Julia Prologue June 1, 2000 Washington, D. C. 8:15 a.m. Kurtzweil had been wrong. It didn't happen on a holiday. Unless you counted days of religious significance, which Scully seriously doubted the men behind the Invasion put much stock into. But it did occur to her as she ran to her apartment that maybe it was fitting. Ascension Thursday. The day Christ rose into heaven, leaving the confines of his mortal being forever. Exactly ten days since Mulder had ascended to the stars - if not by his own choice - in his own quest for immortality. ********** 7:20 a.m. Anger and yearning fought for dominance within her still. She wasn't listening to the priest; but then again - who would be this early in the morning? The only reason she'd attended mass on this Holy Day of Obligation was because her mother had reminded her last night that mass attendance was required. She never could withstand the subtle guilt trip her mother laid on her for such occasions. Tired, lonely, and wondering where to turn to next, Scully had given in to her mother's, "It wouldn't hurt to say a prayer for Fox," and decided to take a short breather on this warm June day. A nasty ear infection, exacerbated by the trip to Oregon, had forced her to limit her physical activity. She'd started on tetracycline three days ago after a week of penicillin had done little good; still she experienced flashes of vertigo if she turned her head too quickly. Despite Skinner's concern, she'd hidden the fading symptoms and thrown herself into the search for Mulder. Snapping at the green agents assigned to the case by Kersh, she pushed them and herself to the brink of exhaustion. It wasn't until Skinner pulled her aside yesterday and told her to take it easy on them that she realized the breadth of her anger. Not at them for being inexperienced. Not at Skinner... though at one moment in the basement several days ago, she wanted to scream at him for losing Mulder. The accusation had been on the tip of her tongue before another dizzy spell had sidetracked her. It wasn't his fault; it wasn't anyone's fault. She didn't even really blame the people - or whatever - behind Mulder's abduction. They knew exactly how to feed into his search for the truth. At times, the only person to blame was Mulder himself. As she knelt for the Communion prayer, she tried hard to clear her mind of those thoughts. Mulder hadn't gone willingly, he hadn't. But she couldn't help her anger sometimes, much as many people felt after the loss of a loved one. Why did you leave me? she wanted to scream at the heavens. You should have fought harder. Didn't you know how much I needed you here? What am I supposed to do without you now? She pushed aside those useless questions and bowed her head, clasping her hands tightly. Days of false leads and dead ends had left her searching her own soul for the strength to continue. It was too soon to give up, but she needed something besides sheer will to bolster her. Against all reason, she couldn't deny that, besides having faith in science for answers, she also relied on faith in God to bring Mulder back to her; faith to give her the strength to find him. She'd witnessed the power of prayer, from the Navajo spirit walk with Albert Hosteen to the Sepher Vetzirah that brought Isaac Luria back from the grave. Her logical mind could not refute the fact that sometimes, the physical had to give way to the metaphysical. It was with this hope that she knelt on the velvet kneelers at St. John's. A few quick prayers for Mulder's safety, for her own unfailing determination, and the calming rote of the Order of Mass. Then she'd begin again. The priest signaled for the congregation to rise and she stood absently, joining in on the Lord's Prayer. "Our Father, who art in heaven...." It started as a trickle of humming, the siren that broke through on the, "... hallowed be thy name." Father Zagst faltered and looked into the incense-filled air of the church as if he could see the warning. So did the others at mass, Scully included, lifting their eyes to the heavens for answers. At first, she thought it was a test of the Civil Defense System. But right upon the heels of that thought came another... those tests usually happened at noon, and they were broadcast on the morning radio news as such. And she remembered no such announcement as she'd driven here. The wail of the siren was joined by another, and another, informing all that this was no test. Something was dreadfully wrong. The people around her began to murmur, then gasp with anxiety. Father Zagst, just as panic-stricken, continued the prayer, this time in a booming, strained voice. "Thy kingdom come, thy will be done..." He didn't pause once when the screams began to drown out his