A Familiar Heart Chapter Eight Mulder fidgeted in the booth, checking his watch again. 7:15. Would she show up? Or was this her way of getting a bit of revenge? He quickly dismissed the thought - her revenge, should she choose to exercise it, would be swift and sure. Most likely, a blow to the groin this time. Unmanning him while she condemned him with that cool gaze. "Mulder." The low call of his name jerked his head up. He stood up with a gulp, subconsciously bending at the waist in an effort to protect his privates at the angry look in her eyes. She wasn't pleased at all by his demand to have her meet him, and she'd had two whole days to simmer and stew herself into a fury. God, she was magnificent - all buttoned up in gray wool, a matching felt hat haloing that errant lock of hair. He wanted to greet her with a kiss, to swoop her into his arms like he'd seen other couples do in the hour he'd waited. Instead, he smiled. Not too broad, just a simple, hesitant parting of lips. "Can I take your coat?" "I'm not staying that long." Okay, he should have expected that. "Would you at least sit?" He glanced around the room, alerting her to the subtle stares their standoff was attracting. With a purse of her lips, she dropped her purse on the table and sat, though she perched close to the edge of the booth as if poised for flight. He cleared his throat, forcing a normalcy to his voice. "How was Christmas?" A scalding, 'are you being absurd?' look crossed her face, but before she could answer, they were interrupted by a big man who descended upon the table with a smile. "Dana!" Her whole face transformed; she stood, a brilliant smile in place as she was enfolded in a bear hug. "Uncle Mike... so good to see you again." Uncle Mike? Mulder took hold of his glass of water with a shaky hand. Its ascent to his lips stopped at half-mast, as he took note of the waiters and waitresses, not to mention the man who hugged Scully as if she were... kin. Jesus. They all had the familiar reddish hair and pale complexions. Mike could be - "And who's this, darlin'?" Scully's smile faded as she nodded at Mulder, who slid to his feet. "Uncle Mike, Fox Mulder. Charlie's best man. Mulder, this is my Dad's brother, Mike Scully." His hand was engulfed in a beefy, calloused paw. "Pleased to meet ya," Mike said, still smiling. "If I'd known you were Dana's beau, I'd have given you a better table. One not so close to the kitchen." God, he was in such trouble. Scully stood by with rigid fury, Mike's mistaken declaration compressing her jaw into a firm line. Mulder rushed to explain, sensing he was seconds away from being thrown out by her command. "I'm not Dana's beau. We're just discussing last minute wedding details." Mike's smile drooped a bit, though he commented no further on the subject, instead turning his attention to Scully. A slight frown marred his brow as he said, "I saw the little limp, darlin' - you hurt yourself?" Her eyes darted to Mulder, then back to her uncle. Lips pursed, her cheeks lost some of their cold weather color as she murmured, "I twisted it changing a flat. It's nothing, Uncle Mike. Getting better every day." Her smile was brief and listless. Another nail in the coffin of Mulder's guilt; he hadn't noticed her limping last night at her mother's. Of course, she hadn't *wanted* him to notice - he doubted if she let herself show the physical weakness in front of her family, for fear of the inevitable questioning. Mike seemed satisfied by her off-putting answer, though he spread his hands and boomed, "Well then - what're you doin' with your coat on? Surely you're stayin' for dinner? We've got some fine corned beef and cabbage today." "Um... actually, I really need to -" She faltered, looking to Mulder for help. Which he was in no mood to give. Despite the fact that she could sic her relatives on him in a heartbeat, he was willing to brave the sure pounding in order to get her to stay a while. "We'll have that, Mike," he drawled easily, ignoring her flashing eyes. "And maybe a couple of beers?" Taking in Mulder's uniform and friendly smile, Mike beamed. "Sure. I'll get right on it." "But -" Mike stalled Scully's protest with a firm hand. "Now, if I didn't feed you before I sent you on your way, your pa would take a stick to me. Sit. Mr. Mulder?" When Mike stepped aside, Mulder moved in, turning her gently to divest her of her coat. Mike winked and moved away to the bar while she fumbled with the buttons. "You... you..." Her anger made her stutter, as she searched for the right, albeit ladylike epithet. Mulder could feel her mind scream out 'bastard', but she didn't dare say that in such close proximity to her cousins. "Wretch? Swine?" he offered, his hands gentle on her shoulders as he leaned close. Her familiar scent wafted over him and he closed his eyes, embracing it with his mind as if his arms had cuddled her close. This meeting was destined to be another mistake, but he just had to see her alone one last time. It didn't matter if he had to field barbs all night; anything was worth just looking at her. Shrugging off his hands and her coat, she let him take it from her, facing him. "Too good for you," she bit out. "How about slimy cur?" He grimaced at the