?" Gini clutched Klizzie around the waist and hugged her tightly. "Do I...must I be mated?" Ahh, so that was it. Gini was not so grownup after all. "No, but I told you how pleasant it is. And you know how hard life can be for a woman without a mate." "I know." "But...?" "I am scared." Klizzie pulled back to look Gini in the eyes. The light from the fire showed the girl's face was swollen from crying and dried tears had left tracks on her cheeks. "Tell me what scares you." Gini frowned. Her eyes became more serious. "Jeha told me babies come from men. That they crawl through his be-zonz when he mates. Is that true?" Klizzie could not stop her smile. "Yes, that is true." "Then why do you pray to the Spirits for a baby?" "Because the Spirits control all things. Even the crawling of small babies from men into women." "These babies must be very, very small, right?" Worry peaked Gini's soft brows, which curved so exactly like Dzeh's. Klizzie loved this young sister of her mate. She hugged the girl and said, "Yes, they are very, very small." "And they do not hurt when they are put in you?" "No, they do not hurt." "Then why...?" Gini blushed as pink as a stalk of fireweed. "Why what?" The girl lowered her voice to a whisper. "Why do women sometimes cry out when they lay with their mates?" Klizzie smiled again and pinched Gini's blushing cheek. "It is not a cry of pain. It is a cry of passion." Now Gini blushed even more. Her cheeks looked like two plump strawberries. "Do you have more questions?" Klizzie asked. Gini shook her head, then nodded. "Is that a no or a yes?" "A yes." Gini burrowed into Klizzie's embrace, hiding her face beneath the furs. When she spoke, her voice was muffled by the skins. "Does a man's be-zonz grow as big as a stallion's when he mates?" This made Klizzie laugh out loud. "No, my Chick, not that big. It is no wonder you have had bees buzzing in your stomach if you are thinking such a thing. Rest assured, a man grows only big enough to fill a woman and no more. You have no reason to fear this." "Klizzie, can we go home? I do not like it here." "I thought you were looking forward to the Mastodon Feast and the games and music and dancing." "I am. But...can I sleep in your bed with you tonight?" "You are welcome to stay in my bed, at least until Dzeh returns. Then you will have to be a big girl and return to your own bed. Agreed?" "Agreed." Gini kissed Klizzie on the cheek. "I love you, Klizzie." "I love you, too, Little Chick. Now go to sleep. We have much to do tomorrow." * * * Mulder sat at the mouth of the cave, elbows propped on his knees, eyes aimed at the stars. It was a little after midnight and the sky was velvety black and cloudless. The Milky Way flowed overhead like a river of cut diamonds. The tilted moon inched closer to the western horizon and from somewhere in the valley below, a wolf howled. The sound raised goosebumps on his bare arms. Rubbing them away with his palms, he scanned the heavens for communication satellites and, finding none, wondered how he and Scully were ever going to get back home. When a comet suddenly plummeted earthward, he followed its fiery trail until it fizzled and vanished. Would wishing on a falling star help? God, he felt restless. Instead of alleviating his insomnia, making love with Scully had had the exact opposite effect, leaving him wide awake and apprehensive. They shouldn't have done it, not without checking for her chip first. But in the heat of the moment he hadn't thought. Foolish. If he got her pregnant-- "Mulder?" Scully's voice came from behind him. He glanced over his shoulder to look up at her. She hugged one of the sleeping skins around her naked shoulders. Concern creased her brow. "Sorry, did I wake you?" he asked. She sat down beside him. "No. I thought I heard wolves." He nodded. They listened to the crickets whine for a few minutes. The air smelled like pine and woodsmoke, reminding Mulder of Memorial Day weekends at Quonochontaug when the foggy ocean breeze would blow in across the bay through the evergreens, making it chilly enough to light a fire in the fireplace. Sam would beg for s'mores and his mom indulged them, as long as he helped his sister toast the marshmallows. Mulder's eyes returned to the stars. "They're ancient, you know. The stars, I mean. Their light is billions of years old by the time we see it." Scully shivered. Wrapping the fur more tightly around her shoulders, she asked, "What made you say that?" "I don't know. Just thinking about time travel, I guess. Why?" She bit her lip, shook her head. "What's wrong?" His gut clenched at the thought of her earlier seizure. "You said something very similar in my...vision." So she was calling it a vision now, not a "perceptual disturbance." And the details evidently weren't as vague as she'd led him to believe. "Did I?" "Mmm." She busied herself readjusting the blanket. "I've been thinking about your Flux Space theory." "What about it?" "Suppose..." She stopped, cleared her throat, stared straight into the black night. "Suppose time isn't two-dimensional, the way you described it, but is...three-dimensional." 3-D? Like space? Where was she going with this? "Based on...?" "It fits the current evidence." He wasn't sure what evidence she was referring to, but guessed it had something to do with her "visions." "You're saying time doesn't exist linearly?" "I'm suggesting it might extend in more than two directions." Forward, backward and... "Go on." "Imagine time not as a line but as a sphere on which we can move forward, backward, sideward, in a line, an arch, a loop." He pictured two ants crawling across a baseball, their paths meandering, occasionally intersecting. Then he pictured the baseball as a bowling ball with its three holes. One of his imaginary ants teetered on the edge of a hole and fell in. "Hm. It might be even more complicated than that." "Right. We may be able to travel into the sphere, maybe pass all the way through it." He nodded, thinking of the unfortunate ant. "Mulder, it gets worse." One ant is inside the ball, while the other is still crawling on the surface. "You and I aren't necessarily in the same time at the same place, so to speak." "Exactly. If time is three-dimensional and we're moving around on and through it independently of one another, you might wake up tomorrow as a teenager, while I might be an old woman." Jesus, no wonder she looked so worried. "Does this theory of yours have anything to do with the...uh...visions you had earlier?" She took a deep breath. "In part. I saw some things that felt very real, although I know they haven't happened...yet." "What things?" "I was shot in the stomach." This startled him. "By who?" "Another FBI agent, as far as I could tell. I didn't recognize the man or the location." "Couldn't it have just been a very, very realistic dream?" "That sounds like something I would argue." She gave him a rueful smile. "There were other things, too, things that jibe with our experience here. I saw myself having my tattoo removed." "You think that explains why it's fading now?" "It might." Was she moving forward into her future while he traveled backward into his past? Then it struck him. If her future included events in the 20th Century that hadn't occurred yet, that must mean they make it back to their own time. And it was possible her visions held clues to their eventual return. "Scully, who is Arbutus Ray?" "Mulder..." "Who is she?" Scully looked directly at him and frowned. "A women who worked as a nurse at the Dominic Savio Memorial Hospital in 1979." "And...?" "She claimed your sister died there." Her words felt like a slap and he recoiled from them as if he'd actually been hit. "In '79? That's impossible. Sam would have been only fourteen years old. We've seen her as an adult." She couldn't be dead. She couldn't be. "We've seen her clone. And clones can be engineered years after someone's death." "No. I can't-- Did you see her body? In your vision, did you actually see Sam dead?" "No, I just felt it was true." "Felt it...?" Scully had never believed in premonitions before. Why now? "I-I can't accept that, Scully. You...you had a dream, a hallucination, not a prophecy." "Mulder, we both know what's possible, what can be done when men are given the necessary science and lack of conscience. My cancer, Emily's conception. Is it so farfetched to imagine Sam's fate is part of the same agenda?" He'd thought exactly that for quite some time, but never imagined Sam as dead. It hollowed him to think she might have died years ago, that he would never see her again, that he'd never be able to make up for-- He rose and stalked into the cave, only to walk right back out again when the air seemed too stuffy and the fire too hot. Scoured by doubt, his skin crawled with annoyance. He wanted to throw or kick something, to scream at the stars at the top of his lungs. Scully remained where she was, unmoving, waiting out his disbelief. "You have no proof," he argued, his voice thick with dread. Jesus, was it possible he'd spent his entire adult life chasing a ghost? "I've said those words to you more times than I can count, Mulder, but I'm saying to you now that I believe what I saw was true. I believe it was our future." He crouched beside her and tried his best to reign in his temper. It was because her words were so uncharacteristic that he knew he had to listen to them. If she was leaning toward a paranormal explanation for her experience, she must have satisfied her own heavy-handed skepticism with a convincing reason. "Earlier today you dismissed these visions of yours. What changed your mind? What makes you so sure now?" he asked. "This." She opened the animal skin that blanketed her shoulders, exposing her bare stomach. There above her navel was the unmistakable scar of a recent gunshot wound. "I found it a few minutes ago." x-x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER TEN "Let's go inside, by the firelight," Mulder said, tugging Scully to her feet. He wanted a better look at her new scar. Once inside, he added a stick of wood to the glowing coals. The fire crackled to life and brightened the cave with its flickering light. Scully let the fur blanket slip from her shoulders to the ground. Dressed only in black camisole and panties, she drew the camisole up to her breasts to expose her stomach. She faced the flames while Mulder knelt to examine the quarter-sized scar that marked her otherwise unblemished skin. "Tell me about your vision," he murmured, running his fingers over the puckered knot a few inches from her navel. She stood motionless, allowing him to examine her with his eyes and hands. "Most of it made no sense," she said. "Tell me anyway." "Images came and went. They followed no logical order...at least none that I could discern." "But you sensed they were snapshots of your future?" He glanced up into her eyes. She looked frightened. "More like video clips, but yes, I got the impression I was looking at the future." He turned her so that he could inspect her back. There was a cherry-red exit wound on her back, just above her faded tattoo. No mistaking it -- it was a bullet wound, only a week or two old. She peered at him over her shoulder. "You were there." "Well, that's some relief, at least." If her vision represented their future he was glad to know he was part of it. "It implies we get back home. You realize that, don't you?" "Yes. Unfortunately, I didn't find out how or when. Or if the future is immutable. Suppose the things I saw are only one possibility?" "An infinite number of futures?" "Built upon an infinite number of actions, here or possibly in the future." "Our future selves saving our past selves' asses?" This was getting more convoluted by the minute. "Let's assume that what you saw was *the* future -- the one and only future. Do you remember anything that might help us get from here to there?" He rose to his feet. She pulled her camisole down over her stomach and turned to face him. The firelight etched lines of worry into her shadowy expression. "I'm sorry, Mulder, I don't." Cupping her cheek, he tried to smooth her frown with his thumb. Did she really not remember? It scared him to think she might not. He relied on her calm logic, and right now they needed her rationalism more than ever. They needed her to remember what she saw. "Think, Scully. Were there any references to Lisa Ianelli, time travel, Flux Space, tachyons, anything?" "Nothing like that. We were...driving in a car." "To...?" "I don't know." Her voice quavered with uncertainty. "Across a desert." He wanted to help her remember. He *had* to help her. "Great Salt Lake, outside Hill Air Force Base?" "I don't think so, but I'm not sure." He released her cheek and let his arm drop to his side. Damn it, this was frustrating. "What else?" he asked, trying to keep any hint of annoyance out of his voice. Scully's vision had clearly left her shaken and he didn't want her to clam up because of his insensitivity. "We exchanged Christmas gifts." Christmas gifts? "In the car?" "No, later. Or maybe earlier. I don't know." She shook her head dismissively. Don't give up, Scully. Not yet. "What about the bullet wound?" "I remember being shot. I remember the pain. And I remember getting my tattoo removed, and learning about your sister." His sister, dead for almost twenty years. Jesus, please don't let it be true. "Scully, is it possible this Arbutus Ray person was lying to you? Maybe she worked for Old Smokey." "Maybe. All I can say is that I believed her." "But she might not have been privy to the truth. Someone might have lied to her or...or..." He was grasping at straws, he knew. He couldn't bear the notion that his sister might be lost forever -- after all his searching, all his hoping. "Mulder, you believed her, too." She put a hand on his arm. Tears of sympathy glittered along her lower lashes as she looked up at him. Evidently she knew he would find her words difficult to accept. "You seemed...relieved." Anger welled up in him at this revelation. "Relieved to learn my sister was dead? Does that sound like me? Does it make sense?" "Right now, nothing makes sense." She leaned toward him and rested her cheek gently against his chest. His arms circled her as if by instinct. She felt small in his embrace, but not as vulnerable as he had supposed. She was telling him the truth the way she had seen it. He hated her words, but he appreciated her honesty, and her integrity purged him of his momentary anger. He placed a kiss on the crown of her head. Lingering there, he wondered what answers a second vision might provide. He also wondered if there was something here in this particular location that had triggered her foresight. Were they standing in or near a Flux Space portal? Scanning the cave, his eyes settled on the painted wall with its larger-than-life Serpent Holder. The alien-looking creature stared back at him with an unreadable expression. If the painting had any answers, it was keeping them secret. His gaze traveled down the wall to the tiny carved idol on the ground below the Serpent Holder's feet. Scully had been holding it when she collapsed. Had it caused her vision? Maybe it was a nexus of some sort, or at the very least, contained powerful Pleistocene magic. Staring at it, he felt certain of one thing: his paranormal radar was picking up another signal. * * * Mulder tucked his shirt into his pants and buckled his belt. He'd hardly slept a wink all night, tossing and turning, worrying about Scully's visions and their uncertain future. It was only after they made love again around 4:00 a.m. that he was finally able to drift off. He nudged her sleeping form before collecting their travel packs and the waterbag. "Rise and shine." She groaned and crawled out from under the fur blanket. His eyes skimmed her trim curves with appreciation. She wore only her underwear, and his pulse quickened at the sight. He let his brain replay their lovemaking: both rounds of it. Jesus, she made him feel eighteen again. She sat and tilted her head left to right, snapping the bones in her neck. "Come on, Scully. Let's go." He tugged the blanket out from under her, then rolled it into a tight cylindrical bundle, which he stuffed into one of the packs. She said nothing, but stood to get dressed. He let her be. She wasn't angry. This was just her usual morning reticence. He'd learned years ago to keep his comments to a minimum until she was ready for morning conversation. His Chatty Cathy act seemed to grate on her nerves at this early hour, especially here in the Ice Age where there were no Latte Grandes to take the edge off. He rolled the second blanket while she slipped into her jeans and turtleneck. Getting lucky twice in one night had put him in good spirits this morning. He felt like humming a few bars of "Love Me Tender" while waltzing her around the cave, but knew better than to try it. "Hungry?" he asked. "Mm," she grunted. Donning her jacket, she headed out of the cave. Almost as an afterthought, he retrieved the tiny carved idol from where she'd dropped it last night. If it had sparked her "vision" -- which he wasn't entirely convinced was a vision, despite her new scar -- it might prove useful by helping them find a way home. He stuffed it into his jacket pocket. "Wait for me." He hurried after her, weighted down by the packs and spears, but buoyed by a night of sweet love. He quickly caught up with her and together they followed the path down the hill to the stream where they'd left the dead sloth the previous day. As they approached the carcass, something about it seemed off to Mulder. It looked blacker than he remembered. And its fur appeared to be...moving. "Uh, Scully? Do you see that?" "I see it." She stopped, causing him to nearly run her over. He set down his things and grabbed the binoculars from his jacket pocket. "Shit," he said, looking through them, his good mood evaporating. He passed them to her. "Ants," she said without emotion. He took a step forward, but she placed a hand on his arm to stop him. "Don't, Mulder. There are species of ants that can take down and kill a large mammal, including a human." Thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, of ants covered the sloth, animating its body in the creepiest way and obscuring the ground beneath it. "That was our breakfast." He hated the petulant whine in his voice, but dammit, he'd risked his life to kill that sloth. "Survival of the fittest, Mulder...or, in this case, the fastest." This was infuriating. The meat was right there, not fifteen yards away. "Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck." "You could try scaring them off with your gun," she suggested dryly, reminding him of yesterday's wolves and his wasted bullet. "Very funny." He paced, stopped, paced some more, then turned to squint at the insect-riddled corpse. "Maybe we could eat the ants, too. They're protein, aren't they?" "I doubt the meat is safe to eat, with or without the ants. It's been sitting unrefrigerated all night." Turning around, she walked past him, heading upland along Klizzie's marked trail. That was it? She was just going to walk away? He looked again at the ants. They'd already devoured most of the meat and were starting to dismantle the skeleton. Fuck. He reluctantly followed after Scully. "We should have known better," she said when he caught up with her. "How's that?" "Ants, vultures, wolves -- something was bound to take that meat. We should have cut it up and cooked what we needed immediately. We didn't think ahead." "So next time we'll know better." She leveled her gaze at him. "We're working blindfolded here, Mulder. We may not survive a next time." * * * Dzeh selected a shady spot away from the bustling activity of the camp where he could sit and work in quiet. His mouth felt drier than last season's pine nuts and his stomach flopped like a hooked fish. The late morning sun jabbed his eyes, making his head pound. Damn the Spirits, he regretted drinking so much wo-chi last night. The evening had been rowdy and pleasant. Forty or more men from Owl, Badger and Otter Clans had crowded the Prayer Lodge to share stories and jokes, pray to the Spirits, play gambling games and drink wo-chi. Lots of wo-chi. The potent liquid had been brewed specifically for the nightly revelries during the days-long Mastodon Feast. The drink was essential to the celebration; its fermented honey allowed the various Spirits to enter the men's bodies and minds, blessing them with visions and insight, as well as giving them a sense of contentment and camaraderie. Unfortunately, the departing Spirits usually left storms in Dzeh's head the following day. He tossed his tool kit to the ground beneath a broad butternut tree. Trying to minimize the thunder inside his skull, he eased himself slowly onto the grass. Thankfully there was no wind to rattle the leaves over his head and needle his oversensitive ears. As it was, a faint whiff of roasting meat from somebody's breakfast fire threatened to empty his stomach. Breathing through his mouth, he arranged himself cross-legged on the grass and slowly opened his tool kit. The small leather pouch held a hammerstone, a few lumps of raw chert, several knapping tools made from bone, and three unfinished spear points. Dzeh withdrew his favorite knapper and one of the unfinished points. His head hurt too much to pound new points, so he left the hammer and unworked chert inside the kit. Swatting away a pesky deerfly, he wondered why the boy Chal hadn't come by to see him earlier this morning as he was supposed to. Dzeh had told his father to send him after breakfast so he could meet him, ask a few questions. Dzeh wanted to gauge the boy's competency and his character before arranging a Joining with Gini. If this Badger Clan boy was to become Gini's mate someday, he would need to possess an honorable disposition and adequate survival skills. It was well known that the men of Badger Clan were skilled marksmen. They were shrewd traders, too, and their women were expert cooks and tanners. Klizzie's Badger Clan aunts had taught her how to work skins into supple hides -- the softest Dzeh had ever felt. Overall, the people of Badger Clan were principled and generous. Their ways were not too contrary to Owl Clan's. There were some, of course, like Klizzie's chindi cousin Klesh and her no-account brother Tse-e, who were contemptible men, but every clan had its share of rotten fish. To their credit, the Badger Shaman was a powerful medicine man; his clan seldom went hungry or became ill. Badger Clan would make an acceptable family for Gini...if the boy proved to be healthy and strong. And kind-hearted. Dzeh refused to Promise his little sister to the hearth of a mean- spirited man. Thinking of these things, worrying about Gini's future, Dzeh began to meticulously chip flakes from his partially finished spear point. He used his bone knapper to shape the stone until it resembled a laurel leaf approximately the length of his middle finger. The familiar activity calmed his queasy stomach and helped quiet the drums in his head. It also brought him closer to the spirit of his father. Dzeh had learned to make spear points by watching his father and uncles. Knowing how to work the stone properly was a skill crucial to the Clan's survival. His father had taught him how to make raw chert more pliable by exposing it to intense heat, burying it in a shallow depression and then building a fire on top of it. Once the rock cooled, it could then be chipped into tools that would remain sharp even after repeated use on long hunting excursions. Chert was not a common stone in Owl Clan's territory. There were no natural sources; the Clan had to trade for it. With only a few pieces left in his kit, Dzeh hoped Turtle Clan would be bringing a new supply with them to the Feast. He would trade several of Klizzie's well-tanned hides for each fist-sized chunk. Dzeh considered himself a fairly shrewd trader, getting the better deal more often than not. He glanced at the unusual ornament fastened to his wrist. Muhl-dar's remarkable bracelet. Much to his delight, Dzeh had recently discovered the bracelet glowed in the dark like a lightning bug when he pushed one of the prongs on its side. The symbols on its smooth face changed moment by moment, too. The men of Eel Clan must be very clever to create such a mysterious ornament. An Eel Clan boy would make a worthy mate for Gini if their ways weren't quite so foreign. Dzeh wondered where his strange Trading Partner was right now. Was Muhl-dar following Klizzie's stone markers to Turkey Lake? Four days had come and gone since Owl Clan had arrived at Tabaha Lodge. Otter Clan showed up the following day. And last night a messenger from Turtle Clan had appeared, out of breath and full of exciting news. Turtle Clan was only a day's hike away. This news energized the entire camp. The Mastodon Feast would begin as soon as all four clans were settled in. In the meantime, there was much to do to get ready. The women were hurrying today to set up additional shelters, collect more firewood, harvest fresh greens, roots, and berries. The older boys were fishing for bass, pickerel and bullheads in Turkey Lake, while the girls gathered snails along the shore and hunted for duck eggs in the reeds. Even the smallest children added to the stores by trapping turtles and frogs, or scooping fish eggs into gourds. Berries and fish eggs were fine things to eat, but bigger game would be needed to feed the mouths of four hungry clans. The men planned to hunt mastodon at dusk tonight, the time of day when the animals were most likely to pass between First and Second Camel Mountain on their way to Turkey Lake for an evening drink. The narrow gorge between the hills was a perfect spot for an ambush, and not too far away to haul a butchered carcass back to camp. Yesterday's scouting party had reported finding fresh mastodon sign along the trail there. Last night, the men had prayed to the Mastodon Spirit for a successful hunt and offered copious amounts of wo-chi to all the Spirits. Dzeh wondered if the Spirits' heads ached as badly as his this morning. Reasonably satisfied with the overall shape of his spear point, Dzeh began honing its edges razor sharp. Then, using a groove cutter, he forced away more pieces of stone to form flutes down the center on each side. These grooves would eventually cradle the spear's wooden shaft. He was almost finished when the boy named Chal finally appeared. He came within a pace or two of Dzeh and then waited to be invited to sit. Who-Neh's son looked younger than Dzeh had expected and seemed somewhat undersized for a boy of twelve years. But he was tanned and muscled and, overall, appeared healthy. At least he bore no obvious defects. He was dressed in a Badger Clan breechclout and leggings. A new tattoo marked his reddened left shoulder with a spiky design, common among his kin. Two curving claws dangled from his pierced ears, indicating the boy had successfully killed his first bear. Not an easy thing to do, even for a grown man. This boy Chal showed potential, it seemed. "You are late," Dzeh growled. The boy bowed his head. "Sorry, Uncle. My father slept late this morning. I only just learned you wanted to see me." Chal was not Dzeh's nephew, of course, but the boy used the formal title out of respect. Dzeh remained silent, ignoring the apology, making Chal stand and wait a while longer. It was no surprise that Who-Neh had remained late in his sleeping skins this morning. The talkative man had been the last to bed. The entire camp heard him singing and laughing his way from the Prayer Lodge to his hearth where Ho-Ya greeted him with angry words. Dzeh shook his head. Although these were Klizzie's kin, they left much to be desired. Ho-Ya had less sense than a clubbed catfish and Who-Neh, while friendly, was the sort of man who would gamble his last good knife in a betting game. If their son turned out to be equally dim-witted, Dzeh would look elsewhere for Gini's future mate. There were other boys in Badger and Otter Clans, although admittedly most were older and ready for mates now. Dzeh was not willing to give Gini away to an older man; she was too young to share a sleeping skin just yet. If he couldn't find a suitable match for his sister this season, no matter, he could wait a year or two. "Sit," he ordered Chal. "Show me how the men of Badger Clan make spear points." He tossed the boy a lump of raw chert and a hammerstone from his kit. The stones landed with a soft thud in the grass at young Chal's feet. The boy crouched to inspect the uncut stone. Nervously licking his lips, he picked up the hammer. His hands shook a little as he positioned the rock for the first blow. "That chert is valuable," Dzeh reminded the boy just as he was about to take his first strike. Chal nodded, serious and respectful. He repositioned the chert. Taking aim, he struck the rock. His angle was good, the impact well considered. A perfect flake broke loose from the chert. The boy swallowed hard, turned the stone and struck the back with equally fine results. Dzeh watched without comment while he hammered the chert into a well-shaped point. The boy had skill. "You will join tonight's mastodon hunt," Dzeh said. "You will be my hunting partner." Chal's eyes rounded. "B-but, Uncle, I have never hunted mastodons." "Then you will learn how tonight." Dzeh nodded at the boy's new spear point. "Lash that to a stout shaft. Bring it with you." The boy stared at him, dumbstruck. Dzeh returned his tools to his kit and then rose to his feet, taking care to hide the discomfort in his head from the boy. Walking away, he called over his shoulder, "Don't worry, Nephew. It has been at least two years since I had a partner killed during a mastodon hunt." * * * Three days had passed since Mulder and Scully's night in the cave. Three days of arduous hiking. Three days without a decent meal. Three days without sex. Fucking ants. Fucking Ice Age. Fucking uphill all the way to goddamn nowhere. The forest lay behind them. Ahead was another mountain, its summit worn smooth by eons of advancing and retreating glaciers. Miniature evergreens, dwarfed by constant wind and lack of soil, dotted the rocky landscape. The sky was clear, but a breeze was blowing, high-pitched and constant, sounding like whale song as it vibrated across the stone. Mulder's clothes flapped in the cross-draft. He squinted against the sting of his wind-whipped hair. His arms, weighted by both packs and the spears, felt ready to snap. He glanced back at Scully. She limped along several paces behind him, favoring her left ankle. Why had he insisted they go to Hill Air Force Base in the first place? He should have known better. These things never ended well. Had he *ever* trespassed on government property without regretting it? Ever? Even once? Why should this time be any different? He waited for Scully to catch up, one stiff step at a time. Honestly, the poor woman seemed doomed to follow him straight to Hell. What had she done to deserve this terrible fate? "You must have been an ax murderer in a former life, Scully," he said. "That's funny, because I've been thinking about becoming one in this life." Obviously she was still pissed. He was feeling pretty damn pissy himself, but he decided it would be in his best interest to keep his attitude under control. "Good thing there are no axes here. Maybe you'll get lucky and we'll end up in the Bronze Age next time." She limped past him, her expression ice cold as she trekked slowly, painfully uphill. "Don't think I won't stone you to death." He trailed after her, keeping his distance. "How is it my fault you tripped and hurt your ankle?" She turned to glare at him over her shoulder. "Watch your step," he said, pointing to the uneven terrain ahead. His warning was meant to needle her more than help. "Cause and effect, Mulder," she said, returning her focus to her feet. "It was you, was it not, who chose to ignore FBI protocol and lead us on this unauthorized investigation into a classified U.S. military facility where you breached a clearly marked security fence to illegally trespass on government property, which caused us to wind up in a...a time warp or Flux Space or whatever, sending us 12,000 years into the past, completely unprepared, I might add, to this...this godforsaken place with stampeding mastodons and hungry saber-toothed tigers and giant killer sloths, where...where there are no bathtubs or coffee shops or taxi cabs or...or..." She paused to take a breath before ending with, "and then I hurt my ankle. That's how it's your fault." "That...that's one way of looking at it." He nodded. "You sound upset." She stopped walking and pivoted to face him. "I am upset, Mulder. I'm hungry, sweaty, and my goddamn ankle hurts." "Want me to carry the waterbag?" He reached for the bag that hung from her left hand. She shrugged him off. "I've got it." "I don't mind. Really." Her hair writhed in the wind as her stormy expression unexpectedly vanished when she looked into his eyes. Voice softening, she said, "I know, Mulder. It's just..." Her voice gave out and tears filled her eyes. He set down the packs and spears and took her into his arms. She leaned heavily against him while he stroked her tangled hair. His heart ached, seeing her hurt, knowing he was the cause of it. "Do you want to rest for a minute?" "No, we're almost to the top." It was true. Another one of Klizzie's markers waited for them fifty yards ahead on the crest of the hill. "We can rest when we catch up with Klizzie and the others," she said, pulling away. He took hold of her hand, unwilling to let her go just yet. "We have no idea when that'll be. You should sit for a few minutes. Check that ankle." "If I take off my boot, I may not get it back on. It's the only thing keeping the swelling down." "Then I'll carry you," he offered, opening his arms. "No, thanks." She backed away and winced when she put weight on her injured leg. "Come on, Scully. You can barely walk." "I'm fine. You're already carrying everything else." She indicated the supplies. He stooped to gather the packs in one hand and the spears in the other and then presented his back to her, bending at the knees, prepared to carry her piggyback. "Get on." "No." He glanced over his shoulder at her. "Just do it, Scully. Don't argue." "I'm too heavy." "Hardly. Just to the top of the hill." "It's too far." "No, it's not. Get on." He crouched a bit lower to entice her. "Just to the marker?" "I swear." Still looking unconvinced, she took hold of his shoulders and climbed onto his stooped back. The spears and packs made holding her awkward, but she truly didn't weigh much. He was glad to do this for her. "Comfy?" he asked. "Yes." She gasped when he straightened. "Don't drop me." "I won't drop you." He took a tentative step, testing his balance. Once he was sure of his footing, he strode up the hill toward the marker. Scully hung on as if for dear life, arms clutching his neck, thighs locked around his ribs. He liked the way her panting breath tickled the upper ridge of his left ear, and he couldn't help but notice the cushiony press of her breasts against his upper back. "Doin' okay?" he asked. "I'm fine. How about you?" "Hardly know you're there." As light as she was, his thigh muscles were burning by the time he crested the top of the hill. His discomfort vanished, however, the moment he looked into the valley on the other side. "My God." Scully's words puffed against his cheek. Grassland covered a gentle downhill slope from where they stood to a vast blue lake at the bottom. The lake was shaped like an open hand and it sparkled in the bright afternoon sun. On its southwestern shore was a village of fifty or more domed shelters: tidy, peaceful, the grass already worn thin between the huts. Several cooking fires burned in the open spaces and Mulder could smell their smoke. He heard laughter, muted by distance; saw men, women and children, dozens of them, going about the business of life, cooking, washing, building more shelters, swimming in the lake. He remained still, overwhelmed by the scene in front of him. He felt caught in a current of timelessness, like starlight that has traveled across the universe, only to arrive brand new in an already ancient place. Between heartbeats he felt as if he was living twenty thousand lifetimes. Space and time expanded beyond the scope of his vision, beyond his power of physical perception, beyond all human comprehension. It was with both regret and wonderment that he realized this infinite moment was only the tiniest fraction of a whole. "We made it," Scully said, her voice thick with emotion. She slid from his back. He helped to steady her once her feet touched the ground, all the while staring with unblinking awe at the community below...at their salvation. * * * Gini and Jeha waded into the lake, leaving behind the group of girls who were gathering snails along the pebbled beach. The two friends were after duck eggs, not snails. Each carried a basket they'd woven out of broad cattail leaves and lined with down. Gini had stuck a yellow bullhead-lily into hers for luck. They hadn't gone far when she spotted a nest. She splashed through head-high reeds, frightening the mother duck off her perch. While the duck squawked at her from the rushes, Gini emptied the nest, carefully placing four ivory-colored eggs into her basket. Jeha was more interested in talking about boys than in collecting eggs. Standing knee deep in weeds and water, she idly swung her empty basket. "Moasi kissed me last night," she said, her voice high-pitched with excitement. Cool mud oozed up between Gini's toes as she waded deeper. The sun beat down upon the crown of her head and heated her dark braids, while blossoming azaleas, waterlogged lilies and newly hatched pollywogs scented the air. "What did it feel like?" she asked, not half as excited about boys or kisses as her older friend. "Warm and...a little wet." Gini crinkled her nose in disgust. She took a few more steps, plowing through buckbean and stargrass. A cluster of glossy water beetles skated out of her way. "It was wet?" Jeha giggled and then lowered her voice to a whisper. "He put his tongue in my mouth." "Yuck!" Gini's shout flushed out another duck. It flew up over the lake, scolding the girls as it went. Gini turned to stare at her friend. "Why did he do that?" Jeha shrugged. "I liked it." For Spirit's sake, Gini thought, Jeha was becoming more foolish with every passing day. Why would anyone want a boy's tongue in her mouth? "Well, I am never going to let a boy do that to me," she said. "I would rather suck on a rotten egg." She spotted another nest hidden in the rushes a few paces away. It cradled five eggs. Curling her toes into the mud for firmer footing, she edged her way between the reeds to the nest. "You will be singing a different song once you are Promised," Jeha predicted. "I am not going to be Promised. Ever. Klizzie said I did not have to." "Then why is your brother meeting with Chal this morning?" "What?" Gini spun to face her friend, nearly dropping her basket of eggs. "Where did you hear that?" "Ho-Ya told my mother at breakfast. Chal is with Dzeh right now. I saw them together myself before coming to fetch you." "Nooo!" Gini wailed. "You must be mistaken." "Gini, I saw them with my own eyes. Chal was sitting with Dzeh beneath the butternut tree at the edge of camp. They were making spear points or something." Gini felt bees begin to buzz in her stomach again. Jeha waded past her, removed the eggs from the nest and added them to her own basket. "I think Chal is handsome, although not as good-looking as Moasi." Handsome? How could she think such a thing? Chal was a skinny, rude boy with hair like a porcupine. He wasn't the least bit handsome. Gini was about to say so when she heard a shout from one of the girls on the beach. "Gini! Jeha! Come quick!" "What do you suppose is the matter?" Jeha asked. "Let's go see." Gini led the way, splashing toward shore. When they reached the other girls, they found them gaping at Crouching Cat Mountain. "Look," one of the girls said, pointing a finger at the mountain's sloping meadow. There, halfway down the hill, two hikers plodded steadily closer to camp. The man was dark-haired and tall. He carried two spears and a heavy pack. The woman was shorter, her head crowned with hair the color of fox fur. Both wore strange, foreign garments. "Muhl-dar! Day-nuh!" Gini squealed. She dropped her basket and began to run to the newcomers, pushing her legs as fast as they would carry her. * * * "Muhl-dar! Muhl-dar!" Gini's high-pitched shout carried halfway up the hill. "That's Gini," Scully said, breathy with exertion and excitement. Mulder shared her enthusiasm. They'd made it. They'd found the others. After more than two weeks of hiking and hunger, the end was in sight. He hadn't expected to feel such a rush of overwhelming relief. He swallowed a lump in his throat as he watched little Gini run pell-mell toward him, braids flopping, her white smile evident even at this distance. A knot of children raced along after her, equally exuberant. When Gini reached Mulder, she hurled herself into his outstretched arms. "Muhl-dar! Muhl-dar!" she gasped, clinging to his neck with a fierce grip. He let his spears fall to the ground to lift her off her feet. She wrapped her thin legs around his waist and hugged him hard. Chattering non-stop, she gulped for air even as she spoke. He patted her braids and waited for her to talk herself out. It was a long wait; she evidently had a lot to say. "I think she missed you," Scully said. Mulder peered into the happy child's eyes and smiled. "I missed you, too." His gladness at seeing Gini was prompted by more than relief, he realized. This young girl had wheedled her way into his heart. In many ways she reminded him of Sam, and her greeting felt like a homecoming. The other children soon surrounded Mulder and Scully. Some hopped with excitement. Others hung back, not knowing what to make of these strangers. One girl gathered Mulder's fallen spears and volunteered to carry them back to the camp. "Fine, fine," he told the child, guessing her intention. "Lead on." They started downhill together, high-spirited and noisy. One child ran ahead, presumably to notify the rest of the camp. Not that a messenger was necessary. The people in the village had already spotted the newcomers and were hiking out to greet them. Mulder spotted Klizzie among the crowd. She waved her arms and shrieked with delight when she recognized them. Mulder held onto Gini, letting her ride his hip as they walked down into the valley. She beamed with pride, giggling and yammering as she tugged at his short whiskers and kissed his cheeks and nose. At the bottom of the hill Klizzie greeted Scully with a warm embrace, tears flooding her eyes. Mulder noticed Scully had tears in her eyes, too, and it put the lump back in his throat to see her so happy. The two women held each other for several long minutes while the crowd of curious onlookers grew. When Klizzie finally broke away, she turned to face Mulder. Mulder set Gini on the ground. He wanted to thank Klizzie properly for all the stone markers she'd left along the trail; he and Scully never would have made it without her help. Unable to express his gratitude in words due to the lack of common language, he leaned down to embrace her and accept her gentle kiss on his cheek. "Thank you, Klizzie," he whispered into her ear, hoping she would understand the depth of his appreciation from the heartfelt tone of his voice. Over Klizzie's shoulder, Mulder saw Dzeh and a group of men approaching at a trot from the camp. They bristled with weapons and Mulder was unsure how to interpret their spears and knives. But he needn't have worried. Dzeh stepped forward to welcome him with a broad smile. He displayed his wristwatch and pointed with pride at the bear claw necklace around Mulder's neck. Mulder caught himself reaching out to clasp the other man's hand -- a 20th Century habit, unrecognized here in the Ice Age. Apparently a whack on the back was the accepted form of greeting. Dzeh thumped Mulder repeatedly, jarring him with unexpected force, using every ounce of strength in his muscular arms. In an effort to divert his enthusiasm, Mulder pointed to the spears and asked, "What's all this?" Dzeh launched into a long explanation, not a word of which Mulder understood. Meanwhile, the women were circling around Scully. They clucked their tongues in a sympathetic manner as they pointed from her injured ankle to one of the village huts. The men's conversation became more animated. They closed in on Mulder, separating him from Scully as she was led away by the women. "Scully?" he called to her, looking over the men's shoulders. "I'm okay, Mulder," she yelled back. "I'll catch up with you later." Gini was the only girl to remain behind with Mulder and the men. "A-woh-tso." The men repeated the word several times while they thrust their spears at some unknown imaginary prey. They tugged Mulder's arms. Someone offered him a new spear. "I'm not very good at charades, guys. Are you going hunting?" "A-woh-tso," Dzeh said again. Mulder leaned down to whisper into Gini's ear, "What's a-woh- tso?" She giggled and then held her fists at the sides of her mouth and pointed her stubby index fingers straight out. "A-woh- tso," she repeated. Ahhh. A-woh-tso. Mastodon. The men were going on a mastodon hunt. Dzeh clapped Mulder on the back and smiled. That's when it hit him. He was going on the mastodon hunt, too. * * * Twelve clansmen, armed with stout spears and stone knives, jogged silently through a forest of alder and waist-high buckthorn. They headed northeast along an almost imperceptible deer trail that circled Turkey Lake. Mulder ran with them, gripping a spear in his left hand, leaving his right free to draw his gun if need be. The hour was late, the sun low in the sky. Horizontal fingers of misty light pierced the forest, painting the leaves gold while camouflaging the men with leaf-shaped shadows. The scent of chokecherries and damp earth flooded Mulder's nostrils as he ran. He tried to guess how the men intended to capture and kill their prey -- a-woh-tso, mastodon. A surprise attack, most likely, concealing themselves in the half-light of dusk in order to ambush the unsuspecting animals. It seemed impossible that a dozen men armed only with spears and stone knives could bring down a beast the size of a dump truck. But clearly they'd done it before, many times; their shelters, constructed of mastodon bone and skin, were proof of their skill and daring. The men's nakedness made them appear alarmingly vulnerable in this wild landscape. Bare-chested and barelegged, the hunters wore only loincloths. Dzeh had insisted Mulder change out of his jacket and jeans and dress in a loincloth, too, before leaving the camp. The stern clansman had plucked at Mulder's sweaty 20th Century clothes and held his nose. Mulder took the hint. The garments' strong odor would alert their prey and spoil the hunt. Dzeh had also argued against Mulder wearing his boots, pantomiming heavy footfalls, clapping his hands loudly with each exaggerated step. Mulder refused to leave them behind, however, noise be damned. His feet weren't callused enough to go barefoot, even after so many days of hiking. Mulder quickly changed out of his smelly clothes. He was hungry -- hollow to the bone hungry -- and he knew Scully was, too. The sloth had been their last decent meal and that had been days ago. He was willing to do whatever it took to fill his and Scully's empty stomachs. He had no intention of freeloading; he would pull his weight, even if it meant coming face-to-face with a ferocious, long-toothed, eight-ton mastodon. Finding Scully before he left, he handed off his dirty laundry and kissed her on the cheek. "Back in a jiff," he promised. "Be careful, Mulder." "Hey, it's me," he said, using his "What could go wrong?" tone of voice. He left her with Klizzie and the other women, and hurried off after the hunters who were already trotting single file toward the woods. About a mile from camp, the trail opened into a clearing. The lead runner -- a muscular, older man with long, gray, corkscrewing hair -- slowed to a stop. He held up a hand that looked big enough to palm a basketball. The other men stopped, too, lifting their noses into the air, cocking their ears. Mulder also listened, trying to hear what they heard: bird calls, the scramble of small woodland creatures, the men's quiet breathing. They were standing in a corridor of felled trees. It reminded Mulder of the logging roads in Washington State's Olympic National Forest, only the trees here had been broken, not cut by chainsaws. The throughway emerged from a narrow gorge between two rocky hills to the east. It continued west, downhill to the lake about a hundred yards away. Mulder faced the setting sun and glimpsed the last rays of daylight reflecting off the water. He guessed route was a regularly traveled thoroughfare for the mastodons, a passage through the mountains to the lake. Evidently, the hunters expected to meet the animals during last call at the local watering hole. That's when he felt it, an almost imperceptible trembling beneath his feet. The men grinned, nodded, and exchanged rapid hand signals. The older man with the basketball hands stooped to gather something from the ground. Mulder recognized this man; he'd seen him at the last camp, along with Dzeh and two or three of the other hunters. His name was Lan or Lon or Lin. Whichever, he was smearing his chest and arms with mud. Once covered, he became almost invisible in the waning light. Dzeh and the others, including the nervous boy with a Mohawk haircut who had shadowed Dzeh the entire way from camp, moved forward to join Basketball Hands. They took turns scooping up handfuls of mud and rubbing it on themselves and each other, effectively camouflaging their bronze skin -- arms, legs, faces, torsos, front and back. Dzeh beckoned Mulder with a wave and offered him a handful. Mulder moved closer and allowed the other man to coat his back and shoulders with the chilly goop. Jesus, the stuff smelled terrible. It reeked of... Shit. It was mastodon dung. The men weren't camouflaging their skin; they were disguising their odor. Dzeh daubed Mulder's face and hair and then pointed to the pile, indicating Mulder should dig in. Face wrinkled in disgust, Mulder knelt and plowed his fingers into the heap. He scooped up a generous portion. The men grinned as he held his breath and slathered his chest and thighs with it. Lan/Lon/Lin used more hand signals to divide the men into two groups. A barrel-chested man with a spiky tattoo and a haircut similar to the boy's led one group across the corridor. They moved quickly, silently, while the second group, which included Mulder, remained on the near side, spreading out and taking positions behind trees and shrubs. Dzeh crouched beneath an evergreen, down-slope to Mulder's left. The boy hid in a patch of tall ferns upland to his right. Mulder squatted behind a toppled tree, which had a trunk as big around as a tanker truck. Then the men waited. The sun sank below the horizon and the forest fell into shadow. Mosquitoes whined in Mulder's ears, but didn't bite, put off by the drying layer of dung on his skin. Somewhere behind them, an owl hooted from the upper branches of a distant tree. Suddenly the mastodons were there. A large herd, moving single file through the corridor. Despite their size, they traveled in near-silence, the soft huff-puff of their feet on the trail the only sound they made as they glided toward the lake like ghostly battleships. Mulder had expected thunderous footsteps, snapping trees, crashing branches -- not this eerie quiet. He watched in wonder, crouched in his hiding place, as the first mastodon passed by, enormous and gray and nearly invisible in the twilight. Its ivory tusks glowed like twin specters, eight feet long and as thick as a man's arm. They pointed straight ahead, parallel to the ground, and appeared to float, unconnected to anything. The sight numbed Mulder's limbs, set his heart hammering. He clamped his jaws together to keep his teeth from chattering, giving away his position. A second animal passed. Then a third. Mulder wondered when the men would attack, tried to guess their strategy while he silently cursed his ignorance of their language and their ways. Dzeh remained rooted to his spot to Mulder's left, hunkered down, eyes trained on his prey. Mulder could just make out Dzeh's hands positioning the shaft of his spear into a strange foot-long handle. Mulder had no idea what this tool was used for. He gripped his own spear more tightly and continued to wait. At least a dozen mastodons plodded toward the lake. Several babies trotted by, too, just as silently as their mothers. More adults followed the youngsters. When the last animal had passed, the clansmen simultaneously rose from their positions. No one called out or gave any signal; the hunters knew from experience what to do, when to attack. A half step behind them, Mulder rose to his feet and sprinted after the others. The men didn't speak or shout. They moved as stealthily as their quarry, forming a U-shaped line behind the herd, closing in as they drew nearer to the lake. They were twelve small men tiptoeing on the heels of hulking shadows and the mastodons seemed completely unaware of their presence. Mulder tried to anticipate what would happen next. Glancing left and right, he noticed all the men had attached the strange foot-long handles to the ends of their spears, just as Dzeh had. The handles folded back on the shafts, which were held shoulder high, parallel to the ground. Many of the mastodons were already in the lake when Mulder heard the first faint whistle of a spear sailing through the air. It was followed by the wet slap of its point penetrating a hide. The struck animal roared. The noise was horrible; a screech like train brakes, followed by the huff of panicked lungs. The herd instantly became an earth-shaking stampede and the night exploded with sound...whooping shouts from the hunters...cries of alarm from the mastodons...noisy splashes of water as the animals plowed into the lake to escape the danger behind them. Several thundered into the woods, cracking into trees, splintering branches. The men ignored the runaways to pursue the one wounded animal. Four hunters let spears fly in quick succession, aiming at the beast's heart. Mulder could now see the advantage of the strange handles the men had attached to their spears. These devices added leverage and distance, hurtling the lances 200 feet with impressive accuracy. Each weapon sank a foot or more into the mastodon's flesh, an impossible depth if thrown without the handle. The men closed in on the injured mastodon. Two more spears found their mark. Still on its feet, the beast squealed each time it was hit. It tried to shake the spears loose, but they remained deeply imbedded in its side. Mulder was now close enough to see inky streams of blood leaking from its wounds. The animal tossed its head in anger and fear. It trumpeted again. Abandoned by the herd, it turned to defend itself. Mulder had faced monsters before, but nothing chilled him like the fury he saw in this beast's bulging eyes. When the enraged mastodon prepared to charge, Mulder's senses left him. His arms hung like dead weights at his sides. His ears became deaf to the commotion around him. Time slowed to an immeasurable crawl and he felt as if he were watching events unfold through the wrong end of a telescope. The mastodon lowered its head and laid back its ears. It pawed the ground and aimed its tusks upland toward the mountains. Then it was galloping uphill. Nearly a dozen spears bristled like picadors' lances from its blood-streaked sides, jouncing with each tremendous stride. The hunters scrambled out of its path, their mouths opening as if to scream. Mulder heard none of their cries in his now silent, slow motion world. He turned to look uphill where he saw the boy with the Mohawk haircut standing in the middle of the path. The boy watched, frozen in place, as the mastodon came straight for him. Mulder drew his gun. Relying on a decade of training and practice, he raised his arms, aimed his weapon, and waited...waited...waited for the charging mastodon to pass him broad side. He seemed to know instinctively that a shot to the animal's impenetrable skull would prove useless. He needed to make a well-placed shot to the heart or lungs. When the moment came and the mastodon passed within five feet of his outstretched arms, Mulder pumped the trigger and let every single bullet fly, hoping like hell to hit something vital. Each shot penetrated the animal's hide, smacking a puff of dust from its fur. The mastodon continued to rage forward toward the frightened boy. The boy closed his eyes. Mulder felt his stomach pitch. He still squeezed the trigger, deaf to the click of the gun's empty clip. Please, please, please, he prayed... Abruptly the mastodon faltered, stumbled, went down on its front knees. Its forward momentum carried it skidding uphill. Its gargantuan tusks dug into the ground like plow blades, furrowing the earth and sending debris flying into the air. Amid an explosion of dust and pine needles, the giant beast lurched to a stop right at the boy's feet. The boy's lance dropped from his hand and he collapsed to his haunches. Mulder had spent every round but managed to save the boy's life. Mulder's hearing returned when the hunters surrounded him. They clapped him on the back and shoulders. Their laughter ricocheted off the trees as they whooped with relief. Impressed by Mulder's gun, they took turns touching it, pulling back with startled surprise when they felt the warmth of its barrel. "Pow, pow," they shouted again and again, mimicking Mulder's stiff-armed stance. He let them pass the gun around. Without bullets it was no longer a danger. One after the next, the men took a turn pointing it at the motionless mastodon. Dzeh seemed particularly pleased by the shooting. His eyes shone with pride as he strutted back and forth between Mulder and the boy. He nodded repeatedly at his wristwatch, reminding everyone of his partnership with Mulder. The boy was beginning to regain his color. Two men helped him to his feet. They pounded his shoulders, too. Buoyed by their praise, the youngster retrieved his fallen spear. He walked on shaky legs around the corpse. "Ut-zah!" he yelled at it, and then thrust the spear into the animal's side. "Ut-zah-ha-dez-bin!" the men replied. They repeated the phrase again and again. Dzeh encouraged Mulder to say the strange words, too. With his tongue twisting around the unfamiliar language, Mulder tried his best to repeat, "Ut-zah-ha-dez-bin!" This caused more laughter and more cheers. Finally, the man with basketball hands cleared his throat, silencing the others. He gave a short speech. The men nodded, faces solemn but eyes lit with satisfaction. When the impromptu meeting was finished, a messenger was dispatched to the village to tell the clans the good news. Then the hunters fell upon the carcass and, using their spears as carving knives, they began to butcher the meat. Mulder watched in awe as the men sliced open the mastodon with quick precision. It reminded him of Scully with scalpel in hand, poised over a body on her autopsy table. Like her, the men seemed to follow a predetermined approach. In only minutes, they had peeled back the skin to serve as a tarp, keeping the meat clean as they piled it in chunks. Spirits ran high as they gutted the carcass. Several men climbed completely inside it to carve out the organs, while others worked to remove large sections of fat. The men in the belly yelled up to those outside to be careful whenever a spear gouged too deeply and poked straight through, threatening their safety. The smell was godawful, but Mulder lent a hand. He borrowed Dzeh's knife because he wasn't able to get the hang of cutting with his spear the way the other men did. Mulder admired the skill of these men, their bravery and their commitment to their families. He felt honored to be included in their close-knit group. As a man who usually eschewed teamwork -- at least off the ball court -- he found himself shedding his customary independence. For perhaps the first time in his life, Fox Mulder felt as if he fit in. Up to his elbows in blood and entrails, he realized with pleasant surprise that he felt genuinely happy. * * * Klizzie combed and braided Day-nuh's hair into cornrows while the injured woman sipped a bowl of medicinal tea concocted by the Shaman to alleviate the pain in her swollen ankle. "You are lucky it was only a sprain," Klizzie said as she began a new braid. She was also lucky the Shaman knew how to make strong tea. Day-nuh sat perfectly still, propped on furs, naked beneath a wolf-skin blanket, while Klizzie knelt behind her and worked on her hair. The tea was obviously beginning to take effect; Day-nuh's head lolled sleepily and she hummed in a quiet, tuneless way. She was freshly shampooed and bathed, and she'd eaten, too, thanks to Klizzie, who had prepared a hearty meal before taking her to the lake to wash. While Day-nuh bathed, Klizzie returned to camp to arrange a shelter for her. Of course, tonight, Dzeh, not Muhl-dar, would share this hearth with the fox-haired woman. As was customary, the Trading Partners would seal their partnership by exchanging mates. Klizzie planned to take her own bath as soon as she finished getting Day-nuh ready. She wanted to be clean and presentable when Dzeh's new partner came to her bed. It was important that she impress and please Muhl-dar, to help build a lasting bond between the men. After tonight, the four of them would be like kin. Muhl-dar and Day-nuh would be accepted and welcomed as permanent members of Owl Clan. "Klizzie...?" Day-nuh murmured, and then her question wandered off like a lost calf. "What is it, Sister?" Klizzie asked, using the honorary title prematurely. She didn't think it would do any harm; after all, she and Day-nuh would be true sisters in the eyes of the Clan after tonight. Patiently waiting for the fox-haired woman to say more, Klizzie tied off the braid she was working on with a row of beads: one of white bone, two blue stones and then a bangle of mother-of-pearl. The pearl sparkled whenever Day-nuh laughed, which was more frequently now that she was on her second bowl of tea. Klizzie eased the near-empty bowl from her limp hand and set it aside. "I think you have had enough," she whispered. She continued to plait Day-nuh's pretty, red hair, weaving in additional beads, along with strands of fresh sweetgrass. Dzeh would be pleased to see her decorated in the Owl Clan fashion. It would make her appear less strange. It would also make him proud that his mate loved him enough to help prepare her for this night. Klizzie's heart filled with happiness at the thought of pleasing Dzeh. He was an honorable man and a fine mate. Generous, patient and tender. He listened when she gave voice to the ideas that were inside her. He provided her with a loving home. Some women were not so lucky. "There, that is done," she announced, finished with the braids. "Now I will oil your skin so you will feel soft and smell sweet." Day-nuh nodded in sleepy agreement before closing her eyes. Klizzie put away her extra beads, tucking them into the soft, fringed pouch she used for storing them. Then she stirred the fire in the small hearth beside the sleeping skins, adding another stick of wood. The hut was pleasantly warm. It wasn't a large hut, like the ones used by families with many children and cousins and aunts and uncles, but it was tall enough for a woman to stand up in. And it had plenty of room for sleeping skins and storage, too. Earlier she had brought Day-nuh and Muhl-dar's packs here and set them to one side. She also added some additional items she thought they could use, such as fresh drinking water, a change of clothes, and more soap root. To be honest, she hoped the soap would encourage them to bathe more often. She wondered if it was the custom of Eel Clan to wait so long between washings. Well, at least she had gotten Day-nuh clean for tonight's exchange. And if the men were successful on their hunt, then they would bathe later, too, to wash off the blood and dung. She had no worry that Muhl-dar would come to her bed smelling bad. Klizzie gathered the perfumed oil and held it briefly beneath Day-nuh's nose. The sleepy woman barely opened her eyes. "Mmm," she hummed. "S'good." Klizzie chuckled, glad to see she was feeling comfortable. Her swollen ankle looked painful. After her bath, Klizzie had wrapped it with the softest strip of deerskin she could find. Then she propped the injured leg on a pile of folded furs to help prevent more swelling and bruising. "You will like this," Klizzie promised. She rubbed a bit of the oil between her palms, then positioned herself behind Day- nuh and began massaging her bare shoulders. "Mmmmm. That's nice." Day-nuh's chin dropped to her chest. Klizzie massaged her ivory white skin, working down her arms to her hands. She rubbed her elbows, her wrists, and each finger, then moved on to her chest, where she used circular strokes to smooth oil onto her breasts and belly. Pausing to inspect the fearsome scar at her navel, she wondered what could have caused such a wound. Day-nuh giggled when she tried to oil her ribs. "You are ticklish?" Klizzie asked as she repositioned herself to rub the other woman's legs. She lifted the blanket off. "You have very pretty feet," she said, when she began to stroke Day-nuh's toes. "They are so soft!" Her own feet were thickly callused from going barefoot. Day- nuh's feet felt as if she walked on clouds all day. Klizzie avoided the injured ankle, kneading the stiff muscles of her calves and thighs instead, astonished by the number of tan speckles that dotted her pale skin. They were more numerous than stars in the sky. "We are done, Sister," she said at last, and set aside the oil. She gently patted the woman's cheek to wake her. Day-nuh seemed to rouse a little. "Klizzie..." She took her hand and gave it a squeeze. "Thank you." "Tahnk-ew." Klizzie remembered hearing this word before, back at Toh-ta Lodge. She didn't know what it meant, but Day-nuh seemed sincere and appreciative. "Oh, I almost forgot," she said, remembering the necklace she had brought for Day-nuh to wear tonight. She scrounged through her pack and pulled out a beautiful carved amulet that hung from a soft deer-hide cord. "This will bring happiness and luck," she said, slipping the necklace over the other woman's head. Day-nuh fingered the carving -- a small red fox. Klizzie had chosen it because the color of the stone matched Day-nuh's hair exactly. "It's beautiful," Day-nuh murmured. Then her eyes brightened. She held up a finger. "I have something for you, too." The words came out in a jumble, meaning nothing to Klizzie, but she waited while Day-nuh retrieved her Eel cloak and searched through its marvelous pockets. She withdrew a silver cylinder, smoother and shinier than any water-polished stone, and held it up for Klizzie to see. "What is it?" she asked, impressed by the pretty thing. Day-nuh smiled and separated the cylinder into two halves. Then she twisted the bottom of one half until a blood red finger poked up from inside. Klizzie wasn't sure what to make of it. Whose finger was it and why would anyone keep such a ghastly thing? She was even more shocked when Day-nuh pressed the bleeding finger to her lips. Was she going to eat it? Oh! It stained her lips red! Klizzie leaned closer. The thing was not a finger after all; it was paint! "May I?" Day-nuh asked, pointing the paint stick at Klizzie's lips. Klizzie nodded and let the other woman color her lips. When Day-nuh was satisfied, smoothing the paint with her finger, she searched her pocket again, and this time she pulled out a container that looked like a small tortoiseshell. She opened the little shell and inside was a smooth, shiny surface that reflected the firelight the way a pond reflects the sun. She held it up to Klizzie's face. Oh, Great Spirits! It was her own face! She recognized her eyes and mouth from seeing them reflected in the lake water. But never had she seen herself so clearly as this! "May I hold it?" she asked. She reached for the shiny tortoiseshell to indicate she wanted a closer look. Day-nuh smiled and handed it to her. Klizzie could not stop staring at her own dark eyes, fringed with long, straight lashes...and her smooth nose, a little curved and somewhat flat...and her lips! Blood red with Day- nuh's paint. She smiled, only to be stunned by the whiteness of her teeth and the two crescent-shaped dimples that dented her cheeks. She might never have stopped looking at herself if not for the strange popping noise that suddenly echoed up from the lake. Worry glittered in Day-nuh's eyes. She tried to stand. "Gun shots. Mulder--" "Sit, Sister, please. You will hurt yourself." Klizzie indicated her bound ankle. "I will see what is the matter." "But I have to--" Day-nuh blinked dizzily and fell back against the furs. "Remain here. I will bring back any news." Day-nuh closed her tired eyes, succumbing to the effects of the tea. Klizzie returned the tortoiseshell container to her, thanked her and apologized for leaving so quickly. She gave Day-nuh's cheek a quick kiss before grabbing her things and rising to her feet. "Klizzie, wait..." The words stretched out in a long, drowsy fashion. For a moment the exhausted woman seemed to forget what it was she intended to say. Then she held out the paint stick. "This is for you." Klizzie gave her a questioning look. "I want you to have it," she said, and held the paint stick a little higher. Klizzie took it. Impressed by the other woman's generosity, she leaned down to kiss her again before hurrying from the shelter. Out in the village's common area she found a group of concerned men and women looking toward the lake, discussing the odd popping noise in uneasy voices. "It came from the direction of the hunt," one man said, pointing northeast. "What could make such a noise?" Speculation was cut short when the excited cry of a messenger resounded from the nearby woods. "We killed a mastodon!" he yelled. "We killed a mastodon -- there will be a feast tonight!" * * * The Men's Prayer Lodge was the largest structure in the camp. Oblong in shape, it had a single door, which faced west to catch the last light of the setting sun. The broad, domed roof was constructed of animal hides, sewn together with sinew. The roof was supported by shoulder-high walls built of mastodon skulls, which had been stacked one atop another, fitted together like spooning lovers. Tusks and slender saplings provided additional height, making the interior space tall enough for a man to stand upright with his arms raised. In the center of the lodge was a large fire-pit, which offered light and warmth, as well as a spit for roasting meat. An open area around the fire was used for speeches, dances, prayers and storytelling. Furs lined the floor along the room's perimeter, providing comfortable seating. Thirty men could sit in the lodge with room to spare. Fifty became a tight fit. Tonight, more than eighty men and boys crowded the lodge to hear the story of the mastodon hunt. Because the lodge was oblong and not circular, some seats were preferred over others because they offered superior views of the speakers and the fire. Dzeh sat in one of these better spots, between his Uncle Lin and his Trading Partner Muhl-dar. A hearty meal of roasted mastodon had left him sated, and several draughts of wo-chi fogged his head in a most pleasant manner. A bite of raw heart fresh from the kill had inundated him with the Mastodon Spirit's generosity. As was custom, the men had let the women finish butchering the mastodon and transport its meat, hide, bones and organs back to camp, while the hunters cleaned themselves in the lake. After their bath, they dressed in fresh garments for Prayers of Thanks in the Lodge. Influenced by the Mastodon Spirit's generosity, Dzeh lent Muhl-dar his best buckskin tunic. After all, the newcomer had nothing clean to put on after his bath. Dzeh had a spare, and Muhl-dar was his Trading Partner now, so why not? The tunic was a fine one, supple and soft, decorated with handsome quillwork and fringe. Klizzie had outdone herself making it. It fit comfortably and would last many seasons. "Take it," Dzeh had insisted, pressing the garment into Muhl- dar's arms. "No, no, no." Muhl-dar shook his head and pushed back, making further objections in his own strange language. Although Dzeh didn't understand his words, he understood his hesitation to accept the shirt. A gift was an obligation that required compensation at some point. Perhaps Muhl-dar felt unable to settle such a large debt. It was possible he was not as well off as Dzeh had first assumed. Even so, he needed something to wear. "This tunic is of little value," Dzeh lied, attempting once more to give the garment away. "The hide is of inferior quality; the seams poorly sewn. Please, take it off my hands." Muhl-dar appeared reluctant and a bit embarrassed, but he was finally persuaded by Dzeh's persistent arguments to take the tunic. Slipping it over his head, he emerged with a broad grin lighting his face. The shirt fit as if made for him. Cleaned, dressed, and cheered by their successful hunt, the men gathered in the Prayer Lodge to celebrate. They recited all the official prayers and then settled in for a long night of storytelling and feasting. Regaling each other with tales of past exploits, they relived every hunt that remained outstanding in their memories. And they coaxed Muhl-dar into telling and retelling his version of tonight's hunt at least six times over. It didn't matter that they couldn't understand his foreign words. The wild motions of his hands, the varied expressions of his face, and the inflection of his voice lent excitement to the tale. They gasped each time he leapt to his feet to pantomime the action. Again and again the hunters interrupted his rendition to add their own perspectives, filling in minute details for the benefit of those who had not been present. While Muhl-dar pointed his gun, another man played the role of the mastodon. A third mimicked fear-stricken Chal, caught in the path of the raging beast. "Whe-hus-dil...pow, pow, pow," the hunters shouted, describing the noise of Muhl-dar's weapon to those who had remained in the camp and heard it only from a distance. The