From: livengoo@bcvms.bc.edu X-From: rkwong@engin.umich.edu (Roberta Chi-Woon Kwong) Newsgroups: alt.tv.quantum-leap.creative,alt.ql.creative Subject: "Leap of Faith" part 8/? Date: 19 Apr 1995 17:41:05 GMT Message-Id: <3n3hvh$7it@srvr1.engin.umich.edu> This is being posted for the author, who doesn't have access to this group. Please direct all comments to livengoo@bcvms.bc.edu. This story is also currently appearing in alt.tv.x-files.creative. No re-formatting has been done in this section. ----------------------------------------- Subject: Leap of Faith 8/? Like always, no profit, no intentional infringement, property Chris Carter, Bellisarius, do you get as tired of reading disclaimers as I do of writing them? Can we just assume the small print, people? Okay. All the print, it's just too small to see. Take my word for it. Heh. Okay, here we go. Get your popcorn ready, here's Leap of Faith 8/? All the rest of it was still hanging around the last time I reviewed the list, so you should be able to get the background pretty easily. Story copyright livengoo@bcvms.bc.edu. Go ahead and send me mail, I love it! The death threats because I post too many short pieces too slowly are my favorites! Send the killer boy scouts, I'm ready for 'em. Now, for our featured attraction: ******************* The rental car was waiting in the parking lot when the taxi pulled in. Sam wasn't sure how many tens he threw at the driver, money was *not* the main thing on his mind right then. It took a lot less bullying to get the manager to open Mulder's door for him this time, but this time the hiking clothes were gone. Scully's laptop sat on the table where Sam had left it, but now it was open. He begrudged the seconds needed to boot it up, but it was obvious Mulder had left something on it. Sure enough. "Scully, I'm really sorry to do this to you again. I know you don't like these notes," understatement of the decade. "I'm off chasing my demons again. Maybe I'll finally find the truth. I just can't let you find it with me. You've been burned badly enough chasing after my nightmares, Please, stay here. Don't tempt fate again. I'll talk to you when I can." He hadn't signed it. Maybe he just hadn't wanted to leave his name to a sterile typeface. Sam didn't care. "Damn-him-damn-him-DAMN-him!" Sam seldom gave in to profanity, but nothing else came close to how he felt right then. He shut the thing off and raced to his room. He didn't have time, but he'd never be able to tackle that climb in Scully's suit and heels. He dressed in a frenzy, finally belting on Scully's holster and pistol and bolting out the door to the car. He wrenched the ignition on, and slammed it into gear, leaving tracks as he roared out of the parking lot and headed the way he knew Fox Mulder had to have gone. Sam was halfway there, his forehead furrowed and his stomach clenched with anxiety when his own ghosts showed their faces. For once he didn't wonder how Al and Scully managed to look like they were riding in the car. He had other things on his mind. "He gave me the slip." Sam got it out before Al could even ask the obvious. "He left a note," Sam distantly noticed Scully's curse, an echo to his own, "and he's heading up that mountain." The blacktop ate the late summer twilight, the grass smelled dry and hungry in the lingering space between afternoon and evening. Sam had the surreal feeling that time was holding still, but he knew it was really moving much faster than he wanted. "We'll get a lock on the kid and come back to guide you." Al's voice was thankfully calm. Both Sam and Scully needed that anchor against their own fears. Sam finally glanced sideways while his friend barked orders to Gooshie. "I take he does this to you a lot." She nodded as the two holograms vanished. Sam floored it. *************************** Fox Mulder was terrified. It didn't matter, it was something he simply had to accept. He carefully shut the car door and locked it, using the small, normal motions as a kind of charm against evil. He'd need every advantage he could get, even the ones he didn't believe in. He didn't have a pack, he was traveling light. His cell phone had rung constantly so he'd thrown it into the trunk. He knew it was Scully, trying to talk him into waiting. He felt guilty about ditching her, and about leaving her yet another of those horribly melodramatic notes. A brief smile crossed his face, she could probably write a best-selling gothic novel around those stupid notes. He hadn't wanted to leave without saying ANYTHING to her, and he simply couldn't let her come with him. Guilty as the notes made him feel, it was nothing to how he'd felt when she'd disappeared. He just couldn't take that risk again. If he could have found his answers without taking any risks himself, he would have. That just wasn't possible, so he took a deep breath and started up the mountain, keeping a wary eye on the deepening shadows for the soldiers he expected were patrolling these