Title: Touching Jericho Author: Ford and Ursula Luxem E-Mail: mmckenzie@dll-lever.com Rating: R Category: XAR Spoilers: anything prior to "The End" (S5) Keywords: Scully/Other, M/S UST, Angst, Mytharc Summary: Sometimes one man's faith is all that stands between revelation and destruction. Feedback: All public and private feedback welcome. Archive: Gossamer - Yes. Others are free to link directly to http://www.dll-lever.com/icarus/stories/touching_jericho.txt If you wish to keep a copy on your server, please email for permission. Disclaimer: All characters from the X-Files are the property of Chris Carter, Ten Thirteen Productions and Fox Television Network. All other characters belong to the authors. Similarities to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Authors notes at end of part 15 ================================================================ Touching Jericho (1/15) Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once. Of all the wonders that I yet have heard, It seems to me most strange that men should fear; Seeing that death, a necessary end, Will come when it will come. --Julius Caesar, Shakespeare. Prologue. The Seventh Day. Fox Mulder had six seconds to identify the end of the world. It began with a thunderous roar, the kind that heralded a momentous event. The ground leapt, dropped, hurled him emphatically about, then undulated like a fishing boat in a New England squall. There were sounds of otherworldly origin; a groaning rumble in the bowels of the earth, the grind of cosmic gears encountering a wrench, the screech of the gates of hell split to devour its bounty. There would be fire and heat, pain and anguish, accusations and judgment, but right now Mulder could only choke and gag on the billowing dust, wince at the dagger like prick of concrete shards, and offer up a prayer to a God he was sure he didn't believe in. His mind searched for a suitable last thought, something he'd like to have on his tombstone. This time his smart ass defense mechanism failed. Faced with Armageddon, all he could come up with was; "Oh, shit!" The dust of annihilation settled. Silence and darkness charged forth to fill the void. All that remained were words. "To: Rabbi Green, From: Asher ben Jacob FBI Field Office Salt Lake City, Utah 7 Sivan 5758, Rosh Chodesh "My name is Asher ben Jacob. I am an FBI agent. I hold a position of trust and power in the area of law enforcement. I took an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States. I am also a Jew. Schooled and trained in the best secular and rabbinical colleges. I am a teacher, entrusted with the faith of my people. "Yesterday I committed a crime. "I uncovered a plot. Insidious in its simplicity. I know the time, I know the place, I know the man. My silence places me squarely in the midst of the conspiracy. "It should have been a difficult decision, four years of dedication to my job and country should have howled in moral outrage. There should have been an accumulation of dark, sleepless nights spent in prayer, in tefillah she-balev, the contemplation of the heart, to reach some epiphany of conscience. "There wasn't. "The blood of the innocent is a small price to pay for staving off the Apocalypse. "I inhabit an odd profession for one who wears tallit. Some might say evil is my living. I deal with men who choose terrorism and suffering to make their points, who persecute people on the basis of color, religion and government. I didn't think there could be a worse enemy to face. How wrong I was. There are those that not only seek to persecute the whole of mankind, but to eradicate it. Men who seek to revoke God's gift to man, to rid the earth of its true inheritors. "I do not expect to hear the sound of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah this year. I do not want God's judgment tempered with mercy. Instead I take up the ram's horn as my ancestors once did; as a signal, a predecessor of the communal cry. Here it ends. The walls must come down." Too late. The words would remain indelibly etched in her memory. As would the author of that meticulous handwritten manifesto. She could have dismissed it as the ranting of a madman, or a religious fanatic. Asher ben Jacob was neither. Her heart turned then to Mulder, and the unthinkable. She had faith. She believed. Mulder would prevail. He had to, because she couldn't comprehend this life without him. Pandemonium dominated by the time she allowed herself to take in the big picture. Somewhere amongst the panicked voices and acrid smoke, somewhere amid the scream of sirens and rushing rescue workers, Dana Scully forced herself to focus. She was the center of the hurricane, a sanctuary for whatever justice endured. She surveyed the destruction, and her clinical mind detailing what her eyes couldn't comprehend. The twisted wreckage of steel and rebar, the chunks of shattered concrete, the glittering fragments of glass that winked and sparkled in the midmorning sun; all had once formed a multistory office building where ordinary people worked together. Now the front corner teetered like an ill-designed house of cards. A compact blast, and a delicate reminder. A gaping rip into an insular world long shrouded from the harsh light of criticism. Inside the eye of this storm, one truth remained. It had been her own quest for answers that brought them to this conclusion. Basement, FBI HQ Washington, D.C. One week earlier. Day One. The way he'd looked at her. That blank expression somewhere between disinterest and patronage, tempered with vague amusement. "Someone wants *what*?" Scully folded her arms, tucked in her chin. "A request came in from the Utah Field Office," she repeated, "for some files." He grinned. "You can tell me, Scully... was it the Osmonds?" She took a deep breath, pressed on. "They've requested all the reports... from Skyland Mountain... and Ruskin Dam." Mulder shrugged. "And Cassandra Spender." There was that expression again. Scully bit her tongue. Damn it, he could at least *try* to fake interest. She faced him, resolute. "Do you think they know something?" "Who? The Osmonds?" She sighed. Then looked at him again. Mulder shrugged once more. "They know about what? Little Green Men? You've all ready convinced me they don't exist, Scully." Scully glanced down a moment, pursed her lips. Every time the subject of her abduction and its consequences was broached, a yawning chasm seemed to open between them. "I need to know." "You do know. We both do. Peel the veneer off one lie and another festers beneath." "I *need* the files, Mulder. I have to look. For myself." Mulder stood, reached for his jacket and pulled it on with a fluid movement. "Sure, Scully, take the files, go to Utah. Come back empty-handed... and don't say I didn't tell you so." She studied him with wide eyes, looking for something that wasn't there. "You're not coming?" "What for? I've had my share of wild goose chases. I don't think it takes two of us to deliver a few files. Hell, you could just courier them..." At Scully's violent head shake Mulder stopped. "I've got tickets for a Capitals game tomorrow night." He paused, shoved his hands into his jacket pockets. "Just call me if you need me." Scully forced herself to nod. "Don't hold your breath." "Give my regards to Donny and Marie." Mulder slammed out, whistling. Scully turned and jerked open the Q-R and S-T drawers, yanked out government issue russet folders, and began to reassemble her past. FBI Field Office Towers Building Salt Lake City Day Two Thunderstorms over the Rockies forced a delay in Scully's flight to Denver. After missing the first connection she managed to work her way onto the next available commuter flight, not arriving in Salt Lake until late afternoon. She rented a car and drove the gridded streets to the Field Office. The Salt Lake City branch was compact, cramped, and reminiscent of a small town newspaper office. Lots of open space and half- walls gave it a transitory appearance. Scully showed her credentials to the suit guarding the entry and was pointed through the cubicle maze to a back corner. "Riley! Goon for you." Scully winced and kept walking. She understood the territoriality of the field offices, but never felt like an outsider. Until times like this. A heavyset man with hair the color of stained mahogany and anemic blue eyes glanced up at the raised voice. He eyed Scully up and down as she walked toward him. "Lucky me." She stopped by the L-shaped partition that enclosed two desks, one strewn with paperwork and Styrofoam coffee cups, the other neat and unoccupied. "Special Agent Dana Scully, Washington Bureau." Scully showed her badge then offered her hand to the man behind the clutter. "Washington. Oh, dandy." The man sighed as he stood, revealing his linebacker build and rumpled clothing, fleshy face dominated by a stereotypical pug nose and scattered freckles. "Special Agent Pat Riley. What can I do for you?" He shook her hand, dropped it as soon as feasible. "I'm looking for your partner, Asher ben Jacob?" The man snorted. "Partner is a term I'd use loosely with Ash. He's too busy hobnobbing to spend much time actually *doing* our job. Some of us work for a living--" Scully pursed her lips at his lamentation, interrupted. "Did I come at a bad time?" Riley shrugged, not at all apologetic. "Ash isn't here. Not that that's unusual... Something I can help you with?" "I really needed to talk to Agent ben Jacob. Do you know where I can find him?" "What is this pertaining to, ma'am? He's not in any trouble, is he?" The blue eyes narrowed almost imperceptibly. "If this is OPR stuff again, what Ash Jacob does in his free time is *his* business, not mine. I don't know a thing." "No," Scully assured him, "I'm not here to review anyone. Agent ben Jacob requested information about a case my partner and I worked on. It has something to do with one of his current cases I believe." "I got nothing that needs outside info at the moment. Ash's got his fingers in a lot of government pies, though. What is it? It better not be personal shit again..." Riley held out a beefy hand. Scully conveniently ignored the gesture and its implication. "It's about a terrorist action... multiple deaths and all that. You understand." Riley dropped his hand, interest waning. "Counter Terrorism is Ash's department. I mainly work Organized Crime. What's happening in the streets. I'm just a brick. What's your specialty?" "I'm a forensic pathologist. As I was passing through, I decided to deliver this file in person, answer any questions he might have." Riley waved a dismissive hand at the other desk. "Ah, just leave it there, he'll get it when he comes in. If he comes in." "I'd prefer to have Agent ben Jacob read it and let me answer any questions myself. I have a few days leeway. My partner's case notes aren't always clear to others." "Ain't that the truth. Ash writes like he's competing for a Pulitzer Prize or something." Riley tapped his pen against his desk in a measured beat. "At least, he used to..." The pen dropped, Riley leaned over the uncluttered desk and opened the middle drawer, took out a business card and scribbled on the back. He checked his watch. "Here, Ash's apartment and phone number. Good chance he'll be home now. I'd call, but he won't answer the phone if he's praying." Scully took the card, read it, and bit her lip. "So I go south and then look for the cross street? What would be the best way to get there?" "Let's have a look at the map..." Riley walked her over to a detailed guide of the city posted on the back of a closet door near the coffee pot. He took the card from her, wrote on it, then traced the route with his finger. "I think if you took eighty-nine south it would be easiest. Looks that way." Scully eyed him. "Looks that way? You don't know?" "Me? Hell, yeah. Was a time..." Riley stopped, regrouped. "I haven't been down to Murray for a while, there's some construction going on... or at least there was. Thing is, the Rabbi hasn't been hanging with us the past couple months. The guys I mean." He gestured to the sparsely populated office. "We haven't exactly been welcome down there since--" Riley stopped abruptly. "Aw, hell." Scully gave him a questioning look. He shook his head, "Forget it. Just blowing off steam. It's been a bad day... Trying to do the paperwork of two men." Riley squinted at the map again, all business. "Okay, get off here and hang a left. Ash's place is just a few blocks, shouldn't be hard to find, all the townhouses look alike, but they're numbered over the garages. Ash's is slate and white, picket fence, flower bed, number eighteen. Any other questions?" "No. You've been very helpful, Agent Riley. Thank you." She gave what she hoped passed as a smile and left. Behind the wheel of her rental she considered the underlying current of anger she'd heard in Pat Riley's tone. Despite the man's puffed chest bravado, there'd been worry there too, before she reassured him she wasn't OPR. Why would the Office of Professional Review be interested in Agent ben Jacob? Again? She was sure Agent Riley said 'again'. Which meant the man had done something before, something that merited an internal investigation. Riley certainly thought that was a possibility, she'd never seen a man distance himself so fast from another agent, and his partner to boot. If you couldn't depend on your partner, who could you depend on? Scully frowned, and glanced at the briefcase that held the Skyland Mountain and Ruskin Dam files. Agent ben Jacob said the files related to a case he was working on. Hadn't he? Scully tried to recall the exact phrasing of his request, and couldn't. Using FBI records to obtain information for personal reasons was an investigatable offense. It was a line she was sure Mulder didn't recognize, and one she definitely had her own doubts about. Twenty-five minutes later she stopped in front of a set of stylized townhouses in a newer neighborhood, squeezing her car in behind a showroom red Dodge Stealth. Number seventeen's yard was strewn with Little Tykes toys in various stages of destruction, deflated soccer balls and a decapitated Barbie. The odor of churned up mud and turf from their lawn assaulted her nostrils, decay and regrowth warring for dominance. A white picket fence bordered the walkway to number eighteen, the yard sparse in comparison. A scraggly shrub crouched over a circle of stones, an outlined flower bed empty and weed strewn, a lone red tulip bloomed stubbornly. Spring grass fought to maintain its hold through last year's dead thatch. Scully mounted the steps to unit eighteen. On the right hand door post was a small stylized wooden case tipped at a slight angle. The intricate carving caught her eye and she allowed herself to trace its loops and whirls. She stared at it another moment, curious, then shrugged and rang the bell. She could hear faint strains of classical music, and smell the heavenly scent of cooking food. Her airline fed stomach growled. The man who opened the door surprised her, albeit a pleasant surprise. He was lean but well-muscled, about Mulder-tall, with