Title: The Far Side of X Author: Vickie Moseley Spoilers: Triangle, Master and Commander: Far Side of the World Rating: PG Category: MSR, MT Written for Mulder's Refuge June Challenge "At Sea" Disclaimer: No copyright infringement intended. Feedback: vickiemoseley1978@yahoo.com The Far Side of X By Vickie Moseley Sargasso Sea June 11 1:21 pm His head hurt. Mulder's eyes were still tightly clamped shut, but he knew without even looking that whatever light there was would surely burn a hole right through his brain. He was not going to open his eyes for love nor money. "Mulder, wake up. Mulder, c'mon, you have to wake up." Slowly he cracked his eyes opened and was surprised at the dimness of the lighting. He actually had to focus a little to bring Scully fully into view. Without thinking, he started to sit up and immediately regretted it. "Oh, god, my . . . head," he gasped, throwing both hands to his temples and trying desperately to keep his frontal lobe from exiting through his eyeballs. "What the hell . . .?" Scully held his shoulder as he steadied himself. Scully! He forgot all about his own ills when he remembered the last time he'd seen her. He was certain she'd been crushed by the force of a tremendous wave and swept overboard. Instantly, his arms wrapped around her and he hugged her for dear life. "Scully, are you OK?" he asked anxiously. He felt her smile into his neck and then she pulled away from his embrace, just far enough so he could see her for himself. "I'm fine, Mulder. A little knock on the head and I hurt my wrist." She held out her left arm, in the dim light her wrist looked bruised and swollen. Tenderly he took the injured limb in his large hands, rubbing the darkened skin gently. "Is it broken?" "No, I think it's just a sprain. Hurts like the devil, though. Are you all right? You were really out of it. I couldn't get you to wake up for several minutes. I was terrified you had a skull fracture." Her eyes showed him the truth of her words. Were those tear tracks on her cheeks, or just drying salt water from their misadventure on the high seas? He decided not to bring up the subject, but squeezed her good hand reassuringly. "You know me. Give me a good, uh, rather short cot and a dry blanket and I can sleep for days," he chuckled, picking at the wool material that still covered his lap and legs. He finally had the sense of mind to look around their quarters. "Where are we? This isn't our boat?" "I'm afraid our boat is at the bottom of the briny deep by now," Scully said mournfully. "There goes another $500 deposit." "Hey," he said, lifting her chin with his index finger. "We're safe. What's five hundred bucks compared to that?" She smiled at him. "Good point," she agreed. "But as for our whereabouts, or the kindly people who saved us, I have no idea." Mulder took a deep breath and rose slowly to his feet. Scully grabbed him to steady him, but he was standing straight, or as straight as he could quickly. "Not much headroom." "It's the hold of a ship. An older ship, from the looks of it. Maybe even a replica of a tall ship, if what I'm hearing topside is any indication." He gave her a lop-sided grin. "'Hold', 'topside', boy, get you on the water and you loose any grain of landlubber you ever had," he teased. Turning his attention to the room once more, he ran his hand over a smooth wooden beam. "This is solid timber. And old, from the looks of it." "I assure you, the Surprise is quite young, and a fair lass for all her voyages." A man in full uniform, full antique uniform Mulder noted, looked askance at him from the doorway. "I'm sorry, that was rude," the man said, striding into the room. Mulder moved closer to Scully, still unsure of the other man's intentions even though he had no indication that the person was hostile. "Where are my manners? I'm Captain Jack Aubrey, this is my ship, His Majesty's Ship Surprise." Capt. Aubrey extended his hand to Mulder, who shook it firmly, and then tilted his head toward Scully. "My apologies, Madam for entering your chamber, but I promised the Doctor I would meet him here." He looked behind him, toward the doorway. "I wonder what could be keeping him," he said with a scowl. "I'm here, Captain. I just had to gather a few things. Mr. Higgins, here, let me take those. And see if you can find any more sheets. We should curtain this area off from the rest of the sickbay and prying eyes." Another gentleman entered sporting small wire-rimmed glasses and carrying a bundle of clothing. He had an easy smile and quickly extended his hand to Mulder. "Doctor Stephen Maturin, at your service. If you would sit down, sir, I'd like to examine you briefly. You were both unconscious when we brought you aboard." Mulder was a bit confused, as both men seemed to be wearing costumes of the same era, an era of long ago. "Are you some kind of reenactment?" he asked, sitting next to Scully and putting his arm around her shoulders. "Reenactment of what, pray