jowls: (Default)
old man mulder. ([personal profile] jowls) wrote2023-02-04 07:31 pm
Entry tags:

open post.


Leave prompts, you'll get nonsense.
rockitlike: (with dark clouds on their way)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 02:43 am (UTC)(link)
Sometimes she feels like this is how she's spent most of her life, lingering over coffee in a thousand interchangeable diners with Mulder. It's made her restless, now and then, to think that; now, it's a source of peace. The daylight and the analog comforts are reassuring after the evening's misadventures, but more than anything it's his proximity that puts her at ease. They sit, and time ticks by, and her mind wanders pleasantly until he speaks up.

The firing of mirror neurons and her matching yawn delay her answer a moment.

"I could use a week in a remote spa with nothing more high-tech than a radio," she says wistfully, a smile curling around the words. There is, she knows, a lot to be done. While not technically a crime scene, her condo is going to need a similar amount of attention: glass replacements, the fireplace needs to be checked, the refrigerator lobotomized. Probably she should call a lawyer; you can't charge an AI with attempted murder but there's got to be someone she can sue for whatever insurance won't cover. The cherry on the cake, she needs to pick up a new vibrator, stat.

So much to do.

"A nap would be a nice start," she reasons instead.
rockitlike: (from the waist down)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 04:42 am (UTC)(link)
"Just crickets and owls and squirrels crashing through the undergrowth, louder than traffic," she sighs, with a wry twitch of a smile. She lets herself lean against him, just a little.

She should go home, get a hotel, sweep some shattered glass into a pile.

But instead here she is, looking at the way their fingers still fit together over all these years.

"There are some calls I need to make."

That's a simple fact. She can't leave the place wide-open, questionably safe, the hair-trigger alarm ready to shriek at friend or foe alike. But she looks up him through her lashes, through the tangling frizz of her hair.

"Can we swing by mine--? I could pack a bag."
rockitlike: (once the sun is gone)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 05:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Something is definitely wrong with her, because the idea of a night camping in the woods with rabid wildlife and too much rain and Fox Mulder sounds brilliant, even though in her experience that usually ends up with a quarantine or a hospital stay or a barely-averted apocalypse. She takes a moment longer than he does to say one more polite goodbye to their waitress, tuck her phone away, and ask herself one last time whether it matters if this is a good idea.

Packing a bag, after all, implies a stay. A nebulous amount of time spent cohabiting with the man she left, a man she's arguably dating. Since they started working together, she's been endlessly careful not to give him the wrong impression-- as though there were some right impression to give.

And she could make some practical excuse, that it's ridiculous to spend money on a hotel when she's got other options, that he's just doing her a favor and there's plenty of room in the house-- she could sleep on the couch-- but she's not going to, and she's too tired to argue herself out of taking him up on the offer.

"It's a nice place," she agrees. "Though I'm rethinking how much glass there is. I'd offer to give you the nickel tour, but."

She shrugs, and shoots him a small smile.
rockitlike: (and now the sun won't shine)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 07:15 pm (UTC)(link)
It's always felt a little strange, having a place Mulder has never seen. But what was she supposed to do? Invite him over for dinner-- I know we broke it off, come see what my life is without you? Impossible. Ridiculous.

(And why is that? Was she worried it would hurt him, to see her move on? Or that it would hurt her, to let him see the way she lived on her own; the perfectly-manicured, high-end place that could have been anyone's.)

She fixes his phone with a wary look, but it fades, eventually; she relaxes against the seat, looking out the window. This, in a way, still feels more familiar than the home they're heading to.

"Is it strange--"

Yes, it's strange; that's the wrong question. It isn't a question. She pauses and tries again. Less tentative. This isn't a hypothetical.

"I had a good time," she says, more softly, looking up at him. "Aside from the part where everything with a battery or plug tried to kill us, I mean."
rockitlike: (how to make a garden grow)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
It shouldn't feel so significant to say. They went out with the intention of having a nice time-- a nice date, it was a date-- so why is it strange to admit that they did? (Aside from the barely-averted robot apocalypse.) Twenty years ago she would have blushed. She doesn't now; though she does glance away, gaze unfocused out the window until he adds that bit.

The curiosity it sparks feels prurient; she sneaks a look at him.

They're both adults. It's silly to keep tiptoeing around the years between them. But it still takes her a moment to work up the nerve to ask, partly because she realizes that touching the topic is potentially a jumbo-sized can of worms, and it's not like she can stay at the condo if it goes south.

