This story is PG 13 for some adult situations. There is a somewhat steamy, (though NOT explicit,) dream encounter between Mulder and Scully, so if that sort of thing gives you fits - even as a dream - you can skip that part. This is not a "romance" in the accepted sense, however, so please feel otherwise safe in proceeding. Thank you to Tish Sears for all the editing help! Comments welcome, critique encouraged, flames humbly accepted. "Those Who Love" is posted in seven parts, all parts posted on September 5, 1995. Fox Mulder, and Dana Scully are the property of Ten Thirteen Productions, lovingly borrowed without permission, and without any intent to infringe, annoy or otherwise upset. The rest of the characters are mine. ***************************************************** THOSE WHO LOVE - Part 3 J. (Jamal) Gallagher did not like waiting in parking lots, he did not like sitting there in his car. It was too suspicious looking, it smacked too much of the actual business he was there to perform. Hendricksen had insisted, however, that he would not speak to him inside the bustling restaurant. He was to wait outside. Gallagher was already in enough trouble over the delays in this shipment, and he did not wish to antagonize his "superiors" with any further trouble, so he agreed to Hendricksen's condition. But he did not like it. The longer this whole transaction went on, in fact, the less happy he was. First there was the delay in delivery. He had examined a sample of Hendricksen's product, settled on a price very much to his liking, and had been promised delivery within two weeks. Those original two weeks, however, had stretched to three, and then four. Then Hendricksen could not make up his mind where the transfer should take place. That took another several days. If it was not for the fact that Gallagher had negotiated such an outstanding price on the "shipment", he would have called the whole thing off a long time ago, simply reported back that the deal was suddenly too risky. His "superiors" would have trusted his evaluation, and agreed, he was sure. But he had negotiated a very sweet deal, here, and he stood to make a lot of money. And he had bills to pay. He glanced at the back seat, at the locked briefcase lying innocently there. The transfer would be simple. He and Hendricksen would park, car door to car door, the doors opened in such a way that no one would be able to see between them. He would hand Hendricksen the brief case, Hendricksen would hand him the leather backpack containing the packets of uncut cocaine. Neither man would count, or examine, the merchandise or the payment at that time. Gallagher had already approved the samples, and Hendricksen, the price. And this was no amateur street operation. While there might not be honor among thieves, or drug dealers, there was fear, and a healthy respect. The likelihood of a double cross was slim; the last man to try to cheat his "superiors" was still floating up in the Wethersfield cove, a piece at a time. And, for such an illegal operation, his superiors had a surprising reputation for honesty. It was good business, and they were not petty criminals, moving dope out on the streets. These were businessmen with whom he dealt, first and foremost. Gallagher looked at his watch. When he turned his eyes back up to the road, a silver sedan was just pulling into the parking lot. He nodded to himself, and brought the briefcase up to the front seat. He waited until the sedan had pulled up next to him, facing the other way, so that their driver's sides were together. Gallagher rolled down his window, then waited for Hendricksen to do the same. "Are we all set then?" he asked, with strained patience. "Follow me," Hendricksen replied. Gallagher frowned in astonishment. "What do you mean, follow you!" he demanded in a harsh whisper. "I'm not gonna follow you! You have the stuff. I have the money. We make the transaction. Here. That was the deal." But Hendricksen shook his head. "Not here, there are too many people," he replied. "I know a place not far from here that is completely deserted. We'll go there." Gallagher struggled to contain his wrath. He had no intention of following this man anywhere; he was *tired* of this run around. Besides, one of the reasons he was confident that he would never need to use his gun was the fact that he *always* performed his transactions out in the open, in full view, cleverly, carefully, but always in settings least likely to encourage a "business partner" to take a chance and do something stupid. Something fatal. "No way, man," he resisted, anger causing a hint of the old neighborhood patois to creep back into his voice. "No way I'm following you anywhere. The transaction happens here, or it doesn't happen. Now, let's get on with it." He took a deep breath, and struggled to calm himself. Hendricksen just looked stubborn. "I don't have the stuff with me," he explained. "I've got it," he continued, seeing the look on Gallagher's face, "but not here. I've got it hidden on this place. It's not far. Honest. I just can't do it here, man, somebody will see us for sure, here. Just come with me. It ain't far. Just a couple of miles, on an old deserted