Never a Good Sign | By : FaerieFire Category: S through Z > X-Files Views: 2501 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own X-Files, nor any of the characters from it. I do not make any money from the writing of this story. |
Never a Good Sign
By Piper Sargassopan>
Disclaimer: Not mine, never was. Thank CC and the gang for these
characters.
A/N: This one’s for Sallie, who really deserves elegant prose
and well-formulated plot lines. But I hope this brings a smile
to your face nonetheless, Mama.
To everyone else: Don’t hate me. <g>
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
“Ow!” Scully exclaimed.
“Oh. Sorry, Scully,” Mulder mumbled and shifted his elbow so it
wasn’t pinning her hair to the mattress.
The night was not getting any better.
Oh, it all started out pleasant enough. The pair decided to dive
into the annual holiday festivities at the Hoover Building as a
way to lift their spirits after a particularly nasty case. Well,
maybe dive and decided wasn’t quite accurate -- perhaps a
little
less visibly peeved about being dragged to it by their superior
was more like it. They couldn’t be forced, of course. But their
attendance was -- how did Skinner put it? -- “strongly
suggested.”
Mulder whined about it later in the privacy of their office.
Scully kept her irritation to hef, cf, cringing inwardly in
anticipation of what promised to be an inside glimpse of the
depths of hell. They decided to forgo the annoyance of finding
dates and go together to make the most of a bad situation.
“Safety in numbers,” Mulder had said. “Besides, no woman outside
these walls would understand the oddity that is these office
parties.” Scully privately agreed.
It turned out Scully’s fears weren’t unfounded; this was,
indeed, a glimpse of hell. With tinsel.
Bob-From-Accounting (isn’t there at least one in every office?)
took it upon himself to lavish his version of Christmas cheer on
an unsuspecting Scully the moment she entered the crowd. “Agent
Scully,” he murmured in her ear from behind, catching her
completely off-guard. His breath was hot and smelled
suspiciously of Limburger cheese. She spun to face him, appalled
by his utter gall. “Looks like we’re both under the mistletoe.”
He waggled his eyebrows. It was not a pretty sight.
She looked up and confirmed that, yes, they were both under the
mistletoe. Not that this was such a unique feat; there seemed to
be pieces of the hated foliage hanging everywhere. Irrelevantly,
she wondered if this was someone’s idiotic idea of improving
office relations.
Whatever the case, Scully didn’t have a chance to tell him to
take a hike before a loud slap sounded in the room and a
stinging sensation warmed her derriere. Bob-From-Accounting
grinned unapologeticaat hat her.
The little bastard just slapped her ass!
Flushed red from anger, Scully yanked him down to eye level by
his ridiculous reindeer tie with the flashing red nose and told
him under no uncertain terms just what would happen to the
reproductive portion of his anatomy if he ever dared do that
again. Bob-O had the grace to pale and took his leave as soon as
Scully released him, rubbing at his now-chafed neck as he went.
Mulder, of course, had missed the entire exchange, having found
the buffet table.
Glaring around the room in an effort to ward off any other
would-be Don Juans, Scully searched the large space for a table
to retreat to. Preferably one located in a corner, away from all
the hoopla. She ended up settling for one close to the exit. But
not close enough.
Two things became apparent to her as she sat waiting for Mulder
to extract himself from the shiny chafing dishes of food. One:
her colleagues and alcohol do not mix. Two: Ginger Rossdale from
Transportation was likely going to achieve her goal of bedding
every available field agent under fifty in the building before
the New Year tonight. Seriously. There was a pool going.
“Did you leave anything for the others?” Scully asked with a
quirked eyebrow, gesturing at the mountain Mulder just placed on
the table. He beamed at her in answer and she shook her head.
This was the part where she nagged him about his atrocious
eating habits (honestly, cinnamon rolls and spaghetti?) and he
returned by looking wounded and whined that all she ate was
rabbit food. Somehow, the usual exchange held no appeal tonight.
Thank Bob, she thought with venom and murmured another slur
on his parentage.
“Huh?” Mulder asked with his mouth full and eyes wide in
confusion. She sighed. It was pointless getting into it.
“Nothing,” Scully replied and snagged a cinnamon roll off his
plate. She took a larger bite than necessary out of the warm
sweet bread. He smiled around his overstuffed mouth and nodded
his approval.
“Count?” he asked as soon as he’d swallowed.
Scully consulted her watch and groaned. “It’s only been fifteen
minutes.”
He muttered a curse and moodily dug back into his plate.
Concentrated as he was on the task at hand, he never saw Scully
stiffen.