hunters held their ears, rounded their eyes, laughed with relief when the man who was pretending to be the mastodon sank to his knees. "Bih-din-ne-dey!" Lin exclaimed, and all the men cheered. The story became grander with each telling. After the third or fourth performance, it became embellished beyond all recognition. But whenever Muhl-dar seemed reluctant to repeat his version of events, the elders plied him with more wo-chi. A sip or two more were enough to loosen his tongue and get him back on his feet. Muhl-dar's gun was passed around the circle many times while he reenacted his tale. Dzeh laughed heartily when Muhl-dar took on the role of each hunter, exaggerating each man's heroism, fear, and shock. He laughed doubly hard at Muhl-dar's impersonation of himself. This was a fine night. Dzeh felt more at ease than he had in many days. Forgotten was his vision about Muhl-dar's unlucky return. The arrival of his Trading Partner had turned out to be a good omen after all. "Enough!" Muhl-dar announced. He collapsed onto his haunches beside Dzeh and refused to get up again. "Enough, enough." He held up his hands in protest. "Eee-nuff!" Dzeh bellowed good-naturedly, causing the men to laugh and repeat the word. The men's moods remained high throughout the evening. Exhausted of tales about their hunting prowess, they now exchanged ribald jokes, some at Muhl-dar's expense, as they passed around more roasted meat and more wo-chi. "Do Eel Clan men 'pow, pow, pow' when they make love to their mates?" someone asked, triggering an uproar of laughter. Similar questions followed -- questions that would be unseemly anywhere but here. Muhl-dar took their ribbing in stride. He clearly understood some of what they said because he joined in their hilarity, insinuating that Eel Clan men were endowed like stallions and made explosive noises whenever they ejaculated. This brought up an important matter, Dzeh realized. "Eee-nuff. Beh-gha," he said, his tone suddenly serious. He clamped a hand on Muhl-dar's arm to draw him close. This conversation was between Trading Partners, not for the general assembly. "Beh-gha?" Muhl-dar repeated the strange word. "Beh-gha means enough?" "Yes, yes! That is right. Beh-gha. Eee-nuff." Dzeh said. He leaned toward his partner's ear and lowered his voice. "We must discuss tonight's arrangements." Muhl-dar shook his head, not understanding. Dzeh tried again. "Klizzie has prepared the shelters." Using hand signals, Dzeh made the signs for "shelter" and "two." "I will take you to yours. You will lay there with Klizzie on the sleeping skins. I will go to Day-nuh and lay with her. You know how it goes." He smiled and Muhl-dar smiled back, nodding his head as if he understood every word. "Tomorrow we will officially be Partners. Hozo-go nay-yeltay to. May we live in peace hereafter." He clapped Muhl-dar on the back. "Hozo...?" Muhl-dar stammered, his grin fading a little. "Hozo-go nay-yeltay to." "Hozo-go...uh...nay-yeltay to?" Muhl-dar's tongue twisted around the unfamiliar words. His pronunciation was poor, but he managed to repeat the phrase fairly accurately. "Yes, hozo-go nay-yeltay to." Dzeh laughed, glad to get this formality out of the way. * * * "This the place?" Mulder asked, hooking a thumb at the domed shelter. He and Dzeh stood under the stars at the edge of the village. Fifty or more similar huts separated them from the lake. Dzeh pointed and nodded, and then turned to go. "Wait, wait," Mulder said, staggering a little as he grabbed Dzeh's arm. Dzeh steadied him and chuckled as Mulder unsuccessfully tried to shrug out of the borrowed buckskin tunic he wore. "Your shirt. I should give it back." Dzeh wagged his head and yammered something in a friendly tone. He slapped Mulder's back a few times, pointed repeatedly at the buckskin shirt, tugged at Mulder's disheveled hair and short beard. Between his good-natured gesticulations and his broad smile, he convinced Mulder to keep the tunic. "*You*..." -- Mulder prodded Dzeh in the breastbone with a stiff index finger -- "are a real gen'rous guy, y'know that, Dzeh ol' buddy? Nice of you t'gimme the shirtoffyerback." Nodding in agreement with everything Mulder said, Dzeh spun Mulder to face the hut's entrance. "Here? This place?" Mulder asked again, forgetting Dzeh's previous instructions. Dzeh gave him an affable shove. Then he turned and walked away on unsteady legs, and in no time, disappeared into the dark. "Gen'rous guy," Mulder repeated to no one in particular. Bleary-eyed and a little dizzy, he tried to focus on the entrance to the hut. He reached for the flap of hide that served as the shelter's door. He lifted it and considered shouting, "Hi, honey, I'm home!" but was distracted by the unusual numbness in his fingers. Couldn't feel the flap...door...whatever. He grinned as he kneaded the supple material. Nope, couldn't feel a damn thing. His hand might as well belong to someone else. HA! He ducked his head to peer through the door. The hut's interior was lit by the dim glow of the hearth. In the bed beside the dying fire was the rounded shape of Scully, sound asleep beneath the furs. Awww, Scully. Sleeping Scully. His beautiful, beautiful Scully. Hi, honey, I'm home. Stepping across the threshold, Mulder walloped his forehead on a bone support. "Damn it!" He rubbed the sore spot. How was it possible to feel pain in his head and nothing at all in his fingertips? Too late he realized he'd spoken out loud. "Shhhhhh," he said, finger raised to his lips. He let the door-flap-thingy close behind him. Taking a deep breath, he tried to steady himself enough to walk a straight line from the door to the bed without falling on his ass. Dzeh had helped him stay upright on the way over from the men's lodge. Left to his own devices, however, he wasn't sure he could make it across the room. He tried to gauge the distance. Hmm. Three steps? Four? Concentrating on his rubbery legs and unfeeling feet he attempted one crooked step toward Scully. Oops! He lurched to the left. Arms held out to his sides, he managed to maintain his balance, but just barely. "If at first you don't succeed..." His next step carried him forward, more or less. "Suck a lemon and you'll 'suck seed'!" The joke made him chuckle. It was an old joke, something his father used to say. Scully stirred beneath the blankets. "Shhhh," Mulder said again. "Scully's tryin' t'sleep." Wow, he hadn't felt this tipsy since...since...since never. He rarely drank, which was probably why the wo-chi had gone straight to his head. Wo-chi. It was a strange word. Sounded like something you'd say to a baby. Wo-chi-wo-chi-wo-chi. Again, he laughed at his own joke. Another deep breath. Concemtrate, consimptrate, constanrate... Man, it smelled good in here! Like mint and...and...fabric softener -- those flowery-scented sheet-things you toss in the dryer, the spring-time fresh ones. Or was that toilet bowl cleaner? Didn't matter. In his fuzzy state of mind, everything seemed right with the world...if you discounted that little time travel booboo. Aw hell, so what if he and Scully were a gazillion years from where they were supposed to be? They were safe. They had each other. Did anything else really matter? After all, the Ice Age had lots of benefits over the 20th Century. No pollution, no nuclear weapons, no government conspiracies or alien invaders. "No, expense reports. HA!" Beneath the covers, Scully shifted again. Just a twitch. Mulder clapped his hand over his mouth. Shhhhhh. "Didn't mean t'say that ow'loud, Slully...umm...Scully," he whispered from behind his hand. He expected her to growl at him for making so much noise, but apparently she was down for the count -- probably exhausted from their hike and the late hour and her injured ankle. Poor Slully. Scully. She sluffered in slilence...shlit! Suffered in silence. Well, most of the time anyway. Not that she didn't have good reason to compain...complain. Better get undressed, he decided. He wasn't thinking straight. And he loved Scully. And wooooo! That wo-chi had him feeling *good* -- like he had nothing but clouds for brains. He shrugged out of Dzeh's tunic and let it drop to the floor. That left him wearing only his loincloth and belt, and the belt held his holster and gun. Couldn't sleep in that. He fumbled with the buckle. His unfeeling fingers had trouble with the clasp, but he managed to unfasten it on the third or fourth try. He let it fall to his feet, too, and the gun thudded loudly when it struck the dirt floor. "Shhhhhh," he told it. He took a tentative step. Then another. Uh-oh, he leaned too far to the right. Whoa! Gyrating to maintain his balance, he found himself at the edge of the bed. When he was satisfied he wasn't going to tip over, he shucked his loincloth and tossed it in the general direction of the door. Ready to take that one final step into bed, he glanced down at his feet. Oops. Still had his boots on. The boots proved more difficult to remove than the tricky belt. He sat on his haunches and plucked at the laces. His fingers refused to close around the damn bows. After several unsuccessful attempts, he said, "Fuck it," and left them on. Lifting the fur blanket, he half-fell, half-rolled into bed. Scully stretched a little, but kept her back to him. Scully, beautiful Scully. The woman who meant everything in the world to him. She lay on her side, facing away. He counted her breaths. One, two, thr-- "You smell pretty," he whispered. She did! Like flowery fabric-softener sheets...or toilet bowl cleanser...whatever. Burrowing beneath the blankets, he drove his nose into her neck and sniffed. Mmmmmm. Too bad his hands weren't working the way they were supposed to. He wanted to touch her skin. Reaching for her anyway, he clumsily placed an unfeeling palm on the curve of her waist. Warm. Bare. He could tell that much, at least. Intending to stroke her ass, he found himself cupping her breast instead. He squeezed. She stiffened. "Muhl-dar?" "You were expecting someone el--" Ummm...that didn't sound quite like Scully. He lifted his head to peer at the woman beside him only to find Klizzie was staring back at him over her bare shoulder. Shit! He was in the wrong hut. The wrong bed. His hand was on the wrong breast! He released his hold and scrambled backward, out from under the covers. "I'm...oh, jees...I'm sorry, Klizzie...I didn't...I musta...this was an honest mistake...I'm really--" Naked. Fuck. He yanked the blanket off the bed into his lap, covering himself and uncovering her. Now *she* was naked. And she didn't seem the least bit concerned. "Muhl-dar?" She sat up. "Yeah?" he asked, trying to sound casual. She smiled. A brilliant, come-hither, turn-a-guy's-legs-to- jelly smile. Then she crawled toward him, and, oh God, her breasts bounced in the most delightful way. "Pinch me?" he squeaked, hoping he was asleep or at the very least unconscious. She reached toward him and he thought maybe she was going to pinch him. But instead she tugged at the blanket covering his lap. He hung onto it. "Huc-quo," she said, still smiling her man-eating grin. "Klizzie nih-tsa-goh-al-neh be-zonz. Klizzie, Muhl-dar, de-ji- kash. Be-zonz yeh-zihn. Lanh?" "I...I..." She tilted her head in the cutest way and licked her lips. Her hand crept up his bare leg...knee...thigh. He wasn't entirely sure, but he thought she might be wearing lipstick and it looked a lot like Scully's shade. Was that possible? Snaking her warm, little hand beneath his blanket, she groped his lap. When her fingers found his penis, she gave him a squeeze. "No! Klizzie... Don't." He backed away. Her happy smile disintegrated as her eyes blinked in surprise. Biting her lip, she now appeared nervous. "De-ji-kash." She beckoned him into the bed with a wave of her trembling hand. "Klizzie yah-a-da-hal-yon-ih Muhl-dar. Day-nuh yah-a-da-hal-yon-ih Dzeh." Day-nuh? And Dzeh? The fog began to lift from his brain, leaving him feeling sober...almost. "Where's Scully?" he demanded. He grabbed Klizzie's arm and gripped her hard. "Where's Dana? Where is she?" Klizzie tried to smile again, but failed. Her eyebrows peaked with worry. "Day-nuh, Dzeh, yah-tay-go-e-elah ta-bilh." He had no idea what she was saying, but it couldn't be good if Dzeh and Scully's names were spoken in the same breath. Mulder rose unsteadily to his feet. What the hell was going on here? Klizzie wasn't acting like this was a simple mix-up. She was acting as if she'd been expecting him to show up in her bed tonight. Which could only mean Dzeh had purposely led him here, which could only mean he was intending to... Son of a bitch. This was a deliberate swap. Mulder stumbled out of the shelter into the cool night, oblivious to his nudity. He found himself facing dozens of identical huts. Jesus, which one was Scully in? "Scully?" he called, becoming more frantic as a vision of Scully, naked in Dzeh's arms, took shape in his head. He sprinted for the nearest hut. He would search every damn one if he had to. "Sculleee!" * * * Scully awoke to the steam of a sigh on the nape of her neck. Mmm. Mulder. He'd returned, safe and... Aroused! His erection prodded the small of her back as he spooned against her. He caressed her bare arm, and she responded by nestling deeper into his embrace. He smelled good, like soap root and lake water and...alcohol? "Out partying late, Mulder?" The entire camp had been in a celebratory mood after receiving the news of the successful mastodon hunt. There would be plenty to eat for days. Mulder's arm curled lovingly around her. She glanced at his watch. 3:52 a.m. "Musta been some party," she murmured, feeling content and sleepy. Her belly was full, her body clean. The tea the Shaman had given her earlier had stopped the awful throbbing in her ankle. She hadn't felt this good in days. Not since the night she and Mulder had made love in the cave. Heat blossomed in her abdomen at the memory. She moaned when his fingers skated up her naked thigh to settle in her curls. "You must be reading my mind," she whispered. He snuggled closer, pressing his hips into her buttocks, poking her spine with his rigid penis. He kissed her neck, her shoulder, his long beard tickling her-- Wait a minute... Long beard? It'd been a month since Mulder last shaved, but his whiskers weren't *that* long. And Mulder had traded his wristwatch to-- Scully lurched out of Dzeh's embrace and turned to glower at him. "What the hell do you think you're doing?" she demanded. He remained where he was, grinning shyly and looking a bit bleary-eyed. She yanked the fur blanket off him and covered herself with it. "Wrong bed, mister. Get out." He reached for her again and she shoved his hand away. "I said, get out!" She scooted from the bed, beyond his reach. He chuckled and came after her. Grabbing her by the wrist, he pulled her back onto the furs. "Let go of me, Dzeh. Let--" His mouth covered hers, silencing her as he pressed her gently but firmly down onto the sleeping skins. x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER ELEVEN Jealousy burned in Mulder's throat. Driven by his escalating rage and the lingering hallucinogenic effects of wo-chi, he stumbled frantically to the nearest hut in search of Scully. He was convinced she was in danger and pictured her trapped in Dzeh's embrace, fending off the caveman's determined advances. The idea made Mulder's skin crawl. His fingers itched to wring the damn Neanderthal's neck. He bulldozed through the door, bellowing "Scully! Sculleeee!", and stopped just short of the sleeping skins. The beds were arranged in a semi-circle around a low-burning hearth and eight sets of eyes peered out from beneath their furs, blinking up at him in startled surprise. Someone gasped. A baby started to cry. "Scully?" He asked, his voice sounding too loud in the confined space. He glanced from face to face. The dim glow of the dying fire revealed she wasn't there. The baby's wailing grew louder. "Eh-ha-jay, nil-chi-tso," growled a frowning man with a braided beard and a pierced lower lip. He rose from his bed to confront Mulder. Although he wasn't very tall, he was sturdily built with powerful arms and legs. His coppery skin was blackened with angry-looking tattoos, geometric designs that accentuated his muscular physique. "Sorry, wrong hut," Mulder said, realizing too late the rashness of his intrusion. The tattooed man swaggered toward him, sledgehammer fists clenched at his sides. He paused an arm's length away to glower at Mulder from beneath dark brows. "I-I'm looking for Dzeh," Mulder explained. "You haven't seen him by any chance?" The man's frown deepened. "Eh-ha-jay," he said again, jerking his bearded chin toward the doorway. "Guess not." Mulder backpedaled out of the shelter, where he was met by a veritable sea of scowling faces. At least two-dozen bleary- eyed men stood waiting for him there, roused from their beds by his shouting. Feeling sandwiched between the crowd and the irate tattooed man, Mulder did the only thing he could think to do; he stood his ground, cupped his hands around his mouth, and called Scully's name at the top of his lungs. Then he let loose a string of epithets directed at Dzeh that rounded the onlookers' eyes. They clearly grasped the vehemence in his tone, if not the literal meaning of his words. A familiar face appeared in the crowd; it was Lin, the older man with the basketball hands. His expression was stern but calm as he approached Mulder. Mulder gritted his teeth and tried to reign in his temper. He was seriously outnumbered here. No doubt his outburst was irritating the hell out of these people, if not outright insulting them. Everyone was eyeballing him, making him suddenly aware of his vulnerability...and his nakedness. Most of the onlookers were naked, too, having been awakened unexpectedly. But their state of undress did little to ease Mulder's apprehension. These men were heavily muscled. They carried themselves with confidence, accustomed to threats far more serious than one loud-mouthed crazy man. Lin rested a weighty hand on Mulder's shoulder, pinning him in place. The older man seemed less annoyed than the others, so Mulder decided to take a chance that he might help. Lin nodded and gazed past the crowd to scan the campground. "Tehi," he said, hooking an arm around Mulder's shoulders. He steered him through the onlookers, who broke formation to follow them. They walked only a short distance before Lin stopped in front of the very shelter where Mulder had begun. Klizzie was waiting there by the door, looking nervous and fearful, her eyes downcast and her former enthusiasm gone. Mulder read shame in her posture, as well as accusation in the eyes of the other tribe members. Did they blame her for his outburst? Some conversation passed between Lin and Klizzie. Lin's gruff tone caused her to wince several times. She glanced at Mulder and fresh tears filled her eyes. Mulder suspected she was being held accountable for his show of bad temper. Would she suffer repercussions for his breach of etiquette? Although he felt sorry for her, he had greater concerns right now. He needed to find Scully. "Where is Dana?" he asked Klizzie, his tone urgent. Her eyes flickered to a hut at the edge of the village. "Na- hos," she said, pointing past his shoulder with a shaky hand. Mulder turned from the group and marched straight to the hut. Without pause at the door, he stormed inside. Just as he'd feared, he found Dzeh inside with Scully, but the Neanderthal wasn't forcing unwanted sexual advances on her. As a matter of fact, he wasn't touching her at all. She was holding him at bay with his own stone knife. "You okay, Scully?" Mulder asked. "I'm fine." She was crouched beside the hearth, knife in hand. Dzeh was sitting cross-legged a few feet away. Mulder walked over to him and without warning delivered a formidable uppercut to his jaw. Dzeh rocked, but remained upright. Mulder struck again. Knuckles met bone with a jarring crack, but the caveman still didn't fall. Mulder tried for a third punch, but was stopped mid-swing when Dzeh grabbed his fist and twisted him to his knees. Restrained by the caveman's crushing grip, Mulder wasn't sure what to do next. He was peripherally aware that the group of anxious onlookers were jockeying for position at the door. They reminded him of the flock of vultures that had surrounded him and Scully their first day in the Pleistocene. "Did he touch you, Scully?" Mulder asked, glaring at Dzeh. "I...I'm okay, Mulder. He didn't hurt me." A confused half-smile slowly replaced Dzeh's frown. He released Mulder's fist. "Muhl-dar?" he asked, sounding puzzled but good-natured. He continued speaking in an amiable tone, nodding and smiling at Scully. He finally concluded with, "Day-nuh nil-ta." The only word Mulder had understood in his entire speech was "Day-nuh." "I don't know what you're saying," Mulder said. Frustration increased his anger. Nothing about this surreal situation was making any sense. "Day-nuh ye-tsan Dzeh. A-nah-ne-dzin." Dzeh said. He chuckled and then pointed to his lap. Mulder looked down to discover Dzeh was in a state of unquestionable arousal. "Son of a bitch!" He sprang at Dzeh with outstretched arms, intending to choke the smiling bastard to death. "She's mine, you fucking--" Again Dzeh's reflexes were quicker and he stopped Mulder by grabbing his wrists and holding him at arm's length. Dzeh's baffled grin evaporated, replaced by a stern scowl. "Beh-gha. Eee-nuff," he said. Klizzie appeared at the hut's entrance. Her eyes widened at the sight of Dzeh and Mulder locked in a standoff. She began chattering and waving her hands. Dzeh yammered right back at her, never loosening his hold on Mulder. Neither one seemed to listen to the other. Unable to shake himself free, Mulder started hollering, too. Only when Scully stood up and shouted in her most authoritative voice, "Be quiet!" did they all fall silent. "That's more like it," she said, looking at each in turn. "Now would someone please explain what the hell is going on here?" * * * People from three clans waited outside Day-nuh's open door to hear how Klizzie was going to smooth things over between Dzeh and his angry Trading Partner. Their prying stares made her as nervous as a rabbit in a wolf's lair. She was to blame for tonight's misunderstanding, she was sure, although she couldn't quite reason out where she'd gone wrong. She'd followed all the Clan's protocols right down to the minutest detail, preparing the shelters, getting herself and Day-nuh ready. Yet Muhl-dar was angry, refusing to accept her in trade for Day-nuh. His behavior was utterly baffling. It was also dangerous. If he didn't change his mind, he would be exiled from the Clan. Without the ties of blood or partnership, Muhl-dar and Day-nuh would be considered untrustworthy interlopers and forced to leave. And if they refused to go, they would be killed. With so much at stake, Klizzie hoped to find a peaceful solution to their dilemma. She liked these strangers. They had shown no unkindness to the Clan. They were gentle with Gini, and they had contributed to the recent boon of mastodon meat. There were other reasons, too, why Klizzie didn't want to sit idly by and watch the newcomers driven off...reasons she was not so eager to bring up. She'd been responsible for talking Dzeh into accepting Muhl-dar as a Trading Partner in the first place. And she was also the one who set out markers, leading the newcomers to Turkey Lake. It would be hard to admit these actions had been undesirable and hurtful to the Clan. In addition, Klizzie carried a burden of guilt from her past. She had caused considerable trouble for the Clan four years ago when she became Dzeh's mate. Her cousin Klesh had been exiled as a result of her poor judgment. Her brother Tse-e, had left, too. It had been a difficult time for everyone, and she didn't wish to repeat it. Her desire to make amends for her past misdeeds fueled her desire to set things right now. Again she found herself wishing she knew how to speak Eel Clan's language, if only a few words. Then she could put this awful misunderstanding behind them. Klizzie knelt with her back to the meddlesome people outside and decided to address her comments directly to Day-nuh because, quite frankly, Muhl-dar's grim expression frightened her. The newcomers were sitting side-by-side facing her, each now dressed in the clean skins she had left for them earlier. Day- nuh was also wearing her strange, black upper garment, the small glossy tunic without fasteners. Dzeh was dressed, too, having put on his loincloth. He squatted on the far side of the shelter, away from the others. He wore an aloof expression as he rocked on his heels. He'd already said all he intended to say; if Muhl-dar was against the partnership, then so be it. Dzeh would not beg a man to sleep with his mate. To do so would be unseemly and disgraceful. There was no denying Mulder's rejection was an insult, to Dzeh and the Clan. "Please, Sister," Klizzie began, keeping her tone as respectful as possible. "I have caused a rift between these Trading Partners." She glanced at Dzeh and Muhl-dar in turn, and saw that both men wore thundercloud expressions. Again she was reminded of Dzeh's failed partnership with Klesh. Shame burned her cheeks. Dzeh had forgiven her only because he assumed Klesh forced her to do the things she'd done that night, but she knew that wasn't entirely true. Klesh had offered her a pretty hair ornament in trade for sleeping with him. It was an unusual thing, made from the loveliest clamshell Klizzie had ever seen. It had been incised with a picture of a lo-tso, an enormous mythical fish, rumored to be bigger than a bull mastodon. Klesh had received it from a traveling man who visited the giant waters to the west, where lo-tso were said to live. The man's name was Ta-bas- dsissi, Shore Runner, and according to Klesh, he possessed superior bartering skills, but was not so competent at betting games. Ta-bas-dsissi had wagered and lost the ornament to Klesh during a round of Ne-e-lahi. Klesh promised the ornament to Klizzie in exchange for a night on her furs. She knew it was wrong to lay with her cousin, but the shell was too great a temptation. The next morning Klesh kept his word and gave her the hair ornament. He also bragged to his best friend Tse-e about what he had done. And soon after, Tse-e tattled to Dzeh. Dzeh was furious, of course, and humiliated. Klizzie was so ashamed by what she had done she threw the ornament away, tossed it into Small Wind Lake without ever telling Dzeh about it. Instead, she let Dzeh and the entire Clan believe Klesh had forced her to submit to his sexual demands. Klesh was not trusted for many reasons, so his protests were ignored. No one listened to his story about the hair ornament. Klizzie kept silent while he was exiled for mating with his own cousin. And she said nothing when her brother Tse-e went with him, too. To this day she still kept her terrible secret, even from Dzeh -- the man she loved and trusted like no other. It was no wonder the Spirits continued to punish her, denying her a child in retribution for her transgressions and her deceit. She deserved their wrath for the things she had done. Tucking away her bad memories, Klizzie said to Day-nuh, "Please, tell me how I might give pleasure to Muhl-dar." She pointed to herself and then to him. Day-nuh shook her head emphatically. "No. *No* Klizzie and Mulder. *No* Dzeh and Dana." The onlookers buzzed like deerflies. Her objections made no sense. Klizzie tried again. "I apologize for any offense I have caused and will do whatever is necessary to set things right." Day-nuh continued to frown, unmoved by her apology. Again Klizzie pointed to herself and then to Muhl-dar. "I can satisfy him if he would allow me anoth--" "*No* Mulder and Klizzie!" Muhl-dar's voice roared like an angered bear. Klizzie's hand went to her totem, seeking its protection and strength. "But...we *must*. The exchange is a good custom. It builds trust. Everyone knows this." She clung to her totem, drawing courage from it the way she often did whenever she was frightened or confused. Looking into Day-nuh's pale eyes, she prayed silently to the Spirits for guidance. Suddenly she was struck by an odd idea. Suppose Eel Clan's customs were as unusual as Day-nuh's eyes or her red hair. Klizzie considered the newcomers' incomprehensible language, their foreign clothes and exotic jewelry, their lack of knowledge about simple things like edible greens and soap root. Was it possible they didn't know the rules of mate-exchange? Did they practice a different custom? She turned to the group outside the door, hoping to find someone who might know the answer for sure. "Have any of you ever visited Eel Clan?" she asked. The onlookers shook their heads and murmured no, they had not. "My sister's cousin from Moose Clan heard that Eel Clan men sometimes eat the flesh of humans," one man claimed. Another man leaned his head into the shelter, suspicion shining bright in his eyes. "I say we cast these intruders out now, before they decide to kill us in our sleep and cook us for breakfast." The prospect caused the crowd to rattle like a nest of angry snakes. "Strangers cannot be trusted," they insisted. Klizzie ignored their unease and turned her attention to her mate. "Dzeh, I am wondering if Eel Clan shares our custom of mate-exchange." His eyebrows rose in surprise. "What sort of clan does not practice mate-exchange?" he asked, sounding incredulous. "Everyone knows of it. How can a man trust his Trading Partner without first exchanging mates?" He glared at Muhl-dar and Muhl-dar glowered back with equal intensity. She cleared her throat, trying to regain his attention. "You must admit their ways are strange, Dzeh" she reminded him. "The ornament you wear on your wrist..." She indicated Muhl-dar's unique bracelet with a nod of her head. "Have you ever seen anything like it before?" She knew he had not. He had shown her its extraordinary glow just a few days ago, delighted as a child by the way he could light it and extinguish it just by tapping one of its tiny prongs. His eyes flickered to it now. "Explain the custom to them. Then we will hear what they have to say." Hope blossomed in her chest. It was possible she was not the cause of tonight's trouble after all. And she might still be able to work things out to everyone's benefit. But how does one explain something as complex as mate-exchange without a common language? Hand signals would be useless, she knew; Day-nuh and Muhl-dar understood very few, even the most general ones. She might try drawing pictures on the dirt floor if she were a better artist. But she could not draw a careful line, let alone capture the true Spirits of things. "I do not know how to explain it," she said, feeling her hopes fly away. Lin stepped forward from the crowd. "Let me try," he said. He squatted beside Klizzie and drew several circles in the dirt with his finger. "These are our huts; this is the village," he said, looking from one face to the next. "Now hand me your amulets." Klizzie removed her totem and placed it in Lin's large palm. Dzeh did the same without hesitation. Day-nuh removed her fox amulet, too, and then convinced Muhl-dar to do the same with the claw necklace he wore. They passed both to the older man. Lin arranged the necklaces inside two of the circles, Klizzie's with Dzeh's and Muhl-dar's with Day-nuh's. "Dzeh and Klizzie," he said in a deep voice. He pointed to their intertwined necklaces. Then he indicated the other necklaces, laid one against the other, apart from the other two. "Muhl- dar and Day-nuh," he said. When everyone indicated they understood this arrangement by nodding, Lin rearranged the necklaces to illustrate the mate- exchange. "Uh-uh," Muhl-dar said. "Put 'em back." Lin shook his head, refusing to switch the necklaces to their former positions. His expression was stern. He was a man used to giving orders and being obeyed, an elder respected for his wisdom, strength and skill. Holding up one stout finger, he said, "To bind a partnership according to our customs, Dzeh of Owl Clan and Muhl-dar of Eel Clan will exchange mates for one night." The newcomers indicated they didn't understand, so Lin pantomimed "night" by tilting his head and closing his eyes, followed by a stretch and a yawn to represent "day." He repeated the action several times until he was certain they understood. Only then did he put the necklaces back to their original positions. "Okay, I get it, but the answer is still no," Muhl-dar insisted. Klizzie didn't grasp the meaning of all his words, but she did understand what he meant by "no." He shook his head each time he said it, and a shake of the head seemed to mean the same thing in every language. "Uncle Lin, please help Muhl-dar understand the consequences of his refusal," she said, keeping her gaze downcast out of respect. Lin stared into the Eel stranger's stubborn eyes. "Refusal to comply with the rules of Partnership will result in exile or death," he said. He picked up the newcomer's necklaces and hurled them across the hut. They landed with a slap against the far wall. Then he drew his knife from the sheath on his belt. Its stone blade appeared razor sharp. Lightning fast, he thrust the knife at Muhl-dar, stopping only a hair's breadth from his throat. "I think I get the picture," Muhl-dar said, backing away and rising slowly to his feet. "Come on, Scully. Let's get out of here." He held out a hand for her. "Mulder..." Concern notched her forehead. "My ankle." He glanced down at her swollen, bandaged leg. Air hissed from his lungs and his taut limbs suddenly hung limp. "I won't allow this. The answer is no," he said with finality and glowered at Lin. The elder man shrugged, unwilling to shoulder the burden of the stranger's decision. It meant nothing to him if they stayed, departed or died. "The decision is yours." Klizzie was astonished that anyone would choose exile or death over something so trivial as a mate-exchange. It was beyond comprehension. Clearly Muhl-dar did not yet understand the seriousness of his decision. She had to try once more to straighten out his tangled thinking. Rising to her feet, she ignored the stares of the men and crossed the room to collect Muhl-dar and Day-nuh's necklaces. She brought them back to the circles and arranged them in a way that depicted the exchange. "Please," she begged Muhl-dar. "Just one night. *Please*." He shook his head. "Uh-uh." His odd refusal was his final word before he stalked from the hut. * * * "Mulder?" Scully shouted, limping after him. He didn't answer her call or stop. The gap between them widened with every dogged step he took. Already she could barely make him out, a determined shadow slicing through the haze of campfire smoke and pre-dawn dark. He was heading upland, away from the village, his stride unwavering as he waded through murky waves of knee-high grass in the direction they had come. Behind him, hearth fires lit the huts like votives. No one came out to follow or challenge them. The villagers seemed to understand they needed to be alone to reach an agreement: whether to stay, accepting the tribe's customs, or to leave. Scully tried to jog, but her injured ankle wouldn't allow it. The medicine man's anesthetizing tea was wearing off and each step was excruciating. "Mulder?" she called again. A sudden stab of pain took her breath away and forced her to slow down. She silently cursed her sprain and Mulder. Damn it, why didn't he stop? "Mulder!" "Stay or come with me, Scully," he shouted, "but don't expect me to stick around for...for..." Without slowing his pace or turning to look at her, he dismissed the entire camp with a wave of his hand. Leaving was not an option, as far as she was concerned. Neither she nor Mulder had the necessary skills to survive in the Ice Age. That had been proven a dozen times over in the hungry days of the last two weeks. Unable to identify a single edible plant or preserve their infrequent windfalls of meat, they would face certain starvation without the tribe's help. There was no way to know how long they would be trapped in the past. Another week? A month? Years? What would they do when winter arrived, when game was presumably scarcer and conditions more severe than now? Would they even live through the summer? Saber-toothed tigers, mastodons, snakes...danger seemed to be waiting behind every rock. "Mulder, stop, please!" she called, her voice thinned by her desperation. "My ankle...I can't..." That stopped him. He turned and waited, bristling with irritation, fists clenched, chin held high, ready for battle. If he felt any sympathy for her injured condition, he wasn't showing it. When she reached his side, she saw anger glowing in his eyes and heard fear in his ragged breathing. "Mulder, where are you going?" For a split second, her question stalled the rise and fall of his chest. She'd caught him off guard; he obviously had no plan. He was simply running away. "I'm not agreeing to...to that." He jabbed a finger at the camp. He was furious. She couldn't remember ever seeing him so angry. She tried to steady her breathing, remain calm. Losing her temper now would only serve to push him further away. "What do you want to do?" His gaze swept the landscape, as if an answer lurked somewhere in the shadows. She waited him out, letting him consider all the possibilities. "Could you do it, Scully?" he asked finally, spitting the words. "Could you sleep with him?" Could she? She wasn't sure. Dzeh's advances had taken her by surprise earlier, so she'd fought him with all her strength. But she hadn't realized his purpose at the time, or what was at stake: her life, Mulder's. "I-I'm not sure," she said honestly. "But you heard them; a refusal means banishment...or death. I think the consequences outweigh our personal feelings here." His eyebrows rose. "You can separate from your feelings as easily as that?" She hadn't meant to imply it would be easy. The prospect of having sex with another man frightened her -- a lot -- but she believed she could contain her fears long enough to put the experience behind her, especially if it guaranteed their survival. She'd always been adept at suppressing her emotions, even as a little girl trying to please her no-nonsense Navy father. Her medical training, followed by years in the morgue, had honed her ability. It would be impossible for her to perform her job without a measure of emotional detachment. Countless autopsies, criminal investigations, and even her own abduction had taught her to guard her inner self. She found it almost natural now to push her emotions to one side while she went about her daily business. Surely Mulder did the same whenever he aimed and fired his gun with lethal intent at another person. As FBI agents, they'd both been trained to put aside their personal feelings to do whatever needed doing in the line of duty. "It's a way to survive, Mulder. Nothing more." "Tell yourself that if you need to, but exchanging sex for something else, even food, has a different name in my book." The anger behind his words stung her. He was acting jealous, although he had no reason to be. She wasn't romantically interested in Dzeh any more than he was interested in Klizzie. "He means nothing to me," she said. "So that makes it okay to sleep with him?" He glared at her, derision narrowing his eyes. "Well, I feel a whole lot better." He wasn't getting it; this was a matter of living or dying. Why was he making it personal? "We aren't talking about a lifelong commitment, Mulder," she said, irritation creeping into her tone. "They said one night." "It's wife-swapping." Before she could stop herself, she blurted, "That's an interesting take considering I'm not your wife." His eyes widened and his body stiffened. For a moment, she thought he might strike her, or turn and stalk away. "Oh, I'm sorry," he said, sarcasm dripping from his voice, "but I was under the impression that when you slept with me it was because you cared about me. But then maybe I'm just a means to an end, too, huh?" He loomed closer. "Tell me, Scully, what end would that be exactly? Pregnancy? A child?" His words shocked her. She felt her restraint slipping away. "What were your reasons?" she challenged, hurt by his unwarranted accusation. "Need a sexual release and I happened to be handy?" Her anger overtook her at this idea. "Is that why you finally decided to take the plunge and sleep with me? Was I just a convenient fuck?" The word hung between them. A grunt of disbelief chuffed from his lungs. His shoulders slumped and he appeared to deflate as his anger -- or maybe his hope -- drained out of him. Turning his focus to the village, his eyes swamped with tears. "I did care for you, Scully. I still do...more than you know." "Then why are you willing to risk my life...and yours...over something that is temporary and inconsequential?" "Inconsequen...?" He looked stunned. His frown deepened. "Because you're *mine*, goddamn it," he said through gritted teeth, his anger returning full force. "I don't want him touching you. And...and I'm sorry if that's not politically correct or I shouldn't feel that way...or...or I have no right to feel that way, but...you're...I can't... *God damn it*!" He suddenly grabbed her and pulled her into a rib-crushing embrace. His words, his emotion, overwhelmed her, and she felt tears flood her own eyes. She wrapped her arms around him and held onto him as tightly as she could. They stood like that for several minutes, lost in a storm of uncertainty. Tucked against his feverish chest, listening to the hammering of his heart, breathing the familiar scent of his body, she no longer heard the shriek of crickets in the grass at her feet, nor did she smell the cloying stench of burnt meat and woodsmoke that wafted up from the village, or feel the chilly night breeze that rattled the beads in her braided hair. Her entire universe became the circle of his arms. He was a refuge on this vast, empty hillside beneath a ceiling of stars, where the moon was setting and dawn was still an eternity away. "Scully, I can't make love to another woman, or allow you to sleep with another man," he murmured into her hair. "I can't. I just can't." "If you know a way out of this, I'm listening." She drew back to look into his eyes. It was obvious from his sad expression that he had no real alternatives to offer. "We could camp nearby, come back and steal their food while they're sleeping," he said, trying to make a joke. When she didn't smile, he suggested more seriously, "Or we could just leave. Go somewhere far away, take our chances that we'll survive until we get home." That was so like him, she thought, ignoring the hard facts while he looked for an improbable, "out there" answer. He needed to see their predicament realistically; she had to find a way to make him see it. "How many bullets do you have left?" she asked. "Uh..." He avoided her eyes, pretending to study the beads in her hair. "We don't need bullets. I killed that sloth with my spear, remember?" "You don't have any bullets, do you?" "No." He stroked her braids, rattling the beads. "I used them to kill the mastodon." Without bullets they wouldn't survive for more than a few weeks at best. And there was also the little problem of her injured ankle. "I can't go anywhere, Mulder," she said, nodding at her bandaged leg. "Not right now." Reminded of her injury, he mumbled an apology and squatted in the grass, drawing her down beside him. It comforted her to sit there with him, knees drawn up, surrounded by a thickening veil of pre-dawn mist. It reminded her of the night they spent on a rock in Heuvelmans Lake while hunting Big Blue. "Mulder, do you remember asking me once if I could cannibalize someone if I had to?" "Yes." "Do you remember what I said?" She knew he did. He never forgot anything. "You said that a living entity is conditioned to perform whatever extreme measures are necessary to ensure its survival. And as much as you abhorred the idea of cannibalism, you supposed that under certain conditions, you would resort to it. Or something to that effect." "Yes, that's what I said." And she'd meant it, although at the time she hoped she would never find herself in a situation where all the choices were objectionable ones...like now. There are degrees of hardship, she reminded herself. Avoiding death, no matter what the emotional cost, was the only real choice here. "I still feel that way," she said. "We're not talking about cannibalism, Scully." "Is sleeping with someone worse than cannibalizing them?" A humorless laugh huffed from his nose. "Given the choice, I'd rather cook and eat Dzeh than have him make love to you." She put a hand on his leg, stilling the nervous tapping of his foot. "Maybe you need to stop thinking of it as making love." "I'm not sure I can," he said, sounding sad. "I guess I'm not like you, Scully; I can't seem to separate the act from the emotion." "They don't think of it that way, you know. To them it's a practical arrangement." "I don't care what they think." He plucked a blade of grass from beside his foot and stuck it between his teeth. "What kind of a fucked up society has a custom like this anyway?" he asked, causing the grass to waggle between his lips. "The aboriginal Inupiat of Alaska, for one." He turned to give her an unbelieving stare. "Really, Mulder, I learned about them from Dr. Diamond. The Inupiat practiced a sort of co-marriage, a non-residential arrangement between two conjugal husband-wife couples united by shared sexual access. The alliance served to connect individuals who were otherwise unrelated by blood or marriage, ensuring assistance in the form of protection, food and goods across territorial boundaries. It made sense in a lot of ways. In periods of war, such ties would temper the amount of killing. In periods of peace, partners and co-spouses became key linkages in the conduct of inter-territorial trade." His jaw stopped working the blade of grass. "We aren't Inupiat." "No, but Klizzie's tribe is like them in this respect. They believe their practices are reasonable. They *are* reasonable, given the circumstances. The exchange serves a cooperative purpose. It has nothing to do with love." "I don't like it, Scully." A sigh of disgust sifted from his lungs. "I know you don't. Neither do I." "But...?" "What options do we have?" Tossing away his chewed grass, he said, "None, I suppose." She found no relief in his surrender. Maybe she'd been hoping he would come up with one of his improbable, "out there" solutions after all. She rose to her feet. "It'll be okay, Mulder." He stared up at her, clearly not convinced. All around him the grass sparkled, tear-kissed by dew. "Will it?" he asked before pushing himself to his feet. He groped for her hand and linked his fingers with hers. "I hope you're right." She hoped so, too. "Wouldn't you rather live to regret your decision than not live at all?" He shook his head, brow knotted with worry. "I'm not sure about that, no." She squeezed his hand. "I am. I want to live. I want to return home." "This is no guarantee." "No, but it's a chance. The best one we have Slowly, reluctantly, they walked down the hill together. When they reached the outermost edge of the camp, he pulled her into his arms. The heat of his body warmed her and the downy hair on his arms and chest tickled her skin. He dipped his head to peer into her eyes. "It hurts me that this doesn't seem to bother you more." She wanted to laugh. Or cry. Or both. It bothered her. It bothered her a lot. But if it kept them alive and safe...kept *him* alive and safe...it would be a worthwhile trade. She pulled away from him. "Don't imagine for a minute I'm taking it lightly." * * * Pausing outside Klizzie's door, Mulder ran his fingers through his hair and tried to corral his emotions. Of all the difficult, dreadful things he'd had to do in his life, leaving Scully with Dzeh topped the list. He knew she was looking at this arrangement in her usual pragmatic way, but he found it impossible to adopt her matter-of-fact attitude. His heart felt as if it were being squeezed by a malevolent hand, like he was under someone's voodoo curse. And yet somehow he was supposed to get it up and get it on with Klizzie. Shit, he'd never felt so un-amorous in his entire life. Thinking about Scully having sex with another man was the biggest turn off of all time. With nervous energy to burn, he began to pace. Sunrise was still an hour away. Maybe an hour and a half, tops. Was Dzeh already kissing Scully? Stop it, he told himself. Just stop thinking about it. Right. Easier said than done. As a psychologist, he understood he was like every other human male, genetically programmed to guard his love interest from the attentions of other sexually attentive males. Millions of years of evolution had honed this urge to instinct, and all the sensitivity seminars in the world weren't going to erase an inherent drive to protect his reproductive rights and guarantee the survival of his bloodline. Understanding the origins of his jealousy, however, didn't help him feel any better about the situation. Even knowing he never planned to procreate didn't lessen his desire to keep Dzeh from sowing oats in what Mulder considered his field. Great, now he was thinking of Scully as property...in the literal sense. What would she think? Before leaving her with Dzeh, Mulder made damn sure to clarify that this was a one-time deal, signed, sealed and delivered by sunup. Dzeh seemed to get the gist and nodded in gruff agreement. Then the crowd of surly clansmen had dispersed, placated by Mulder's promise to swap partners. And Dzeh seemed guardedly satisfied, too. He gave Mulder a solemn nod before placing his big, fat, hairy Neanderthal paw on the small of Scully's back and steering her into his hut. Son-of-a... Mulder almost ended it right there, but Scully shot him a glare that warned him loud and clear "don't fuck this up." Against his better judgment, he backed down. To save her life, he told himself, his mind still scrambling for another solution, knowing he would hate himself until the day he died for allowing this. Klizzie had returned to her own hut while he pretended to see a man about a horse, when in fact he was trying to cool his temper. Jesus, how was he supposed to make love to Klizzie when he couldn't get his mind off Scully and Dzeh? It's not "making love," he reminded himself. It's a social rule with a purpose, according to Scully. Shit. Taking a deep breath, he pushed through the door flap. Klizzie was waiting inside on the sleeping skins, her knees drawn up and arms hugging her bare legs. A fire burned in the hearth. It cast flickering shadows across the leather ceiling and a golden glow over the left half of her face. All her former confidence and playfulness were gone. To be honest, she looked a little frightened. Jesus, he hadn't meant to scare her. Feeling guilty, he walked to the bed and crouched so that he faced her. He cleared his throat. "Hey." "H-hey?" "Yeah, well..." He nodded and cleared his throat again. "Here we are." She offered him a nervous smile and scooted to one side, making room for him on the furs. He remained where he was, looking at her. She was a small woman, only a little bigger than Scully, with smooth, coppery skin, and hair the color of a Hershey bar. It was done up in dozens of tiny braids, like Scully's was tonight. Full of beads and bangles, the braids glittered in the firelight. He could hear their soft tinkle whenever she moved her head. Her eyes were almond-shaped and full of trepidation. Her lower lip trembled, caught between white teeth. She was naked, except for the small, leather pouch that hung from a rawhide cord around her neck. She couldn't have been more than seventeen or eighteen years old, he realized, feeling queasy at the thought. He had to remind himself she was a married woman, not a naive virgin. There was no denying she was lovely, but he didn't feel the least bit turned on. Everything about this situation felt wrong. "Guess I'm supposed to make the first move," he said. Reluctantly he shifted position so that he was sitting beside her. She gasped when their arms bumped. "Sorry," he said. "Uh...this is awkward, isn't it?" She glanced into his eyes and then quickly away. Okay, he'd take the plunge. Reaching out, he fingered one of her braids. "Uh...what's the word for this?" he asked, hoping to relax them both with a little friendly conversation. "Cey-yehs-besi," she said shyly. "Cey-yehs...?" "Cey-yehs-besi," she repeated the word more slowly. "And this?" He stroked the outer edge of her ear. "What's this called?" "Ah-jah." "And this?" He touched the tip of her nose. "A-chin." His questions brought a smile to her lips. If she had been Scully, he would have kissed that smile. But she wasn't Scully. She neither looked like Scully, nor smelled like Scully, and he was going to have a helluva tough time getting down to business here. She seemed to read his mind, which was a bit like Scully. She reached beneath his loincloth and groped his penis, which wasn't at all like Scully...at least not until recently. "Ah...Klizzie, let's wait on that for a minute." He removed her hand from his lap. Worry returned to her eyes and she began chewing her lip again. "Don't..." he said, caressing her lip with his thumb until she released it from her teeth. "Don't do that. You don't need to be afraid of me. I...uh...I'm sorry about...earlier." Not understanding, she shook her head, setting her beads tinkling. Unsure what to do next, he asked, "You sing, Klizzie? Know any Elvis? 'Don't be cruel'" -- he crooned -- "No?" Again she shook her head, but her quizzical smile returned. She clearly didn't know what to make of him. "I guess this isn't how these swap things usually go, huh?" Had she slept with many men besides Dzeh? he wondered. He tried to imagine her with other lovers, cavemen like Dzeh who understood the tribal protocols. Did they indulge in a little foreplay or did they skip right to the main event? What was Dzeh doing with Scully right now? Klizzie interrupted his worrisome thoughts by tugging at his loincloth. "Right. Clock's ticking and this has gotta come off." He unknotted the cord at his waist and let her pull the loincloth away. She looked at his lap and giggled. "That's not gonna help, Klizzie. It's a reeeeal turn off when a woman laughs at a guy's co...penis." "Be-zonz sid?" she asked. "Bi-nih-nani be-zonz sid?" "Excuse me?" "Be-zonz." She pointed at his penis. He still didn't understand. She reached out and traced his circumcision with the tip of her finger, causing him to flinch. "Oh, right. Yeah, I guess that looks kinda different from what you're used to." How the hell do you explain circumcision to an Ice Age woman? He decided not to even try. Let her think it was a war wound or something. All this attention directed at his flaccid penis was making him more uncomfortable than ever. "Klizzie, why don't we lie down?" He patted the furs. She got the idea and stretched out beside him. When they were both settled, he drew the blanket over them. She snuggled next to him, hooking an arm over his chest and a leg over his thigh. She felt nice: curvy, soft, warm. But she wasn't Scully and he wasn't turned on. He couldn't make love to this woman. He wouldn't. Screw the fucking rules. He hated rules anyway. "Roll over," he said, nudging Klizzie onto her side. She gave him another confused look, but turned her back to him, maybe thinking he intended to take her from behind. "Muhl-dar?" she asked, uncertainty in her voice. "It'll be okay," he said, repeating Scully's earlier words. He gently kissed her shoulder, wrapped an arm around her waist and spooned against the curve of her back. Would she tell anyone he wasn't going to go through with the exchange? Keeping his eyes trained on the door, he lay completely still and waited for sunrise. * * * You can do this, Scully told herself as Dzeh guided her into the hut. It won't take long, just an hour. Or less, she predicted, noticing the way Dzeh's erection tented his loincloth. He looked ready now. You can do this, she repeated to herself. You can do this. You can... Although she'd tried to convince Mulder that sex with Dzeh would mean nothing to her, in truth she was dreading their intimacy more than she'd realized. It was ridiculous. She had no romantic feelings for him. They were here to fulfill a duty and that was all. Rules were rules and you carried them out whether you agreed with them or not. She'd learned that lesson at a very young age whenever her father praised her and her siblings for doing as they were told, and disciplining them when they did not. He'd sometimes called Scully a "good sailor" when her behavior had been exemplary. As a kid Melissa had called her Miss Goody Two Shoes, and later on when they were older she switched to Kiss Ass, but that was because Missy preferred breaking the rules rather than following them. Like Mulder. Dzeh nudged Scully toward the furs, his hand pressed firmly against the small of her back. She considered pretending it was Mulder who touched her there, but Dzeh's prodding was more insistent than Mulder's. He wasn't suggesting she step forward; he was almost demanding it. There was no mistaking him for Mulder. She would not be able to close her eyes and imagine it was Mulder who made love to her. Dzeh neither looked nor acted like him. He didn't smell like him either. Mulder's familiar scent reminded her of their office, his apartment, her home; Dzeh's musky odor, on the other hand, made her feel lost in unfamiliar territory. Facing the bed with Dzeh at her elbow, Scully felt her first real pang of foreboding. This was really going to happen, right now. She fought the urge to call out for Mulder's help. The desire was so strong it made her throat ache to hold it in. She was thankful Dzeh didn't expect her to make small talk; there was no way she could utter a single word. Dzeh removed his loincloth and reclined on the furs. He beckoned her to lie beside him. Should she turn and walk out, take the chance that she and Mulder could survive on their own? Or was Mulder already making love to Klizzie, playing by the rules as she'd suggested? She shook the image from her mind. She had no reason to feel jealous. He was doing this for her, at her request, just as she was doing it for him. Dzeh propped himself on one elbow and reached out a hand for her. She watched herself take it, felt herself drawn down beside him, closed her eyes when he unknotted the belt on her fur skirt. She tried to distract herself by recalling a seminar from her FBI training: Mental Preparation for Duty and the Reality of a Critical Confrontation. In the class they'd learned basic self-defense techniques, negotiation and crisis management, the importance of back ups. The last half hour was spent discussing the psychological impact of kidnapping and sexual assault on officers. This wasn't rape, she reminded herself. She was permitting it, to save her life and Mulder's. Dzeh was not a monster. He was a kind man, following the customs of his people. It meant nothing when he kissed her. It meant nothing when he positioned himself between her legs. It meant nothing when he pushed slowly inside her. * * * It is night. Dzeh is gone, Scully realizes. She is still naked. Mulder is naked, too, and is lying on top of her. They are in Mulder's bed, in his apartment. She can smell herbal tea on his breath. She spreads her thighs for him as he shifts his hips and pushes into her. Oh, God, he feels good. "I'm glad God spoke to you," he breathes into her ear as he fills her. Somehow she knows he is talking about her vision. Not the one she had in the cave, but the one in the Buddhist temple. Although...she doesn't know when she was in a Buddhist temple. With Mulder inside her she doesn't care; she wants to experience this astonishing combination of need and satisfaction without question or worry. This is a familiar feeling, yet somehow brand new. She knows she has loved him before...in a cave somewhere, long ago. Yet she also knows this is their first time together as lovers. How can both things be true? Everything happens for a reason, she thinks. He rocks against her, fitting his body more tightly to hers before he begins to glide smoothly in and out of her. "I love you," he sighs. She shuts her eyes against an overwhelming surge of emotion. She loves him, too. She should tell him. The words hang on the tip of her tongue, but before she can say them, she is no longer beneath him. She is in the Lone Gunmen's offices, fully clothed, and Mulder is gone. "I want you guys to tell me who Diana Fowley is," she says to Mulder's friends. The three men are clearly discomfited by her question. Byers finally says, "Diana Fowley? Geez, we haven't heard that name in a while. "Then you know her." "Well...yeeaaah." He says it as if her question is a no- brainer, and yet she really has no idea who this Fowley person is. An image of a dark haired woman, busty and glamorous, comes to mind. Frohike clears his throat. "She was Mulder's chickadee when he first got out of the Academy. Good-looking." Chickadee? Her skin crawls at the idea. "Well, she claims to have worked closely with him for a while." Langly says, "She was there when he discovered the X-Files. She has some kind of background in para-science." Byers adds, "She got a Legat appointment a while back...in Berlin. I always wondered why they split up." Split up? Why has Mulder never mentioned this Fowley person before? Head swimming, Scully retreats from the Gunmen's office only to find herself in the doorway of her own office. Mulder's office. Mulder is sitting at his desk waiting for her. "Come on, Scully. What's the word?" he asks when she enters. She crosses the room and settles a hip against the side of his desk. "Um, Dr. Parenti feels, with the proper approach, there's a good chance for me to become pregnant." She feels nervous and a little giddy, so she fumbles with some pencils he has lined up at the edge of his desk. "He said he could...uh, help me with genetic counseling if I wanted to find an anonymous donor for the baby's father." Mulder nods. "Is that...is that what you plan to do?" "There is another option. I can ask someone I know." She releases the pencils; they roll across the desk like pick-up sticks. "I was thinking of you." She is having another vision, she realizes. The change of scene doesn't frighten her the way it did the first time. But she hasn't been paying attention, looking for clues as to how to get back home. Mulder will ask her later. She looks around now, determined to notice every detail, something to help them, if she can find and remember it. Suddenly she's back in that apartment with the cameras again. Oh, God, no, this is the place where she got shot. The room smells of photographic chemicals. A man is loading film. He tells her "You're very lucky, you know that?" He barely finishes saying this when a bullet pierces her abdomen. Oh, God, the pain is terrible, a shock, buckling her knees, sliding her to the floor. Mulder! Help me, please! She looks down at her stomach and sees blood. Pain rips through her abdomen. Oh God, oh God! "Push. Push, Dana, push!" commands a dark-haired woman Scully has never met. The photographer is gone. Scully is no longer in the camera- filled apartment, but on a bed in a room with a stained glass window. She places a hand on her stomach and discovers it's distended, enormous. She hasn't been shot; she's giving birth! Dozens of faces stare at her. She is screaming, terrified. They want to hurt her. They want to take her baby! Yet in the next breath she is holding her newborn son and her fear is gone. He is one day old and perfect. She is with him in her apartment, on her bed. She could watch him forever. She can't remember ever feeling this happy. When Mulder arrives, she rises from the bed and carries the baby to him. He murmurs to the child, gathers him in his arms, and asks, "What are you going to call him?" "William. After your father." This is Mulder's child. She knows it, feels it. And her heart unburdens itself in that single instant. * * * "Gini," Dzeh whispered to his little sister, "Where is my yea- go stick?" Rummaging through the stores of fur blankets, empty containers, tools and cooking gear in the back of his Uncle Lin's shelter, Dzeh tried to be as quiet as possible so as not to wake the others who still slept around the hearth. Although it was almost sunup, it was dark in the lodge with the door closed. Most of his relatives were sleeping late this morning, recovering from last night's excitement. Gini climbed from her furs to help Dzeh look for his stick. She knelt beside him, eyes still glazed with dreams. He cupped her small cheek. It felt overly warm and he hoped her feverishness was the result of sleeping too near the fire, not a sign of illness. He would send her to the Shaman later today to get a potion, just to be on the prudent side. "Where is Klizzie?" she asked, keeping her voice low. Dzeh let his hand fall away from her cheek. "She is with Muhl-dar." Gini nodded and then set about silently rearranging a pile of unworked hides to gain access to the back of the storage area. Once she had cleared a narrow path, she crawled through. "Why are you not still with Day-nuh?" she asked, her head hidden behind a large travel pack. "Because we are done," he said. He didn't bother to explain they had finished before first birdsong. Day-nuh had been an unresponsive partner. She refused to let him kiss her or bring her to her moment of pleasure. She remained mute and emotionless the entire time, leaving him to consummate their alliance. At least the responsibility was now over and he was grateful Day-nuh had not fought or pulled any more knives on him. "Why are Klizzie and Muhl-dar not finished, too?" Why indeed? Perhaps Klizzie was being more accommodating than Day-nuh had been, pleasuring Muhl-dar twice or even three times. It pleased Dzeh to think his mate was fulfilling her part of the bargain in a proper manner. These newcomers bewildered him. Their strangeness seemed without limits. Muhl-dar's initial objections to the mate- exchange, followed by his outrageous temper last night -- such actions were unheard of among civilized men. How did Eel clansmen build binding partnerships without first trading mates? It was beyond understanding. Day-nuh's lack of enthusiasm confused him every bit as much as Muhl-dar's temper. He had expected to receive a sincere demonstration of conjugal affection from his Trading Partner's mate. But Day-nuh had shown no friendliness whatsoever. The one-sided exchange left him feeling a little cheated. Not that he would complain to Muhl-dar. Such pettiness would be impolite. Insulting even. "You ask too many questions, Little Sister. Prying is unseemly. It is time for you to start behaving more like a grown woman and less like a little girl. How will I find a mate for you if you continue to act like a child who has not learned proper manners?" Gini pulled her head out from between the stores. Her eyebrows peaked with worry. "Klizzie said I do not have to have a mate!" she said, her voice soaring with apprehension. "Hush!" Dzeh pointed to the sleeping family. "You will wake everyone!" Gini clamped a hand over her mouth. Tears pooled in her widened eyes. "Of course you will have a mate," he said, lowering his voice. "Do you expect me to take care of you forever?" She uncovered her mouth, revealing a headstrong scowl. "I will take care of myself," she said, squaring her slim shoulders. "You will hunt for your own meat?" He almost laughed out loud at the idea. "I...yes, I will." "Such foolish notions prove you have much growing to do." Gini needed to be taught the proper ways of adults, and the sooner the better. Klizzie had babied the girl too long. "We will take our meals with Klizzie's Aunt Ho-Ya today," he announced, ready to begin Gini's education as soon as possible. "Why?" Gini's round face paled. "So you can become acquainted with her son Chal." He shifted several empty baskets out of his way and resumed his search for his yea-go stick. "The boy showed courage during the mastodon hunt. He knows how to make serviceable spear points. He might be an acceptable mate for you." "But--" Tears spilled down Gini's cheeks at this news. She jumped to her feet and, without even bothering to ask her brother's leave, she ran from the hut. Dzeh would have called her back and disciplined her if he could have done so without waking the others. Instead he simply sighed and continued hunting for his stick. He wasn't really a hard-hearted man; it weighed heavily on him to see his little sister in distress. But he was also a man who had experienced the harshness of the world. He had witnessed many bleak seasons, times of starvation and hardship. Gini was too young to remember such suffering. She didn't know that their own mother had been weakened by hunger when she began her last labor. The Spirits had taken her that awful night, leaving Gini an orphan. Dzeh recalled the moment like yesterday. He knew his sister needed a strong, skilled man to provide her with food and protection. Life was a difficult enough path when a family walked together; it was impossible for one who walked alone. He caught sight of his yea-go stick and tugged it out from beneath his uncle's fishing gear. The rawhide yea-go ball was tucked inside the stick's leather well. He hefted it, testing its familiar weight and then he brought the leather ball to his nose. Ahhh, the smell made him long to be on the playing field. Soon enough. Turtle Clan would arrive this morning, which meant the yea-go matches could begin. * * * The sun crested the blue-black mountains in the east and cast a golden glow into the valley, turning the lake molten, gilding the trees, and striping the land with hard-edged shadows. From the reeds along the lakeshore to the uppermost branches of the butternut trees, grackles, jays and ducks cawed and quacked, their raucous morning ritual announcing the dawn. Mulder paced outside Scully's hut, the same way he had paced outside Klizzie's only an hour earlier. His stomach was in knots. He combed his fingers repeatedly through his hair. Worry creased his brow. The sun wasn't fully up yet, which meant Dzeh might still be inside with Scully. *That* would be more than he could bear. He wished this whole mate-swap thing would fade like this morning's mist, never to come up again. He paused in his pacing to cock an ear toward the shelter. He heard nothing from inside, no conversation, no masculine snore, no cries...or grunts...of ecstasy. All good signs. Even so, he was reluctant to enter. Most of the village was still sleeping, exhausted from yesterday's feasting and long night of celebration...not to mention Mulder's early morning rampage. A few women were up and about, stirring communal cook-fires, bringing the glowing coals to life. A couple meandered toward the lake. They were nude and carried soap roots, combs and furs. They pretended to ignore Mulder as they walked past with heads bowed, as if too intent on their own low conversation to notice him. He caught their sly, sidelong glances. "Hey," he said, lifting a hand to give them a half-hearted wave. "Nice morning." They frowned and hurried on their way. No pleasing some people. He'd played by their rules...sort of...and yet he was still being treated like an outsider. Disgusted, he turned and entered the hut. Inside he found Scully -- and only Scully, thank God -- curled on the sleeping skins with her back to the door. The fire had burned out, but daylight from the open door made it bright enough for him to see she was wearing his leather jacket. The coat was several sizes too big, of course, and the sleeves extended beyond her wrists, hiding her hands. Her legs were bare, knees drawn up. She looked lost in his coat, small and vulnerable. The hut smelled like sex, hers mixed with the musky odor of male sweat and semen. Mulder's stomach knotted tighter. He considered turning and walking away. If he were back home he'd quell his nervous stomach by jogging until his legs cramped and his lungs ached. He'd expel his overwrought emotions by sweating them out. It would be a relief to empty his mind while concentrating on the rhythmic slap, slap of his feet on concrete. He could almost smell the car exhaust prickling his nose, hear the blare of horns, feel himself bouncing in place while he waited for the crosswalk light to change. God, what he wouldn't give right now for a decent pair of running shoes and five miles of city sidewalk. Letting the shelter door fall shut behind him, he crossed to the bed and knelt beside her. He reached out to gently stroke her bare hip. "Scully?" he said softly. She sniffled at his touch and rolled over to look at him. Oh Christ, she was crying. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her lashes and cheeks wet with tears. Rage washed through him in waves at the sight, battering his frazzled nerves and threatening to steal the last shreds of his control. What had that fucking Neanderthal done to her? Unable to ask the question, he gathered her into his arms intending to let her cry herself out. But she didn't bury her face against his chest as he thought she might. She surprised him by smiling up at him. "Scully?" "I had another vision," she said, sounding breathless and excited. Her tears weren't tears of grief, but of joy. Mulder found himself struggling to switch gears. "W-When?" "Just now. A few minutes ago." He brushed his palm over the jacket she wore. His fingers itched to reach into the pocket and touch the carved idol he knew was there. "Tell me," he urged. "I was pregnant." "Pregnant?" He hadn't expected this. "I gave birth to a baby. A boy." Questions swirled through his mind. How? Where? When? Who? "When did this, uh, event take place?" he asked, deciding to ease into his questions, beginning with the least personal. "I don't know. There was a woman with me. A dark haired woman. I've never seen her before. I think she was an FBI agent." An FBI agent in the maternity ward? That was odd. "Where--" He paused to clear his throat. His mouth felt as dry as the Utah desert. "Where did you have this...your baby?" "I'm not sure. I was in a room with a stained glass window. I was afraid." "Afraid? Why?" She shook her head. "But then you came and everything was fine." Her smile widened. He rarely saw her smile this way. It softened her face, made her look younger, less like a seasoned agent. He would cut off both arms to be able to put that smile on her face every day. "He was beautiful," she said in a dreamy voice. "So perfect." "The baby?" "Yes. I named him William." She shifted in his arms, snuggling against him like a satisfied cat. "After your father?" he asked, feeling stupid because of course it would be after her father. "No. After yours. The baby was yours, Mulder." Whoa, whoa, whoa...not possible. Not in this lifetime. "Are you sure?" he asked, spotting a smear of drying semen on her upper thigh. The knot in his stomach was reaching critical mass; he was on the verge of losing last night's supper. Her beautiful smile faded. "Yes, I'm sure." She pulled away from him. "Well, it's just..." He gestured at her leg. "Isn't it possible--?" "No. The baby was yours, Mulder." "How do you know? How can you be sure?" "Because you agreed to the IVF procedure, for one thing." "In vitro fertilization?" He was having trouble keeping up. This was too confusing, too outlandish. His emotions were seesawing. Jealousy, fear, rage, bewilderment...he couldn't get his bearings. "Why IVF?" Her frown deepened. "In case you've forgotten, I happen to be infertile." Jesus, I can be such an idiot, he thought. Of course she would need IVF. Her expression changed again, from irritation to apprehension. "Mulder, what you said, back in the field, about me using you to get pregnant--" "Scully, I was upset. I shouldn't have said that." "Shouldn't have," she repeated softly, looking down. "But you meant it, didn't you?" "Scully..." He shook his head. Yes, he'd meant it but only in an insecure, thoughtless way. He truly didn't believe she would try to trick him into getting her pregnant. She was the most honest, forthright person he'd ever known. It wasn't in her character to be devious. He'd been projecting his past relationship with Diana onto his current one with her. Assuming they still had a relationship. Scully looked ready to flee. And he felt ready to run in the opposite direction. She rose and for a moment he thought she was going to leave, but she crossed the hut to get the water bag. She used it to sluice her thigh while scrubbing the dried semen from her leg with her fingers. When she finished washing, she turned to face him. "I want you to be honest with me," she said. "Always," he said, knowing this was a lie but wishing it weren't. It wasn't that he liked lying to her; it was just sometimes it seemed more prudent to keep the truth to himself, for her sake as much as for his own. She cleared her throat before pinning him with a stare. "Mulder, who is Diana Fowley?" x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER TWELVE "D-Diana Fowley?" Mulder asked in what he hoped was a neutral tone of voice. He remained frozen in place, kneeling on the sleeping skins and staring up at Scully as she rinsed the last traces of Dzeh's ejaculate from her thighs. His stomach rolled at the sight and he clenched his jaws against the sting of bile at the back of his throat. Damn it, didn't they have more important things to discuss than Diana? Like what Dzeh had done to Scully. She set down the waterbag and stepped around the fireless hearth. Mulder's jacket hung loosely across her hunched shoulders, engulfing her small frame. She paused at the edge of the bed to take a swipe at her wet, bare thighs, trying to dry herself with one dangling sleeve. "Do you know her?" she asked, pressing him for an answer. He nervously rubbed his palms up and down his own naked thighs. His tongue felt as gritty as the cooling ash in the hearth. "Uh...in what context?" "In any context," she said. "Do you know her or not?" "Well, yes." His head bobbed. "But it was a long time ago." "And...?" "And...we worked together." He shrugged, hoping to end the conversation. This was not an appropriate time for true confessions about his failed marriage. He wanted to hear about Scully; he wanted to find out if she was all right after sleeping with Dzeh. "When you were in ISU?" she persisted. "No, on the X-Files." She must be purposely avoiding the topic of the mate-exchange, he decided, which meant the experience was worse than she'd anticipated. Damn it, she'd seemed so calm back on the hill, touting logical arguments, urging him to go along. It suddenly struck him that her composure must have been an act, deliberately feigned to save his life and safeguard his feelings. The realization settled painfully into the pit of his stomach. It would be just like her to do whatever it took to protect him. He had no doubt she would put herself at risk for him, just as she was trained to do...as they were both trained to do. Shit, why hadn't he responded with equal valor? While she'd willingly sacrificed herself for him, he'd done nothing to protect her. He'd let himself be persuaded without thinking the situation through, without considering every possible alternative. Why had he been so quick to agree? To save her life? Or had he been overly eager to save his own sorry ass? His hands began to tremble and he felt swamped with regret and self-loathing. His negligence -- or worse, his damn egocentric instincts -- had clouded his judgment. As a result, he'd allowed this terrible thing to happen. "Scully--" "I didn't know you had another partner on the X-Files," she continued. "Uh...yeah, for a couple of years. She left for a foreign terrorism assignment in Europe. But--" Mulder scrubbed his chin with his palm as he tried to figure out what he should say next. He wanted to ask about Dzeh, but was uncertain if Scully was trying to spare his feelings, the same way she'd done on the hill, or guard her own. It was possible she wasn't emotionally ready to talk about what happened. And if that were the case, he didn't want to push her. He'd already caused her enough hurt. Then again, he wasn't ready to launch into the truth about Diana either. No doubt he should have mentioned her to Scully years ago, but the subject hadn't seemed relevant in the early years of their partnership. And now it was so far beyond relevant he didn't know the best way to approach it. How do you start a conversation with your lover about an ex- wife anyway? How 'bout those Yankees, Scully, and by the way I was once married. That didn't sound quite right. He decided to dodge the issue for now by repeating, "It was a long time ago." "So you said." She knelt in front of him, her knees almost touching his. The hut was warm, yet Mulder shivered as if chilled to the bone. He wanted to reach out and take her in his arms, to comfort her as well as himself. The urge to touch her was almost overwhelming, unbearable, but he fought it and kept his hands anchored to his thighs, guessing that she didn't need any more manhandling at the moment. Especially from him, the asshole who'd given Dzeh permission to have his way with her. Jesus, how could he have condoned such a repugnant act? Did Scully blame him for abandoning her to Dzeh, for putting her in danger, for bringing her here in the first place? She should. He blamed himself. How could he not? He was responsible for all of it. He desperately wanted to set things right, get them back home, away from the tribe's abhorrent customs, out of the damn Ice Age. But he had no clue where to begin, other than Scully's visions, which he wasn't a hundred percent convinced were visions. Although...she had learned about Diana from them. "Was Dian -- Agent Fowley in your dream?" "It was a vision, Mulder, not a dream." "Fine. Was Agent Fowley in your vision?" "Yes, indirectly." "Indirectly...what does that mean?" "The Gunmen mentioned her. They were wondering why you two broke up." Don't tell her, do *not* tell, he thought. Not right now. Not while he was misreading her, missing important clues, messing up. Scully tightened his jacket around her, hugging her arms across her chest. He pictured the carved idol hidden in its pocket. She had been holding it when she experienced her first revelation. And it was with her again during the second. As much as he believed in magic and the supernatural, right now he felt torn about the idol's potential power. On the one hand, it could represent a way home. On the other, it seemed to be forecasting a future he found unlikely and undesirable. Sam's death at age fourteen. His supposed relief at learning about it. Scully's pregnancy, the birth of her baby, *his* baby. His willingness to participate in an IVF procedure. It was difficult to reconcile these improbable events. They ran contrary to some of his deepest wishes. And yet Scully had learned about Diana somehow. She'd developed that new scar on her abdomen, physical proof that her vision was more than a figment of her imagination. He suddenly felt bone-tired. Days of hiking and going without food, yesterday's hunt and the events of last night had exhausted his strength. His worries about Scully and Dzeh and her visions were expending the last of his diminished energy. He could barely keep his head up. "Scully...can we...do you mind if we lie down?" She glanced suspiciously at the furs before searching his face. Whatever she was hoping to find in his expression must have been there, because she lowered herself onto the bed, facing him. He settled beside her, careful not to touch her; he preferred to wait for her to take the lead and reach out to him. When she did, putting her arms around him, he melted into her embrace, overwhelmed by her capacity to forgive him. Tears flooded his eyes and he hid them by pressing his face into the crease of her neck. He held his breath against crying, fearful his lack of restraint would disgust her even more than his earlier acts of cowardice. He felt unremitting remorse for his failure to prevent Dzeh's sexual assault and knew he would never forgive himself for his role in it. Unlike him, Scully was bearing the brunt of his folly with her usual sangfroid. He'd honestly expected to find her physically and emotionally altered by her experience: face red with grief, hair disheveled, bruises on her hands and arms where she'd tried to fight off Dzeh's unwelcome advances. Yet she appeared as self- possessed as ever. Her composure shouldn't come as a surprise, he realized. She'd been practicing it for years. Half a decade with the FBI's good ol' boys had hardened her until now, twelve thousand years from Bureau paradigms and the prying eyes of her colleagues and superiors, she was still clinging to her customary stoicism. You don't have anything to prove, he wanted to tell her. You surpassed them all long ago. You surpassed me, too. He pulled back and looked at her with tear-filled eyes. "I know it's not our usual MO, Scully, but talk to me. Please." She stroked his face, inspiring a painful lump in his throat. "There's nothing to say, Mulder. Really." "Noth-- You just gave yourself to a caveman, for Christ's sake." "I didn't *give* anything," she said, bristling. "I participated in a tribal ritual. So did you." No, actually he hadn't...and that little fact would be another of the many unspoken truths between them. He tentatively ran a finger over her coat sleeve. "It had to affect you," he whispered. "Why? Why did it have to affect me?" "How could it not?" His eyes searched her face. "You made love to another man." "I did not. I kept us alive." Color rose in her cheeks. "Are you saying your...encounter with Klizzie affected you?" His hand stopped its rhythmic caress. "No...I'm...It's different for me," he said, skirting the truth. "Because you're a man?" "Yes, because I'm a man." "Tell me what difference that makes," she challenged. "It's...it's less invasive for me." "You think I was 'invaded'?" "Don't you?" Her focus fell away. "My body...maybe...yes," she murmured, sounding sad and momentarily vulnerable. She looked up and pinned him with a determined stare. "But not *me*." There's a difference? he wanted to ask, but bit his lip against the words, trying instead to put himself in her place, to think the way she might be thinking...not as a victim of a sexual assault, but as Scully, his strong, logic-minded partner. "I don't buy it, Scully. You weren't given a choice--" "We were backed into a corner, Mulder, *both* of us, but no one held a gun to our heads." "The gun was metaphorical. We were forced...and that had to be worse for you." "Mulder, I wasn't raped. I allowed it to happen." Clearly she believed she'd made the emotional leap from the mores of 1998 to the tribe's loathsome prehistoric customs, but she would have to face the truth eventually and when that happened, she'd feel the same turmoil he was feeling now. "Is Klizzie okay?" she suddenly asked. "Is *Klizzie* okay? Shit, Scully." Why did she care what Klizzie was feeling? "Yes. Of course. She's fine." "I just wondered if she was feeling 'invaded.'" Now it was his turn to look away. "No," he said, managing to keep his voice steady. "I don't think she's feeling... No." "Then there's no reason for you to think I'm not okay, is there?" Yes, there is, he thought. "That's not an apt comparison," he said, still not able to look her in the eye. "Why not?" "Because this is her culture, her rules." "Rules by which we must abide as long as we're here." He didn't want to argue with her. Not now. He wanted to hold her, feel her skin, taste her lips, convince himself she was okay. He wanted to wrap his arms around her, keep her safe. He wanted to make up for all the hurt he'd caused. "Scully, are you sure--" "I'm fine, Mulder. Drop it, please. Go to sleep. That's what I plan to do." Her expression hardened; she was steeling herself, avoiding the full impact of her emotions by putting her back up against a wall of logic, the same way she'd done after her father's death and her sister's and Emily's, after her abduction and after her cancer. This was her way of coping; he'd seen it countless times. She closed her eyes, effectively shutting him out. He decided not to push; he would drop it for now, silently promising to be there when she finally did need him, vowing to do better than he'd done earlier. He would watch out for her best interests, not his. He would, he swore it. Reluctantly, he closed his eyes. Almost immediately he fell fast sleep. * * * Gini ran as hard as her legs could carry her. Tears blurred her vision as she raced through wet, waist-high grass, heading upland toward the summit of Crouching Cat Mountain. Morning mist, tinted silvery-gold by the rising sun, swirled in her wake like angry Spirits. Her heart pounded in her chest. She could hear nothing but her ragged breathing and the memory of Dzeh's dreadful words: "Of course you will have a mate. Do you expect me to take care of you forever?" "No, no, no," she chanted through clenched teeth. More tears flooded her eyes. Three quarters of the way to the top of the hill, she felt the jab of spear points in her sides. Her thighs burned like hot coals. Out of breath, she threw herself to the ground to weep into the crook of her arm. Flower blossoms heavy with dew hid her from prying eyes and helped cool her overheated skin. Her body shook with outrage and dread as she cried. At this moment she hated Dzeh. He was cruel beyond belief. Couldn't he see she did not want to move away from her home and family? And what did he mean when he said *he* took care of *her*? It was the other way around! Did he not notice the way she was always helping Klizzie, cooking *his* meals and sewing *his* clothes and tending *his* hearth? If he would only open his eyes he would see how often she gathered food, scraped hides, dried meat, fetched wood, carried supplies from one camp to the next. The work was endless! He was not being fair. She had done everything he had ever asked and yet he still wanted to send her away to live with a stranger, a stupid boy who was rude and ugly and mean...almost as mean as Dzeh himself! It would serve her brother right if she went away to live with another clan. Then he would see exactly how much he missed her. "Help me find my yea-go stick, Gini." "Fetch my tool kit." "Pour my tea." "Bring me another plate of meat." He would surely suffer if she were gone. Right now she wished a saber-toothed cat would come and eat her up. That would solve all her problems. Dzeh would be rid of her and she would not have to go live with Chal. Then Dzeh would be sorry that he treated her so badly. When he found nothing but her bones and her bloody tunic, he would be the one crying. Then he would have to tell the entire Clan how sad he was to have lost his sister -- the girl who did everything for him, who loved him with all her heart even though he was mean, mean, mean. One day he would regret the unfeeling things he had said. He would wish he'd never mentioned sending her away. * * * "Klizzie?" Dzeh crouched beside the furs and gently tickled his mate's bare shoulder. "Wake up." When she didn't stir, he leaned closer, putting his lips to her ear. He blew across the outer ridges, nibbled her lobe, then whispered, "It is after sunup, my mate." She groaned with dissatisfaction, squeezed her eyes shut more tightly and curled onto her side in a ball. He slid beneath the blankets behind her. "Did my Trading Partner tire you out?" He chuckled and nuzzled her neck. Breathing her womanly scent, he felt himself growing hard. She smelled nice, like the perfumed oil she often wore. Overlaying her feminine fragrance Dzeh detected a more masculine odor, too, very faint along her shoulders, at the nape of her neck. He let his nose guide him down her spine, knowing this musky odor must be Muhl-dar's. Giving Klizzie to his Trading Partner had not been easy for Dzeh. Mate exchange required a leap of faith in the best of times and Dzeh's trust had been razed four summers ago when his former Trading Partner took Klizzie to his bed. Remembering those fiery days still caused coals to burn in his stomach. It was beyond reason that a man would mate with his own kin. Klesh's actions were reprehensible, the worst contravention imaginable. All civilized men knew the Spirits imparted traditions and taboos for the good of the Clan. Only a fool would flout the rules, risking the fury of the Spirits and endangering the lives of his family. A reliable Trading Partner was intended to be a blessing. Partnerships turned the stone mountains that often divided clans into mists, allowing men to walk freely in hostile territories, help each other in times of need. This was the reason Dzeh was willing to take a gamble with Muhl-dar. There was much to gain if the stranger from Eel Clan was a man of honor and status. If he turned out to be as contemptible as Klesh, however, there was everything to lose. Dzeh thought back to his dream about Muhl-dar, the vision he had recounted days ago to the elders in Tsa-ond Cave. In it, stormy skies calmed when an invisible female spirit transformed Snake Spirit's terrible lightning bolt into a fog of harmless cottonwood seed. The female Spirit blew the downy seeds away. Then she stole Muhl-dar away, too, and the people of Owl Clan had been very sad to see him go. Parts of the dream had frightened him; Klizzie was missing and he could think of nothing more dreadful than that. And yet the vision was hopeful, too. Muhl-dar had saved the Clan from the vengeful snake-man. Whether the vision turned out to be true or not, Dzeh's partnership with Muhl-dar was already made; the formality of the mate-exchange now bound them like brothers. And overall, Dzeh felt relieved by their relationship. He had gone too long without a partner. Thank the Spirits the last four years had not been too arduous; the Clan had needed to ask for assistance from neighboring clans only twice, when winter stores had run low and hunger squeezed their empty bellies. Thanks to the generosity of Lin's Trading Partner in Bear Clan, no one in Owl Clan had been lost. Dzeh took a deep breath, pressing his nose into the soft flesh of Klizzie's hip. Yes, he could smell his Trading Partner there; Muhl-dar must have taken her from behind. Thinking of the Eel stranger on his mate's back made Dzeh want to take her in that fashion, too. He became rock hard at the thought of Klizzie beneath Muhl-dar, her back arched, her braids swaying and her breasts jouncing with each of his thrusts. She would still be wet inside from her earlier mating, slicked with a mixture of Muhl-dar's essence and her own juices. It pleased Dzeh to know she had pleasured his Trading Partner, strengthening their bond. He slid a hand around her waist, spreading his palm across the gentle swell of her abdomen. Her skin was smooth, warm. He dipped his hand lower, sliding a finger between her folds. She rolled toward him, eyes dark with passion. Withdrawing his caress, he whispered, "I want to take you from behind. Like a stallion with his mare." Her eyes widened a little, but she complied, turning over to position herself on hands and knees in front of him. She was beautiful. Her skin was as polished as a river stone and the color of ripe acorns. Her curves reminded him of the undulating hills around Small Wind Lake where they met at the Mastodon Feast four years ago. She had been a woman just out of girlhood, only fourteen Feasts old. She had crept into his heart the instant he cast eyes on her. And for the first time in many lonely seasons, he had no longer felt the awful ache left by the passing of his first mate. Young Klizzie had reawakened the Spirits in him. Feeling the same rush of desire for her now as on that wonderful summer day four years ago, Dzeh moved behind her, nudging her knees apart with his own. His erection stood straight out, eager to plunge into her. "Ready, my mate?" he whispered. She glanced over her shoulder at him, setting her braids into motion. The clatter of her beads caused the hairs on his arms to rise. His legs went numb at the sight of her liquid eyes. Mother Earth, how he loved this woman. She was his delight, his companion, his hearth-mate. He could think of nothing he wanted more than to be here with her, inside her. Hands on her hips, he pressed slowly into her. She was pliant and snug, although not as slick as he had expected her to be. His head swam with pleasure as he pushed more deeply into her. A quiet growl hummed in the back of his throat. Bowing over her, his chest pressing against her back, he balanced himself on one arm, so as not to burden her with his weight. With his free hand, he groped her right breast, tugging her hardened nipple and squeezing her soft flesh. He began to thrust, making her moan. Her soft cries excited him, urging him to quicken his pace. The smell of her sex prickled his nose. This felt wonderful; she felt wonderful. Had Muhl-dar thought so, too, when he was inside her? Had he brought Klizzie to her moment of pleasure before hurrying to his own? Releasing her breast, Dzeh slid his hand between her legs, his fingers searching for her ulh-ne-ih. She gasped when he found it. "No, Dzeh. Please. I cannot," she suddenly begged. He halted his thrusts and removed his hand from between her legs. "What is the matter, Klizzie?" "I..." She was trembling beneath him, so he withdrew from her and turned her around to face him. "You must tell me," he murmured. She hid her eyes behind lowered lashes. "It is...bad. I have done something shameful." "Shameful? What is it?" "You will be angry." A tear slipped down her cheek. "You will no longer want me as your mate." He doubted that. What could she possibly say that would steal away his love for her? He caressed her face, wiping her tears with his thumb. "Tell me," he urged. Clinging to her totem, she drew a deep, shuddering breath. "I have lied to you," she whispered. Shame crept up her neck and face, reddening her skin. Her hands trembled. She bit her lower lip to still its quivering. He couldn't imagine what would make her so afraid of him. He rarely became angry...at her or at anyone. Not once in four years had he struck her the way some men did to their mates. She'd never given him a reason to hit or scold her...ever. And even if she had, he doubted very much he would react with such ferocity. So why was she quaking like a startled hare now? "What lie, my mate?" he asked, uncertain he wanted to hear her answer. Clearly she didn't want to tell him. She swallowed hard. Tears overflowed her lashes again, painting wet trails down both cheeks. "He...he did not..." Her voice was so faint and meek, Dzeh needed to lean forward to hear her. "Who, Klizzie?" he asked. Did this have anything to do with Muhl-dar and the mate exchange? "Who did not do what?" "Klesh. Klesh did not...force me." A hive of bees awoke in Dzeh's stomach at the mention of Klesh's name. His hand dropped away from Klizzie's cheek. What did she mean he did not force her? "Force you to do what?" he asked, his voice a hoarse whisper. The question scoured his throat like a breath of wood ash. "He...he offered me a hair ornament in exchange for the night on his sleeping skins." Dzeh could not believe his ears! "And you agreed?" he asked, incredulous. Please, deny it, he silently begged. Tell me you argued with him and you fought him. Tell me it was only because he overpowered you that you submitted. Please, Klizzie, please, don't tell me you allowed this to happen. Her shoulders slumped and her chin fell to her chest. "Klizzie, he is your cousin!" It was an outrage...the most contemptible act imaginable. Even at age fourteen she would have known this. "Dzeh, I am...so sorry." She was crying openly now, her hands twisting nervously in her lap. The angry bees in Dzeh's stomach began to sting him and he thought he might throw up. Klizzie had done this loathsome thing of her own volition...for a silly hair ornament. "Why did you not tell me this before?" he shouted, surprised by the roar of his voice across his tongue. Klizzie jumped at his shout. She opened her mouth, but no words came out. The only sound in the hut was the rattle of her beads as she ducked her head, cringing as if she expected a rain of blows on her back. He rose to his feet, fists clenched in anger. His heart hammered inside his chest. Spinning on his heel, he lunged for the door. "Dzeh? Where are you going? What will you do?" she asked, her voice watery with tears. "I do not know," he growled and pushed through the door, leaving her to cry alone. * * * As soon as Mulder fell asleep, Scully rose from the furs, intending to take a bath in the lake. She wanted to scour away all traces of Dzeh from her skin. Quietly, she located a soap root and her clothes: her jeans and turtleneck, not the garments Klizzie had given her. She didn't want anything that had belonged to the tribe touching her skin...not now, not yet. She preferred instead to wrap herself in the familiar, which was why she'd put on Mulder's jacket the moment Dzeh left her. She'd wanted to lose herself in Mulder's comforting scent. Cocooned in his coat she felt less alone, less afraid. She hugged the coat around her now and looked down at Mulder, asleep in a tangle of furs. He was lying on his back, his face half-hidden beneath one upraised arm, his fingers curled into a loose fist. A soft snore whirred in his throat. She watched his chest rise and fall and silently she counted his steady breaths just as she'd done almost three weeks ago when he'd been so ill. She'd nearly lost him then. She might have lost him last night, too, when he challenged death again by refusing to cooperate with the tribe. Didn't he realize how much she needed him? Especially here. He had no right to risk himself for the sake of his irrelevant 20th Century code of ethics. Their modern-day values were utterly meaningless in this Ice Age world. These people had no way to understand or appreciate their foreign concepts of honor, principles of morality that were tied to a time still thousands of years in the future. She and Mulder needed to play by a set of older, less familiar rules now, to stay alive, to get back to their real place in history, to the life she'd foreseen in her vision. Reminded of her vision, she once again imagined the small weight of her infant son cradled in her arms, the milky feel of his skin beneath her lips, the downy softness of his hair as she ran a palm across the crown of his head. Closing her eyes, she could hear him suckle at her breast, feel the pull of his mouth on her nipple as he drew sustenance from her. He was a miracle and it didn't matter to her how or when he came into being; her love for him was already so strong it stole her breath away. She opened her eyes and let her teary gaze settle on Mulder's bearded face. This man would one day be the father of her baby... "If I can keep you alive long enough to get you back home," she whispered. Letting him sleep, she left the shelter with clothes in hand. She headed for the lake, but changed her direction when she saw how many tribespeople were already there. She didn't feel ready to mingle with them...not yet. Wanting to cleanse her spirit as much as her body, she decided to climb the hill that overlooked the lake; at the summit, she would pray to God for His guidance. He had allowed her to see an angel not too long ago, during the Kernoff case; maybe He would show her the right path to take here. Limping through knee-high grass, she climbed slowly. The rising sun cast her shadow into her path like a blackened corpse. Her sprained ankle pained her. It was irresponsible to hike on it, she knew, but at the same time she was grateful for the way it distracted her from the raw ache between her legs. Scully hadn't been ready for Dzeh's invasive intimacy. As much as she'd tried to close off her mind and relax her body, she'd been tense and the act had been uncomfortable. Thankfully, it hadn't lasted long; he'd thrust only a few times, ejaculated and then quickly withdrew. Had Mulder's performance been equally brief? Don't think about it, she told herself. It's over now. It doesn't matter what happened. Unless... Klizzie became pregnant as a result of her union with Mulder. God, please, not that, she silently prayed. The consequences would be devastating. A baby would anchor Mulder to this prehistoric world. He would never agree to abandon his child to strangers...would he? Glancing over her shoulder to gauge the distance she'd come, she was momentarily blinded by the glare of the sun. She lifted an arm to shade her face and gaze down into the valley. The lake glittered like a shattered mirror between the ranges of bruise-colored mountains. A ghostly mist hovered over the water. Sounds from the village floated feebly up the hillside: the wail of a baby, a mother's concerned call, an unidentifiable hammering that reminded Scully of a too fast heartbeat. Overhead, a battalion of tin-colored clouds marched toward the rising sun, as if intending to ambush and capture it. Gray and menacing, they reminded her of a similar sky on a June day in Denver eight years ago...the last day she saw Daniel. She'd asked Daniel to meet her in the atrium outside UCH's cafeteria and had bought sandwiches from the vending machine for their lunch. He was late, as usual, but she hadn't been hungry anyway; her stomach was tied in knots because she was planning to tell him goodbye. She'd decided to leave her medical career, and him, to join the FBI. She doubted he would understand her desire to switch from medicine to law enforcement. No doubt he would infer her motives were fueled by the complications of their personal relationship. With Daniel, everything was about him. "I'm late," he announced without apology when he appeared at her small table. Sliding into the seat opposite her, he didn't reach for her hand or lean in to kiss her. Too many people at the hospital knew his wife Barbara, who spearheaded several very successful fundraising projects for the auxiliary. "I can't stay," he said. "This for me?" He pointed to one of the sandwiches. She nodded and pushed the turkey club across the sunlit table. He unwrapped it and took a hearty bite. "What's up?" he asked, between mouthfuls. "I'm leaving," she said without preamble. He stopped chewing, but only for a moment. "What do you mean you're leaving?" "I'm joining the FBI. I'm flying to Washington on Friday." "The FBI?" A laugh chuffed from his nose and his eyes clouded with disapproval. "You're running away from me." "This isn't about you, Daniel." "No? You expect me to believe the FBI is more alluring than a career in medicine? It's an excuse, Dana." To some degree, he was right. He scared her with his unyielding passion -- for medicine, for her, for his secretive double life. She admired his relentless dedication to his patients and to his profession; he was a brilliant doctor and she couldn't deny she was attracted to him. But Daniel Waterston required everything his way, and she saw little room for her in his already overcrowded life. He had a wife, a daughter. An affair with him would lead to nothing but heartache for them all. "If you stay, Dana, I can help you with your career," he said. "There's an open--" "No. Thank you. I can make my own way." "The only thing you're making is a mistake." He rewrapped what was left of his sandwich. "You'll regret it." "I might. But I would regret staying more." Already her heart was aching over the loss of him, yet she knew she mustn't show it. Any sign of waffling would launch him into an argument, one he was sure to win because she loved him, and he knew exactly how much. It would take so little for him to convince her to stay. She couldn't allow that to happen; she couldn't be responsible for the breakup of his family. Their needs outweighed hers. He rose from his chair, dusted the crumbs from his trousers and leaned across the table. In front of the entire crowded dining room, he planted a passionate kiss on her lips. It was the first time he'd ever risked his position and reputation for her sake. When he finally pulled away, he said, "Stay, Dana. Forget this FBI nonsense." Still feeling the press of his lips on hers, she blinked back tears and tried to find her voice. She shook her head. "I'm sorry, Daniel." "So am I," he said, sounding sincere. She saw real pain in his eyes before he turned from the table and walked away. She sat there for several minutes, blinking away tears, eyes turned toward the atrium's glass ceiling. The sky darkened as clouds overtook the sun, their surprise attack mirroring the swirl of emotion inside her chest. Turning away from her memory of that day, Scully continued her uphill climb. She sought solace as she walked by reciting the 23rd Psalm. "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want..." Her hand went automatically to her throat, searching for her cross and the comfort it brought her. She was seized with fresh anxiety when she remembered it was no longer there, that it was in the possession of the scarred man...or lost. "He makes me lie down in green pastures," she continued. "He leads me beside still waters; He restores--" Thinking she heard the sound of muffled crying, she paused and held her breath to listen. Sure enough, somewhere up ahead, hidden by tall grass, someone was weeping as if her heart would break. Scully aimed for the sad sound, hobbling as fast as she could and trying to ignore the pain in her ankle. "Hello," she called as she hiked, still unable to see who was crying. "Are you all right?" Then she saw her, little Gini, stretched out on her belly in a well of trampled grass. At the sound of Scully's voice, Gini stopped her hiccoughing sobs and lifted her head to mop tears from her eyes with her fists. "Sweetie, what's the matter?" Scully asked. Setting the things she carried on the ground, she knelt beside the girl and gently rubbed her back, coaxing her to sit up. "Are you hurt?" Gini launched into a long teary explanation, none of which Scully could understand, except for the word "Dzeh." "Come here," she invited, indicating her lap. Gini didn't hesitate. She slid into Scully's lap, her tears starting up all over again when Scully wrapped her in a hug. "It can't be as bad as that, can it?" she asked, smoothing the girl's hair away from her fiery cheeks. She planted a kiss on the crown of her dark head. "Shhhh, it'll be fine." They sat like that for several minutes while Gini cried herself out, her wet face pressed into Mulder's coat, her narrow shoulders shaking within the loose circle of Scully's arms. Scully rubbed her back, soothing the girl's nerves. Comforting Gini reminded her of William. She pictured him again, snug in her arms, blond and blue-eyed, with Mulder's pouty mouth and curious stare. She ached to hold him and satisfied her desire by rocking Gini instead. Closing her eyes against the Pleistocene landscape, she conjured up her most recent vision: her bedroom, William, Mulder walking toward them, his eyes glistening with pride and love. The image was so real she swore she could hear the sounds of traffic outside her window, smell the baby's powdery scent, even taste the flavor of decaf coffee from the cup on her nightstand. "Day-nuh?" Gini was no longer crying. She was patting Scully's arm to get her attention. "You're a mess," Scully said, looking down at the girl's tear- streaked face. She dug Mulder's handkerchief from his coat pocket, wiped Gini's cheeks, and then held the cloth to her nose. "Blow," she said, crinkling her nose and demonstrating a quick, gentle blow. Gini understood and snuffled into the handkerchief, then watched with curiosity as Scully tucked it away again. When she withdrew Mulder's binoculars, the girl's eyes widened. "Look through here," Scully said, holding the glasses to her face. Gini peered through them at the lake and gasped. She turned to stare at Scully in wonder. "Nih-tsa-goh-al-neh," she said, breathless with excitement. "Nih-tsa-goh-al-neh!" "Pretty interesting, huh?" She handed Gini the binoculars. The girl leapt to her feet and, pivoting 360 degrees, she inspected the mountaintops, the faraway forest, the clouds, the village, the lake. She chattered nonstop as she looked, pointing a stubby finger and squealing at each new view. Spinning around twice more, she became so dizzy, she toppled and landed with a giggle on her backside in the grass. Scully smiled at her exuberance. "Cha! Cha!" Gini said. She pointed to a large beaver lodge on the northeast shore of the lake and indicated she wanted Scully to look at it through the binoculars. That began a back and forth game of looking and naming various objects, trading words for each. Scully found it fairly easy to remember most of Gini's words and phrases; she'd always had an aptitude for languages. The girl seemed to share her ability. When they'd finally exhausted the most obvious landmarks, Scully rose to her feet and gathered her things. "What do you say, you and I go down to the lake to get cleaned up, hmm?" she said. "You hang onto the binoculars for now." "Bi-nok-a-lurs," Gini repeated, grinning. "Nih-tsa-goh-al-neh. Bi-nok-a-lurs." "Nih-tsa-goh-al-neh." Scully carefully pronounced each distinct syllable. She took hold of Gini's hand and together they headed down the hill. * * * "...Ninety-eight, ninety-nine, one hundred! Ready or not, here I come!" Fox uncovers his eyes and blinks against the bright afternoon sun. Finding Sam will be a piece of cake, he thinks; she always hides in the same half-dozen locations. The first place he looks is the boathouse. Its shadowy interior is surprisingly cold on this hot summer day. Goosebumps stipple his arms and legs when he steps inside. He hopes Sam isn't here. The air smells of mildew. Cobwebs cling to the rafters. When he crouches to check beneath the upside down rowboat, his bathing suit, still damp from his morning swim, feels chilly against his backside. He grabs hold of the boat's gunwale to keep his balance, and the rotting wood is spongy beneath his fingers. The paint is peeling. He offered to scrape it and put on a fresh coat, but his dad said no. He doesn't want Fox out on the water in the boat. Not even if he promises to wear a life jacket. "Sam? If you're in here, I'm gonna find you." He listens for telltale noises: a giggle, a hitch of breath. He hears nothing but the scampering of a small animal. Probably a red squirrel. Returning to the outdoors, Fox checks behind the prickly, waist-high shrubs that line his mother's flower bed. He circles a few trees, looks beneath his dad's car, which is parked in the driveway near the house. He squats beside the foundation and peers between slats of wood that are meant to keep raccoons out from under the porch, but don't because several boards are missing and the hole is big enough for his sister to crawl through. "Sam?" The sound of his voice falls flat in the dead, damp space. She's not in any of her favorite hiding spots, so he stands and heads down the shore path to the beach because the rule is "no hiding in the house." Mom doesn't want them underfoot, tracking sand and pine needles across her clean floors. "Sam? Saaammmm!" The sound of breakers drowns out his cry. He pivots, looking up and down the beach, seeing nothing but a knot of seagulls in front of the Norwood's house. The birds are bickering over a dead squid, washed ashore, black with sand fleas and blowflies. "Sam!" He spots her small footprints in the sand and begins to follow them. Another set of prints soon appears alongside hers, larger than hers. Larger than his. There is a toe missing on the left foot. Oh God, oh God, he knows these prints. He breaks into a jog. "Sam? Saaam!" His voice becomes a shriek. Shit, she's gone! He's got to find her, save her, protect her from that Neanderthal monster. Suddenly he is no longer a boy on the beach. He's a grown man in his apartment with his father. "You let this man take your sister," Bill Mulder accuses him. "Isn't that what you're trying to tell me?" Mulder turns his back, unable to look his father in the eye. "I-I can't explain it to you," he stammers. "But, um...I believed I was doing the right thing, Dad." "Was this your decision?" His father's blame knocks the wind from his lungs. "Yes," he admits, wanting to shirk the responsibility, but knowing he should admit to it. "I'll tell Mom." "Do you realize what losing her again is going to do to your mother?" He turns to look at his father, whose disappointment and anger bring tears to his eyes. "Do you?" Bill Mulder hurls the words at him. His voice fails him. Shame, guilt and sorrow push rational thought out of reach. He stares at the floor and starts to cry, feeling like a boy again, repentant and overwhelmed with regret. "I'm sorry, Dad. I'm sorry. I'm...I'm sorry." It's all he can say. A wave of nausea threatens to empty his stomach. "Sorry doesn't cut it, Agent Mulder." He's no longer standing with his father. He's in A.D. Skinner's office and Skinner is sitting behind his desk, shoulders squared, jaw clenched. Annoyance seeps from every pore. Mulder slouches in the chair opposite the AD. It's his usual seat. Scully's chair is empty beside him. Misery blurs his vision. Fear constricts his lungs. "I lost her." "You lost her? Is that all you can say?" They aren't talking about Sam. They're talking about Scully. "I couldn't...I couldn't protect her. I tried." His hands twist in his lap. He loathes everything about himself. "I think...I think she's dead." Skinner's focus drops to his desk as he considers this news. "Agent Scully was a fine officer," he finally says. "More than that, I liked her. I respected her." He lifts his eyes to glare at Mulder. Mulder recognizes his words from years ago, when Scully was abducted. Skinner continues to speak. "We all know the field we play on and we all know what can happen in the course of a game. If you were unprepared for all the potentials, then you shouldn't step on the field." "What if I...I knew the potential consequences but I...I never told her?" He's made one bad choice after the next. "I lost her," he repeats, knowing the fault is his. "I didn't tell her the truth and now I've lost her. I've lost everything." * * * "Muhl-dar? Day-nuh?" Klizzie called through the closed door of their hut. "Excuse me, are you awake?" She held a tray of food, which was laden with roasted mastodon, fresh mushrooms, gooseberries sweetened with honey, two raw goose eggs and an assortment of greens. Tucked between the bowls and plates were several mint twigs for cleaning their teeth when they were finished eating. "Muhl-dar?" There was no answer. They were either sleeping or had left the hut. Or maybe they were mating. Not wishing to disturb them, Klizzie considered leaving the tray on the ground outside the door. But to do so would draw insects and scavenging animals. It would be better to set the tray inside. "I have food," she announced loudly. She had prepared the tray soon after Dzeh stormed out of their hut. Providing his new partner with breakfast was part of the exchange, and Klizzie didn't wish to further anger her mate, so she dried her tears and set about gathering the finest food in the camp. She went to Aunt Ho-Ya for fresh goose eggs. The kind woman didn't seem to notice she'd been crying; she was too distracted by last minute preparations for Jeha's Joining Ceremony, which was scheduled to take place after the afternoon yea-go match. "I have so much to do." Ho-Ya complained without any real irritation in her voice; a broad grin lightened her words. "Extra food is needed for Turtle Clan when they arrive. My sister Tkin and her family will be staying here with me until a new lodge can be set up for them. I do not mind the extra company, really. We have the bed space. Oh, Klizzie, Jeha looks so pretty in her new Joining dress! So grown up!" Klizzie barely listened as Ho-Ya described the embroidered tunic; her mind was on Dzeh instead. She feared what he might do now that he knew the truth about her and Klesh. Would he beat her? Cast her out of the Clan? She wished she hadn't told him; it would have been better to take her secret to the Spirit World. But the second lie about Muhl-dar had piled upon the first about Klesh, and the two together were too great a burden to carry. When Dzeh began making love to her, she felt overwhelmed with guilt. The words came out as if on their own. Her confession brought both relief and regret. Admitting the truth had felt good, like having a heavy load of firewood lifted from her aching arms, and yet, she wished she had told someone other than Dzeh. She'd deceived him and lost his love as a result. And she had no one to blame but herself. Klizzie hoped beyond hope that he could forgive her. Silently she promised the Spirits she would break no more rules and she would tell no more lies from this moment on if Dzeh would pardon her offenses. Ho-Ya finally handed her the goose eggs and asked, "How did it go with Dzeh's new Trading Partner last night?" The question stole her breath away. She and Muhl-dar had not completed the ritual, which meant the partnership was invalid. Would Dzeh find out? Muhl-dar might spill the truth, putting her in worse trouble. She had to try to convince him to remain silent. "It is over," she lied to Ho-Ya. "Dzeh and Muhl-dar are Partners now." Ho-Ya nodded with serious approval. "That is good." Klizzie thanked her for the eggs and hurried away to prepare Muhl-dar's breakfast. Her stomach was buzzing with bees as she pushed through Muhl- dar's door, carrying her tray of food. She paused just inside the entrance, allowing her eyes to adjust to the dark. The fire had burned out. She could see a shadowy mound beneath the furs and heard a quiet masculine snore. "I have food," she said again, more quietly this time. "Muhl- dar?" He stirred, lifted his head, and blinked sleepily at her. "Scully?" he asked. "No, it is me...Klizzie." She held out the tray. "I brought food." "Oh." Sitting up, he glanced around the hut. "Where's Scully...uh...I mean, where's Dana?" She shook her head, unsure what he was asking. She carried the tray to the bed and set it on the ground. "Are you hungry?" she asked. Kneeling beside him, she lifted a plate of meat for him to see. It was impolite to remain here with him; custom demanded she bring the food and then leave him on his own. But first she needed to find out if he intended to tell anyone the truth about last night. Maybe he'd already spoken of it and she was too late to dissuade him. Or maybe he had said nothing yet, but planned to complain to Dzeh later on. She had to find out, to help her predict Dzeh's next actions. "Muhl-dar, I must ask you something but I do not know how," she said, trying to keep her voice steady. On the inside she was quaking like an aspen tree in a windstorm. She worried that Day-nuh might suddenly return and interrupt her questions, or that Muhl-dar might think her inquiries rude and become angry with her for her impudence. It was possible, too, that he was embarrassed about the incomplete ritual. She didn't really know why he had not finished the rite. She'd assumed he was dissatisfied with her in some way, but it was possible he had not been physically capable of carrying out his duty. His male part was marked by a strange scar; perhaps it no longer worked the way it was supposed to. Their lack of common language and the delicate nature of the conversation made asking questions almost impossible. "Muhl-dar, last night we did not conclude our obligation," she said, pointing first to his lap and then to hers. "This is a breach of custom." She looked up at his face to see if he understood any of what she was saying. His jaw clenched and worry shadowed his eyes. Again she gestured toward their laps. When he nodded, she continued, "You will be cast out of the Clan if Dzeh discovers the truth. I may be exiled, too. I am afraid for both of us." She could no longer control the quaver of her voice. Tears filled her eyes. He reached out and put a finger to her trembling lips. "Shhhhh," he said. He continued to talk, his tone sincere, gentle and urgent. He shook his head several times, repeating her gesture at their laps. Several times, he held his finger to his lips and to hers, making his hushing sound. It seemed he was eager to keep their secret, too, although his reasons eluded her. "Did you tell Day-nuh?" she asked. She used the hand signal for "making talk." Several repetitions, combined with more pointing at their laps seemed to convey her question. He shook his head. "No one knows," he said. "It'll be our secret." "See-kret?" Again he held his finger to his lips and nodded. "Have you told Dzeh?" "Dzeh? No, no. Dzeh must not find out. He is very angry with me...about something else...something awful. Knowledge of an additional deceit will cause more trouble. He must never learn of it. Never." In this halting way they made a pact to remain silent. Thank the Spirits, she had not been too late. Relief surged through her and on an impulse she embraced Mulder for his willingness to keep quiet. He returned her embrace, as if equally satisfied by their arrangement. * * * Tormented with worry, Dzeh brought his yea-go stick and tool kit to the butternut tree at the edge of the village. He did his best thinking while working with his hands, so he decided to repair the stick's worn leather basket while giving careful consideration to Klizzie's shocking confession. Setting down his tools, he sat cross-legged beneath the tree's broad limbs. This spot gave him an unobstructed view of the camp, and he wanted to keep an eye out for Klizzie. No doubt she would soon be joining the group of women who were cutting meat beside the smoke house a stone's throw away. Dzeh upended his tool kit, allowing its contents to spill into his lap. Two unfinished carvings fell from the leather pouch: fertility idols, intended as offerings to Hare Spirit in hope of getting Klizzie pregnant. Dzeh pushed them aside, too distressed to look at them. Klizzie's transgressions were like knives in his flesh. She had broken the strictest Clan law and then lied to cover it up, remaining silent while her cousin and brother were exiled. Dzeh had no doubt Klesh deserved to be banished; he was an unrelenting bully and a known thief. He frequently cheated at gambling games and refused to observe the necessary rituals or give prayers. He was an angry man who had made many enemies. Only Tse-e had stuck by him, leaving the Clan along with his exiled cousin. Both men were probably dead, he supposed. Two alone without the help of kin were doomed. Their blood was on Klizzie's hands. No wonder the Spirits had denied her a child all these years. Dzeh had been a fool to beg for a baby on her behalf. Hands shaking, he took a small strip of leather from his pile of supplies and trimmed it to fit the loop on his yea-go stick. He then searched for lashing material and a stout needle. He kept an eye on the women by the smokehouse while he unwound a length of rawhide cord. Klizzie would arrive shortly, he was certain, to help them with their chore of cutting and preserving the meat from yesterday's hunt. He wasn't sure what he would say or do when she appeared. He had no plan. He only hoped that seeing her would help him decide the right course of action. About twenty women of various ages hunkered beside the smokehouse, chatting amicably while they cut chunks of fat from meat. Dzeh was too far away to overhear their conversation, but he caught their excited, happy tones. No doubt they were discussing Turtle Clan's anticipated arrival later today, as well as other details of the upcoming Feast. He watched them pile fat into gourds to render later. For now they concentrated on slicing the meat into thin, even strips, which would dry quickly over the fires in the smokehouse. His previous mate had been very adept at preparing meat in this fashion. She'd taken great care to carve all trace of fat from the meat before drying it, thus preventing it from going rancid. Mixing the rendered fat with pulverized dried meat, she made the smoothest pemmican he had ever eaten. She often flavored it with tasty herbs, too...a welcome change of pace from an otherwise bland winter diet. It had been a long while since he had thought of Chuo's cooking skills, perhaps because Klizzie was equally proficient at preserving and cooking food. Chuo had been a beautiful woman, several years older than Dzeh and already the mother of one young son and pregnant with her second when she agreed to become his mate. The father of Chuo's children had been killed in a winter hunting accident. He'd been an elder from Moose Clan, a skilled toolmaker and a knowledgeable tracker. His loss was keenly felt by his mate and his clan. Five springs after Chuo became Dzeh's mate she announced she was pregnant again. It was the happiest day of Dzeh's life. He looked forward to the birth of his first child and he walked around camp puffed with pride. Although he loved Chuo's sons very much, he was thrilled at the prospect of giving her a child from his body. His joy was short-lived, however. Two moons later when the Clan was on its way to summer camp at So-a-la-ih Lodge at Star Lake, summer rains brought floods. Dzeh lost his beloved Chuo and his unborn child when they tried to cross Toh-ni-lih River. Chuo slipped while wading through the swift rapids and was quickly swept away in the fast-moving current. Dzeh and Lin had plunged into the icy water to try to save her. Several of the other men had run along the bank, hoping to grab her as she passed by. But by the time she was pulled from the white water, she had drowned. After Chuo's death, her sons were given to Moose Clan to live with their uncle. Dzeh missed them. They'd been clever, well- behaved boys. But they were not of Owl Clan; they rightly belonged with their kin. He saw them only once after they left, at a Winter Feast two years ago. The youngest no longer recognized him. Dzeh sighed and knotted the lashing on his stick. The basket was repaired, but Klizzie had not arrived at the smokehouse. He felt caught in a pit of indecision. He couldn't ignore her confession; it was too serious to let pass. The proper thing would be to bring her misdeeds to the attention of the elders because her punishment was not his alone to make. Her offense was not a minor one. It wasn't as if she'd refused to cook his dinner or share his sleeping skins. These sorts of misbehaviors were his responsibility to handle however he saw fit. But mating with her cousin was an abomination that concerned the entire Clan. He knew what they would do to her when they found out. They would bind her to a tree and stone her to death. His beautiful, loving Klizzie. It made his stomach clench to think of it, and for a moment he thought he might vomit. Damn the Spirits, what should he do? Keeping her secret would certainly anger the Spirits, bringing hardship, maybe death, to the entire Clan. And yet he couldn't watch her die. Confused and afraid, he packed up his tools. The last items to go into his kit were the two unfinished fertility idols. He held the small carvings for a moment in his palm. Looking at them, he felt hope drain from his heart like blood from a mortal wound. * * * Scully and Gini walked from the lake through the village. The girl still clung to the binoculars. She tested them on everything she passed, obviously impressed by their power to make objects appear only an arm's length away. Over and over again she put out a hand to touch something that was well beyond her short reach. Scully felt better after her bath. The word games with Gini had gone a long way to lift her spirits, pushing her experience with Dzeh to the back of her mind. "Atsah," Gini said, binoculars aimed straight up at the overcast sky. An eagle flew in circles a hundred feet above their heads. "Eagle," Scully gave Gini the English translation. "Atsah, ee-guhl," Gini repeated. The girl's wet hair dripped down her back, sticking in ropey tendrils to her narrow shoulders. Gini had insisted Scully remove her braids after she had finished combing out her own. They then shampooed and bathed before hurrying from the lake feeling chilled but clean. Scully paused when they arrived at her own hut. On the far side of the campground an excited cry drew her attention. A group of women who had been cutting meat were leaping to their feet. "Chay-da-gahi Din-neh-ih!" they shouted, waving their arms and rushing to the expanse of open grassland to the south. Men and women throughout the camp abandoned various chores to hurry to the field where a group of about thirty travel-weary tribesmen were hiking toward the village. "What's going on?" she asked. "Who're they?" "Chay-da-gahi Din-neh-ih," Gini replied. "Chay-da-gahi?" Gini drew her shoulders up next to her ears. "I don't understand," Scully said. "What is this?" She mimicked the girl's strange posture. Gini dropped to her knees and began to sketch a simple outline of a turtle in the dirt with her finger. "Chay-da-gahi," she said when she was finished. "Turtle? Those people are turtles?" That didn't make any sense. "Lahn. Yes," Gini said. She pointed back and forth between the approaching strangers and her sketch. "Chay-da-gahi Din-neh- ih." "Well, if those people are Chay-da-gahi, what are you?" Scully used pointing gestures to clarify her question. "Ne-ahs-jah Din-neh-ih," Gini said with pride in her voice. "Woo-woo." She reproduced the sound of an owl perfectly. "Owl?" Scully asked. "Ouwwhull." Gini tried to wrap her tongue around the foreign word. Scully guessed that each tribe must be named for a species of animal, most likely as a way to differentiate familial lineages. "If they are Chay-da-gahi and you are Ne-ahs-jah, then what am I?" Scully pointed a finger at herself. "Tkoh-klesh," Gini said, looking up at Scully with a big grin. "Tkoh-klesh? What is Tkoh-klesh?" Again Gini drew a picture in the dirt. "A worm? A snake?" Scully guessed. Gini added a few wavy lines around the snake. "A water snake?" Scully shook her head. "I don't understand." Gini jumped to her feet and stroked Scully's leather jacket with her palm. "Tkoh-klesh," she repeated. A black leather water snake? Scully's knowledge of various snake species was limited to the symptoms and treatment of their bites. She gave Gini a confused look. Using hand signals, Gini tried again to make herself understood. She held her right hand palm down and waggled it to indicate water. She plunged her left hand below it. An underwater snake? Suddenly it came to her -- the girl was describing an eel! Evidently her and Mulder's black leather coats reminded her of eel skin. "Tkoh-klesh means eel," she said, satisfied she had guessed the girl's meaning. "Eee-ul." Gini tried out the new word several times before turning her attention back to the distant field. Lifting the binoculars to her eyes for a closer look, she watched as the people from Owl Clan embraced those from Turtle Clan. "Coming inside?" Scully asked, corralling her with one arm and nodding toward her hut. "Lahn. Yes," she said, lowering the glasses and letting Scully steer her through the door. Inside Scully found Mulder sitting on the bed embracing Klizzie. A lightning bolt of surprise and jealousy sizzled beneath her breastbone before she could find her voice. "Mulder? What's going on?" "Scully!" He released his hold and backed away. Klizzie's eyes rounded. She scrambled to her feet. "She made breakfast," Mulder blurted, pointing at a tray of food beside the bed. "And what are you doing? Thanking her?" "No, I-- We-- Are you hungry?" Tears stung her eyes, surprising her almost as much as finding Klizzie in his arms. "Tehi," Klizzie said to Gini. Gini began to protest, but Klizzie took hold of her arm and quickly ushered her from the shelter. As soon as they were gone, Scully asked, "What was that all about?" "Uh...dunno." He gave her an innocent shrug before plucking a gooseberry from the platter and popping it into his mouth. She wasn't in the mood for his evasiveness. On the other hand, she wasn't prepared for the truth either. Her experience with Dzeh had left her nerves too raw to deal with Mulder's obvious betrayal or her own budding jealousy. She wished she were back at the lake, trading words with Gini, or for that matter, she wished she were back home. "Scully, I... It was nothing," he said, his expression serious and sad. Feeling dizzy, self-control ebbing, she sank to her knees just inside the door. She let her tears flow and her show of grief seemed to shock Mulder. He went to her and took her gently in his arms. "Scully, please...I'm sorry." Misery engulfed her. She crumpled against him, her arms hanging heavily at her sides. Wounded by his apparent indiscretion, she refused to cling to him. He was her best friend, her lover, which was why his infidelity hurt so damn much. The urge to retaliate was strong. "Didn't you get enough last night?" she asked, giving in to her animosity. "It wasn't like that." His steady, reassuring tone increased her indignation. He was patronizing her, God damn it. "For a man who claims to be searching for the truth, you seem pretty adept at sidestepping it when you need to." His arms dropped away and he blinked against an onrush of tears. She knew she'd wounded him, deeply, but he remained silent, apparently unwilling to let her goad him with hurtful accusations. Was she being unfair? Maybe the error in judgment was hers, not his. "You... It's just..." she stammered, unsure where she wanted to take this conversation. "Can we not talk about this?" "Whatever you want," he said, not a trace of rancor in his voice. She closed her eyes against his tender, pleading stare. "Mulder, I'm --" "It's okay." He reached for her again. This time, she wrapped her arms around him, too, and buried her face in his neck, muffling her next words. "No, Mulder, I shouldn't have --" "Shhh, don't, please." He tightened his hold on her and she concentrated on his fierce grip and thundering pulse and the urgent tenor of his voice. Reducing her focus to these three things, she was able to push aside her suspicions about him and Klizzie, crowding them into that part of her mind where she buried all the unpleasant aspects of life. * * * Blustery and overcast, it wasn't the best day for a yea-go match, but at least the rain was holding off. A flat expanse of grassland between the village and the southern woodlands provided a serviceable playing field. The view from the sloping meadow at the base of Crouching Cat Mountain was perfect for spectators. Already several families were toting food and blankets to the choicest locations overlooking center field. They also brought items for wagering. Hide scrapers and hair ornaments for the women, knives, hand axes and earrings for the men. Services, such as sewing or tattooing, would be gambled here today, too. Prizes for the winning players were laid out on the grass at the foot of the hill for all to see. Mastodon blankets, fox furs, unworked chert, jerky, tanned hides, embroidered tunics, jewelry, and spearpoints were among the goods that would be distributed to the kin of the winning team. Players who scored goals during the game would take home the most valuable prizes. Several days of trading would ensue, with items going round and round the camp. Some might even make it back to their original owners. Clans took great pride in donating the most sought after goods. Skillfully crafted tools were particularly popular. But the most prized item of all was the large gourd of honey, brought by Owl Clan. It contained enough pure, sweet honey to make a winter's worth of wo-chi...if the children could be kept out of it. At the northern and southern ends of the playing field, several men were wrestling stout goal posts into the ground. Each post was as big around as a woman's waist and stood as tall as the shoulder of a bull mastodon. Cutting the posts had been no easy feat. Badger Clan dulled several stone axes while felling the two requisite trees before the arrival of the other clans. The chore of digging postholes was assigned to the last clan to arrive at the summer camp. No one enjoyed this laborious task, chiseling into rocky soil and backfilling with gravel, which had to be carried by the sack-full from the lake. The men of Turtle Clan endured good-natured jibes from the other clans as they lugged stones across the field. While the posts were being set, Dzeh practiced lobbing a ball to his teammates. Using his favorite stick, he tossed the ball high into the air, relishing the way it felt when it slid from its basket. A smooth stone the size of a duck egg was at the core of the ball. This was wrapped in leather and laced with a rawhide cord. When tossed with force, it could fly far and fast, drawing blood if it impacted a player's unprotected flesh. Dzeh's yea-go stick was the finest he'd ever owned. He'd made it three seasons ago out of a straight, young hickory tree, free of knots. He'd stripped the bark and smoothed the wood with a draw-knife, thinning one end until it was flexible enough to be doubled back on itself, producing a loop as long and broad as his hand. He used bark strips to secure the loop in place. Then he lashed a piece of rawhide across it to create a basket that was large enough to hold the ball. The process took several days, but was worth it. This particular stick had proven lucky for him, winning many matches. "Hey, Dzeh! Na-e-lahi!" his cousin Wol-la-chee shouted, tossing the ball. Gauging the trajectory, Dzeh jogged a few steps to position himself in its path. Then he thrust out his stick, catching it neatly in the basket. Without pause, he spun and hurled it further up the court to the next player. It soothed his temper to be gripping the familiar stick. A strenuous game of yea-go would be just what he needed to distract himself from the sting of bees in his stomach and the growing ache in his chest. Dodging, tackling, blocking shots would occupy his mind and help burn off his anger. He glanced up at the crowd of spectators and was saddened when he couldn't find Klizzie among them. He hadn't seen her since their argument and knew he wouldn't come to a proper decision without talking to her first. She was the hearth-fire of his spirit and the prospect of losing her was making his thoughts howl like wind in winter. He promised himself to seek her out as soon as the game was over. Maybe together they could come to some sort of acceptable solution. This afternoon's match was the first of several and it pitted Owl Clan against Badger Clan. Members of both teams were stripped down to their loincloths, their bodies painted in the designs of their clans. There would be no mistaking one player for another. Badger Clan's bold black and white patterns and tall spiky hair set them apart from the reddish-brown circular designs and braided hair of Owl Clan. Wol-la-chee jogged to Dzeh and hooked a friendly arm around his cousin's shoulders. "Where is your new Trading Partner?" he asked with a grin. "Is he playing today or did Klizzie tire him out?" Dzeh shook off the younger man's arm. "I have not seen him." "Ooohhh-ho! He is not still with her, is he?" Wol-la-chee scanned the horizon as if hunting for the wayward couple. "Stop it, Wol-la-chee." Dzeh felt a knot of annoyance squeeze his throat. "The business of my Trading Partner is of no concern to--" "There he is..." -- Wol-la-chee nodded his head toward the village -- "with his own mate and your sister." Sure enough, young Gini was leading the newcomers by the hand toward the ball field. Dzeh cursed under his breath; Muhl- dar's presence would be like a thorn in the sole of his foot, a constant reminder of the problems that came with Trading Partners. Dzeh knew it was unfair to compare him to Klesh, but his worries about Klizzie prevented him from separating the two in his mind. "Are you going to invite him to play?" Wol-la-chee asked. "We could use another swift runner." "He does not look like a swift runner to me," Dzeh said, hoping to discourage his cousin. "What are you talking about? He is tall and lean. Surely he can run." "I think maybe he is *too* lean. A hummingbird could knock him on his ass." Wol-la-chee chuckled and shook his head. "He has got to be more skilled than Ghaw-jih." Both men turned to look at Wol-la-chee's undersized nephew. The boy had gotten himself trampled in last year's game, which led to a loss during the final match...to the chindis from Ant Clan. A year later, the defeat still rankled. "Fine. I will ask Muhl-dar to play," Dzeh said. "*You* tell your nephew he is out until someone is injured." Wol-la-chee seemed satisfied with this arrangement. He loped off to give his nephew the news while Dzeh called to Muhl-dar. Gini and Day-nuh glanced in his direction, then moved uphill to join the crowd of onlookers. Muhl-dar squared his shoulders and came forward to meet him halfway. "The game is about to start," he said. "We need a runner to play third attack. What do you say?" Muhl-dar's eyes fell to his stick. "Lacrosse?" he asked. Dzeh didn't know the word. "Yea-go," he said, holding out the stick. Muhl-dar hesitated before taking it, his body tense. He wore a storm-cloud expression and his eyes burned with animosity. But as soon as the stick lay in his hands, his taut muscles appeared to relax a little and his expression softened. He tested the stick's weight and balance, gave it a practice swing, and then offered it back. "Keep it," Dzeh said, determined to put his anger aside, at least for the afternoon. A victory today would bring tools and goods to the Clan. He needed to do whatever was necessary to ensure a win. "Let's get you ready," he said, pointing to the sidelines where the rest of his team was getting marked with paint. * * * The last thing Mulder felt like doing was playing lacrosse with Dzeh and his Neanderthal buddies. If he'd had his way, he and Scully would still be in their hut. But Gini had arrived and convinced Scully to attend the afternoon game. "We can't hide in here forever, Mulder," Scully had said in her commonsensical way. "Why not?" "That would negate our reasons for going along with the...the exchange." *Your* reasons, he thought, but rose from the sleeping furs to follow her outside. He'd intended to join the spectators, not play the game. But holding Dzeh's stick made him rethink the idea. A quarter or two of lacrosse might burn off some of his excess anger. And if it didn't, he could always use the crosse to beat in a Neanderthal skull or two. Dzeh led him to the sidelines where he was instructed to strip out of his clothes. He was handed a red loincloth that matched Dzeh's. Too pissed to feel self-conscious, he undressed right there in front of seventy or eighty curious onlookers and donned the teams' uniform. Then he held out his arms while two men slathered him with cold, red and brown paint. It had been a long time since he'd last played lacrosse. He doubted these cave people went by the same rules as his Oxford squad, but he assumed any version of the game would require approximately the same skills. Dzeh's crosse resembled a modern one in size and shape. It was heavier, but not unwieldy. Mulder had played second attack for the Blues when he was an undergrad, and remembered feeling beaten and winded after four quarters against squads from Hillcroft and Birmingham. Although the Blues took possession on almost every face-off, their opponents had high-class shooters and long-reaching defensemen. Mulder recalled his final match with disgust; in truth the game had been over after the first half, but the Blue's agonizing defeat stretched on for two more humiliating quarters and eight unanswered Hillcroft goals. Looking across the field at the goal posts, he wondered where the boundaries were. No center or end lines marked the field or the goal creases. Worse than that, none of the players were wearing helmets or pads. This could get rough, he realized. Dzeh rattled through the rules as he steered Mulder onto the field, which he referred to as the "clo-dih." Mulder grasped the meaning of several other words, like "tsa-zhin" for "ball" and "bi-ne-yei" for "goal." He tried to get Dzeh to explain some of the technical fouls, but after a few confused looks and a shake of the head, he came to the uneasy conclusion there might not be any technical fouls in this version of the game. He sized up the brawny men who were gathering at mid-field. Every one had muscled arms the size of Mulder's thighs. Their painted chests looked as solid as beer kegs. Shit, he was fucked. Twenty-four players, twelve per team, arranged themselves in two facing lines. Each man carried a crosse. Mulder stood to Dzeh's right, while the squads' apparent leaders extended their crosses toward one another, keeping them vertical and touching, with the ball caught between them. "Das-teh-do," shouted a man on the sidelines, signaling the start. A violent struggle ensued with each of the two leaders exerting all his strength to overcome the pressure of his opponent's crosse. Owl Clan prevailed and sent the ball hurtling toward the goal. That's when all hell broke loose. The man facing Mulder bulldozed forward, knocking the wind from his lungs. Mulder tumbled backward