the broad shoulders of a wrestler. He wore faded jeans, black high tops, and a olive river driver shirt that looked to have a silk shawl draped over it. A navy yarmulka -kipah, Scully corrected herself-covered some of his wheat-brown hair. What made the biggest impact on her were the long-lashed brown eyes. They studied her with attentive warmth, revealing a deep, rich chocolate color, flecked with particles of gold. It was positively criminal for a man to have such gorgeous eyes. "Hello. May I help you?" If there was any justice in this world, he should have a voice like an acerbic bullfrog. He didn't. It was liquid honey, cultured, with a trace of an East Coast accent. "I'm sorry to disturb you at home... Agent ben Jacob?" She waited for his confirming nod. "My name is Special Agent Dana Scully from the Washington Bureau." She dug out her badge and held it up for his inspection. "Agent Mulder's partner." He nodded, recognition firing his eyes and highlighting the laugh lines that fanned out from the corners. Scully bit back a sigh. "Yes. Agent Mulder's partner." "Is this about the files I requested? Is Agent Mulder with you?" "No, he's back in Washington." Her stomach rumbled at the tantalizing aroma of baking bread. Scully flushed in embarrassment. ben Jacob gave her a slow smile. "Please, come in, Agent Scully. I expected the files by bureau courier, not in person. You must have had a long flight." "Well, I..." Her brain was making a polite refusal, but before it could act her stomach propelled her into the room. "Thank you..." ben Jacob latched the screen behind her but left the inside door open to the tepid air. Scully stood in the entry beside a silver mountain bike. It leaned on the wall, narrowing the hall, black helmet slung over the straight handlebars, polishing cloth tucked through the spokes. She looked ahead, a wooden dining room table was off to her right, close to the kitchen. The table wouldn't have looked out of place at her mother's house. It was solid, covered with an ornate lace tablecloth, topped by two candles in heavy brass holders. Fine china, cloth napkins, and wineglasses were stacked to one side of the table. A covered plate rested at one end of the table. Several books were open at the other end. An empty crystal decanter held down a stack of papers. Mozart in the background. The understated elegance Scully remembered well from her childhood. "I'm sorry, I didn't mean to disturb your dinner," she said. "Agent Riley said you might be home..." "You aren't disturbing me. I was just reading." "I can come back later." "It will be dark later... will you join me for dinner, Agent Scully?" Puzzled, Scully checked the table, the stack of dishes. "It looks like you were expecting someone." "Just you." He laughed softly at her confusion. "It's a family custom, to set an extra place at the table for an unexpected guest. I was preparing for Shabbat tomorrow. Please, join me. I would appreciate the company." Scully studied the yearning in his expressive eyes and found herself nodding. At this point a plastic wrapped sandwich could reduce her to groveling. Actual cooked food would probably turn her into a mindless drone. She forced her thoughts back on track. "I have some questions for you, Agent ben Jacob. About the files you requested?" "Questions for me?" He turned to look at her, raised an eyebrow, hands tucked in the front pockets of his jeans. "Very well. How may I help?" "I was curious about your interest in Cassandra Spender. You knew her?" "I've never laid eyes on Cassandra Spender. If I did I'd probably kill her." Scully's eyes widened, stunned by such a blunt proclamation. The depth of glittering anger she saw encouraged her to believe his calm statement. "I thought your wanting the files had something to do with Cassandra Spender... but not this." Scully floundered and tried to gather her thoughts. "You requested her files specifically, but you never met the woman. If you're looking to find her and harm her, I must tell you she's already disappeared. From Ruskin Dam." "I know. Something to drink? Coffee, tea? Juice?" "Tea, please..." Scully requested, off balance again. She waited impatiently as ben Jacob disappeared into the kitchen. He returned five excruciating minutes later with two cups of tea, some lemon, sugar and cream on a silver tray. He set it on the coffee table in the living room, and calmly motioned her to a seat on the couch. After she was seated, he settled into a chair across from her and picked up a china cup, squeezed a few lemon drops, stirred in a spoon of sugar, all with the absentminded actions of ritual. Scully felt she was in a play where nobody had given her the script. She reached for the sugar, spooned some into her cup. ben Jacob sipped his tea as she fixed hers, then he set the cup down abruptly, splashing liquid on the wooden table top. He leaned forward and fixed his fierce gaze on her once more. "I have no interest in hurting the woman. Just in preventing others from believing her false prophecy." Scully closed her eyes and resisted the urge to scream at the man. She sampled her sugared tea instead. "Explain it to me then... I missed something." ben Jacob closed his eyes and recited softly, "'Woe unto the foolish prophets, that follow their own spirit, and have seen nothing...'" He looked at her. "D... a friend of mine is the one who knew her. I was concerned over the amount of influence Spender seemed to wield over D-d-... my friend." Scully appraised the man across from her, put him at roughly her age, maybe a little less. A hank of hair that fell across his forehead made him appear younger, more vulnerable, although it was at odds with the circles drawn under his eyes. The depth of anguish in his face marked his soul as one that was battle- scarred by grief. She knew how he felt. Now she wanted to know what caused the fragile despair he thought he kept so well hidden. "What kind of influence could a wheelchair-bound, hospitalized woman like Cassandra Spender possibly hold over your friend?" she asked quietly. "She put strange notions in my... my friend's... in D-," he stopped and closed his eyes, took a breath, then looked her in the eye, still stammering over the name. "She put strange notions in... D-Davi's head," ben Jacob replied. He winced and looked down, still mouthing the name. "Davi was your friend?" "Yes..." He raised his hands in a strangely defenseless gesture. "Cassandra Spender made her believe things that weren't possible. Made her turn away from her faith..." He fingered the edge of his blue fringed shawl, rubbed it between his thumb and forefinger. "Did Cassandra Spender tell your friend to abandon her religion?" "No!" ben Jacob rubbed his unshaven jaw and sighed. "It's just that she encouraged the obsession. Nurtured it so to speak... gave it a place to grow..." "A place that wouldn't have been there otherwise?" "That's what I'm unsure about." He interlaced his fingers, rested his elbows on his knees. "What is it you want to know, exactly?" Scully asked him. She took a sip of tea and watched him deliberate. "I want to know... what happened. What happened to Dav... Davi? I, of all people should have known, and I had little inkling of what she was headed towards. I knew her better than I knew anyone." ben Jacob measured her with somber eyes then plunged onward. "Davi and I were to marry. I've loved her since we were young. Then, a few years ago, she changed her mind. Refused to marry me. Gave me excuses." He scowled. "This was about the time she started talking of... alien abductions, and Cassandra Spender. I thought if I simply gave her more time.... I don't know why she suddenly changed her mind about marrying me, and I don't know why she died." He stared down at his clenched hands. "You don't know what it's like, Agent Scully... not knowing." Scully reached across, rested a hand on his tensed forearm a moment. "Please... call me Dana." He looked up, met her eyes, and smiled slightly. "Thank you. I'm Asher." "Asher... I *do* know what it's like, I know the uncertainty. It becomes a persistent nightmare that clouds your every waking moment... and most of your sleeping ones, too. Believe me when I say I understand why you want to know." ben Jacob looked at her curiously. "Do you? Really? Right now you have the files and I don't. I expected Agent Mulder to come, I've heard rumors he might be... sympathetic to my plight." His eyes examined her closely. "Since you're his partner, I'm thinking you might share that sympathy. I'm hoping the files will shed some light on the entire situation, I need answers... Those files are my last hope. So I guess I have to do whatever you ask." Another man could have sounded self-pitying. From Asher it was fact. There was an undercurrent in his tone Scully didn't want to examine. What he was asking was definitely an OPR disciplinary offense - on both their parts. Scully gave him a thoughtful look, then reached into her soft- sided briefcase and pulled out several russet file folders. She placed them on the coffee table next to the china tea cups and pushed them over to his side with one finger. "I told you Cassandra Spender disappeared. Not that I believe you'd kill her if you found her. Not just for influencing your fiancee. I understand you're upset. What I don't understand is why you want to know the details of what happened to Cassandra Spender so badly?" To his credit, Asher didn't drop his gaze to the folders. His steady brown eyes never wavered from hers; a tiger stalking its prey. "Because I was at Ruskin Dam." end part 01/15 ================================================================ Touching Jericho (2/15) Scully's eyes widened. "*You* were at Ruskin Dam?" "Dana Scully... now I remember..." Asher nodded to himself. " I was only there after the fact. You, however..." Natural charm and a small smile tempered his accusation. "I'm sure you can tell me a lot more than these files can. Like what happened." He leaned forward and fixed unblinking eyes on her. "I'm sorry..." Scully scrambled to her feet and shook her head. She couldn't trust herself to look at him, to meet that penetrating gaze. "I can't help you with that. I've taken enough of your time." He beat her to the front door and blocked her exit. In any other situation, Scully would have considered such a move a threat. Somehow, not from this man. Instead her eyes searched his and she waited. "Davi wasn't as lucky as you. She was there, too. Burnt to death on the bridge..." ben Jacob made no attempt to hide the anguish in his voice. Scully shook her head again, bit her lip in an effort to ignore her own pain. "I'm so sorry..." He grasped her upper arms, desperation etched on his face. "You can *help* me to understand. Help me to explain to her parents. Help me find something to hang on to... anything... *She* shouldn't have died!" He shook her slightly, the power of his grip letting her know he could fling her across the room like a rag doll if he chose. A strong man, and a desperate one. "Stop." ben Jacob flinched at Scully's quiet command, and dropped his hands as if burned. Scully looked up into his tormented stare. She firmly believed this man deserved an explanation, just as she did. Instead she was bound by her emotions, annoyed by her own ignorance, and had nothing to offer but more questions. Crosscurrents she didn't comprehend rippled and whirled around her, threatened to suck her down. "I don't have any answers for you. I wish I did, if only for my own sake. I came here hoping... seeking the same answers for myself." "Tell me she wasn't crazy." Suddenly ben Jacob moved past her, into the living room and started digging around in a desk drawer, "I saw the victims' x-rays..." he returned and offered her a tiny, self- sealing evidence bag. "Explain this to me, at least... please." Scully remained fixed in the doorway, close to the escape route. She accepted the bag, studied the diminutive piece of charred shrapnel through the plastic before looking up into his eyes. "Where did you get this?" "I am not without friends in Washington. I got it from Davi... after... after the autopsy. It was embedded near the nape of her neck... here..." He reached out, brushed gentle fingers against the back of her neck in demonstration. Scully closed her eyes a moment, allowed him the intrusion, allowed herself to feel the brand of his caress on her bare skin. When she recovered, Asher's compassionate gaze regarded her. Her eyes locked onto his, colors whirled, the imprint of his touch lingering warm and steady. She drifted; A mariner mesmerized by the Siren's song. He leaned close, whispered, "'Did ever people hear the voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire, as thou hast heard, and lived?'" He caressed her neck again, fleetingly. "That's why you were at Ruskin Dam." His words jarred. Ruskin Dam. She stiffened, her hand groped for the doorknob. "I'm sorry. I can't help you. Just... just read the files." ben Jacob bowed his head, but Scully read the desperation in the set of his shoulders. She felt a sharp pang, hesitated. But Dana Scully couldn't do it, she just couldn't cover that ground again. She didn't need any reminders of what she was, and what she would fail to be. She wasn't sure why she'd expected this man to have an interlocking piece to her personal puzzle. Asher ben Jacob wanted to know why his lover died, what purpose her death had served. Scully worked from the other side. Why had she lived? What purpose did her life serve? Ideas raged through her mind, then settled into a tumbling kaleidoscope of fragmented thoughts. She just couldn't. Not now. She yanked open the door, stammered a feeble excuse, and left. It started on the drive back to the hotel. The uneasy feeling that she made a mistake. That walking away was not an option. The evening was an exercise in self-loathing. Every child of the Navy knew the price for desertion. Despite her pledge to find answers, presented with hard cross-examination, she'd allowed herself to crumble. Mulder never would have turned and walked away. The truth would not have intimidated her partner. Mulder wouldn't have hidden behind excuses. That single thought mocked her. Dana Scully wasn't afraid of the truth. First thing in the morning she called Washington and arranged for a week's vacation. Her request was made through Skinner's office, a deliberate attempt to avoid the probing questions Mulder was sure to ask if she'd called him. She wasn't in the mood for Mulder's inconsiderate snipes. 'Why are you staying in Utah, Scully? Make friends with Donny and Marie?' She wasn't in the mood for Mulder's double-edged remarks. 