vehemence in her voice. "I'd prefer 'friend'," he said softly, waiting for her reaction. "Fiend," she replied, sweeping aside her skirt to sit in the booth. Sighing, he hung her coat next to his on the nearby hatrack and resumed his seat. This wasn't going to be easy. And truth was, he'd never really been all that smooth with women. He'd never had to be; he wasn't an ugly man by any means, and women seemed to find him attractive enough. Not that he treated them badly - usually, he could charm any woman with his smile and rapier wit. But not her. The uniform hadn't impressed her. His smile seemed to fall flat at every opportunity. Though they'd not exchanged more than a hundred words since they'd met again, his attempts at being friendly were met with hostility. Of course, he couldn't blame her one bit. What he'd thought of her back in Utah... what he'd *done* to her, would take a lot more effort to repair than smiles and charming words. Letting his gaze wander over her sky blue knit dress, he drank in the sight of her loveliness as a waiter appeared with their drinks. "I didn't know you'd hurt your ankle," he said. "Is it bad?" Her eyes, which had been making a serious study of the shiny table, snapped up. She waited until the waiter left, then, with ice dripping from her voice, said, "My ankle is fine, Mulder. Just say what you have to say so I can go." "Dana -" At the leap of flame in her eyes, he amended, "Scully. I've been too long without conversation that wasn't edged with suspicion. I realize you have every reason to hate me, but I thought we could talk without growling at one another. For Charlie's sake, I thought we could at least try to be friends." "Friends?" Her question carried the unspoken, 'and nothing more?' "Friends," he stated. His more-than-friendly feelings would have to be squashed, he knew. And if her friendship was all he could ever enjoy, he'd damn well take it. For this brief interlude, it would have to do. And maybe, just maybe - if he played his cards right - they could come together again, on an even playing field. Her animosity slowly faded, but wary reticence still clouded her eyes. She picked at the napkin neatly folded on the table, saying, "I'm - I can't just forget. It's not something I'm very proud of, you know... the way we... met." At last, a peek behind the armor of defiant fury. Using every bit of sincerity he'd thought lost in the past few years, he responded in kind. "I can't say that I was on my best behavior, either. I'm usually more accommodating." "Mulder -" "And I want to apologize," he interrupted, sensing that her anger was giving way to something more fearsome - total withdrawal. He wasn't letting her go that easily. In fact, if he had his way, he'd never let her go again. "I'm sorry, Scully. You caught me at a really bad time." A slight curl of her lips accompanied her reply. "Is there ever a *good* time to catch you?" He shouldn't, the little angel on his shoulder whispered. But the devil on the other side won the argument, and he touched the lump under his hair. "You seem to have found the best way." Steady and truthful, his somber gaze tried to tell her what his lips could not. Signed, sealed, and knocked unconscious... whether she wanted it or not, he was hers. Instead of retreating behind a cool mask of anger, she surprised him by chuckling, which pleased him to no end. "I'll have to remember that - all I have to do is wallop you with the butt of a gun. Got it." Her near smile was winsome and it tugged at his heart. "I need to apologize to you as well." "What for? You did what you had to do." He looked away, disgusted with the remembrance of his behavior toward her. "But it - we never would have reached that point if I hadn't... you know." A fresh surge of color tinted her cheeks, an attractive, blooming tinge of pink. "I don't usually... throw myself at men that way." He looked at her, falling more in love with her with every second that passed. He could feel it burn from his eyes, travel down to the fingers that longed to touch her face. "I know." Her eyes met his, and he could have sworn it wasn't possible for her to become more beautiful. But she did, her flush extending down the vee neck of her dress, the cross glowing above the rush of blood to her skin. "Yes. Well." She reached for her glass of beer, taking a long sip. "So. I have a feeling you're about to tell me who this Chang person is. Am I right?" He lowered his voice to a murmur, clasping his hands together beneath the table to prevent them from reaching for her. "I'd very much like to, if you're willing to listen." The arrival of their dinner made her hesitate, but she gave him an answer as she picked up her fork. "Will it ruin my dinner?" Mulder knew he would never tell her the most sordid, heinous details of his time spent with Chang. As a genteel lady, she really shouldn't be regaled with tales of opium and whores. "Probably. I think I'd better wait until we're done." "Nonsense." She took a bite of cabbage, chasing it down with another sip of beer. "I've seen and heard things you can't imagine." Her face clouded over with a memory unknown to him - but one that intrigued. She was no ordinary female, and he'd best get that straight. He