and hit the ground hard. Gasping for air, he wondered how long each quarter was going to last. Then he ducked just in time to avoid a blow to the head from Tractor Man's swinging crosse. Jesus fucking Christ, these guys were playing for keeps! The whole troop then turned to pursue the ball, whooping and running at top speed. They darted down field, bounding after the ball, sweeping it up in their crosses, tossing it off before being tackled. Despite several bone-crunching hits, the men kept their tempers. As a matter of fact, they seemed to relish the hard-hitting play. Mulder scrambled to his feet and hurried to join the melee. He nearly tripped over a prostrate player in the non-existent goal crease, but managed to get his crosse into position and catch the ball. The Black and White defense turned on him. "Muhl-dar!" Dzeh shouted, crosse held high. Mulder lobbed the ball in Dzeh's direction just before he was plowed over by an onrush of charging Cro-Magnons. He hoped his throw was accurate; he couldn't see a thing, buried as he was beneath a pile of pounding fists and flailing sticks. A loud thwack brought the players to their feet. Evidently Dzeh had hit the goal post. Jesus, the noise echoed like a lightning strike against the surrounding hills. Mulder blinked in surprise as his teammates raced toward the goal where the goalie was struggling for an outlet to clear the ball. He found a slot and the game resumed. Mulder soon learned there were no fouls, substitutions or breaks in Caveman Lacrosse. Only when a man was seriously injured was a new player brought in to take his place. Fast-paced play continued throughout the afternoon, going back and forth between zones. The Black and White Team answered Red Teams' score almost immediately. Red Team one-upped them just minutes later. A hard-fought half hour passed before the next goal was made. Two-one, Red. Their lead didn't last. Black and White scored three consecutive points. By late afternoon, Mulder felt like he'd been hit by a car. His ribs ached and he was covered with welts on his shins and thighs. One well-placed wallop to his left biceps had sliced open a nasty wound that was bleeding buckets. So far he'd managed to protect his head, but he wasn't certain how long he could hold out. He hoped this show of his athletic fortitude was turning Scully on, if nothing else. Play became more intense, not less, as the afternoon wore on. Mulder hoped this meant the game was nearing an end, not that tempers were running short. Red Team was down by one and his teammates began to play as if their lives depended on it. Maybe they did, he realized. Could be the winners killed and ate the losers. "Nahl-kihd!" shouted the Red Team leader. He signaled with his crosse, positioning the men for offense. This was the first bit of strategy that Mulder recognized. The rest of the game had seemed a goddamn free-for-all. But then maybe he'd been too busy getting steamrolled to notice the subtler aspects of the game. The ball was lobbed into play and Mulder caught it in his crosse. The Red Team leader barked at him, "Yo-lailh! Yo- lailh!" Too bad he didn't know what the fuck that meant. Half a dozen Black and White brutes headed straight at him. He decided to run with the ball. He covered more than sixty yards before a defenseman took his legs out from under him. The ball bounced from his crosse. He scrambled for it, but missed. Dzeh appeared out of nowhere, scooped it up, and pitched it at the goal. THWACK! The ball ricocheted off the post. Yes! They were tied up! Mulder staggered to his feet, prepared to launch into the next play, only to find Dzeh wasn't celebrating. As a matter of fact, the entire Red Team looked pissed while the Black and White Team were clapping themselves on the backs, laughing and hollering. Shit, the game was over. It must have ended *before* Dzeh made his shot. The Black and White Team had won the match. Damn it...after all that work...it was like Hillcroft all over again. Mulder's strength gave out and he collapsed to his knees. He let go of his crosse and, with effort, unfolded his fingers enough to place his palm over his bleeding left arm. Dzeh limped across the field to stand beside him. The caveman looked beat. A large bruise shadowed his right cheek. Blood and dirt streaked his chest. He was crisscrossed with cuts and scrapes. "Ut-zah," he said, breathing hard. He leaned down and offered Mulder a hand. "Tehi." Mulder stared at Dzeh's outstretched hand. This was a chance to set aside their differences, to make peace. Life would be so much easier if he would just accept Dzeh's generosity. "No thanks," he said, rising on unsteady legs. He could never forgive this man for what he'd done to Scully. "I don't need your help." Mulder turned and walked off the field, leaving Dzeh's yea-go stick lying where he'd dropped it on the ground. * * * Shortly after sunset, the men, women and children of four clans gathered to watch Jeha become joined with Moasi. Mulder and Scully watched, too, from a respectable distance. Neither felt comfortable standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the crowd. Dressed in their 20th Century clothes, they received plenty of stares. Some of the tribesmen seemed only mildly curious, others suspicious, a few downright hostile. Mulder glared right back at them and held on tight to Scully's hand, wanting everyone in the camp -- especially Dzeh -- to see that she was with him. Speaking of Dzeh, where the hell was the bastard anyway? Mulder wondered. He scanned the crowd, but didn't find him among the dozens of bearded faces. "Mulder, you're hurting me." "Sorry." He loosened his grip on her hand, but drew her closer. Putting his lips to her ear he asked, "You don't usually cry at weddings, do you, Scully?" She arched an eyebrow. "No." "Good, 'cause I do and we have only one handkerchief between us." He patted the pocket of his leather jacket. Inside he could feel the hard lump of the carved idol. Instinctively he closed his hand around it and wondered again about its possible powers. Could he get it to work for him the way it seemed to work for Scully? The tribespeople were standing in front of a small domed hut, which was situated at the outer edge of the village away from the other huts, presumably for privacy. Its roof had been decorated with pleasant smelling mint leaves and flower blossoms. Fresh pine boughs covered the threshold like a welcome mat. The skin door was fastened open with a rawhide cord. Inside, Mulder could see a fire burning in a small hearth. A bed of furs waited beyond the fire and trays of sumptuous-looking food had been arranged around the bed. The honeymoon suite, he thought. A stocky man with a broad, friendly grin waited beside the groom just outside the hut's door. Mulder recognized him from the communal "apres lacrosse" bath he and the other men had taken in the lake following the match. This guy had been on the Black and White Team, a fast runner who'd played hard. No longer covered with paint, he was impressively dressed in a beaded robe, decorated on the hem and sleeves with striking, colorful feathers. His ears were studded with bone ornaments and his hair had been oiled and combed straight up from his brow, giving him the appearance of a surprised porcupine. Pride and pleasure radiated from his round, tattooed face. A gangly, big-nosed woman stood beside him with tears in her eyes and a smile on her elongated face. She was dressed to the nines in a spotted fur cape, arms banded by dozens of rattling bracelets, and hair done up with beads, bangles, feathers and flowers. Mulder guessed she was the groom's mother. Looking down at his own unwashed jeans and muddy boots, he whispered into Scully's ear, "I feel a tad underdressed. Do you?" She licked her thumb and gently scrubbed something from his cheek, before giving him a "be quiet" look. "Did I miss a spot?" he asked. "You missed a lot of spots. Now shhhh." He returned his focus to the wedding party. The groom -- a kid who'd also played in the afternoon's match -- seemed far too young to be tying the knot. Mulder pegged him to be only about fifteen or sixteen. Despite his youth, the boy had shown real grit in the game; he'd played with the enthusiasm of a seasoned athlete and had received a fresh black eye for his commendable efforts. He was a long-limbed, muscular kid with a proud stance and, at this moment, a nervous, albeit eager, expression. The groom's oiled, black hair hung in waist-length braids down the center of his back. Closer cropped on the crown, it stood on end like his father's. An array of striped feathers added height and color. Half a dozen heavy bear claws dangled from each of his pierced ears. The upper half of his face was painted with white pigment in angular patterns. His chin was shadowed by a patchy short beard. He rocked from foot to foot, evidently anxious to finish the formalities. Mulder thought back to his own wedding day, a blustery, wet Wednesday in late November. He hadn't had time to feel nervous. He and Diana had raced over to City Hall on their lunch hour, taking a cab and talking the whole way about thought transference and extra sensory perception because they were knee deep in an investigation about hospitalized psychiatric patients who claimed be misdiagnosed psychics. Ten minutes with a dour JP made it all legal; they returned to the office as husband and wife, presumably for life, although they hadn't exchanged any long-winded vows. They hadn't felt the need. They'd signed the necessary paperwork, donned matching wedding bands, and presumed their signatures and rings were testament enough. Neither of them truly believed in undying love anyway. They were both children of divorced parents; Diana's mom had been married three times. At the time, Mulder thought he knew everything Diana was thinking; whether the subject was parascience or romance; words were seldom necessary between them. They were so alike back then, agreeing on everything, reading each other's minds as easily as the clairvoyants they were testing. He believed they were soul mates, destined to be together. Diana had proposed to him, not the other way around. A dare, almost, after a breathless bout of lovemaking in her apartment on another lunch hour several weeks prior to their wedding day. She had looked gorgeous...tousled and flushed from their intimacy, a mischievous smile in her dark, sparkling eyes. He loved her so much at that moment it was only a small surprise when he heard himself answer yes. She told him she didn't want an overblown, traditional lace- and-flowers type wedding, which suited him fine. She also said she didn't care about going away on a honeymoon; it would take too much time away from their work and they could celebrate their newly wedded status at home. He agreed, promising to take her somewhere romantic, like Groom Lake, on their tenth anniversary. "Fox, everyone goes to Groom Lake on their anniversary," she teased. "How about something more out of the mainstream, like the Oregon Vortex or Spook Hill in Lake Wales." "I hear the Wonder Spot in Wisconsin is a paranormal Poconos." Of course, they never did travel to the Wonder Spot, or remain married long enough to celebrate their tenth anniversary; as a matter of fact, they split after only eighteen months. But on that November day when he signed his name below hers on the marriage license, he had truly hoped they might beat the odds. Mulder squeezed Scully's hand now. If he were ever to get married again, he would do it up right. Traditional wedding, proper honeymoon, the whole nine yards. And he would pop the question this time. Get down on bended knee in the most romantic setting he could find. The sound of drummers brought him out of his musings. Several men began chanting, and a group of women joined them, singing in high-pitched voices, weaving their meandering rhythm into that of the men's. The music served as a signal for the bride to step forward, flanked by her kin. Mother, cousins, uncles, and siblings marched together like a phalanx of solemn soldiers. Nearly lost in their midst was young Jeha, dressed in a snow white deer-hide tunic, smiling shyly and trembling a little as she walked to her future husband. Jesus, the girl looked too damn young to be a bride, Mulder thought. Twelve or thirteen maybe, if that? No wonder she was shaking. She was just a little girl. If she were living in the 20th Century, she would be years away from mature responsibilities like marriage. Here, however, she'd probably be a mother in a year's time. A petulant cry from the outer edges of the crowd turned everyone's attention away from the wedding party. Mulder rose up on his toes to look over their heads to see what was going on. "What is it?" Scully asked, too short to see over the crowd. "It's Gini and Dzeh," Mulder said when he spotted them. Dzeh was strong-arming the little girl toward the gathering and she was none too pleased about it. The more she argued, the fiercer he frowned and the tighter he gripped her wrist. Mulder didn't like the way he was dragging her against her will. Stepping forward, he felt the tug of Scully's hand on his arm. "Mulder, don't," she murmured. "It's none of our business." By now everyone was watching Gini's tantrum. Mulder couldn't understand her words, but clearly she didn't want to be here. Dzeh remained silent but insistent. He looked embarrassed as he held the girl in place and tried to ignore her outrage. Mulder wondered where Klizzie was and why she didn't come forward to intervene on Gini's behalf. "Scully, I don't like this." He took another step in Dzeh's direction. Gini yelled something that brought gasps from the onlookers. Dzeh's face darkened. He spoke harshly to her, but she paid no attention and continued her tearful shouts, tugging against his grip. When she couldn't break free she screamed, bringing disapproving frowns from all the bystanders. Dzeh raised his hand and struck her across the cheek, silencing her and drawing grunts of appreciation from the crowd. Mulder's temper flared. He pictured Dzeh hustling Scully into her hut last night, hand planted firmly on the small of her back...the same goddamn hand that was holding Gini against her will right now. He regretted allowing Dzeh to take Scully, regretted it with every fiber of his being, and he was goddamned if he'd let the motherfucker bully this little girl, too. "That's it," he said, shaking loose from Scully. He walked straight to Dzeh. When they stood toe-to-toe, he growled through clenched teeth, "Let her go." Dzeh's eyes narrowed. He didn't release Gini. Leaning forward, he sternly rebuked Mulder for interfering. Mulder balled his fists and straightened to his full height. "I said, let...her...go." Dzeh was not intimidated. Glaring at Mulder, he shoved Gini out of the way, pushing her with such force he sent her sprawling into the dirt. That was all the excuse Mulder needed. His fist shot out and caught Dzeh square on the chin. Dzeh grunted from the impact, then threw a jarring uppercut that cracked Mulder's teeth together and sent him stumbling backward. Regaining his balance, Mulder plowed head first into Dzeh's stomach. The two men toppled and rolled. The spectators backed away, giving them more room. Mulder found himself straddling Dzeh. He didn't waste the advantage. Fury escalating, he pummeled his head with a rain of blows. He'd been wanting to do this all day and it felt damn good to be pounding the shit out of this mother-fucker. Dzeh tried to block the blows with his arms. Twisting his body, he rolled out from under Mulder, knocking him sideways as he went. Dzeh staggered to his feet. Without pause, he grabbed Mulder by the front of his coat and lifted him into a standing position. He roared something unintelligible. Mulder roared right back. "This is for Gini!" He drove his fist into Dzeh's nose. "And this..." -- he struck Dzeh again, using his left -- "is for fucking *my* partner!" Blood exploded from Dzeh's nose, spraying them both. He howled. Mulder pressed forward, but before he could pull another punch, Dzeh locked him in a crushing bear hug and wrestled him backward toward the newlywed's hut. Mulder crashed against the covering, stopped short by the bony supports inside. Backhanding Mulder in the head, Dzeh sent him spinning. He landed face down on the ground, the wind knocked from him. Unable to catch his breath, he covered his head in anticipation of Dzeh's next blow. When it didn't come, he cautiously lifted his head to look back at Dzeh. Dzeh remained frozen in place, eyes targeting something to Mulder's right. His expression had changed from rage to disbelief and horror. The crowd surged closer, their mouths gaping in similar shock. Mulder followed their stares to the small, carved idol he'd taken from the cave. It must have fallen out of his pocket onto the ground during the fight. And evidently he was in a shit-load of trouble for having it. * * * CHAPTER THIRTEEN A fearsome storm was moving into the valley from the north. Purple-black clouds clotted the night sky and the frigid breath of angered Spirits gusted across Turkey Lake, buffeting the hide-covered shelters and raising gooseflesh on Dzeh's arms. Staring at the idol on the ground, he could not believe his eyes. The sacred statue, offered to Hare Spirit on Klizzie's behalf, lay beside Muhl-dar's outstretched hand. It had been intended as a gift to the gods, sanctified by prayers in Tsa- ond Cave. To see it in the newcomer's possession turned his blood to ice. Only a dishonorable, Spiritless man would dare steal a prayer offering and risk the wrath of the gods. Muhl-dar was clearly such a man; the proof was there on the ground for all to see. Dzeh wished he'd never agreed to become Trading Partners with this chindi from Eel Clan. He wished he had never set eyes on Muhl-dar. Gasps arose from the onlookers when they realized what had spilled from the stranger's odd cloak. Even those who were not from Owl Clan, those who hadn't witnessed Dzeh's heartfelt prayers to Hare Spirit, recognized the revered fertility symbol for what it was. To steal such an idol was sacrilege. Dzeh looked into his fellow clansmen's startled faces and saw his own disgust etched in their furrowed brows. Vengeance smoldered in their eyes as they waited to see how he would respond to this insult. The punishment for stealing a spiritual offering was death, befitting the crime. Exiling the offender was not an option. Muhl-dar's outrageous actions had proven him too untrustworthy to be released; if allowed his freedom, he might return to Tsa-ond Cave and defile it again. There was only one way to prevent another desecration...kill the offender. Thunder rolled across Crouching Cat Mountain as rain began to fall in sleety drops, drumming the ground with a frenzied rhythm that matched the beat of Dzeh's turbulent heart. The events of the day -- Klizzie's betrayal and now Muhl-dar's -- had razed his trust. His fingers trembled as he picked up the tiny idol. Squeezing it in his palm, he straightened his back and turned away from the stranger from Eel Clan. "This man is no longer my Trading Partner," he announced to the onlookers. Lin and Wol-la-chee understood the importance of his proclamation and stepped forward to haul the stranger to his feet. Muhl-dar tried to shake them off, but they gripped his arms tightly, holding him captive. When Day-nuh tried to come to his aid, two men from Badger Clan moved in to block her way. She objected with a shout and tried to dodge around them, but they latched onto her arms and held her firmly in place. "Sculleee!" Muhl-dar roared, trying to free himself. Lin wrapped an arm around Muhl-dar's throat, preventing him from going to her. Gini ran to her brother and cried, "They're hurting him! Please, stop them!" He ignored her pleading. She was a child who didn't understand the seriousness of the situation. Turning to face Lin and Wol- la-chee, he said, "Do what must be done." They pulled Muhl-dar away from the crowd and he protested with angry-sounding words. Day-nuh shouted again, too, in the foreign language that meant nothing to the clansmen. "Nooo!" Gini screamed. She threw herself at her brother's feet, bowing low out of respect and fear. "Please, please do not hurt him! I will do whatever you ask. I will take a mate and move away, if that is what you want. I am sorry I called you a chindi, honest I am. Please do not be angry any more. Do not hurt Muhl-dar and Day-nuh!" Her supplication affected Dzeh more than he dared let on. He loved his little sister and felt like a brute for striking her earlier and disregarding her cries now. Yet he knew what was required of him as a clansman and as head of his own hearth. He was obliged to follow certain rules and the situation with Muhl-dar was intolerable. Dzeh had no choice but to order his execution. Gini might not understand it now, but someday, when she was grown, with a family of her own, she would recognize the reasoning behind his decision and the necessity of the Clan's strict customs. Looking again to Lin and Wol-la-chee, Dzeh said, "Take him to the ball field. Bind him to one of the goal posts..." The next words stuck in his throat like sharp fish bones. He swallowed, trying to wet his dry mouth and coax the necessary orders from his tongue. It was without pleasure that he finally said, "Stone him." As Muhl-dar was dragged away, Day-nuh's shouts grew more frantic. Dzeh signaled the Badger clansmen to remove her, too. Gini shrieked and ran to help Day-nuh battle against her larger captors. The two females were no match against the brawny men and Day- nuh was hauled to the Shaman's hut. Gini turned and faced Dzeh with balled fists. Tears streamed from her eyes. "I *hate* you!" she screamed. "I wish they would stone *you*!" Lightning flashed in the distance. Two heartbeats later a rumble of thunder galloped down the mountainside like a stampede of panicked bison. Dzeh said nothing to his sister. Her words stung, even though he knew she didn't truly mean what she said. It was with a heavy heart that he shouldered his way through the gawking crowd to follow his uncle and cousin and their struggling captive to the ball field. The onlookers fell into step behind him. Impatient to punish the stranger for his wrongdoing, they became more agitated as they neared the field. Muhl-dar continued to protest, elbowing his captors, shouting to Dzeh at the top of his lungs, "Stop this, Dzeh! Let Scully go! Dzeh...! Let her go, you fucking son-of-a-bitch!" His words were meaningless, but his tone brought an unexpected pang of guilt. Dzeh felt the weight of Muhl-dar's bracelet around his wrist and his thoughts flew to Klizzie. She had convinced him to accept this ornament, initiating the partnership. What would she say when she found out what was happening now? He looked over his shoulder, past the incensed mob, beyond the wind-battered huts and spitting bonfires, to where the mountain loomed pitch-black and empty on the western horizon. Where was Klizzie? The crowd surged forward. They grew more excited at each of Muhl-dar's shouts and collected rocks as they marched toward the northernmost end of the ball field, arming themselves for the execution, their eyes glowing with fiery anticipation. Dzeh did not share their enthusiasm. He walked with hunched shoulders, squinting against the sting of rain. The wind harangued him; he heard the Spirits' rage in each icy blast. Was this the storm he had foreseen in his nightmare? Klizzie was missing, just as he had dreamt she would be. His heart was pounding in the same dreadful fashion. Would the mysterious female Spirit be arriving soon to take Muhl-dar away? Another roll of thunder rattled the dark hills. Dzeh glanced at the sky, expecting to see the fiery eyes of Snake Spirit staring back at him. But no angry eyes gazed out of the swirl of clouds; only the rain, needle sharp against his upturned face, spewed from the purple-black sky. Unlike his fellow clansmen, he didn't stoop to gather stones as he walked. He clung to the carved idol while he pictured Klizzie, not Muhl-dar, being punished for her misdeeds, for mating with her cousin and then lying about it. The image of her lashed to the post while the Clan hurled stones at her set his arms shaking. Dzeh had witnessed a stoning once. He had been a boy of just eight years at the time, the same age as little Gini, yet he could still remember the way the strangers cried pitifully for leniency and the sickening thud of stone hitting flesh and bone. The offenders had been two strangers who deserved their fate, caught stealing food from Owl Clan's winter cache during a season when supplies were extremely scarce. Their deaths had been lingering and horribly painful. The same would be true for Muhl-dar now, and for Klizzie, too...if he exposed her awful secret. Up ahead Lin and Wol-la-chee stood beside the goal post with Muhl-dar held firmly between them. Dzeh walked up to them. "Strip him of his clothes," he ordered. Two men from Badger Clan stepped forward, eager to help Lin and Wol-la-chee remove the stranger's foreign garments. Muhl- dar became enraged when they laid their hands on him. He struggled with formidable strength as they wrestled him to the ground. Lin and Wol-la-chee pinned him in place while the others tugged at his clothes. They yanked his sleek, black cloak from his thrashing arms and tossed it aside. His heavy footwear and tight leggings were more difficult to remove; he kicked and bucked, but the men finally managed to take those off as well. They let the clothes lie in the mud while they stripped him of his inner garments. When the stranger was naked the men positioned him in front of the post and forced him to sit. He continued to battle like a wounded bear until the men twisted his arms behind his back and lashed his wrists to the goal post with rawhide lacings. Dzeh walked up to him and held out his left hand, palm up. Cradled in the well of his palm was the small idol. He showed it to Muhl-dar. "A man shapes his own future," he said. He let the figurine drop from his hand. It landed on the ground between Muhl-dar's bent legs. "Your misdeeds have determined yours." Muhl-dar ceased his struggling to stare down at the idol. Uncertainty crossed his face. He lifted worried eyes to meet Dzeh's stare. Rain and mud slicked his naked body. The wind whipped his hair and raised gooseflesh on his arms and chest. "Where's Scully?" he demanded, his voice sounding ragged and afraid. Dzeh didn't understand his words and interpreted them as a curse. Backing away, he told the others, "You may begin." The first stone clipped Muhl-dar's left shoulder. His eyes darted from person to person; his breathing quickened. When the next stone flew at him, he ducked his head and drew his legs together, trying to protect his face and genitals. The second rock struck his right knee, splitting the skin and drawing blood. An anguished cry burst from his throat. Dzeh closed his eyes, unable to watch, unwilling to join the others as they tossed more stones. This will be Klizzie's fate, he thought with revulsion, if I expose the truth. Muhl-dar howled again and Dzeh shivered at the sound. Spirits be damned, he did not want to lose Klizzie and he could not listen to her die this way. He would not reveal her secret, even if it meant angering the Spirits and bringing disaster to them all. * * * Klizzie knelt on a rocky outcropping at the top of Crouching Cat Mountain. Hands held flat atop her bare thighs, she turned her face to the sky. The bitter northerly wind rattled the beads in her hair. Closing her eyes against the prick of sleet, she began to pray to Owl Spirit for guidance. "Owl Spirit, I hear your voice in the wind. Please, hear mine." She reached for the small, doeskin pouch that hung from her neck. Grasping it in her right fist, she felt for the totems inside. She pictured the items in her mind: a brassy nodule of pyrite, a spotted snail shell, an owl feather, the razor-sharp tooth of a badger, a bit of mastodon bone, carved by Dzeh with the tiny smiling faces of their future children. Her voice trembled, yet she spoke with conviction. "Owl Spirit, I seek your patience to help me remain calm in the face of what is coming. I seek your wisdom to learn the lessons of the world, hidden in every leaf and stone and drop of rain. I seek your strength to fight my greatest enemy -- myself." There was no doubt in Klizzie's mind that she was to blame for her troubles. She had caused Dzeh's anguish, invited her own punishment, and she wasn't looking to give excuses for her misdeeds. Mating with a kinsman was an unpardonable sin, everyone knew it; she knew it, too, even at age fourteen. She could offer no justification for what she had done. "Help me act with humility and purity. Prepare me so that I may come to you with clean hands and an honest heart, so that when my life ends, my spirit can fly without shame." Klizzie's lies distressed her as much as her original wrongdoing. And now she was burdened with a new secret about Muhl-dar. Dzeh must be told of it, she knew, but her fear of his reaction held the truth prisoner in her lungs. She would need the power of Owl Spirit to help her release her unspoken truth. The wind whistled over the rocky summit, pummeling her, tugging at her hair, howling past her ears. She braced against it. Determined to do what was right, she repeated her prayer, and was prepared to continue repeating it until she received divine guidance. "Owl Spirit, I hear your voice in the wind. Please, hear mine." The sky released a torrent of chilling rain. Lightning sizzled in the east and was followed only moments later by a crack of thunder. "I seek your patience to help me remain calm in the face of what is coming toward me. I seek your wisdom to learn the lessons of the world, hidden in every leaf and stone and drop of rain..." * * * Mulder struggled against his bonds. The rawhide strips, painfully tight, bit into his wrists and cut off the flow of blood to his fingers. He shivered uncontrollably in the frigid downpour. His teeth chattered from cold and fear. "Sc-scully!" Blood streamed from a wound on his forehead and swamped his eyes. He tried to blink it away. The tribesmen flickered in and out of view, a blood-red blur of shifting legs, writhing arms, and gaping mouths. Their shouts reverberated in his ears, as if he sat at the bottom of a deep, black well. "Sculleee!" Where had they taken her? Was Dzeh with her? Twisting as far as his restraints would allow, he tried to locate her. Was she in the village behind him, lost in the deluge and dark? Where was Dzeh? Mulder's panic escalated. Find her, help her! his mind screamed. More stones sailed at him. They struck him hard, one a direct hit to his chest, surprisingly painful, bruising his breastbone and forcing the air from his lungs. Another quickly followed, hitting his jaw and knocking his teeth together. Blood spurted from his lip and the taste made his stomach roll. The next stone slammed into his right cheekbone, just missing his eye. The impact hurt like hell. He tried to duck, but was held fast by the restraints. Being tied this way, helpless against his assailants, he was reminded of his recent confinement in Calumet Mercy Hospital, waiting for that awful insect creature...Pincus...to attack him in his bed. Scully had arrived in the nick of time. She'd saved him. But who would save him now? And who would save her if he died? He had no doubt the tribesmen intended to kill him. Leaning forward as far as he could, he screamed at them, "Goddamn mother-fuckers! Let me go! Goddamn you!" A bolt of lightning split the sky, illuminating the mob. Mulder used the brief flash to search again for Scully. He found nothing but outraged faces, upraised fists and more stones. The world blackened in the bolt's aftermath, seemingly darker than before. A luminescent image of the tribe floated like a ghostly chimera in his memory. Thunder shook the valley, setting the muscles in his legs quaking. His dread soared when another stone careened into his neck, momentarily cutting off his breath. It was followed by a wallop to his shoulder. Then a glancing blow to his upraised shin. Pleasestoppleasestoppleasestop, he chanted to himself. Were they stoning Scully, too? Or was Dzeh raping her first? "Nooooooooo!" he bellowed, inviting a hailstorm of stones. Another flash of lightning exposed his enemies, hideous brutes, mouths twisted with hate. Thunder vibrated the earth. "I'll kill you! I'll fucking kill you if you hurt her!" A blow to his temple rocked his head backward and caused an explosion of light behind his eyes. It was followed immediately by a lightning strike so close he could smell its fiery ozone, feel its pull of static. His hair bristled; his skin tingled. Thunder cracked and the concussion hammered his chest. He thought he heard screams, saw feet running. Gulping for air, swallowing blood and rain, he waited for the next stone...waited...waited... Rain, only rain beat against his bruised, torn skin, so cold it numbed his pain. He tried to shout, but managed only a whisper. "Scully...please, please..." Then he thought he saw her walking toward him, silvery white in the dark. Her wet hair, flailing in the wind, appeared blood-red around her pale face. Even at this distance he could see she was crying. She held out her arms to him. Oh, God, how he wanted to bury himself in her embrace. When she was only a step away, she knelt at his feet and stroked his swollen face. Her touch was a reprieve from the pain. Tender. Healing. "Wh-where are they?" he asked, meaning the angry tribesmen. "They've gone." The sound of her voice released fresh tears. He didn't try to hold them back. "I'm c-cold," he told her through chattering teeth. "I know," she answered. Her words hummed like the wind. Was it the wind? Maybe she wasn't really there. No. No-no-no... Panting, shivering, he desperately wanted to reach out and touch her, to prove to himself that she was real, that this wasn't a hallucination, but the restraints held him back, reminding him again of Calumet Hospital and Pincus. Scully had believed him...saved him... "Scully?" Behind her a shadow crossed the field, coming toward them. Was it Pincus? Shit, shit, shit. Mulder was trembling uncontrollably now. He hurt all over and he couldn't see out of his swollen right eye. His lips felt numb, his wrists raw. He thought he saw Pincus' red insect eyes. Look out, Scully! He mouthed the words, trying to warn her, but no sound came from his raw throat. Scully remained kneeling in front of him, silvery as a specter, her back to the threat. Tears glossed her sympathetic eyes. The approaching shadow took form. Not Pincus. Not an insect creature with red eyes. It was a man. Oh, Christ it was Dzeh. He was coming back. He was coming for her! Dzeh strode with confidence through the rain, stopping when he stood directly behind her. He sneered at Mulder, then bent to kiss her shoulder. A chuckle rumbled deep in his chest, sounding like distant thunder. He dragged his lips from her shoulder to her neck. Don't trust him! Mulder wanted to shout but his breath was caught in his throat. Scully held herself perfectly still, allowing Dzeh to kiss her. Only her teary eyes revealed her revulsion. Get away from her! Leave her alone! Mulder struggled to free himself, hell-bent on stopping Dzeh. He couldn't let him hurt her. Not again. He'd been a coward before. He'd let Scully down. Oh, God, if she knew the truth she'd leave him. Panic overtook him at the thought of losing her. He squeezed his eyes shut. I'm sorry, Scully, he told her silently, sincerely. I'm so sorry... When he opened his eyes again, she and Dzeh had vanished. Nothing but darkness remained. Mulder swallowed another mouthful of blood and imagined he was drowning. He'd lost her. He'd lost Scully...and his heart was disintegrating beneath the crushing weight of his own guilt. * * * Scully sat on a bed of sleeping furs with her knees drawn up and her hands bound behind her back. She was being held captive in the medicine man's hut. He sat opposite her on the far side of the hearth, alternately sipping tea and smoking a foot-long pipe. The herbs in his pipe put out a pungent odor. Or maybe it was his tea that smelled bad. Whichever, he appeared very relaxed. From the odd smile on his face she suspected his pharmacopoeia included mood altering substances. Drying plants hung upside-down in bunches from the shelter's rafters. The walls were lined with rows of tortoiseshell bowls that contained colorful powders and dark liquids. Several painted masks hung from a bone support toward the back of the hut. Two live hens preened in a reed cage near the door. The medicine man was an elderly man, the oldest she'd seen in the camp, with snow-white hair and no beard. She wondered if he shaved it or if he simply didn't grow hair on his face. Either way, his lack of whiskers emphasized the swirling, black tattoos that decorated his face. Curvilinear designs circled his eyes and striped his cheeks and chin, giving the impression of claw marks. He wore a spotted cape, trimmed with shaggy fur like the mane of a horse. A green amulet carved into the likeness of a frog hung from his neck on a beaded cord. A large ivory fang dangled from his right ear, adding to his ferocious appearance. For two hours he'd been watching her through half-closed eyes, saying nothing while she railed at him. She'd demanded to be released, called out repeatedly for Mulder and swore a blue streak. "Where's Mulder? Mul-der," she shouted, her voice growing raspy. "I know you know what I'm asking. Where...is...Mulder?" Was the tribe hurting him? Clearly they'd been angry about the carving, but how angry? Enough to kill him? The medicine man remained silent, smoking his pipe and watching her with glittery, black eyes. She struggled against her bonds, but the rawhide lacings were as tight as ever. She needed something to cut them. The medicine man was wearing a knife on his belt. If he fell asleep -- or passed out -- she might be able to get to it and cut her restraints without waking him. A gust of wind shook the hut. Scully could hear rain beating against its hide roof. An occasional crack of thunder startled her with its intensity. "Is Mulder out in that? He better be alive, you son-of-a- bitch." She had to believe he was. The alternative was too dreadful to bear. The medicine man held up his small drinking bowl, offering her tea. Would he untie her if she agreed to drink some? Better not take the chance, she thought. The tea might contain herbs that would make her sleepy. Or worse, he might be trying to poison her. "No thanks," she said, shaking her head. He shrugged and prepared another bowl for himself. After settling cross-legged on his bed, he sipped his drink and continued to watch her. The storm was growing more intense. Thunder vibrated the ground and the medicine man paused mid-sip to gaze skyward. His herbs swayed from the quaking rafters. The next hour passed with excruciating slowness. The medicine man finally dozed off. As soon as his eyes were closed, she tried searching her coat pockets, hoping to find something to sever her restraints. Unable to reach inside far enough to grab hold of anything, she decided to try to steal the medicine man's knife instead. She was half way to him when Gini startled her by pushing through the hut's door flap. The girl sidestepped around the sleeping man and hurried to Scully's side. Crouching behind her, she sawed through the bindings with a stone knife. Scully massaged her wrists and rose to her feet. Damn, her ankle still hurt. Trying her best to ignore the pain, she limped after Gini, around the medicine man and out of the hut. "Where's Mulder?" she asked as soon as they were outside. Gini signaled for her to be quiet, then beckoned her to follow as she led them toward the ball field. Rain flattened the girl's hair and soaked her tunic. She seemed not to notice as she hurried through the village. Smoke rose like phantoms from the blackened remains of rain- drenched communal fires. A crooked finger of lightning sizzled in the western sky, touching down somewhere behind the mountains. It revealed low clouds roiling overhead. Torrents of rain continued to fall. Not a soul was about; the violent weather was evidently keeping the tribesmen huddled around their hearths. Gini stopped when she reached a long, low structure at the southernmost edge of the camp. She motioned for Scully to wait while she went in. Not a minute later, she emerged with a bulging sack slung over one shoulder. With another wave of her arm, she led them south, sneaking like a shadow beneath the flailing limbs of a butternut tree and out onto the field. A flare of lightning revealed the nearest goal post and Scully spotted a slumped figure at its base. She recognized him immediately... Mulder, stripped of his clothes, head lolling to one side. Blood glistened darkly on his pale skin. Panting with fear, she disregarded her injured ankle and ran to him. Oh, God, was he dead? Contusions mottled his skin. Blood striped his chest, limbs and face. His right eye was so swollen the lashes all but disappeared in its reddened crease, and the split on his lower lip was caked with blood. The ground around him was littered with fist-sized stones. It was easy to guess what had happened here and the image prompted a flare of anger and stinging tears. She knelt in front of him and stroked his battered cheek. "Mulder?" Air stuttered from his lungs and he stirred. "Scully?" The rasp of his voice unraveled her, sending tears spiraling down her cheeks. She kissed the crown of his bent head. "Oh, Mulder." She drew back, restless to examine him. The doctor in her wanted to assess the damage, plot a course for his treatment and recovery. He opened his one good eye to look up at her. "Guess I ticked 'em off." She chuffed at his understatement. "Can't take you anywhere." His grim half-smile cracked his bloodied lips. "Untie me." Gini set down her pack to crouch behind him. She used her knife to cut the rawhide at his wrists. Freed from his bonds, he brought his arms stiffly to his sides. Blinking back tears, Scully tucked away her emotions and began to skim her palms gently over his head, arms and ribs, exploring every inch. Miraculously he appeared to have no broken bones. His bluish skin felt ice cold beneath her hands. He was still bleeding from a cut on his knee and another at his hairline. It was likely he had suffered a concussion. And she had no doubt he was in shock. "Let's get you dressed," she murmured, reaching for his jacket. His leather coat was sodden with mud. It would do little to keep him warm. "Gini, get his other things, please." Scully pointed to his boots and pants, tossed carelessly to one side. The girl hurried to gather the clothes while Scully eased Mulder away from the post. He paled and gasped when she moved him. "T-take it easy," he said, teeth chattering. "Sorry." She draped the jacket over his shoulders and carefully snaked one of his hands into a sleeve. "We have to get you out of here. Can you walk?" "I-I think so." With a hiss of pain, he inched his other arm into its coat sleeve. Gini brought his other clothes. She stood by his feet, nervously glancing back at the camp as she offered him his undershorts. "Sk-skip those," he said. "N-not worth the effort. Sk-sk-skip the sh-shirt, too. J-just give me my p-pants." Getting him into his jeans wasn't an easy task. The pants were wet and his chilled, bloody legs refused to cooperate. Scully and Gini worked together to guide his feet into the leg holes. Mulder grunted with discomfort when they tugged the jeans up to his thighs. "You're going to have to stand for the last part," Scully warned him. He nodded, looking as if he might vomit. Using the goal post and Scully's shoulder for support, he managed to rise to his feet. She pulled his pants up, noticing as she fastened them that his hips and waist had thinned from their month in the Pleistocene. And it wasn't likely he would be putting on weight anytime soon, not wherever they were headed now. As if reading her mind, he asked, "Where t-to?" She pivoted to study each direction. Going west, back the way they'd come, meant climbing the mountain. Another range hemmed them in to the east. Heading north meant hiking back through the camp. That left only one choice...south. "That way." She nodded toward the woods flanking the ball field's southern end. "Let's get your boots on." She signaled Gini to set the boots on the ground near his feet. That's when she noticed the small, carved idol half buried in the mud. Mulder saw it, too, and with effort, he tried to bend down to pick it up. "Leave it," she said. "It might be our ticket home." "It'll bring us nothing but more trouble." "Or more visions." "So now you're saying you believe my visions really were visions?" Doubt clouded his one good eye. "I-I don't know, but we--" "Mulder, that figure did not cause my visions." "Then what did?" "I don't know, but--" Gini interrupted their argument by tugging on Scully's sleeve, whispering urgently and pointing away from the camp. Her message was obvious: get moving! "Come on. We need to go." Scully positioned herself beside Mulder. Apparently too exhausted to argue...or maybe too disoriented...he allowed her to drape his arm around her so that she was shouldering his weight while they hobbled toward the woods. Gini trailed them, carrying her pack and Mulder's extra clothes. When they reached the edge of the field and it became obvious that Gini intended to follow them into the trees, Scully turned to her and said, "You can't come with us. You have to go back." She used gestures to reinforce her words, shaking her head at the woods and then nodding enthusiastically while pointing to the village. Gini's brows drew together. She rattled off a lengthy argument, keeping her tone insistent while taking care not to speak too loudly. Scully stood firm. "No, sweetie, we can't take you. You have to stay here." The girl looked to Mulder, clearly hoping for his support. When he shook his head, too, her shoulders sagged and her eyes pooled with tears. Obviously crestfallen, she stuffed Mulder's clothes and her knife into her pack and then offered them to Scully. Moved by her generosity, Scully knelt to give her a heartfelt hug. "Thank you," she whispered into her ear, embracing her. Rain continued to pour over them. "For everything." Gini returned her hug and sniffled against her neck. Scully's heart ached at the thought of leaving this child. She'd been helpful, attentive and kind to them since the day they first met, sitting beside Mulder's sick bed during his entire illness and welcoming them with obvious delight when they found the tribe the second time. It saddened her to think this was going to be the last time she would ever see the girl. "No tears, okay?" She pulled away and looked into Gini's sad eyes. The girl snuffled. "Han-ker-cheef?" Scully looked back at Mulder with raised brows. He fumbled through his pocket, withdrew his handkerchief, and held it out to Gini, who took it and used it to blow her running nose. "Tahn-kew," she said, returning it. Then her expression changed from sad to stern. She began jabbering in an insistent voice and signaled for them to wait. "Where is she going?" Mulder asked. "She seems to be looking for something," Scully said. They watched as she ran along the edge of the field, peering intently into the woods. "We shouldn't be hanging around." Mulder glanced back at the village. His legs were trembling so badly Scully worried he would collapse. She took hold of his arm to steady him. "Give her a minute," she said. Apparently finding what she'd been looking for, Gini waved them forward. Scully helped Mulder to her. She heard the sound of rushing water before she spotted the stream. It skirted the ball field, running from the lake to the woods, and was perfect for their escape. Hiking in the water would conceal their tracks, as well as provide them with plenty to drink. Gini must've had the same idea. She was urging them into the stream and whispering earnest instructions. "Ye-tsan Ne-ahs-jeh Din-neh-ih. Ye-tsan Dzeh," she said. Scully nodded, hoping the girl was telling them the stream would lead to hospitable territory where they weren't likely to encounter any more unfriendly natives. Before she could thank her one last time, Gini rushed forward and wrapped her small arms around her waist. Scully returned her tight embrace. "Nih-hi-cho," Gini said before pulling away and turning to Mulder. She hugged him hard, too, then looked up into his eyes and repeated, "Nih-hi-cho." Mulder bent to kiss her forehead. "Take care of yourself, pipsqueak," he murmured. She nodded as if she understood, then rose up on her toes and pressed a kiss to his bearded, bruised cheek. The girl's show of affection brought a lump to Scully's throat, and it was a moment or two before she could say, "Come on, Mulder. Let's go." Together they waded into the stream and turned south, leaving Gini standing on the bank. * * * As soon as Muhl-dar and Day-nuh were out of sight, Gini hurried back to the goal post and picked up the fertility idol from the muddy ground. She wiped it clean on her wet tunic and then rolled it in her palm, trying to feel its hidden life force. Nothing out of the ordinary emanated from the tiny figurine. It felt like any old bit of bone. The discovery disappointed and confused her. She knew Dzeh had taken the idol to Tsa-ond Cave to be blessed by Hare Spirit, the fertility god, so she expected it to be warm with the life force of a new baby. Prodding the idol's hard, swollen belly, she whispered, "Are you in there, little baby?" Wind howled past her and rain splashed in puddles around her bare feet. The idol remained silent. Even when she held it up to her ear, she could hear no heartbeat or tiny cry. Could the baby be inside Dzeh already? Klizzie had told her that babies crawled through a man's be-zonz during mating. Maybe Hare Spirit put the baby into the idol and then it somehow got from there into Dzeh during his prayers in Tsa-ond Cave. This seemed like a very crazy way to make babies! If Hare Spirit was powerful enough to put a baby into a statue, why didn't he just put it directly into Dzeh? For that matter, why not put babies into their mothers instead of statues or fathers? Then there would be no reason for women to mate at all. No need to move away from family, no need to share sleeping skins with strangers, no need to let boys put their big be-zonz-- Ugh! Gini didn't want to think about it. She was remembering that awful stallion with his mare again, the mare's eyes rounded with fear as the stallion pushed his enormous be-zonz into her. Gini was *not* going to let that happen to her. She didn't want to share sleeping skins with a man; she didn't want him to put his be-zonz between her legs. She especially didn't want that mean, ugly boy Chal touching her! If Dzeh was expecting her to willingly live with Chal and Badger Clan, he was in for a surprise. She wasn't going to join with any boy *ever*. She was going to run away...tonight. She'd been planning it all day, intending to sneak off during Jeha's Joining Ceremony, knowing the long celebration would keep everyone too busy to notice she wasn't there. But then Dzeh ruined everything by dragging her to the stupid ceremony. She'd tried to get away, even insulted him in front of all the clansmen by calling him a chindi. But instead of being embarrassed and releasing her, he hit her! And then the fight started with Muhl-dar and the idol fell onto the ground... Well, it was fish down the river now, and things had actually turned out for the better. Now she could follow Muhl-dar and Day-nuh instead of traveling on her own. She fervently wished they'd invited her to come along with them. She wasn't sure why they didn't want her, because she was good at finding and preparing food. And she was strong; she could carry almost as much as Klizzie. She knew how to fish and scrape hides and smoke meat. She could even make pemmican. They would see for themselves soon enough. She would prove to them how helpful she could be. All she needed to do was remain out of sight for a few days while she followed them, then when they were too far from Turkey Lake to bring her back, she could show herself and everything would be fine. Squeezing Dzeh's idol in her fist, she started across the wet field, heading for the base of Crouching Cat Mountain where the clans had piled the prizes for the winners of the ball games. She would gather supplies from these rich stores before starting after Muhl-dar and Day-nuh. She found the goods covered with a tarp of heavy mastodon hide to protect them from the weather. Rain continued to pelt her as she rolled back the fur. Her tunic flapped wetly in the wind. Water ran in numbing streams down her body and she clenched her teeth to stop their chattering. Not all the prizes had been left beneath the tarp. Fragile items had been put elsewhere for the night. But she wasn't interested in those pretty but useless things anyway; she would have no need for embroidered tunics, feathered hats or fancy baskets while traveling. A sturdy pack and some basic gear was all she would need or want to carry. Wiping rain from her eyes, she quickly located a suitable travel pack. She began filling it with only the most essential items: fishing line and hooks, flints, a spare knife, a couple of scrapers. There was one item she knew she would need but couldn't find here: a waterbag. She considered sneaking back into camp to get one, but decided it wasn't worth the risk of getting caught. Spotting the Clan's large gourd of honey, she decided to dump it and take the container. The gourd was sealed with pine pitch, which Gini scraped off with her knife before upending the container. Thick honey poured out onto the ground, and she scooped up fingers-full to eat. It tasted sweet and wonderful and she wished there was some way to take it with her. But it was too heavy to carry and she needed the gourd for water in any case. She cleaned her sticky fingers on a deer hide, then turned her attention back to her travel pack. Only the fertility idol remained to be placed inside. It was wrong to take it, she knew, but Muhl-dar seemed to want it so badly. He'd risked his life for it. It would make him happy if she brought it to him. Maybe he would give her a big hug and forget any thoughts about sending her back to the Clan. "Don't worry, little baby," she said, gently tucking the figurine into the pack and covering it with a soft, sleeping blanket. "You will be with your new mother and father soon. Until then, I will watch over you." She stood and shouldered the pack. It was reasonably light. Grabbing the gourd, she headed south after the others. In no time she spotted them. They were moving very slowly, most likely due to Muhl-dar's terrible injuries. They waded through A-Chi Stream, dodging boulders and downed trees. They carried a mysterious light-stick that projected a fiery beam onto their path, making them easy to track even from a distance. A-Chi Stream ran from Turkey Lake to Tacheene far to the south, where the soil was so red it was said to have been painted by the blood of warring Spirits. Gini had been there last year for an autumn feast with Ant Clan. The territory was dry, she remembered, with few trees and many enormous anthills. Strange creatures called armadillos roamed the blood-red countryside, ravaging the mounds and gorging on insects. The people of Ant Clan had been generous hosts, but they practiced many peculiar habits. They bound the heads of their babies with tight strips of animal hide, causing the infants' skulls to become pointed. Men and women alike shaved their own pointed heads and painted their bald skulls with the red pigment of their land. When boys became men, they pierced their lower lips and plugged the holes with large, circular bones. Women tattooed their chins with striped designs. The oddest thing these people did to themselves was to file their two front teeth into sharp points! They were the ugliest people Gini had ever seen. To the south of Ant Clan Territory lay a body of water called Endless Lake, rumored to be so vast it was impossible to glimpse its opposite shore even on a clear day. No one had actually ever gone there to see it for themselves because it was located beyond Ye-tsan Basin, a mysterious valley that was said to be the home of massive serpents, creatures bigger than the largest bull mastodon and meaner than a wounded she-bear. Only a desperate person would enter such a place. It scared Gini to think of going to Ye-tsan Basin and meeting up with giant serpents, but it seemed a better choice than returning to Turkey Lake where Dzeh would surely kill Muhl-dar and send her to live with Badger Clan. She would rather face countless giant lizards than be forced to share a sleeping skin with Chal. If Muhl-dar and Day-nuh decided to go to the Basin, she would go, too. * * * "Want me to carry the pack?" Mulder asked. He trailed Scully by a step or two, trying to keep up as they waded downstream. He ached all over. Standing was excruciating; walking was worse. He felt like dying. "I've got it," she said. Flicking on her flashlight, she aimed its beam to guide him around a boulder. "How long have we been walking?" "Three hours and twenty-three minutes. That's nine minutes longer than the last time you asked." It took Mulder a moment to make sense of her answer. His mind wanted to float off to a warmer, drier place, preferably in the 20th Century, where his head didn't throb and he could see clearly out of both eyes. His right eye was swollen completely shut, wreaking havoc with his depth perception. He couldn't walk a straight line if his life depended on it. And he couldn't feel his legs from the knees down, they were so numbed by the stream's frigid water. He repeatedly lurched to the left, tripping over his own feet, no matter how hard he tried to focus his one good eye on the beam of Scully's light. "Why is it so cold?" he asked. "It's the Ice Age." She glanced over her shoulder to give him a concerned look. "But it's June...isn't it? Do we have to walk in the water?" She turned her attention back to the stream. "Yes, if we want to hide our tracks." "Oh." He wanted to ask why they needed to hide their tracks, but he was pretty sure he should know that already. Instead he asked, "Where are we going?" "You asked that nine minutes ago, too." Had he? "Well, what did you say?" "South, as far as I can tell." South. He pictured sunny beaches. Maybe it would be warm there instead of raining icy pellets. Sleet pinged off his soaked clothes, stung his exposed skin. He drew his collar up around his neck when he realized he was shivering uncontrollably. The world was pitch black beyond the narrow beam of Scully's light. From the patter of rain overhead, Mulder guessed they were walking beneath a low canopy of leafy tree branches. The stream seemed to twist and turn, although that might just be an illusion. He felt dizzy, disoriented. And whenever he looked away from Scully's light, he saw stones flying at him. They appeared so real he flinched every time. Angry faces hovered like specters behind the onslaught of imaginary stones. He thought he heard them shouting. When another stone suddenly hurtled toward him, he lifted his arm to protect his head. The motion hurt like hell. Pain zigzagged across his ribs. "Scullee!" he shouted, and then lost sight of her behind the steam of his own breath. His legs gave out and he sank to his knees. Cold enveloped him to his waist, cutting him in half. He felt the sickening sensation of spiraling down into a bottomless pit. "Stay with me, Mulder." Scully's voice sliced through the fog in his head, stopping his dizzying freefall. "You're going to be okay." She was kneeling beside him, holding him. Her flashlight bobbled as she tried to maneuver beneath his left arm, disorienting him further. He felt his stomach roll and grabbed onto her. "Scully!" he pleaded, wanting her to stop the world's awful spinning. "I'm right here. I've got you." She hooked his left arm around her neck and shouldered him into a semi-standing position. He cried out in pain when she pushed him toward shore, making his legs move, dragging them both from the stream. They collapsed on the rocky bank, a few feet from the water's edge. "Mulder? Can you hear me?" He nodded, too exhausted to speak. Her arms embraced him. He let his head drop to her shoulder...tried to catch his breath...stay awake. She rocked him. Kissed his hair. Was she murmuring...something...? He couldn't make out her words. Curling into a ball, he rolled into her lap...grateful for the warmth of her body...and the gentle timbre of her voice. Trying to listen, he sank into blackness. * * * An hour later Scully still cradled Mulder's head in her lap. He was sleeping on his side, knees drawn up and hands tucked into his armpits. Even in the dark she could see the bruises that mottled his face, the dried blood caking his brow and his swollen right eye. The severity of the tribe's assault frightened her. She'd assumed the mate exchange would ensure their safety, but apparently they'd participated in the loathsome custom for nothing. Compliance hadn't earned them the tribe's trust or protection. She'd been naive to believe it could. A strip of pale daylight was beginning to emerge from behind the hilltops. Although the rain had stopped, she shivered from fatigue and exposure. The frigid air reminded her more of December than mid-June. Jesus, if it was this cold in summer, what must it be like in winter? She hoped they would be home long before they ever had to find out. Caressing Mulder's cheek, she tried to coax him awake. The tribe would soon discover they were gone. They should keep moving, put as much distance between themselves and the village as possible, in case Dzeh decided to come after them. "Mulder?" His skin felt ice-cold. "Wake up, sweetheart." The endearment slipped easily off her tongue, surprising her with how natural it felt. Had he heard it? She blushed at her presumptuousness. Mulder didn't share her feelings, at least not yet; he hadn't seen their son in a vision the way she had. But for her, the unexpected foresight had caused a fundamental shift in her view of their relationship. Funny, two weeks ago she'd been agonizing over their future together, wondering how she could reconcile her love for him with her inability to give him children. It seemed wrong to encourage his advances...until she'd cradled their son in her arms. Then everything changed. Learning she would bear a child -- Mulder's child -- eased her worries about a fruitless and lonely life. The future was suddenly full of promise. And it included Mulder in a way she'd been hoping all along, yet hadn't realized how much until this very moment. Devotion welled up in her so earnest and strong it swept her old uncertainties away. Mulder was not a perfect man, but he was perfect for her, and she hoped their child would grow to be just like him, searching for the truth and railing against the lies of men, even if it meant he also believed in Bigfoot, witchcraft and aliens from outer space. There was no doubt he would make her proud...make them both proud. How could he not? His conception, his birth, his entire being would be nothing short of a miracle. Mulder shifted fretfully in his sleep, interrupting her thoughts. She tried to soothe him by stroking his face. He moaned when she touched him. "Klizzie?" he murmured. Her hand froze mid-stroke. She glanced at his lap, checking to see if he was aroused, and then immediately chided herself for her presumption. He didn't have an erection and even if he did, it wouldn't necessarily mean anything. He was only dreaming. The possibility that he may have impregnated Klizzie during the exchange arose again in her mind. She tried to push her worry away. Maybe he'd withdrawn before ejaculating. Had he thought to do that? Even if he had, withdrawal was a notoriously unreliable method of birth control. She could only hope that Klizzie wasn't at a fertile point in her cycle. At least her own current infertility removed any concern about becoming pregnant by Dzeh. Contracting a sexually transmitted disease was unlikely, too, given that Europeans introduced most venereal diseases to the New World. Dzeh and Klizzie should be free of gonorrhea, syphilis and other known STDs, including AIDs, which was too recent to be a consideration. She and Mulder were both clean, she knew, so there would be no transmission the other way. Unless... It was possible Dzeh and Klizzie carried diseases that were extinct in modern times, to which she and Mulder had no immunity. It was even more likely that she or Mulder could infect the others with a modern day contagion. The introduction of a communicable disease like measles or small pox to a prehistoric population could alter history in any number of catastrophic ways. Jesus, yesterday the decision to participate in the exchange had seemed a personal choice. Now she realized their actions carried consequences beyond themselves. Everything they did here could inevitably impact the future. Why hadn't they considered this sooner? Mulder moaned again. "Scully?" he mumbled, sounding confused. "It's okay. I'm right here." He rolled his head until he was looking up at her with his one good eye. "I was having a nightmare." "So I gathered," she said, helping him sit up. "I dreamt I was playing the worst dodge ball game of my life." He tentatively touched his swollen eye. "Guess it wasn't a dream. How long have I been out?" "Only an hour. Feeling better?" "No, but let's get going anyway." With a deep groan he lurched to his feet. Wobbling on unsteady legs, he offered her a hand up. She took it and pulled herself to a standing position. Then she grabbed their pack from the ground. "Any food in there?" he asked, licking his swollen lower lip. She opened it and discovered beneath Mulder's boxers, it was full of dried meat. She pulled out two stiff strips, gave one to him and took a bite of the other herself. "S'good," she said, shouldering the pack. He eyed the meat suspiciously. "Did I see my dirty underwear in there?" "Yes, but this is no time to be picky. Eat it. It's all we have and you're going to need your strength." He sniffed the meat. Then took a small bite. "Not bad," he admitted. "Where'd you get it?" He took a larger bite. "Gini." They began hiking south, Scully in the lead. "She freed me from the medicine man and brought me to you." Mulder was quiet for few minutes. "We're never going to see her again," he finally said. "I know." She thought once more about the threat of contagion and the potential consequences of their contact with the tribe. "It's for the best." * * * Daylight crept across the pre-dawn sky like a slinking cat. The rising sun, obscured by a low-slung overcast, brought no warmth. Klizzie slept curled on her side on the summit of Crouching Cat Mountain. The ground around her bristled with frost and she shivered in her sleep. She was wearing only her short fur skirt and a lightweight summer cloak made of thin doeskin. A dusting of snowflakes dotted her shoulders and hair. Dreaming of soft sleeping skins, a warm hearth fire and Dzeh's breath on the back of her neck, she didn't see the pale Snowy Owl that circled overhead. It spiraled lower. Only when it flapped its broad wings to settle on a nearby boulder did Klizzie awaken from her comforting dream. She gasped when she saw the bird. The arrival of the owl -- her Clan's totem -- was an undeniable omen. It was possible the bird carried a message from Owl Spirit. But was its news good or bad? The owl ruffled its white feathers, turned its head and winked at her with one golden-green eye. Trying to control her panting breaths, Klizzie rose slowly to her knees to face the heavenly messenger. It met her surprised stare with a tranquil gaze. Emotions churned inside her heaving chest: fear, hope, reverence, wonder. She had prayed to Owl Spirit for guidance and there he was! She supposed she should say something, maybe repeat her prayer, but her voice was hiding deep within her throat and her words refused to come out. She found she could not even whisper an apology for her reticence. Maybe the bird could hear her thoughts! Quieting her mind as best as she could, she allowed her prayer to take shape inside her head: Help my spirit fly without shame...help my spirit fly without shame...help my spirit fly-- The owl turned its head and fastened its gaze upon the village. A heartbeat later it rose from its stone perch and flapped skyward, where it rode a current into the valley. Klizzie watched it hover above the huts like wood ash caught in an updraft. She finally found her voice and yelled, "Help my spirit fly without shame!" Suddenly the bird dove, spiraling into the center of the village as if hunting mice. She felt her stomach lurch as the owl plummeted. Its talons raked the ground before it flew up again, with a writhing snake dangling beneath its belly. The bird headed south across the ball field toward the forest. The sight of it -- swift, graceful, beautiful -- filled Klizzie with optimism and awe. When it disappeared over the trees, it seemed to take her troubles with it. Rising to her feet, Klizzie felt buoyed by the morning's extraordinary beginning. A Spiritual visitation was a rare occurrence and a great honor. She was eager to tell Dzeh of it so he could ask the Shaman to interpret its meaning. She must try to remember every detail: the owl's actions, the wind's direction, the sun's position. Anything and everything might be important. Not wanting to let a single memory slip away before she could share it, she broke into a run and hurried toward the village. When she arrived at the bottom of the hill, her heart was pounding and her chest aching. At the outermost edge of the village she slowed to a trot and headed for Lin's hut, believing she would find Dzeh there. Up on the mountain she had been certain he would welcome the news of her spiritual encounter, maybe even believe it meant the Spirits had forgiven her for her misdeeds. And surely if the gods could forgive her, he could, too. But the closer she drew to Lin's hut, the more she felt seized by doubt. She began to worry she might have misinterpreted the meaning of the owl and Dzeh would not be as forgiving as she'd hoped. No one was up yet, so Klizzie passed between the huts unnoticed. The communal hearth fires remained cold and black, extinguished by last night's downpour. They dotted the village like bruises and the sight of them made her feel strangely alone. It looked as if the Clan had abandoned the camp in the night and no one had come to tell her. Outside Lin's hut, she paused to catch her breath and gather her courage. She knew she had disappointed Dzeh and could not fault him if he no longer wanted her as his mate, but she also wondered how she could bear to live without him. Perhaps his anger toward her would thaw once he heard her account of the owl's visit. She pushed aside the hide door and entered the shelter. A fire blazed in the hearth, casting a warm glow on the sleeping occupants. Their bodies formed hills beneath their furs. Dzeh's sleeping skins, however, were empty. Uncle Lin raised his head when a cold draft, let in by Klizzie, ruffled his gray hair. "Where have you been, my Niece?" he asked, keeping his voice low. She came to him and dropped to her knees, bowing out of respect. "I have been praying, Uncle, on the mountaintop." Lin propped himself on one elbow. He looked at her with kind eyes. "Did the Spirits answer your prayers?" She felt joy swelling inside her at the memory of the owl. "Yes, Owl Spirit appeared to me," she said, breathless with the wonder of it. Lin sat up. "Did he speak to you?" His startled tone caused several of the others to stir and waken. "No. He flew from the mountain to the village, where he plucked a snake from the ground and carried it away." "A snake in the village?" Lin's gray eyebrows drew together. "Where did Owl Spirit take this snake?" "South, into the woods. What do you think it means?" By now most of the hut's occupants were awake and listening. "The elders must hear your story and discuss its meaning." Lin rose from his bed. His eyes fell on Dzeh's sleeping skins. "Where is your mate?" Klizzie shook her head. It was possible Dzeh had gone to the hut where she had slept with Muhl-dar yesterday morning. Perhaps he wanted privacy to think about the things she had told him. She was about to mention this when she noticed Gini's bed was also empty. A spear of worry struck her heart. "Where is Gini?" she asked. Lin glanced around the hut, a look of indifference on his face. No doubt he assumed she was sleeping at the hearth of a cousin or friend. It wasn't unusual for a child to spend the night in a bed other than her own. The entire Clan watched out for every child, treating each like a son or daughter. They were all kin, after all. But Klizzie remained fearful, remembering last night's storm. Had Gini been out in it? She couldn't recall the last time she'd seen the girl. Yesterday she'd been so intent on her own problems she'd paid little attention to Gini. At that moment Dzeh's cousin Wol-la-chee pushed his way through the hide door into the hut. He was breathing hard and his face was flushed as if he'd been running. "The strangers have escaped," he announced. Lin's eyes rounded. He rose and shouldered past Wol-la-chee, out of the hut. Wol-la-chee glanced at Klizzie. "Are you coming?" he asked, and then followed after Lin. Klizzie remained frozen in place. The strangers have escaped? What had he meant by that? What happened last night while she was on Crouching Cat Mountain? * * * Needing to empty her bladder, Gini shouldered her pack and climbed out of the broad-limbed hackberry tree where she'd spent the night. It was too bad the tree's berries weren't ripe, she thought as she hopped to the ground. They would make a convenient breakfast. After relieving herself, she headed to the stream, picking her way carefully through dense greenbriers. Thorns pricked her feet and scratched her legs, but she ignored them, intent on locating Muhl-dar and Day-nuh. She had last seen them beside the stream where they stopped to rest. Not wanting to get too close, and preferring the safety of a tree for sleeping, she'd hiked a short distance into the woods where she located the hackberry. She intended to wake and return to the stream at dawn, but sleep had hung onto her until the sun was halfway up in the sky. Quickening her pace, she