Title: Giving Thanks by Vickie Moseley
Summary: Just a little Thanksgiving Story.
Rating: PG
Spoiler: FTF, mere mentions of The Beginning and Triangle
Category: V, A, UST (safe for all)
Disclaimer: On the Twelve Days of X files, my true love gave to
me, a legal document stating that I refuse to infringe on any
copyrights.
Archive: Yes
Dedication: To my kids, who did another _bang up_ Thanksgiving
Dinner. Thank you, sweethearts!
Comments to me: vmoseley@fgi.net
Giving Thanks
by Vickie Moseley
vmoseley@fgi.net
Airport Ramada Limited
Denver, Colorado
November 26, 1998
10:13 pm
Dana Scully juggled the tray, trying to keep all the items
from
sloshing together. She stood before the door with a puzzled
expression. She called out "Mulder" as loud as she
dared. It was
after 10 pm, and the motel seemed either largely deserted or the
guests were asleep. Finally, in desperation, she kicked the door
a
couple of times with her foot.
After a moment of shuffling, the door opened. Before she had a
chance to enter, her partner had already gone back to his 'lair'
in
the far corner, hunched over a yellow legal pad at what resembled
a
table-turned-desk.
"Mulder," she said after setting out the dishes on
the low dresser
and turning down the blaring television. "Come on. Time to
eat."
"Not hungry," came the growl from the darkened corner.
"Come on, I got good stuff here. Turkey, stuffing, I
think it might
be cornbread. I know you like oysters, but this far inland . .
."
"Scully, please, I'm trying to think over here."
She sat down on the edge of the bed and frowned. "Mulder,
the
only reason the doctor let you out of the hospital was because
you
promised to rest and _eat_ something."
He turned in his chair to shoot her a cool look. Pulling
himself up
to a standing position, he limped over to the dresser, looked
over
the selections, and grabbed a roll. Waving it like a trophy, he
then
limped back to the chair in the corner and nibbled on it while he
wrote.
"That's it! This time I'm calling the paramedics,"
she roared,
jumping to her feet to reach for the phone resting on the bedside
table. Distance was against her, and he got there first, yanking
the
plug from the wall. They stood there, glaring at each other for a
full five minutes.
"Mulder, you haven't eaten in three days. You're
exhausted. You
haven't slept . . ."
"I slept at the hospital," he said over her continued narration.
"and the doctor said that even though it was a mild
concussion, you
should still take it _very_ easy. And your leg should be elevated
or
it's going to swell."
He sat down in tired defeat. It had been a hellish week. On
Sunday
night, they were interrupted from their respective quiet weekends
to
come to the office. There, AD Kersh had abruptly ordered them to
catch a flight for Denver, where a serial killer was giving the
local
Bureau office the slip. Scully had objected, and been shot down
for
her attempt. Mulder had taken it stoically. He was more used to
the really shitty assignments, he told her on the plane.
He'd completed the profile at 3 in the morning on Tuesday. On
Wednesday night, they had laid a trap for the killer. But their
prey
was a step ahead. The trap backfired and one agent and one
member of the local PD were dead. Mulder had been injured,
receiving a blow to the head that left him unconscious for 4
hours
and 14 stitches in his right leg. On Thursday morning, against
medical advice, he'd checked out of the hospital and had been
working on his revised profile every since.
>From his chair, he took a good look at the dishes laid out
on the
dresser and a perplexed look came to his face. "Scully, that
looks
like . . ." To Scully's amusement, it was like watching a
light bulb
go on in his head. His eyes opened to the size of saucers, his
jaw
dropped an inch. "It's Thanksgiving," he said sadly.
"Scully, geez,
I'm sorry. You should have said something earlier! You should be
home, your mom was having a big dinner at her place, wasn't
she?"
Scully would have felt more triumphant if her partner hadn't
decided to take the opportunity to wallow in some more gold
plated guilt. "Mulder, I called Mom last night, from the
hospital.
At the time, I knew I wasn't going to be home today, but I
thought
I'd be sitting there, waiting for you to wake up. Anyway, don't
worry about it, Mom knows it comes with the territory."
"Your brother Bill won't be happy," Mulder noted with a frown.
"Bill can suck eggs," Scully responded with a smile.
"Now, will
you eat something?" Not waiting for him to answer, she
quickly
filled a china plate with a little bit of everything the kitchen
had left
over and served it to her partner with a white linen napkin. She
reached into her handbag and produced two soda cans. "Would
you prefer white wine with your dinner, sir," she grinned,
popping
the top of the 7-Up and pouring it into a glass of ice.
"I'd prefer 'red' actually," he said as he wiggled
his eyebrows and
nodded toward her own Coke.
"Uh-uh, if you won't sleep, the least I can do is keep
you away
from caffeine," she shook her head and poured her Coke into
a
glass.
"Uh, Scully, I don't think I can, er, eat all of
this," Mulder said with
a worried expression.
Her heart went out to him, but she stood firm. "Mulder,
just take it
slow. We'll eat a little, talk a little. Before you know it,
you'll be
member of the clean plate club," she grinned.
"Did your mom have that? A 'clean plate club'?"
Mulder asked,
spearing a forkful of stuffing.
"To an extent. She never forced food on us. Now they've
finally
figured out that forcing a child to eat everything on their
plates is a
contributing factor in obesity. But Mom had a rule. If you put it
on your plate, you had to eat it. And most of the time, when she
introduced us to new foods, it was fun, so we didn't balk at
them.
When Dad was at sea, we'd have 'international' nights." At
his
curious look, she continued.