Yes, Ginger Rossdale was on the prowl -- and was stalking toward
their table. “Agent Mulder,” she said in her annoying, simpering
tones and laid a familiar hand on his shoulder. Mulder turned
around and, Scully was satisfied to see, looked both surprised
and appalled. Ginger was Scully’s basic nightmare with her
runway-model legs and long, glossy chestnut hair. But she’d been
around the block -- several times. In fact, she’d been circling
that bad boy for years. It pleased Scully to no end that Mulder
was turned off by the woman practically sitting in his lap.>
Many tortured moments later, Ginger dropped her eyes
coquettishly and whispered into Mulder’s ear loud enough for
Scully to hear that she was going to “powder her nose.” Scully
snorted. Who the hell said that anymore? But the important thing
was that the phrase carried her out of Scully’s sight.
She grinned. “You’ve btargtargeted.”
Mulder pushed his plate away, appetite on indefinite hiatus.
“We’re wasting time talking about it, Scully. Let’s go.” He
stood up and rounded the table to her side.
She stifled a laugh. “Mulder, we can’t just go--“
“Scully, there’s a very real part of me that wants to cower in
the corner and cry for my mommy. That woman has fangs and I’m
afraid for my mortal soul. Now let’s go!”
She did laugh now, but complied. They were out of the room
before Ginger even knew they’d gone without her.
Thus, they’d found themselves at The Crow Bar (Don’t Caw, Come
In), which was the only nearby place open on Christmas Eve,
downing strawberry margaritas (her favorite) and Guinness drafts
(his favorite). “You can’t leave me after a traumatic experience
like that,” he’d insisted. So there they were.
One cheerful patron was kind enough to play “Christmas Comes But
Once a Year (Or Else We’d All Just Shoot Ourselves) on the juke
box. Scully decided she wasn’t quite drunk enough to appreciate
the biting sarcasm of that particular ditty yet and slid down
her stool to make a few selections of her own. Then she ordered
another margarita to wait out the remaining songs.
After the last strains of “Merry Christmas (Screw the Holidays)
faded, Scully’s first song began. By then, she was tipsy enough
to enjoy the irreverent musical stylings of the last artist and
tipped her head to the man she’d seen select them. She was
almost sad to hear them end.
“Who the hell played Elton John?” Mulder queried, revived from
his brooding examination of the beer mug in front of him. Scully
hopped down from her stool as soon as Sir Elton crooned the
words, “Blue jean baby. L.A. lady” and yanked drunkenly on
Mulder’s arm.
“I did. C’mon,” she slurred, “You owe me a dance, Partner.”
Mulder frowned. “Wha for?”
Scully rolled her eyes, as if the reason were obvious. “Your
girlfriend turned my stomach against my ci’mon roll with all
that ‘sgustingly blatant innuendo. I think the least you can do
is dance with me.”
<
He
He relented and they made their way to the dance floor, which
truth be told was nothing more than a small clearing between the
juke box and the jumble of scuffed tables in front of it. The
floor itself was coated with a questionable-looking layer of God
knew what.
The pair barely moved to the music, more hugging with a bit of a
sway than anything else. Of course, in their minds their dance
was of Fred-and-Gingerian proportions. Drunkenness is bliss.
Mulder lowered his mouth to coo in Scully’s ear, “I thought you
enjoyed innuendo.” The words slid richly down her spine in the
most pleasing way. It was nothing like Bob’s damp and rancid
attentions. She shivered. Surprised by her unexpected reaction,
he held her tighter and rested his chin on the top of her head.
Scully was never one to miss a great opportunity when it
presented itself. She snuggled into Mulder’s embrace and sighed
her content. “You look incredible tonight, Scully,” Mulder
whispered into her ear as the music began to swell. Never mind
that she was in her usual ‘uniform’ of a black skirt and white
While AFF and its agents attempt to remove all illegal works from the site as quickly and thoroughly as possible, there is always the possibility that some submissions may be overlooked or dismissed in error. The AFF system includes a rigorous and complex abuse control system in order to prevent improper use of the AFF service, and we hope that its deployment indicates a good-faith effort to eliminate any illegal material on the site in a fair and unbiased manner. This abuse control system is run in accordance with the strict guidelines specified above.
All works displayed here, whether pictorial or literary, are the property of their owners and not Adult-FanFiction.org. Opinions stated in profiles of users may not reflect the opinions or views of Adult-FanFiction.org or any of its owners, agents, or related entities.
Website Domain ©2002-2017 by Apollo. PHP scripting, CSS style sheets, Database layout & Original artwork ©2005-2017 C. Kennington. Restructured Database & Forum skins ©2007-2017 J. Salva. Images, coding, and any other potentially liftable content may not be used without express written permission from their respective creator(s). Thank you for visiting!
Powered by Fiction Portal 2.0
Modifications © Manta2g, DemonGoddess
Site Owner - Apollo