woods. *********************************** "Okay, Sam. He's about twenty minutes ahead of you, but he's got to take it slow because of the guards. With me scouting ahead you should be able to go a lot faster." Al was back, and alone. "What about Scully?" "She wanted to be here, but Ziggy's gonna need every kilowatt to keep me running point for you. If she's here we can't work at any distance and you won't be able to go fast enough. Once we're up there I'll bring her back in." "Good. She deserves to be there, and I'm afraid we're going to need her." They rode in silence then. Al had no information to give, and neither one felt much like talking. Sam was scared for himself, they had no idea what would happen if he failed, and just as scared for the two FBI agents. He wasn't sure why, but by now they both felt like friends, and Sam didn't leave his friends in the lurch. It took fifteen minutes of forever to pull onto the shoulder behind Mulder's abandoned car. Sam tried the cell phone one more time, but the buzzing from Mulder's trunk told him how successful he'd be. He couldn't afford a chance call with guards around, so he left the phone with his car. He wouldn't have breath to spare for phone calls anyway. Al took point, as far ahead as he could stay and be in sight, and they traveled. Al would direct Sam, sometimes diverting or stopping him, and they made time. Sam puffed hard, regretting Scully's small frame again, and the time it would take her to tackle this hike, but Al assured him he was overtaking Mulder steadily. It was dark up here by now, on the back side of the mountain. By the time they reached the peak it would be full dark. Sam shut his mind off and climbed, just climbed. ************************* Mulder had come in range of the peak. He'd had to stop several times, frozen, waiting for a guard to pass. There was still enough light that they weren't using night-sight goggles and that fact probably saved him more than once. The last twilit gloom hung to the peaks, warming the scented gloom and the clouds of gnats that swarmed into his eyes. He stood carefully, quietly, and took a moment to simply accept the beauty of the place. It wasn't right to face his fears without taking a piece of this with him. As the last blue-violet light deserted the crest, Fox Mulder let go of the evening and turned to what he had come to find. **************************** "You're almost there, Sam. Take a break and catch your breath, I need to go find the kid and make sure we're still on his track. According to Al, Sam had narrowed Mulder's lead from twenty minutes to less than two. Scully's blood was really pounding in his ears, he felt like he'd taken the trail at a run, and wasn't far wrong at that. Gnats buzzed him, attracted by the sweat that matted the auburn hair and rolled down Sam's face. Al was back. Sam couldn't muster the breath to ask, he just looked at his friend and waited. "Okay, he's close to where you two were the other night. He's under cover of a batch of brambles, I think he's trying to decide on the best route down to the Unidentified Sitting Object." Sam wasn't in the mood for Al's sense of humor. He heaved himself back onto his feet and followed the hologram into the shadows. Lights flared ahead of him, and the hum of generators. The big, military spotlights were back on. Good and bad, it would light Sam's way and confuse the light amplifying goggles the guards wore, but would also make it easier for Mulder to move ahead. Sam drew on reserves he didn't know he had and picked up his pace. ******************* Mulder had been crouched still as stone, in the briars, when he heard the rustling behind him, out of place in a still, dead-calm night. He was careful turning, moving slowly enough not to catch the eye of a watcher, until he could see behind him. Then he froze, appalled. Scully was visible in light reflected down from the canopy. Her pale face was still, focused, as if she were listening to someone he couldn't see. Her face suddenly flickered into alarm, as she spun to her left. His eyes followed hers, his hand blurred as hers did, towards a holster. The crack of the rifle was almost indistinguishable from the sound of his handgun. Scully and the soldier dropped all but simultaneously. Mulder couldn't hear the briars crackle around him as he vaulted out of them to where he'd seen her fall. The ringing in his ears drowned her voice, too, as she smiled at him and said something he didn't think was very complimentary. She was gripping her leg, trying to put enough pressure to keep the wound in her thigh from bleeding so much. He scooped her up and turned, running along the dark lip of the crest where the actinic light cast everything into chiaroscuro, until he was sure they were far enough around that the soldier's friends wouldn't trip over them as they scrambled to his assistance. Mulder knew, instinctively, that they wouldn't be able to help that young man. He might not be the FBI's best gun handler, but