'You got a lover you been hiding out there on me, Scully? He trying to talk you into being his second wife? Or third?' She wasn't in the mood for the Mulder that was, and the Mulder that could be remained elusive as a half remembered dream. Scully dismissed the thoughts, turned her attention to the business card Agent Riley provided her, and noted ben Jacob's phone number. Tomorrow. One way or another, she would finish what she had begun. FBI Field Office Salt Lake City Day Three Scully walked into the Field Office displaying a confidence she didn't feel. It was a lesson learned long ago, incubated with her brother Bill and honed to perfection throughout medical school and the Bureau. Act like you know what you're doing. She nodded to the man with the broken arm at the front desk, an Agent Franklin, then glanced to the cubicle at the back of the office. It was empty, Asher elsewhere. Scully felt the flutter in the pit of her stomach, the same as when she'd call ben Jacob this morning. Asher readily agreed to see her again, but considering her behavior the night before, she worried he might have changed his mind. Or worse. She'd change her own mind given enough time. The few agents in the office treated her with a cautious respect, a solitary wolf among the buffalo. They knew who she was; they just weren't sure what she was doing there. Neither was she. Aware of the other agents watching, she made her way to the back, receiving a few casual smiles, some more knowing than others. She frowned unconsciously. Six agents in the office, there were many more desks around. Where was everyone? The coffeepot in the rear corner was almost empty. Scully poured the last cup, then pitched the grounds, placed a new filter inside and several scoops of coffee from a nearby can. She picked up the empty pot, intending to fill it with water. "I wouldn't, if I were you," A husky female voice said from behind her. Scully turned. "Took me long enough to convince these overgrown Rambos that women don't *have* to make the coffee. Hate to have to retrain them." The woman who spoke was lithe, tanned, eyes the same rich chocolate as Asher's. Dark hair cut into a no nonsense pageboy, a neatly tailored pants suit also stated professionalism. Her face showed lines, some age, some laughter. A package that radiated quiet authority. She thrust out a hand. "Christina Martinez. ASAC. And you are...?" Scully set the pot down and grasped the outstretched hand. The grip was firm, palm slightly callused. "Dana Scully, from the Washington Bureau." A delicately plucked eyebrow went up. "Scully, Scully... not OPR?" "No... I, uh... I'm just visiting..." Visiting? How inane, way to go, Dana. What was it about other female agents that made her nervous? Lack of familiarity perhaps. Christina Martinez nodded, pursed her lips. "Come on in to my office. I have a cappuccino maker. Too good for these uncultured hicks. We'll leave them the dregs. Right, Phillip?" She slapped a nearby agent on the shoulder; he looked up from his paperwork and grinned, blue eyes alight with mischief. He turned to the other agents and made a face. "Hey, boys, the bitch is back." Everyone laughed, including Christina. Scully's laughter was uncertain. "Nice shooting, Chrissy, way to save those taxpayer dollars," someone called. "Should have plugged them both," another agent added. "I wanted to, but they put a *Coloradan* in charge." Everyone hissed and booed. "DeMarco just wasn't as good a shot as me." Christina pretended to blow smoke off her finger, then flexed her biceps and struck a weightlifter's pose, to the delight of the other agents. They razzed her good-naturedly. Christina took Scully's elbow, led her to one of the few private offices with a door, and closed it behind them. "Take a seat." She checked the coffee maker and hit a button on the side. It began to rattle and groan. "So, why are you visiting us poor Field Office drudges, Agent Scully? Trolling for a transfer?" "No, I... Please, call me Dana." "What division are you with back in Dee Cee, Dana?" The older woman leaned against her desk and crossed her arms, brown eyes pinning Scully like a specimen to a board. "I work in a small division. They needed a forensic pathologist for the position, I was available..." Scully's voice trailed off. "I work in the X-Files." Christina tugged on an earring. "With Fox Mulder?" "You know him?" "In a manner of speaking. He was in the class behind me at the Academy. Tell me, is he still as flaky as he was then?" Scully nodded, not trusting herself to speak. "You can be flaky, long as you got the brains to back it up. And I recall him having more than his fair share of brains." Christina checked the progress of the coffee then turned her attention back to Scully. "He still as drop dead gorgeous as ever?" Scully nodded again, flustered. "Must make it hard to concentrate." Christina laughed at Scully's expression. "Sorry, but when you're the lone female in an office full of men, you tend to start thinking the way they do." She eyed Scully appraisingly. "I bet you don't know a thing about it, do you? How long you been in the Bureau?" "Seven years." "All in one division?" "Not quite ... I taught at Quantico for two years. Been with the X Files for five." "You taught at Quantico?" Her eyebrows went up a notch. "Interesting... Five years in one place? How many people in your division?" "Uh... two." "Two!?" "Yes. Just me and Mulder." "Cozy." Christina pulled two coffee cups off a bookshelf. One said, 'The best man for the job is a woman' and the other had a picture of John Wayne with the caption, 'Because I said so, partner'. She poured the cappuccinos and handed Scully the John Wayne mug. "You ever want a transfer to a regular Office, you look me up. We need more women. I've been trying to start a mentoring program, to teach women how to lead and command in this male oriented field. It's been slow going. They haven't even gotten me another female agent yet." Christina shrugged, and sipped her coffee. Scully followed her lead, sampled the brew. It was frothy and hot, tasting strongly of vanilla. "I've had cause to think about it once or twice ... I don't think a field office job is what I want." "Five years and you haven't had an involuntary transfer yet?" Christina asked. "Once..." Scully fingered her coffee cup thoughtfully, again reminded of her abduction, and the real reason for her visit. "The division was closed for a while, but... Agent Mulder is difficult to ignore." "Prima Donnas usually get their way around the Bureau. As long as somebody upstairs likes them." Christina studied Scully's face a moment. "So, what brings you out here then? If not the possibility of a transfer? We got great skiing, you know." "I brought some files out for an agent of yours, decided to take a break. I figured he couldn't read Agent Mulder's chicken scratch anyhow." Martinez' eyes became low voltage lasers as they raked Scully from top to toe. "Which agent was this?" "Asher ben Jacob?" She nodded slowly, let out a sigh. "Asher. I should have known. What's the Rabbi up to now?" Scully bit her lower lip. "He just wanted information on some cases Agent Mulder worked on a few months ago. He thought it might relate to one of his cases." "And did it?" "I'm sorry, you'll have to discuss it with Agent ben Jacob." Christina gave a husky chuckle. "I see the Rabbi got to you. He's a charmer, isn't he? If I were ten years younger... and his religion... I wouldn't mind taking a tumble with him myself." Scully's mind darted to Asher's warm eyes and sensual mouth, she recalled the gentle play of his fingers on the back of her neck... Oh, boy. Scully felt the heat rise to her cheeks and took a big gulp of cappuccino. "I thought I could help him find a connection between our two cases. That's all." After a deliberate sip of her coffee, Christina nodded. "There better be a connection, or ben Jacob's going to be answering to me. I won't tolerate any more misuse of Bureau resources. And he wouldn't dare pull that nonsense again... " Christina let her face ease back from the worried mask to friendliness again. "Then again, if Asher asked for your files, they must be relevant to one of his cases. The man is incredibly bright, extremely talented, and a royal, cotton- picking pain in the ass." Scully almost spit out her mouthful of coffee as she choked on laughter. "I'm sorry, but you've just quoted one of Agent Mulder's superiors." The two women grinned at each other a minute. "Seriously, Dana. Asher's a good agent. Most of the time." Martinez scowled to herself, then shrugged and sipped her coffee. "Let me guess, he likes to work independently, resents interruptions, and never lets you know what's going on?" "Sometimes." Christina answered. "I live with his work methods, because the man gets results. Or used to. But this office functions as a unit, if I have one player who insists on playing his own game, it reduces our effectiveness all out of proportion to the individual. Christina leaned forward. "That's one reason I kept him paired him with Pat Riley. Riley's a good influence." Scully made a face. "I see you two have met. Patrick Riley's a good agent, solid, dependable. He doesn't always come off as the most sensitive guy on the block..." Christina shrugged. "The man's a bulldog. He builds his cases piece by piece, and gathers evidence to support them. He goes from A to B to C to D in a methodical manner. It may be slow, but it's damn effective. Asher on the other hand, tends to leap from A to D with nary a stop in between. The hell of it is, he's usually right. But brilliant deductions mean squat without evidence to back them up." "You really like your job, don't you?" Scully commented. It was a revelation, and would require some examination once Scully was alone again. "Yeah, I do. It's a challenge, and a puzzle, and frustrating as all get out, but yeah. I love it. Despite days like yesterday." Martinez rubbed her right biceps reflexively. Scully gave her a puzzled look. "Those two cop killers up in Idaho? We finally ran them to ground. That's where half the office is, mopping up. Took a lot of manpower and hours, but we did it. Now I can find out what's happened while I was gone and get the whip cracking again." "Is that where Asher is?" Scully asked. "I was supposed to meet him here about a half an hour ago." "No, the Rabbi's over at Temple Square. Porter Kent requested to borrow him for a few days, they got foreign dignitaries coming into the church this week." Seeing Scully's blank look, Christina backtracked. "The Mormon church here, Church of the Latter Day Saints, has something called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and each of those guys has a secretary or two or three that works under him. Porter Kent is a secretary, he's also in charge of security for the prophet, among other things. The prophet is the leader of the church, and the U.S. Government likes to be kept informed when he meets with representatives from other countries. The LDS church is all over the world, so a lot of foreigners come here for meetings. We supply a government rep, a liaison if you will. ben Jacob's our counter- terrorism expert, he also has an extensive background in Middle Eastern studies and international law, and speaks several languages, so he's perfect for the job. He even attended Brigham Young University in Jerusalem, which is probably why he got posted here." Christina leaned back in her chair and stretched. "I was forced to refuse his request for transfer to New York because the Bureau has a shortage of international and language specialists. Asher's too valuable here. I wish I'd been able to transfer him. Maybe-" Christina shook herself and switched gears. "Asher also coordinates with the local police in emergency situations. It's a lot to put on one man, but we're a small office, we all have to pull double duty. I sent him to a Hostage Negotiation class at the Academy, he graduated number one, same with the Explosives Response class last year. The man has great hands, an inquisitive mind, and a golden tongue. What a waste." "What do you mean?" Scully asked, "I would think those would be valuable assets for the office. The team." "Let's call it ... a waste of his abilities." Christina looked thoughtful a moment then turned her attention back to Scully. "He should be a diplomat or something. Or move to hostage negotiations. I've told him that several times. He got an offer from the State Department as a matter of fact. I'd quote his response, but it was unbelievably rude, especially for the Rabbi. It didn't seem to bother them, they offered again a few months ago. Right after his girlfriend died." She looked at Scully. "I know all about Davi. Asher told me." "He did now? Well..." Christina sighed and pinched the bridge of her nose. "It was a tragedy. The poor guy was shook to the core, although he'd won't admit it. They *never* should have let him go to the site, but I guess they didn't know she was there when they put out the call. I gave Asher time off and bureau counseling, his rabbi has been counseling him, I can only hope it's helped. Typical male, he insists he's fine. But since April, he hasn't been the same." She shook her head. "Pat Riley likes to complain about him, always did, but these days he's doing a lot of covering he just shouldn't have to do. He doesn't think I've noticed, but I have...." Christina shrugged, "I can only help so much. The Rabbi agreed to fill out the paperwork for a transfer to the State Department, after that special rep came out here and nagged him about it again. You can tell he doesn't care where he works right now. I'd hate to see him go, but maybe it's for the best." Scully drained her cup, set it on the edge of the desk. Guilt blossomed. She hadn't made things easier for this man. "Why does everybody call Asher, 'Rabbi'? Just because he's Jewish?" Christina looked startled. She took Scully's cup and her own, set them on the counter behind her desk. "No... not exactly. I know, it's a bad habit and not very PC of us. It's an easy nickname. Partially because he's devoted to his religion, there is that... but more because... he's easy to talk to. To confess your troubles and sins to. There isn't a person in this office that hasn't been helped by Asher ben Jacob one time or another. Myself included. If he was Catholic, we'd probably call him, "Father". Sometimes you forget he isn't some 80 year old wise man." Christina frowned, then gave an eloquent shrug. "I guess, mostly, we call him Rabbi because he *listens*. Or he used to." Scully nodded. A knock sounded on the closed office door. Christina glanced up at the frosted glass. "Speak of the devil... Come!" Asher ben Jacob opened the door. He gave a crooked smile when he saw Scully, then addressed his boss. "Didn't know you were back, ma'am, or I would have let you know where I was. Porter Kent needed a meeting." "Pat told me. It's okay, Asher. I used the time getting to know Agent Scully, here. Tried to recruit her, but alas, no dice." She grinned at Scully. "The prophet requested my services for the next few days. He's meeting with a foreign contingent to discuss missionaries in hostile countries. Kahzakstan and Turkey are on the list. I might have to translate." ben Jacob rolled his sleeves down as he talked. Today he wore a simple tan shirt and navy tie that matched the navy kipah on his head. Puffy circles darkened his eyes, and he probably forgot to shave. In the harsh light Scully could see where his