farm." Gallagher was so angry he was shaking. He took a deep breath and tried to think. There was *no way* he wanted to follow this slime ball anywhere. This whole arrangement was starting to smell like nothing but trouble to him. He did not know what to do. Had he backed out of the arrangement before now, even a short a time ago as a week, his superiors would have understood, and perhaps even complimented him on his acumen. But to call it off now... They knew he was meeting Hendricksen tonight, to call it off now would look too suspicious. At best it would look like he no longer had the edge, or the nerve, to control these transactions, at worst like he had made some sort of a deal on his own behalf. He could not risk their ire. He would have to take his chances with the slime. He nodded. "Where?" he asked shortly. Hendricksen nodded and gave him directions. Gallagher waited until Hendricksen's car was out of sight. Then he threw his corvette into gear and peeled furiously out of the parking lot, nearly taking out a blue Ford Escort rental car in the process. He headed down the street. Mulder pulled into the restaurant parking lot just as the black corvette came flying out, nearly hitting him as it squealed around the corner. "Jesus Christ!" he cursed, swinging wide. He looked back over his shoulder. "Guy must have just caught his wife with another man..." He glanced at Scully, who had been thrown hard against her seatbelt. "You okay?" "Yeah," she sighed, shaking her head. They parked, and went inside. The place to which Bowman had directed them for dinner was called "Cousins", and was more of a bar and grill than a real restaurant. Several tables were set in the middle of the floor, and there were a few booths, but the long mahogany bar that took up most of the far wall left no doubt as to the establishment's real function. Still, wonderful smells had met them in the parking lot, as they pulled in, and that promise was met when their entrees were finally placed before them. Scully cut a slice from her roasted chicken breast, and watched Mulder tuck into his rib-eye steak and fries. She looked at him quietly for a moment. "So, are you still convinced these deaths are actually murders by haunting?" she finally asked. Mulder looked up at her. "The evidence seems to point in that direction, yeah," he agreed, eyeing her curiously. "I take it by the look on your face that you don't agree?" "I guess I just don't see anything I could call evidence of anything other than exactly what this seems to be - a very strange coincidence. Nothing more." "But what about Bowman's story?" "About the two ghostly lovers? I thought it was very charming. Delightful, really, and he tells it very well. I got the distinct feeling that he's been telling that story to anyone who would listen, for years." She smiled at Mulder fondly. "My father used to call that 'local color'." Mulder frowned at her. "His aunt seems to have had some personal experience with them," he countered. Scully nodded. "I've got an aunt like that, too, only mine sees angels. Mulder, all's you've got there is an eccentric old woman who forgot where she put things, and blamed ghosts for it. It doesn't prove anything." "What about Bowman's own experience. That was something less than charming, don't you think?" Scully sighed. "Oh, come on, Mulder, look at it logically. You have a little boy, subject to a terrifying and heinous experience. A little boy who was brought up on stories about those ghosts, who romanticized them, whose own family member treated them like household companions. It's only natural to expect that the boy would 'see' one of these ghosts under the circumstances. Like an imaginary friend." "Imaginary friends rarely throw heavy lamps across rooms to save you from being raped," Mulder countered. Scully nodded gently. "And maybe this imaginary friend didn't, either" she suggested. "Did you stop to think that maybe Bowman did *not* escape that assault? That this 'ghost' is actually his mind's way of dealing with what was done to him?" Mulder made a face, but did not argue further. She had a very good point, one that had occurred to him as well. He looked at her out of the corner of his eye, then sighed and nodded. Scully ate her chicken, and let Mulder think for a moment. When he did not offer a counter argument, she ventured further. "Anyway," she began, "I have done *some* reading during my, uh, sojourn on the X-Files..." Mulder quirked a lopsided grin at her, and she smiled back, "and I seem to recall reading that hauntings, for the most part, are generally pretty benign occurrences. Ghosts are suppose to be little more than left over energy from a consciousness that has not found peace in death, for one reason or another, often due to some unfinished business, or violence associated with the death, itself. But usually, this energy just sort of hangs out. It may, possibly, repeat whatever activity is associated with the reasons behind the 'haunting', but nothing premeditated. With the exception of certain kinds of poltergeist activity - which may not even be spectral - ghosts don't really affect their environments much. And even poltergeists usually only move things around, or