"Called To Rise." 2/2 by Joylynn Wing aljoyw@a-znet.com I march over to the pastel tinted wall, and after gathering my bearings I follow the other room numbers to my destiny. I walk slowly allowing the soft, caressing sounds of this environment to envelop me. The tapping of my footsteps fall into step with the lub-dub of my heart and finally, I come to the end of my journey. Room number 25. I trace the black engraved numbers with the index finger of my right hand, careful to note the tattoo, which seems to be of the same shade. The surface cuts gentle ridges into my soft skin, the moment marked indelibly within my psyche for all time. A sense of awe overcomes me and I nearly lose my cool once again right then and there. But I shove that down deep where it will sit until a more appropriate time. In spite of my emotionalism, I will remain strong. This is sort of a spiritual pilgrimage for me and I will not sully the moment with such nonsense. I knock on the doorframe, and await a response. None arrives so I step in and walk forward. "Hello?" The room is brightly lit, the glimmering sunshine glittering of the gleaming white tiles like moonlight off a pool of water. I look about, the small, smartly appointed space and its proud contents challenge me to investigate its mysteries which it offers humbly. I walk up to the wall nearest me, my soft soled shoes thudding softly upon the impossibly smooth floor. Carefully framed pictures lined the eggshell colored surface. Pictures of heroes long dead, pictures of ceremonies celebrating proud moments. Medals of every sort are neatly hung next to the heroes, almost a shrine of their accomplishments. I have seen these individuals, immortalized forever in the textbooks which expound their exploits: which in the end, freed a whole world from the brink of annihilation. "So, you are the new girl." I hear as I turn around to meet the one that I have emulated all of these years. My eyes are stunned by what they behold. The textbooks didn't do proper justice. Even age hasn't faded the greatness, which sits there. A slight figure sits in a well-padded wheelchair. Impossibly blue eyes glance at me from under dark auburn lashes, belaying their careful assessment of me. Her once bright red hair; the color that I have been so envious of all of these years now is white with streaks of faded red. "Yes, I am. I am Mira Gentile." I say, as I offer my hand to her. My hand shakes slightly in nervousness and I force myself to calm down. It isn't every day that I get to meet a real hero. She wheels herself over to me, offering her slight hand in gesture. Her hand is graceful, unlined and youthful unlike the fine lines which are indelibly etched into her pale white skin. I take it and her strength is incredible, inconsistent to the frail body to which it belongs. I swear that her hand radiates a heat which I have never felt before. I know that I am experiencing the indomitable force of her spirit, the driving force which helped to liberate mankind. She brings her hand back into her lap, folding the fingers together gracefully as she tilts her head in thought. Her hair is still quite similar in style as it was before, the smooth bob slips and falls into her face, obscuring her swirling blue eyes from my view. She reaches up and tucks the smooth lock behind her small ear. She smiles softly as she mumbles, "beautiful name, very unusual. I am..." "You are Dr. Dana Scully. You are the one." I look at her and sit down, wanting to be able to speak to her eye to eye. I study her carefully, her eyes showing me all that I have ever needed to know. I see strength, extreme intelligence, honesty, and integrity. But I also see the passion and the pain that lies just beneath the surface. "Please, I was one of many. One of the many dedicated, selfless individuals who did what they had to do." She looks over at the wall and gestures with her hands. Even in the whisky smooth dulcet tones of graciousness, I can hear the sorrow which lurks there. This was not how I pictured her to be. Heroes are always smiling and happy in their accomplishments, they are not supposed to look like this. "We read about you, and the others in school. What you did was...was..." I try to convey my deep respect for what she has done but my feeble words fail me. I let my words fall off, not wanting to make myself look like a bigger fool. I glance down at my skirt, fumbling with the neatly pressed hem with my clumsy fingers. "Nothing," I hear her deny softly as she begins to wheel her chair over to the pictures which her eyes never seem to leave. Her hands move the wheels flowingly, the squeaks of the spinning spokes filling the silence which swallows the deep even breaths which we are both taking. "I did nothing, that others didn't do also." Her voice is strong, almost lyric in quality. "You are a hero, you have won so many awards. We all owe our lives, our freedom to you." I raise my hand up to gesture to the numerous commendations neatly arranged on the plain wall. Doesn't she even realize that she is a hero? Doesn't she even realize what she has done for humanity? It is as if it doesn't mean a thing to her. She looks at me, her face emotionless. "You owe me nothing...they are the true heroes. They are the ones that you supposedly owe. They are the ones that sacrificed it all. I sacrificed nothing. I lived, they died..." She reaches up and trails her trembling fingers along the smooth shiny surface of the frame. She may think that she has fooled me. She may think that I can't see the pain that she trying so hard to deny, but I can. As a nurse, I am trained to minister to the body as well as to the spirit. I may not be able to do anything for her on the outside, but I maybe can help on the inside. My clinical mind goes into diagnostic mode, descriptions of what I hear in her voice abound... Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Trauma induced Dementia Depression All of them seem right, but none really seem to fit. I need to understand what she is feeling in order for me to better help her. I slide to the edge of the bed, raising my hands out in front of me as I plead, "but you... " "I lost my use of my legs in the war for independence," she interrupts curtly as she gestures down to them as she shrugs. "They were a small price to pay for the millions which now live free...." She then takes one long last look at the momentos and then turns to face me, her face suddenly looking tired and confused. I can see all the pain that she carries inside of her, it oozes to the surface like beads of sweat. I wish that I can take away all of her pain, but I know logically that I am just losing my objectivity. But who wouldn't? "All of them are...are...." I ask in a trembling voice as tears sting by vision and make my head spin. I can't seem to finish what I was trying to say, I seem to choke on the words like a bad meal. "Dead... Yes, they are." A lone tear falls from her fathomless blue eyes and it steaks down the lines of her face. "They were all wonderful people, giving people. People who were not afraid to stand up for what they believed in." Oh God, if I do not get my mind off all of this tragedy, I am going to lose it. So I stand up and walk over to that wall, letting my eyes see for myself what my heart and soul should know. Such life once existed here. Such heart. True heroes dedicated to sacrificing it all for what they believed in. Can I ever live up to what they represent? I suddenly feel small and insignificant to the whole. As I valiantly blink back my tears, I come across one picture with her in it. One picture where she is standing next to someone that I also remember. Someone also ingrained into my memory with a brand etched in fire. "This is Fox Mulder, isn't it? Oh my God. The pictures in the text book did not do him justice." I take the picture down and look at it. Bright hazel eyes stare back at me, their depths only hinting at the man behind the legend. Then I look at her, the grace of youth bringing out the very best in her. And as I study it carefully, I see it. Yes, 'It'. That special something that one never expects to see in a photo. Love...unconditional love and acceptance. She loved this man and he loved her. I walk over to her and carefully place it in her lap, as I kneel beside her. As she looks it over carefully, a bright smile creeps across her face, dimples and all. Yes, I was right. I have always been perceptive about these things. "Yes, he was handsome," she offers as she drags her fingertip across the glass. "And stubborn, lewd, opinionated, sarcastic and crazy as hell. But he was also the most wonderfully caring, dedicated, selfless, intelligent, perceptive man that I have ever had the pleasure of knowing. " "Ah, the tragic hero. So what was his Achilles' heel?" I look down at him, trying to get a better sense of the man. He would seem to fit the part. Although books are few and far between, I have been blessed by the opportunity to look at a few of the classics. I must say that much of it I do not understand, I guess the lack of a good formal education had seen to that, but I did find that I was quite entertained. "Not what, who. I was. I was Mulder's fatal flaw." I look up, my jaw hanging in mid air somewhere near my sternum. Did I just hear what I thought that I heard? "Throughout our whole time together," she continues as she sighs in realization. "I was the one who they used to get to him. They knew how to pull his strings... and they would hurt me to really hurt him. He didn't care what happened to him. It was all about me. He would have gone to the ends of the earth for me. In fact he did. And in the end, to repay him for all that he did, I was the one who ended up killing him." "What?" I snort as I nearly fall back on my heels. What secrets has this woman been carrying for all of these years? Why now, and why me most importantly, has she chosen to reveal this information? I close my eyes and try to steady the incessant pounding of my heart. Whatever she has to say, I will hear it. I owe her this and so much more. She puts her hands down on the arm-rests of her chair and grips it tightly, the knuckles turning white almost instantly. "It was the day of the final assault upon their last stronghold. We had been successful in administering the Trojan Horse-" "Trojan Horse?" "A virus which we engineered which would effectively kill off the embryonic versions of the aliens. It was very successful but we had been unable to eradicate this last assimilation station. I guess that we had killed off so many of them over the last few months that they weren't taking any chances on this station." "We and the rebels had come up with a two pronged approach to the situation. A well-armed distraction coupled with a small advance team which would infiltrate and infect the system." "We were all there; the Lone Gunmen, Skinner, Mulder and me. The plan executed flawlessly; the moles had been able to get in undetected. However, due to a miscalculation on our part, we ended up getting pinned down, not able to escape. We knew that we had precious little time. When the system malfunctioned, the ship would lift off and self- destruct. We were trapped until the advance team arrived. They gave us cover, so that we could escape." She stops and closes her eyes, trying to get control of what she feels. Every muscle trembles in her body as she fights an inner war more deadly than any fought outside. "They knew that they would die," she says shakily as she finally herself under control. "But they sacrificed so that we might have a chance. We ran like hell, trying to use the chance given to us, but the firefight was too intense. "I was