tell?" the Captain asked, looking as confused as Mulder. "Tall ships, men of yore, John Paul Jones?" Mulder rattled off. At the mention of Jones, Captain Aubrey visibly bristled. "I'll not be compared to that scallywag, sir," he said haughtily. "Arrogance and dumb luck, that's all he had going for him. Take a Captain with some wit, some intelligence. Admiral Nelson -- now that is a true seaman!" "Jack, please," the Doctor said in a sotto voce. "They are our guests, and judging by their accents, American." The Captain looked suitably contrite. "Yes, yes, you're right, Stephen. My apologies, once again." After an awkward silence, he looked first at Mulder, then at Scully. "But before I go, may I inquire as to the names of our two guests from the sea?" Mulder looked over at Scully for an instant. Something strange was going on here and he wasn't sure if she'd picked up on it yet. Tall ships, odd uniforms, the obvious animosity to an American Captain of the Revolutionary War. And they had been sailing in the Bermuda Triangle. "I'm Fox Mulder and this is my wife, Dana," Mulder said and caught in the corner of his eye his partner's wide-eyed glare directed at him. As if to prove his point he put his arm around her waist and gave her a light squeeze. "We were sailing and our boat was hit by the storm." "Mr. Mulder, Mrs. Mulder," Aubrey said with a nod to each. "From what part of America do you hail?" "Boston," Mulder replied quickly. Both Aubrey and the Doctor raised eyebrows. He didn't bother to look at Scully, he knew her eyebrows were probably reaching the crow's nest. "We were in South Carolina, visiting Dana's brother." "Oh, well, we'll see if we can't put you off at Charleston harbor, provided the winds pick up again," Aubrey said with a tight smile. "No wind?" Scully asked. "That's odd, isn't it, for this time of year?" Aubrey cast her a curious look. "You know of sailing, Madam?" Scully felt Mulder's hand on her thigh, and covered it with her own. "My father was a captain in our Navy," she said proudly. "Oh, really," Aubrey replied happily. "What vessel, may I ask?" Scully thought for a moment. "The Kearsarge was where he was last stationed," she said and felt Mulder's hand almost pinch the circulation off in her leg. Aubrey's expression darkened. "I didn't know the Americans had a vessel by that name," he said tersely. "Just commissioned," Mulder said hastily. "Now, Jack, enough interrogation," cut in the doctor. "Please allow me to attend to their injuries. That wrist looks quite uncomfortable, Mrs. Mulder." He seemed ready to belie that request, but finally Aubrey turned to leave. "I'll tell Killick to set two extra plates for dinner. You'll honor me by dining at my table, won't you, Mr. and Mrs. Mulder?" It wasn't his words, but the way he said it that put Mulder on alert. It sounded like an order dressed up as a request. The Captain wanted to keep a close eye on them. "Of course, Captain. We would be honored. Thank you," Mulder answered for both of them. Once Aubrey was out of earshot, the young Doctor smiled and gave them a sympathetic look. "Please excuse him," he said with a shrug. "We don't pick up many people at sea and Jack tends to see Napoleon's spies around every corner." "I can't imagine what that must be like," Scully said dryly. "So, Mr. Mulder, what do you do for a living?" the Doctor asked casually as he wrapped Scully's wrist in bandages. "I'm a professor at Boston College," he said finally. Scully gave him a look that told him she thought he'd finally gone mad. "Oh, how lovely," the Doctor said with a smile. "What subject? The sciences, maybe?" "Sorry, literature," Mulder said with a tilt of his head. "That will make for interesting conversation at table tonight," the Doctor said cheerfully. "Now, let me bandage that wound on your scalp. Do you have a headache?" "I think I do," Mulder said and heard Scully snort quietly beside him. "Or I do feel one coming on," he added, for her benefit. Dr. Maturin cleaned the two inch gash just at Mulder's hairline and wound a piece of bandage around his head efficiently. "There, that should do nicely. Rest and a ration of rum after dinner and I'm certain your headache will be better by morning." "I hope you're right," Mulder said, exchanging a quick glance with Scully to see if she was going to clobber him when they were alone. "Well, I think that's all that needs done," the Doctor said with a dusting of his hands. "I suggest you both try to rest. Either I or Lt. Pullings will be by to take you to the Captain's quarters for dinner." He got up to leave, but stopped at the door. "Mrs. Mulder, I'm sure I don't need to apprise you of the fact that it would be in your best interest not to wander alone on the deck," he said, looking apologetic again. "Of course not, Doctor. I understand," Scully replied and took Mulder's hand. When the good doctor was out of the room, Scully turned on her partner. "Mulder," she hissed in a voice just above a