make noise. Ghosts can be a nuisance, but they are very rarely intentionally injurious to human life. Most of that is a Hollywood interpretation. "What you are suggesting, though, is that these 'ghosts' *intentionally* caused those men to die. Even given the possibility that you might be right about the *existence* of such entities, doesn't that theory pretty much fly in the face of the accepted thinking?" By the time she finished, Mulder was grinning widely. "You *have* been reading," he replied with a small laugh. "And yes, you're right. Most spectral activity is benign in nature. However, I think we have a particular situation here." He put down his fork and looked at her intently. "Let's take Bowman's story at face value for a moment, and assume that he is correct in his belief that Jeremiah Colter and Catherine Hewlett still haunt the Colter farm because of the depth of their love for each other. A love that was denied in life, and therefore cannot be denied in death. It could be postulated that the actual physical matter binding them to this Earth and to each other, is that house, itself. The house they lived and loved and died in. To lose the house would be to lose each other, which is something they cannot allow. They aren't really murdering. They are only defending themselves and their love. "As long as efforts go forward to tear down the Colter farm, I'm convinced that people will continue to die on that property." Scully smiled warmly, and glanced down at her dinner for a moment. Then she looked back up at her partner. "That was very touching, Mulder. Very romantic, actually. I didn't know you had it in you." Mulder smiled, a little sheepishly. But Scully sighed. "Look, I agree that coincidence isn't a very satisfying explanation, here," she admitted, "and, short of exhuming a body and looking for other evidence," she pointed a finger at him warningly, "which we have *no* grounds to do, so don't even think about it, your theory that those men were frightened to death makes as much sense as anything does. But I still fail to see what we can do about it." Mulder looked at her earnestly. "We either have to convince Bowman not to sell that property, or get him to bring in a parapsychologist who can contact the ghosts through a psychic, and convince them to leave the house," he said. "It's the only way to prevent further deaths." Scully pursed her lips. "And, you might even be able to convince Bowman of that, although his *brother* doesn't seem much like the 'parapsychologist' type to me," she agreed. "But what the *hell*, Mulder, are you gonna tell Skinner? This is *not* our job. Under no circumstances can we even justify *this* little junket, we can only hope that nobody has been looking for us, so we can get back to Washington tomorrow without having to explain our absence." Mulder did not look happy. "So what, we just let the deaths continue?" Scully sighed, beginning to get exasperated again. "Mulder, I don't know what you want me to say," she replied. Her partner eyed her, then finally nodded in defeat. "I'd still like to go through the house tomorrow morning, before we leave," he said, his disappointment clear in his voice. "Just to satisfy my curiosity." "All right, if we do it early," Scully agreed, knowing she had won, and not wanting to rub it in. "I'm kind of curious, myself." J. (Jamal) Gallagher pulled off the road behind Hendricksen's sedan, and looked around. There wasn't much moon, but enough to see that he was parked beside an open, and overgrown field. He got out of his car and walked cautiously up to Hendricksen's. He peered in the windows and saw the keys still in the ignition, but the vehicle was otherwise empty. He peered up into the field. "Up here!" Hendricksen called him distantly. In that vague light, Gallagher could just make him out on the boarder of the woods. "Bring the briefcase and come here!" The hell he was going to do that. Gallagher tossed the briefcase full of cash into his trunk and slammed it shut. Then, hand over the butt of his gun, he trudged up the long incline to where Hendricksen was waiting. He could not see well in the half light, so he had several deep scratches and a wrenched ankle by the time he reached Hendricksen. He mood, never very good, was no longer the least cooperative. "Hendricksen, what the *fuck* is this all about, man?" he demanded, frustration destroying the last vestiges of his carefully cultivated speech. "What the *fuck* is going on here?" "Nothing, man," Hendricksen demurred placatingly. "I just, you know, didn't like to do the transfer in that parking lot. Too many people around." He looked at Gallagher. "Where's the money, man. I tol' you to bring it?" "An' I don't take orders from no slime like you," Gallagher hissed. "It's locked in the trunk of my car, and that's where it's gonna stay until you tell me what the hell you're up to. Where's the stuff?" Hendricksen kicked a backpack at his feet. "Right here, man." Gallagher looked down, and nodded. "Let's get the fuck out of this field, then. Bring it down to the cars." He turned and started down the slope. "I don't think so," Hendricksen replied, his voice firm and hard, all traces of whining vacillation