arrived at the bank to find Muhl-dar and Day-nuh were gone. That was good, she thought. They needed as much of a head start as possible to outdistance Dzeh's search party. As long as they stayed their course, following the stream, she could find them easily enough. They were traveling slowly, both suffering from injuries. If she jogged, she could easily overtake them by mid-afternoon. There was no doubt Dzeh would come after them. Muhl-dar's crime had been serious and Dzeh was very angry. Even so, it was unlikely he would lead his search party any farther south than Ant Clan territory. Ye-tsan Basin lay beyond that and no one would willingly travel there. Gini began scrounging the wooded bank for breakfast. Juneberry plants were plentiful, but their small fruits wouldn't be ripe for another moon yet, so she passed them over and collected greens instead: chickweed, sorrel and violets. She particularly enjoyed the sweet flavor of the violet blossoms and popped one flower after the next into her mouth as she gathered enough food to satisfy her empty belly. She carried the greens to the edge of the stream where she sat to eat. The chickweed tasted a little bitter, but the tart flavor of the sorrel washed her tongue clean. Watching the shallow brook churn southward, she kept an eye out for frogs or turtles. Their meat would make a fine meal later in the day. A gentle breeze was blowing from the west. Gini was thankful it no longer carried the smell of snow or rain. She hoped the clouds would clear soon, allowing the sun to shine. Traveling would be so much more comfortable with dry hair and clothes. Finished eating her greens, she bent to drink from the stream. The water tasted cold and sweet. She took long, satisfying gulps before standing and lifting her pack to her shoulder. Hunger sated and thirst slaked, she began jogging downstream in search of Muhl-dar and Day-nuh. * * * The entire village was in turmoil. People circulated from hearth to hearth, speculating about the strangers' motives and the location of the missing girl. Rumors spread quickly that the chindi from Eel Clan had used powerful magic to conjure up last night's storm and free himself from the goal post. He then cast a spell on the Shaman, rendering him unconscious, and released the red-haired woman. It was soon discovered that several items were missing from the pile of goods intended as prizes for the winners of the ball games. Already considered a thief, Muhl-dar was blamed for stealing the goods. He was also accused of kidnapping little Gini. Only the Spirits could know his evil intentions, but there was conjecture that he would make a slave of her. Or worse, cook and eat her for his supper. After all, Eel Clan men were cannibals, capable of any atrocity. Many people were helping to search for the strangers and Gini. Klizzie checked and double-checked every hut in the village, hoping to find the girl. Wol-la-chee led a party of men up Crouching Cat Mountain to comb the fields and explore the stony summit. Uncle Lin headed east into the hills, taking four skilled trackers from Badger Clan with him. A group of boys hiked around Turkey Lake, calling Gini's name and looking for signs that she and the strangers might have gone north. Dzeh scoured the woods to the south, accompanied by three experienced hunters from Turtle and Owl Clans. By mid-afternoon, the disappointed search parties returned to the village. Last night's rain had obliterated any prints, making it impossible to track the runaways. Dzeh sat with a group of eight or nine men around Uncle Lin's hearth, discussing what they should do next. Klizzie was present, too, although she remained respectably separate from the men, sitting half-hidden in shadows by the wall. Her eyes were red and swollen from crying and she occasionally sniffled. "Of course they took her!" Dzeh pounded his fist against the ground. "Where else would she be?" "A saber-toothed cat or--" young Chal began. Dzeh cut off the boy's ominous speculation. "No. She is *not* dead." "Being eaten by a cat might be preferable to--" Wol-la-chee let the remainder of his thought go unspoken when Dzeh aimed a storm cloud expression his way. "The most logical direction for them to go is south," Lin said. "Maybe they are hiding on the mountain to come back and kill us in our sleep," said Wol-la-chee's nephew Ghaw-jih. "If they intended to kill us in our sleep, they would have done so already," Lin said. "They are running away like thieving cowards," said a pale- eyed tracker from Otter Clan. "And the most likely direction is south. There are mountains to the east and west. And the Tkin Glacier lies to the north." "But the glacier is six days hike away." "That is true, but heading toward an ice sheet is a useless journey. Following A-Chi Stream will lead them into Ant Clan Territory." "And Ye-tsan Basin beyond that. Who would go there? It is full of giant serpents," said Ghaw-jih. "They will probably veer east or west before they reach the Basin," Dzeh said, concurring with his uncle. "They could just as easily veer east or west before Tkin Glacier, too," Wol-la-chee pointed out. Lin combed his fingers thoughtfully through his long gray beard. "Klizzie saw an owl visit our village this morning." Everyone turned to stare at Klizzie. Dzeh wondered why she had kept such important news from him, but then remembered Klesh and her inclination to keep secrets. Lin continued, "She said the owl caught a snake and carried it into the woods to the south." The Shaman, who had been listening without speaking until now, pulled his pipe from his mouth and said, "It is a sign. The strangers went in that direction." "They might be following A-Chi Stream," Lin said. "It would cover their tracks and provide fresh drinking water." "Then we will follow the stream, too," Dzeh said. "When we find the strangers, we will kill them and bring Gini back." "We must be careful. Muhl-dar is a powerful man if he can conjure up a storm like the one last night," Lin said. All the men nodded in agreement. "I am not afraid," Dzeh said, rising to his feet. "The longer we sit here talking, the further away he gets. Already he has a full day's start. My sister is with him and I will not wait a heartbeat longer." He looked intently at the others. "I need two men to come with me." Wol-la-chee jumped to his feet. "I will go." "So will I," Lin said, standing. Chal stood, too. "May I come, Uncle?" Dzeh studied the boy's earnest expression and nodded his consent. "I want to go," Klizzie said from her place by the wall. "Absolutely not." Dzeh's face blazed at the thought of traveling with her. They hadn't had an opportunity to talk out their differences and a personal discussion would be impossible on the trail. The others would be at their sides every step of the way and Dzeh did not want them to know Klizzie's terrible secret. "But--" "No! You will stay here." Having given his final word, he went to collect his travel pack. With the Spirits' help, Gini would soon be back in her own bed and Muhl-dar and Day-nuh would be dead. * * * "Scully, what was your favorite penny candy when you were a kid?" Mulder trailed her by a step or two. It was late afternoon and the sun was finally shining. They'd been traveling non-stop since dawn, with only short breaks for drinking or relieving themselves. "Twizzlers." "Red or black?" Still heading south, they were following the stream but no longer wading in it. The current was swift here, the banks steep and rocky, sloping downhill, winding through a forested gorge of evergreen trees and giant boulders. The clamor of rushing water ricocheted off every tree trunk and stony outcropping. The air smelled like fermenting fruit. Moss and damp earth softened their footfalls. "Red." Scully stepped carefully over a tangle of tree roots, each one the size of Mulder's arm. Her limp was becoming more pronounced, but she pressed onward without complaint. "What about you? What was your favorite?" Mulder limped, too. His head throbbed where he'd been struck above his right eye. Every muscle in his body protested the endless downward trek. He pushed a drooping tree branch out of his path and continued on. "I liked those wax lips." "You did not." She glanced over her shoulder to give him a disbelieving scowl. "No, really, I did. Sam used to buy the Dracula teeth and I'd get the lips, then we'd put them on and try to scare Mom." "Bet it worked." Scully returned her attention to the uneven ground. "Why Twizzlers?" he asked, trying to concentrate on anything but the pain in his ribs or his godawful exhaustion. When a bird shrieked overhead, calling "Thief! Thief!" he hunted for it in the foliage. He glimpsed a blur of feathers before the jay disappeared into the branches. "I liked the flavor and they lasted a long time," she said. "Fire balls and Sugar Daddies last a long time, too." She shrugged. "Fireballs were okay, but Sugar Daddies stuck to my braces." He tried to picture her as a girl with braces, but had trouble filling in all the details. Had she worn her hair long or short? Was she skinny? Chunky? Something in between? No doubt she had freckles. He could imagine her surrounded by a bunch of giggling girlfriends. He guessed she'd become a loner only later on...after meeting him. "Bet you were cute with your mouth full of wires." "I wasn't, believe me. Bill called me 'tinsel teeth.' It was a very traumatic time," she said, not sounding traumatized at all. "Well, your smile turned out pretty." She grunted and he wasn't sure if it was in response to his comment or the sudden dip in the trail. She held her arms out for balance and teetered from one moss-covered stone to the next. He waited until she was on even ground before attempting to descend the embankment after her. Thankfully the path flattened out at the bottom of the incline. Mulder didn't think his calves and thighs could hold out much longer against the inexorable pull of gravity. They walked without talking. Every twenty or thirty feet, sunlight spilled through the canopy, spotlighting the ground. Mulder concentrated on each whitewashed pool, challenging himself to overtake the next one without asking Scully to please stop and rest. One more, one more, he chanted in his head. "We don't really talk much, do we?" Scully suddenly asked. "I just told you about my wax lips; what else do you want to know?" She stopped beneath the next sunbeam and turned to face him, skin luminescent, hair glowing like fire. "Mulder, is there any chance...?" Her face flushed and she glanced away. Her discomfort was obvious. She seemed to be trying to gather her courage. "Chance of...?" Either unable or unwilling to look him in the eye, she focused on a point somewhere in the middle of his chest. "Did you..." She paused to clear her throat. "Did you withdraw from Klizzie before you...?" It was his turn to blush, although not from embarrassment. His discomfort was borne of guilt. He'd been hoping this subject would never, ever come up. There was no way he was going to tell her the truth. Explaining how he'd copped out while she surrendered herself would heap insult onto injury. Especially now, knowing that her sacrifice had been for nothing. He must have paused too long before answering because she hurried to explain, "I-I'm asking because a pregnancy would...could have...far-reaching consequences...catastrophic even...what I mean is...your actions...*our* actions could, uh, change the course of history...couldn't they? Shouldn't we be worried?" So it was the future of mankind, not his night with Klizzie specifically that was bothering her. Feeling both relieved and disappointed, he shouldered past her to take the lead. "Ever hear of the 'Cosmic Censor'?" he asked. "No. What does it have to do with us inadvertently changing history?" Her voice joggled as she hurried after him. She sounded irritated. "Plenty. It's Stephen Hawking's solution to the Grandfather Paradox." "The Grandfather Paradox: 'Can a man travel back in time, father a child who turns out to be his father, making him his own grandfather?'" "That's the one." He realized the conversation was U-turning back to his night with Klizzie, so he quickly went on to say, "Hawking claims the Cosmic Censor -- an omnipotent entity who watches over time travelers -- intervenes to prevent the occurrence of such paradoxes. The Censor operates something like this: if a man goes back in time and attempts to alter his personal history, for example by trying to prevent his lover from being killed in a car accident, then the Cosmic Censor arranges things so that the woman is killed some other way. No matter how many times the traveler attempts to prevent his lover's death, she will always die." "So you're saying this Cosmic Censor won't allow us to change history even by accident." "According to Hawking." "You believe that?" "Scully, you said it yourself. 'Although multidimensionality suggests infinite outcomes in an infinite number of universes, each universe can produce only one outcome.'" "I didn't have the Cosmic Censor in mind when I wrote that." "Maybe not, but I take it you meant that the future can't be altered." The wet ground was becoming spongier as they approached a lowland area clogged with cedars, fallen trees and spiky, yellow bog plants. Feeling hemmed in by the broadening stream and the thickets of prickly vegetation, Mulder slowed his pace to sidestep the increasing number of puddles. A paw print in the mud caught his eye. It obviously belonged to a large cat, reminding him of the saber-toothed tiger that had chased them into a tree their first night in the Ice Age. He glanced around for more tracks. Without their guns or even a spear, they were sitting ducks for a saber-tooth, or any of the massive carnivores that roamed the Pleistocene landscape. "Let's keep going." Mulder slogged through a sea of knee-high weeds, vivid with yellow blossoms, each one speckled with crimson dots. The flowers poked at the sky like bloodied swords. "Scully, right after we arrived you mentioned something about a megafaunal extinction." "That's right. A major extinction took place around 11,400 B.P., killing off the megafauna: the mastodons, mammoths...saber-toothed cats. Why?" Unable to find solid footing, Mulder decided to change his course. He veered away from the stream and headed out of the marshy lowland toward higher ground to the west. "Any chance it could have been caused by a couple of time travelers?" "That's not funny." "Hawking could be wrong." Zigzagging around downed trees that bristled with dead branches, Mulder found firmer ground. He tried to gauge their direction by the position of the setting sun, but the dense canopy made it difficult to be accurate. Not that he was an accomplished navigator even when out in the open...or with a map, for that matter. He decided to follow the upward slope of the ground and worry about reconnecting with the stream later, after he was sure they'd circumvented the swamp. "Mulder, according to Hawking's theory, Jason Nichols must have failed when he tried to kill himself at the Biomedical Research Facility." Mulder had thought that very thing at the time. Although he'd watched both young and old Nichols burn to death, the paramedics had recovered only one body from the fire. "That might explain how we got here." "Jason Nichols continued his experiments." "Or Lisa did. Nichols' compound -- and time travel -- were eventually discovered by someone. I think he might have been at Hill Air Force Base with Lisa the day we ended up here." "Then he might be able to get us back, too." She sounded hopeful. He hated to disappoint her, but it was unlikely that Jason Nichols or anyone else would be helping them. "Only if he knows we're missing, Scully. Chances are, no one saw us on the Base in the first place." * * * OFFICE OF COLONEL R. BECK HILL AIR FORCE BASE MAY 14, 1998 6:22 AM "Airman Greenwood found it, sir, during his 0600 perimeter check." Captain Linden stood at attention while Colonel Beck sat behind his desk and examined the faded ball cap. The "Black Sox" insignia was unfamiliar to him. "Where?" he asked, turning the cap over in his hands. "Approximately 700 meters southwest from Hangar 19, sir, just off the tarmac." Linden kept his eyes aimed at a point somewhere above Beck's head. "Greenwood followed two sets of tracks to the fence, where he discovered a breach and a pair of wire cutters. Footprints led only one way, sir...in." "The intruders are still on Base?" Beck asked, incredulous. He resisted the urge to pound his fist against his desk. Keeping Nichols' experiments classified was crucial. General Kaback would shit bricks when he heard about this. "We're searching for them now, sir." Beck gave the Captain an intimidating stare. "Find them. Quickly and quietly." "Yes, sir." Linden saluted and Beck returned the gesture. As soon as the Captain was out the door, Colonel Beck picked up the phone and dialed General Kaback's number. * * * A-CHI STREAM SEASON OF THE MASTODON FEAST SUNSET Shadows engulfed the lowland bog as the sun slipped below the horizon. Gini navigated the gloom by following a swath of yellow loosestrife. The pale blossoms highlighted the course of the stream like tongues of fire, guiding her through the murky swamp. She knew she should have stopped long before sunset to locate a proper tree to sleep in, but she'd wanted to put the wetlands behind her before bedding down, especially after spotting cat tracks alongside those of Muhl-dar and Day- nuh. Now she was caught in the dark, halfway across the swamp. She listened for the growl of cats and the hiss of snakes, but all she could hear were shrieking crickets and harrumphing frogs, seemingly unconcerned by the splash of her hurrying steps. Nervously humming a song to allay her fears, Gini waded as fast as she could through the ankle-deep water, black as eel skin and just as alive. She knew the swamp was filled with crawling creatures, some of which would be good to eat if she could see them. But now, in the blinding dark, each slithering fish and tickling spider felt like the tap of dead spirits against her skin. Nothing was quite so scary as a night spent alone. Gini had always bedded down by firelight, surrounded by aunts, uncles, cousins and siblings. She was accustomed to the rustle of sleeping skins, soft snores, and occasional coughs. People moved about during the night, men returned late from the Prayer Lodge, women rose to nurse their babies, children scurried outside to relieve themselves. Mothers sang songs to coax their little ones to sleep. Fathers told tales. The hearth fire crackled. The lodge was safe and pleasant. Gini missed Klizzie and wished she'd had a chance to say goodbye. Thinking of Dzeh, however, renewed her resolve to never go back. She would have a new family; she would live with Muhl-dar and Day-nuh, and maybe visit their kin in Eel Clan. She would help tend their hearth and care for their children. They would be happy to have her stay with them and would never, ever send her away to live with a boy she did not like. It worried her that she hadn't seen Muhl-dar and Day-nuh since mid-afternoon. She had fallen behind when she stopped to hunt for food. The three fat frogs she'd caught had tasted good, but searching for them meant losing sight of the others. She plowed forward through reeds and mud. Fireflies blinked on and off, hovering over the loosestrife like winking eyes. Were the Spirits watching her? At long last she reached the far side of the swamp and higher ground. A sigh of relief shuddered from her chest when she located a sturdy shagbark. She scaled its rough limbs and quickly settled into a notch that held her like a giant hand. Satisfied she would not fall, she slid the pack from her shoulder and opened it. She rooted through its contents until she found the tiny, bone figurine. "We will sleep here tonight," she told it. She hung on to it tightly, careful not to drop it while she stowed her pack in the crook of an upper branch. Pack secured, she leaned against the tree trunk and examined the idol. It glowed silvery-white in her palm, lit by the rising moon. She stroked its swollen belly. "Would you like to hear a story or a song, Little Baby?" She listened for an answer, but heard only the whisper of leaves and the faint howl of a distant wolf. "Don't be scared." She kissed the tiny figurine and then began to sing. Her high- pitched voice wavered in the thin night air. "The red deer sleeps in a bowl of tall grass; "The wolf pup sleeps in a rocky den; "The eagle chick sleeps in a nest of twigs atop a loblolly pine; "But you, my Little One, sleep in my arms, close to my heart, until you wake again." She thought of Muhl-dar and Day-nuh camped somewhere downstream. Did they sleep holding onto one another? If she shouted their names, would they hear her? "There is no need to worry, Baby," she told the figurine. "As long as they follow the stream, we can find them." x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER FOURTEEN Shortly after sunup Gini shouldered her pack and began hiking south, following A-Chi Stream exactly as she had done the previous day. The land was flatter and more open here than to the north. Tall shagbark hickories lined both banks, their broad, woolly leaves fluttered in the morning breeze, filtering the sunrise and casting lively shadows on the water. The air tickled like butterfly wings against her bare legs and arms. It carried the honey-sweet scent of nectar from the profusion of lilies that were growing around the trees' gnarled trunks. She plucked several blossoms, staining her fingers orange-yellow with pollen. Popping the flowers whole into her mouth, she ate while she walked. The sweet-tasting buds, dripping with dew, appeased her growling belly and made a fine breakfast. She traveled a considerable distance, listening to the trill of vireos and trying to spot the shy birds, before it struck her that she had not seen a single footprint in the moist, lowland soil since starting out. Muhl-dar and Day-nuh's unusual footwear left distinctive, easy-to-spot impressions, yet there were none here. And now that she was looking more closely, she saw no other signs of her friends' passing either, no crushed vegetation, no broken twigs. Could they be traveling in the stream itself? The water ran deep and muddy, channeled between sloped banks rough with greenbriers and supplejacks. Boulders the size of mastodon skulls cluttered the sluggish stream. Walking around them would be cumbersome, impossible in some places. It seemed unlikely anyone would choose to travel there instead of on the bank. Dread crept up Gini's spine like a spider in the dark, bringing her to a stop. Muhl-dar and Day-nuh had not come this way, she realized. But which way had they gone? And at what point had they decided to turn away from the stream? Worry tightened her chest as she tried to remember when and where she'd last seen their tracks. Late yesterday evening, she recalled, on the northern border of the swamp. Muhl-dar's familiar prints, pressed deeply into the mud, and Day-nuh's smaller, shallower tracks had led her directly into the murky water. She assumed they would continue across to higher land, where the swamp narrowed once again into a south-flowing brook. After all, who would leave behind a source of fresh water when they carried no waterbag? And yet, for whatever reason, Muhl-dar and Day-nuh had veered away. Dismayed, Gini turned around. She would need to backtrack until she picked up their trail again. Focusing her eyes on the ground, she trudged along slowly, paying close attention while searching for the smallest sign of their passing. Her own tracks remained clearly visible in the loamy soil and she followed them all the way to the shagbark where she'd spent the previous night. Despite her vigilance, she found no evidence of the others. It was then she remembered hearing wolves howl while she sat in the tree waiting for sleep to claim her. Wolves could have chased Muhl-dar and Day-nuh off their course. Bees started buzzing in her stomach at the idea, and for a moment she thought she might lose her breakfast. She decided to cross the swamp again, return the way she'd come and locate the tracks she'd seen yesterday. Then she would try to follow Muhl-dar and Day-nuh's new trail. Not an accomplished tracker, Gini worried she might miss a shallow print or mistake a deer trail for a human path. Although she had sometimes listened to Dzeh and the other clansmen describe their hunting strategies and cunning as they sat around the hearth, she knew that listening was not doing. Even experienced hunters often returned to camp without meat, having lost the trail of their quarry. The sun was already halfway up in the sky; Muhl-dar and Day- nuh had a lengthy head start. If Gini failed to find their route soon, she would fall too far behind to ever catch them. Then what would she do? Legs quaking and heart pounding, she headed into the swamp once more. * * * "Which way now?" Scully asked. Dwarfed by a forest of ghostly birches and standing knee-deep in ferns, she waited for Mulder to make up his mind. He swiveled, a chevron of indecision marring his brow. Finally he speared the air with an outstretched arm. "That way..." -- his finger meandered northwest -- "I think." "I was about to say the opposite." She squinted into the morning sun. "Weren't we heading west last night?" "Were we?" He let his arm drop. "Mulder, I'm thirsty." "So am I." "We should have stayed with the stream." "Scully, it was a swamp." She licked dry lips, feeling exhausted and hungry and sick to death of being in the Pleistocene. "At least it was wet." "And full of saber-too--" His jaws suddenly clamped shut. He shouldered past her and started hiking downhill. "Fine, we'll head east." She stood her ground for a moment while his words sunk in. "Hey, wait! What were you going to say?" Her voice rattled in her chest as she jogged after him. "Nothing." "No, you said something about saber-toothed tigers." He quickened his pace. Her ankle throbbed from her unhealed sprain and she immediately began to fall behind. "Mulder, slow down!" He took three more long strides before he did as she asked. Coming to a stop, he straightened his shoulders and turned to face her. "I saw cat tracks. Big cat tracks," he admitted. "Where?" She caught up to him, breathless and limping. "In the swamp. Last night." "You didn't think it was worth mentioning at the time?" "I didn't see the point." "The point--" She struggled to control her temper. Sometimes he could be so infuriating, the way he danced around the truth, thinking he was protecting her by keeping things to himself. Well, she didn't need his coddling. "The point is we should be honest with each other." "That's interesting, consid--" Again he stopped himself mid- sentence. "See? You're doing it right now." "Doing what?" "Treating me like a child, which I find insulting -- and unjustified -- after all we've been through." Her anger came spilling out. "When will we be equals, Mulder? When will you be comfortable sharing the truth with me? What exactly does it take to earn your trust?" He stepped closer and loomed over her. When he spoke it was through clenched teeth. "Isn't that a bit hypocritical? Tell me you aren't keeping a few secrets of your own." There was no denying she censored her thoughts...a lot. Whether she did it more or less often than he did was irrelevant. They were both liars-by-omission. Ten thousand years from home with no one to depend upon but each other and here they were, still letting the worst of their old habits drive a wedge of misunderstanding between them. For God's sake, what benefit was there to perpetuating these foolish secrets and half-truths? She looked up at his bruised face, his swollen eye and split lip. Dried blood clung to his hair; fatigue lined his brow. It was time for a change. She steadied her voice and asked, "What do you want to know?" Her question clearly took him by surprise. He must have been expecting her to continue their argument, not capitulate, and it took him a moment to mentally switch gears. "Go ahead," she prompted. "Ask me anything. I promise to answer truthfully." Nodding his head, he said, "Okay, I want to know what happened between you and Dzeh." Suddenly his nod changed to a vehement shake. "No, I don't. Forget it." He spun around and began walking east again, although with less urgency than before. She hobbled after him, wondering if he really did or didn't want to hear about Dzeh. And if he did, could she bring herself to tell him? She'd just promised to answer his questions truthfully, whatever he wanted to ask, and she'd meant it. But then she hadn't expected him to ask about Dzeh. Neither of them said a word for the next several minutes. They mutely wound their way downhill around stands of prickly vegetation and in between saplings as dense as prison bars. Mulder paused to hold a brier out of her way, face set in angry despair, reminding her of a line from a poem: "Life is a quest and love a quarrel." Damn Millay...her poetry often left a sting, like a slap. It was no wonder she preferred science to literature. Hard facts were dispassionate and predictable. Love, on the other hand, was too damn personal and confusing. Did Mulder *really* want to know what happened between her and Dzeh? She decided to find out. "He didn't kiss me." "I said forget it. I don't want to know." His hands curled into fists and his strides lengthened. He dodged a thatch of brambles. "Then why did you ask?" Ignoring her question he said, "Just look for the stream, will you?" They were heading downhill through thickets and shadows. The stream was nowhere in sight. "It only lasted a few minutes," she said, returning to the subject of Dzeh. If he wanted the truth, then he'd get it. He glanced over his shoulder, looking confused. "What?" "Dzeh...the, uh...thing. The swap." Revulsion darkened his eyes. "I don't care." "He didn't hurt me...or at least he never meant to hurt me. He was gentle." "I said I don't care." "I think you do." "Scully, please, don't do this." He stopped walking to pin her with a sad stare. "Didn't you want us to be honest?" "No, that's what you wanted." She blinked up at him, perplexed. Was he saying he preferred secrets and wounded feelings over the truth? Too bad, Mulder. Enough of this pretense and deceit. Being honest had to be better than the status quo. She opened her mouth, prepared to meet his growing ire and tell him every distasteful detail, but he cut her off before she could begin. "Don't, Scully. Don't say something we'll both regret." Eyes bright with tears, he looked uncharacteristically frightened. His show of panic brought her up short and she paused for a moment to examine her motives before risking their relationship. In many ways it would be a relief to confide in him, to liberate her unease. But how would her release help him? He'd been beaten within an inch of his life only yesterday and it wouldn't benefit him in any way to suffer the additional torture of listening to her confessions. "You're right. I'm being selfish." "I didn't say that." "No, I said it." He combed his fingers through his hair, obviously conflicted. It was his turn to capitulate. "Uh...he really didn't hurt you?" "No." He turned to gaze at the forest, presenting a weary profile. His next words sounded thin and forlorn, and she had to strain to hear him when he asked, "What did he do?" Although his eyes were focused on the tree branches, she knew he was giving her his full attention. "He treated the whole thing in a very business-like way. It was as if he had a job to do--" "A job?" Disbelief flared Mulder's nostrils as his eyes once again met hers. "I doubt he felt that way. How can a man make love to a woman and not feel--" His voice cracked and, Adam's apple bobbing, he cleared his throat. "Can we please not talk about this?" His question aroused unwelcome suspicions. Had he felt something for Klizzie? Simple lust? Or worse: attraction, pleasure and gratification? She had experienced none of these. And from the way Dzeh had behaved toward her he hadn't seemed to either. "Are you saying you enjoyed yourself with Klizzie?" "No, I'm not saying that. No." The urge to argue appeared to leach out of him. "Then what did you feel?" she asked. "I don't want to talk about it." "Why not?" "You were the one who wanted to play true confessions, not me." "And you're the one who touts the truth as some sort of Holy Grail." "The *truth*..." He paused to fill his lungs, as if preparing for battle. "The truth is I didn't want to participate in that repulsive custom in the first place, but you already know that, so why are we having this conversation?" They were having this conversation because she wanted to hear him say that he loved her, that he found her more attractive than Klizzie, or any woman, that he intended to devote the rest of his life to her. But then, maybe none of those things were true. Maybe he had enjoyed being with Klizzie more than he was admitting.Resentment, alarm, and distrust coursed through her veins, singeing her cheeks and turning her bones rubbery. She realized she was jealous. Crazy insane jealous and she hated the feeling. It was irrational. It made her feel vulnerable and powerless, and she'd already had her fill of feeling powerless. She decided it might be best to keep some secrets after all...like her suspicions about Mulder and Klizzie. "Fine, this conversation is over." Eyes stinging with tears and heart pinched with doubt she elbowed past him. They'd lost their way in more ways than one, it seemed, and now they were stumbling blindly toward nothing at all. * * * Dzeh led the search party, wanting to be where the view was unobstructed and odors unsullied by the passage of his companions, where sounds were not muddled by their panting breaths and thudding footfalls. His senses were primed for this hunt and even after a full morning of strenuous travel he remained fully alert. He slogged through the lowland cedar forest, dodging puddles and bog plants, following the murky course of A-Chi Stream. The sodden ground held tracks: Muhl-dar's, Day-nuh's and Gini's. Anger burned in his throat at the thought of his sister with the strangers. Muhl-dar had robbed him not once, but twice, first taking the spiritual offering and then kidnapping Gini. Only the lowest sort of villain would accept a man's hospitality and then steal a helpless girl-child from his hearth. It sickened Dzeh to consider what despicable acts Muhl-dar might inflict on little Gini. Would he force her to lay with him on his sleeping skins? The girl was too young to be mounted by a mature man; such a mating would be excruciating. Silently he begged the Spirits to protect his young sister from the evil stranger, to keep her safe until he could rescue her. Perhaps he was already too late. It was possible Muhl-dar had claimed his sister's innocence last night, back on the bank where the hunters had first encountered the strangers' odd tracks. There had been blood beside the prints, and he feared it was Gini's maiden blood. Vengeance ignited his temper and he lengthened his strides. There was no doubt Muhl-dar was a fearsome opponent. But he was without his powerful thunderclap weapon -- he had left it in his hut back at the camp -- and he was no storm-conjuring god either; Dzeh had seen his blood run as freely and dark as any man's when struck by stone. He could be defeated. And Dzeh longed to be the man who choked the last despicable breath from his throat. "Dzeh! Wait!" Wol-la-chee shouted from behind him. He turned to find his cousin pacing in a circle, eyes aimed at the ground, while the others stood by and watched. Pointing a finger, Wol-la-chee squatted and said, "There is something here you should see." Dzeh backtracked to kneel beside him. There at their feet, Muhl-dar and Day-nuh's prints pocked the muddy soil beside those of a large cat. "Saber-tooth," Lin said, identifying the paw prints. "The strangers traveled west from here," Wol-la-chee said. "Their tracks head upland, away from the stream." "But Gini...?" Dzeh turned to scrutinize the tracks to the south. "Why would they let her go?" "Maybe the cat surprised them?" Chal suggested. A saber-tooth cat was a serious threat. It might have hidden in the swamp to ambush its unsuspecting prey, scattering them when it attacked. Had it claimed a victim? Fear stung the back of Dzeh's throat. A cat would go after the most vulnerable...the smallest... "Which way now?" asked Wol-la-chee. "Should we follow Gini or go after the strangers?" Dzeh stood and looked first in one direction and then the other. "We will split up," he said. * * * Gini hunkered down, submerging herself up to her neck in swamp water when she heard the voice of her brother. Trying to make no noise, she peered through the cover of loosestrife to locate him. She spotted him with three others: Uncle Lin, Wol-la-chee and that awful boy Chal. They were standing only a stone's throw away, talking in low tones. They hadn't noticed her...yet. While they talked, she concentrated on stilling the shivering in her legs. The black water was frightfully cold. She bit her lower lip to prevent her teeth from chattering and possibly alerting them to her presence. It seemed each breath she took roared like a storm. Couldn't they hear it? Couldn't they hear the frantic drumming of her heart? Lin jabbed the air, pointing west where the ground sloped upward into a dense evergreen forest. Dzeh pointed south and then suddenly turned to face her. She remained motionless, certain he would spot her among the yellow weeds. But his gaze fell away when he stubbornly shook his head in response to something Lin was suggesting. "No! *You* look for Gini," he said, his voice carrying to her. "*I* want Muhl-dar. It is my right!" Murmurs from Lin and the others were followed by more arguments from Dzeh. They were splitting up! Oh, no! Dzeh and Lin were heading west after Muhl-dar and Day-nuh. Wol-la-chee and Chal were coming south, presumably for her. Now what would she do? As Wol-la-chee and the boy waded toward her, she held her breath and sank beneath the water's surface. She curled over her knees and listened to their splashing steps -- deep, thick sounds echoing through the cold, murky water. The men stirred the mud, blinding her. Their passing caused bog plants to churn around her. She felt the slimy tickle of leaves across her face. Her lungs soon ached for fresh air, but she didn't dare rise. Not yet...not yet. She had to let them pass her by and get beyond earshot. She knew they were sharp-eared and keen of eye, skilled at spotting their quarry in the densest forest. The slightest noise or movement would alert them. She *must* wait. She prayed to the Spirits to help her hold her breath just a little longer so she might evade detection. But then what? Which way should she go? If she tried to follow Muhl-dar and Day-nuh, Dzeh and Lin would be ahead of her. Yet it was pointless to continue south. Wol-la-chee and Chal would soon discover she had backtracked and they were sure to do the same. She couldn't hide in the swamp forever and she certainly was not going to return to Turkey Lake. Her chest felt ready to burst. The desire to breathe was nearly overwhelming. Were Wol-la-chee and Chal gone? Finally, she could wait no longer. She lifted her head, just enough to release her breath and take in a quiet gasp of fresh air. Slowly, silently, she turned to see if they were out of sight. Thank the Spirits! They were gone. Quaking from cold and fear, she rose on unsteady legs and headed west, deciding to follow Dzeh and Lin. If nothing else, maybe she would be able to intervene on Muhl-dar and Day-nuh's behalf when Dzeh caught up with them. * * * Begin with a few simple, non-threatening questions, Mulder told himself. Start small, that's the key. "Sssssoooo...what's your favorite color, Scully?" he asked. Four hours of silence had begun to wear on his nerves. They'd left the wooded hills behind and were now wading through a sea of ripening wheat-like plants, two specks of humanity on a vast, open prairie, seemingly alone in the world and as insignificant as insects. Their passing embossed twin trails, wavering and transient, into the waist-high grass. In the distance, a row of hazy mountain peaks studded the horizon. Overhead, the empty sky looked close enough to touch. "My favorite color?" Incredulity pinched Scully's brows. "How is that relevant to anything?" It wasn't really, but at least it had prompted her to break her icy silence. "Uh...I was just realizing how little we really know about each other." "You were just realizing that?" "Well, no...I mean, I've thought about it before...of course." He tried to laugh but it came out sounding unconvincing and a little pathetic. "I mean, we've been working together now for, what...five years?" -- five years, three months and twenty-one days -- "and we don't know some of the most important things about each other." "My favorite color is not one of the most important things about me." She was still pissed and he was floundering. "Uh, okay, not important, necessarily, but basic, which is actually quite important by virtue of its very basic-ness..." Basic-ness? Was that a word? Shit, he was sounding like an idiot. He corrected himself. "By virtue of its basic nature. The core of who we are, really, the building blocks to our personality. Things that define our character." God, he was babbling, when what he really wanted to do was end their bickering and make up for his abysmal behavior earlier in the day. Scully had sucker-punched him with her questions about Klizzie, and, caught off guard, he hadn't thought to duck and cover, but had struck back instead. Now he felt ashamed because she hadn't deserved his ire. Just the opposite. She'd sacrificed herself to Dzeh to save his ass, and he hadn't reciprocated. He owed her more than an explanation; he owed her an apology. Too bad he didn't have the cojones to own up to his miserable cowardice. "Loden," she said at last. "My favorite color is loden. What does that say about me?" Loden? Whose favorite color was loden? And what the hell color was that exactly? "Um, I'd say it defines you as...as..." "As...?" "Your own person?" He plucked a lithe stalk from the field and tickled her ear with its bobbing seed-head. "Ask me my favorite color." She batted away his attempt to smooth things over. Again they fell into an uncomfortable silence. Evidently she wasn't willing to forgive and forget. His guilt was growing exponentially, threatening to choke him. He wanted to apologize and tell her the truth, he really did, but he couldn't figure out a way to do it that wouldn't end up making her feel even worse. I'm sorry you gave yourself to a Cro-Magnon, Scully, and, oh by the way, did I mention I didn't go the distance myself? Fuck. It was bad enough he'd negated her sacrifice by getting them kicked out of the tribe over that damn idol. Add to that the fact he'd dodged the mate swap and, no matter how he phrased it, she was going to be hurt. He didn't know what to do. He'd really messed up this time. If he lived ten thousand years he wouldn't forgive himself for allowing that goddamn wife swap. What had he been thinking? How had he let himself be convinced it would work out okay? Jesus Christ, the choice to turn tail and run seemed so obvious now, but at the time... No, even at the time, he hadn't felt right about it. He'd hated it. And now he hated himself for letting it happen. He'd allowed another man to make love to Scully. Jesus fucking Christ. To add insult to injury, now he was refusing her the opportunity to talk out her experience. As a psychologist, he knew how necessary it was for her to express her feelings about what happened. He should be encouraging her to open up, not closing her off. If only there was some way he could listen to her side without having to tell his. She walked beside him, shoulders slumped, hands skimming the tops of the wheat plants. Unexpectedly she looked up at him and asked, "Okay...what's your favorite color?" Whether she really wanted to know or not was beside the point. She was opening the door of communication and he was grateful. "Uh...yellow." She frowned in disbelief. "Yellow?" "What, you don't think I have a sunny personality?" "You want an honest answer?" He supposed not. Poking his stalk of wheat between his teeth, he chewed while he explained, "Yellow is one of the few colors I seem to see the same as everyone else." He was constantly confusing red with green. Blue was pretty easy to distinguish, as long as it wasn't what other people called violet or aqua. He glanced at her and wondered how others saw her red hair or blue eyes. "Then again, how do I *know* I'm seeing color the same way someone else sees it? I mean...isn't it possible everyone's perception is unique?" Her stern expression relaxed as she considered his question. Although his meaning had intentionally gone beyond the subject of colorblindness, he expected her to give him a scientific explanation of rods and cones and visual acuity. Instead she surprised him by saying "I don't think we can ever truly know another person's experience." Should that stop him from trying? Start small, he reminded himself. "Favorite holiday?" he challenged. It was entirely possible she saw his game for what it was. For the time being, she seemed willing to play along. "Christmas, when Dad was home and the whole family was together," she said. "Mom had this beautiful creche that used to belong to my grandmother. She'd set it up beside the tree, while we kids hung the ornaments. Dad watched from his favorite chair. He'd wait until we were finished before he'd stand to inspect our work. If it passed muster, which it always did, he'd place the star on the top of the tree, like some sort of Medal of Honor. He always looked so proud of his family at that moment." "Sounds nice." "It was." A smile lifted the corners of her mouth. He wondered what specific memory was causing her contented look. "What are you thinking?" he asked, mirroring her smile. "Oh, I was just remembering the way Melissa used to get mad at me every Christmas Eve." "So there was a flaw in this Norman Rockwell holiday of yours?" She nodded. "Missy was a peeker." "A peeker?" "Mm, we'd sneak downstairs after Mom and Dad went to bed and she would shake the presents, try to peek beneath the gift wrap, that sort of thing. I was more restrained." "What a surprise." "Hey, I'm proud of the fact I could look without touching." "No wonder it took you five years to jump my bones." He dodged a playful slap. "You *never* peeked, Scully? Not once?" "No, of course not. Did you?" "Well, yeah...I thought everyone peeked." She snatched the stalk from his mouth and, smiling wider, stuck it between her own teeth. He was struck by the intimacy of this gesture and took it as absolution for his hurtful behavior earlier in the day. "Missy always tried to talk me into giving her hints about the gifts I'd gotten her, promising to tell me what she'd gotten me in return," she said through clenched teeth. The seed-head bobbled on the end of its long stem as she spoke. "I told her 'loose lips sink ships,' which just made her madder. It drove her crazy that I could keep a secret when she--" Her smile suddenly vanished and she grimaced, offering him a penitent shrug. He wasn't about to surrender their hard won geniality over the casual mention of secrets. "My favorite holiday was Flag Day." "Mulder, Flag Day isn't a holiday." "Tell that to my Great Aunt Emily. She used to babysit me before Sam was born. She'd come over from New Bedford, take me to Menemsha Pond to play on the beach, build sandcastles and stuff. One day this old guy with an artificial leg limped over to us and stuck a miniature American flag in the turret of my castle. He said, 'Every castle needs a flag, little man. Be sure to guard those stripes with your life. Better soldiers than you and me have died for 'em.' Then he tipped his hat to Aunt Emily and said, 'Happy Flag Day, ma'am.'" "That's creepy, Mulder. And I'm not quite seeing why this is one of your favorite holiday memories." "There's more." He plucked a fresh stalk of grass and twirled it absently between his fingers. "I took his words to heart and brought the little flag home with me. Naturally, Mom wanted to know where I'd gotten it. I told her and she had pretty much the same reaction you did." He tapped the end of her nose with his wheat, making her smile. "She threw the flag away." "She threw it away?" "Yep, she said it probably came off a grave down at Squibnocket Point." "She might have been right." "Yeah, she might've been. Didn't matter. Aunt Emily took me to get an ice cream cone to make me feel better." He tossed the wheat like a spear. It flew only a couple of feet before it nose-dived into the field. "Mulder, I don't understand your story." "What's to understand?" "Well, it's mildly disturbing and seems to have no point." "Does it have to have a point?" "No, I suppose not. It's just...I was hoping for some kind of resolution." He wanted to say, "life isn't always that neat and tidy, Scully," but figured she already knew that. If her cancer and everything else that had happened to her since she'd met him hadn't driven home the point, then their weeks here in the Pleistocene certainly must have. "Scully, I don't want to fight anymore. Can we call a truce?" "Mulder, we're not fight--" She stopped herself and removed the grass from between her lips. "I don't want to fight either." Then, in an uncharacteristic confession, she admitted, "I feel scared here. And helpless, which I hate. But I shouldn't take it out on you. I'm sorry." He reached for her hand and dovetailed his fingers with hers. She didn't pull away and it felt so damn nice to be touching her. "I'm sorry, too," he said. "In the interest of not antagonizing each other further, how about we come up with a list of subjects never to be mentioned again?" "Forever?" he asked. "At least until we return home." Would Dzeh be on her list? he wondered. And what about Klizzie? "Agreed." Apparently she was in no hurry to start her list. The next ten minutes passed without either of them speaking. He was reluctant to present his own list. There were several items on it he preferred to never mention, not even for the sake of claiming them off limits. Some would hurt her; some would hurt him...or at least hurt his relationship with her. Finally he broke the silence by finishing his earlier story. "Aunt Emily mailed me a new flag every Flag Day until she died last year at the age of eighty-two. She always included a note, which read, 'Every castle needs a flag, little man.'" He gave her hand a gentle squeeze. "That might not be the sort of resolution you were looking for, Scully, but I ended up with thirty-three flags. That's a hell of a lot more than I ever expected." She offered him a sad half-smile and returned the pressure to his hand. "Do you still have them?" "No. After her funeral, I went to Menemsha Beach and built a giant sandcastle with thirty-three turrets. Put a flag in each one." She was quiet for a moment, as if trying to work this information into their shared timeline. "I didn't know your aunt died last year." He shrugged. "You'd just gotten out of the hospital. It was a few weeks before we went to Florida to hunt moth men." "Oh." She stopped walking, pulling him up short. Snagging his other hand, she stared up at him with teary eyes. "You're right, Mulder, we don't know some of the most important things about each other." No, we don't, Scully. You don't know how much I hate myself for letting you down, or how angry I am that Dzeh didn't kiss you because I know he did much worse than that, or how very, very badly I want to tell you I never touched Klizzie. She wasn't you and you're the only woman I'll ever love, with my body or my heart. Rather than saying any of those things, he wrapped his arms around her and sighed into her hair. "We know each other's favorite colors. That's a start." Closing his eyes, he leaned against her and whispered, "The rest will come." * * * From her vantage point, sitting on the summit of Crouching Cat Mountain, Klizzie stared into the valley where the world appeared unchanged. It was an illusion, she knew. Turkey Lake still rested like a blessing in the palm of the valley, reflecting the cloudless midday sky. The sky was the color of pickerelweed, which blossomed in bunches in the shallows by the lake's eastern shore. Klizzie knew that clusters of frog eggs clung to the reeds there, full of the promise of life. The air was balmy and scented with clover. Honeybees drifted from flower to flower. The hillside hummed with their collective buzz. An occasional silent butterfly waggled among them, peaceably sharing the Spirits' bounty. The village itself appeared tidy and tranquil. Communal hearth fires glinted like sunshine off stone. Domed huts dotted the clearing, familiar, safe and welcoming, although empty now because most of the villagers were at the ball field where Turtle Clan was battling Badger Clan in a game of yea-go. The traditional ceremonies of the Mastodon Feast continued, despite personal concerns about thieving strangers or one missing girl. Yesterday's events were insignificant when compared to the clans' spiritual obligations or even their empty bellies. The ball suddenly struck a goal post, cracking like one of last night's lightning bolts. The sound echoed against the hillsides and sent a cold Spirit skittering down Klizzie's spine. A cheer erupted from the onlookers. For the first time in her life, Klizzie felt no kinship with these people. Their gaiety was a spear in her sad heart. Where was Gini, her Little Chick? she wondered. And Muhl-dar and Day-nuh? And Dzeh? Worry knotted her stomach and tears burned her eyes. She found it difficult to believe the newcomers would hurt Gini; they had shown no unkindness toward anyone in the Clan. Yet people were accusing Muhl-dar of stealing a prayer offering from Tsa-ond Cave. They were saying worse things, too, impossible things, and she refused to believe them. He had treated her only with gentleness and respect two mornings ago when they lay together on the furs, and again yesterday when she went to him, begging for his silence. She hugged her knees and gazed out over the forested valley to the south, where fir trees bristled, hemmed in by mountain ranges. Somewhere hidden beneath the evergreen boughs, Dzeh and the others were tracking Muhl-dar and Day-nuh, searching for Gini. Klizzie desperately wanted the girl back, but she feared for the newcomers' lives, and she preferred they escape undiscovered than be caught and killed...even if it meant she would never embrace her Little Chick again. She scanned the sky for a sign of the owl, but the Spirit had seemingly abandoned her; the heavens lay as empty as her heart. Another cheer sounded from the ball field. Klizzie rose to her feet, intending to return to the village, but when she stood, her world began to spin, her vision blurred and a wave of nausea dropped her to her knees. Crawling on all fours, trembling, she vomited her meager mid-day meal, and waited for her dizziness to subside. * * * HILL AIR FORCE BASE MAY 14, 1998 6:48 AM Tamping down an urge to order his driver to speed up, Colonel Beck sat stone-faced in the passenger seat as the young airman steered their jeep out the front gate. On the main road, they turned west. Beck glanced into the side mirror. Nothing behind them but another hot Utah sunrise and an empty stretch of highway. Up ahead, more open road, although the intruders' car should be coming into view soon. Captain Linden had reported finding it parked a mile from the breach in the south fence. How the hell had two trespassers gotten past Security, Beck wondered? Especially during a test. The timing couldn't have been worse. General Kaback had been livid when Beck called him. Now the old blowhard was on his way to Hill. Christ, that was all he needed. Kaback would insist on micromanaging the Project even though the damn idiot couldn't tell a tachyon from a fucking turd. "Twelve o'clock, sir." The driver nodded at the dusty windshield, directing his attention to a blue Crown Vic parked a quarter of a mile ahead on the shoulder. Captain Linden was waiting beside it, along with half a dozen security personnel. They squinted in the early morning sun, their elongated shadows looking like gouges in the pavement. The driver pulled alongside the Ford, and Beck was out the door before the jeep had rolled to a complete stop. Salutes went up all around. "Report," Beck ordered as he paced around the car. Utah plates, he noticed. Rental sticker on the rear bumper. "The vehicle was rented to a Mr. Fox Mulder yesterday afternoon in Salt Lake City, sir," said the Captain. The trunk was up. Two overnight bags rested inside, wide open, their contents neatly removed. Shaving kit, sweat pants, men's dress shoes and slacks, clean shirt, necktie, and underwear were arranged beside a blue-gray duffle. The other bag was a hard-sided case, powder blue. Beside it were assorted women's clothes, a pair of high heels, toiletries, pajamas, lingerie. "You run a check on this guy Mulder?" Beck asked. "Yes, sir. He's FBI." "FB--" Fuck. He had been hoping the intruders were nothing more than a couple of ballsy UFO kooks, attracted by last night's light show. "What else?" he snarled. "Sir, Agent Mulder was a passenger on flight 1204 from Dulles to SLC yesterday afternoon. Seat 19B. Arrival time, 3:32 p.m. local." "And the woman?" Beck nodded at the peach-colored bra and panties before he moved around the car to peer into the driver's side window. What appeared to be sunflower seeds littered the mat below the steering wheel. "Agent Dana Scully, sir, also a passenger on flight 1204. Seat 19C." What the hell were two FBI agents doing out here? And why not come in the front gate instead of sneaking under the fence? "Sir, should I contact the Bureau, find out if Agents Mulder and Scully are on official assignment?" Beck's head snapped up and he pinned Linden with a steely-eyed stare. "No, I want you to locate them. You got that, Captain?" "Yes, sir!" "Tow the car. Stow it in Hangar 19. And bring Agents Mulder and Scully to me as soon as you find them." He spun on his heel and returned to his jeep. Kaback would be here in less than five hours. That didn't leave much time. * * * LATE PLEISTOCENE JUNE 27, 7:45 PM "You know what I miss the most? A toothbrush." Mulder picked his teeth as he walked, trying to dislodge an irritating bit of smoked meat from between two molars with his fingernail. "Or at least some dental floss. What about you?" Scully limped along beside him. He admired her dogged persistence and tried to ignore the ache in his own legs. "No contest," she said. "Toilet paper." He nodded with understanding and sympathy. All around them, as far as the eye could see, gentle hills ribbed the landscape. Furred with grass, the prairie seemed endless, its monotony broken only by domed anthills and an occasional copse of deciduous trees nestled in the shallow valleys. To the east, a sluggish river zigzagged southward, trenching the red earth and reflecting the golden rays of the setting sun. They'd been navigating its countless oxbows all afternoon. It was possible the river was the same waterway they'd started out on, or it might be another. They had no way to know and he supposed it didn't matter. Its water tasted sweet and slaked their godawful thirst. He ran a hand over his bearded jaw and continued his wish list. "Razor." "Hoo boy, I'm with you on that, G-Man." She didn't return his smile, so he wasn't certain if her enthusiastic response was aimed at his need to shave or hers. She added, "Clean underwear." Clean anything would be welcome. His filthy clothes could probably walk on their own. Smelling their sour tang, he longed to shed them, then clean himself in a steamy, hot shower with a bar of real soap. And after his steamy, hot, soapy, magnificent shower, he would collapse onto his couch to watch some TV, and maybe have a... "Big, fat slice of pepperoni piz--" "No food!" She gave him a disapproving scowl. The setting sun darkened the creases in her face, making her look fiercer than she probably intended. "We agreed. Rule number six, remember?" "Right." According to their new ground rules, twenty-two subjects were now off limits. Any and all modern-day foods fell somewhere between "sex with other people" and "what happens if we never get home." He selected an acceptable topic. "Shampoo." His answer seemed to placate her and her reproachful expression softened. "Bubble bath." "Socks." "Ibuprofen." "A cold beer...and that's not a food," he hurried to add. "It's edible, isn't it?" She cocked an accusatory eyebrow. "It's a beverage and we have no rule against beverages. Although you're welcome to negotiate for it, if you like." "No thank you. To tell you the truth, I wouldn't mind a beer myself." She gazed wistfully across the prairie. The lengthening shadows of sunset striped the rolling hills with fingers of jet, making the land look like an old- fashioned washboard. Crickets whined in the tall weeds at their feet, while iridescent birds swooped overhead, chasing insects in the near-dusk. The swallows glided in dizzying barrel-rolls through the crisp air. It would've been a perfect evening if not for the fact that they were ten thousand years away from home. "Maybe not a beer, but a nice glass of wine," Scully said, amending her choice. They began climbing the next swell of land. "Red or white?" "At this point I'm not that picky." She tilted her head, snapping the bones in her neck. "I miss my favorite robe and slippers." "I miss my Knicks T-shirt." He yearned for all the comforts of home. More than that, he yearned to comfort her, to somehow make up for bringing her here in the first place. "Sheets, pillows and a bed. I'll never complain about crappy motels again." "A silver lining," he teased. "It's good to know our deprivation hasn't been for nothing." She gave him a light jab in the ribs. He grinned and arched away from her poking finger, glad to see her mood improving. A mischievous glint lit her eyes. She aimed two fingers at him. "Scully...no...," he warned. Backing away, he raised his arms to deflect her playful attack. But she was too fast for him and managed to spear him in the stomach. His grunt made her laugh and try again. Not really wanting to stop her, he retreated backward, stumbling uphill. "Watch out," she said, eyes flickering to the slope behind him. A diversionary tactic, he was certain, but he glanced over his shoulder anyway to see what danger might be lurking there and, sure enough, she took full advantage of his inattention. She launched herself at him, prodding him again in the stomach, the ribs, and one low hit to the groin that made him squeak and double over. She chuckled at her victory and pressed her advantage, snaking her fingers underneath his jacket to tickle his armpit. It was good to laugh with her, to fall back into their comfortable camaraderie. Struggling only in a half-hearted attempt to fend off her attack, he pinned her arm beneath his while grabbing for her other hand, which was insinuating its way beneath the waistband of his pants. "Scully...don't...payback's...a *bitch*-- Ahh!" He yelped and writhed beneath her wiggling fingers. "But victory is sweet," she said, flashing teeth and gums. God, she was beautiful. Cheeks flushed, eyes bright, hair tousled by their mock battle and the relentless breeze. She smelled heady and tart from exertion. Her hands were feverishly hot and everywhere she touched him his skin sizzled. Her fingers slipped inside his pants. "Whoa...Scully..." He staggered backward to the crest of the hill, grabbing her wrist to stop her. He didn't really want to end their fun, but if she continued much lower she'd soon discover that their roughhousing had begun to arouse him. Suddenly she stopped fighting him and he thought the jig was up, until she gazed past his shoulder and said, "Mulder, look." "I'm not falling for that again." "No...I'm not joking." She withdrew her hand from his pants. The intensity of her expression told him she was serious. He turned to follow her gaze. There in the next valley, tucked into an oasis of trees by an elbow in the river, was a village. "Shit." He dropped to his knees in the weeds, dragging her down with him. "Mulder, I think it's abandoned." He pulled his binoculars from his coat and held them to his eyes. A dozen or so roofless huts dotted the riverbank. Their bone supports gleamed golden-yellow in the setting sun. Scorched circles indicated the locations of old hearth fires. Not a wisp of smoke curled skyward. "See anyone?" she asked. "No. Looks like an Ice Age ghost town. But maybe they left behind something useful." He rose to his feet. "Like food." Tucking his binoculars away, he loped downhill. "Or flint for making a fire." She hobbled after him. "Or a spear." "Or a waterbag." It was funny how quickly their wish list had switched from toiletries to survival gear. All a matter of perspective, he decided. A moment ago shampoo seemed a necessity. Compared to food and water, however, even toilet paper became little more than a frivolous luxury. A few minutes later he neared the skeletal shelters and slowed to a walk, keeping a cautious eye out for any sign of ambush. After the trouble they'd encountered with Dzeh's tribe he had no desire to fall into the hands of another hostile group. He needn't have worried; the camp was deserted. Splitting up, they swept the area, hunting for anything useful. Much to their disappointment, they soon discovered the village had been stripped bare. The former inhabitants had left behind nothing of value. All that remained were the shelters, semi-circles of stacked mastodon skulls, too heavy to transport. Collecting and stacking so many large bones clearly represented a significant expenditure of time and energy, indicating the villagers' commitment to this location. The implication was that they would return to it at some point to reestablish their residence, reusing the bones. But when? Soon? From the worn grass and scorched ground, Mulder guessed that occupancy was fairly recent, otherwise vegetation would have overgrown the paths between the huts. Wind and rain had yet to obliterate the campfires' black circles. Hands on his hips, he swiveled to inspect the surrounding area. Not a single animal roamed the grassy landscape or waded in the river. Nothing moved in the trees. No doubt the villagers had hunted the area heavily, depleting it of game before moving on to richer territory. "Find anything?" he called to Scully, who was inspecting a hut about twenty feet away. "Maybe." She held up a matted fur blanket. "It's pretty thin, but it beats sleeping on the bare ground." He nodded, wishing she'd found a mastodon roast instead of a skin. Their smoked meat was nearly gone and, without weapons or tools to make weapons, they had no way to replenish their supply. Hunger was only a day or two away. The lighthearted moment they'd shared back on the hill now seemed remote and unreal. Their situation was grim, more serious than anything they'd ever faced before. Behind them lay certain death, ahead, more danger. Worst of all, there seemed no way to get home. Tamping down his fears about their future, he crossed the camp to where Scully stood slapping dust from the old fur. "Thought we might spend the night here," she said, spreading the blanket on the ground inside the shelter's bony walls. "No roof, but I don't think we need to worry about rain." It was true, not a cloud marred the evening sky. A few bright stars already winked above the eastern horizon. The chirrup of crickets intensified as twilight approached. He moved to help her smooth out the folds in the blanket. They would rest for a few hours, and then continue south at sunup. His instincts urged him to not give up hope. Protecting her was paramount. She meant everything to him and he would do whatever it took to bring her home safely. * * * Dizzy, nauseous, and lying face down on the ground, Klizzie lifted her aching head and tried to blink the fog from her eyes. When her vision finally cleared she found herself staring at two bare, muscular legs, one of which was hideously deformed by deep, ropey scars. The mutilated leg was missing a toe on the left foot. Klesh! Klizzie pushed herself into a sitting position and gaped at her loathsome cousin. She must have fallen asleep, she realized. It had been mid-day when she felt the onset of queasiness and now the sun was setting. Klesh squatted next to her, blocking the sun's dying rays. "You do not look so well, Kliz." Her tongue tasted sour and her stomach churned like water at the bottom of a falls. "What are you doing here?" "Is that a proper way to greet your cousin?" He laughed at her obvious astonishment and displeasure. Four years hadn't changed him. Beard matted with snarls, lips curled into a cruel sneer, dun-colored eyes smoldering with animosity...he was as repulsive as ever. It shocked and shamed her to think she had once lain with this man. "Are you not curious about your brother?" he asked. Yes, where was Tse-e? Why was Klesh alone? She glanced past him, down the hillside to the village, where the clans had returned from the ball field to cook their suppers. "He did not go there, did he?" she asked, worried about what the Clan might do to him if they discovered him. Klesh's sneer turned more hateful. "That would be impossible since he is dead." Dead? "How...?" "Killed by those chindis you befriended. The red-haired woman and her mate." Day-nuh and Muhl-dar? This could not be true. "You are lying." He had always been a liar, eager to get his own way even at the expense of others. He held up his right arm to show her a strange silvery bracelet, darkened by dried blood, which dangled from his wrist. "Li-chi Tse-Gah's mate wounded Tse-e, then lashed the two of us together with this unbreakable binding." He tugged on the bracelet to demonstrate its durability. "Then the chindis left us to be devoured by buzzards. After three torturous days, the Spirits finally took your brother," -- he lowered his eyes as if out of respect -- "and I cut myself free." Cut...? Her stomach bucked again and she swallowed its sting. Tse-e was her only sibling and although he had not always been the kindest brother she lamented the possibility that he might be dead. Especially if his passing had been as agonizing as Klesh described. Tears flooded her eyes at the seeming injustice of the Spirits' choices. Why was Tse-e taken and not Klesh? "That does not explain why you are here," she said, holding back her tears. She did not want to show weakness by crying in front of him. "I have come for revenge." Her heart sank deeper into a murky pond of despair as she guessed his motives. "You plan to kill Muhl-dar." "If that is the chindi's name, yes." He reached out to cup her cheek, setting the silvery bracelet rattling. "And you are going to help me." She recoiled from his unwelcome caress. "Why would I do that?" "Because if you do not, I will tell Dzeh your little secret." "I have already told him the truth." "You told him everything? You told him how much you enjoyed your night on my sleeping skins?" Shame rolled through her at the memory of Klesh with his face between her thighs, bringing her to her pleasure. She loathed herself for allowing it to happen and believed Dzeh would never love her again if he learned the humiliating details of that awful night. The sun sank behind the mountain, taking with it the last rays of daylight. Regret swallowed her like a shadow. "The man named Muhl-dar stole everything from me, Kliz -- my food, my gear, and my best friend. Help me avenge Tse-e's death. He was your brother and he did not deserve to die at the hands of a vile stranger." She pictured her small, nervous brother, wounded by Muhl-dar and then tethered to Klesh, suffering unimaginably as he slowly perished. Even so, she would not help Klesh. He was not to be trusted. "Muhl-dar has disappeared," she said, hoping to discourage him. "He left the village two nights ago." "Left?" Klesh sat up straighter. "Which way did he go?" "I do not know," she lied, but her eyes flickered toward the forest to the south. He caught her glance. "I will go after him. You must bring me food and supplies from the village." "I will not!" His eyes narrowed, frightening her with their intensity. "Then I will go there myself and tell Dzeh all about our night together." "Dzeh is gone, too," she blurted without thinking. "He is already looking for Muhl--" Klesh's scarred face brightened at this news and she regretted letting her panic wrestle the truth from her. "Did he go alone?" She hesitated to say, not knowing what he planned to do. He grabbed her arm and growled, "You might as well tell me, Klizzie, for I will find out soon enough on my own." "Let me go!" She tried to twist free, but he hung on tight and hauled her to her feet. "Come with me." Her lightheadedness returned as soon as she stood upright. "Where...where are we going?" she stuttered, thinking she might vomit again. "To the village." "No! You cannot. The Clan--" "Tse-e is dead," he said, strong-arming her down the slope. "He was your brother and my cousin. The Clan will understand if you take me in so we may grieve together." "Dzeh will never allow it." "Dzeh is not here to object, is he?" The world tilted beneath her unsteady feet. If not for Klesh's brutal grip, she would have fallen to her knees. What was happening to her? * * * HILL AIR FORCE BASE COMPUTER LAB, HANGAR 19 MAY 14, 1998 7:20 AM "Lisa, take a look at this." Jason Nichols hunched over his keyboard and tried to make sense of the data on his monitor. The graphic model indicated a spike in gravitational displacement during last night's test, which meant that either the computer was malfunctioning or something had gone very wrong with the test itself. Lisa Ianelli abandoned her terminal to cross the lab and stand behind him. She peered over his shoulder at the data and gasped. "Is that what I think it is?" "Yes. McGuane's Transference, completely anomalous. I didn't expect to see this for another three to five years." Lisa studied the evidence. "It's impossible." "Apparently not," Nichols said, adjusting his glasses. He tapped his keyboard, bringing up the next chart. It confirmed the first. "Not a computer malfunction." Lisa leaned closer, almost touching him. Her long, spiraling hair tickled his cheek and he felt drawn to her perfume. God, he loved this woman, despite the risk to his plans. "Does it mean someone's come