could see her courage etched in every subtle, firm crease of her brow. "And I've done things you can't imagine," he said, regret making his voice husky. She laid her fork on the plate. "Then maybe both our imaginations need enlightening. If you want us to be friends, Mulder, you have to tell me the truth." The truth. However ugly it may be, he knew he owed her that. "Finish your dinner, then we'll talk." "I've got a strong stomach," she pressed, a soft intrusion punctuated by an encouraging lift of her lips. He picked up his fork, lowering his gaze. Much as he wanted to, this was not a moment for soft, re-assuring smiles. "Maybe I don't." ********** Mulder's appetite seemed on a par with hers, as he picked at his dinner. They fell into silence as they ate, and she took the opportunity to study him and gather her thoughts. He'd had a haircut since Utah, but he needed a bit of Brylcream, in her opinion - there was a lock of unruly hair that refused to stay put. Every now and then, he impatiently brushed it back with his fingers. He'd shaved, though a little red scrape on his chin told her he'd either been out of practice, or nervous. She could commiserate, she thought sadly, recalling the butterflies in her stomach on the way over here. All in all, he was a handsome man, with a devastating smile and hazel eyes that were old, but warm. In another time, she might have found herself falling for his charm. And he was charming, she had to admit. An easy intelligence and dry wit - God, she would have fallen hard. But there was an edge to his polished exterior, and though it didn't frighten her, it did make her uncomfortable. He wasn't used to playing the part of the gentleman, that was obvious. But the uniform was spotless, and his manners, while rough, had been taught at an early age. She wondered what had happened to him. His behavior in the cabin had been appalling. Now, he was trying so hard to contain whatever drove him to act that way. And it was high time she found out what it was. As the waiter took their plates away and brought coffee, she murmured, "You weren't kidding." Lost in thought as she'd been, his glance was confused. "Excuse me?" "About your stomach. You hardly ate a thing." Fingers wrapped around the steaming cup of coffee, he seemed mesmerized by the brew. "I wasn't very hungry." She added sugar and milk to her cup, knowing the time had come to hear his story. "Guess you don't want dessert then." His eyes snapped up, as if he'd suddenly been reminded - once again - of his lack of manners. Raising a hand to the waiter, he said quickly, "I'm sorry. What would you like?" Before she could stop it, her hand tugged on his sleeve, pulling his arm down. That slow burn, the same one she'd seen back at the cabin, returned to his gaze. Slowly, his eyes caressed her face, then fell to her hand. She snatched it from his arm, saying, "I don't want dessert, thank you. But I would like some answers." Mulder paled a bit, bringing a hand up to scratch his jaw. She noticed a mole on his cheek; it was quite attractive, actually. Gave him a bit of distinction. Not that he needed any - she'd noticed the admiring looks from the ladies in the diner while they'd eaten. Once again, she lamented the circumstances of their meeting with a heavy heart. But no... they couldn't go back... "You know I work in Naval Intelligence." His statement shook her from her traitorous thoughts. "With Charlie, apparently." "Yeah. He was my contact in Honolulu." "And this Chang fellow?" He sighed, looking everywhere but at her. "I was assigned to Hong Kong back in '39, when the Japanese began stirring up trouble in Asia. The government set me up as a Dutch trader - I'm fluent in several languages." She remembered his barrage of questions, barked at her in languages she didn't understand. Until he got to Japanese. "For what purpose?" "We suspected the Japanese were moving in on the opium trade; they used their profits to finance the military. At first, I was only supposed to keep an eye out and report back any suspicious movements." "At first?" She wished he'd look at her; it was difficult to read him when those expressive eyes were hooded and withdrawn. He swallowed the last of his coffee before answering, "Then I met up with Chang." He raised somber eyes to her. She almost gasped at the pain and guilt in those liquid depths. "I now had a connection. As it turned out, *the* connection. He was - *is* - a major player in the Chinese Triads." "The Mafia?" Surprise lit his face; he hadn't expected her to recognize the term. "This fabulous hairdo *does* sit atop a brain, you know," she said dryly, waving a hand at her hat- covered hair. He smiled, and it was as if the gloom over him dissipated a bit. "Yeah, I kinda noticed." Admiration glinted in his eyes, warming her more than the coffee. She sensed their drift into dangerous waters, and pulled him away with, "So... how deep did you go in?" His smile faded and he leaned back, toying with his empty cup. "Deep. When Skinner - our CO - learned I'd been offered a job with Chang, my orders changed." "Changed? How?" "By that time, the Japanese had occupied Hong Kong. Let's just say Chang was very friendly with the officers - and my job was to make