"She found the idea in a _Redbook_ or _Better Homes and
Gardens_ I think. Anyway, Saturday night, every other week, we'd
'sample' a new cuisine. Japanese, Thai, Malaysian, Tex-mex before
it was the rage. Remember, we were in base housing and it was
easy to find new recipes among the other families. It got so
popular, we'd ask to invite our friends over on those
nights."
Mulder smiled at his partner's story. "We did something
sort of
like that. When we'd go on vacation, instead of eating all fast
food,
Mom would get the local phone book and find a 'different'
restaurant. Sometimes it was just home cooking, other times it
was
pretty exotic. Since we were already in an adventurous mood, we
didn't mind experimenting." He smiled to himself at a half
hidden
memory.
"What was your favorite Thanksgiving food?" she
asked, getting up
to get some more cranberry sauce.
He chewed on his smile. "You'll make fun of me," he
said with a
feigned pout.
"Mulder! You know me better than that. I'll only make fun
of you
if you truly deserve it," she teased with a grin. "Come
on, out with
it. I have ways of gaining that information, you know."
"I wish you'd never met my mother," he sighed. "OK. Squash."
She dropped her roll and stared at him. "Squash?"
He nodded, and picked up his fork again. "Squash.
Buttered
squash. I would eat two or three helpings of it every year."
"But Mulder . . . squash is actually _good_ for
you," Scully
muttered breathlessly. "I mean, the potatoes, swimming in
fat
heavy gravy, sure. Or the sugar laden cranberries, you bet, but
_squash_! I'm, I'm . . . speechless!"
"Yeah, well, I outgrew it," he said dismissively.
"So, Ms Perfect,
what was your favorite food. As. A. Child." Unconsciously,
he got
up and dished out more food onto his plate.
"Pumpkin pie, no contest. And whipped cream. Not that
non-dairy
crap, either. The real McCoy, heavy cream and sugar and my
Mom's beaters set on high speed. I could eat my weight in
it," she
sighed dreamily.
"You know, you can make squash pie and it tastes just
like
pumpkin," he grinned widely at her.
"Heretic," she threw back and then hid her laugh
behind her napkin.
"OK, best Thanksgiving ever. How old were you?"
He thought about it for a moment. "I was eight. My
Grandma
Mulder had Thanksgiving at her place. She lived in West Tisbury,
the house my Dad moved to after the divorce. Sam was four and
and old enough to eat at the big table, so I didn't get stuck at
a
'kid' table to keep her company. We ate on English china and
drank out of crystal and I never thought I'd seen so much food in
my life. And Grandma made me my _own_ squash. A little green
butternut squash that she baked special and served just to
me."
Scully was overcome with the tenderness of his memory.
"She
must have been a special lady, your Grandmother."
He nodded, lost in another time. "She was. She always
made me
feel . . . loved."
"My Mom's parents were gone before I was born and my
Grandmother Scully died when I was five. I don't remember her.
But my Grandpa Jim, he was always there. I remember, one
Thanksgiving, I was in my residency and I couldn't get the
evening
off to go home for dinner. He brought dinner to me. Sat in the
resident's lounge and ate with me. Brought me two pieces of
pumpkin pie." She grew quiet and sighed. "He died the
next
spring."
"Worst Thanksgiving," Mulder called out.
Scully shook her head. "Mulder, let's not play this game . . ."
"Come on, Scully. Don't worry, I'm not getting morose. I
won't
let us fall," he promised.
She looked at him with suspicion, but drew in a deep breath.
"Worst Thanksgiving ever. The one I never saw." She put
her
now empty plate back on the dresser. "And I already know
your's
Mulder, so you don't have to . . ."
"The same one," he said, loud enough for her to hear
over her own
voice.
"Mulder," she said, low and warning.
"I'm serious here, Scully. I know you think it's the
Thanksgiving
after Sam's abduction, but we were all still thinking she would
come home and to tell you the truth, I don't remember it. But the
year you were gone . . ." His voice was tight and low and
Scully
busied herself with the empty dishes rather than look at him.
"I'm glad you reminded me it was Thanksgiving,
Scully," he said
quietly, coming up behind her and giving her a hug before
dropping
his empty plate on the tray. "I would have hated not
acknowledging the day."
"Mulder, we're on a horrible case, you were injured last
night,
we're stuck in another nondescript motel eating restaurant
leftovers
for dinner, this hardly feels like a 'traditional
Thanksgiving," Scully
protested, but leaned back to wrap his arms around her again.
"I almost lost you this year, Scully. Twice. But I
didn't. I'd say I
have a lot to be thankful for." He leaned his head down and
kissed
the top of her head.
It was her turn. "The Bureau could have separated us
twice this
year. Transfered me to Salt Lake City, or worse. And you could
have died in Antarctica, or when you decided to go swimming in
the Bermuda Triangle," she pinched his arm for spite.
"Or last
night." She turned around and hugged him tightly. "I
have a lot to
be thankful for, too."
Mulder was relishing the feel of her arms around him, but he
couldn't stifle a huge yawn.
She smiled at him, hugged him again, then led him over to the
bed.
"Shoes off," she ordered and helped him comply.
"Lie back," she
added and shoved him down onto the bed.
"Are you coming on to me, Agent Scully?" he chuckled.
She looked at him tenderly. "Not tonight. Tonight you
need sleep.
I"m leaving the door open, in case you need me." He
nodded and
rolled over on to his side. She stood there, waiting for him to
fall
asleep before tiptoeing to the connecting door.
"Scully," he called out.
She stopped in midstep. "Yeah, Mulder?"
"Next year, find some squash, OK?"
She smiled and shook her head. "I'll do my best." As
she flicked
off the light, she could hear him snoring softly. She crawled
into
bed and was soon fast asleep.
the end.
Vickie
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Season's Greetings
Peace and Joy
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