mantra. A slight stammer began when the first explosion rocked the stone walls of the church. He stood there, sputtering in the cacophony of the panicked parishioners, hysteria manifesting itself in denial, as if he thought he could block out the world with his words. The hundred or so people in the church stampeded with fear and Scully immediately left her pew and started walking against the stream of bodies to the altar. Father Zagst's eyes were wide and he looked as if he'd lost all sense of awareness. "Father?" she called out above the din, moving closer. It was then she saw the bee. Crawling up his cheek like it was following a road map to his forehead, where it sat square between his glassy eyes. He didn't even seem to notice its presence, though shock finally set in, silencing his words. The church grew quiet with the exit of the last parishioners, the sirens fading away. Scully was stilled by the cessation of his voice, stopping just a few feet away from his statue- like figure. Rubbing its hind legs together, sprinkling the black soot covering its wings over the priest's nose, the bee moved away quickly to an unsmudged patch of pasty skin, its small hiss of displeasure at the dirt reaching her ears in an instant. When it found purchase again, it dropped its stinger to deliver the fatal blow. His pupils dilated to enormous proportions, almost indistinguishable from the early morning shadows that filled the church. It took her a second to realize it wasn't a normal physiological response to the sting - the whites of his eyes were liquid with black oil. Sinister, invading... taking him over in a heartbeat. Her heart soared to her throat and she began to back away. A foolish thought accompanied her rising panic. That wasn't supposed to be. It couldn't be... the bees didn't carry the black oil. Or did they? Scully immediately pulled out her cell phone, intending to call Skinner. She knew what was happening... did he? The silence that greeted her ears was deafening, much more so than the smoky, ash-filled chaos that swirled around the statues, bouncing off the stained-glassed walls of the church. She gave the man on the altar one last look, noting his glazed eyes. But what scared her more was not the priest's reaction; it was the movement behind him. Scully looked up from his face to the huge stained glass portrait of Jesus Christ that usually came to life with the glow of sunlight. The storm cloud behind it made a normally benevolent face angry and twisted with blasphemous rage, darkening the cheeks and pulling the eyebrows together. It moved the Savior's face with a hum of menace, a tidal wave of drones with singular purpose. The portrait frightened her, frowning upon her as if laying the blame at her feet. That was when she decided to run. Her car was useless; already the streets were clogged with vehicles attempting to escape. A tanker truck sat in the middle of a nearby deli, accounting for one of the explosions she'd heard. Numerous other fires burned, obscuring her vision. She set out on foot, hoping to make the six block run to her apartment without succumbing to the bees. Through the chaotic streets, dodging the insects and the infected, she ran. It was like a scene from a bad horror movie - zombies staggering, then falling when human fright finally gave in to mindless existence. She was fortunate enough to stay ahead of most of the swarm and to swat at the insects that got too close. As she was lucky to sidestep the black oil that oozed from those that were crushed beneath the wheels of out-of-control vehicles. The vaccine, the one Mulder had administered to her in Antarctica... it would work if she got stung, wouldn't it? It was her only hope as she ran the obstacle course of wayward automobiles and staggering bodies. Please let it work, she prayed. I'm not ready to die. Just when the relative safety of her apartment was in sight, a gloved hand stopped her progress. "Come with me." She looked up into the sweat-tinged face of the last person she expected to see. Even Mulder's face would have been less shocking to her. Scully pulled her arm from the cold grip and spat out, "I'm not going anywhere with you, Krycek." In a flash, she faced him over the barrel of her gun. "Leave me alone." "You gonna shoot me, Scully?" he laughed, his eyes glittering in his dark face. "I don't think so; I'm your ticket out of here." "I don't need your help," she replied, backing up the sidewalk. She could hear the growing hum of the bulk of the approaching swarm beneath the layers of war-like sound; it hadn't yet made it this far, but people were scrambling for their cars and screaming with terror already, having heard the Civil Defense sirens and the news reports. Suddenly, despite the chaos that surrounded them like a hail storm, it sunk in totally that this was Alex Krycek trying to save her. Krycek... who worked for.... "Where's Mulder?" Her yell was frantic as the gun trembled in her hands. "Where is he?" Krycek laughed incredulously. "Hell if I know, Scully. Who the fuck cares, anyway? At the white chalkiness of her face, he pressed on. "He's gone, Scully. Not coming back." "You - you work for *them.