"....Have you been?"

It's half a question, but Mulder usually knows what she means with less than that to go on. What has he been up to, since she's been gone?
rockitlike: (and now the sun won't shine)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 08:35 pm (UTC)(link)
The problem has never been disinterest. Of course she wondered about him-- and she'd hoped he was doing well. Or at least she'd tried to hope he was doing well, that he was happy; admittedly the thought of him dating was never one she wanted to consider too closely, and even now there's an irrational stab of jealousy she knows she's not entitled to feel. No amount of therapy or mindfulness or Mulder-free orgasms has ever quite managed to quash it.

"That's good," she says, and immediately regrets how patronizing it sounds; she means it earnestly. It's never been good for him to be so alone. (And, yeah, it's her fault in part that he was; she won't deny it. But she couldn't have stayed, if she was only staying so he wouldn't be by himself; that wasn't healthy for either of them, wallowing in the damp, drizzly November of the soul. She'd had to go to sea.)

The strategic move here is to volunteer some information of her own; make him feel heard and offer some vulnerable admission, but on her own terms. Control the narrative, make it sound... however it would best sound, she supposes. Successful and dignified and sanitized, like her currently uninhabitable home.

Instead she lets the silence hang, offering him the chance to pry if he wants to, or to avoid the topic; but she leans towards the center of the car, reaches to set a hand on his arm.
rockitlike: (from the waist down)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-05 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
She wouldn't fault him for being bitter, if he was. There's really no way to pick up and leave that doesn't result in some bad feelings; she believed, and still believes, it was for the best. But that doesn't mean it was easy or even quantifiably good. If anything she's been impressed at how kind, how civil, he's been. Even when they started working together again; she'd half-expected him to lash out, to be sarcastic and closed-off the way he was the very first time they met.

And sometimes she thinks she understands what it means, that he isn't. The deep-seated feelings that mean after everything he still has a little tenderness left in him for her, even at her worst, and his worst, and under the worst circumstances. It's the reason, now and then, he scares the shit out of her.

"Too bad," she says, with a wry note. "Rock climbing is great exercise."

Checking in with herself, she decides she's not sorry she started this conversation-- though oddly she's a little sorry they're having it in the car. She could have waited; they could be on their beat-up couch with beers, a stolen pair of his thick socks on her feet because she doesn't have anything warm enough anymore, his Navajo blanket over her shoulders. Their knees and elbows touching.

"In quantity or quality?" she asks, rhetorically, a little sarcastically, fighting a wave of feelings too tangled to easily sort. Embarrassment, jealousy, an overpowering want to put her head on his shoulder.

"I tried the apps a little, which-- well, not great for a lasting connection." Everyone loves a cougar but no one wants to keep her around long-term. "Let some friends set me up a few times... A few dates with one of the pharmaceutical reps, but I couldn't shake the feeling she was going to try to sell me something eventually." She bites her lip-- he's been honest, she ought to do the same.

"I almost let Tad take me to dinner." But nothing since then-- which, hopefully, he can infer from that being the last on the list.

She waits a moment, takes a breath, lets the last thing loose.

"It reminds me of dating in the mid-90's, actually."
faithfulskeptic: (046)

[personal profile] faithfulskeptic 2023-02-05 10:05 pm (UTC)(link)
It's not her proudest moment. She's only telling him because it feels like hiding it would be worse. Tad was handsome enough; tall, well established, and interested. He'd flirted with her in that respectful way that felt just inappropriate enough to be exciting. And-- this part she wouldn't admit aloud under any circumstance-- it mattered that he thought well of Mulder. He'd invited her into his limo with champagne and it had seemed like the sane choice at the time.

And Mulder had called and interrupted, and really, that's the part that made something in her flutter happily.

She has a reward for his good behavior.

"I went out because I knew I was supposed to want to, and I was always a little relieved when it went nowhere."

The best part was always when he called her, with some crazy story or a dead body or a flimsy excuse. She'd wondered at first if he was trying to sabotage her; but eventually it hadn't mattered why. It only mattered that he needed her.
faithfulskeptic: (• unusually unguarded)

[personal profile] faithfulskeptic 2023-02-06 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
You can't say she didn't make the effort, back then; she recalls lace blouses, complicated hairdos, makeup tips that looked so elegant in magazines and made her look seventeen and lost when she tried them.

Even if it's a little impersonal, this is still her home; she can't help standing a moment to regard it, annoyed and sad about the state of it, as she steps out of the car. What happened isn't Mulder's fault, really, but this will cost more than ten percent on a blob fish.