back from the future?" she asked. He knew she was referring to his future self, who had tried to destroy their work last year. When the old man died in the fire at MIT's Research Facility, young Nichols was thrown thirty years into the future in his place. It was there he learned the truth when he witnessed a world without history or hope, where everyone knew everything that would ever happen. It was the same future the old man had warned him about and had tried to stop. Nichols returned to his own time convinced that he must prevent it, too. Which is why he'd sabotaged last night's test. Only...he hadn't expected this. "If I'm reading the data correctly, I don't think anyone came back from the future." He traced the computerized image with his index finger. "I *think* we may have sent someone into the past." * * * LATE PLEISTOCENE JUNE 27, 9:42 PM "I-I'm nervous. Can you believe that?" Mulder asked. Yes, she could believe it. She'd told him she wanted to make love, but as much as she yearned for him, she was nervous, too, afraid that her body might rebel against this intimate act, a reaction to Dzeh's recent invasion, not Mulder's attentions. She was dressed in her camisole and pants. He wore his jeans, too, but no shirt. Both of them were barefoot. She lay on her back on the fur robe and he knelt beside her. A circle of ancient bones bleached by moonlight surrounded them. No roof covered their heads, only a ceiling of stars and the pregnant moon. Mulder leaned forward, staggeringly handsome, despite his bruises. His beard had filled in, dense and dark, changing his clean-shaven good looks to something more primitive but equally attractive. The hair on his head had become shaggy, too, during the last several weeks. It curled over his ears and fell into his eyes, making him appear boyish and wild. A loss of weight had defined his muscles, transforming his already lanky body into one more hardscrabble and sinewy. Even injured, he looked strong, durable and unequivocally masculine. Lean and half-naked, he stole her breath and her heart. She was hoping his touch would help erase the memory of the mate swap and soothe her frazzled nerves. But when he moved over her, she unexpectedly recoiled and gasped. Her reaction apparently startled him every bit as much as it did her because he backed away. "Sorry. I-- Sorry." "No, it's me. I-I'm sorry." She reached for him and drew him toward her. Rather than lie on top of her, he chose to stretch out on the ground beside her, propping himself on one elbow, taking care not to touch her. "Let's take this slow, okay?" She nodded, realizing intimacy, even with Mulder, might be more difficult than she had imagined. He watched her intently. "Would it be all right if I tried kissing you?" "I--" Would it? "I'll keep my hands to myself and you can tell me to stop anytime you feel uncomfortable. I won't force-- I won't go any further than you want to go. You're in control." "Then maybe I should kiss you." "That works for me." A smile nudged his right cheek. He made no move toward her. True to his word, he was handing her the reins, allowing her to steer their actions. She decided to begin by touching his lips with her fingers. Running the pad of her middle finger across his lower lip, she reveled in the feel of his skin...smooth, pliant, warm. His bruised mouth trembled beneath her caress. Then her finger grazed a raw cut and he flinched. "Careful." "Sorry." She wanted to kiss the hurt she'd caused and take away his pain, but she wasn't quite ready to press her lips to his. Not yet. I'm being ridiculous, she chided herself. This was Mulder. She trusted him. Hell, she loved him! Yet she felt conflicted. She worried that their lovemaking might escalate out of control -- her control -- and the idea set her heart pounding. As if reading her mind, he rolled onto his back. His arms dropped loosely to his sides, palms down, fists uncurled. His eyes never left hers and his expression seemed to say, "Whatever you want, whenever you're ready." She rose to kneel beside him and tentatively placed her right hand on his bare chest. His heart hammered beneath her palm, making her own pulse quicken. Each beat brought a molten wave of panic. Could she handle this? Although their time in the Ice Age had roughened her hands, she could still feel every silken hair on Mulder's downy chest. They tickled the calloused pads of her palm, sending minute jolts of pleasure vibrating up the nerves of her arm. Her own skin turned to gooseflesh in response. Her nipples tightened. His gaze flickered briefly to her camisole and the hardened points of her breasts. When his focus returned to her face, his pupils had grown enormous, black and bottomless, filling each iris like a solar eclipse. She blushed and turned away, avoiding his obvious arousal, afraid it would trigger another bout of panic. She focused on his breastbone, where she traced minute circles with her thumb and forefinger, using almost no pressure. His breath quickened. Would he lose control? Would she? Glancing at his hands, she saw they remained loosely at his sides. There was no threat in his posture. Even so, her uncertainties confounded her and she almost removed her hand from his chest. This is Mulder, this is Mulder, she repeated to herself. He won't hurt me. If he wanted to overpower her, he easily could. She was trained in self-defense, but then so was he, and her skills were no match for his larger size and muscular strength. Even with his recent weight loss, he still outweighed her by sixty or seventy pounds, and his long reach and greater height gave him every advantage. He could readily take her if that's what he wanted. She needed to trust that he would keep her safe. She had to rely on his self-control, and hope that he wouldn't force her to do anything she didn't want to do. In five years, he had never given her a reason to fear him, she reminded herself. Not once. She watched the quick rise and fall of his chest. It was the only movement he made. He was allowing her to dictate the pace and the scope of their intimacy. Determined to continue, she slid her hand over his chest, avoiding the worst of his bruises and grazing his flat nipple with her thumb. The contact caused him to jerk with apparent pleasure. He inhaled, a sharp gasp, but, steadfast to his promise, he made no move to touch her. His restraint gave her the confidence to continue her exploration of him. Slowly, she traced the upward curve of his ribs, hard beneath her palm, to the Linea alba, the shallow indentation of muscle that divided his taut torso from breastbone to pelvis. Fine, dark hair shadowed the depression, growing more dense below his waist. She teased his navel, dipping into it with the tip of her finger. Her touch made his stomach muscles quiver. Goosebumps sprouted across his abdomen when she combed against the grain of his hair with her nails. He grunted with pleasure and the sound of his arousal both excited and frightened her. She lingered over the Crest of Ilium, stroking his jutting hipbones as she studied his nude torso, his submissive expression, his accommodating posture. He was offering her his trust in return for hers. It was a generous gift, considering how he'd also suffered at the hands of the tribe. Blackened by contusions, crisscrossed with scrapes, his hide bore physical testimony to their cruelty. He had no more reason to trust another human being with his body than did she, and yet here he was, consigning himself to her command. There was little doubt he was doing it for her sake. He evidently understood how much she needed him to yield right now, and the depth of his understanding brought tears to her eyes. He was surrendering so that she wouldn't have to, so that she might regain her lost sense of power. Fortified by his generosity, she unbuttoned the waistband of his pants. Even before drawing down his zipper, she could see the prominent ridge of his engorged penis pressing against the denim of his jeans, looking larger and more menacing than she remembered. Feeling apprehensive, she paused, reproaching herself for her groundless anxiety while leaving his fly half zipped. Certainly the threatening size of him was only a trick of the moonlight. His penis isn't a weapon, she reminded herself; it's a part of him. There is nothing to fear. Squaring her shoulders, she unzipped his pants all the way, only to discover he wasn't wearing any boxers, and for a split-second suspicion engulfed her. Had he been planning all along to make love to her? Get a hold of yourself, Dana. Mulder was anticipating no such thing. His boxers were still in their travel pack because he'd been too weak to put them on at the ball field. He'd been going without them for the last two days. Convinced for the time being that his intentions were not dishonorable, she resumed undressing him. She tugged at his pants and he lifted his hips to help her. This was the first deliberate move he'd made since she'd begun her cautious seduction. His motion was so slight, so measured, it didn't startle her...unlike his erection, which popped free as soon as she pulled his pants low enough. She fixed her eyes on his swollen groin and left his jeans bunched around his thighs. Her stomach fluttered at the sight of him. Fully engorged, he was magnificent...and intimidating. An image of Dzeh's erection came unbidden to her mind. She fought a wave of nausea and tried to push the memory away. This was Mulder, not Dzeh. Their motives were nothing alike. But the memory of Dzeh was not so easy to extinguish. She could still see the way he reclined on the skins, his penis dark purple and pointing straight up as he reached for her hand, drew her down to him-- Stop it! This isn't Dzeh! This is Mulder. She glanced at Mulder's face, double-checking his expression. His hooded eyes were bright with passion, yet his bearded face remained calm. He said nothing as she mentally inventoried his physical attributes, noting the differences between him and Dzeh. Mulder had green eyes, not brown, and a shorter beard, longer nose, fuller lips curled into a half-smile, not set in a determined line the way Dzeh's had been. His shoulders were narrower, and his chest less hairy. Both men had muscular stomachs, but Mulder was less tan than Dzeh, despite going shirtless for the last few weeks. She regretted the disappearance of the scar on his shoulder; his gunshot wound was incontrovertible evidence of their 20th Century life together. Her eyes traveled lower to the thatch of dark hair that cushioned his erect penis. Unable to stop herself, she reached out to touch his circumcision scar, extraordinarily grateful for this distinctive difference between the two men. He twitched when she caressed him with the tip of her finger. He breathed the words "You're in control..." Yes, she was, and the knowledge strengthened her enough to take him in her hand, hot, rigid, his skin silky smooth against her roughened palm. He moaned through gritted teeth and she relished the sound; a feeling of privilege ran white- hot beneath her skin. She directed him, not the other way around. The advantage was hers, all hers, and it freed her from the dread and panic and hurt that had been dogging her since her encounter with Dzeh. Her overwrought nerves began to uncoil and she felt herself returning to her physical body. Relief swamped her eyes, causing tears to spiral down her cheeks as she bent over him and took him gratefully into her mouth. "Sculleee..." His hips rocked. He was obviously trying to minimize his reaction to the pressure of her lips. Holding him in her mouth, feeling in control, she explored him with the tip of her tongue. He was softly ridged and he tasted salty, earthy, delicious. She inhaled his musky scent and savored his familiar smell. She sucked gently, applying the lightest possible pressure for now. She wanted to make this experience long lasting and wholly different from her brief, awful encounter with Dzeh; she wanted this to be leisurely, tender and loving. Mulder didn't thrust upward; he didn't take hold of her head or hair. He let her lead him toward ecstasy. Only his quiet moans, and the rigidity of his cock, let her know how much he was enjoying her ministrations. She applied more pressure, sucked harder, swirled her tongue over and around him, bit down gently, and then scraped his flesh carefully with her teeth, stimulating the sensitive knot of tissue just below the glans. He hissed with pleasure, murmured her name. Still he didn't touch her. She released him to blow softly across his wet skin, then lapped him from base to tip before taking him once more into her mouth. She let him slide to the back of her throat and then out, repeating the motion, tightening her lips, setting a steady rhythm. This was nothing like her experience with Dzeh. This was beautiful and right. Mulder was her partner, her protector, her lover. The future father of her son. She cupped his scrotum, thinking of his contribution to their child waiting there, half the genetic material that would one day be their little boy. When she gently squeezed, he hissed her name, "Ssssculleee!" His voice sounded desperate when he warned, "I'm close." She had led him to the brink and now it was her choice where he would go next. She decided to bring him to orgasm in her hand and watch his face as he came. Removing him from her mouth, she said, "Let it happen." He nodded and swallowed. She sat up, curled her fingers around him and began to stroke. Her hand slid easily up and down his saliva-slicked shaft. He inhaled a lungful of air. His fingers dug into the fur beneath him, clutching for a solid hold as his hips rose to meet her thrusts. He bit his lower lip and she could hear his panting breaths as he huffed through flared nostrils. His chest glistened, humid and flushed, so feverishly hot she could feel the warmth radiating off him. Sweat dotted his brow, snagging strands of damp hair. "Come for me, Mulder." At the sound of her voice he threw back his head and grunted. Semen spurted from him, spilling hotly over her hand. She continued to pump until he begged, "Stop, stop. Ahh...too sensitive." His hands finally came up to cover and still hers, spreading semen on them both. She felt the throb of his racing heart grow fainter as his penis softened beneath her palm. A mixture of emotions somersaulted through her: pleasure, apprehension, pride, anxiety, excitement, nervousness, passion, uncertainty, devotion. She wanted to sort them out, tuck them into some sort of proper order, but it was impossible and she cringed from the chaos that was squeezing her chest, making it difficult for her to breathe. Conflicted yearnings twisted through her mind on tornado-like winds. She was sure of only one thing -- she loved this man -- and she focused on that thought as she moved her hand away from him. "Scully...that was...that was great," he said, gratitude evident in the quaver of his voice. Catching his breath, he sat up and searched for something with which to clean himself. His jacket was an arm's length away and he grabbed it and dug into the pocket for his handkerchief. "Let me." She took the cloth from him and mopped his groin. He watched, eyes bright with what she imagined was lust, but hoped was love. "Your turn," he said as he pulled up his pants. At first she thought he meant it was her turn to use the handkerchief on herself. But she was already wiping her hands, so he wasn't talking about cleaning up. He was talking about bringing her to orgasm. "Mulder, I'm not sure I can...I don't think I'll be able to..." "Let me help." No...she wasn't ready for it. Bringing him to orgasm, that was one thing; she could handle that. Coming for him, in front of him, it would take too much-- "Show me what to do, Scully." He placed his hand in hers, palm up. "I don't think--" "You're in control," he reminded her. Right. She was in control. So why did she feel so out of control? "Maybe I should undress first," she said. "I won't argue with that." His wide grin made her feel suddenly shy, which was ridiculous considering the fact that she'd just had him in her mouth, watched him climax. But the eager way he was looking at her made her feel vulnerable and exposed. Grateful for the twilight, she hid her timidity in the shadows and pulled her camisole up over her head. The cooling night made her shiver. She was certain he was looking, although she avoided his gaze, too discomfited to find out. Instead she rose to her feet and, hands trembling, she unfastened and removed her pants. Gathering her courage, she pushed her panties down her legs and stepped out of them. Mulder whispered "Sweet Jesus..." and the words landed like mist on her skin. Again she was made rough with gooseflesh and tingled from brow to breasts to belly to knees. A finger of cool, night air grazed her moist inner thighs, shockingly cold and invasive. Its intensity startled her and her body blushed in response. Heat crawled up her torso and spread inside her womb, which felt swollen and heavy with her lust. She had been denying desire for too long and it would not be overlooked now. It pressed her to her knees in front of him, spread her thighs to give him access, took his hand in hers and guided him to her entrance. His fingers seared her slick folds, branding her with a tentative caress. "Jesus," he whispered again, sitting up and moving closer. She urged him deeper, steering one extended digit in and up, not daring to look at him, avoiding his reactions with downcast eyes. He slipped into her, up to his first knuckle, and second... No. Stop! She clutched his hand, preventing him from going deeper. It felt too much like before, like the other, like confusion and dread and panic. "It's okay, Scully," he said, obviously aware of her distress. "It's just you and me here. Whatever happens -- or doesn't happen -- it's okay. Just relax and show me what to do." Sitting on her knees in front of him, legs spread wide, she tried to relax as he suggested, but it was difficult for her to let go of her recent memory, or her lifelong habit of dodging emotion. Unease tightened her inner walls, making penetration uncomfortable...the way it had been with Dzeh. Mulder didn't push more deeply into her, but waited for her to do it for him. "Did he touch you there?" "Y-yes." Oh, please, don't make me remember it, Mulder. "Like this?" "No. Just his-- Not with his hands." Please, please. "Did it feel like this?" It felt awful, she wanted to scream. It wasn't you. I hated it. I hated him. "No." The word leaked from her throat sounding like a distraught child and her whining embarrassed her. She was a grown woman, for God's sake. Why couldn't she let go of her hurt? Mulder edged closer, his hand motionless between her legs. His other hand came around her back and settled at the base of her spine, the place where he often touched her. His light caress was familiar and soothing. "Scully, I'm with you now. Me. No man will *ever* touch you this way again...none but me. I won't let it happen." His promise brought a flood of relief, and like a swift river, it caught her jumbled emotions in its current and carried them off. In her mind's eye she saw her unease swept away. Fragments of fear bobbed like debris after a storm, eddying out of sight, leaving her breathless but not drowned. Contentment washed in, displacing her previous discomfort. She didn't expect to be made permanently clean by this promise of Mulder's. No doubt her respite was only temporary. Her memories of Dzeh would return to haunt her, but she now knew she didn't have to face them alone; Mulder was here. "You okay?" he asked. He held her tenderly, buoying her, even after the worst of her emotional tempest had passed. Rather than answer him with words, she moved his hand within her, pushed his finger deeper, trying to fill herself with his promise of devotion. The magnificent pressure unexpectedly swamped her with passion and she gasped. Everything outside of her body vanished. The world became only his touch. Her other senses registered nothing, no sound, no sight, no smell, only him and a ballooning desire to take him more deeply inside her. "More," she begged, her voice thin with need. "You'll have to let go." This time he was referring to her grip on his wrist, not her emotional state. She reluctantly released him and he began to withdraw. Even as he slid out of her, she became desperate to be filled again. She rocked her hips toward him, following his retreat, trying to regain the pleasure he was taking away. "Nooo," she pleaded. The emptiness was intolerable. "You show me." Frantically, she grabbed his hand and slid two fingers into herself. Having him inside her was all she craved and she satisfied her longing by pressing her hips downward onto him. She felt replete as she held him there, adjusting to his presence, enjoying the sense of fullness. She looked down at his large hand guided by her smaller one. He didn't move. He had relinquished control, relaxing his hand in hers, allowing her to determine the extent of their intimacy. He was undemanding and patient and willing to surrender to whatever she desired. A primitive need prompted her to initiate a steady rhythm, a push and pull that both soothed and excited her. At her insistence, his fingers glided easily within her, slicked by her passion. Each thrust was utter bliss. Each withdrawal exquisite torment. He didn't pinch or grind. No grasping or pressing, rubbing or stroking, and yet the friction of his fingers, steered by her, prodded her closer to her climax. Picking up the pace, she thrust more urgently. She was nearing the edge, trembling, knowing that he watched her. Pressure swelled in her abdomen; sizzling tendrils of pleasure radiated out from her center. God, she loved him. Instead of feeling dominated and shamed by this act, she felt self-possessed and liberated. Performing for him was reassuring. Empowering. It felt incredible. She was so close now; release was only a heartbeat or two away. Her frenzied pulse hammered her ears. She gasped. Fire ignited between her thighs. Panting, she imbedded him deeply within herself and waited for the eruption of her climax...inevitable...unstoppable... there...now! Ecstasy singed her torso and burned across her thighs. Her eyes closed. She gasped, ablaze, deafened by the roar of her pulse in her ears. She wanted the glorious fire between her legs to go on and on. Her desperation razed, she released her held breath. Called out his name. "I'm here," he murmured, sounding as awed and grateful as she felt. She lunged for him, releasing his hand, wrapping her arms around him, clutching him, trying to breathe, quiet her rapid heart, regain her balance. His fingers slid from her. He drew her tightly to his chest, returning her heartfelt embrace. "You're beautiful," he said. "So beautiful." She felt beautiful. And cherished. And safe. I love this man, she repeated to herself. He is all I want or need. My perfect other, my hero, protector of my body, spirit and heart. "Lay beside me," he said, releasing her and reclining on the fur robe. When she was nestled beside him, he placed an arm around her and asked, "Can I...? Is this okay?" "Of course." It shamed her to see how she'd made him wary of touching her and yet, she was so grateful for his understanding, his tenderness, for helping her begin to overcome her fears. "Mulder?" "Hmm?" He stroked her hair, comforting her. "I know this is on our list of things we said we wouldn't talk about, but I... I think I need to talk about what happened to me." "Tell me," he encouraged. "You're sure?" "I'm sure." He seemed truly ready to listen. Not resigned, but strong and sympathetic. "Dzeh didn't kiss me." "So you said." She suddenly realized she hadn't kissed Mulder, not once since the day of the awful exchange. She'd been letting her anxiety -- and her jealousy -- keep him at arm's length. "Mulder, I want to kiss you. Right now." His hand stopped its leisurely caress. Without hesitation, he drew her to him and kissed her deeply, passionately on the lips. She felt her apprehensions dissipate as he pressed his mouth to hers. Cradled in his arms she realized there would be other opportunities to talk about Dzeh and Klizzie and any other confusing, unpredictable fears that plagued her. Mulder would be with her tomorrow and the next day and long after that. She'd seen their future in her visions and now she felt their connection in her heart. There was no need to hide her emotions from him anymore. Peace of mind descended on her and she relaxed for the first time in weeks. When he released her lips, she drew back to smile at him. "Loden is a shade of green, Mulder," she said. "It's the color of your eyes when we make love." It was the color of his eyes at that very moment. x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER FIFTEEN Don't cry...don't cry... Mulder struggled to hold back his tears. He bit his lip...so hard he reopened the wound there. Tasting blood, he focused on its bleak tang and waited for Scully to fall asleep. As soon as he was certain he could rise from the furs without waking her, he stood and staggered out of the shelter, wanting to release his anguish where she couldn't overhear him. Stifling his emotions while making love had proven almost unbearable. It had been torment to feel her hands on him and not respond the way his body and his heart were demanding. He'd wanted to fill her with more than his fingers. Jesus, he wanted to drive his cock into her, replace Dzeh's essence with his own, reclaim her as his. Fucking son-of-a-bitch had no right to touch her. She was *his*, God damn it! His! Lurching toward the river, he let his tears come. Stinging and fiery, they spiraled down his cheeks and became lost in his beard. Unable to see through their blur he followed the river's fluid sound, aiming for the starburst of moonlight on its rippled surface. The reflection appeared shattered, like his pride, and muddled, like his heart. Although Scully claimed she hadn't been hurt by Dzeh's manhandling, Mulder didn't believe her. The way she'd recoiled when he reached out for her proved she was more shaken than she was willing to admit. "God damn Neanderthal," he muttered, "God damn this whole fucking place." It struck him that if God were to damn anything or anyone, He should damn him...for bringing Scully here, for allowing Dzeh to bed her, for being such a fool and a coward. At the river's edge, his legs buckled and he collapsed onto hands and knees in the shallows, soaking his pants legs. A moan vibrated in his throat and he tried to swallow it, tamping down an urge to scream. He was still too close to the shelter. Even over the tumult of rushing water, Scully would hear his cries and come looking for him. He couldn't let her find him this way. His throat tightened and a sob hitched painfully in his chest, feeling like a punch to the gut. He scrambled to his feet and jogged downstream. Although sharp stones bit into the flesh of his bare feet, he ignored them, intent only on getting as far from Scully as possible before he let loose his outrage. Impatient to shed his frustration and sorrow, he began to strip off his pants as he ran. He fumbled with the zipper, pushed his jeans from his hips, down his thighs, slowing his stride only long enough to tear the pants hastily from his legs. It never occurred to him that they were already wet, that it would make no difference if he plowed into the water with them on. White- hot panic drove him to disrobe and leave his clothes crumpled on the shore to wade naked into the river. Icy water enveloped his ankles, calves and thighs, contracting his muscles with its chill. He hissed when it reached his genitals, so goddamn painfully cold, but apt punishment for his sins against Scully. Hypocrite. Fraud. Liar. She deserved better. She'd trusted him, goddammit, and he'd let her down. He'd allowed another man to touch her, to make love to her. It was intolerable. Swamped with self-loathing, he dove beneath the surface and bellowed into the murky water. His scream churned past his face, a stream of frenzied bubbles, the sound muted, too weak for the agony it carried. Lungs emptied, he burrowed down through the bitter current, swimming deeper, to the riverbed's weedy bottom. When he could go no further, he stopped his thrashing and let himself sink into the wafting kelp. His arms and legs were so numbed with cold he barely felt its soft tug. He waited there in the gloom, letting his awful anger dissipate like sweat in a cool breeze. Inexorably the river brought relief. Thank God. A shining memory insinuated itself into his anguish. A moment five years ago, in Scully's bathroom, after he'd handcuffed Eugene Tooms to her tub. Scully briefly sought solace in Mulder's embrace. All these years later, he could still feel her cradled in his arms, her pulse slowing, her fear ebbing as she caught her breath. It had been the first time he'd saved her life. He'd been her hero, come to her rescue like a white knight on a steed. He would give anything to be that man again. Pushing away from the river bottom, lungs aching for oxygen, he promised to reconcile his past mistakes. Two powerful strokes and his face punched through the river's surface. He gasped, filling his chest with the soft night air. Water clung to his lashes, his brows, streamed from his beard and hair. He blinked at the stars, bringing them into sharp focus. The constellation of Hercules loomed straight overhead, his club lifted high, everlastingly prepared to battle Ophiuchus and his dreadful Serpent. The snake's triangular head blocked Hercules from Virgo, who reclined on her back along the ecliptic. Mimicking the virgin's defenseless posture, Mulder rolled to face the stars and floated with arms and legs spread wide. Scully had been similarly exposed, he recalled, when she climaxed against the palm of his hand. Jesus, he'd wanted to climb inside her at that moment, become part of her, know her thoughts, share her ecstasy. He'd wanted to be thawed by her passion, and wash away her fearsome memories while purging his own anguish. In an ultimate act of love, he'd wanted to embed himself between her legs, nudge her womb and weep for joy. More tears came now, silently this time. He let them fall in scalding rivulets past his temples into the icy river. High above him, the night sky teemed with menacing creatures: the Dragon, the Lizard, the Lion and the Great Bear. At the center stood Hercules, and Mulder wished for the legendary hero's lionskin armor, to make him impervious to fear, too, able to face his own demons. He located the cluster of stars that marked Hercules' head, halfway between Vega and Gemma. It was faint, even on this crystal clear night. Suddenly the stars shifted east to west and the entire sky appeared to turn watery. At first Mulder attributed the distortion to his tears. But blinking failed to clear the intensifying blur. The sky was bucking, folding and unfolding in an astonishing fashion, corrugating like a paper fan. Startled, he righted himself in the river, treading water, toes searching for solid ground. A strange vibrating current wobbled him and he instinctively began to swim for shore. But the riverbank appeared as uneven as the sky, ribbed with unexpected peaks and grooves. It undulated, shuddered, grew soft and hazy. Was this an earthquake? No, a quake wouldn't explain the sky. This was some other phenomenon. Something unnatural. Something paranormal. Fearing for Scully's safety, he was about to call her name, when a reverse memory inundated his senses and sent him spiraling backward in his mind. Fiery pain in his thigh. The smell of antiseptic and bleach. "Noitatiplap no 76 si erusserp doolb," a woman's voice said, garbled and unintelligible. Where was Scully? There. At his feet. She was backing away toward the emergency room exit. He shook, coughed. Paramedics and nurses surrounded him. Feeling nauseous, he was afraid he was going to vomit into his oxygen mask. What was happening? Suddenly inside an ambulance, he felt like a kid on a merry- go-round, spinning backward, tugged by centrifugal force. From the ambulance he was lifted to the ground where he was left to lie, wet and cold. Scully dragged her coat from his chest, leaving him exposed and shivering. She shouted, "Nwod reciffo!" It made no sense! Now he was falling skyward, yet somehow he managed to land on his feet. Hearing a gunshot, he inhaled a scream. Fire drilled his leg from back to front. The astonishing pain vanished just before he yelled, "Tnega laredef!" What the hell was going on? As quickly as the topsy-turvy event had begun, it was over. The sky smoothed, returning to normal, a curved velvet dome, jet black, glittering with all its familiar constellations. The river flowed south as before. Its banks lay flat and tranquil. With his heart pounding, Mulder swam quickly for shore. Once there he found his legs were quaking so violently they wouldn't support his weight, so he crawled from the river on hands and knees, and hunkered on the grassy bank to wait for his trembling to subside. He'd just experienced some sort of time anomaly, he realized. Maybe similar to the one that had brought them here. Was it a way home? Hope coursed through him, only to be ousted by fear when it occurred to him that he could have been sucked back to the future -- or to some other time -- without Scully. Was she still here? Frantically, he rubbed his thighs, trying to bring feeling back into them so that he could run to her and assure himself that she was still asleep in the shelter where he'd left her. When his palm grazed the location of his old gunshot wound he noticed it was no longer there. Like the scar on his shoulder, it had disappeared. The time distortion...it must have taken him back to the Boggs case, to the moment when Lucas Henry shot him in the leg. Only...everything had happened in reverse with people speaking backward. Somehow he'd slipped into the past, and now he was once again where he'd started...only younger, somehow, and missing the scar from Lucas Henry's bullet. A sense of urgency propelled him to his feet. He and Scully needed to find a way home, before time separated them permanently. Was she still here in the Pleistocene? Locating his pants, he ran, desperate to find her. Retracing his steps, he careened past several ghostly shelters, their bony supports luminous in the moonlight. Where was she? Then he spotted her, cradled in the hut's giant, skeletal fist, asleep and looking like a resplendent angel. He slowed his running, stopping just outside the shelter, hot with relief, each sandpaper gasp scouring his throat and tightening his chest. She was okay. She was still with him. He went to her and crouched on shaky legs, while she blurred beyond the curtain of his tears. Hugging his aching ribs, he thanked God he hadn't lost her. * * * HILL AIR FORCE BASE COMPUTER LAB, HANGAR 19 MAY 14, 1998 7:29 AM Jason rapidly typed a string of commands on his keyboard. "What are you doing?" Lisa asked, hanging over his shoulder. He wished she would back away. Her scent, her heat, the whisper of her breath against his ear...everything about her was distracting. "Creating a graphical exemplar of the warp during last night's test. It should show us any structural anomalies in the continuum." A three-dimensional model began to take shape on the monitor. Time rippled in predictable waves from the EE Nodule at the model's epicenter, like the surface of a pond disturbed by the toss of a pebble. "Ground zero." Nichols pinpointed the Nodule with his index finger. Lisa's head bobbed, causing her long hair to sweep his shoulder. Its tickle evoked yesterday's lovemaking, when he had buried his face in those dark, curling tresses, feeling both desperate and relieved at the same time. Growing hard at the memory, he struggled to ignore her physical proximity by focusing on his computer screen. Another keystroke set the computer model into motion. Time pulsed, stretched. Waves crested like whitecaps on a wind- tossed sea. Unanticipated bubbles formed on the curve of each wave, small at first, but soon ballooning and drifting off course. Two expansive bubbles collided and burst. "Shit." Jason gaped at the image. More bubbles erupted, causing pinprick holes to develop in the fabric of time. Tiny perforations grew larger, then merged with others, until the entire model appeared pocked and roiling. "Someone went into that?" Lisa asked, sounding aghast. If Jason's suspicions turned out to be true, not only was someone lost in that caldron, they might be the catalyst for time's continued disintegration. "We have to tell Beck," Lisa said. "No!" If Beck saw this data, he might suspect Jason had sabotaged the test, and no one must learn about that, not even Lisa, not yet. He couldn't risk being removed from the Project. Not until he had assured its failure. "Lisa, listen to me. It's too early to tell Beck anything. We need to figure out what went wrong before we go to him." "Jason, you said yourself that someone might be trapped in there." "I didn't say trapped. If anyone traveled back, they can be returned." "How? We've never seen anything like this." "And neither has Beck, so telling him won't help. He'll only get in our way. Let's rerun the model. As soon as we figure out what happened, we'll go to Beck...I promise." She stared at the monitor, brows drawn together. "I don't know, Jason. This is the Colonel's project." "It's *our* project. We--" The lab door suddenly swung inward, putting an end to their argument. Captain Linden stood at the entrance, eyes narrowed, lips pressed into an angry line. * * * ANT CLAN'S AUTUMN CAMP A-CHI STREAM SEASON OF THE MASTODON FEAST EARLY AFTERNOON Concealed by stalks of pasture roses, Gini crouched on all fours to watch Dzeh and Lin search the abandoned village at the bottom of the hill. Painful thorns pricked her bare knees, but the thicket provided good cover. Surrounded by fluttering, pink blossoms and dense, glossy leaves, she was well hidden from her brother and his uncle, as well as from Chal and Wol- la-chee, should they suddenly appear from the north. Glancing over her shoulder, she looked for them again, expecting to find them hiking down the hill, following after her and the others. She was certain they must have discovered she'd backtracked at the swamp, and unless they stopped to hunt or eat, they couldn't be far behind. But the grassy slope at her back remained empty. She breathed a quiet sigh of relief and returned her attention to the village in the glade below. This was Ant Clan territory; she recognized their autumn camp by the gooseneck bend in the river, marked by an ancient sycamore and a rock formation that resembled a mastodon mother with her baby. Klizzie had told her a story about those massive stone boulders when they were here last year. In the story, the mother mastodon and her baby were drinking at the river when a pack of hungry wolves surrounded them. The frightened baby hid between its mother's legs and cried for help, while the mother trumpeted angrily at her attackers. Driven by their hunger, the wolves closed in on the mastodons. They licked their muzzles in anticipation. The wolves bared their teeth and growled low in their throats, while the mother lashed out at them with her tusks. She kept the wolves at bay all afternoon, throughout the night and into the next day. Eventually, however, she grew exhausted and weak. When the greedy wolves saw the mother was near death, two of the more daring ones -- a pair of silver-furred sisters -- approached the mother from behind while the others kept her distracted with howls and barks. The silver sisters darted between the mother's hind legs and pounced on her baby. Their sharp jaws clamped around his wobbly legs, and he released a pitiful wail. The distraught mother used her last dying breath to send up one final trumpeting prayer to the Spirits, begging them to intercede and save her baby from being devoured by the wolves. The Spirits heard the mother's cry and answered her prayer, turning both the mother and the baby into stone. The wolves were left with nothing but broken teeth and empty bellies. Gini hadn't liked the story very much. It seemed unfair to her that the wolves were allowed to go free, punished only with a few broken teeth, while the mastodons were transformed forever into stone. When she complained to Klizzie about it, she was told, "We cannot always understand the actions of Spirits, Little Chick, but it is good to know they are willing to answer a frightened mother's prayer." "But what if the wolves had prayed to the Spirits, too?" she asked. "Which prayers would the Spirits answer?" "I do not know. Perhaps it is possible to answer all prayers." Gini doubted this could be true. "Then why do people go hungry or get sick, even when they pray?" "Maybe they are not praying earnestly enough." Not earnestly enough? What was enough? Sometimes the Spirits seemed very hard to please. She decided she would rather have broken teeth and an empty belly than be turned to stone. No sooner had she thought about her empty stomach when it rumbled from hunger. She could smell Dzeh and Lin's mid-day meal cooking over their campfire. A large armadillo was roasting in the coals, while the men paced around the huts, going back and forth to the river and gesturing in all directions. Although Gini was too far away to hear their conversation, she suspected they were discussing Muhl-dar and Day-nuh's footprints. They'd been following the strangers' clear trail all day, through highland meadows, reconnecting with A-Chi Stream around mid-morning, and now here to Ant Clan's sparsely treed lands. Gini had mixed feelings about returning to A-Chi Stream. It meant that Muhl-dar and Day-nuh would now have plenty of fresh drinking water as they traveled, which was good. It also meant Dzeh could simply follow the stream to find them. Not that he was having any difficulty tracking them. Hopefully Muhl-dar and Day-nuh had not stopped anywhere to rest for very long, and now were far, far to the south, forever beyond Dzeh's reach. Glancing once again behind her and seeing no sign of Chal and Wol-la-chee, Gini settled down to pick ants from the rose blossoms to appease her hungry belly. Smelling the delicious roasting armadillo, she crushed insects between her thumb and forefinger and popped one after the next into her mouth. They had almost no flavor and it would take a lot of them to silence her empty stomach. * * * Drawn south by the river, Scully and Mulder hiked through a stony valley of scrub brush and stunted hardwoods. Jagged hills rose on either side of them. Deep red canyons snaked between tree-studded peaks, shadowy and mysterious, making Scully feel like a mouse in a maze. It surprised her how radically the terrain changed each day, mountaintops to lowland swamps to open grassland to this notched and ragged place. The ground underfoot was relatively flat, although striated with rocky outcroppings. Sandy soil and weedy vegetation filled the spaces around the islands of stone. Recent rockslides littered the canyon's edges and redirected the flow of the river with colorful slabs of sandstone. In some places entire cliff-sides had fallen away, exposing striped layers of earth and uprooted trees. It was as if the land were a living, breathing beast, shedding its skin to reveal a more brilliantly hued creature beneath. The river ran deep and rapid here. Jammed with boulders and fallen logs, it zigzagged noisily through the valley. Scully raised her voice to be heard above its monotonous chug. "It's myth, Mulder. Urban legend." "Maybe." Mulder had been uncharacteristically quiet all day. He claimed to be fine, although he'd obviously spent at least part of the night crying. She'd woken to find him shivering and wet, sitting beside her on the furs with his legs drawn up, hugging his knees. "River water," he explained when she asked about his bloodshot, red-rimmed eyes. "I took a bath." "Before dawn?" He shrugged and kept his face turned away after that. Wouldn't you know, she thought. She was finally feeling better about their relationship and now he was in a funk. Not that she could blame him. Making love must have been as difficult for him as it had been for her. A pang of guilt stung her. The decision to participate in the mate exchange had been hers, not his. In retrospect she realized Mulder had been right about leaving. They should have gone before agreeing to the tribe's repugnant custom. She'd been wrong to talk him into staying. An altercation with the tribe was inevitable given their extreme cultural differences. And given Mulder's predictable disregard for rules. To her surprise, she found herself wishing she were more like him. She actually admired his ability to go his own way and damn the consequences. He followed his heart without questioning it. Where had her prudence gotten her all these years? This time it had landed her in a stranger's bed. What a fool she'd been. Like the Ourobourus on her back, she was going in circles, plodding along a familiar, yet fruitless, path of logic while denying herself Mulder's more satisfying, if less predictable, extreme possibilities. She vowed to do things differently if given the opportunity. She would throw caution to the wind, go where her heart led without trying to second-guess it, the way he did. The way she had finally done last night. Giving in to her emotions and making love to Mulder had been cathartic for her. She'd opened herself up in a way she never had before, and today she felt better for it...calmer, closer to him than ever. She'd hoped he would feel the same way, but evidently their lovemaking had affected him differently, closing him off instead of opening him up. Unable to wrestle any real communication from him all morning, she reluctantly fell back on their old habit of discussing case files instead of personal issues. Debating the paranormal seemed better than saying nothing at all, if only a little. At least it helped pass the time as they traveled. How many miles had they hiked since leaving the tribe? And when would enough be enough? Surely no one was still following them. A herd of spindly-legged gazelles grazed peacefully on the riverbank thirty yards downstream, where grass fringed the shore, growing lush beneath a row of slanting elms. Pestered by flies, the animals tossed their heads and flicked their tails. Beyond the gazelles, a fallen log had created a swell in the river and a flock of stilted egrets fished for minnows in the relatively calm shallows. The noon sun flashed brightly off the birds' snowy feathers as they plucked silvery fish from the water and swallowed them whole. Scully's empty belly growled. There was no smoked meat left in the pack. The only thing they carried now was the worn fur blanket from the abandoned camp. "It's the Pookie Johnson story all over again," she said, determined to disregard her stomach while whittling away Mulder's reticence. "Who's Pookie Johnson?" He tossed a pebble into the river, startling the egrets. They cawed and flapped their wings, edging downstream but not flying away. "There was an alleged case in a Cincinnati hospital's ICU where patients always died in the same bed on Sunday nights at about 9:00 p.m., regardless of their medical conditions." "A vengeful ghost?" "Hardly. A team of experts was assembled to investigate the cause. The following Sunday, a few minutes before 9:00, they waited outside the ward to see what would happen." "What did happen?" He tossed another stone. It ricocheted off a boulder with a tinny ping. "I'd put my money on Aquiel, the Demon of Sunday." "You'd lose, betting man. When the clock struck 9:00, Pookie Johnson, the night custodian, entered the ward and unplugged the life support system so that he could use the vacuum cleaner." "Nooooo! Say it ain't so." She felt a surge of triumph. Not only had she told her joke without him guessing the punch line, she'd also managed to lure him out of his circumspection. "It ain't so, which is exactly my point, Mulder. That story's been told so many times it's become folklore." "Spoilsport." She chuckled. "The Demon of Sunday? Where do you come up with these things?" "I--" Suddenly Mulder stumbled. He managed to remain upright, but was now standing in a rocky indentation approximately two and a half feet long by about six inches deep. The "hole" was an animal track with three enormous, talon-tipped toes. Mulder's face brightened for the first time all day. "Wow!" Although she was glad to see him smile, she didn't share his enthusiasm; any beast that could leave an imprint like that was a monster. "What is it?" "Allosaurus." He squatted to run his hand over the stony print. "Allosaurus?" "A theropod. Biggest, meanest predator in North America during the late Jurassic." "A dinosaur?" Jesus, were they traveling further back in time? "Relax, Scully. This is a fossilized track. Look, there's another." He stood and loped to the next track, which was about three yards away. He jumped into it with all the enthusiasm of a six-year-old in a mud puddle. Looking back at her, he whooped with delight. "Is this great or what?" She didn't share his enthusiasm. "How do you know so much about dinosaurs?" "All boys know about dinosaurs." He began following the trail of prints, hopping excitedly into each one. "They do?" she asked, more to herself than to Mulder. Bill and Charlie had never shown an interest in anything but military jets and submarines. She hurried to catch up. "When I was nine, Dad took me to the American Museum of Natural History in New York to see the diplodocus skeleton," he said. "It was 72 feet long, 22 feet high, and was estimated to weigh between 50 and 70 tons. Can you imagine a creature like that? It would dwarf even the biggest Ice Age beast." "I guess I should be thankful we didn't wind up in the Jurassic." She eyed the prints nervously. "Are you sure these tracks are fossilized?" Her question brought an indulgent smile to his lips. "Yes, I'm sure." For the next hour, he followed dinosaur tracks while she followed him and listened to his excited descriptions of various gargantuan beasts. Diplodocus, apatosaurus, stegosaurus, camarasaurus, and so many others she began to lose count. "These could be over 135 million years old!" he said, tearing his eyes away from another set of stony prints only long enough to grin at her. "Lower Cretaceous, maybe. Did you know that there are more than 1600 fossilized dinosaur bones at Dinosaur National Monument?" Dinosaur National Monument...why did that sound familiar? "Where?" she asked. "It's a graveyard of fossilized bones in Vernal, Utah. That's about...uhhh...well, I don't know how many miles from here, but it's in the eastern part of the state." That sparked her memory. "Melissa sent me a postcard from there once," she said, picturing the photo on the card...enormous brown bones protruding from rock cliffs, happy tourists standing nearby. In her note Missy had seemed as enthralled as Mulder, although not for the same reasons. It wasn't the dinosaurs that excited her. Apparently she'd met a park employee named Craig, who convinced her to stay in Utah for most of the month of October. Their relationship remained strictly platonic, she claimed. Craig was allegedly a cosmic sibling. The fossilized tracks finally petered out as the rocky canyon widened into a verdant basin of grassland and deciduous trees. Red rock cliffs more than three stories high cradled the lowland paradise, where herds of animals grazed along the broad river's curving shores. Water buffalo, camels, more gazelles, all seemingly unconcerned by the approach of humans. Flocks of birds waded and fished in the rapids. Enormous turtles sunned themselves on fallen logs. The air smelled as fecund as a greenhouse. Constant bird song blurred with the babble of the river, filling Scully with wonder, drawing her forward with her head tilted skyward, sniffing the soft breeze and listening to the harmonious melody of nature. Mulder seemed to grow calmer, too, as he led them more deeply into the tranquil basin. Eyes wide, lips quirked in a half- smile, he wore an expression of enchanted incredulity. His outward delight and disbelief matched hers as they approached a herd of horses, eventually coming close enough to smell the ponies' dusty hides, without scaring them away. Twelve mares grazed peaceably in the shade of widely spaced trees, taking almost no notice of the dumbfounded humans who walked among them. "They aren't afraid of us," she said, keeping her voice low. "I noticed that." She chanced touching one as she passed, just lightly, on its sun-warmed rump. The pony nickered and kicked at the ground making a dull, hollow-sounding thud before plodding two steps away. It bent its head to tear another mouthful of bright grass from the dirt. "Why aren't they running?" "Maybe they can see we aren't carrying any weapons." The pony swatted its rust-colored tail, inadvertently slapping Scully's arm as it swished flies. She flinched and gasped from the whip-like sting, causing the horse to gaze back at her. Its large eye rolled, assessing the threat. Flies tormented its ears and it waggled them, nodding and snorting in an effort to find momentary relief. When it trotted away, Scully wasn't certain if it was trying to escape her or the bugs. None of the horses were very large, not by modern standards. But they all had fat bellies and muscular legs. A lot of protein on the hoof, she realized, and her stomach rumbled again. "Just one of these animals would feed us for three or four days," she said, eyeing the horse that had struck her with its tail. She pictured it cut into T-bones and tenderloins, and her mouth began to water. "Perhaps you didn't hear me when I said we have no weapons." "You have a knife." He chuckled. "You want me to take down a horse with my pocketknife?" "Okay, maybe not your knife. But we're smart people. We should be able to apply a little 20th Century ingenuity to solving our food problem." "Such as?" "I don't know. But we need to eat and there must be a gazillion calories of fresh meat in this valley." Mulder's head swiveled and a curious expression replaced his smile as he looked around. "Weird. The place where we stayed last night had no game at all. I didn't see so much as an anorexic squirrel. Nothing but a few ants." It was a contrast. This valley was like a Garden of Eden, flourishing with robust animals, lush vegetation and crystal- clear water. Its serenity and abundance soothed Scully's frayed nerves. She felt relaxed here. This was the most peaceful place they'd encountered since coming to the Pleistocene. "Look at that." Mulder pointed to the eastern cliffs where the late afternoon sun spotlighted a shadowy cave in the crimson- colored rock. The cleft curved like a frowning mouth, its lower lip jutting beyond the arching roof, approximately thirty feet above the valley floor. He dug his binoculars from his pocket and raised them to his eyes. "I think our luck is finally changing...for the better. Feel like spending the night with a roof over your head?" "It's not occupied is it?" "Look for yourself." He passed her the binoculars. She peered through the glasses at the cave. Nothing moved inside its shady opening. A shallow incline of boulders, overgrown with shrubs, saplings and groundcovers, connected the cave to the valley floor like a living staircase. At the base of those lush steps, a large, ragged beaver dam slowed the river's current, creating a sizable pond. Cattails and purple flowers grew in profusion along its southern shore. More birds fluttered in the rushes. It was beautiful. "Come on, let's go," Mulder urged, taking her hand and pulling her forward. * * * HILL AIR FORCE BASE COMPUTER LAB, HANGAR 19 MAY 14, 1998 7:47 AM "Captain Linden!" Lisa Ianelli wore the startled expression of an airman caught jerking off on night patrol. She stood beside Nichols, who was seated with his back to the door at a computer terminal at the rear of the lab. Linden stepped into the room as Nichols swiveled in his chair to face him. The young scientist's hand slid from his keyboard to his lap and the monitor behind him went dark. Two stone-faced airmen flanked Linden and he motioned them to wait outside the door, which he left open. Crossing the lab, he passed several unoccupied stations to stand directly in front of Ianelli and Nichols. "Something wrong?" Nichols asked. "You tell me." "Sorry." Nichols looked up at him with mock regret. A contemptuous smirk twitched the corners of his mouth. "I'm not authorized to discuss the Project with anyone but Colonel Beck. Damn those pesky orders, huh, *sir*?" Impudent little fuck. Linden was sick to death of Nichol's "I know something you don't" attitude. He was a goddamn smart-ass and, worse yet, a civilian working on a classified military project...a very risky combination. Linden didn't know the details of Beck's pet project, but it was his job to ensure the security of this base and his gut was screaming at him to distrust Nichols and his jittery girlfriend, especially after discovering a connection this morning between them and the two elusive intruders. "I'm not here to talk about the Project," Linden said. "No? Then why are you here?" Nichols leaned back in his chair, loose-limbed and cocky. "To hear you explain why two Federal agents tried to sneak onto this base last night." Nichols looked genuinely surprised. "I don't know anything about that." "I think you do." Linden paced around Nichols to rest his hand on top of the computer monitor. What had these two been looking at a moment ago and why didn't they want him to see it? "You ever hear of an Agent Fox Mulder?" "Yes, I met him last year." Nichols took off his glasses to clean them on the hem of his faded T-shirt. "At the Bio-Med Research Station at MIT. Was he one of the Federal agents who slipped past your security?" "Technically you met him at the police station." "Mulder arranged for my bail, yes. And since you've obviously checked my records, you already know I was acquitted of Lucas Menand's murder." "So the BPD said. They also said you disappeared for a period of several days after a fire broke out in the Bio Lab's computer center." Nichols fitted his glasses back over his ears and sighed. "So what? I needed to get away. I'd just lost several years worth of work, not to mention my very good friend Lucas. Is it a crime to grieve?" "That depends." "Depends on what?" Ianelli asked, flipping her long hair behind her shoulders. A nervous habit, Linden guessed, more than a challenge. Her lips were frayed from biting them. Her nails chewed to the nub. She looked like she hadn't slept in a week. "What's this really about?" she asked. "Why would Agent Mulder try to sneak onto this base?" "My guess is he was planning to meet someone here. Someone who was in a position to leak classified information." Ianelli's eyes rounded. "You think we're spies?" "That's preposterous." Nichols threw up his hands in disbelief. Anger darkened his face. He pinned Linden with a cold stare. "Is that what he told you?" Linden shrugged. He had no intention of letting them know the intruders hadn't been found yet. "This is my life's work, Captain," Nichols said. "Why would I do anything to jeopardize it?" "Sorry, I'm not authorized to discuss that with anyone but Colonel Beck." Now it was Linden's turn to smirk. He drew away and headed to the door; at the threshold he turned to look back at them. "But I am putting you both under 24-hour guard until further notice. Damn those pesky orders, huh, *Mister* Nichols?" * * * LATE PLEISTOCENE JUNE 28, 6:59 PM While Scully was bathing in the river, Mulder gathered tinder for a fire. He planned to ignite it using the sun's rays and his binoculars. The idea had come to him earlier when Scully passed the glasses back to him, causing sunlight to ricochet off the lenses and spotlight the red rock outside the cave. Why he hadn't thought to try this days ago, he wasn't sure. Must have been distracted by saber-toothed tigers and angry Cro-Magnons. Dried grass? Check. Cedar shavings? Check. Small twigs and branches? Check. Larger branches and driftwood? Check. One threadbare animal skin next to the fire for making love? He waggled his brows at no one in particular. Check! He had arranged the combustibles near the mouth of the cave, where late afternoon sunlight still washed across the stony floor. The cave was dry and roomy, about twelve feet high at its mid-point and nearly twice as wide. It curved into the hillside for about ten yards before narrowing and finally dead-ending. Nothing seemed to be living in it, other than a small colony of bats that hung from fissures in the roof at the back. It wasn't the Watergate, but in many ways, it was more comfortable than some of the hotels they'd stayed in over the years. Just in case he was unsuccessful at starting a fire, he hadn't divulged his plans to Scully. No sense getting her hopes up over nothing if all he managed to create was a little smoke. Besides, it would be great to surprise her with a roaring fire when she returned from her bath. Tilting the binoculars toward the sun, he focused its rays through one the lenses, creating a small circle of light on his pile of wood shavings. A minor adjustment of distance shrank the circle to a dime-sized dot. He wondered how long this might take...assuming it worked at all. Would staring at the dot blind him? He averted his eyes, glancing back only often enough to make sure the light was still aimed at the kindling and not on the stone floor of the cave, or worse, at his leg or foot. In less than a minute a wisp of smoke wafted up from the tinder. Could it really be that easy? A curled cedar chip smoldered. It was working! He blew gently on the ember. It glowed brightly, but didn't ignite. He blew again, a little more forcefully. A tiny flame appeared. Yes! He was making a fire! Just an itsy-bitsy one, but an honest-to-goodness fire nonetheless. He set down the binoculars and fed a few bits of grass into the tenuous flame, all the while trying to still his shaky hands. It wouldn't do to get overexcited and suffocate the fledging fire. The grass sizzled and ignited. "Now we're cookin'." He added a few more cedar shavings. They crackled and snapped, and sent up a pleasant aroma. A few thin, dry twigs ensured the fire was going to keep burning. "Woo hoooo!" he bellowed. He'd made a fire! A *fire*! Without matches. Now they could cook food...uh, assuming they could find some. And even if they couldn't, they'd be warm tonight, which was something. He placed a branch very carefully onto the flames and it started to burn. "You built a fire?" Scully stood at the lip of the cave, hair dripping wet, brows raised, and looking for all the world as if she didn't believe what her own eyes were seeing. He grinned up at her. "I did." "How?" "A little 20th Century ingenuity." He hefted the binoculars and waved them at the setting sun. She nodded. "Handsome *and* smart. Every cave girl's dream." "You're just sayin' that because I'm the only guy around who's willing to wear a necktie to work or use a napkin at the dinner table." "Can't argue with that. Speaking of dinner..." She brought her hands out from behind her back and held up a fistful of bullfrogs. They dangled wetly by their long webbed feet, hind legs stretching to at least eighteen inches and each one with a belly as thick as Mulder's forearm. She smiled proudly. "Whoa. Look what croaked." "You aren't squeamish, are you, Fire Man?" "Not at all. Whaddaya say I cut a couple of sharp sticks and we roast 'em like weenies?" * * * Dzeh's eyes widened at the sight of the giant three-taloned track. He had heard about such things, but had never seen one for himself. This print was as long as a man's stride and was pressed deeply into the stone. Whatever creature had created it was monstrous. "We must turn back," Lin urged. "This is Ye-tsan Basin." "That is only a legend." "You can see for yourself it is real. What animal can make a track like that?" Dzeh knew Lin was right. His uncle was not a man who was easily frightened. He'd lived many hard winters and single- handedly battled ferocious bears, wolves and saber-toothed cats. Dzeh had once seen him stand his ground against a charging bull mastodon, killing it by driving his spear into its furious eye. And yet Lin's face was pale and his hands trembling as he stared down at the gigantic tracks. "It is a trick. Perhaps Muhl-dar conjured these tracks to frighten us away." Dzeh's desire to continue after his enemy was greater than his fear of ancient legends. "We have heard the tales all our lives, Nephew." "Doubtless Muhl-dar has heard them, too." "These were not created by a man, not even one as cunning as Muhl-dar." Did massive serpents really live here, creatures bigger than the largest mastodon, fiercer than a wounded she-bear? Dzeh scanned the land to the south for any glimpse of the giants. He saw nothing but more impossible tracks, and A-Chi Stream, grown fat and wild, snaking south through a verdant lowland. "Muhl-dar will die here," he said, feeling relieved. It was commonly believed that Endless Lake lay at the southern-most end of the Basin, too broad to be crossed and too wide to be hiked around. To the east and west, tall red cliffs, impossible to climb, squeezed the valley. Ye-tsan was a trap. Only a desperate man would enter a place that was blocked on three sides and teamed with colossal serpents. Muhl-dar would perish as surely as a fly in a pitcher plant. Two faint sets of prints -- Muhl-dar's and Day-nuh's -- disturbed the dust beyond the giant lizard's stony tracks. The sight lightened Dzeh's aching spirit. The strangers deserved whatever dreadful fate they would meet in this fearsome place. As if able to see his thoughts, Lin said, "They are already dead, Nephew. Let us go home before we meet the same fate. Surely Wol-la-chee and Chal have already returned to Turkey Lake with Gini." A shiver of doubt tickled Dzeh's spine, but he shook it off and turned away from the terrible lowland. He was finally done with the strangers and was grateful he would never set eyes on them again. * * * The sun appeared to be balanced on the rim of Ye-tsan Basin; its crimson glow painted the cliff-sides the color of blood. Gini emerged from her hiding place behind a thorny locust tree as soon as Dzeh and Lin were out of sight. They were returning home...without her. She wasn't sure how she felt about that. She had expected to be relieved, but as it turned out, she was sad and a little panicky. Watching Dzeh disappear into the sparse, darkening woods was more difficult than she had anticipated. She would never, ever see him again, she realized. Or Klizzie either. Imaginary knives jabbed her heart as she considered living without them. Klizzie had been her mother for four years -- half her life -- taking care of her whenever she was sick and teaching her important lessons, like how to scrape hides and smoke meat and make pemmican. She showed her which plants were safe to eat and which were not. She braided her hair and gave her gifts and treats, like honeyballs and spruce gum and necklaces and soft, pretty tunics. Even Dzeh was *usually* nice. He had carved her many little dolls, far more than her friend Jeha ever had. And he told her stories and sometimes took her hunting even though girls were not supposed to hunt with men. Lots of nights Dzeh and Klizzie let her climb into bed with them when she woke up afraid, scared by a nightmare or the howl of wolves. Klizzie would hold her in her arms and stroke her hair, while Dzeh told stories, keeping his voice low so as not to wake the others in the lodge. Dzeh had a nice voice. Deep and comforting, at times as soft as goose down on a spring wind. It was pleasant to listen to him tell tales of successful hunts or happy feasts, while Klizzie kissed her cheeks and called her "Little Chick," until she fell asleep between them. Tears filled her eyes at such fine memories, blurring the red sky and the dark silhouettes of trees, making the world look like the inside of a gutted carcass. Wiping away her tears, she was determined not to cry. It had been many moon cycles since she'd gone to her brother or Klizzie for comfort. Certainly not since Dzeh decided she must take a mate. She would not go back to the Clan. If she must live with strangers, she would decide who. Dzeh would no longer tell her what to do. She would live with Muhl-dar and Day-nuh and that was the end of it. Unfortunately Muhl-dar and Day-nuh had gone into Ye-tsan Basin...the place of monsters. She turned to face the lowland. There in the growing gloom, pressed deeply into the stone, were the frightful footprints of giant lizards. Fighting the urge to chase after Dzeh, she headed into the valley. "Please don't eat me, Serpent Monsters," she whispered to the shadows. "I do not want to die." * * * Mulder's lips nudged Scully's. He didn't press, didn't open his mouth, didn't seek to invade her with his tongue. His kiss was chaste, tentative, a gentle exploration of her mood. They stood at the entrance of the cave, the fire separating them from the black night outside. His arms loosely encircled her silky shoulders; her hands rested on his bare chest. He wore his jeans and nothing else. She wore hers, too, and her camisole, which reflected the flames in its lustrous fabric. Their feet were bare and the stone floor of the cave felt cool on his soles. Drawing back an inch or two, he asked, "Everything okay?" She nodded shyly. The glistening tip of her tongue darted across her lower lip, as if tasting the love he'd left for her there. "Yes...everything's fine." Would she recoil in horror if he touched her breasts? He really wanted to touch them, imagining the eggshell-smooth skin, the nipples puckered from her bath in the chilly river. They tented the silk of her camisole, creating attractive shadows in the firelight, tempting his twitchy hands and hungry mouth. Instead of satisfying his craving, however, he brushed her inner arm with the backs of his fingers. Goosebumps sprouted beneath his caress. She didn't withdraw from him and he felt a prickle of triumph. Were there certain things he shouldn't do? Certain positions that would frighten her? Things she'd done with Dzeh? The idea of Scully making love to that Neanderthal repulsed him, no matter how they'd gone about it. He certainly didn't want to remind her of it by approaching her the same way. Yet, he wanted to make love to her. He longed for the intimacy of intercourse. He wasn't expecting anything so sublime, or unlikely, as simultaneous orgasms -- he wasn't that optimistic -- but he needed to be with her, *in* her, this time when she climaxed. *If* she climaxed, he corrected himself. It was possible she wouldn't be comfortable enough to reach orgasm. The memory of her coming against his hand made his cock stiffen. "Scully..." He barely recognized his own raspy voice. "I want to make love to you, but I... I'm not sure..." He paused to swallow. "What do you want?" There was little doubt she was as nervous as he was. Her brows were peaked with worry, her mouth taut, jaws clenched. But she nodded, setting her hair swinging. "I want you," she said. Her answer brought relief, but it wasn't enough. He ventured a smile. "I need more to go on than that. I don't want to mess this up." "It'll be fine," she reassured him, although she looked far from confident. "Is there anything...I shouldn't do?" She bit her lip and thought for a moment. Finally she said, "Don't hurry." "All right." He slipped a finger beneath the delicate strap of her camisole and tugged playfully. "How about we start by taking this off?" "You need to undress, too," she said, looking at him through lowered lashes. He'd never wanted her more. Stepping away from her was agony, but he did it, reluctantly, to remove his pants. The night air sifted across his naked erection, surprising him with its chill. His hand automatically closed around himself and he was rewarded with a familiar tingle of pleasure. When she lifted her camisole up and over her head, exposing her breasts and making them bobble in a most attractive way, he tightened his grip on his cock, increasing his enjoyment. He was staring at her, making her self-conscious, he knew, yet he couldn't pull his eyes away from the dark circles of her nipples. Not until she unfastened and lowered her pants and panties. His focus dropped to the triangle of hair at the apex of her legs. Rust-colored curls beckoned him and he took an unsteady step closer. He felt somewhat narcissistic holding onto himself, so he let go. His cock bobbed between them and made him think briefly of divining rods and dowsing for water with the way it aimed at the cleft beneath her curls in search of her humid depths. She glanced down at him, and much to his dismay, appeared to grow a little green around the gills. "Scully, if you're not sure..." "No, I'm... I'm fine." He bridled at the familiar phrase and felt some of the rigidity leave his cock. "Honestly," she assured him and took hold of his flagging penis with her right hand. His knees nearly buckled. The pressure and warmth of her touch felt so damn good and he began to grow hard once again. He wrapped his arms around her, and she nuzzled his bearded chin with her lips, coaxing his mouth to hers. When their lips met, he slipped his tongue between her teeth, swirling into her mouth, exploring her taste and wetness and heat. A moan vibrated from his lungs into hers. She shivered in response and he hoped it was from desire, not cold or fear. She still gripped him and he pressed against her, trapping her hand and himself between their hips. It felt good, but he ached for more. Cradling the back of her head in his palm, he increased the ardor of his kiss. Her jaw went slack, her lips more pliant, and when her tongue prodded his in a swiftly won skirmish to access his mouth, he welcomed it and sucked her in. Connect, merge, unite...these words didn't begin to describe the compelling desire he had to join with her. Without thinking, without breaking their kiss, he swept her up into his arms, causing her to release her hold on him. Engorged to the point of pain, he immediately missed her touch. His kisses became more desperate. Jesus, Jesus, if he wasn't in her soon his heart was surely going to burst. Dragging his mouth from her lips, he nipped at her chin and nose, lapped her neck and cheeks, and dipped his tongue back into her mouth. He carried her to the fur blanket, where he knelt, feeling clumsy and unbalanced, but keeping her in his arms, in his lap, for just a moment longer, enjoying the warm press of her weight against his swollen groin. He continued to kiss her, on the lips, the cheeks, the forehead, more gently this time, trying to slow the frantic pace of his desire. "God, Scully," he gasped when she bit his neck, trapping the thin skin above his Adam's apple between her teeth. "I want you...so...much." She released her hold to look up at him, lips swollen and parted, chest heaving in little panting breaths. The pupils of her eyes were as black and beautiful as the night sky. He swore he could see Hercules coalesce with Virgo in their glittering firmament. Tenderly, he lifted her from his lap onto the furs. Then he moved over her, nipping at her collarbone in a gentle pantomime of her passionate bite. Slowly, he lowered his body on top of hers. Her knees parted to cradle him between her thighs. Her arms encircled his neck and drew him down. She was sun-warmed silk beneath him, welcoming and enchanting. He fitted himself to her, pressing his hips between her splayed legs. His hard cock found her entrance and he hitched forward, nudging into her softly split form. He pushed...and met resistance. She gasped and winced. "Wait," she said. "I'm not...I'm not ready." He immediately halted his forward thrust. "Sorry. Maybe we shouldn't--" "No. No, it'll be okay. Just...uh...give me a minute." Propping himself on his elbows, he shifted his weight so that he no longer pressed so heavily onto her. "Take whatever time you need." He stroked her hair. "How about if we swap positions?" She nodded at the suggestion, so he slid off her, rolling as he went and taking her with him. He ended up on his back with her sprawled on top of him. Smiling up at her, he said, "Whenever you're ready. Or not. Whatever you want to do." A look of determination replaced the watery worry in her eyes. "Maybe if you talk to me. It might help." Talk to...? Really? "You mean...like phone sex?" "Not quite. I just want to hear your voice. I find it soothing." Ah, so she didn't want to hear "Oooo, yeah, fuck me, baby." A poem maybe? He sifted through several possibilities before settling on: "'Let me but glimpse you and I can no longer utter a word. No voice comes; my tongue is thick. Fire runs beneath my flesh.'" She raised an eyebrow. "Continue." "'My eyes cannot see, my ears are filled with humming that stuns, sweat streams down me...'" She smiled. "More, please." He recited the last line: "'My body trembles. I turn greener than grass, so faint I believe I shall die.'" "That was beautiful. Who wrote it?" "Sappho. 