* Tell me where Mulder is!" The threat of tears made her hoarse. "You knew this was coming... now tell me!" He turned at the approach of a vehicle, then whirled back to her. "I just found out a few hours ago," he hissed. "And I don't know where Mulder is. But if you want any chance of getting out of here alive, Scully..." The sight of the beat-up VW van that screeched to a stop beside them was a blessing. "Looks like my ride is here, Krycek." She sidestepped him, giving him a small smile, her gun steady upon him. "Frohike?" Please don't let me be hallucinating the van, she prayed. "Get in, Scully!" The gnomish face poked out as the back door slid open. Scully didn't hesitate, scrambling into the vehicle's back seat and crouching on the floor, gun still in hand. Krycek fumed on the sidewalk, his face dark. "The date is upon us, Scully... and I've got something you need." "You don't have anything I need, Krycek." Certainly not Mulder, she added silently. She couldn't resist a final jab, reaching for the door handle. "So long - ow!" Scully was stopped short by a piercing pain at the back of her neck. Reaching up with her left hand, she felt an overwhelming sense of deja vu. Dear Lord, she thought. Not again. As if in slow motion, her fingers wrapped around the insect and she brought it around before her face. Her mouth dropped, as well as the gun from her right hand, thumping to the floor. "Jesus!" Frohike's panicked hiss sounded like it came from far away. "Scully... Scully!" Collapsing against Frohike, she felt her throat constrict, making further speech impossible. No! she wanted to scream. I've been vaccinated! But apparently it wasn't working. Her arms, legs... her mouth. All as useless as the vaccination. She would be good as dead in a matter of moments, as the virus would take hold and turn her internal organs to mush. Krycek muscled his way into the front seat of the vehicle and reached for her gun, shoving Byers past the bucket seats into the back. She watched all of this with mute panic, but could do nothing. He was a split second away from throwing her out of the vehicle, she just knew it. Not that it mattered; her last thoughts were for the safety of her friends. If she could have spoken she'd have insisted upon her abandonment herself. But Krycek stilled, his eyes upon her face. A soulless grin dawned in his gaze. "Well... I'll be damned." What? she wanted to shout. Someone tell me what's happening! Her hand twitched, the nerves re-connecting and firing with panic. It was with some difficulty, but she brought her right hand up to her face. Itching, her cheeks were itching like a swarm of gnats had decided to picnic on her skin. Brushing her lower eyelids, she scratched and scratched, a hum of distress breaking free from her open vocal cords. "It's okay, Scully," Krycek said. "Relax. It's inert, dead." Dead? She wasn't dead? What was he talking about? Her hand pulled away from her face and into focus. The pads of her fingers were crusted with ash... no... not ash. The black oil. Crumbling to dust, falling from under her fingernails to the moldy shag carpet of the van. Krycek was right; it was dead. She wasn't going to die. A sob clamored for release and she took a deep breath, letting her eyes close with relief. They were safe. From her, at least. "Get going," he growled at Langly, bringing the gun up to the blond head of the driver. "Now!" With a lurch, they sped away. "What the hell is going on?" Byers' question was frightened as he crawled from the front to the back, helping Frohike cradle Scully's limp form. "You can't just commandeer this vehicle -" "Same as before, stupid," Frohike interrupted, bringing his boot down to crush the insect that had fallen to the floor. "Africanized honeybee. And I'd say our new friend here is currently holding all the cards. Am I right?" Krycek glanced over his shoulder for an instant, then back at the road ahead, the gun never wavering from Langly's temple. "Looks like I am, comrade," he murmured, then addressed Langly. "Now... head northwest, like a good little Gunman." "Scully?" Frohike's worried face swam before her eyes. "What can we do?" Nothing, she wanted to answer. Nothing. We're safe. That's all that matters. Her pounding heart skipped a beat as she fainted from exhaustion. End Prologue