sure they stayed happy." Something in his face told her she wasn't going to like what came next. But she had to hear it all. "And what was your job?" "I ran the China Moon." He hesitated, his lips pursing, then added, "Chang wasn't happy making millions from the opium trade. When the Japanese won, he wanted control of Hong Kong." "Greedy fellow, wasn't he?" Mulder didn't respond to her attempt to lighten the conversation. He knew what was coming next, so she didn't dawdle further. "The China Moon. A bar, I take it." "You could say that." He finally looked at her again, his face an ill-concealed portrait of self-revulsion. "Let's just say, whatever the Japanese wanted, I got it for them. In return, Chang got plenty of blackmail material. I got plenty of military secrets." His eyes spoke of things criminal, of dirty, backroom deals and an easy flow of all manner of vices. Scully was speechless. When he said he'd done things he wasn't proud of, she'd never dreamed he was little more than a common criminal. "Some hero, huh?" His cutting remark spoke volumes of the way he felt about his service in the war. After the initial shock of moments ago passed, she'd quickly realized that it didn't matter how he'd done his job - the fact remained, he'd done it. Charlie obviously knew what Mulder had had to do in Hong Kong, and he didn't hold it against him. In fact, Charlie was Mulder's big advocate. She'd spent the better part of Christmas Day listening to Charlie's subtle praises of his friend, despite the warning looks she bestowed on her brother. Mulder cleared his throat and signaled for the check. "I was supposed to stay until the end of the war, but in February, I'd had enough. I couldn't stand what I'd become. Skinner and Charlie knew I was at the end of my rope, and arranged transport out for me." He couldn't stand what he'd become. That statement, quickly sandwiched between the other two, made her see him for what he was - a flawed, totally human being. He was right. He wasn't a hero. But he was a soldier to the bitter end, taught to fight for his country in whatever way he had to. So what if he finally broke and had to be relieved of his duty? There was still one question that remained. "Chang. I take it he didn't let you go so easily?" At that, a bitter laugh broke from his lips. "Not after I torched his warehouses and blew up a couple of his ships in a fond farewell." Scully blanched. "He's after you." "You could say that. I thought the bastard had gone up in flames with his merchandise. Seems I was wrong." God. Moments ago, she'd been on the verge of sobbing at his story. But that was before the final piece fell into place. Chang was *still* after him - out for revenge. If Chang was the type of criminal Scully suspected he was, he wouldn't let anyone stand in his way. And here was Mulder, sitting out in the open with her, exposing himself in order to explain. Worse - putting her family in the line of fire as well. "I can't believe you," she said, anger at his nonchalant attitude hardening her voice. "Do you think I want you anywhere near me and my family?" "Scully, listen to me -" He put a hand over hers, trapping her at the table, his face desperate. "No." Jerking her hand away, she stood on shaky legs, not wanting to hear any more of his explanations. It didn't matter that she sympathized with his story - the fact remained, he was a walking timebomb, and the explosion could very well take her family with him. Her uncle Mike chose that moment to interrupt, saying their dinner was compliments of the house. Mulder sat mute, watching her tug on her coat. "Dana," Mike said, "what's the rush? Stay awhile. Have another cup of coffee." Feeling as if she had a target plastered to her back, she glanced around the room, looking for signs of menace. Mulder got to his feet and slowly pulled on his own coat, addressing Mike. "Thanks, Mike, but we've got to get going." She pressed a kiss to Mike's cheek and fled, not listening to Mulder's goodbyes. The night air was cold and crisp, and she wasted no time waving at the few cabs on the street. Damn him. Just when she was beginning to feel sorry for him, too. He had no business placing himself in such close proximity to her family, and she was going to let Charlie have an earful when she got home. "Tell him I said I'm sorry." Mulder's soft statement made her flinch, but she didn't turn around. "Tell who what?" she grated out, not interested in anything but getting as far away from the man as possible. "Tell Charlie I'm sorry." Impatiently, she dropped her arm and faced him. "For what?" "He'll know." He turned up the collar on his coat, his face half in shadow. "And I really am sorry for what I did to you, Dana." Furious, she could do nothing but stare. Mulder shoved his hands in his pockets, his eyes sweeping her face one last time. "I know it's not an explanation, or an excuse. But being with you... it was like coming home at last. I felt... whole." He turned and walked away, his tall figure blending in with the night. Her anger fell to ashes at the sight of his hunched shoulders and for a moment, she allowed herself to grieve for what could have been, her whisper humid with unshed tears. "So did I." End Chapter Eight