hit; in the back." She turns her head and gestures to her lower back. "I couldn't move, so I had resigned myself to the fact that this was the end. But it wasn't... Mulder had come back to save my ass once again." She closes her eyes once again and this time I am prepared for tears. After what she has been through she deserves this chance to mourn for her losses. But no tears come; bright blue eyes meet the bright light once again with strength renewed. "When I woke up, he was gone. After the fight, he couldn't be accounted for. They found Skinner and the others, but not Mulder. He became one of the statistics. One of the many which were never accounted for." "After I was released from the hospital, I looked for him. I looked for him for years. My whole life became helping to rebuild and looking for Mulder-" "You loved him didn't you?" I ask as I nod towards Mulder's likeness. To spend a lifetime looking for the one you love is profound, to say the least. I only hope that I one day find that kind of love myself. "And you never told him...." I finish as I bring my hand up to rest on her now trembling shoulder. My heart pounds painfully in my chest, my lungs burn with each breath that I take. "We...I..." She shakes her head, her voice low and husky, like honey over ice. "We never really had to say the words. I guess that we just knew how we felt about one another..." Ah, to have such a love. A love that transcends words, and blossoms with adversity: a rare priceless gift indeed. "So I take it that you and he never...." Now I know that I am crossing some lines here, but this love story needs some happiness. I need to know if she has something to keep with her, something to soothe her broken heart. "We weren't like that. That wasn't what we were about." Her eyes reflect the truth, which she speaks. However, one doesn't need to be incredibly perceptive to notice the blatant disappointment dripping from every syllable. She lets out a deep breath as if just telling her story is cathartic. I guess that in a way it is. "Why? You obviously loved one another very much." I smile and feel myself blushing profusely. Now I know that we are both medical professionals but I can't help feel nervous about asking this. This love story moves me on so many different levels that I have this almost obsessive need to know it all. "I guess that there was always something more that had to be done." She looks out into the room as if half expecting something to happen. "The work was above all else, at all times. We knew that. I guess that when you have the world to save, other things seem to have less importance." "But you have regrets..." Of course, I know how totally stupid this sounds but she needs to voice it. To accept and to hopefully get some closure for her and for the ghosts which haunt her room and her heart. "Loneliness is a choice. We both chose the life which we led. It was necessary, so that the whole of humanity might have a chance: a chance to live and to love. We all have to make choices and we all have to live with them. I have lived with them: the good and the bad." "Dr Scully..." "I haven't been a practicing doctor for decades, please just call me Dana." She reaches over and for once in our discussion, she touches me. And I feel it clear down to my toes. She is letting me in. She is letting me know the heart that beats within the breast of this woman. I am truly honored. "Dana, I'm sorry." Tears start to fall down my face in heated torrents. They do very little to wash away the pain or the guilt that I feel. But I guess that they shouldn't. I shed them for her, not for me. "Sorry?" She furrows her brow, her eyes cloud with worry. "You're sorry for what?" For a woman that spends so much time and energy hiding what she feels from others, she is incredibly empathic. "For how it all turned out," I blubber uncontrollably as I stand up, turn away and attempt to wipe my eyes. "You gave so much, yet you couldn't even have the one thing that you wanted. We all owe you so much." What an impression I have just made, walking in here and asking personal questions until I lose it all together. I am such a pathetic mess. "But you are so wrong...so wrong." She rolls to me and touches me on the forearm. "I did get to love. I loved a lifetime in the years, which I knew Mulder. We may have never consummated the relationship but we were still lovers...in the deepest truest sense of the word." She looks up at me and smiles. "Our souls were reunited; our hearts were one. We loved with a love that time and death could never sever." "And as for you or anyone owing me anything," she arches her perfectly curved brow admonishing me as quickly as words could ever do. "If you want to repay us, repay me... there is something that you could do. Live your life fully. Do not waste a single moment." "Take this time that we have given you and use it wisely. Not everyone gets a second chance. This is yours-" Suddenly the fire is gone, and the room literally grows dim without its presence. Her shoulders slump, her eyes narrow and darken. "Now if you would please leave, I need some time." Wiping my eyes on my sleeve, I nod and walk out of the room pretending not to notice the hitch of her shoulders and the soft sounds of sobbing. As I reach her doorway, I pull it shut and lean my forehead against the wall. Funny, legends always seem to make heroes larger than life. Society can make heroes out of almost everyone, just do a good deed and you can live forever. However, now I know the truth. Being a true hero isn't that easy. A true hero is a person who is not afraid to make the tough choices. They make those choices in an instant without even worrying about the repercussions that might hurt them. They only think of others, not of themselves. I met one of them today. Well? Feed a starving artist at aljoyw@a-znet.com