whisper. "What the hell is going on?" "Listen to me for a minute, Scully. I've done this before. We left Bermuda and went sailing southeast. We were hit by a storm. Our boat was wrecked, as least as far as we know. We were picked up by another ship, but this ship is not from our time." She rolled her eyes to the ceiling. "Mulder . . ." "Look, Scully, I know you didn't believe me when I woke up in the hospital in Bermuda, but I was on the Queen Anne in 1939!" "The Queen Anne, which I will admit did appear, was a ghost ship, Mulder," she hissed back. "Then this is another ghost ship, Scully!" "Well, at least the name fits," she said, crossing her arms until she hit her wrist and winced. "Mulder, I think these men are just actors." "Pretty convincing act, if you ask me, Scully. And if they were actors, why stay in character like that? You saw how the doctor treated your wrist and my head. Would you stay in character if someone was injured?" "I'm not an actor, Mulder. I'm an FBI agent," she sneered. "I don't think these men are actors, either. I think we're on an English sailing ship from sometime after the American Revolution. The English were at war with Napoleon during that time." She slowly shook her head. "And what was that about being married? And the stuff about Boston College and a professor of literature!" "Cover, Scully. The last time I had this happen, I told the truth and it almost got me killed. I'd like to think I'm learning," he said tensely. They shared an angry silence for several moments. Finally, Scully drew in a deep breath and turned toward him. "So, are we stuck in their time or are they stuck in ours?" Mulder chewed his lip. "I don't know. Maybe we're all stuck sometime else. We won't know anything until the ship starts moving." Scully closed her eyes and nodded. Stephen found Jack on the top deck at the rail near the wheel. The Captain gave him a look and cocked his head. "They're resting," the doctor answered the unspoken question. "Her wrist is sprained. He has a cut on his head. They are in surprisingly good shape for the condition of their boat." "What were they doing this far from land?" Jack muttered, looking off on the horizon. "Sailing, and they were blown off course by the storm last night," Stephen offered with a shrug. "You believe that?" Jack asked, not leaving his search of where the sea met the sky. "What wouldn't I?" Stephen returned. "Jack, they're Americans. We are off the coast of America. I don't think they mean us any harm." "He hardly seems the sailing type," Jack said casually. "He's a professor. Maybe she was at the helm," Stephen said with a wry grin. Jack chuckled. "She does seem the type. Did you see her hair? That is one fiery lady." "He appeared totally devoted to her," Stephen noted. Finally, Jack turned to his friend. "I think you are entirely too trusting, Stephen, but I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt. I just want you to keep an eye on them, and make sure that they stay out of the way. I would rather they didn't get a close look at our arsenal." "Of course, Jack." He joined his friend's perusal of the skyline. "Clouds to the south. Maybe we'll get some wind soon," Stephen said, pointing off the starboard bow. "Or fog. We may be in for some soup," Jack said sourly. Jack's words were reality by the time the two agents were ushered into the Captain's quarters for dinner. Mulder found himself ducking through all the portals, Scully tried to get a glimpse of the holds as they passed, but all was darkness in the growing dusk and fog. The Captain's table, on the other hand, was brightly lit and cheery. Aubrey introduced the assembled officers and midshipmen. Scully withheld a gasp when she realized the small children in attendance were actually officers in training. The boys couldn't have been more than 10 or 12. One boy, a bright-eyed tow-head with an easy smile seemed particularly intelligent during conversation. Scully was dismayed to note that his left sleeve was empty, obviously his forearm had been amputated. She bit her lip and turned her attention to the Captain. "It's not often that we have guests at table. If you'd be so kind, Professor Mulder, to lead us in grace?" Scully swallowed a groan, but Mulder seemed immune to her distress. "Certainly, Captain," he said amiably. "Dear Lord, for the food on this table, the calm after the storm and the kindness shown us this day, may we be forever grateful. Amen." An echo of 'amen' rounded the table. "Well said, Professor, well said," Aubrey said with a smile. "Very well said," Scully whispered as she leaned over to pass him a bowl of fish chowder. "Oxford. Grace was required," he whispered back and grinned impishly at her. As dinner wound down, Mulder was pressed upon to entertain the assembled with his knowledge of poetry. Scully was enraptured when he recited several stanzas of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, complete with distinctive voices for each new