"That would be great, if you would. Uh-- help yourself to anything in the kitchen, if you want, though I wouldn't trust the water dispenser right now."

She's offering him free reign of the house, really. Hard to have any secrets when there's so little of yourself imprinted on a place.

"I'll double- check the fireplace and then-- I shouldn't be long."

It sounds reasonable, she thinks, and calm; no trace of the panicky internal debate on what to bring, how long to stay, when she'll come back. Whether she wants to go. Whether she'll want to leave. Mulder would be a gentleman and take the couch himself if she asked him to. If he offers, makes a joke about staying up with porn or Plan Nine, it won't be a shock.

But she thinks, maybe, that's not what she wants.

She kicks aside some larger shards of glass as they go inside, a useless gesture considering the breath of the damage.
faithfulskeptic: (• catholicism intensifies)

[personal profile] faithfulskeptic 2023-02-06 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
The wine mostly goes to her book club, when it's her turn to host; very few dates make it this far. Scully has always preferred to go home with someone else, side-stepping the need to kick them out if they overstay her attention span.

"I guess I ought to, since I can't exactly lock up-- can you get the bookshelf in the corner of the living room?"

Scully has always tended towards a cozy kind of minimalism, and a career spent traveling plus their years on the run have taught her to travel light. She fills a duffel, figuring it's standard enough not to seem presumptuous; she chooses things that are either easy to launder or can be worn more than once, and folds in one pair of pyjamas in case she loses her nerve on the plan to steal Mulder's shirts. She could do a week easy, two with a load of washing, and if things aren't fixed up after that she'll reasses. There's a little fireproof safe with her important documents and her paranoid stash of cash under the bed, and what little jewelry she keeps is easy enough to tuck into a pocket of her bag.

The bookcase doesn't hold much, and not all of it is books. There's her father's copy of Moby Dick, and a second paperback copy bought on the run. Her mother's Bible and Melissa's favorite tarot deck. A couple of other old books, some signed Jose Chung editions, and an ancient VHS-- Superstars of the Super Bowl. None of it valuable, but all in all, the most precious stuff she has here.

Eventually she emerges, laptop bag slung over her shoulder and the rest in either hand. It feels suddenly like too much. She fights back the urge to ask if it's okay, to carry all this with her. She isn't ready to hear him say it is.
rockitlike: (with dark clouds on their way)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-06 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
There's so little she still keeps with her from the old days; most of this, her mother managed to keep in storage. She knows he'll see the tape; maybe it will put him at ease, a little, to think of her thinking of him. Lining it up with her other peculiar treasures. Or something.

It's strange to pack all her things into the back of his car, mostly because there's a part of her-- too large a part of her-- that thinks, this is fine; she could leave without looking back, not really. The bits and pieces of art, the rest of her wardrobe, the appliances and furniture-- she could live without that. She doesn't want to ditch it, but she wouldn't morn it.

The firemen come and go; they do a walk-through, they take her information, they get a basic statement, and leave her with recommendations, with numbers to call, with a house that's still in large part shattered glass. It's about what she expected. It's fine.

And then they go.

The ride is familiar, and fairly quiet. She thinks it's not a bad sort of quiet. And when they pull up-- it's a normal reaction, it's just the familiar surroundings, her brain telling her body home out of a habit that hasn't quite broken.

"The place looks good," she says approvingly. He's been taking care of it.
rockitlike: (but do you find the change in season)

[personal profile] rockitlike 2023-02-07 01:55 am (UTC)(link)
Chartreuse is almost too awful to joke about. She scoffs at the thought, but there's a laugh in it too; she shoots him a look which he probably can't see, but they've known each other long enough that he should be able to feel it, she thinks.

Escape hatch or not, she feels perfectly at ease, coming into his space. Mulder's tastes might be questionable from a fashion perspective, but they're comfortable. (It doesn't hurt, either, how familiar it feels; even if the furniture is new, the vibe is the same, and the past few months have made it easier to remember the good times than the bad ones.)

She hangs her coat on a hook on the wall, and drops her bags in an out-of-the-way spot, putting off the question of what to do with them. Should she unpack? Does she live out of her suitcase, like she's at a motel? She doesn't want to give the wrong impression, and since she has no idea what the right impression is, the whole thing can just... wait. For now, she goes to put on tea water without thinking twice about it.

"Still thinking about a nap?"

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