now gone. "Turn around." Gallagher turned around and found himself staring down the barrel of a .38 caliber revolver. He gaped in shock. "Now give me your car keys." "What are you *doin'*, man." "The keys, Gallagher. Slowly. Now." Gallagher drew breath slowly. "Are you crazy? They'll kill you, man. I don't show up with the goods tomorrow, they gonna *know* you double crossed them. They'll find you, man." But Hendricksen shook his head. "You don't show up with the goods tomorrow, they'll figure it was *you* who pulled the double cross. By the time they pull your car out of the Cumberland marsh, I'll be long gone. With the cash, and the stuff." "Man, you're nuts!" "Give me the keys." Gallagher dropped his hands to his waist, and thought furiously. He could not believe this was happening. It had to be a dream. His hand brushed the top of his gun butt. Maybe it was a deer, or maybe it was just some rotten tree limb finally giving up and cracking to the ground, but the sudden sharp noise within the woods made Hendricksen jerk his attention to the left, just slightly. It was only a fraction of a second, but it was enough. Gallagher drew his weapon, clutched the butt in both hands, and fired. It took him a moment to realize what he had done. Hendricksen's body collapsed into a heap in the shadows. Gallagher could not see the extent of the damage his bullet had done, but Hendricksen had to be dead. Shit, the man had taken that bullet right in the face, no one could survive that! He kicked the body, and felt no movement, heard no response. Then it hit him. He had killed the man, *killed* him. For all of his flirtation with the underworld, for all that he had grown up on the streets, Gallagher had never killed anyone, before, had never even known anyone, intimately, who had done so. Panic took him. He had to get out of there. Hendricksen's body had fallen over the backpack. Gallagher jerked it out from under him, then opened it quickly. He tipped the mouth of the bag to catch the moonlight, and shuffled his hand around inside. It collided with something soft, and he drew out a clear plastic bag filled with soft white powder that glittered in the faint light. Gallagher dropped the bag back into the backpack, and zipped it closed again. He had to *do* something. He had to get out of there. He could take the coke, he could be take the coke and the money back to his superiors, explain what had happened. But his superiors were tidy men, and serious businessmen. They would not like this little complication, not at all. There was not telling what they might do to "discipline" him for this slip-up. Gallagher shuddered at the thought. He could always just blow. Take the money, take the coke and run. He could be a thousand miles away before the sun came up. But they would find him. He knew they would find him. He had to think. He looked around wildly. Hide the coke, hide it somewhere and go someplace where he could think. He had to get away from the body, get the hell out of that field. He peered into the woods, but it was too dark to see, and he was not going in there anyway. He turned around slowly, looking around him as he did. His eyes strained across the field. He had not noticed the old house, at first, because it was partly hidden in the shadows of the surrounding trees, but his eyes had adjusted to the near darkness, by now, and he could see the outline clearly. It returned to him that Hendricksen had said this was an old deserted farm. He jogged toward the building, desperate to put as much distance as he could between himself and Hendricksen's body, sure he could find someplace in that ramshackle building to safely hide his burden. He ran, unmindful of the rough ground, and the brush clutching as his pant legs. He did not stop until he had reached the house. The old well presented itself like a vision of salvation. Gallagher careened to a stop and bent over, gasping for breath beside the stone circle. He set the backpack onto the ground, and shifted the stone well cover to one side. Without stopping to think, he dropped his gun inside. Then he felt around the inside of the rim. Yes! Exhilaration filled him as his fingers found the iron bucket hook wedged in the wall of the well. He lowered the backpack over the side, and hung the straps over the hook. Then he pulled the cover back over the well. By morning, the trampled grass would be back to normal, rising with the dew. There would be no evidence that anyone had tampered with the well. Gallagher brushed the dirt from his hands, and thought about Hendricksen's body. Leave it, his brain said. The farm was deserted, chances were no one would even find the body until the wild animals had decimated it. And even if they did, there was nothing to lead them back to him. He could drive Hendricksen's car into the marsh; it would be days before it was found. Even Hendricksen had been sure of that. He felt unreasonably better as relief flooded him. The money was in his trunk, the coke would be safe in that well forever, and he had all the time in the world, now, to figure out the best thing to do. He looked around, slightly disoriented, then saw the road. He strode purposefully back down the hill.