600 B.C., give or take." "I like it." "Yeah? Well, I figured it was better than, 'Down go the britches, in goes the little thing about six inches.'" She laughed at his joke, which pleased him. "Where the hell did you come up with that?" "It's an Ozark square-dance call." "You're kidding." "I never kid about square-dancing." Again she chuckled and he enjoyed the vibration of her body against his. "Talk to me some more," she urged, laying her head on his shoulder. "I love your voice. Especially here, in the dark." She smelled wonderful, fresh like the river water, but with an underlying hint of her own natural fragrance, that delightful "eau de Scully" that complemented any of the soaps, shampoos or perfumes she used back home. He loved her aroma, most detectable at the end of a long stakeout, when the artificial scent of her toiletries gave way to her body's unmasked, musky perfume. He buried his nose into her hair and inhaled deeply, grateful for this opportunity to sniff her without pretense. Moaning his appreciation, he tried to think of something else "soothing" to say. "Know what the Pleistocene tribesmen call this?" He raised his hips, nudging her pubic bone with his erection. As soon as the words left his mouth, he regretted saying them. Would his question remind her of Dzeh and the mate exchange? She was quiet for a moment, giving him ample time to worry. Finally she lifted her head from his shoulder to grin at him. "Umm, impressive?" she asked. Thank God, she wasn't upset. And she'd just complimented his equipment. Maybe this talking idea was a good one after all. "Aww, thanks, Scully. But no, it's a 'be-zonz.'" "Be-zonz? What does that mean?" "*This*." He poked her again. "Penis. Cock. Dick. Schlo--" "I get the point." "Know what they call the female genitalia?" She stared at him, eyes wide with disbelief. "Ah-toh," he said, answering his own question. "Mulder, how did this come up in everyday conversation?" "Oh, you know, just a bunch of guys, hangin' out in the prayer hut, talkin' guy talk." "Hm." "What do you call it, Scully?" He wouldn't mind hearing a little "soothing" talk himself. "It?" "Your...uh, ah-toh." "I call it a vagina." "That's kinda clinical." "So?" "Not very sex...er, soothing." He ground against her and gave her ass a playful pinch. "Can I give it a nickname?" "No. And don't tell me you've got a nickname for your...your..." "My what?" "Your be-zonz." "You mean 'Godzilla'?" Now it was her turn to pinch him. She tweaked his ribs and then reached down between them to grab hold of Godzilla. She squeezed him...*hard*. "Mmmmmm," he groaned, feeling like he could explode in her hand. She closed her eyes to mere slits, licked her lower lip and said, "I think I'm ready." That was it? A poem and a little friendly banter and she was good to go? She stroked him and he decided not to question it. "You've got your hand on the stick shift, Scully. Feel free to take me for a test drive." She rose to a sitting position and guided him to her entrance. It took all his willpower not to push into her. Instead, he let her sink down on top of him. Ready indeed. She was more than ready. Slick with desire, she settled onto him...over him...around him. Jesus, she felt good. He looked up at her sitting above him, her thighs straddling his hips, hands anchored to his chest, the unrestrained corona of her hair illuminated from the side by the fire. She was half light, half shadow, simultaneously exposed and hidden. A secret and an answered prayer, all in one. Her eyes glittered with tears, bringing a lump to his throat and a pang to his chest. "You okay?" he asked in a whisper. She answered him with a faint smile and an almost imperceptible nod. Then she rose up on her knees, stroking his hardened flesh with her inner walls. The satisfying friction drew his attention away from everything, everything but their joining. "I'm fine, Mulder. 'Greener than grass, so faint I believe I shall die,'" she quoted his poem and eased back down on him. "Make love to me." "I thought that's what I was doing." "No, you're treating me like glass. I want you to treat me like a lover." "But...I don't...I--" "You're inside me. Make love to me." Again she rose up. It was too much. With her blessing, his self-control abandoned him. Driven by an urge as ancient as life, he grasped her hips and pushed into her. The reward was instantaneous. Pleasure zigzagged along his spine, promising bliss should he empty himself into her. Every nerve in his body yearned to fill her with the fertile slurry of his seed. Meeting her downward stroke, thrusting back into her, again and again, he became every rutting deer, every mating hawk, every spawning salmon. He was the very first spark of life adrift in the vast primordial sea, struggling against all odds to become more than itself alone. And yet, this act was greater than any biological urge or even a Divine command to go forth and multiply. This was making love in the truest sense, becoming one with a soul mate. Putting together two imperfect halves in order to create one perfect whole. His recompense came too soon, too soon, in waves, salty breakers upon her feminine shores. He threw his head back and, with gritted teeth, climaxed into her. Each rush of semen was sheer bliss. Each concluding thrust, perfection. Scully... Scully... *She* was perfection. Never had a woman overwhelmed him with passion the way this one did. Never had he felt more at home than inside her. He belonged to her. It was unimaginable to consider his life without her. Still joined, she leaned forward, lowering herself onto his chest, gasping and overheated. Like him. Their two hearts thundered against one another, not quite in sync but complementary. "Sorry," he apologized. He had rushed to his own fervent release, failing to bring her along with him. "You didn't--" "Shhhh. I'm fine, Mulder. Really. That was...that was beautiful." She lifted her head to study him. Her eyes shone with what must certainly be love. "*You* were beautiful." "Jesus..." He stroked her face. "Evidently I've fallen for a crazy woman." "Not crazy. Just happy." Happy? Here? "You mean for once being in the wrong place at the wrong time isn't a bad thing?" He was feeling pretty happy himself, he realized. It was mind- boggling. Their situation couldn't be more precarious and yet he did feel happy. Crazy, insanely happy. Greener than grass, he thought, so faint I believe I shall die. She shifted on top of him, causing his diminishing erection to slide out of her. Sated by his dinner and warmed by the fire and his love for her, he felt sleepy. Drowsiness weighted his limbs. His eyes closed and his thoughts began to drift, languid and content. "Wake me in fifteen," he mumbled, his words rolling like smooth stones in his mouth. "I'll finish you then." "It's a deal," she said, laughing quietly. She stroked his chest with a rhythmic, hypnotizing caress. Just before sleep snagged him, he thought he heard her say, "I love you, sweetheart," but maybe it was only wishful thinking. * * * "More wo-chi!" Klesh flung his empty bowl at Klizzie. It hit her arm and bounced away. She set down her sewing, giving up on trying to untangle the knot of sinew in her kit. Rubbing the pain from her elbow, she frowned and said, "You have had enough." They sat on opposite sides of the hearth in the hut where she had laid with Muhl-dar on the night of the mate exchange. The Clan had allowed Klesh to remain at Turkey Lake to mourn Tse- e's death with his kin, just as he had predicted they would. "Do not tell me what I will and will not drink," he growled, slurring his words. His beard was clotted with a mixture of spilled wo-chi and the traditional pale, clay face-paint of someone in mourning. His whitewashed lips curled into a nasty sneer. "I will have as much as I like. Bring me more. Now!" "There is none left," she lied, tasting the clay-of-death on her own lips. "You drank it all." She didn't want him to have another bowlful. The powerful drink was already making him bad-tempered, more so than usual. He suddenly laughed out loud, an angry barking sound that made Klizzie jump. "You...are a liar, my cousin," he said when he finished laughing. "Maybe you should have a sip or two of wo-chi yourself. It might make you friendlier." He shifted onto hands and knees and crawled around the fire to sit beside her. She glanced down at her sewing supplies, strewn about the floor at her feet, and noted the location of her stone knife among the needles and knotted sinew. She would use it if forced. "Remember the last time we drank wo-chi together?" His voice purred like a saber-toothed cat, sated on the blood of its most recent kill. He reached out a gnarled finger to caress her cheek. She batted his hand away. Yes, she remembered. Of course she remembered. If she lived to be a gray-haired old woman, she would not be able to forget that dreadful night. "Do not touch me," she warned. He chuckled at her discomfort. "You said it burned your throat," he reminded her. Indeed, the wo-chi had burned. It caused her stomach to buck and ache at first, but after a few more swallows, it enveloped her in its mysterious warmth. And by the time she'd finished an entire bowlful Klesh no longer seemed so unattractive. His scars had grown faint, almost invisible. He appeared as handsome as he had been before his disfigurement. As if able to see her thoughts, he said, "You did not always find me so ugly." No, he had not always been deformed and he had not always been so mean. At fifteen, his skin had been as smooth and unmarked as any boy's. And he laughed often, even when teased about his father, who was a lazy man and a poor gambler, or about his mother, who was said to have shared her sleeping skins with many men in exchange for meat and hides. Gossips claimed she sometimes traded herself for pieces of jewelry, even a...a hair ornament. Klizzie flushed with shame. Four summers ago, warmed by wo-chi and dazzled by a silly hair comb, she had done exactly what Klesh's mother was said to have done; she gave herself to a man in exchange for a pretty trinket. Her decision seemed foolish now. So obviously wrong. But at the time...Klesh had appeared transformed into the boy he had once been, the courageous 15-year-old who had saved her frightened brother's life by stepping into the path of a charging saber-toothed cat. Klesh had nearly died from the awful wounds he received on Tse-e's behalf. No doubt he often regretted his selfless act, or wished he had perished in the fight instead of living. The physical pain he endured must have been excruciating. His scars and his sacrifice earned him no honor, it turned out. He was tormented ruthlessly about his deformity, maybe because his father and mother were so unworthy of respect that the Clan's loathing for them spilled over onto their son. Only Tse-e remained loyal to his scarred cousin. When Klesh was banished, Tse-e refused to turn his back on the man who had once saved his life, and went with him. If she had been more compassionate and less selfish, she would have gone, too. It seemed she was always misjudging the right thing to do. She felt confounded by the choices the Spirits placed in her path, unlike Dzeh, who knew what was proper and what was not. To her, decisions were often as knotted as the sinew in her sewing kit. Well, she had learned one lesson at least. Telling Dzeh the truth about Klesh had been better than more lies. Now her cousin could not slit her throat with the knife of her own deceit. "I will bring you some food," she said, rising to her feet. It would be better to fill his belly with mastodon meat than more drink. And it would give her an excuse to go to the smokehouse and get away from him for a while. Maybe if she stayed away long enough, he would be asleep when she returned. "Don't go." He grabbed her wrist and leered at her. "I am not hungry for food." She twisted her arm free. "Then I will visit the Shaman instead. The Spirits are poking spears into my stomach." Without waiting for his permission, she turned her back on him and walked out of the hut. * * * Mulder jabbed at the fire with a stick, sending a flurry of sparks spiraling into the night sky. The landscape was jet black beyond the hearth's glow. Only the silver moon and its rippled reflection on the river appeared beyond the yawning mouth of the cave. Inside, light and shadow skirmished on the rock walls. The fire provided welcome heat and real protection, along with a sense of security that had been rare here in the Pleistocene. Sitting inside its circle of light, Mulder felt safer and more contented than he'd felt in weeks. "You're awfully quiet," Scully said. She sat next to him, knees drawn up, eyes focused on the flames. "Did I wear you out?" He chuckled. True to her word, she'd woken him after a short nap, and they had made love a second time. He'd given her that promised orgasm, times two. Tossing his stick into the fire, he caused it to crackle and hiss. Cedar-scented smoke curled skyward from the green wood. "I'm just sittin' and thinkin'." "About what?" "Making love. Uh... not tonight...just now...but last night. It...uh...it wasn't easy for me," he confessed. "I know. It wasn't easy for me either." "Hmm," he hummed his acknowledgement. Of course it wasn't; it couldn't have been. "I didn't mean to imply--" "I didn't mean to minimize your discomfort either," she interrupted. "I'm sorry." "Me, too." She was radiant in the firelight. Lustrous, smooth, perfect. She had put on her black panties and bra after making love and now her satiny bra reflected the fire, drawing his eyes. He was still naked, loathe to dress again in his filthy clothes. Maybe tomorrow he could wash them in the river, and take a long bath, too, to cleanse away the blood and grime and unpleasant memories of the last few days. She caught him staring at her chest, and he glanced quickly away, not wanting her to think he expected another round of lovemaking, although he would bed her again in a heartbeat. To avoid looking at her underwear, he focused instead on her bare feet and her pretty little toes, curling and uncurling, delightfully small, especially compared to his. He loved everything about her compact body. Her diminutive size made him feel substantial, physically powerful, and protective, characteristics he relished when he was with her. It filled him with masculine pride to think she might occasionally depend on his larger size and greater strength, to overpower a murderer or to spear a Pleistocene sloth. Or simply to hold her in his arms at night, keeping the cold at bay. He reached out to stroke her hair and she leaned into his caress, rubbing against his fingers like a cat. The strands slipped between his fingers, feather soft and shimmery, its silkiness and shine bringing a pleasant ache to his heart. To his surprise, he saw tears glittering along her lower lashes. His breath caught in his throat when she raised her eyes and he saw they were glossed with melancholy...not the same raw contentment he was feeling. "I keep thinking about you and Klizzie," she said. "Klizzie?" His hand dropped away and he blinked at her. "Yes. I'm a little embarrassed to admit this, but I'm...I'm jealous of her." "Scully..." Tell her, he urged himself, don't make her suffer thinking something happened when it didn't. Tell her. Tell her now-- "I was married once," he blurted. Shit! Where the hell had that come from? That wasn't what he'd meant to say. Could he take it back? Would it be possible to divert her attention, maybe switch back to the topic of Klizzie? Or would that just make things worse? She stared at him. Shock, maybe anger, rounded her eyes. "What...?" "Did I say that out loud?" She didn't smile at his joke. To the contrary, her frown grew deeper. "I, uh, probably should have told you that a long time ago." "You were married?" She sounded hurt. Damn it, this was exactly as he'd feared. He shrugged, afraid to say more. "Why didn't you tell me before now?" she asked, her voice sounding faint and vulnerable. "Because...it was a disaster, not something I'm particularly proud of." "What happened?" "I was an idiot, of course. I didn't...I couldn't agree to her terms." "Terms?" If he told her the truth, would she leave him the same way Diana had? It was his greatest fear. At the same time, he couldn't bring himself to lie to her any longer. He decided to take a chance and come clean. "She wanted children. I didn't." Scully appeared to be corralling her emotions. She nodded and asked, "And what was...what *is* your objection to having children?" "Scully...can't we just say you and I disagree on this subject?" "No, Mulder, we can't. One day, you and I are going to be parents, *together*. We're going to have a son--" He hissed in disbelief. "I saw it, Mulder." "In your vision." "Yes, in my vision." He tried to steady his own emotions. "Have you asked yourself why you believe that vision, Scully? You've doubted and questioned every paranormal event we've ever encountered...except this one. Why do you think that is? Could it be because you're seeing exactly what you want to see?" "That's not it." "No? A happy family? The perfect future?" "Are those such terrible things to want?" "For you, no. For me...they're impossible." "Why? Why impossible for you?" "Because I have commitments, to the X-Files, to my sister..." These were old arguments, the same ones he'd used dozens of times with Diana. During their last fight she'd countered by accusing him of acting like a child, with only the responsibility of a child...to his "dreams," his "fantasies." Just before she walked out of his life forever, she'd said it was time for him to let go of his past. She asserted that his search for Sam was fueled by a subconscious desire for an ideal "family wholeness," and until he realized this and became a parent himself he would never know the true meaning of commitment or happiness. He had disagreed, of course. Then and now. He believed he wanted Sam back because he cared about her -- not in an abstract sense, but as a living, breathing, little girl who was enduring who knew what because he'd been too frozen by fear to save her. He was responsible for her disappearance. He'd done nothing to help her when they'd come to take her away. And it scared the hell out of him to think he might one day react with the same fear and cowardice, jeopardizing the lives of his own children. Just as he had jeopardized Scully during the exchange...by doing nothing to prevent it. He had to make her understand. "Scully, someone once told me I would never experience true joy unless I planted my feet in the world," he said, swallowing his anger...at himself, at his past, at the current circumstances. "Trouble is, my feet are always running. Toward the truth, away from liars who want to shut me down. We both know what I'm up against. It's a fight I can't win unless I give it my undivided attention. And I think it's worth my undivided attention. Don't you?" Her expression hardened. "It's *our* fight, Mulder, not just yours. It hasn't been yours alone for a very long time." "You know what I mean. I can't just slip into domestic bliss. I need to find my sister. You've known that from the start, since our very first case together." "Having a child doesn't mean giving up on your sister. It doesn't mean giving up the X-Files." No? How could it not? Having a family took time; it took emotional commitment. Time was slipping away faster than he could comprehend; the twenty-five years since Sam's abduction had vanished in a heartbeat. He had nothing to show for it. He also had neither the skill nor the fortitude to handle the emotional responsibility of parenthood. He wasn't the father type. He had nothing to give a child. No way to protect it. He'd proven that with Sam. "No, I don't feel... I can't..." His temper flared; he balled his fists as a familiar tide of incompetence welled up inside him, swamping him with his failures and shortcomings. "*No*! No children, Diana!" Scully flinched as if slapped. Blinking back tears, she asked, "Her...her name was Diana?" Oh, fuck. He'd called her Diana. "I-I'm sorry, Scully, I didn't mean..." He reached out to stroke her hair again, but this time she pulled away, and her withdrawal was a knife to his heart. Clearly he would have to tell her the truth now. All of it. "Scully, I'm sorry. Yes. Her name was Diana." "Diana Fowley...your colleague on the X-Files who left for an assignment in Europe?" How was she able to remain so calm? Why wasn't she arguing, striking out at him, slugging him in the jaw? "Yes. We met when I first got out of the Academy...in '86. We were married in '89. It lasted 18 months." She considered this new information. Although obviously hurt, she didn't appear particularly angry. "Mulder, why did it take falling into a time warp for you to finally tell me this?" Tell her. Tell her the truth. "I was afraid." "Afraid to be honest with me?" "No. Afraid you'd leave me, just like she did, for the same reasons, because I'm not the man you want or need me to be." He picked up another stick and tossed it into the fire, sending sparks churning through the dark. "What I don't understand is why you stay with me at all. It's a question I hate to ask, but why *haven't* you left me before now?" "Why should I leave you?" "Why not? You've lost so much because of me...everything really." "Not everything. Not so much, really." "No?" "No. And how would leaving you now change any of that?" He shrugged, unable to bring himself to say the words he was thinking, that she would be happier, safer without him. She reached out and caressed the back of his hand. "Besides, what makes you think I hold you responsible for the things that've happened?" "Because...I caused them." He drew his hand away. "You didn't." "Yes...I did." Why didn't she just admit it and have done with it? It was so goddamn obvious. "Scully, I'd like to think I would die before letting anyone or anything harm you, but good intentions only go so far. The truth is I ignore you and manipulate you and use you for my own purposes at your expense." "You don't." "Yes, I do. I sit idly by while you suffer. I've done it for years. We go my way and you get hurt." She shook her head vehemently. "Mulder, you're acting as if I have no free will. As if I haven't made my own choices, when the fact is I follow you because I want to. I believe in our cause. *Our* cause. Yes, the costs have been high, but from where I sit, our purpose is worth a risk. Any risk. Don't you think that, too?" No, he didn't. Nothing was worth ultimately losing her the way he'd lost Diana. He reached around behind him, fumbling for his pants. When he found them, he dug into the pocket and took out his knife. "Maybe she was right," he muttered, rising to his feet. "Excuse me?" He went to one of the rock walls where the firelight flickered warmly over its smooth surface. He selected a relatively flat area and started to gouge into the stone with his knife. "Have you noticed there are no petroglyphs here?" he asked, etching an eight-inch-tall stickman. "No evidence of any human habitation. Don't you find that strange?" To the left of his stickman, he carved a stickwoman, making her a head shorter than her partner and giving her round breasts and triangular hips. He joined their hands. When he was finished, he took a step back to study his picture. Something was missing. He wanted to show the man protecting the woman, providing for her, being the sort of man she needed, the man he wanted to be for her. A heroic man. He carved a long spear in the stickman's hand. Satisfied, he returned to Scully and sat down beside her. "What's that all about?" she asked, nodding at the figures. Tell her, he repeated to himself. Answer her question truthfully. "Scully, I can't be without you," he admitted. He tried to smile, hoping to make the words come easier, but a wave of panic drew his brows together and his desire to smile vanished. "I...I think I knew that before we came here, but now I'm certain of it. So...so if you want a family, whether it's by IVF or whatever, I'm willing to be part of that." Instead of being ecstatic, as he'd expected her to be, she scowled at him. "You're agreeing to become a father? Just like that?" Was there something wrong with the decision? "Yeah...just like that." "Don't, Mulder." She shook her head. "Don't do this for the wrong reasons." "I-I'm not." He loved her. He didn't want to lose her. He wanted to make her happy. Weren't those good reasons? He knew his perception of family life was skewed compared to most, that his divorce echoed his parents' break-up. He'd lost far more than he'd gained in marriage. And even earlier there had been the loss of Sam. Life seemed to be constantly snatching his family away in bits, like buzzards picking at a carcass. But, dammit, he wasn't going to let it happen any more. She didn't look as convinced as he felt. "It's etched in stone, Scully." He pointed at the petroglyph. "You can't get more committed than that. Give me the chance and I'll prove it to you." x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER SIXTEEN Standing at the river's edge, Scully wrung water from Mulder's clean pants and then shook out the wrinkles. Moisture rained from the cuffs as she carried them to the nearby bushes, where she spread them over blossom-covered branches to dry in the sun alongside their other clothes. Blond, trumpet-shaped flowers spiked the shrubbery, poking up between the clean clothes like birthday candles, scenting them with the sweet aroma of honeysuckle. The tattered garments fluttered in the morning breeze, looking the worse for wear after so many weeks in the Pleistocene. Frayed holes gaped at the knees of Mulder's jeans, and a slash on her right pants leg left the hem dangling. Her turtleneck was on the verge of losing a sleeve if she didn't repair it soon. She decided to mend it after it dried, using the sewing kit she still had in her jacket pocket. She would stitch the holes in her socks and panties, too, while she was feeling domestic. Done with the clothes washing, she returned naked to the shore to watch Mulder finish his bath. He sat in the shallows with knees splayed, water cresting his hipbones, his back to her. The river ran broad and calm around him. Pebbles the size of coins, polished smooth by centuries of tumbling in the current, lined the banks as colorful as confetti. Pillowy clouds and a periwinkle sky reflected in the river's glassy surface, bright and tranquil, except where Mulder stirred the water to wash his hair. Had Diana Fowley ever watched him shampoo this way? It bothered her that he'd waited so long to tell her about his marriage. To be fair, he had no reason to bring up the subject before now. His ex-wife hadn't been any of her business until recently. Maybe she still wasn't. And God knew Scully hadn't confessed anything about her own past romances. Diana Fowley aside, it was nice getting to know the personal side of Fox Mulder. She never would have guessed his favorite color was yellow or his favorite holiday was Flag Day or that he loved dinosaurs as a kid. She stood for a moment, watching him scrub his scalp. He had no shampoo, but worked hard to clean every trace of mud and debris from his hair, rubbing and rinsing until it shone as black and glossy as licorice. Next he scoured his neck and face with his palms, causing the muscles in his arms and shoulders to ripple and glisten. Although still mottled with bruises, he was a striking man and the sight of his dewy skin and sinewy vigor ignited a fire inside her. She waded out to him and leaned down to kiss his cleaned cheek. His skin smelled fresh like the river. He lifted his gaze and reached up to cup her jaw with waterlogged fingers. A startling current of lust surged beneath the surface of her skin where he touched her. She looked down at him, bewildered and delighted by the intensity of her attraction to him. He stared back at her, his expression fierce, untamed and hungry. Sliding sodden fingers down her neck, he traced a path to her collarbone, making her shiver. It was difficult for her to reconcile this wild, naked man with his 20th Century twin, her clean-shaven, impeccable partner. Both versions set her pulse pounding, but only with this one had she felt free to open her heart. She regretted shutting the other out, letting modern-day paradigms govern her instinctual desires. At least here her mistake was rectified. In this valley there were no rules to follow. No superiors to obey, no tribe to placate, no one to please or impress but each other. This was living honestly and she'd never felt more genuine. She moved in front of him, straddled his legs and lowered herself into his lap. "Good morning," she said, looking into his eyes. Such beautiful eyes, moss-green and fringed with wet, spiky lashes. Water sparkled in the smooth, dark hair of his brows, glistened in his bristly beard. "Hey," he breathed, stroking her cheek with his thumb. His gaze dropped from her eyes to her mouth. She felt him growing hard beneath her. "Again?" She chuckled. "Don't look at me. Godzilla has a will of his own," he said, before his tongue swept across her parted lips, and slipped inside her mouth. She reveled in his kiss. He tasted of the river, silty and sweet and ripe with life. She breathed him in, filled her sinuses with his humid scent. Ripe with desire, she painted his back with loving caresses, longing to have him assail her womb the same way his aroma overran her lungs and his taste pervaded her mouth. As if reading her thoughts, he pressed her backward until she lay supine in the shallows, her spine supported by polished pea stones and her hips still cradled in his lap. Her knees rose on either side of him. She dug her toes into the gravel, while her hair floated like a crown of sea kelp around her head. "Beautiful," he whispered, sounding awestruck. "My own mermaid." He scooped up a palm-full of water and trickled it onto her breasts. "I want you," she pleaded, responding to the pleasant pucker of her nipples. Without hesitation he shifted forward, spreading her legs wider while pushing into her. He found her entrance on the first thrust, as if they had performed this intimate act innumerable times. He brought cool water with him, startling her with its chill before his heat warmed them both. More water dripped from his hair onto her chest, spattering her breastbone like the first fat raindrops of a thunderstorm. He grunted with apparent satisfaction as soon as they were joined, his eyes closing briefly, a smile playing along his lips. The pressure between her legs set off a swell of passion that traveled like a breaker from her abdomen to her chest, where it whirlpooled around her heart. "I...need more," she begged, feeling feral and greedy. His hands slipped beneath her back and he lifted her once again into his lap, embedding himself deeply inside her. Water streamed from her hair as she rose up from the river. She thrust her hips forward and shoved against him, crying out as he filled her. Sunshine heated her upturned face. It reflected off the water, mottling his wet skin, making him shimmer, slick and urgent beneath her. She arched in his arms when he bowed his head and sucked her right nipple. Palming her left breast, he squeezed. She pressed into the cup of his hand, while he pumped between her splayed legs, jostling her with his thrusts. His teeth nipped at her breast. Strong fingers kneaded her flesh. A raft of ducks, half-hidden in the reeds on the opposite shore, swam in wary circles, made nervous by the disturbance. They quacked in disapproval whenever she moaned or cried out. She ignored their complaints, preferring to focus instead on Mulder's lovemaking, letting the act of coitus strip away her peripheral awareness. Everything outside her evaporated as his movements grew more demanding, until only he existed. His prodding. His lust. His unrelenting thrusts and insistent kisses. She steadied herself by gripping his shoulders, while her hips rose and fell over him. Using her legs to push, she rode his turgid flesh. The friction against her inner walls was extraordinary. It excited her and drove her to quicken her pace. She found coupling this way, out of doors, washed by sun and water, caressed by a mild morning breeze, to be astonishingly sensuous and arousing. In no time, it seemed, she felt poised at the crest of a colossal waterfall. "I'm close," she warned. At her announcement, his knees fell apart as he dug his heels into the river bottom, searching for leverage, spreading her legs impossibly wide. His fingers clasped her hips and she relinquished all control, returning his earlier generosity by allowing him to steer them toward their climax. With a bruising grip he lifted her, then brought her back down over him. Plunging, withdrawing, he continued to pound into her until her insides burned and a welcome contraction began behind her pubic bone. She held her breath. "Come for me," he urged. Giving in to desire, she released all residual restraint and allowed pleasure to shudder her womb. The hum of her panting breaths and the frantic splash of water faded into silence at the onset of her cascading orgasm. A blissful tremor ballooned in her belly. It radiated outward, rippling through her torso, numbing her limbs. She tried to shout her satisfaction, only to discover she hadn't enough air in her lungs to whisper her lover's name. He ejaculated then, bathing her insides with his fiery essence. His bellow prompted the ducks to take wing. They rose from the reeds with a raucous flap of feathers, squawking skyward, where they eventually dispersed to the north like seed on the wind. * * * Chal tracked Gini's footprints around scrub brush and stunted hardwoods, while only a spear's throw away Wol-la-chee followed the trail of his Owl Clan kinsmen and the strangers from Eel Clan. The two separate paths had begun in the swamp, where Gini had doubled back to head after the others. From there she'd traveled to this stony valley, staying always within sight of the others' trail, yet never walking in their footsteps. It was very peculiar. Her tracks clearly indicated she often paused behind shrubs, boulders and trees, as if she were trying to remain hidden from the others. But why follow them if she was afraid of being discovered? "Have you told Dzeh you are interested in his sister?" Wol-la- chee asked, raising his voice to be heard across the distance between them. "I am not interested in her," Chal lied. "She is too young." In truth, he didn't think Gini was too young and she did interest him...a lot. He liked the way she'd faced him, chin held high as he teased her at the lake, calling her ugly, although she was not ugly at all. To the contrary, she was one of the prettiest girls he'd ever seen. Even so it was not the pleasantness of her face or the glossy shine to her hair that made her stand out in his mind. It was the way she'd dared to challenge his insulting behavior, telling him bluntly he was rude. Her outspokenness was uncommon for a female, and he found himself admiring her bravado. "She is eight Feasts old," Wol-la-chee said. "It is a proper age to become Promised." "She does not appear that old. She behaves like a baby and...and she frowns too much." Chal preferred not to discuss his true feelings with this cousin of Dzeh's. Arranging for a mate was the responsibility of a girl's father -- or her brother in this case -- not nosy relatives. Besides, it was bad luck to talk about a Joining before the Promise was made, and he did not want to ruin his chances by testing the Spirits. "Dzeh is considering several boys as possible mates for her," Wol-la-chee continued, unwilling to let the subject lie. "But maybe you already knew that." Indeed, Chal had hoped this was the reason Dzeh was arranging to share food at his mother's hearth...before the trouble with the strangers sent them journeying here. His heart began to beat faster as he considered the likelihood of a Promise between Gini and himself. "Has he settled on someone?" he asked, feigning indifference. Wol-la-chee laughed, recognizing his pretense. "So you *did* come along to impress Dzeh." "I did not. I am here because the stranger named Muhl-dar saved my life." Wol-la-chee's good-natured expression suddenly turned stormy. "You want to *help* Muhl-dar? He is an enemy of Owl Clan!" "But not of Badger Clan," Chal reminded him. "He is a chindi," Wol-la-chee insisted. "He stole a sacred object." "He also killed the mastodon that nearly killed me." Wol-la-chee considered this. After a moment he grunted, reluctantly acknowledging Chal's reasoning. Saving another man's life was no small thing. It necessitated loyalty, even to a man of notorious character. Everyone understood this. The two hunters didn't speak for a while, focusing on their task instead of their difference of opinion. Following their individual trails, they continued south along A-Chi Stream into a sandstone canyon strewn with fallen trees and boulders. Steep, red cliffs loomed on either side of the rift, blocking the sun and cloaking the lowland in darkness. In the distance, two figures appeared out of the shadows, hiking wearily upstream toward them. "Is that Dzeh and Lin?" Chal asked. Wol-la-chee recognized the approaching men and shouted to his kinsmen, "Dzeh! Shi-da Lin!" The others heard his call and responded by waving their spears. Then all four men broke into a run, eager to exchange information. Chal was breathing hard when they came together in a copse of quaking aspens. "Where is Gini?" Dzeh asked, fear shining in his eyes. "Why is she not with you?" Chal exchanged surprised glances with Wol-la-chee. "We followed her tracks here," Wol-la-chee said. "Here?" Dzeh appeared thunderstruck. "Let me show you." Chal led them across the canyon to where Gini's diminutive footprints marked the sandy soil. "See?" He pointed to her southerly trail. Dzeh crouched to inspect the prints. He traced one small track with a shaky finger. Tears filled his eyes. "I do not understand," he mumbled. Lin placed a broad hand on Dzeh's shoulder. Sadness lined the older man's brow. "She must have gone after the strangers." "Why would she do such a dangerous thing?" Dzeh asked, rising to his feet. He looked at each man in turn. "We must bring her back." "Nephew...we cannot," Lin said. "Not if she has gone to Ye- tsan Basin. The serpents--" "I do not care about serpents! Gini is my sister. I must go to her." "No," Lin said, using the tone of an elder who will be obeyed without question. "It is foolhardy. You have many needy kin back at Turkey Lake. Our Clan depends on the meat and protection you help provide. You must think about what is best for them. It is too late for Gini. She is with the Spirits now. You cannot bring her back." "We do not know that...it may not be too late." Chal had heard the tales of Ye-tsan and knew its dangers. If the girl had gone into that horrible place, she would soon be dead, if she wasn't already. Aspen leaves rattled overhead, sounding like angry snakes. Dzeh peered along Gini's thin trail. He took two faltering steps toward the south, then stopped, fists clenched in desperation. "I will go with you, Dzeh," Chal offered. "I-I am not afraid." Dzeh turned and regarded him with hopeful eyes. After a moment, however, his expression turned forlorn and he shook his head. "You are a Badger Clansman, Chal. I cannot ask you to take such a risk on behalf of Owl Clan." Then, scowling at Lin and Wol-la-chee, he snarled, "Such a sacrifice is for kin." Lin drew himself up to his full height. He was a robust, imposing man despite his years, lined by experience and muscled by years of difficult living. Placing gnarled hands on Dzeh's shoulders, he met the younger man's outrage with compassion. "We cannot, my Nephew. We have greater responsibilities... mates, children and kin who rely on us to feed and clothe them. If we go to Ye-tsan, we sacrifice them along with ourselves. Ask yourself who will care for Klizzie if you perish? Who will teach Wol-la-chee's three young sons how to hunt? Who will comfort them when we do not return home? We are more than four men; we must think beyond ourselves. You know this." "But...Gini..." Tears overflowed Dzeh's eyes and streamed into his beard. Grief distorted his face. Lin spoke softly, but with conviction. "She is already lost, Nephew. Do not sacrifice the living to chase a ghost." A miserable moan bubbled from Dzeh's throat, numbing Chal's arms and legs with its intensity. The boy's chest tightened at the thought of Gini alone against the monsters of Ye-tsan. Dzeh spun to face the southern horizon and suddenly bellowed, "Gini! Giniiiii!" When nothing but his wretched echo returned from the blood- colored cliffs, Dzeh's shoulders slumped and he buried his face in his hands. The others waited quietly, grief-stricken, too, while he wept unashamedly for his dead sister. * * * "Get over here, Scully! I need your help." Mulder felt ridiculous. He was standing knee deep in the river, wielding a branch of driftwood like a baseball bat, dressed in nothing but his boxers as he tried to herd a snapping turtle the size of a hubcap toward shore. His underwear offered no real protection against an attack, should the turtle decide to turn and bite him, but he hadn't been comfortable with the idea of chasing after it with the family jewels dangling in front of its menacing jaws like bait on a hook. "You're on your own, Mulder. I only promised to gut and cook it, not catch and kill it." Scully sat on shore, watching him with an amused look on her face. Her torn panties lay in her lap, waiting to be mended while she threaded her sewing needle. "You could at least help me corner...whoa!" The turtle suddenly spun and headed straight at him. He back- peddled into the shallows, splashing as he tried not to trip and fall. He swung his club, bringing it down hard, but the turtle zigzagged out of the way and he missed it by several inches. Water sprayed the air, momentarily blinding him. When his view cleared, he saw the snapper lunging open-mouthed at his crotch. "Shit!" He whacked at it again. This time, driftwood connected with shell, producing a lethal-sounding thud. The impact rattled Mulder's teeth and he nearly lost his grip on the club, but blood began to ooze through the current around his ankles. The turtle was floundering. Its head lolled to one side as it tried to retreat. Mulder struck once more, hitting it squarely between its beady eyes. This time it stopped moving altogether. Bobbling on the waves, it began to drift downstream, limbs and head hanging limply. Mulder followed it at a safe distance, wondering if it was just pretending to be dead or if in fact he had killed it. He nudged its bloodied nose with his stick to be sure. Nothing. It didn't move. Didn't even blink. "Yes!" He lifted his club overhead and performed a lively victory dance, kicking up water as he pranced around the dead turtle. Scully smiled and clapped her hands in dignified approval, which only encouraged him to strut more. He hurled his branch away and beat his chest for effect. "Okay, Tarzan, haul it out so we can eat," she called. Grasping the turtle by its stout tail, he dragged it to shore. It weighed fifty pounds or more, and left a trail of crushed grass nearly two feet wide from the riverbank to where Scully was sitting. It pleased him more than he expected to present it to her. He was providing for his mate and the idea puffed him with masculine pride. She smiled with obvious appreciation when he deposited the turtle at her feet. "Nice," she said. Her eyes weren't focused on the turtle, he realized. She was ogling his crotch, where an erection tented his boxers. "Huh, whaddaya know?" He feigned surprise. "Is it too soon to...uh...you know?" She set her sewing aside. "Not at all." "Then c'mere." He dropped to his knees and opened his arms. * * * Gini walked through Ye-tsan Basin with her mouth gaping. She'd never seen anything like this place before. There was food everywhere! Camels, horses, pronghorns, bison...they roamed the lowland in great herds, indifferent to her passing. Beavers, turtles, frogs and birds crowded the waterway. Heavenly Spirits, there was enough meat in this one valley to feed two hungry clans for an entire year! Earlier in the morning she'd filled her stomach with six fat duck eggs and more mushrooms than she could count. Then she'd eaten fistfuls of sorrel and ramps, which grew in profusion along the riverbank. She considered gathering mussels for later in the day, but the shellfish were so plentiful she saw no reason to carry them. No doubt about it, half a day's hike south of those terrifying, giant footprints, Ye-tsan had turned into one of the most hospitable places she'd ever encountered, nothing at all like the grim stories had claimed. There were no rivers of human blood, no sandy dessert of powdered bones, no flying serpents or mastodon-sized monsters. Only lots and lots of delicious things to eat. She decided to stop worrying about oversized serpents. She hadn't seen a single one since coming here. Dzeh and Lin had been silly to turn back. There was nothing fearsome in this valley and it would be a fine place to live for the summer...or even longer. Comforted by a full belly, and eager to catch up with Muhl-dar and Day-nuh, Gini broke into a happy run. * * * Scully dozed next to Mulder on the riverbank. Fresh grass cradled her naked body and Mulder's arm cushioned her head. The pleasant sweet-tart smell of chlorophyll prickled her nose, while honeybees droned in the flowering shrubs higher up the bank where their clothes were still drying. The river whispered like a sated lover beyond her feet as it flowed gently southward. She covered her face with the crook of her arm, blocking out the brilliant morning sky. The sun's rays warmed her skin and she drifted between sleep and arousal as Mulder drew feather- light circles on her abdomen with his finger. His touch was partly stimulating and partly hypnotic...an erotic combination. "Scully..." His voice vibrated like the humming bees. "When was your last period?" His question brought her fully awake. She unshielded her eyes and reached down to close her hand over his, stilling his eddying caress. "I...I'm not sure. Why?" "You know why." His tone sounded worried and a little accusatory. "We've been having unprotected sex for weeks." She counted silently backward to the day when Klizzie had given her cattail down to absorb her menstrual flow. Five weeks had passed since then, she realized with some surprise. "I'm a little late." "What's 'a little'?" "Maybe a week." He sat up, jostling her as he slid his arm out from under her neck. Ordinarily he was quite adept at concealing his emotions beneath a mask of professional detachment, but this news clearly rocked him and he wasn't able to hide his shock. Concern puckered his brow and tightened his lips, and he regarded her with nervous eyes. Feeling exposed beneath the intensity of his stare, she sat up, too, and hugged her knees to her chest. What had happened to his recent resolve to become a father? she wondered. "It doesn't necessarily mean anything, Mulder," she tried to reassure him. "There are numerous explanations for oligomenorrhoea. Overexertion, poor diet, stress, even a change in routine. I've experienced all of those since coming here." He nodded slowly, lower lip caught between his teeth. Shifting his gaze from her to the river, he seemed to consider his next words with great care. When he did speak, his voice was quiet, his tone indeterminate. "But it's possible you're pregnant." "No...I'm...I can't get pregnant, Mulder. You know that." Not wanting to rehash this familiar conversation, she plucked peevishly at the grass beside her. Did they have to go over it all again? "But maybe you can...now," he said in a voice so soft it was nearly lost beneath the rustle of the river. She reached out and tagged his arm, drawing his attention back to her. "What makes you say that?" "Something happened two nights ago." Two nights ago she'd woken to find him red-eyed from crying. "What...what happened?" "I went to the river to...cool off. While I was swimming I experienced a, uh, time anomaly." This surprised her. Why had he waited until now to mention it? "What kind of anomaly?" He shrugged, causing sunlight to slide across his fine-grained shoulders, highlighting a fresh rash of gooseflesh and exposing his nervousness. "It felt like falling backward only I wound up where I'd started...but younger...sort of...I guess." "Mulder, that doesn't make any sense." "I know." A humorless smile nudged his furred cheek. "Sorry." "Tell me more," she urged. He released a slow breath. On the far shore a pair of egrets argued over a flopping fish. The sun shone so brightly off the water it was painful to the eyes. "The sky seemed to buckle," he said. "Everything became blurry. I'm pretty sure I was seeing events unfold backwards." "What events?" "The Boggs case. Going to Lake Jordan in Raleigh. Getting shot in the leg, only everyone was moving and talking in reverse, including me. It was very disorienting." "I can imagine." She reached for his hand and dovetailed her fingers with his because she didn't want him to take her next question as an accusation. "Other than the backward direction of events, how was your experience so different from mine?" "Your visions?" He hung his head. "Not so different, I guess." Squeezing her fingers, he offered her a contrite smile. "I think I know what you're going to say next." "What?" "You're going to ask why I didn't believe you. Why I didn't accept your visions when I'm willing to accept every other paranormal event we encounter." "And your answer?" "I suppose I didn't like what you were seeing." So they were making progress after all; he was being open, answering honestly. "And now that you've experienced a time event of your own?" "I feel like a jackass." He lifted her hand and placed it on his bare thigh. "It's gone," she said. "Your scar is gone." His skin was unblemished and smooth. The realization that he was reverting to a younger version of himself made her stomach roll uneasily. In less than two months he had regressed five years. How long before he was a teenager...or a toddler? "Whatever's happening to us, Scully, it's changing us physically. We have no idea to what extent, or how far it might go." They had to find a way out of this place. "You're getting younger, while I'm...not. How fair is that?" she tried to joke. He didn't smile. "You've seen glimpses of the future. In them you're pregnant, giving birth. How do you think that's possible?" "I don't know." She honestly had no explanation. "Your vision suggests your fertility is going to be restored at some point. How that happens, I don't even want to guess. But when it happens is what's important right now." He pointed to the new scar on her abdomen. "Before that? Or after?" Her hand went automatically to the gunshot wound...undeniable evidence that she was already physically changed by an event which had yet to happen. Did it mean her fertility was restored, too? Could she become pregnant now? "No, the child I saw in my vision was a product of IVF, not natural conception." "Are you sure about that?" No, she wasn't sure. Not one hundred percent. She'd seen only bits and pieces, like snapshots tossed randomly onto a tabletop, some half-hidden beneath others. The experience had been incomplete. The only thing she knew with any certainty was how she'd felt when she held their son in her arms. She'd been happy and proud and calm. And Mulder had appeared to feel the same way. "Last night you claimed to be ready for fatherhood," she reminded him. His expression turned forlorn. "I was. I am. But you have to admit," -- he waved a hand at the foreign landscape -- "this isn't an ideal place to have a child." He was right, of course. Bringing a child into the Ice Age was foolhardy. Assuming she could carry a baby to term and give birth without complications, there were other dangers to consider. "Scully, I don't know if you've thought of this, but..." He ran his fingers nervously through his hair. "If you have a baby here, we might not be able to bring it back with us." Her heart began to race. She wouldn't leave a baby here, she couldn't. She'd insist on staying with it. But would Mulder stay, too? Was it even fair to ask him to make such a sacrifice? He'd agreed to parenthood, not a life sentence in the Pleistocene. Another awful thought struck her. They might not be given the opportunity to choose between staying and going. They might simply fall forward through time the same way they'd fallen backward...without their child. The baby would be left to die alone. Anxiety glossed Mulder's eyes, making him look as scared as she felt. In a croaking voice he said, "There's another concern. I'm not the only man you've been with." So it wasn't just the idea of pregnancy that had him spooked, but that Dzeh could be the father. Quickly, she calculated the timing of her cycle. Assuming she wasn't barren and she'd ovulated on schedule, she should have been ten to twelve days beyond ovulation when she slept with Dzeh, which meant the odds were against a pregnancy by him. But the rhythm method was notoriously unpredictable; intercourse at any point during a woman's cycle, even while menstruating, sometimes resulted in conception. And if her cycle had been delayed, for any of the reasons she'd just cited, her chances of conceiving a child by Dzeh were even greater. Mulder turned to face her, rose onto his knees and took both of her hands in his. Looking sincere, he said, "Scully, marry me." Marry him? "That's not funny, Mulder." "I'm not trying to be funny." She scowled at him. "You can't be serious." "Why not?" "I'm not pregnant." "It doesn't matter. That's not why I'm asking." "Why are you asking?" "Because I plan to spend the rest of my life with you...as more than your FBI partner, more than your friend, more than your lover. I want to be your husband, Scully. Say you'll marry me." Doubt closed her throat. She felt confused by his motivations and timing. He wouldn't be proposing if she'd started her period on schedule, would he? Or if she hadn't slept with Dzeh? Or if they'd never come to the Pleistocene? Or...did those things matter only to her, not to him? She'd promised herself just yesterday to follow her heart. And yet here she was facing her first opportunity to be honest about her feelings and she was falling back on her habit of trying to second-guess them. Let your heart lead you, she reminded herself. Don't over- think it. Don't question it. Just *feel* it. When she didn't answer immediately, his shoulders slumped. "Unless...you don't want..." His voice petered out. Swallowing hard, he released his grip on her hands. What exactly did she want? For five years she'd been trailing after him, searching for the truth in shadows, illusions and lies. But her experiences over the last few weeks had shown her that falsehood and dishonesty were not hiding places for the truth, whether the deception came from an enemy or from within oneself. The truth only presented itself to an unguarded and honest heart. Devotion, attachment, loyalty...love...these were where truth resided. Mulder seemed ready to take a serious step forward in their relationship, a leap of faith, considering their dire circumstances. She should accept his proposal. She certainly loved him enough and that was all that really mattered, wasn't it? It was past time for her to admit her true feelings...to herself and to him. "Mulder..." It took more courage than she imagined to expose her heart. Reaching for his hand again, she drew strength from his solidity. "I...I love you," she said at last, deciding to trust her emotions. His eyes pooled with tears and a smile formed on his softly curved lips. He whispered, "I guess I knew that." "You did?" "Well...I'd been hoping it for a long time, longer than you can imagine, but I knew it for sure when--" His voice caught in his throat and he turned away. "When...?" "When you agreed to sleep with Dzeh..." -- his words were strained and quiet -- "to save my life." She tugged him toward her and slid her arms around his waist. It relieved her beyond measure to know he understood why she'd agreed to the mate exchange. She loved him...Jesus, she loved him...more than any silly sense of pride or dignity, more than her own personal safety. Submitting to Dzeh had meant nothing when compared to saving Mulder's life. There had been no other choice for her and she would do it again in a heartbeat if it meant she was protecting him by doing so. Smiling through tears, she said, "Go ahead, ask me again." "What?" He drew back, eyes brimming with raw emotion. She wiped a falling tear from his cheek before it became lost in his beard. "Ask me again." "Really?" "Really." "Wait..." -- he held up a finger -- "I want to do this right." He rose on one knee and took her hand in his. All his nervousness and sorrow seemed to drain away when he looked into her eyes. He cleared his throat. "Dana Katherine Scully, would you do me the honor of agreeing to become my wife?" He looked so sincere and happy, posed on one knee, eagerly awaiting her answer. Behind him the Pleistocene landscape was picturesque, a Garden of Eden, colorful, pristine, untamed. The air smelled of flowers and fresh water. Stilt-legged birds, with feathers as white as a bride's gown, tiptoed through the shallows. Smaller birds clung to the reeds, cheerfully warbling and bobbing in the mid-day breeze. A herd of striped antelope with corkscrewing horns grazed on a sea of grass beside the shimmering river not more than fifty yards away. And grand, ruby cliffs towered above the valley, cradling the lowland in their open arms while bestowing a sense of security and peace to everything within view. The scene was unspoiled, magnificent. The moment was perfect. Scully wanted to remember it forever. When she didn't immediately answer him, Mulder misinterpreted her silence and his face fell with disappointment. Until she said yes. Then he rose to his feet, pulled her up after him, and wrapped his arms around her. Lifting her from the ground, he spun them in a circle and whooped for joy. His shout echoed off the stone cliffs, repeating his elation over and over again. "Mulder!" She laughed at his obvious enthusiasm. "You won't regret it," he promised, setting her back on her toes. At that moment, she believed his words. She felt dizzy and happy and all her regrets seemed to be in the past. * * * Klizzie awoke to a caress, a teasing and gentle stroke along her jaw. "Dzeh?" She turned on the furs to look over her shoulder, hoping to find he had come back, safe and willing to forgive her. Instead, Klesh was grinning at her, deepening the scar in his left cheek. "You are sleeping late this morning, Cousin." "Do not touch me!" She ducked out from beneath his gnarled hand and sat up. "What are you doing in my bed?" "I thought you might be lonely without your mate." He leaned toward her and stroked her arm. Recoiling, she narrowed her eyes and said through gritted teeth, "Dzeh will kill you for touching me." "Oh, really? He did not kill me the last time." Klesh's hand moved to her breast, where he cupped her and softly traced her nipple with a twisted thumb. "Maybe he is not so possessive as you think." She slapped his face hard. "Touch me again and I will kill you myself." He laughed at her threat, a mean, barking sound that made her stomach roil. "You will not kill me, Kliz." "I will. You cannot force me to lay with you again." "Your memory is not so good, my Cousin. I did not force you the first time." Shame heated her face at the memory. In truth, he had not forced her. But she was no longer the foolish girl she'd been then. He could not bribe her into his bed the way he had four years ago. Smiling, he rolled onto his back to fish into his totem pouch. From it he withdrew an astonishing ornament. A delicate necklace of shiny yellow, so finely worked only the Spirits could have made such a beautiful thing. He dangled it in front of her eyes. "Like it?" he asked. She had never seen anything so lovely. "Where did you get it?" "I have gone many places in four years. I cannot remember them all." His eyes gleamed as brightly as the necklace. "It can be yours." "Only if I submit to you, I suppose?" He shrugged. "Is that such an unfair trade?" How dare he ask such a question? She rose to her feet. "You are my *cousin*," she accused. "I will *never* lay with you again." Giving another shrug, he tucked the ornament back in his totem pouch. "Then I will be wanting my breakfast instead. Bring it to me now." Anger flared inside her. She hated that he ordered her around as if she were his mate. Filled with rage, she began to gather her clothes and stuff them into a travel pack. "What are you doing?" he snarled. "Where do you think you are going?" "To my Aunt's. I will not share a roof with a chindi like you." Heart beating wildly, stomach churning, she grabbed her pack and fled the shelter. * * * So this is domestic bliss, Mulder thought. His future bride was tending their meal while he whittled a sturdy sapling into a six-foot-long spear with his knife. They sat at the entrance of the cave, on opposite sides of the hearth, where a small fire burned inside a two-tiered ring of stones. She wore her clean jeans and camisole. He was dressed in his pants, having opted to go shirtless. The midday sun flooded the mouth of the cave and warmed his bare shoulders and chest. He could scarcely believe it, but, sweet Jesus be praised, Scully had agreed to become his wife. He'd fully expected her to argue against marriage, citing all the logical reasons why it wouldn't work out, and he was ready to counter with confessions of true love, when she surprised the hell out of him by saying yes. A light breeze whispered through the valley, fluttering leaves and grass. Trees lined the river's curving banks. Pale flowers blossomed thickly along both shores. Thirty feet below them, an enormous beaver nosed a freshly felled log downstream to its dam, cutting a V-shaped stripe through the glistening water. In the shallows, where Mulder had bathed earlier, a herd of dainty pronghorns drank their fill, oblivious to the two humans who watched them from the rocks above. Mulder drew his knife along the shaft of his spear, shaving it smooth and straight. Curls of wood spiraled from the blade and piled in his lap. He didn't think he could feel any happier than he did right now. Strips of turtle meat were roasting on long sticks propped against the hearth stones near his feet. Scully periodically rotated the skewers, adjusting their distance from the coals to ensure even cooking. The food smelled delicious. As promised, she'd gutted and butchered the turtle. While she'd been preparing the meat, he'd built a proper hearth by wrestling stones up to the cave, and then positioning them around the existing fire. He was pleased with the outcome. The circular wall prevented the wind from spreading ash into the cave, and would keep the coals protected and burning throughout the night. It also provided a decent shelf for a spit or for propping skewers. "Nice job on the fire pit," Scully complimented him, checking one of the steaks to see if it was done. "I've had some practice." He held up his spear and squinted along its length, eyeballing its uniformity. "You've built fireplaces before?" "No, I worked for a mason one summer when I was in high school. We renovated chimneys, old fieldstone walls, did some foundation repair." It had been laborious work. Long hours in the hot sun, tormented by insects, earning slave-wages. The physical intensity was mind numbing, which suited him fine at the time. Hauling and stacking brick or stone seemed to settle his nerves more effectively than the expensive shrink his mom sent him to twice a week. "Not the easiest way to earn money." She gave him a sympathetic smile. "I've had worse jobs." Hell, there were days when he would gladly trade his FBI badge for a mason's chisel and a wheelbarrow. "What's the worst job you ever had?" "Laundromat attendant." His brows lifted and he flashed her a curious grin. "You handled strangers' unmentionables for money?" "Skivvies, socks, uniforms. You name it, I washed, pressed and folded it, three afternoons a week throughout my entire junior year." Hearing this he felt a little guilty he hadn't volunteered to help her wash their clothes earlier. "No wonder your suitcase always looks like it was packed by a professional." "How do you know what my packed suitcase looks like?" "I'm a peeker, remember?" "Ahh, right." She nodded and offered him a piece of cooked meat on a blackened skewer. It sizzled and steamed, putting off a mouth-watering aroma. He set down his knife and unfinished spear to take the stick from her. She selected another for herself. "What else did you do before you decided to devote your life -- and mine -- to the pursuit of the truth?" "I think I was always searching for the truth." He bit into the meat. It seared his tongue, but he was too hungry to wait for it to cool. "Even when I was bagging groceries at Wakeby's or lifeguarding at Sengekontacket, I was looking for Sam. Mmm, this is good." "You were a lifeguard?" "Does that surprise you?" "No, not really." She ate carefully, nibbling at the edges of her steak as if she were eating corn on the cob. "Did you sit in one of those lifeguard towers?" "I did." "Ogled by all the girls, I bet." "Hardly. But I tanned up nicely. How about you?" "Did I tan nicely?" she teased. "Or were you wondering if I've been ogled by girls?" "If you have any stories that involve either tanning or ogling I'd be happy to listen." Juice from his steak drizzled into his beard and he swiped at it with the back of his hand. When the grease spread, he found himself wishing again for a razor. Growing a beard was like wearing a hairy bib. "I waited tables," she said. "Did a lot of babysitting. I liked watching people's kids...although there was this one eight-year-old boy who--" She abruptly stopped talking. Mulder glanced up from his food to find her staring into the valley, back stiff, muscles taut. "What is it?" he asked, following her gaze to the river. "Someone's down there." "Where?" "About fifty yards upstream." His focus moved to a grove of broad-leaved hardwoods that fringed the riverbank. Their pale, slanting trunks leaned out over the water, creating a dense bower that could easily hide an entire tribe. He searched for movement beneath the arching branches, but could see nothing. "How many?" he asked, putting down his food and reaching for his unfinished spear. Could it be Dzeh and his fellow tribesmen? Some other hostile natives? "I caught only a glimpse," she said. After a moment a small, solitary figure emerged from beneath the cover of trees. Mulder tightened his grip on his spear and rose to his feet. Scully stood, too. The interloper paused, lifted an arm and shaded sun-blinded eyes to stare back at them. "Mulder, I think that's..." She startled him when she suddenly broke into a wobbly jog, favoring her injured ankle as she headed down the rugged path that led from the cave to the river. "It's Gini," she shouted over her shoulder. "Scully, wait!" He bolted after her. Dodging stones, he ignored the scour of loose gravel against his bare feet. He pictured Dzeh and a dozen of his beefy cousins hiding in the underbrush, waiting to ambush and kill them. "Scully, she might not be alone," he warned. "It doesn't matter." She hobbled downhill. "If anyone else is down there, they've already seen our fire." Smoke curled through the air, carrying the hazy smell of their roasting meat across the valley, pinpointing their location like a flag. "Gini!" Scully waved to the girl. The child waved back and ran toward them. "Day-nuh!" Her high- pitched shout ricocheted off the stone cliffs. Even at this distance, Mulder could see she was grinning from ear to ear. "Muhl-dar!" A large pack hung from her narrow shoulders and pounded her back with every stride. Despite its size, it didn't seem to slow her as she charged around shrubbery and raced with splashing steps through river water. Scully slowed when she reached the bottom of the hill and let Gini come the last few yards to her. Still upslope, Mulder paused where the view of the valley was better. If Dzeh and his Cro-Magnon buddies were going to pop out of the bushes at any minute, he wanted to be where he could see them coming. Panting and laughing Gini threw herself into Scully's outstretched arms. She babbled excitedly, hugging Scully and repeating her name again and again. Her eyes were bright with tears; a flash of white teeth lit her small, brown face. Mulder felt an unexpected lump rise in his throat at the sight of Scully embracing the happy little girl. For just an instant Gini reminded him of Samantha and this joyous reunion made him wish again for his sister's long-awaited homecoming. "Let me look at you," Scully murmured, kneeling to inspect the girl. "Hold still, sweetie." Mulder's stomach contracted when he saw the girl's legs and arms were streaked with dried blood. "Is she okay?" he asked, combing the valley again for any sign of Dzeh. "I think so. Just insect bites and superficial scratches. There's some minor infection. These cuts need a thorough cleaning." That was an understatement. Gini's hands and feet were black with grime. What appeared to be berry juice stained her chin and lips, and her hair was matted with twigs and grass. Mud caked her torn clothing. She grinned up at Mulder, seemingly unconcerned by her filthy condition. Shrugging her pack from her shoulders, she set it on the ground at her feet. She crouched to rummage through its contents, chattering the entire time in a breathy, eager voice. At last she found what she was looking for and withdrew her hand, fingers curled around something of obvious significance. Her expression grew solemn. She straightened and walked uphill to Mulder, and when she stood only an arm's length away, she opened her fist. There, cradled in the well of her palm, was the little ivory carving, the idol he'd stolen from the tribe's cave. Jesus, she'd come all this way to bring him that damn thing. Reluctantly he took it from her, causing her to smile shyly but proudly up at him. He didn't share her enthusiasm and couldn't return her smile. The carving had brought nothing but trouble. It wasn't connected with Scully's visions as he'd once thought -- his own experience with the time anomaly had proven that. It was only a worthless bit of bone and all he wanted to do was toss it into the river. Instead, he tucked it into his pants pocket and crouched to embrace the beaming girl. * * * Why did I strike her? The question circled Dzeh's mind like a windstorm in a canyon. He walked without seeing; his focus was not on the trail, but on that awful moment when he'd last spoken to Gini. He'd hit her across the face. Yelled at her. Oh, Spirits, help him, he'd knocked her to the ground. "I *hate* you!" she screamed up at him. Had she died hating him? Tears blurred the path. He stumbled, unable to feel his feet. If not for Lin's grip on his arm, he would wander off course, fall to his hands and knees. Not that it would matter. He deserved this anguish. He had been a brute to her when he should have controlled his temper. In the end it was his stubbornness that killed her. She was dead because he'd placed tribal customs and his anger for Muhl-dar ahead of his love for her. Dzeh felt his mother's spirit surround him. In his grief he believed he could hear her weeping in the rustle of leaves overhead. The breeze whispered her dying words through the wind-tossed branches, begging him again to take care of his young sister, to watch over her with the heart of a doting parent because she would not otherwise know such love. "I am sorry," he mumbled to his dead mother. "I am sorry." Soon his mother would greet Gini in the Spirit World; she would hold her little girl in her arms once more. His arms would be empty. Klizzie's, too. And there was no one to blame but himself. * * * "Mulder, bring your shirt from the cave." Scully