nose had been broken at least once before, and the tired grooves around his mouth. Despite that, he still looked damn good. "You see a problem with the foreigners?" Martinez asked. "I haven't assessed the threat level, yet, ma'am, but yes, I believe heightened security would be appropriate. Some countries tend to be prickly about Christian missionaries in their domain." ben Jacob ran a hand over the kipah and unruly mane that dropped across his forehead, in a vague attempt to smooth the rumpled look. Scully had to refrain from straightening his hair for him. "Very well, keep me informed. And keep Riley informed also, like you did this morning. Good job. We'll see you Monday." "Yes, ma'am." ben Jacob looked at Scully. "Sorry to keep you waiting, Dana. The appointment was unexpected, and Porter had a lunch meeting that ran late. It put us behind." "That's okay, I didn't mind." Scully stood and held a hand out to the woman behind the desk. "Thanks for the coffee, Christina." "No problem." She stood, shook Dana's hand, then came around the desk to walk her to the door. "I'll grab my jacket and we can go," ben Jacob said. He left the office, moving quickly in a loose-jointed athletes stride. "Hubba, hubba," Christina said under her breath. "Life's too short, Dana. Don't let it pass you by. Go for the gusto, yadda, yadda...." Scully couldn't help but smile. Christina Martinez was a refreshing footnote to her Salt Lake City visit. "I'll certainly keep that in mind." "Chrissy, the firearms lab's on line three, they want to talk to you," Agent Franklin called out. "I'm on it..." She turned. "Don't be a stranger, Dana. It's nice to talk to another female agent." Christina gave Scully a pat on the shoulder, then disappeared back into her office. Across the room, Asher ben Jacob looked up from putting on a black wind breaker. The intensity of his glance raked Scully's jangled nerves. What does he want from me? On the basest level, she knew the answer. It gave her flutters in the pit of her stomach. "Rabbi!" Franklin sang out again from the front desk. "You're back. Call *your* Rabbi. He said it was important." Franklin waved a pink phone slip in the air with his good arm. Scully walked slowly for the exit, giving Asher time to grab his message and catch up. He did in short order, placing a hand between her shoulder blades as he swung open the outer door. Heat seemed to radiate from his palm through her clothes to her bare skin. She looked up, met the steady chocolate eyes that focused squarely on her. Scully received another troubling thought. What do I want from this man, and what is it going to cost me to get it? She cleared her throat, found her voice. "I appreciate you seeing me again, Asher. I'm sorry, I shouldn't have left so abruptly last night." "No, I understand. I appreciate you agreeing to speak to me under difficult circumstances." They stood in front of the elevator, joined together in an island of mutual misery. ben Jacob appraised her, nodded to himself. "Is this personal or business, Agent Scully?" "Maybe a little of both. Why?" "Because I am not allowed to discuss business on Shabbat." ben Jacob glanced at his watch. "You have a few hours before dusk, anything after that will have to wait until Shabbat ends." His intense gaze informed her of the seriousness of his statement. Scully nodded, first to herself then to him. "I understand," she said quietly, as her hand found the gold cross nestled at the base of her throat. The elevator dinged. His gaze dropped to the flash of gold between her fingers, then rose back to her face, expression strangely satisfied. "Come with me to my place. There we can talk." end part 02/15 ================================================================ Touching Jericho (3/15) Just under thirty minutes later Scully was settled in the comfort of ben Jacob's apartment. Again hot tea steamed in front of her. The drive over had been pleasant, the conversation safely on Salt Lake City and the scenery. But the time for small talk was over. She studied the man opposite her as he stirred his tea with an absentminded concentration she found endearing. "I want to help you," she told Asher, "I want to help both of us." "You know what I want to know." His spoon clattered against the china as he dropped it on the saucer and fixed unblinking eyes on her. "That piece of metal from Davi's neck? You have one also." "Both my damnation and my salvation..." Scully explained slowly. "It's what some people call an implant." Asher chewed his lower lip as he watched her. "I don't understand. Where did it come from? For what purpose? Implanted by whom?" He leaned forward, the lawyer in prosecution mode. "I don't know," Scully paused, swallowed. "Theoretically, it's some kind of tracking or cataloguing device. But I do know that after mine was removed, it facilitated the onset of a serious illness." Genuine concern crossed Asher's face, he tipped his head and asked softly. "How serious, Dana?" Scully froze. After Mulder's studied indifference, this man's interest jolted her. To Mulder the implant was the means to an end. You don't question the golden ring. Here was someone concerned by its ramifications. She hesitated all the same, then looked at him. "Cancer..." "I'm sorry..." He reached out and gave a fleeting touch to her cheek, then dropped his hand. An impulsive gesture, born of honest emotions, and suppressed with difficulty. Another piece that made up the man. Scully shook her head. "You don't have to be sorry. Returning the implant cured the disease. Not a miracle in the biblical sense I don't think, more a miracle of technology I am yet to understand." He frowned, quoting, "'He delivereth me from mine enemies, yea, thou liftest me up above those that rise up against me; thou hast delivered me from the violent man... the violent man...'" Asher stared out over her head. Scully stared at him. "'The violent man'?" Asher brought himself back to her. "I'm sorry. And how did you come to have this implant in the first place?" "I was abducted... by a person or persons unknown," Scully admitted. "My memories are vague... it must have happened then. It's the only explanation I have." "Abducted. Davi's letters frequently mentioned abductions," ben Jacob told her, "aliens and tests... and Cassandra Spender. I didn't fully believe her until it was too late. You believe this too?" Scully chose her words carefully. "I know that I was taken. I also believe the stories of alien abductions and spaceships. Not because I am a proponent of extra terrestrial involvement, but because I believe the memories are real. Memories of aliens implanted to make those believing the allegations look ludicrous. The men who did this to me... to so many other women like me, serve an entirely different agenda." Asher's eyes darkened, wrath transformed his face. "Women like you? ...And Davi?" "Yes," Scully whispered. "And these men?" Scully lips thinned, as if nothing could remove the bad taste from her mouth. She got to her feet and paced. "They experimented on us. They were doing some kind of testing or research. I suppose you could say we were lab rats. They made us sick when we outlived our usefulness, they lured the survivors to Skyland Mountain, and to Ruskin Dam. Then exterminated them." Asher gave her a horrified look, then bowed his head, whispered quietly to himself a moment. Scully didn't recognize the prayer, or the language, but understood the sentiment. She found comfort in the cross she wore, indulged in her own silent prayer. For herself, for Betsy, Penny and all the women wronged, for Emily, for all the children like her. "'Save me God; for the waters are come in unto my soul'." Asher's voice was soft, anguished. "'I sink in deep mire, where there is no standing: I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me...'" Scully continued the Psalm automatically. Asher lifted his head, eyes wide. "'I am weary of my crying; my throat is dried...'" his voice faded and he rubbed a hand over his face as if to erase the emotion showing there. For a long moment the words hung between them, an invisible connection, stronger than the past, made of the mortar of shared agony. Scully found the next line sprang unbidden to her mind. "'My eyes fail while I wait for my God...'" The words forced themselves out of her lips in a barely audible whisper. Asher held out a hand, palm up, then closed it slowly and brought it to his heart, as if to protect the fragile covenant. "I think you should sit down... I want to show you something." He moved away from the door and disappeared up the stairs off the hall. Scully sat, shaken by the encounter. 'I am weary of crying...' The line hit her with the impact of a bullet. She poured herself more tea. The Ruskin Dam, Skyland Mountain, and Cassandra Spender files lay on the coffee table, in exactly the same place as she'd left them the night before. This time she wasn't retreating. Asher returned and set a large plastic shoe box on the table between them. He studied her with unconscious intensity. "I'm sorry I don't seem to have the answers you seek, Dana... but perhaps some good can come of Davi's death after all." He unsnapped the lid to the container, set it aside, then handed the box to her. Scully took it, stared down into the contents. It was crammed full of letters; envelope after envelope, all neatly slit across the tops. Some were bundled together with ribbons. She flipped through them. Letter after letter addressed to Asher ben Jacob, some to Cornell University in New York, then to Boston, some to Quantico, many to Salt Lake, they were arranged in chronological order. The ones tied with ribbon were addressed to Davita Yael, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and Alfred, New York. She looked up at him. "I don't understand..." His hand reached out, caressed the box, his finger tracing the postmark of the first envelope. "Letters Davi wrote me over the years. I saved them... since college that is." He picked up a packet tied with a red ribbon. "These I recovered from Davi's apartment after she died. I didn't want her parents to find them. They didn't know we were having... problems. Or about Cassandra Spender." He tucked the packet carefully back into its space. "They're in order. Me to her. Her to me. The past five years and then some." He stared down at the box. "All I have left..." "You want me to read them?" He looked up then, into her eyes and beyond. "Yes. Somewhere in there, may be an answer you seek. I don't understand the questions, I may have missed an important sign." Asher touched a hand to his chest. "If I can help ease your burden of pain, alleviate the suffering caused by the agents of Amalek... I must do so." Scully swallowed. The man was offering her a piece of his soul, a glimpse into the most intimate details of his relationship with his fiancee. All because she asked for help. It was mind boggling. His self-assured brown gaze never wavered as he waited for her response. "Asher... I'm not sure I can read these..." He dropped to one knee, touched her arm. "Dana... please. I want to help you. A small atonement for all I've done wrong lately..." "If you're sure..." Scully felt her pulse quicken as she looked at the box. Somewhere in these chronicles might be a clue, a light in the obscurity that shrouded her abduction. "I am sure." "Okay. Thank you, Asher." She fastened the top on the box and snapped it closed. "Can I ask a question?" "Anything, Dana." Asher got to his feet and looked down at her from what seemed a great distance. "Who is Amalek?" Asher's eyes flashed, the chocolate hardened into stone. He glanced over her head onto a higher plain, and seemed to wrap himself in the cloak of his religion. "Amalek is evil in its many forms... Amalek opposes the Torah and anything that contains Torah... it is written, 'Remember what Amalek did'. We must remember the misery we suffer, lest we sin and Amalek returns... like he did at Ruskin Dam..." His vision dropped, a bitter smile twisted his face. "I, for one, will never forget. Never. I will fight him with my dying breath." Scully met his impassioned gaze, felt his words reverberate. Words that were cool salve over the raw scrape of her heart; the very place that craved a human touch, that longed for someone to lighten the burden locked within. Amalek was responsible for her abduction. Amalek took her daughter and future daughters. It was as good an explanation as all the others. She found herself clutching her tiny gold cross with all her might and whispering, "Amen..." They stared at each other. Heartbeats passed. The spell was broken by the persistent chirp of Asher's watch. He reached down and silenced it, held out a hand to help her from the couch, eyes alight with excitement this time. "Eighteen minutes until Shabbos. Come, we must prepare." Scully reached up and took the outstretched hand. Best Western Hotel. Salt Lake City Day Four. Scully promised herself she would read the letters without becoming involved; that she would rely on the clinical detachment she'd spent her entire life perfecting, that thus far served her so well. It wasn't often she gave herself a fool's errand. At first, she was the voyeur. Peeping through a keyhole, almost afraid of what she might find. As the hours stretched out that feeling faded until the words on the pages seemed as if they'd been written by old friends. Their story started innocently enough. Asher ben Jacob and Davita Yael from Lancaster, Pennsylvania. A childhood friendship that grew into something more. Asher was the brilliant student, Davi the rebellious youth. Asher left for rabbinical school and Davi went to the University of Pittsburgh. Asher, torn between the calling to be a rabbi and the growing desire to go to law school. He attempted both, struggled, but was eventually forced to choose. Davi's letters were alternately supportive and scolding. "'Do not chose your life according to someone else's wishes'" seemed to be Davi's advice. Asher reply was an elegant argument about the duties of the eldest son. Eventually law won his heart, and Asher dropped out of Rabbinical College to concentrate on the legal profession. He graduated from Temple University and went to Cornell University Law School, at the same time Davi moved to Yale to do graduate work in English Literature. Again they had more distance between them than either liked, and their letters were full of 'when we graduate and can be together'. Scully's pulse quickened when she came across another of Asher's more provocative letters. They were sprinkled intermittently throughout the correspondence. The letters were exquisitely detailed, descriptions worthy of the raciest romance novels. Scully readjusted her perception of Asher ben Jacob: Here was a man that understood desire, in all its dark and difficult disguises. A man that felt deeply, believed passionately, and loved without regret. The sheer eroticism of his written words was astounding; they made Scully blush and sent a flutter through her stomach. She attributed it to emotional overload, and read on. The