that shot had FELT true. He could hear Scully now, as he settled her in the cover of a tangle of mountain laurel. "Damn it, Mulder, what do you think you're playing at? Didn't your Arctic trip convince you that this sort of stunt is stupid?" He had to grin, only Scully would take the time to tick him off while they stood a good chance of coming under fire. He was awfully glad he favored belts and snug jeans over suspenders, his belt made a very good tourniquet for her leg. "To tell you the truth, Scully, this little scene is exactly what I was hoping to avoid by ditching you." The wound was a clean one, gouging the outside of her thigh. No involvement of bone, and the blood was already clotting. He smiled into her eyes (strange feeling, suddenly, like looking at a stranger). She was pale, and probably slightly shocky, but this wound shouldn't be serious. "I thought I was the one who was accident prone," he murmured. He put his hand over her mouth as she got ready to give him another broadside. "Ssshhh. They'll be looking by now." He'd leaned in to whisper in her ear. "Look, do you think you can walk?" He helped her forward, testing the leg. She went a shade paler, if that was possible, but nodded. ******************** A low whine droned, barely below hearing, but getting higher and stronger. Insects and animals were falling silent. The soldiers were too busy spreading out to catch the intruders to notice. ******************** Al had vanished, and was back with Scully. The two of them crouched on Sam's other side. Mulder must have seen his eyes track, because a sudden look of alarm crossed his face. Al was babbling, apologizing for missing the guard who'd shot Sam, worried. Scully was eyeing the wound to see how serious it might or might not be. Mulder had looked away, and was scanning the woods around them. "You can't get clear in this condition. You'll make too much noise and move too slowly." He might have been talking to himself. He looked back at Sam. "And if I carry you they're bound to see us. They'll get us both." Al and Scully were watching him now, and Sam didn't like this train of thought at all. He knew Mulder wouldn't abandon his partner, but what was he getting at? "Look, you only need to get clear of the peak, Scully. Their priority is here." 'You'? What was he talking about? "When they come after me, you break for it. I think they'll have better things to do than come after you." "NO!" Sam heard Al and Scully echo him, but Mulder was gone, out of reach and heading back down towards that blasted ship. "Shit!" Al was punching at the handlink. Scully was trying to keep her partner in sight and Sam was scrambling, painfully, up onto his feet. Mulder was still under cover of the laurel that blanketed this hollow, but Sam heard his Glock. He was making sure they wouldn't miss the decoy. Sam spun, looking helplessly to Al and Scully for help, but Al was fixed on his handlink with a growing look of alarm, while Scully was craning back to try to see through the canopy. Sam hadn't realized in the panic, but it was quiet, too quiet. A sharp wind was rising but it made the only noise besides a growing, tooth-aching whine. Al and Scully suddenly crackled with static, flickered like a bad picture tube, and Scully winked out. Al looked up at Sam, both of them pale and scared. "It's Them, Sam." Al's voice was a choked sound. Ziggy says the probabilities are multiplying faster than she can track, everything's going shitty!" Sam looked down, into the hollow. Everything there was frozen, the few soldiers not looking for him and Mulder seemed petrified down there. Mulder . . . Sam suddenly caught movement on the edge of the cleared basin. Black windbreaker, blue denim. Then it all went as the big spots exploded into sparks and blackness. Al was the only light left, and the wind was a gale now, the droning so loud Sam couldn't think. Al screamed something to him, something about probabilities and electromagnetic frequencies, and warped out of shape and imploded, leaving Sam alone in the dark, with the wind and the noise. Sam's heart was drowned out by the drone, the air smelled like ozone and every hair on his body stood on end. His palms were wet with terror and he'd never remember how he kept his feet against the fear that shook him like a leaf. A sudden punctuation of gunfire in the hollow barely registered. Leaves and dust were thick in the air, like being trapped in a funnel cloud, and Sam screamed with the cold and fear and helplessness of the moment. His shriek might have been a switch. A sudden mind- numbing glare of light crushed everything in the hollow into two dimensional relief. The light was a physical blow, felt more than seen, and Sam sunk his face in his hands to escape it. The image of the hollow, the crumpled ship, and two men caught in the flood of light was burned onto his retinas. Time stood still. Okay, that's all for now. Comments and criticism welcomed. Class dismissed. livengoo@bcvms.bc.edu