took Gini's hand and began to lead her toward the river. "My shirt?" "She'll need something to wear after her bath," she called over her shoulder. "Why not your shirt?" "It needs mending." "Won't mine be kinda big for her?" "We can roll up the sleeves. Just get it, please." Mulder jogged up the incline, hurried into the cave and back out again, taking the shirt with him. At the river, he handed it off, then took up a position several yards up-slope, where he would have a better view of the valley. He was still expecting Dzeh to show up any minute. Scully helped Gini out of her muddy, torn tunic and inspected her chest and back. The girl talked non-stop while dutifully turning to be examined on all sides. Mulder clenched his fists at the sight of her ribbed torso and knobby knees. Her once neat braids were unraveled and fell in knotted mats down her back. Mud and blood caked her slender limbs. "Did he do that to her?" Mulder nodded at the girl's bloodied skin. "He" referred to "Dzeh," of course. "They're just ordinary scratches and insect bites," Scully said. "She hasn't been abused." Skeptical, he grunted and glanced again to the north, where there was still no sign of Dzeh or the others. Scully quickly stripped out of her camisole and jeans before herding Gini into the river. The girl jabbered a mile a minute as she pranced naked into the water. "Can you understand anything she's saying?" Mulder called down to them. "I recognize the words 'Turkey Lake.'" "Turkey Lake?" "The place we ran away from." "It was called Turkey Lake?" "I think that's what she was telling me the day we played word games on the hill." She lowered herself into the shallows and motioned to Gini to sit, too. Mulder's focus swiveled between Gini and the landscape to the north. He wondered how it was possible such a young child could come all this way by herself. Surely someone must have accompanied her. "Ask her about Dzeh," he said. At the mention of Dzeh's name, Gini pointed a finger in the direction she'd come. Her words came out in clipped, angry tones as she jabbed the air. "Ye-tsan Dzeh. Ye-tsan Dzeh." "You understand that?" Mulder asked Scully. She shook her head and scooped water over the girl's shoulders, wetting her thoroughly before massaging the filth from her neck and back. "She sounds pissed," he said. She had good reason to be mad, he knew; Dzeh had walloped her pretty hard back at the wedding. "Ten to one she's running away from home." "She must have followed us." Scully scrubbed the girl's outstretched arms. If she had, that meant she'd been within sight of them the entire way. Shit, he hoped she hadn't seen them-- "Maybe she left later and tracked us." "Mulder, she can't be more than seven or eight years old." As old as that? She looked like a kindergartner. "Could be cave kids know these things," he suggested. "We walked in the stream, remember? We didn't leave tracks." "Yeah, but she was the one who told us to do that." And if Gini knew that old trick, then Dzeh did, too. He would be coming for them as soon as he discovered she was missing, which must have been the morning after they'd left. They'd had only a half a day head start at best. Gini emerged from her bath clean and cheerful. Her tanned skin glistened and her wet hair hung in dripping ropes down her narrow back. She prattled in an exuberant tone, taking a breath only when Scully tugged Mulder's turtleneck over her head. "Oooh!" she said, eyes rounding as the fabric draped her shoulders. Scully guided her arms into the sleeves and then rolled up the cuffs. The shirt's hem hung well below her knees. She seemed delighted by the feel of the material, squirming inside it, patting the sleeves, burying her face in the loose-fitting neck. "Ne-zhoni," she said in an awed tone. She ran to Mulder to show him, as if he'd never seen his shirt before. Grinning broadly, eyes bright, she twirled several times in front of him. When the fabric flared as she whirled, she squealed with delight, making Mulder smile in spite of his concerns about Dzeh. He scooped her up in his arms. She giggled and hugged him, while calling out to "Day-nuh." Scully paused in her dressing to wave at her. Mulder tugged playfully at the girl's sleeve. "You like my shirt?" "Lyke ma sssert?" she repeated, smiling. Not the least self- conscious, she reached up to stroke his short beard. He gave her nose a light peck and then pretended to try to bite her fingers. The game made her laugh and she teased him by waggling her hand near his lips, pulling away just before he could nip it. Scully climbed the hill to join them. "We have to take her back, you know," she said, as soon as she stood beside Mulder. His smile quickly faded. "We can't go back. They'll kill us." "We don't have a choice." "But she...she obviously ran away. Wouldn't you say that means she doesn't want to go back?" "She's a child, Mulder. She doesn't know what she wants." Scully reached out to give Gini's cheek a gentle stroke. "She belongs with her family." "So Dzeh can beat her again?" Scully frowned. "You're judging him by 20th Century standards." "I don't care what century it is. It's wrong to hit a child." "Mulder--" "No, Scully. We saw him hit her -- *hard*. She's just a little kid. I'm not taking her back to be beaten up again." Gini's brows peaked with worry. "Muhl-dar a-nah-ne-dzin bilh Day-nuh?" Mulder had no idea what she was asking, but clearly their argument was worrying her. He tried to corral his mounting irritation. Scully appeared to do the same. She lowered her tone and said, "We don't know if what we saw was an everyday occurrence or an isolated incident." "She's gone to considerable trouble to get away. That should tell us something." "The fact that she's alive, healthy and educated by Pleistocene standards tells me she hasn't been neglected. She's been well cared for." "We can care for her, too." He wasn't convinced it was in her best interest -- or theirs -- to return her. Not yet anyway. "Mulder, she needs her real family. They love her. She loves them." "Shall we test that theory?" If Scully needed proof, he would give it to her. He shifted Gini to his left hip. "What was the word for 'Turkey Lake'?" "'Than-zie tkoh,'" Scully said, pronouncing each syllable carefully. "'Than-zie tkoh'? Fine. Come on, Gini, I'm taking you to Than- zie tkoh. I'm taking you back to Dzeh." Gini stiffened in his arms and her eyes rounded with obvious dread when he began hiking north. "No, no," Gini squawked, using English. She struggled to be put down. "No tehi. No ta-yi-the! Muhl-dar, no, no, no." "Yes," he insisted, gripping her more tightly. He hardened his heart against her escalating panic and quickened his pace. "Yes, Than-zie tkoh. Yes Dzeh." "NO!" she shrieked. "No Than-zie tkoh, no Dzeh!" He felt like a monster for doing this. She was clearly upset and desperate to be released. She began boxing his head and neck with her fists. He took the blows...apt punishment for his cruelty. "Nooooo, Muhl-dar!" She was crying in earnest now, kicking and twisting in an effort to escape. She let out an ear-piercing screech. He stopped walking and spun to face Scully. "Can I stop now?" he shouted to be heard over Gini's desperate wails. Scully's chin dropped to her chest. After an excruciating half-minute she nodded. Thank God. Poor Gini was distraught. She must think his actions abominable after coming all this way to deliver the carving. "It's okay, it's okay," he soothed, stroking her damp hair. "Shhhh. Demonstration over. No Than-zie tkoh, no Dzeh. Shhhh." She collapsed against his shoulder, arms and legs dangling limply. Her cries slowly dwindled into watery hiccups as he carried her back to Scully. Scully looked contrite. "Okay, we'll give her a day or two to cool off." "Good. Maybe Dzeh will cool off a little by then, too." Assuming he didn't show up after dark tonight to kill them in their sleep. * * * Klizzie made it out of her aunt's hut before her oversensitive stomach threw back her evening meal. She retched into the weeds, feeling sweaty, exhausted, and a little frightened. The Shaman's tea had failed to put out the fire in her belly, or ease the thunderstorm in her head. In truth, its spicy smell made her feel even more queasy. "Are you all right, Niece?" Ho-Ya approached her, her long horsy face puckered with concern. She crouched beside Klizzie and rubbed soothing circles between her shoulder blades while Klizzie finished emptying her stomach onto the ground. Klizzie gulped for air. Her skin prickled with fever. The world seemed to spin around her. "Oh, Auntie...I do not know what is wrong with me. Nothing will stay put in my stomach. Whenever I rise to my feet, I am sick. It feels like a fire is burning inside my chest." "Did you visit the Shaman?" Klizzie bowed her head in shame. The Shaman had said the Spirits were punishing her for bringing the strangers to Owl Clan. "He told me to drink more bergamot tea. But the smell just makes me sicker." Ho-Ya studied her for a moment. Suddenly a kindly smile split her long face. "When was your last Moon Time, my Niece?" Klizzie thought back. She was always regular, flowing with the return of each new moon. But the moon was presently halfway to full and she had not bled during its dark phase. "I-I have missed a cycle," she said. Thoughts of the strangers had been filling her head for weeks. And now, with Gini missing and Klesh returned, she had new troubles to keep her preoccupied. It was no wonder her moon time had passed without notice. "Come with me," Ho-Ya said as she helped Klizzie to her feet. "Rise slowly. I think I know what is wrong with you." "You do?" She felt confused. Her head ached and her stomach churned. "Of course." Ho-Ya steered her toward the shelter. "The stranger from Eel Clan has left a gift inside you." What was she talking about? Muhl-dar had given her no gift. "I do not understand." "A baby, Klizzie! You are pregnant." Pregnant? With Muhl-dar's baby? That was impossible. He had not performed the ritual exchange. They had not joined as mates. There was no opportunity for a baby to pass from him into her. "Auntie, I do not think...I cannot...the Spirits..." What should she say? She couldn't admit the truth. Dzeh was already angry with her for lying about Klesh. What would he think if he discovered she had not fulfilled her duty with his Trading Partner? He might accuse her of cursing the partnership. He could say his falling out with Muhl-dar was her fault. "It is possible I ate spoiled meat," she said by way of explanation. Ho-Ya chuckled. "No, Niece. I know the symptoms. I have had six children and I was as sick as you are with each of them. Before Chal was born, I was certain I would waste away to my bones, he caused such pains in my belly." Klizzie put her hand over her own aching stomach. If there was a baby in there, it had not come from Muhl-dar. It must have been given to her by Dzeh. The fertility idol he carved for Hare Spirit must have convinced the god to finally answer his prayers. But how could she tell him this good news without divulging the truth about Muhl-dar? "Auntie, I do not know what to do--" "Do not worry." Ho-Ya patted her arm, misunderstanding her concern. "I have learned some ways to make the sickness tolerable." She guided Klizzie into the hut and back into bed. "You must eat small meals. No eggs, no meat, no fat! And do not lie down after you eat. Drink lots of water. I will make you some mint tea with honey right now. It will help ease your stomach. And tomorrow morning, I will bring you your breakfast in bed so you can eat it before you rise. Berries, greens and lily buds. These will sit well with the baby inside you." Klizzie snuggled beneath her blankets, stunned by this unexpected turn of events. Long after Ho-Ya brought her a bowl of steaming mint tea, she lay awake, trying to guess what Dzeh would say when he learned she was finally carrying a child. * * * Although Scully had eaten her fill of turtle meat she took one last bite, hoping to coax Gini to try some, too. The girl was staring glassy-eyed at the fire, uninterested in food. Still in a funk hours after Mulder's threat to take her home, she leaned sullenly against him, tucked beneath his arm, her knees drawn up inside his long turtleneck. Only her bare toes peeked out beneath the hem, making her appear even smaller than she was. In one fist, she clutched his FBI badge, which he had given her earlier. With the other she stubbornly held onto his pants leg, unwilling to let him beyond her reach. Throughout the afternoon and evening he had tried various things to calm her fraught nerves. He helped her empty her travel pack and rolled out her sleeping skin near theirs, hoping this gesture would show her the cave was her home, too, at least for the time being. He set the fertility idol on a narrow shelf of rock, a place of honor above his and Scully's bed, right beside the petroglyph he'd carved the previous day. He praised her for the many useful items she'd brought and they went together to fetch fresh water from the river in the hollow gourd. They picked berries, which they brought back to the cave, but she wasn't interested in actually eating any of them. She obliged Mulder by popping two or three into her mouth, but she chewed without apparent pleasure. All her former exuberance had completely vanished. Remembering how much she'd enjoyed Mulder's binoculars, Scully suggested he let her explore the contents of his jacket pockets. This activity was moderately successful. Gini spent the better part of an hour crouched on the cave floor, solemnly examining everything she pulled out of his coat. His cell phone piqued her interest, particularly after he turned it on to demonstrate its different musical tones, but even when he let her try it, her mood was restrained. She was not the Chatty Cathy she'd been when she first arrived. In the end it was his FBI badge that intrigued her the most. She scrutinized the photo ID for quite some time. She was still clinging to it almost two hours later, while he held her and recited Dr. Seuss rhymes. "So Horton stopped splashing. He looked toward the sound. 'That's funny,' thought Horton. 'There's no one around.'" Muted by the sputter of burning wood, his voice was pleasantly hypnotic, a steady monotone, as velvety smooth as the fire's golden glow. Scully found it peaceful and hoped Gini did, too. "Then he heard it again!" he said, putting almost no emphasis on Seuss' exclamation. He gently tugged one of Gini's shiny pigtails and smiled when she looked up at him. After her bath, she had allowed Scully to comb and braid her long, tangled hair. One snarl had been so knotted Scully decided to cut it out with the knife rather than yank painfully at it. The result was a cowlick that sprouted like a whiskbroom from the mid-point of her left pigtail. "Just a very faint yelp, as if some tiny person were calling for help," he continued. A tentative smile twitched at the corners of her mouth. His storytelling was apparently easing her fears. It didn't seem to matter that she couldn't understand his words. She listened intently, and now tried repeating his last phrase. "Kawl-ing for hel-lep?" "Like this..." Mulder took a deep breath and cupped his hands around his mouth, megaphone style, as if he intended to shout at the top of his lungs. Scully braced herself for a loud bellow, but he surprised her when he whispered "hellllllp" in the faintest voice possible. Gini giggled. "You try it," he said, encouraging her to parrot him by demonstrating his quiet cry once again. She set down his badge to pose with her hands on either side of her mouth the way he had done. "Hellll-lep," she whispered. He nodded his approval. "'I'll *hellll-lep* you,'" he mimicked her Clan accent, "said Horton. 'But where are you? Where?' He looked and he looked. He could see nothing there but a small speck of dust blowing just through the air." Gini leaned again into his loose embrace. She no longer gripped his ID or his pants leg. Her eyes began to droop and her body relaxed as his honeyed cadence lulled her toward sleep. Scully was impressed by his patience with the girl. He would make a good father, despite his fears to the contrary. She expected he would make a good husband, too. She just needed to give him a fair chance by being more forthright with her feelings. No more "I'm fines," whenever he asked about her well-being. She needed to be honest, so that he could respond with equal honesty. "What made you pick that particular story?" she asked when he finished his recitation. Gini was fast asleep against him. "I dunno. I guess I've always seen a parallel between 'Horton Hears a Who' and the search for extraterrestrials." I should have known, she thought. "How is that?" "For one thing, Horton hears the Who because he has this pair of reeeeally big ears," he teased, "not unlike the satellites used to listen for signals from outer space." "That's a stretch, don't you think?" "Maybe." He shifted Gini into his arms and rose to his feet, taking care not to wake her. Scully stood, too, and crossed the cave to straighten the girl's sleeping skins. "Thanks," Mulder said, before laying Gini on the furs. He retrieved his jacket to cover her. After tucking the coat around her shoulders, he snagged Scully's hand and led her to the front of the cave, where they sat facing the stars, their backs to the fire, far enough from Gini so as not to disturb her while they talked. "Could be I like the story because Jane Kangaroo reminds me of you," he said, picking up their conversation where they'd left off. "How am I like Jane Kangaroo?" "She denounced the possibility of people living on a dust speck because she didn't believe people that size could exist. In other words, she was unwilling to believe what she couldn't see with her own eyes." He leaned over and kissed the tip of her nose. God, she loved this new, easy intimacy with him. She returned his kiss. "I guess that makes you Horton," she said against his lips. He chuckled and drew her into a one-armed embrace. "None of his fellow animals were willing to accept his beliefs. Story of my life, wouldn't you say?" She nodded. "Too bad aliens don't communicate with Who-Scopes. Maybe they could convince us non-believers, too." "Mm...that's interesting." He turned to gaze to the night sky. "It was a joke." "I know, but think about it. If intelligent beings elsewhere in the galaxy wanted us to hear them, they would need to send a signal using a medium we could hear, at a frequency that we're listening to. It would have to be unique compared to any natural background signals, like static or naturally occurring radio waves. And the signal would have to be powerful enough for us to detect it." "And your point is?" He shrugged. "Just talkin' out loud, wondering what it might take to contact someone far, far away." "Like 10,000 years in the future?" "Yeah, kinda like that." "More than a Who-Scope and a pair of reeeeally big ears, I'm afraid." When he turned to smile at her, she leaned in and kissed him again. * * * HILL AIR FORCE BASE COMPUTER LAB, HANGAR 19 MAY 14, 1998 7:29 AM "What are you doing?" Lisa asked. She rolled her chair next to Jason's and sat down. With the stroke of a key, he initiated a diagnostic, setting his time model into motion. Then he lowered his voice so the guards outside the lab door wouldn't overhear his next words. "I'm trying to find those missing agents." "You think they're the cause of this?" She pointed at the disturbance on the computer screen. "Who else? Agent Mulder came here because he knew about the old man's attempt to destroy my work." Jason still couldn't bring himself to refer to the old man as "me." It was Mulder who had first figured out the truth about the old man's identity. Apparently the agent and his partner were still working on the case. And now they were somewhere in the past, causing a progressive disintegration to the continuum. "We have to find them," he said. "How?" "I haven't figured that out yet." "Can we bring them back?" "In theory. We have to open another hole." "The field can't be manipulated easily. How are you going to control it? We could end up making things worse." She didn't realize things couldn't get worse. "I'll find a way." She watched him intently. "Maybe we should just leave them where they are." "We can't. Their presence in the past is causing increasing instability in the continuum. The longer they're there, the more volatile the time field becomes." He pointed to the growing perforations in the model. "If we don't get them out, the continuum will eventually disintegrate." He turned to stare at her. "And time as we know it will end." This news clearly shocked her. "How long before that happens?" "I don't know. It's possible we might start feeling the effects soon." She blinked in surprise. "In what way?" "Flashbacks in reverse, glimpses of the future. It'll be like stirring a pot of soup, mixing past, present and future into a jumble of confusing moments. Our lifetimes will cease to progress linearly." She stood and began to pace. He hoped she wasn't about to panic and go running to Beck. Turning his chair to face her, he reached out and grabbed her hand as she walked past. "It'll be okay," he said, squeezing her fingers. "We need to stay calm. Focus on solving the problem. You're good at that. Help me." When she nodded he breathed a silent sigh of relief. He released her hand and turned his attention back to the monitor. "Jason, why do you think Agent Mulder came here?" "I don't know." He watched the model writhe. "But I'm betting he wishes he'd never left Washington." * * * LATE PLEISTOCENE JUNE 29, 10:19 PM Mulder stoked the fire with two knotty pieces of sun-bleached tree roots, driftwood smoothed by the river and thick enough to burn throughout the night. Sparks floated from the mouth of the cave like fireflies when he disturbed the coals. They spiraled toward the moon and he watched them until they became lost against the backdrop of stars. In the southern sky Ophiuchus, the celestial Serpent Holder, stood upright on the horizon; the snake in his fists appeared to be climbing out of the trees. Above him, Hercules faced his old enemy, blocked as always from Virgo and crowded by the Dragon to the north. The hero's struggle was eternal. God had placed him in an untenable situation, one he could neither win nor lose. He could only stand bravely, prepared to fight. Behind Mulder, the cave glowed with the flicker of fire. Gini slept in its warm circle of light, cushioned by furs and curled on her side beneath his jacket. A few feet away Scully waited for him on the larger sleeping skin. Even without looking at her, he knew she watched him. It was a familiar feeling, her eyes on his back. Tonight her guardianship comforted him more than ever. Her recent confession of love let him know her true feelings. Amazingly, she'd agreed to marry him. And this was his advantage over Hercules. Unlike the solitary hero, he would not be facing his fears alone. Scully's declaration had filled him with unprecedented hope and knowing she wanted to become his wife gave him newfound courage, bravado enough to battle a lifetime of ferocious serpents. He felt a sudden urge to hold her, but before retiring to their bed, he went to check on Gini. The girl appeared lost on her island of fur, cloaked by his jacket. Her small fingers, loosely curved and motionless beneath her chin, peeked out from the rolled sleeves of his turtleneck. He adjusted the coat over her shoulders, then palmed the crown of her head, giving her hair a gentle stroke goodnight. She stirred but didn't open her eyes. Satisfied that she was fine, he crossed the cave to Scully, lowered himself onto the furs and gathered her lovingly into his arms. "Is she asleep?" Scully whispered, snuggling closer. "Mm hm." He kissed the curve of her brow. Domestic bliss, indeed. This simple cave felt like a haven, and the valley an oasis. The most luxurious lodgings in the modern world couldn't hold a candle to this place. Contentment rolled over him like the fire's welcome heat, despite his worries about Dzeh. He held the woman he loved in his arms, while their unexpected foster child slept soundly nearby. For the time being, they were well fed and secure, and an unfamiliar sense of peace settled into his heart as he began to experience the pleasure of family life for the first time in years. Gini was not his child, of course, nor a substitute for his lost sister, but her arrival seemed to answer a need in him. Although she carried the genes of strangers, he felt enormously protective of her, much as he did of Scully, and was willing to take on the task of caring for her. It was possible he would fail. Gini might become injured or ill or die, despite his best efforts, but clearly he had no choice but to try his best. To be honest, he didn't really want another choice. Right now, this was what he wanted: Scully and Gini, under the same stone roof, within arm's reach, and for the time being, safe from harm. He was beginning to understand what Scully meant by the "wrong" reasons for fatherhood. Yesterday, he'd agreed to father her children because he'd wanted to tie himself to her. But today he grasped that a child was more than a tether between two people; she could be desirable for herself, not for what she brought to her parents. Was this the true meaning of commitment that Diana had spoken about? Damn, if she hadn't turned out to be right. Scully nestled against his chest. He buried his nose in her hair. God, she smelled good. If Gini wasn't just a few feet away, he would take her again. He would-- "Muhl-dar?" A soft voice behind him. He rolled over to find Gini standing beside the bed looking frightened. Had she heard something? Was Dzeh outside? "What is it? Bad dream?" he asked. He doubted she could translate his questions literally, but she did seem to grasp his sympathetic tone because two fat tears began to roll down her cheeks. "No Than-zie tkoh," she said, sniffling. "No Dzeh." So that was it. She was still worried about him taking her home. "No Than-zie tkoh. No Dzeh," he assured her. She didn't look convinced. "You wanna sleep with us?" He pointed to the bed, indicating she could join them if she wanted to. Wiping her nose on her sleeve, she nodded and crawled between them. Scully immediately offered her the harbor of her arms and the girl quickly nestled into her embrace. Scully peered over the top of her head and pinned Mulder with a stern look. "You shouldn't give her the impression we won't be taking her back. We could vanish from here without warning, the same way we arrived. We need to return her to her tribe as soon as possible." He reached for Scully's hand and their fingers intertwined in the dark. The danger was real, he knew. Even if they didn't suddenly disappear into another time, they were still subject to the strange effects of accelerated aging and regression. In another month or two he might actually be younger than Gini, while Scully would become an old woman. They'd be defenseless. It was wrong to encourage the girl's dependency on them. With regret he felt his short-lived fantasy of family life slipping away. "We will," he promised. "When?" "A day or two." "Mulder--" "Give her some time, Scully." Give *me* some time, he thought. She searched his face. "I'm afraid time is the one thing we don't have." x-x-x-x-x-x CHAPTER SEVENTEEN An enormous beaver crossed the swimming hole each sunrise and sunset, nosing logs downstream to its dam. Four hundred and fifty pounds if it was an ounce, the oversized rodent was eight feet long and resembled a black bear more than one of its own 20th Century descendants. It didn't have a wide flat tail like a modern beaver, but it was an agile swimmer. And with six-inch-long incisors, it was no slouch at cutting trees. Mulder decided to hunt and kill the beaver while Scully and Gini were upstream foraging for breakfast. He figured one well-placed spear would do the trick, and then they'd be feasting on flank steaks, tenderloins and T-bones for a week...uh, assuming beavers had all those parts. Hell, even if the oversized animal turned out to be inedible, its hide would make a warm sleeping skin, or a couple of decent winter coats. And a few logs from its dam would go a long way toward building a smokehouse. The beaver's dam was an astonishing thirty-five to forty feet long. Made of mud, brush and logs -- some as thick as a man's waist -- it bisected the river, effectively blocking its flow and creating a deep, wide pond on the upstream side. Mulder climbed out onto its uneven surface with some difficulty and took up a position at the midpoint, where he would be able to throw his spear at the beaver as it made its morning run. Sure enough, it arrived right on schedule, guiding a freshly fallen tree toward the dam with its nose. Closer...closer, Mulder silently urged, raising his spear shoulder high and gripping the mud-covered timbers with his toes. The beaver swam toward him, oblivious to the danger. If it could see him with those beady little eyes, it didn't seem perturbed to find him standing atop its weir, armed with a spear and wearing nothing but his lucky boxers. "Your hairy ass is mine," he mumbled under his breath. Jesus, the thing was the size of a fucking Volkswagen. Steady...steady... Mulder squinted against the glare of early morning sun and fine-tuned the angle of his spear, thankful for its new stone tip. The spearhead came courtesy of Gini. She'd brought a nice selection of goodies with her from Turkey Lake: scrapers, flints, fishhooks and line...her backpack had been chock full of useful items. He'd appropriated a yard of her fishing line to secure the spearhead to a seven-foot-long shaft, making a formidable weapon, much better than that clumsy driftwood club he'd used to beat the snapping turtle into submission two days ago. Visions of Scully and Gini dressed in matching beaver-skin coats boosted Mulder's courage and fueled his determination to nail the unsuspecting animal. He pictured them gnawing happily on its huge spareribs while complimenting his impressive hunting prowess for the gazillionth time. The beaver suddenly stopped paddling. It lifted its flat head to sniff the air. Could it smell him from ten yards away? Small eyes blinking, it floated slowly into range, carried by the current. Mulder waited, itching to throw his spear. Come on, you ugly... The beaver appeared to be staring straight at him. It was now or never. Mulder hurled the spear. It made a quiet whooshing sound as it sailed through the air. The trajectory was perfect, the speed more than adequate. Its point sank deeply into the beaver's humped back with a satisfying thud. The surprised beaver reacted by diving underwater, disappearing beneath the surface and taking Mulder's spear with it. "Shit." He was going to lose the animal *and* his new spearhead. His instinct was to dive in after it, but a breakwater of logs bristled beneath the river's surface, blocking his way. So he scrambled over the edge, lowering himself feet-first into the water. The river was deep and startlingly cold. Mulder gasped when he sank up to his armpits. Gooseflesh sprouted along his shoulders, and his testicles felt as if they were being squeezed in an icy fist. Not wanting to linger, he filled his lungs with air and ducked beneath the surface. The water was crystal clear, allowing him to see all the way to the toe of the dam, where whip-like plants swayed in the current, anchored to the logs. A blood trail was blossoming out of one shadowy tunnel where two trees crossed each other. He swam toward it, using branches as handholds to drag himself quickly into the crimson cloud. Ten feet ahead, the pale shaft of his spear disappeared behind a jumble of timbers. He plowed after it, angling more deeply into the dam. Gaining on his target, he came close enough to reach out and grasp the spear's butt end. The beaver lurched forward, jerking the shaft from his grip before veering into a side tunnel. Mulder gave chase, confident he could easily fit into any crevice that could accommodate the massive rodent. A trickle of air bubbles escaped the beaver's nose, keeping Mulder oriented as he insinuated himself between timbers, unwilling to abandon his pursuit. Two powerful strokes brought him within range again. He grabbed the spear and this time managed to hang on when the beaver started thrashing. It pulled him forward, deeper into the labyrinth of logs, scraping his unprotected ribs against clawed branches. Pain blazed along his right side from armpit to hip. The beaver's strength was astonishing and Mulder worried he would lose his hold, or dislocate a shoulder. He was pitched into another rough-barked tree when the beaver flailed again. His lungs began to call for air. Time was running out. He braced his feet against a log. Using the leverage to propel himself forward, he embedded the weapon solidly into the animal's back and lungs. Blood gushed from the wound and the beaver ceased its violent struggle. Although not dead, it floundered as its strength ebbed. Mulder latched onto a fistful of its long fur and dragged it backward out of the logjam. His lungs hitched as he grew more desperate for air. Towing the oversized animal was no easy task, especially given his oxygen-deprived state. He felt light-headed. His chest ached to take a breath. He kicked harder, trying to increase his speed. His pulse hammered inside his ears. Sunlight and blue sky guided him, becoming brighter as he rose. Stale air leached from his lungs in a mass of bubbles that blinded him as they swirled past his face. *Don't breathe.* Damn it, he wasn't going to make it. He considered releasing his hold on the beaver. *Don't breathe.* Only a few strokes to go. Hang on...hang on…don't breathe... Finally he punched through the surface and gasped for air. His lungs filled. He swallowed a mouthful of water and coughed, but he was okay. Thank you Jesus! He'd made it...with the beaver *and* his spear. Panting, blinking water from his eyes, he hooked one rubbery arm over a branch to steady himself while he caught his breath. After a minute, his heart stopped its awful pounding and he gave the beaver a shake...turned it so that he could stare into its dull eyes...decided it was truly dead. Fingers gone numb, limbs quaking with fatigue, he began swimming towards the shore, shoving the carcass ahead of him, wrestling it with elbows and shoulders and even the crown of his head. By the time he finally beached it, he was covered with mud, bark and blood...some his own. Muscles trembling from overexertion, he rose on unsteady legs to yank the spear from the beaver's lifeless body. Pride surged through him as he pulled the weapon free, giving him the strength to stagger up the bank onto dry land. Dropping to his knees in the grass, he felt exhausted but indomitable. He'd done what he'd set out to do. And he couldn't wait to see Scully and Gini's expressions when they saw what he'd brought home for breakfast. * * * Dzeh took no notice of the sun's daily journey, nor did he discern the change of terrain from red rock cliffs to open grassland to wooded hills as he and his kinsmen traveled steadily northward. His thoughts were focused on Gini, and his regrets grew heavier with each step toward home. He tried to imagine how he might have conducted himself differently on that last awful day with his sister, scrutinizing his every action, word and decision. But no matter how often he reviewed it, he could think of nothing he'd done that contradicted Clan ways. He'd followed every rule, acted precisely as any reasonable clansman would act, and still Gini had run away from home -- away from *him* -- to chase after a couple of depraved chindis. She'd left behind a loving family to follow strangers. Why would she do such a thing? Before coming to Turkey Lake -- before the arrival of Muhl-dar and Day-nuh -- Gini had been a reasonably obedient girl. At times headstrong and independent, but not intolerably so. Usually she was helpful and polite, eager to contribute to the welfare of the Clan, giving no argument when performing everyday tasks like butchering meat, preparing hides, or collecting firewood. Truly, she did whatever he or Klizzie asked, with very little complaint. Except when it came to the matter of finding her a mate. For some unfathomable reason she'd balked at being Promised. The mere mention of it had caused her to run from Lin's shelter the day of the yea-go match as if chased by a saber-toothed cat. Later he'd had to force her to attend her friend's Joining Ceremony, dragging her against her will while she screeched and struggled to be let go. The members of four clans witnessed her willful disrespect. They were clearly appalled by her outburst and expected him to put an end to it. So he'd struck her. What else could he have done? It was true he'd hit her more forcefully than he'd intended. With every passing heartbeat he wished he had not. She was just a small girl and he a full-grown hunter and he could understand how his foul temper might have frightened her. But was one slap cause to run away? Certainly she knew he loved her. He'd never struck her before -- not even once -- although it was within his right to do so. Men were always hitting their children to maintain peace at their hearths. Perhaps he should have been stricter with her from the start. If he'd disciplined her more frequently, instead of allowing her to go her own way for so many seasons, maybe she would have grown used to it, the way other children seemed to. Then she might not have overreacted to his reprimand. And she would be alive now, safe at his hearth. Preoccupied by his regret, Dzeh failed to notice the hunters had stopped at the edge of the swamp, and he bumped into Chal, startling them both. "Why are we stopping?" he grumbled. This dark and inhospitable quagmire was not a place to linger. The swamp bristled with dead trees, gray and naked as corpses, spearing the sky as far as the eye could see. Blowdowns crisscrossed the murky lowland, uprooted by violent storms, fallen victim to age and rot. Rancid air snaked into Dzeh's nostrils and down his throat like a rattler looking for respite in the shadows. Chal pointed to the ground, directing his attention to Gini's small footprints, still visible in the deep mud. Dzeh wondered again why she had left the others, only to turn back and follow them. Her motives were as difficult to discern as doves in fog. "I should have asked," he mumbled. Lin's brow wrinkled with concern. "Asked what, Nephew?" "Asked Gini why she objected to being Joined." He had discounted his sister's distress without ever learning its cause, and now she was dead and his lack of understanding weighed heavily on his heart. "Gini did not want to be Joined?" Chal's eyes rounded with surprise. "That is absurd," Wol-la-chee said, frowning. "Why would a girl not want to be Joined?" Dzeh shook his head. He could think of no logical reason. Taking a mate and having children were desirable, necessary things. There was no alternative. Life without family was impossible. No one, not even a seasoned hunter, could survive for long alone. "Perhaps..." Chal's voice grew thin, losing its strength. He cleared his throat and began again. "Perhaps she was afraid." "Afraid?" Lin blinked in astonishment. "Of what?" Wol-la-chee asked. The boy squared his slim shoulders and faced the hunters. Lifting his chin, he said, "Maybe it is not easy to be sent away from kin and made to live with strangers." Dzeh shook his head, trying to dislodge the boy's perplexing words from his ears. "All girls must move away when they take mates," he said. "It is the Clan way," said Wol-la-chee. "It is the manner in which these things have always been done," Lin agreed. "Yes, but..." -- Chal licked dry lips -- "maybe...the old way is not the best way." He tightened his fists, stilling his shaking hands, and locked determined eyes with Dzeh. "Perhaps some rules need to be reconsidered." "You are suggesting we change what is custom?" Dzeh scowled at him. Clan traditions came from the Spirits and could not be altered without their divine guidance and blessing. It was not up to men to say, "We will no longer send girls away when they are Joined." Only the Spirits could determine such things and their rules were made for the good of everyone; going against them would bring misfortune to all. If a girl was frightened by the prospect of moving to a new clan, she should simply pray to the Spirits to give her more courage. "This boy knows nothing," Wol-la-chee announced with a wave of dismissal. "He is arrogant to think we should amend the Spirits' ways." Lin placed a large, gnarled hand on Chal's recently tattooed shoulder and studied the boy's beardless face. "You have a season or two yet before you are wise to the ways of the Spirits, young man. Until then, it is best that you do not question their decisions." Chal did not back down or avert his earnest, almond-eyed gaze. "Even if their decisions are unsatisfactory?" Wol-la-chee hissed at the boy's disrespect. Lin quieted them both with an upraised hand. "There is nothing for us to decide here. We still have a full day's hike before we are back with our families. Let us not waste the daylight." With that, he headed north for Turkey Lake. Wol-la-chee fell immediately into step behind him. After a moment, Chal followed, too, with his head hanging. But Dzeh lingered, his eyes fastened on Gini's small tracks. He could feel the Spirits squabbling in his chest and their quarrel frightened him. Most of their voices seemed to be in agreement with Lin, Wol-la-chee and Clan tradition, yet a few were casting spears of doubt at their arguments. Dzeh had lived his entire life according to the customs of his people, always knowing which actions were correct and which were not. He had never before questioned the Clan's ways. Until now. Now he felt confused. He wished he had not struck Gini, even if doing so was the accepted way to chastise an unruly child. He wished, too, that he had asked her why the prospect of taking a mate had been so upsetting to her. Dzeh took one final look at Gini's small footprints before he turned to follow his kinsmen. Right or wrong, what was done was already done. Gini was dead and he would not see her again, not until he, too, passed into the World of Spirits. * * * Scully paused to readjust the pack that hung from her right shoulder, while Gini skipped ahead. The girl's unraveling braids bounced against her straight, narrow back and the sleeves of Mulder's oversized shirt dangled loosely from her short arms as she ran. Scully smiled, glad Gini's energy and enthusiasm had rebounded after Mulder's demonstration two days ago. She'd even slept peaceably in her own bed last night. This morning they were heading upstream to collect mushrooms, fresh greens and "a-ye-shi" -- duck eggs -- along the riverbank. The sun was already warming the post-dawn air, causing vapor to rise from the water. It gilded the entire valley in blonde light, and the cliffs appeared peach-colored, the sky rose-hued. Fluttering tree leaves sparkled with silvery dew. Again Scully was struck by the beauty of this place. The river meandered serenely through the flat-bottomed basin, hemmed by shade trees and sweet smelling flower blossoms. Herds of animals grazed on long grasses or drank their fill along the winding shores. Birds celebrated the sunrise with a trill that cheered her in a way she wouldn't have thought possible given the precariousness of their situation. Up ahead, Gini stopped to pluck a bright orange bud from a long-stemmed lily. She popped it into her mouth, then gathered a few more before hiking upstream at a more leisurely pace. They had left the cave as the first rays of sunlight were cresting the cliffs, and in less than an hour they had collected enough food for the entire day. Scully decided to extend their hunting expedition a little longer; she wanted to learn as much as possible about edible plants from Gini before the girl returned to her family. She and Mulder would soon be fending for themselves, and everything she learned now could help them survive on their own later. She stooped to pick a toadstool from a rotting tree stump. Holding it aloft, she called to Gini, "Is this one okay?" Gini ran back to her, a serious expression on her face. One glance at the mushroom and she shook her head. "No. Do-ya-sho- da. No good." Her accent hummed in her nose and her pronunciation was flat and gravelly. Her croaking voice didn't match her diminutive features and every time she spoke Scully was taken a little by surprise. "What'll happen if I eat it?" Scully pantomimed taking a bite. Gini frowned and pointed out the toadstool's defining characteristics and then, mimicking obvious body sounds, she demonstrated quite clearly how it would make her sick. Scully tossed the mushroom to the ground and waved the girl upstream. Gini's knowledge of Pleistocene flora didn't surprise Scully. She remembered reading an article in one of her journals that described a group of hunter/gatherers on the island of Mer in the Torres Strait in Australia. The study had shown that even very young Meriam children could quickly master the knowledge and skills needed to engage in productive, adult activities -- like spear and line fishing -- as long as those activities didn't require adult size and strength. Most of the children were fishing by age six, and by age nine they'd become as good at it as the adults. The children weren't as successful at collecting shellfish, however, although it required very little knowledge or skill. Apparently their size didn't allow them to cover much ground, so they were ineffective at it. It was logical that Gini, even at the tender age of seven or eight, would have accumulated considerable knowledge about her world, and be skilled at whatever survival techniques her size permitted. As the morning wore on, they stopped often to study one plant or another. Sometimes Gini would pick and eat what she found, or offer it to Scully, while other times she left the plants alone, presumably to let them ripen. She cheerfully attempted to explain her choices, or describe various methods of cooking or practical uses, but Scully found it difficult to follow most of her instructions. For two days they'd been playing word games, exchanging a multitude of phrases. She guessed Gini's vocabulary had grown to more than four or five hundred English expressions. Scully was not as adept at memorizing the tribe's language, so more often than not, Gini used English to make herself understood. "Who-neh?" she asked in her own language as they continued their walk along the river. She pointed at the red cliffs to the west and switched to English. "Wha'zat?" "Cliffs," Scully answered. "Kiffs." "Close. Cliffs. Culliffs." She emphasized the L. "What do you call them?" "Tse-ye-chee." "Tse-ye-chee?" Scully tried her best to pronounce the expression and fix it firmly in her mind. "Lanh. Yes." Immediately Gini pointed to another object, a dark stone that stood like a lone sentinel on the riverbank. "Wha'zat?" "A tall black rock." Scully enunciated each word with care, uncertain which aspect of the rock Gini wanted clarified. "Bul-lak rok," Gini repeated, before giving Scully the tribe's translation, "Tsa-zhin." Many of Gini's words began with an unfamiliar "TS" combination, making it difficult for Scully to differentiate between them. Tse-e meant mosquito. Tsa-zhin meant rock, or maybe black rock, or even tall black rock. Tsee...the cheese? -- or something like that -- meant cliffs. Already she had forgotten the precise pronunciation. Gini glanced back the way they'd come and began to chew on the cuff of her dangling sleeve. "Muhl-dar seep?" she asked without releasing the fabric from her teeth. "Probably not." He'd been sleeping when they left -- Scully had hushed the girl, hoping not to wake him -- but he was typically an early riser and, no doubt, was up by now. She tapped the girl's arm. "Don't chew your shirt, sweetie." An embarrassed smile spread across Gini's face and she let the sleeve drop. This wasn't her first reminder. "Muhl-dar's sssirt." She had trouble pronouncing SHs and THs, yet she managed her own tongue-twisting DLs, DZs, TKs and TSs with ease. "Yes, Mulder's shirt." "Pretty." She patted the fabric that covered her flat chest. Since she seemed cheery and relatively calm Scully decided this might be an opportune time to broach the subject of returning to Turkey Lake. Keeping her voice light, she asked, "Gini, why did you leave home?" "Leaf?" The girl scanned the surrounding trees with a confused look. "No, not leaf. Leave. Why did you...?" How could she phrase it so the girl would understand? She gestured at their surroundings. "Why did you come here...to this valley, this river?" She knew Gini understood the words for valley, river, come, why, you. Surely she would put it all together. "Why did you follow Mulder and me here?" Gini's sleeve-covered fist lifted once again to her mouth. She stopped herself before she actually took the fabric between her teeth. "Bring...baby." The carved bone idol. "Why else?" "Elz?" She didn't understand. Scully was hesitant to mention Dzeh, since his name had triggered such an extreme reaction two days ago. Obviously he was somehow involved in the girl's decision to run away. Taking a less direct approach, she smiled and said, "I like Klizzie." Gini glanced nervously to the north. She bit her lower lip instead of her sleeve. Scully reached out and smoothed a few stray hairs from the girl's worried face. "She braided my hair, put beads in it. And gave me her pretty comb, too. Remember?" Gini nodded but said nothing. "She took good care of me when I was sick. She took care of Mulder, too. That was kind of her, wasn't it?" Still the girl didn't speak. "I imagine she misses you a lot." "Klizzie--" Gini stuffed the shirt cuff into her mouth. Tears welled in her eyes. "Sweetie, we can take you back to her if you--" "No. No go Too-key Lake. Peese." Her body began to tremble. Scully set down her travel pack and crouched in front of her. Gently, she removed the cuff from the girl's mouth and rolled the sleeve up to her wrist. Turning her attention to the other sleeve, she rolled it up, too. Then she took both of Gini's hands in hers. "Why don't you want to go back to Turkey Lake?" "Tehi ah-na-sozi." Gini pulled at Scully's hands, urging her to stand. "Yah-a-da-hal-yon-ih--" "No, sweetie. First tell me why you don't want to go to Turkey Lake." She spoke kindly but refused to budge. Reaching out to stroke the faint bruise beside Gini's right eye, she asked, "Are you afraid Dzeh will hurt you again?" Gini lifted her hand to the bruise. "Hurt?" Scully nodded. "Dzeh hurt you, didn't he?" She pointed to the injury and then pantomimed a slow, left hook. Gini didn't flinch. Her expression was one of bewilderment, not alarm. Scully began to sense she might be on the wrong track. "Sit, please." She patted the ground beside her, then settled cross-legged on the grass. Gini squatted beside her. They were in a narrow clearing in full sun with an unobstructed view of the river twenty feet away. The water made a tinkling sound as it flowed south between gravel-lined banks. A mother duck and her lone chick waddled along one pebbled shore, searching for food among the wet stones. Scully pointed to the birds. "See those ducks?" "Dose duhks," Gini sounded out the new phrase. The duckling wobbled after its mother, almost toppling in its effort to keep up. "Baby duhk run...um..." Gini waggled her head from side to side to demonstrate the word she was looking for. "Tippy?" "Tip-pee." "He reminds me of you, Gini." The girl seemed to take offense at this. "Gini no run tip- pee." "No, I didn't mean that." Scully smiled. "He's following his mother the same way you used to follow Klizzie." Gini frowned and stared at the ground between her feet. "No talk Klizzie." "Is Klizzie your mother?" Scully was determined not to let the subject drop. She suspected the girl was a blood relative of Dzeh, not Klizzie, because Klizzie looked too young to have an eight-year-old child, and Dzeh and Gini shared the same eye color and slanting grin. It was possible he was the girl's father by a former partner. Or he could be her brother, or a cousin or uncle with a strong family resemblance. "No muht-her," Gini said without a hint of self-pity. "Your sister then? Or your aunt?" "No...want...talk Klizzie! No want talk Dzeh, no want talk Too-key Lake!" she said firmly. "Gini, we have to talk about this." "Why?" the girl whined. Fear peaked her brows and her chin quivered. "Day-nuh no want Gini?" she asked, sounding heartbroken. "Sweetie..." Damn, how was she going to explain? She reached out and placed her hand on Gini's back to gently rub circles between her shoulder blades. "I'm not angry at you. You've done nothing wrong." "Gini...stay...here. 'Kay?" "You can't stay. I'm sorry." Frustration crumpled Gini's face. "Here...good," she said, searching hard for the proper words, and staring up at Scully with tear-filled eyes. "Day-nuh, Muhl-dar, Gini...ummm...ta- bilh." "Ta-bihl? I don't understand." "Ta-bihl...ummm...means..." She pointed toward the two ducks. Mother and baby? Family. "Dzeh and Klizzie are your family, sweetheart. Dzeh, Klizzie and Gini ta-bihl." "No, nooooo..." Too upset to speak English, Gini rattled off her woes in her own language. Tears spilled over her cheeks as she hiccupped her way through her concerns. Scully recognized a few of her words and phrases: go, Badger tribe, no, want, big...be-zonz? Wasn't that the word Mulder said meant penis? What the hell? * * * Gini was desperate to make Day-nuh understand. She would not go back to Turkey Lake, but trying to remember the right combination of Eel words to say so was impossible. The words were difficult to pronounce and she didn't know enough of them to express her thoughts. So she spoke in her own language, and once she got started, her worries poured out of her like water from a spring. "I can not go back there, Day-nuh. Dzeh wants to send me away to live with a boy in Badger Clan. He has already Promised me to Chal, I think. I am so scared. I do not know Chal! I do not want to be Joined with him or live with him. I am afraid he is going to make me lay with him on his sleeping skins and it will hurt because his be-zonz will grow too big to fit inside me, just like that awful stallion with his mare--" "Sweetie, sweetie, slow down," Day-nuh interrupted. Her voice and manner were soothing and her concern was evident. She asked several more unintelligible questions, something about...Dzeh's penis? "No, no Dzeh be-zonz," Gini said. What was Day-nuh talking about? "*Chal's* be-zonz." "Chal? Who is Chal?" "Badger..." She didn't know the Eel word for boy. "Badger man," she said instead, before switching back to her own language. "I do not like him very much. He looks like a stork and he is rude and mean." Day-nuh shook her head, not understanding. "A-nah-neh...?" she asked for clarification. "A-nah-neh-dzin." Gini lowered her brows and grimaced, trying to make her face look as fearsome as possible to convey the nasty look Chal had given her on the day they first met. Day-nuh's eyes widened as if she had been bitten by a rattlesnake. Gini realized her impersonation of Chal was perhaps unfair. He hadn't been *that* mean. But still, she didn't like him and she didn't want to live with him or his peculiar Badger Clan kin. She particularly didn't want to share his bed or touch his disgusting be-zonz. Ugh! Day-nuh reached out and wiped away her tears. "Gini, help me understand. Explain again what's frightening you." Although Gini couldn't translate the request word-for-word, she'd learned enough over the past two days to know that Day- nuh wanted a more precise explanation, even if it meant using hand signals and a mix of Eel and Owl Clan words. Gini did her best to detail Dzeh's plans to Join her with Chal. She repeated the story about the dreadful stallion and his frightened mare several times, too, until finally Day- nuh's frown changed into a smile. "What is so funny?" Gini asked in her own language, a little hurt that Day-nuh was laughing at her troubles. Day-nuh seemed to grasp this was serious talk and her face grew more solemn. "Sorry," she said. Then she leaned forward and embraced Gini. It felt nice to be held in her arms, like being hugged by Klizzie. Suddenly Gini missed Klizzie with an intensity that made her chest hurt. Tears filled her eyes again, and she hid them by throwing her arms around Day-nuh's neck and burying her face against her chest, trying to push away any thoughts of Klizzie, hoping beyond hope that Day-nuh -- and Muhl-dar -- might someday love her as much as Klizzie had. Day-nuh murmured more unrecognizable but reassuring words into her ear, while rocking her and smoothing her hair. They remained like that for many moments, until a faint call came from the direction of the cave. Muhl-dar was shouting and he sounded excited. "Scully! Sculleee!" His voice echoed off the valley's rosy cliffs. Day-nuh rose to her feet and pulled Gini up after her. "Let's go see what he wants." * * * HILL AIR FORCE BASE COMPUTER LAB, HANGAR 19 MAY 14, 1998 8:02 AM Beck dropped the faded Black Sox cap onto Nichols' keyboard. "Does that mean what I think it means?" Nichols leaned back in his chair to look up at him with mock- innocence. His hands slid into his lap without touching the hat. "I don't know, Colonel. What do you think it means?" Lisa Ianelli was sitting in her usual place beside Nichols. A 3-dimensional computer model undulated on the monitor in front of them, disintegrating as it writhed. Beck recognized the image as a diagnostic of last night's test. It clearly showed a malfunction had occurred while the aircraft was operating in gravity pulse mode. "Just answer the question," he said through gritted teeth. Nichols shrugged, seemingly unconcerned by Beck's threatening tone. Ianelli, on the other hand, appeared nervous...and confused. She picked up the hat. "I don't understand. What's this got to do with us or our work?" Before Beck could answer, Nichols sighed loudly and said, "The Colonel thinks it's a clue to the whereabouts of the missing agents. Isn't that right, Colonel?" That was precisely what he thought. Security had searched every square inch of the Base and had come up empty handed...except for the ball cap. "The Baltimore Black Sox haven't played ball since 1934. I checked it myself," Beck said. "So? It's a reproduction." "Does it look new to you?" Nichols shrugged again. "Maybe someone here at Hill collects baseball memorabilia." "My men deny ever seeing it before." "So it belongs to the missing agents. That doesn't necessarily connect it to last night's test...at least not in the way you're implying." "It does when you add to it the evidence on that computer screen." Beck nodded at the monitor. Ianelli glanced at the undulating image, then down at the hat in her hands. "You think the missing agents went back in time to--" "To the 1930s, yes, I do," Beck finished for her. "I think the anti-gravity propulsion system caused a warp during last night's test. Agents Mulder and Scully got caught in that warp. That model..." -- he nodded at the screen again -- "proves it." He was guessing a sudden shift in the craft's trajectory created the distortion, and that the agents had been in close proximity to the AGPS when it malfunctioned, bending time, and throwing them several decades into the past, while depositing the cap in the present. "I want you to find those agents," Beck ordered, "and bring them back. ASAP." "Suppose they're dead." "If they were dead, the model wouldn't be reacting like that." Beck jabbed a finger at the swirls on the computer screen. There was no doubt the agents were still alive and their presence in the past was affecting the stability of the continuum. Nichols eyeballed the model, his expression guarded. A twinge in Beck's gut warned him that Nichols knew more than he was saying. "Open a new hole and haul them back," Beck ordered. "It's not that easy." "Make it happen...*before* General Kaback gets here." Nichols leaned back in his chair while continuing to study the model. "It might be possible to open a small hole, to allow the transfer of electronic data." "Electronic data? I want those agents, not a fucking email." "The data would just be a test...to ensure stabilization of the warp before we actually try to retrieve the agents. As a matter of fact, we could use the data to send them a message, notify them of our intentions, make sure they stay in one place long enough for us to pinpoint them and grab them." "A message?" Ianelli sounded incredulous. "To what? Their cell phones?" To Beck's surprise, Nichols nodded at her suggestion. "Actually, that would work perfectly." Was such a thing even technologically possible? Beck knew that Mulder and Scully carried FBI issued cell phones; he'd seen their numbers listed in Captain Linden's background report. But would the agents have their phones charged and turned on? More importantly, would a cell phone work in 1930? "Do it," he said. "Rerun last night's test, recreate the distortion. Make it look routine. I want this done quietly." Nichols no longer appeared to be listening. He was already punching keys, altering the model's makeup. "Kaback's due at 1100," Beck reminded him. "Do whatever you need to do before then." Nichols nodded absently. Beck wasn't certain he grasped the seriousness of the situation. "We're running out of time, Nichols." The scientist swiveled in his chair. "Interesting choice of words, Colonel." * * * LATE PLEISTOCENE JULY 1, 10:19 AM Gini gutted the beaver, while Mulder and Scully watched. They sat a few feet away, leaning comfortably against a fallen tree in a grassy clearing approximately ten yards from where Mulder had beached the animal. The tree was without branches or bark, having lost them decades ago to wind and weather. Its thick trunk was bleached silver-gray by the sun, and it felt smooth and warm against Mulder's sore, bare back. It surprised him how happily Gini was going about her grisly task. She chattered as she slit the beaver from gullet to groin, carefully cutting around its genitals and anus without penetrating the bowel, which he supposed was to prevent contamination of the meat. She used one of her small stone blades, brought from Turkey Lake, having declined his offer of the pocketknife. She was evidently more comfortable with her own familiar tools. Using bare hands, she scooped entrails from the gaping body, emptying the cavity onto the grass. She pointed to the growing pile of organs and rattled off a string of what sounded like questions or commands. "What's she saying?" he asked, not understanding a single word. "I didn't get all of it, but 'a-chi' means intestines and 'cha' means 'beaver.' I think she wants to know if we plan to use the entrails," Scully said, rising to her feet to inspect the gore. "You really should make an effort to learn her language, Mulder." "I'm not good at languages." "With your photographic memory?" "Doesn't seem to help. You should hear my Spanish. It's embarrassing. 'Mi nalga se confunde fácilmente.'" She laughed. "You just said, 'My rump is easily confused.'" "Did I?" He grinned at his mistake. "Oh, well, considering how often I have my head up my ass, that's not too far off the mark, actually. But what I meant to say was 'My brain is easily confused.' Guess I proved my point." "'Brain' is 'cerebro,' not 'nalga.'" "'Patata,' pa-tay-ta. The Vineyard's a long way from the Mexican border, San Diego Girl." Bending over the bloody entrails, she frowned. "How is it you were able to remember the tribe's words for the male and female genitalia without any trouble?" "Easy...that's a guy thing." She rummaged through the guts and retrieved what looked to him to be the liver. "You interested in eating this?" she asked, holding it up. It draped heavily over her arm, dark, slimy and wholly unappetizing. His throat closed and his stomach rebelled. "Uh...no, thanks." To avoid watching her pick through the gore, he inspected the injury on his ribs. The scrape he'd received underwater was beginning to sting like hell. It was raw and inflamed looking. Carefully, he pulled a long sliver from the wound. "I was kind of hoping we wouldn't be here long enough to make learning cavemanese a necessity," he said, letting the bloody splinter drop to the ground. "Do you have something more pressing to do?" She abandoned the beaver's innards to come inspect his wound. "You should rinse that." "It's fine." To be honest, he felt too tired to rise to his feet and traipse all the way down to the river. "Mulder..." Her warning tone. "Give me a few minutes," he wheedled. "I wanna see how Gini skins this thing." Gini was already separating the hide from the carcass, cutting and tugging, while taking care not to puncture it. With Scully's help she removed the entire skin in about twenty minutes. Mulder was content to simply sit and watch them. The work appeared to be strenuous. Sweat was slicking their faces by the time they laid the hide on the grass -- sans head -- in one unbroken piece. Opened flat, it was wider than Gini was tall. Gore still clung to its inner surface, making it too unwieldy for Scully and Gini to lift on their own. "Muhl-dar na-e-lahi?" Gini pointed to the skin and pantomimed draping it over the fallen tree. "Come on, Mulder. Help us." Reluctantly, and with an exaggerated groan, he rose to his feet to help them lift the pelt into position over the log. Once it was where they wanted it, Gini crouched beside it and immediately began scraping off a layer of sticky membrane with her crescent-shaped blade. She held the stone knife at a ninety-degree angle while she methodically removed fat from the pelt, until the underlying pores began to appear. While she worked on the hide, Scully butchered the beaver, using Mulder's knife. Mulder returned to his comfortable position beside the log. "Too bad we don't have some way to preserve all that meat," he said. "The tribe had a smokehouse." Scully sliced through what was once a muscular thigh, trimming away several perfect steaks. "Maybe we could build one, too." "Maybe." Without tools it would be difficult to build anything. He plucked a blade of grass and stuck it between his teeth. "If we had another knife, I could help you cut that up," he said, glad there was only one. "You killed it, I can clean it. Nice job, by the way, Tarzan." She glanced at him and smiled. Her praise lessened the ache in his limbs. Half an hour later, Scully and Gini were still cutting and scraping. Apparently ready for a break, Gini rose to search through the pile of guts. To Mulder's disgust, she dug out the heart, from which she took a big, bloody bite. She chewed with obvious relish and swallowed. "Mmmmm. Gud!" she said, wiping gore from her lips onto the back of her hand. "Jesus." Mulder's gag reflex kicked in and he felt his gorge rise. He looked to Scully to see if she was going to object. Instead she simply shrugged. "It can't harm her, and I doubt it's any worse than the raw snake meat you and I ate." Maybe not, but... "I'm going to wash up." He stood and headed for the river. By the time he returned, Gini was finished with her scraping and Scully was bringing the snapping turtle's shell from the cave. "What's that for?" he asked. "I don't know. Gini asked for it." She handed the turtle shell -- which was as big as a punch bowl -- to the girl. Gini set it on the ground beside the log. "Muhl-dar break head," she said. "Excuse me?" he asked. "Break head?" Gini smiled and pointed first to the turtle-bowl, and then to the beaver's decapitated skull lying beside the entrails in the grass. After several minutes of sign language and broken English it became clear that she wanted him to crack open the beaver's skull with a rock and dump the contents into the turtle shell. Why, he wasn't exactly sure, but guessed it must have something to do with curing the hide. While Gini was showing Scully how to rough up the pelt's underside with sand and fine gravel, he hunted for an appropriate sized rock to hammer open the beaver's head. A fist-sized stone caught his eye. He brought it and the grisly severed head to the log where Gini and Scully were abrading the skin. A few well-placed blows between the beaver's eyes punched a hole through its fur and bone, opening its flat forehead and exposing a gray soup of brains inside. "There you go." He nudged the mutilated head toward Gini. She took it from him and scooped the brains into the turtle shell. Mulder was reminded of a grotesque little verse from his childhood. He began to chant while she emptied the skull: "Great green globs of greasy, grimy gopher guts; mutilated monkey meat; little turdy birdy feet; French-fried eyeballs swimming in a bowl of blood; And I forgot my spoon!" "But I've got my straw," Scully finished the ditty for him, and followed it with the prerequisite slurp, which made Gini pause at her brain mashing to giggle. Her laugh was so throaty and infectious Mulder couldn't help but chuckle, too. Smiling broadly, Gini held out the bowl to him. "Muhl-dar bel- dil-khon." "Sorry, I didn't quite get that." "Bel-dil-khon. Um...fill...uhhh..." She thought for a moment, trying to come up with the appropriate words. "Muhl- dar...make...uh, tkoh." Now Scully laughed. Loudly. "What?" he asked, not getting the joke. "She wants you to fill the bowl." "I get that, but with what?" Scully seemed to be struggling to suppress another laugh. "Urine." "Urine? She wants me to pee in this?" Scully nodded. "I remember Dr. Diamond telling us that Sub- Arctic People used animal brains and human urine to tan caribou and moose skins." "Well that's fine and dandy, but why do *I* have to piss in the pot? What's wrong with your urine? Or hers?" She shrugged. "It could be a tribal preference. Maybe male pee is thought to be luckier than female pee." "Luckier?" "I don't know, Mulder. Just do it, will you?" Reluctantly he grabbed the turtle shell from Gini and headed for the trees. Behind him he heard Gini ask Scully, "Where Muhl-dar go?" "He'll be right back, sweetie." Sequestered behind dense foliage, he set the turtle shell on the ground between his feet. Didn't this just take the proverbial cake? Pissing into a bowl of beaver brains. "Highlight of my professional career," he muttered as he emptied his bladder. Walking back to Scully and Gini, he tried not to blush or trip over his feet and fall face-first into the damn bowl. "Here." He passed the bowl to Gini, who set it on the ground and began mashing its contents with a paddle-shaped stick. "Ut-zah," she said after a few minutes of mixing. The gray contents had become a greasy slurry, which she applied to the inside of the pelt with her bare hands. "Isn't that...unhygienic?" Mulder asked, face wrinkled in disgust. "Human urine is sterile when it's fresh," Scully informed him. Twice Gini smeared the entire skin with the brain mixture, buffing the surface between coats with a handful of sand. Then she rolled the skin into a tight bundle and left it beside the log. "That's it? It's ready to be made into fur coats?" Mulder asked. "Not yet," Scully said. "Dr. Diamond described several traditional methods for softening hides, to keep the skin flexible." "Chewed by Indian maidens?" "Something like that." She turned to Gini, who was smeared with blood, brains, sweat, and no doubt, Mulder's urine. "Bath time, sweetie. Let's get you cleaned up." "Bat-time!" Gini grinned and immediately stripped off Mulder's soiled shirt. She dropped it onto the ground and ran naked to the river. Scully collected the shirt from the grass. "I'll wash this." "You do that. I'd prefer it didn't smell like my pee." "Your *lucky* pee," she called over her shoulder, waving the shirt at him. From the water's edge, Gini high-stepped into the water and shouted at the top of her lungs, "Lug-hee pee, lug-hee pee, lug-hee pee!" * * * A knife of defeat prodded Chal between the shoulders as he and the others crossed the sun-washed ball field at Turkey Lake. He gripped his spear in bone-weary fingers. The weapon seemed as burdensome as a bull mastodon tusk, tugging painfully at the muscles of his arm. His travel pack caused him irritation, too. Its strap chafed his neck with every plodding step, and the pack itself pressed heavily against his spine although it contained nothing more than a few meager supplies. The hunters' journey to Ye-tsan had yielded only empty bellies and disconsolate hearts. No fresh meat, no redress for the transgressions against Owl Clan, and no happy homecoming for Gini. Chal conjured up an image of her the way she'd looked the day he met her at the lake, her eyes flashing with indignation, her pretty mouth set in a taut frown, while the midday sun glossed her braids and a light breeze rattled the beads in her hair. His bones had rattled at that moment, too. It took all his strength to quell the trembling in his limbs as he stood on the bank above her. No girl had ever set his knees to wobbling the way she did. It was as if he had been caught unawares by a powerful punch to the gut. The feeling was unexpected and alarming, yet he found himself rooted to the riverbank, curiously delighted as he gazed at her clenched fists and angry wide eyes, eyes that weren't afraid to meet his own blinking stare. It was at that exact moment he decided to bargain with Dzeh and the Spirits to make her his mate. And now...now he must forget that she had ever lived. How was he to do such an impossible thing? She had occupied his thoughts every day and every night since he first laid eyes on her, and now her spirit was haunting his heart. While awake he imagined himself returning to Ye-tsan and rescuing her. While asleep he dreamt that she shared his sleeping skins or tended his hearth. Last night he saw their children playing by the fire, two daughters and four sons, all strong and healthy, long-limbed like him, yet marked by her dimpled smile. He was loath to wake from this happy scene, preferring instead to imagine a life with her. Upon opening his eyes at daybreak, he was met with the disappointing truth that she was lost to him forever. Four sunrises had come and gone since he and the other hunters had turned their backs on Ye-tsan Basin. Finally they were in sight of the domed huts of their summer home. The mouthwatering aroma of roasting meat greeted them even before they heard the cheerful voices of their kin at the lakeshore where all the clans were gathered to watch teams of girls and boys compete in water games. Even without looking, Chal knew his best friends Na