Shakespearean overtones and sensual phrases were guaranteed to weaken the knees of most women, and Davita Yael was no exception. Of course an English professor would be smitten with such eloquent declarations of love and lust. Davi's replies to the letters were equally compelling, and the care with which they were crafted shone throughout. Scully felt the need to take a break after reading Asher's last erotic offering, she took a shower, dressed, and walked to the end of the corridor for a can of soda pop before deciding to continue the saga. The FBI came recruiting to Cornell, and Asher was seduced by the idea. Davi was appalled, terse letters flew back and forth. Asher's parents remained steadfastly against it. Dr. ben Jacob apparently tried to manipulate Asher and others involved, causing his son a great deal of pain. Davi rallied to Asher's side because of this, offering her support to that which she formerly opposed. It was clear her loyalty and love were with him, despite her disapproval. Asher, torn, postponed his decision, accepting a position with a prestigious Boston firm that specialized in criminal law. Everyone was appeased by this, and happy. Except Asher. He quickly grew bored with the mundane work they gave him, and this time when the FBI approached he was more than ready. He accepted on the condition his first posting be to New York, so Davi and he could be together. His parents again attempted to interfere. Daniel ben Jacob going as far as arranging a position for his son with an international law firm and consulting the Rabbinical College about re- accepting his son. It was obvious from Asher's pained disclosure that his father didn't approve of Davita, or her family, and wanted Asher to marry someone else, someone the father had already chosen. Someone in Israel. But if it came down to losing his son to the FBI and letting him marry 'that dissident bitch', Daniel would encourage the marriage, albeit reluctantly. Asher and his father fought, scathing arguments, Daniel ladling a heavy dose of duty, obligation, and responsibility on the back of his eldest child. Even reading Asher's account of it was painful for Scully. The things family members say to each other, the hundred little ways they know to make the deepest cut. The rift between Asher and his father grew to insurmountable proportions. Scully recalled her own doubts about her father's acknowledgment of her career, her family's lukewarm acceptance of her choice, the unspoken agreement that she was making a big mistake. The idea that others knew what was better for you than you did yourself was a tangled thread she and Asher shared. They made plans, Asher and Davi, but the life they'd hoped for together proved elusive. Davi was offered a position at Alfred University, which she accepted, expecting Asher to be sent to Buffalo. Asher graduated the FBI Academy and was sent to Salt Lake City. His guarantee of a New York posting vanished under the weight of Bureau needs and rules. His background in international law, time spent in Jerusalem, and fluency in several languages proved to be Asher's undoing. 'You go where we need you.' Scully recalled that attitude well. Asher tried on several occasions for a transfer out of the Utah field office, but was unsuccessful. Davita, hopeful of finding work somewhere closer, applied to teach at BYU, then smaller colleges in Utah. It wasn't to be. Asher's eloquent pleas for Davi to give up her job and be with him were met with resistance. 'I wish to be more than some hausfrau to an important man. Even if that man is the one I love more than anything. You push too hard, Asher. Be patient. The marriage will come, I promise. We have time. Your children will come, as many as you desire, I promise that too. Be patient. I don't like the pressure.' That stopped Scully cold. She thought back to Asher's bewilderment at Davi's sudden refusal to marry. Something tickled her brain, but refused to be grasped, elusive as a night wraith. Clues, she needed more clues. Scully sipped her grape soda and read on. The tone of Davi's letters changed. There was no forewarning. Scully noted the dates on the letters, noticed how the time between them grew further apart. She realized the date of the first stilted one coincided with Davi's return from abduction. A pain behind her eyes blossomed. With hindsight, and her own experience, Scully read between the lines. Too often something written touched a nerve, brought tears to her eyes, served to open wounds that had never fully healed. She'd never met Davi, but felt as if she understood. Scully could also see the other side, and appreciate Asher's frustration. 'I'm sorry, Asher, because of my abduction experience, I can't marry you.' 'I don't care about that, Davi. I believe you. I believe what happened to you, or that you believe it happened that way. I still love you. None of that has changed.' 'I can't marry you, Asher. I can't give you what you deserve. Not anymore. I don't even want to try. Find someone else. Marry Rebekah. She worships you.' 'I don't want anyone else." Asher wrote seven pages of Shakespearean quality discourse on wanting only her. Davi's next letter was one page. One line. Intended to inflict mortal damage. 'Then you are a fool, because I no longer love or want you.' Scully dropped the letter to her lap, wiped a hand over her eyes. "And *you* were a liar, Davita Yael. You did love him." Several tissue thin airmail letters were tucked in the back of the box, postmarked from Tel Aviv. Curious, Scully pulled them out. They weren't from Davi, they were from a woman named Rebekah Levine. The Rebekah that worshiped Asher? Scully hesitated only an instant before opening them. If he hadn't meant for her to read them, they wouldn't be in there, she rationalized. Her righteous self scolded her, saying he probably had forgotten about them. Either way, Scully was too fascinated to quit and put them back. Whoever Rebekah was, she possessed a brilliant mind and wry sense of humor. Her exchanges with Asher bordered on the eclectic, discussions of military strategies and Middle Eastern history sprinkled throughout. She asked for Asher's input on points of law, she freely dispensed her own advice on his situation. 'Become an FBI agent. It's the closest thing to an intelligent soldier you have over there. Anything less would bore you.' In another letter Scully read her concern for Asher in between the lines. 'An Explosives expert? You are too methodical, my dear. We deal with bombs daily over here, when are you going to get a chance to practice this new hobby? Wasn't sacrificing Ben enough?' Most telling were the lines concerning Davi. 'Marry her anyway, Asher. If your father insists on legitimate offspring, give him some sperm in a cup for Hanukkah... Have a dozen kids, then grow old and fat and study Talmud to your heart's content. So what if she isn't the right 'class'. That's a stupid, antiquated notion. Like your father is a paragon of Orthodox virtue... You've already signed the t'naim, she'll come around. If your love can override your insistence on propriety that is.' Scully got up then, and dragged her laptop out, plopped it on the table. Within a few minutes she connected to the Internet and searching for information on Jewish culture and family life. It took three hours, and she thought she found the answer she was looking for. But she had to be sure. One other concrete detail in all her reading warranted investigation. A company Davi mentioned, asking Asher to look at it, as if finding it would somehow make him believe. Asher insisted he'd done all that he could, but found little trace of the company she'd given him, just a P.O. box in the middle of Salt Lake City. Asher even used his FBI privileges to try and find out. His first attempt at playing with the system resulted in a reprimand, and letter of censure added to his file. Christina Martinez managed to keep him from being put on probation, and apparently Asher gave up chasing the phantom company. He didn't have the right connections. Scully only knew one place to go for the kind of elusive information he'd been after. It took as much courage to dial that number as it had to face down numerous flesh-eating entities. But Scully's need to know outweighed her fundamental distaste. This wasn't the way she liked to do things. "Yeah?" "Frohike? Agent Scully." "Scully?!" The man's voice rose an octave before he recovered enough to act cool. "What can I do for you this fine day, Agent Scully?" "I need information. I need it immediately." "Mulder said you were on vacation. In *Utah*." "Yes. I am. Can you do this or not?" Scully rolled her eyes, an instinctive reaction around any of the Lone Gunmen. "Sure. Whatcha need?" "I need to get as much information as I can about a limited liability company called New Genesis. I believe they're behind a high- tech medical research lab here in Salt Lake City. There have been problems finding the holders of the shell company. It may even be owned by members of the church. I know you have better resources..." The was a pause from the other end, "A name, that's all you've got?" "I'm afraid so. Look, if it's too difficult for you--" "Don't worry, Agent Scully. If it exists, I'll find it. Anything else?" "I also need to find out if a certain person is a certain type of Jew, whether he's Orthodox--" "Or Reform, or Conservative? Can't rule out Reconstructionist either." Scully blinked. "Exactly." "Got a name? Any background? Be easier if you got a location, saves time in the search." "Name of Asher ben Jacob. He's an FBI agent. Born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, he's about 30 to 34 years old. Currently living in Salt Lake City, Utah. Also a Davita Yael, originally of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. She's deceased. Last, information on a Rebekah Levine from Tel Aviv, Israel." She spelled the names for him. "Got it. Give me some time. Want me to call you back?" "Please. Do I need to give you my number?" "Nope. Got it the minute you called." "That's what I was afraid of." Scully hung up and continued her search through the Internet. When her cel phone finally rang, she let it shrill three times before picking it up. "Scully." "Got a big blank so far on New Genesis. We're digging ... something will turn up, I'm sure." Scully nodded to herself. "Thanks. What about the other information?" "Much easier. Interesting collection of people you acquired. Over achievers, " Frohike answered, "ben Jacob and Yael attended an Orthodox synagogue. The both of them. Interesting thing is, ben Jacob attended a reconstructionist Rabbinical College in Philadelphia." "Which means?" "Which means he was one confused puppy," Frohike explained. "He started off in a strict religious atmosphere, then moved to a more progressive one. Probably was like a kid in a spiritual candy shop." "Rebekah?" "Didn't get much on her. She's connected to an import-export firm in Tel Aviv. What I find more interesting is what I couldn't find on her. It's been hidden. Then again, could just be an encryption method I'm not familiar with. Yet. Israelis are like that. Secretive. She could be covert operations. That would explain a lot, I'll keep digging-" "Frohike, do you know a lot about Judaism?" There was a short silence, then a cautious reply. "I might. Why?" "I need a question answered. It's been skirted around in the research I have available. How important are children to a Jewish couple?" "Depends on the couple. And their background. In the more religious sects, children are very important. To the point where the man is required to divorce his wife for not giving him kids." "I see..." Scully chewed her lower lip. "There was this rabbi, I forget his name, who once said, 'An unmarried Jew is not considered a whole human being.' See, the rabbi, heck, all Jewish men are expected to marry and raise children, to contribute to the Jewish state, so to speak, and set the example. Have a basketball team of kids, at least. A baseball team was better. American League rules. So children are an integral part of the Jewish experience. For the religious Jew that is. Without children, the couple would be considered incomplete." "Frohike, you are amazing." "Will it get me a date?" "Not a chance," Scully said with a smile. "But I won't make fun of your Wookie vest more than once a week now." "I guess it's more than I hoped for. Anything else?" "No, and Frohike? Thanks..." "Anytime, Agent Scully... B'Shalom." Scully tapped off the phone and stared into space. So much unsaid, so many covenants cast to the wind, unable to find a place to come to ground. What Asher and Davi did made Scully's heart ache. She wished she could rewrite the letters, rewrite their lives from after the abduction. Hindsight was a curse she didn't know how to reconcile. Scully picked up the next letter and steeled herself. Asher and Davi fought, long distance. A war of words, the most vicious kind of war a couple could wage. The rift grew deep, seemingly insurmountable, neither of them willing to compromise further. Underlying every trip Asher made to the East Coast was a side trip to see Davi, to talk to her, plead with her, court her, make love to her. The passion still raged. Scully could see it through the carefully composed letters. Asher refused to let go, Davi spoke of letting go, but seemed unable sever their connection. Abandoning love for its own good was the action of a saint, not a mere mortal, and not the action of a woman needing love and support after her ordeal. If only Davi had told Asher the truth. Scully shook her head and read on. Eventually their arguments drove a wedge between them. Asher started to cling more possessively to his religion and returned to his Orthodox roots. Davi put her faith in the teachings of Cassandra Spender; Someone who understood, who relied on optimism, who could promise her everything would be all right. Scully knew first-hand the pain of isolation. To suddenly find someone else had control over your life. To be fighting an enemy with no face, no name, and no basis in normality. To feel as if you were drowning in unseen water. It was easier for Davi to make Asher the culprit. At least he was available. Like Mulder. Mulder. Scully pulled off her glasses and rubbed the bridge of her nose, muscles tense. She was still angry with him. Not for his indifference, nor for his unwillingness to continue to be dragged further into the lies. She was angry for one reason. He'd given up. The thought made her stomach churn. Then again, maybe after all this time, Mulder had learned something. end part 03/15 ================================================================ Touching Jericho (4/15) Best Western Hotel Salt Lake City Day four. Scully opened her eyes, squinted at the unfamiliar surroundings. As she realized it was light, she also realized what it was that woke her: A persistent knocking on the door. "Coming..." she rasped, then dragged herself off the bed and smoothed down her shirt. She ran a hand through her hair, afraid to look in the mirror. Sleeping in