Title: The Payment (1/1) Author: Elanor G Email: ElanorG@yahoo.com Distribution: Wherever you wish! Please send me an e-mail, just so I know. Spoilers: Post-ep for En Ami, contains very vague and unspecific references to Requiem Rating: PG13 for disturbing themes Classification: post-ep vignette Keywords: Conspiracy, Angst Disclaimer: The X-Files is the property of Chris Carter, Fox, et al. I'm writing this simply to amuse myself - and a few others, I hope. Summary: After En Ami, a conversation. And payment for services rendered. Note: This little vignette could take place concurrently with my other En Ami post-ep story, "Yo Creo" - but not necessarily. Another note at the end. XxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxX The old woman sits heavily at the little dining table, trembling a little with exhaustion. The room is dim, the light from the gray sky filtered through a thick wall of trees. She stares out the window at the sodden garden. After some time has passed, she rises and opens the bottom door of the china hutch. She sits back down with a glass in one hand and a bottle of sherry in the other. Expressionless, she pours herself a generous helping. As she sits and drinks, her gaze returns to the view of the garden from her dining room window. The hands that clutch the glass are rough from years spent in that garden, in the dirt. She ignores the footsteps on the porch and the slight creak of the door. And the smell of fresh cigarette smoke. Without looking up, she says, "I did what you asked. As always. I did exactly what you asked me to do." He exhales thoughtfully, a stream of smoke curving toward the ceiling. "Thank you, Marjorie." She snorts. "Don't bother thanking me with words. Your words aren't worth the paper they're written on. Not worth the air you breathe to speak them. I just want what we agreed on." The old woman looks up for the first time and studies the man's tired and wrinkled face. "You look like hell. You know that?" He ignores her observation. "Are you sure you won't change your mind? You know I can give you something that would cure you. Something that would truly set you free." "You think I want that thing in me? Don't bother. I've had enough. Give me what I want, then I'll be free." She swirls the sherry in the glass, thick and brown like old blood. "That young girl you brought here. That nice young girl. You didn't...you didn't give it to *her*, did you?" The man shrugs, as if he knows nothing he says will be believed. "Does she know?" Again, he shrugs. "That poor girl. That poor girl." She takes a sip. "Do you think she believed it all?" He pulls out a chair and sits across from her. He follows her unseeing gaze out the window. The garden, a cheery place in the sunlight, is dreary this wet afternoon. "I really can't say. It's never easy to understand what Dana Scully believes. It seems to me that she believes in whatever suits her own purposes at any given time." He smiles slightly to himself. "She is a pragmatic believer. Yes. That is how I would describe her." Momentary confusion clouds the woman's blue eyes. "She's the one that works with Bill's boy, isn't she?" "Yes, Marjorie," he answers with great patience. "We've gone over this before. And he's forty years old now - hardly a 'boy' by any standard." "Hard to believe." "Indeed." She tears her eyes from the garden and surveys the dining room and the living room beyond, cluttered with potted plants and a lifetime of knick-knacks. "I remember seeing him, you know. When he was a little boy. Sulking around the edges of his parents' cocktail parties, that sort of thing. And later on, after..." Another sip. "He always seemed so fragile. Like his mother." "And like his father." Her eyes are suddenly bright. "Bill was a good man," she says, her voice shaking with sudden anger. "He never deserved any of this. I betrayed him. I betrayed his family." She bows her head but no tears can come. "He was a good man," she whispers. "Oh please, Marjorie," snaps the smoking man. "You know perfectly well what Bill was. He was me. The only essential difference is that Bill couldn't handle the guilt. Not without a bottle of Johnny Walker." Here he looks rather pointedly at the bottle of inexpensive sherry. "A misty-eyed tribute is the last thing he deserves. I would have thought that you knew him better than that. You were the man's secretary for most of your adult life." "You were the one I really worked for," she tells him quietly, worn out by the small burst of emotion. Dull despair now clouds her face. "She's dead now too, isn't she? Teena, I mean. My memory has become so poor." "She took her own life. You know that." Idly he watches the rising column of cigarette smoke. "My God. That whole family destroyed." "One of many, Marjorie. One of many. And at any rate, Bill's son survives." His eyes narrow. "That fragile boy developed a hard shell." They sit for some time, smoking and drinking in almost companionable silence. "You must admit it's been good to see each other again, after all this time," he says at last. "Surely there are a few good times we can look back upon with fondness." "Hmph." He studies her from across the table with curiosity and something like tenderness. "Sometimes I forget what a handsome woman you were," he tells her. "You still are." "Silver tongued as always." She looks up at him, and her face momentarily softens. Blue eyes soft in an almost girlish face. Then the mask of despair falls back into place. "That girl, that young woman who came here. Is she..." She takes a deep drink of sherry before she can continue. "Is she the One?" "What do you think?" he asks after a long pause. "Oh God. So typical of you. Mysterious to the end." She shakes her head, a bitter smile forming on her lips. "That's it. I'm ready. It's time. Just give me what you promised me and go." He stubs his cigarette in a heavy glass ashtray. "Very well." He fishes in a pocket and produces two small white pills. "These should do it." He places them on the table and she picks them up with a shaky hand. She gazes at them as if hypnotized. He rises to leave, but stops and looks down at her. "Would you rather I waited?" "Please. Just go." She shuts her eyes. "I am tired of you. I am so very tired of you." He turns and leaves without another word. As he opens the door he pauses and looks back at her one more time, his face unreadable. Then he is gone and the screen door slams shut behind him. When the old woman opens her eyes, dusk is approaching. She looks again at the pair of pills resting in her hand. After studying them intently for a moment, she swallows them with a mouthful of sherry. Then she sits and waits for the gathering darkness. End XxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxX Notes: After En Ami, was anyone else as curious about this Marjorie person as I was? It struck me when I watched the episode again, and it seemed to go nicely with another idea I'd had for a while. Thanks for reading - let me know what you think. Elanor G (ElanorG@yahoo.com)