your clothes was never a good look, especially not in the early afternoon. She opened the door, not sure who she expected to see. Certainly not Mulder. A casual Mulder, no suit, just blue jeans, T-shirt, leather jacket, windblown hair and that contrite smile. "Mulder...?" She blinked. He smiled again, if he had a tail it would have been wagging. "Not going to invite me in?" Scully stepped back to let him pass, still fumbling for words. "Why... aren't you in D.C.?" Mulder paused and gave her a look. A calculating look. A head to toe survey of her flaws and imperfections. A Mulder look. It wasn't that early, certainly not by Scully's standards. But here she stood, the vagaries of sleep still courting her expression, clothes rumpled, hair in disarray. All she needed was a man hiding in the bathroom. "I was a little worried about you," Mulder said. The tail wagged tentatively. "Me? Why?" "Come on, Scully. I spoke to Frohike. What's so interesting about this New Genesis thing? And the mysterious Asher ben Jacob? And the vacation time?" Mulder shot her a hurt look. "You didn't tell me." The tail drooped to the floor. "I'm sorry, I didn't mean to seem..." Scully took a thoughtful breath, "How did you find me here?" He gave a sardonic smile. "You kidding? You phoned Frohike. He knows your shoe size." "Then tell him to FedEx me a new pair of Gucci pumps, so I can kick some ass in style," Scully snapped. She pulled her fingers through her hair, stared up at the overgrown St. Bernard in her doorway. If he had a keg of Scotch around his neck, she *might* be glad to see him. "It wasn't necessary for you to come after me, Mulder." "No, not necessary..." Mulder studied Scully's resigned expression, and added, "I know you're a big girl now, Scully. Doesn't mean I don't want to help." She shot him a look of her own, reminding him of his refusal to come to Utah with her. Mulder had the grace to glance down and give a tiny nod of concession to her unspoken reprimand. Scully softened. "I'm fine, Mulder. Really." He squeezed himself into one of the chairs and eyeballed the anonymous hotel room, "I know what it's like. I've been in the same place before." She nodded, a half-hearted effort that was instantly analyzed by her partner. He scrutinized her face a long moment before conceding her right to privacy. Mulder's eyes wandered the room again, landed on the shoe box sitting at his elbow. "What's this?" "Mulder... don't." "Don't what?" he asked as he picked up the item that had piqued his interest. "Don't open it. They're personal letters... Not mine." He gave her a curious look, but nodded and set the box down again. "You still haven't answered my questions. Vacation? New Genesis? ben Jacob?" "Agent ben Jacob was the person who requested the files. That's hardly mysterious. His fiancee was killed at Ruskin Dam. He wondered if anything further has developed in the case. You saw the request." "Was there some Bureau related item in the files, Scully? Or did he request them strictly for personal use? Because that's what I saw. Personal use. Maybe you saw something different though. Not that I blame you for being curious," he finished softly. Scully busied herself, switched on the pot of water, in dire need of coffee. Anything to buy her a few minutes. Plastic mug, little orange pouch of coffee, ripped carefully across one end, another meticulous rip to a packet of sugar, then a plastic spoon dropped into the cup. Mix the brown particles with the white in equal proportions. Try not to drool in the cup. She glanced at the electric pot. The water refused to boil. The thought passed through her head that she could just rip open a packet and chew the granules... but Mulder already watched her with too much knowledge swimming through those hazel eyes. She leaned back against the dresser, paused, then asked almost rhetorically, "If you thought you could... help someone... help ease their pain... by revealing something of your own soul... would you? Or would you let them remain ignorant?" Mulder's expression grew contemplative. "I guess... it would depend on the person. Maybe..." He shrugged, amended his words, "Probably..." She sighed, wrapped her arms around herself. "Maybe that's the difference between you and me." "What's all this about, Scully?" She looked at him, from eyes damp with unshed tears and whispered, "Emily." He stood, loomed over her, sympathy and guilt on his face. All she had to do was reach out and touch. Just a few feet. Her arms lay woodenly at her sides. Not this time. "You think Emily can help someone? Even now?" Mulder gave a tentative smile. "I think I like that idea. I think she would too." He was trying. God, the bastard was really trying this time. But was it sincere sympathy, the kind Asher ben Jacob bestowed in abundance, or was it the calculated sympathy Mulder seemed able to drudge up in a psychological instant? Scully erred on the side of caution, felt the lump swell in her throat, she nodded, the only way she knew to stall as she forced it down. "Me too..." Mulder's affectionate gaze drove her to action. There could be no room for self doubt. She took hold of his arm, pointed him towards the door, "I'm sorry, Mulder, I have something to do. We can talk later." "I can--" Scully shook her head. Her decision provided her with newly found determination. "No. This is something I have to do myself." Residence of Asher Ben Jacob City of Murray, Utah Scully stood in front of the door to townhouse number eighteen. The resolution that drove her to leave the bleak hotel room and travel south drained completely away, like blood from a sacrifice. Aimless driving, watching the sunset over a golf course, a lonely meal at a fast food restaurant, and periods of anguished thought had brought her to the very place she set out for hours ago. She stared at the small wooden decoration on the right door post, knowing now what it was and what it represented. A mezuzah. Inside the case was a tiny scroll of parchment, a handwritten piece of the Torah with all the implied blessings and obligations. Her hand reached out to touch the case, stroke its intricate lines and swirls, imagining Asher's fingers tracing the same pattern. There was a complexity to the design that she found immensely satisfying. Religion was not meant to be simple. A deep breath. Then another. She rapped on the door. She could have used the bell, but winced inwardly at the thought of what a strident announcement it would make. Knocking portrayed a confidence she was sure still lurked inside her uneasy heart. Scully stepped back. No warm light shone from the living room windows, the second floor was wreathed in dark silence. All the misgivings she so cavalierly dismissed several hours ago came flooding back. He wasn't home. Irrational tears welled up. Well, what did you expect, she scolded herself. Absolution? He wasn't a cleric to confess your darkest secrets to. Not even a real rabbi. He was only a man. Scully wheeled and headed blindly down the stairs. At the bottom she heard the door open behind her. "Dana?" She didn't turn. Couldn't turn, held physically immobile by the conflicting emotions that raged inside her. She heard Asher clatter down the steps, a few seconds later his strong hands were on her shoulders. He made no move to force her to face him, no abrupt demands as to her presence here. He merely waited. Scully stood, the proverbial deer caught in the headlights, finally realizing it was fear that rooted her to the spot. The pulse in her throat jumped. Anger surged. Dana Scully feared nothing, and no one. Right. ben Jacob's hands continued to rub her shoulders. After another minute, Scully felt the warmth of his breath at her ear, "Come inside." Then his hands were gone, his presence cleared from her personal space. He left the decision to her, and her alone. Wise man. Scully turned. Asher ben Jacob stood in front of his own door, touched the tips of his fingers to the carved wooden case beside his door, brushed it lightly. He then brought his fingers to his lips, and stood a moment, eyes closed, before opening the outer door. Scully caught the screen before it closed, night chilled metal a shock to her hand. She stepped inside. The room was dark, the dim glow of the streetlight spilling into the entryway. It was enough light for Scully to see ben Jacob wore hastily pulled on jeans, the top unsnapped, and a green flannel shirt, open down the front. His feet were bare, jaw shadowed, hair tousled like a six year old. Weakness slammed into her knees. He'd been asleep, not tossing in agonized thought as she had. She groped for the screen door handle behind her, pushed frantically at the half open door that threatened to swing closed on her. ben Jacob's hands found her shoulders again, his body inserted between her and the wooden door. "Dana. You need me?" His voice was soft, fluid, like honey coating itself around her fears. She turned to face him, nodded, unable to speak. He stepped back then. Breathing room. Shoved the door back, away from her, propped it open. Maybe that was why he always left the heavy inner door open when she was there. Breathing room. Air for tortured lungs. Breezes for tortured hearts. Scully faced him through the gloomy light, tried to look into those chocolate eyes, the ones that seemed to peer straight into her soul. They were hooded and black, fathomless pools of darkness that absorbed what little light was there and reflected none back. Scully shivered. She felt the warmth of his hand against her face, the gentle scrape of his thumb as it caressed her cheekbone. A mere touch and she suffered vertigo, poised at the top of a slick slope, about to plunge through the blackness. "Asher... there's something I didn't tell you." He stepped closer, and Scully could finally see the light in his eyes, and the compassion. It fueled her voice, strengthened it, drove it above a terrified whisper. "There's something I didn't tell you," she repeated. "Something about me... and Davi." The man's gaze never wavered. His other palm rose, cupping her face with its twin. There was a great deal of strength in those hands. He could snap her neck and not even break a sweat. The thought was oddly comforting. Scully tipped her head back. His hands tightened briefly around her throat and cheekbones, then relaxed. "Is it something important?" ben Jacob's voice remained steady, but every one of Scully's nerve endings were hypersensitive. She sensed the fear her statement provoked in him, the minute tremble of fingers and tone. With that gathered feeling came a sweeping sense of power, of control, of equilibrium regained. Scully reached up, captured his hands, pulled them down in front of her. Then held onto them. "Yes, it's important." They stood close, much too close. This time it was Scully who occupied his space, stripped him of his absolute composure, ripped the scab off the top of his rationality. His eyes were wide, nostrils flared as if to test the wind. Scully slid one hand from his, continued to clutch the other tightly. With her free hand, she reached over and gave the heavy wood door a shove. There were no creaks, or groans, or protests. The well oiled hinges did their job. The click of the latch engaging ricocheted like a well placed gunshot in the silent foyer. "It's very important." ben Jacob stood, a silhouette in the near darkness. "Come inside..." They walked to the living room, inches apart, afraid to relinquish the physical contact for long. Asher fumbled to turn a light on over the desk, he left it burning low, barely beating back the shadows of the room with its delicate amber gleam. Scully took his hand again, pulled him down to sit next to her on the couch. "I want to tell you about Emily." "Emily?" "My daughter." She watched him study her like prey determining a predator. "First let me tell you how Emily came to be. When I was abducted... when I was experimented on, one of the things they did was remove my ova... all of them. They stripped away every chance I had at reproduction." Scully waited as Asher absorbed this news, eyes wide with understanding. "They made you sterile?" His voice was a horrified whisper. Scully nodded. "Against my will, without my consent... without me really knowing about it either. I was still undecided about having children, but they ripped that decision from my hands with their actions. I was upset when I found out, angry. Terrified. Reviled. But mostly angry. They had no right to determine my future like that, none at all." Asher clutched her hand, eyes fixed firmly on her face. "What did you do?" "What could I do? I didn't know who abducted me, I didn't know who stole my ova, I didn't even know who would want the ova. I decided if I couldn't find out the who, then I should find out the why." Scully's eyes dropped to their clasped hands. "I didn't realize at first the who and the why were interconnected..." "Dana... was it just you?" She looked up then, felt a million years old, hated herself for having to inflict more pain upon this man, but knowing he'd want nothing less than the truth. He was a lot like Mulder that way. "No. It wasn't just me. It was all of us, every woman who was abducted." Asher stiffened as if from a blow, eyes closed, his lips struggled to form words, a prayer, but the only one that Scully understood was 'Davi'. She was torn between throwing her arms around him, and waiting for him to come to terms with his anguish. She settled for tightening her grip on his hands as he rocked back and forth, biting his lip until blood oozed. Scully felt as if she held a kite in high wind, string unraveled to the reel, one strong tug and snap, it would tumble end over end and hurtle off into deep space. "That's why she wouldn't marry you, Asher... because she couldn't give you the children you wanted." "I thought she-- I wouldn't have cared..." "But she cared, Asher, cared about you and your beliefs. What good would you be as a Jew with no children, much less a rabbi. She believed in you, Asher." "I'm not a rabbi." "But you were thinking of going back, weren't you? Before Davi was abducted. Quitting the FBI and being ordained so you could be with her." Asher looked at her and nodded. "She loved you, Asher, far more than you know. She would rather give you up than have you live a life without children. Without *your* children." Scully laid a hand alongside his cheek. "Until I read those letters, I never realized how much the ability to have a child with someone I love meant to me." "Emily? Was she a child from this love?" Scully dropped her hand. "Emily was an abomination, a mistake. She should have never been." "But... I don't understand... she was your daughter..." Scully gave a tired laugh, and tried to pull back, but Asher held onto her hand, forced her to face him. "Tell me," he insisted. Scully reached out, used her thumb to wipe the smear of blood from his lip, then dropped her hand back to his, clutched it like a lifeline. "Emily was created, using the ova they stole from me during my abduction, my ova... and the DNA from something else, something... not of this world." Seeing Asher's eyes glued to her, she continued. "They created her as an experiment, knowing that she wouldn't live long. I found out about her when she was three years old and her mother died... her adopted mother..." Scully's voice faltered. "How did she die?" Asher asked quietly. He still held her hands, still studied her face, his own grief apparently forgotten. "She had a... had a rare medical condition... because of the way she was created. It required a great deal of treatment. By the time I entered her life, her body was on the verge of breaking down. Less than a week after I met her, she was dead." Scully looked up at him, eyes bright. "I tried to be a good mother, for a week I tried as hard as I could... but she died anyway." "It wasn't your fault." Asher pulled her onto his lap, smoothed her hair with one hand. "Dana, nobody can be a mother in a week." "But she was my child--" "A fact of biology," Asher interrupted. He gripped her face in both hands and peered into her eyes. "You never knew her, Dana. There was no bonding period, no chance to get acquainted, to discover one another..." "But I was her mother," Scully whispered. "I should have loved her on sight." "That's the romantic in you, Dana." Asher's hands tightened on her face. "Love comes from a long and deep familiarly, lives interwoven over the course of years, webs that entangle and enmesh and support..." He leaned his forehead against hers a moment. "You are not less desirable, less of a woman, Dana, because you cannot have children. The fault is not in you, but in the circumstances..." "It was my only chance... to be a mother... and I blew it..." To her horror, Scully felt hot tears gather behind her eyelids, and spill down her cheeks. Asher pulled her onto his lap, pressed her head to his shoulder, and held her. The comforting came naturally. He would make a good father. She buried her face in the warm flannel and cried. "I'll never have the chance again. I held back, withheld my love, because in the back of my mind, I knew she was going to die..." "We all die, Dana. Some sooner than others--" She snarled, punched his shoulder with her free hand. "I *knew* she was going to die! She started life as a foetus in a jar of green alien goo, created from my ova, labeled and stuck on a shelf! What kind of beginning is that for a child! All of us women, our children torn from our womb before creation, cataloged and shelved in rows like merchandise at Wal-Mart!" Scully sobbed tears of rage, poured out months of frustration and anxiety, soaked his shirt with remorse and recriminations. Gradually she quieted, and became aware Asher was rocking her, singing softly in another language, a faltering lullaby interrupted by the cracks in his voice. She looked up and discovered tears coursing down his face, drops of pain long unshed. Scully reached up a reverent finger, touched the wetness, then tasted it with her tongue. His song faltered, then faded and disappeared until even the words drifted no longer. All that lay between them were heartbeats. Scully pressed her lips to the base of his throat, felt the ragged pulse that surged, savored the tang of salt that gathered in the dark hollow. She let her mouth continue, and explored the narrow expanse of bare skin showing between the flannel. Asher lay frozen beneath her, a living, breathing effigy of warm marble. She pushed his shirt back, bared his shoulders and began kissing them, working her way over the hard, sculpted muscles of his chest, inhaling the unique combination of soap and aftershave, scent and sweat that made up the man. She paused to lay her head down, and listen to the thunderous beat of his heart, so reassuringly alive, and filled with compassion. He stayed immobile, body taut and tensed beneath her. She sprawled across him, palms on his biceps, feeling the twang of stressed muscle. Scully pulled herself up, and began an assault on his mouth, hands cupping his head, fingers curled in his long hair, lips demanding. She felt him respond, and triumph pushed her forward. Her tongue darted out, touched his lips, pushed past them to explore the depths of his mouth. He tasted of toothpaste, minty, with the coppery overtone of blood. Asher's hands finally moved, grasped her arms, dropped, then moved lower, wrapped around her waist and held on. Their kiss became tinged with desperation. In her urgency, Scully bit his lip, reopened the wound, then sucked on the blood flowing from it. They finally broke apart, panting. Asher lay beneath her, eyes fathomless in the dim light. Scully stared down, hands still tangled in his hair, body imprinted with his, chest to ankle. She could feel their combined heat, her hair fluffed in wild disarray, she could see the swollen passion on his half parted lips. The hidden current that ran between them since their first meeting surfaced with a vengeance. Scully pressed her body hard against his, and felt a response. A smile curled her mouth, and she slid off him, held out a hand and whispered, "Let's go upstairs." He followed. She found the bedroom unerringly, led him inside. The covers were thrown back and trailed on the floor. Shafts of streetlight pierced the blinds, slashed stripes across the sheets and pillows, and cast the rest of the room into shadow. Scully reached up and pushed the flannel from his shoulders, dropped it to the floor. Her hands tugged at the zipper to his jeans. It galvanized Asher. He thrust her away, stripped them methodically. Impatient, Scully yanked off her T-shirt, pulled down her jeans, tore her underwear off and flung it on the pile of clothes. She reached up and wrapped her arms around Asher's neck, kissed him again, pushed him back until they fell on the bed. She lay on top of Asher, kisses demanding, hands restless, driven by compulsion. After another minute, it wasn't enough. She coveted him, craved closeness, needed him inside her. She moved to fulfill her body's demands. He stopped her, hands steel cuffs on her upper arms. She made a mewl like a lioness deprived of its dinner. Asher squirmed forward, yanked open the drawer to the night stand, searched through it, then pulled things out and dropped them on the floor, finally looking at her in frustration. Scully grabbed his chin in her hand, ignored the rasp of his unshaven jaw, twisted his head. "Are you clean?" He nodded. "Then don't worry. It's not like I can get pregnant." The sudden sympathy in his chocolate eyes was her undoing. Scully threw herself on Asher with a vicious passion, and felt him reciprocate. They devoured each other. No tender words, no foreplay, no leisurely exploration. He entered her, and Scully abandoned herself to the reckless coupling of two lost souls, moving together in the rhythm of despair. The vehemence of their joining, the intensity of feeling that poured through Scully forced her to push herself up, prop her hands against Asher's muscled chest and glare down at him. His eyes were closed, hands out to the sides, gripping the sheets, a drop of blood glistened on his mouth. She dug her nails into his shoulders, forced his eyes open. 'I need' trembled on her lips, along with 'I want...' but the words wouldn't be born, no possible way for her to tell him. Words were inadequate, a poor substitute for the volumes of emotions building in her chest and between her legs. Her assault on him was undiminished, but that piercing gaze saw clear through her, crumbled her defenses, brushed them away like a sand castle slapped by the rising tide. He wrapped his arms around her, pulled her down, pressed her close, compelled her to feel their heat and the slickness that wielded them together. Asher slid one hand down her back, cupped her rear and held her tight against him, letting her feel the depth of his own need. Scully trembled as Asher began to move in response to her unspoken plea. He pressed his lips to her cheek, kissed her with infinite tenderness... and Scully lost it. She cried out and rode the wave that washed through her, bucked against him, then in the dying moments of ecstasy, leaned forward and sank her teeth into his collarbone. He made no outcry, just shuddered beneath her, then went still. They breathed in unison, Scully riding the rapid rise and fall of his chest. She turned her head, pressed her ear to his sweat glossed skin, and listened to his heart drum like thunder, finally realizing it was the echo of her own beat that intensified the sound. They lay quietly, until breaths stilled and flesh cooled. Scully made a move to slip off, and he caught her, kept his arm around her, under her back, urged her to stay close. She rested her head on his shoulder, arm over his ribs, threw a leg across his thighs and relaxed. He tugged the covers up over them, and lay quietly, for a long time stroking her hair with one hand, until the strokes grew further and further apart, then stopped all together. He was so still Scully imagined he slept. She drifted, oddly content, strangely satisfied, spiritually cleansed, the flood of anger and regret wiped away. Scully refused to let her thoughts dwell on the quiet man beside her, believing him as satiated as she was. If she had looked up, past the ribbons of light and dark that slashed their bodies, she would have seen those chocolate eyes were open wide, staring at the ceiling, and focused inward. end part 04/15 ================================================================ Touching Jericho (5/15) Best Western Hotel Salt Lake City 4:20am Mulder shifted uncomfortably, not sure whether the creaking noise was the bed or his bones protesting. He glanced at the clock, then peered disinterestedly at pro wrestling blaring on the TV between his sock-covered feet. Not that his thoughts had been focused on anything else but Scully. He frowned, rubbed his hands over his face. This wasn't like her. Chasing smoke was supposed to be his forte. He didn't like the way this was shaping up. Or maybe he just didn't like being left out. The cel phone's rabid chirp broke the placid silence. He fumbled for it, jabbed the talk button. "Scully?" "She's much prettier." Mulder cursed under his breath. "Don't you ever sleep, Frohike?" "Hey, I've been hard at work. Got some info for Scully, but haven't been able to get her on the phone." You and me both... "You mean it's OK to wake me up at 4:30 in the morning, but you wouldn't dare disturb Scully at this hour?" Frohike chuckled. "I normally wouldn't disturb you at this hour, either, Mulder. You need your beauty sleep at lot more than she does. But I thought this was important." "OK, Frohike, cut to the chase. What have you got?" "Tell her to check her email, I sent over everything I tracked down ... main thing was an address she was after. That New Genesis thing? That was tricky, but we found something. I hope she appreciates my diligence." Mulder nodded, suddenly interested. He balanced his phone on his shoulder, dug in the night stand for a notepad. "You found New Genesis? Give it to me." "Right in your backyard, Mulder, West Temple Square ... hang on, I've got a number here.." Mulder noted down the number, then fumbled in the bedside drawer for a city map. After a moment he raised his eyebrows. "Where'd you get that address, Frohike? You've got them singing second soprano with the Tabernacle Choir... That can't be right." "Tracked some postal packages ... we found that address twice. And, I might add, after a considerable amount of time and effort." "Thanks, Frohike..." Mulder said automatically. He continued to stare at the map, frowning in thought. "Anything for the delectable doctor..." "Uh-huh..." Mulder mumbled before he pulled his thoughts back on track. "Thanks, Frohike, I owe you." He hit the disconnect button before he had the honor of discovering exactly what discharging that debt would entail. He was far more interested in the connection between a company called New Genesis and the LDS Church. Strange bedfellows. Residence of Asher ben Jacob Murray, Utah Day Five. The sound of a radio woke Scully, annoyed, she burrowed back against the source of warmth that enveloped her body. It moved, and her eyes flew open as Asher leaned across her shoulder and slapped the alarm clock into silence. He sank down, pulled her against him. She glanced at the clock, saw it was only five thirty, and turned over. "You have to go to work already?" He shook his head, oh so serious eyes glued to her, voice rough. "I usually bike or run..." "But?" The man studied her. "But not today." Pleased, Scully leaned back against the warm, satiny skin of his chest. The world outside was remote, dawn but a tentative idea in the filmy light. Asher's hand rose to stroke her side, a light touch, undemanding, but it awakened all nerve endings in her newly sensitive skin. His fingers were work and weather roughened, yet still able to caress her with the finesse of a surgeon. Scully sighed, then caught it in her throat, not wanting him to know how desperately she'd longed for this simple contact. Asher kissed her, right on that sensual spot behind her ear, then pressed his lips to the side of her throat where her pulse throbbed. Scully turned to confront him, to look directly into those impenetrable brown eyes and that carefully expressive face. His controlled voice was as seductive as a whisper. "This time, my way." She recoiled, one hand splayed on his chest, eyes wide. In the jagged light she saw the purpling bruise on his shoulder, with its semi circular indentations, and the angry lacerations left by her nails. When she froze in indecision, he covered her mouth with his, lips questioning, soft except for the spot where her teeth had torn his flesh. Scully was the marble in this play, a red-haired Venus, arms useless, body chiseled with indecision. Asher moved over her, a sculptor in the throes of creation. His kisses were gossamer, so feather light they captured her attention quicker than a blow. Just as she began to lean into them, he shifted, and spread them across her body, covering every inch of her skin in exquisite detail. She wanted to alternately weep, and claw him with her nails, howl in protest and purr in satisfaction. She searched for the rage of the previous night, but it dissolved under the patient ministrations of his lips and tongue. Her body grew languid, but submission did not come easily, so she roused herself long enough to hook her fingertips under his arms and pull him up. Asher loomed over her, propped up on his hands, muscles tensed, expression inscrutable. She neither gave him permission, or refused him, so he continued, entering her so delicately she could only gasp. The infinite gentleness with which he made love to her stood out in stark contrast to their frantic coupling of the night before. Scully wasn't sure which she preferred. Asher spoke then, as they rocked together, his words finally undamped, they spilled forth in an eloquent torrent, slipping into her ears and oiling her body to new pliancy. They were the words of his letters, the poignant phrases she'd found so compelling in black and white were twice as devastating spilling from his gorgeous mouth between kisses. Scully only relaxed once she realized the beautiful expressions were born of a desperate memory, and not a future promise. The knowledge allowed her to wrap her body around Asher and urge him on, towards oblivion. Their release was abrupt, a harsh compliment to the liquid words. Scully found herself weeping bitterly for things lost, and for things unnamed. Asher made no attempt to comfort her, he sprawled with his head buried in her shoulder, body still entwined with hers. The two of them lay like that for a long time, until Scully pushed him off and cuddled in his arms. Asher clutched her tightly, muscles taunt with emotion. They must have slept, for the next thing she heard was the strident ring of the phone. Asher grabbed it, fumbling. "Yeah?" His expression changed from lethargic to annoyed, he glanced at the clock. "I'll be right there. Cover for me. Thanks, Pat." After slamming down the phone he looked at her. "Late for work?" "Yes, there's a meeting this morning, case reviews." "I'm sorry..." Asher leaned over and kissed her. "You shouldn't be." He jumped out of bed. "All I can do is shower and dress and get down there before Martinez gets any angrier." Scully lay back, pulled the covers up and gave him a small smile. "You haven't been late much, have you?" "No... well, maybe a few times in the past few months..." "After being Mulder's partner all these years, I've learned things. One, say 'Sorry I'm late', then give them nothing more. Two, smile and act like nothing's wrong. And above all else, don't volunteer any more information." "I've got two and three down pat..." "Work on number one, Asher. It usually helps." Asher shrugged, came over and touched her cheek. "No need for you to run off, stay, make yourself at home. How about we meet for lunch?" "I'd like that," Scully told him. "I'll call you after the meeting with the location." After a quick glance at the clock, he disappeared into the bathroom. Five minutes later he returned, trailing soapy smells and steam, nicks on his face where he'd cut himself shaving. He dressed in a white undershirt, a rectangular cloth with fringe at each corner he'd told her was a tallit katan, pale blue polo shirt, no tie, socks, white boxer briefs with a Nike logo, and dark pants. Asher spoke hurriedly as he put on the tallit katan, Scully could only make out the words 'Blessed are you, Adonai-' before he turned away. After yanking a sport coat out of his closet, Asher took his holstered weapon off the dresser and clipped it to his belt, then shoved his wallet and badge in a pocket. He left without kissing her goodbye, and Scully burrowed back under the warmth of the covers, drifting. FBI Field Office Salt Lake City Day Five. Agent Pat Riley leaned on the wall outside the conference room drinking a cup of coffee. His calm azure eyes betrayed none of the anger he was feeling. If Martinez asked about his partner for the third time, he was fully prepared to offer her his third lie of the morning. Then he was going to take every one of those lies out of Asher ben Jacob's hide. Riley was dreaming up a fitting punishment for his partner when Asher strolled in. He surveyed ben Jacob from head to toe, and raised an eyebrow. "About damn time, Ash. We got five minutes. You're in luck, Chrissy moved the meeting to nine. I fed her some line about you checking on a lead for a case." Asher nodded. "Thanks." He went to the back to grab some coffee. Riley trailed behind, his anger slightly dissipated. "You owe me, pal, big time. Seems all I do any more is cover your butt." That earned Riley a shrug and ducked head. "Yeah, I know..." "So what happened?" Riley asked. "Nothing, I just overslept." Riley topped off his mug. "Bullshit. In all the time I've known you, you've never overslept. Not once. Hell, that case in Idaho where you got decked by the suspect's car and spent a day in the hospital you still got your paperwork done before me." "So maybe I was due for a break." Asher emptied several packets of sugar into his coffee and headed for the conference room. "Ash!" Riley waited until his partner turned around. "Damn it, what's with you? Something wrong?" "No, just leave me alone, okay, Pat?" Asher went into the conference room, and found a seat. Riley followed closely. "Leave it alone, hell. You never left me alone when my marriage was headed for Split City. You helped me even when I told you to *go* to hell. You're the only damn reason Francie and I have such an amiable divorce. You missed your calling, Ash, you should have been a marriage counselor." Riley dropped down across from his partner, studied him, then gestured towards his jaw. "It's just not you, Asher. The toilet paper on the nicks?" Asher grimaced and removed the blood saturated dabs of paper. "That's better." Riley shoved a file folder across to him. "We'll have to go over the Michaels case, make sure there aren't any loose ends. Also, there was a bust Friday night, you might want to look over the items we recovered. See if they relate to anything you're doing." He watched Asher nod absently. "I thought you were going to type up that report on the Blyleven case, so we could read it over before testifying." "I'll get to it. Just slipped my mind." "Damn it, Ash--" Riley stopped before he could go off again. Up and down the long table voices fell silent as Christina Martinez walked into the room. After a few perfunctory remarks, she let each agent, or pair of agents discuss their pending cases and query the gathered personnel for ideas and insight. Sometimes they found threads between specialties they hadn't realized were there. Waller, who headed up Financial Crimes, discussed a counterfeiting problem that might tie in with one of the organized crime rings Riley kept track of. Comments flew back and forth, thick and heavy, until some workable plans were hammered out. Riley sat back in his chair, satisfied, then glanced across the table. Asher turned his coffee cup around and around in circles, staring down at the folder in front of him. He hadn't contributed to the commentary, while not that unusual, in light of his other behavior it made Riley take a long look at the man. Asher ben Jacob wore a distant, unfocused look. Riley hoped it meant the rabbi was thinking on their cases. When his turn came, Riley outlined the Michaels case, starting with the bomb threat a business in Wyoming received several months ago. He detailed his and Asher's course of action, and the outcome, then talked about the latest bust and how it might be connected. "...there was sufficient quantities of sulfuric acid and urea nitrate to get our attention, I know the Michaels contingent and some of the minor terrorist outfits never ship just one batch of anything, so conceivably there is more of that stuff out there floating around that we missed." Riley sank back in his chair as Christina Martinez thought about the information Riley presented. "Agent ben Jacob, do you see the stockpiling of these chemicals as a prelude to a bigger threat? Has there been any domestic or international terrorist groups that could account for that quantity of potentially explosive chemicals?" Riley watched Asher look up towards the head of the table, then glance at the assembled agents. To anyone else he appeared to be thinking, but Riley knew the man hadn't heard a word Martinez had said, probably didn't even know she was talking to him. Riley kicked Asher under the table. ben Jacob jumped, started to glare at Riley, then became aware of everyone watching him. "I'm not sure what you mean, ma'am." Martinez rolled her eyes. "Is anybody planning on bombing anything, Rabbi? That's what I want to know. Nitro, C-4, any of that in quantities out there as a catalyst?" ben Jacob shrugged. "Not that I know of." "You're telling me the terrorists have all taken the week off? The city is safe from loony toons, domestic and foreign? No bombs in the works, despite all the obvious bomb chemicals your *partner* has discovered funneling into the city this week?" Martinez kept her gaze firmly fixed on ben Jacob, expression disapproving. Riley saw a flash in Asher's eyes, a hint of emotion too nebulous to name. "I don't have any new information at this time, ma'am..." Martinez nodded slowly, then turned to the final report of the morning. Riley glanced across the table at Asher, but the other man refused to meet his eyes. Frustrated, he looked down the table to find Martinez' eyes on him, she gave him a questioning look, and tipped her head at ben Jacob. Riley shrugged, angry now he'd been implicated in Ash's problems. He sat through the remainder of the meeting pissed off. The minute it ended, he cut off Ash's escape by slapping a file folder down. "We need to talk, *partner*." Riley gave Asher no graceful way out of it, short of knocking him down. The resigned look ben Jacob flashed him was little consolation. Riley closed the conference room door after the last agent and stared down the length of the table. "Thanks for the backup there, *pal*. Nothing like looking like a fool in front of your colleagues." "I don't know what you're talking about, Pat." "You would if you were paying attention. Christ! You hung me out to dry on the Michaels case, and this latest bust. *You* were the one who suggested the tie in between the organized crime and the chemical transport. I never understood how you came to that conclusion, I tried to explain it and it sounded lame. I expected you to jump in and back me up on it. But no, you were off in La La Land. Weller and James took the case apart in front of me, made me look like a complete idiot. 'Uh, my partner said it would happen, so... I applied for the warrant...'. Christ!" Riley repeated. He tore a hand through his hair. "So I want to know what the hell's going on with you, Ash. You owe me an explanation, at least..." "I'm sorry..." "Sorry ain't good enough anymore, Ash." Riley looked down at the other man. "What, you get in a fight or something last night?" "Huh?" "A fight." Riley gestured toward his mouth. "Looks like your lip is busted up, and you're moving kinda slow." Asher touched his lip, then shook his head. "No fight, I, uh... I took a tumble... off my bike. Look, Pat, just drop it, okay? It's no big deal." He stared down at the table. "That and I didn't pray this morning... I even skipped shaharit minyan..." Riley raised his eyebrows. "I need you more than God does right now, Ash." ben Jacob gave him such a miserable look, Riley capitulated. "Fine. Let's go over the Blyleven testimony." Asher nodded, and pulled the file over, looked at it without seeing. "Pat, you ever run across a company called New Genesis in your travels? They might be hooked up with organized crime..." "New Genesis?" Riley frowned, and thought a minute. "What do they do?" "Pharmaceuticals, scientific testing, medical research maybe, I'm not really sure." "This have to do with a case?" Riley flopped into the chair next to Asher. "It might." "Which one?" "A new case I've been working on. They might be involved in something illegal, I don't have a lot to go on, because I can't find enough about the company to check it out. I did trace a P.O. box here though." Riley nodded to himself. "I got to tell you, Ash, something about that name rings a bell. Seems I saw it on a delivery slip somewhere. Maybe from a bust." Asher leaned forward. "Can you find out? I really need to know." "If you tell me about this case it involves. Damn, Ash, you know how humiliating it is to not even have a clue as to what your so called partner is working on? Sometimes I feel like your friggin' secretary, taking messages from Porter Kent and your rabbi and lying when I promise you'll call them back." Riley pulled a small notebook from his inside pocket. "New Genesis..." He wrote it down, then made some scribbles under it. "So, what gives?" He stared at ben Jacob patiently. "Look, Pat--" "What, you don't *trust* me? I don't know anything? I don't have the insight of the golden boy, Asher ben Jacob? No connections in Washington and Israel? Things are beyond my puny grasp of law and foreign intelligence?" Riley leaned over. "What the hell is so complicated about it that you can't tell your own freakin' partner? Huh?" "I think it might have something to do with Davi's death," Asher blurted out. He looked stunned by his confession, about as stunned as Riley felt. "Don't *even* start that shit again, Ash. You looking to get your ass suspended? Or worse? You want Weller investigating you again? He might not be as charitable this time around. Let it go, Ash, I'm telling you--" "I can't, Pat, don't you see? I'm stuck in a nightmare, I can't move forward until this is resolved. I need closure. I need to *know* why Davi died." "Even if pursuing that knowledge takes me down with you?" Riley watched his partner carefully. The other man looked down, and refused to meet his eyes. "What about that pretty little piece from Washington? That's why she's here, isn't it? She brought you information. You going to ruin her career too?" "Pat..." "You and Agent Scully got a thing going? Is that why she's doing it? Risking her career on this wild goose chase of yours? Or is she another Rebekah? You spend an awful lot of time in Washington, Ash. You've picked up some unsavory connections." ben Jacob glared at him, then took a deep breath and spoke softly. "What happened to Davi might be related to terrorist activities. Therefore, it falls in my jurisdiction." "Weller didn't see it that way." "I've learned a few things since then." Riley exhaled loudly. "You going to add lying to your record, Ash? The Bureau frowns on that... they'll fire your ass in a heartbeat." "If it were Francie and Sean that died, would you even be questioning me?" "That's dirty pool, Ash... and totally different. Don't change the subject." Riley shook his head and reached out to touch Asher's shoulder. "Talk to me, man. Before this thing goes too far again." Asher slid to his feet and backed away. "Look, I need to get over to Temple Square, talk to security, we got some foreign diplomats arriving soon. It *is* part of my job, remember? This liaison stuff..." He headed for the door. "Ash, wait! What about the Blyleven testimony?" "Cover for me, Pat. Please? I got other things I have to do." "Damn it, Ash! I've about had it with--" Riley ended up talking to air as Asher ben Jacob wrenched open the door and escaped into the outer office. Riley stared after him, of half a mind to force a confrontation. But the look on Ash's face when he said his girlfriend's name was enough to quiet Riley's anger. The Rabbi was right, damn it. There had to be closure. Riley wondered how long he was supposed to cover for his partner, and if Ash would ever turn the corner and get a grip again. With a sigh, Pat Riley gathered up the scattered files on the table, and looked at them. He chewed his lower lip, ran a hand through his hair, and swore quietly to himself. Then he sat down and pulled out the bulky Michaels case file. "Now where in the hell did I see that info on New Genesis..." end part 05/15