character. The doctor applauded his performance loud and long. Even the Captain clapped him on the shoulder in appreciation. "As much as I hate to end such lively company, I feel we shouldn't tire our guests. They endured quite an ordeal last night," Dr. Maturin said finally. "Quite right, Doctor," Aubrey agreed. "Lt. Pullings, accompany the Mulders to the sick bay where they can retire for the evening." As they made their way out of the quarters, Scully nodded to the Doctor and the Captain. "Thank you, sir, for your hospitality." "We're happy to be of service, Mrs. Mulder. Sleep well," Jack replied. After the agents had exited, a few of the officers stayed behind. Jack listened to their assessment of the men's mood. Without a whiff of wind, especially following the strong storm the night before, the men were frightened and wary. Already some had started grumbling about a woman on board and the bad luck that foretold. "Stephen, I think we need to keep a close eye on our guests," Jack told him after the officers had retired for the night. "Jack -- " Stephen objected but his friend shook his head. "I don't think they're spies, Stephen. But the men are spooked and I don't want anything to happen to the lady or her husband while under my protection. Just keep an eye out, that's all I ask." "Of course, Jack," the doctor replied hastily. "Well, Mulder, you sure know how to show a girl a good time," Scully chided as they prepared to turn in, which consisted mostly of removing borrowed shoes and Mulder's new found waistcoat. "I think we're faring pretty well here," Mulder countered. "When I was on the Queen Anne, I'd already been beaten up a couple of times by now." There was a small glass covered portal just over Scully's cot. She knelled on the bedding and looked out into the inky black night. "So what does it mean when there's no wind, Scully?" Mulder asked from the shadow of his cot. "I thought there is always wind." "There is, usually. And calm seas aren't a problem for the modern navy, obviously. But in olden times, if the wind was in the wrong direction to tack or if it wasn't strong enough to fill the sails, you just drifted where you were." "So we're just drifting," Mulder said and sighed. He could just make out his partner's nod and the dejected slump of her shoulders. "Scully, c'mon on over here," he said, his voice low and raspy. "Mulder, the cot is too small for both of us," she warned, but stepped over to his side and after a few moments, they were spooned together on his cot, Mulder holding her to his chest. "See, perfect fit," he whispered into her ear. "We'll get home, Scully. I promise," he told her with more confidence than he felt. He just hoped they wouldn't have to jump ship to do it. When she first heard the groan, she thought it was Mulder. After a moment, she came fully awake and realized it was farther away, beyond the curtain that made their little alcove. She saw lamplight and shadows. The groaning continued. Someone was in distress. The sound of violent retching was the last straw. She had to see what was going on. Slipping on her borrowed shoes, she cautiously pushed aside the curtain. Dr. Mautrin was bending over a cot, another man was handing him instruments. There was blood on the bedding and the floor. "Is he injured?" Scully asked and the sound of her voice caused the Doctor to jump. "I'm sorry, I heard the noise." "My apologies, Madam. No, he's not injured, he's ill. High fever, vomiting. I'm balancing his humors," Mautrin said without looking up from his work. "Balancing his . . ." Suddenly, it dawned on Scully what the doctor was saying. "You're bleeding him?" she asked quickly. "In order for the body to function, all humors must be in balance. I understand science and medicine are not the customary studies for young gentlewomen, Mrs. Scully, but . . ." "No, please, Dr. Mautrin, this is all wrong. That man doesn't need to be bled! He needs to be rehydrated. There has to be a cause for his illness. What are his symptoms?" she demanded, muscling past the astonished man holding the instrument tray. "Madam, please, you have to leave immediately. I don't have time to answer your silly questions. I have work to do," Mautrin objected. "So do I," Scully replied tersely. "Did he complain of headache, muscle pains? Is there blood in his stool?" The man with the tray looked wide-eyed at her, but nodded in the affirmative. "Madam, I must insist that you leave this room immediately!" Mautrin said forcefully. "Higgins, assist Mrs. Mulder to her chamber!" Higgins made a grab for her arm, but Scully held tight to Stephen's sleeve. "Dr. Mautrin, you must listen to me. This man has malaria. He doesn't need bloodletting, he doesn't need his humors balanced," she said with disgust. "He needs quinine. Surely you've heard of it. It comes from the bark of a tree!" "I've heard quite enough! Higgins!" Stephen barked and this time Higgins was able to manhandle Scully back behind the curtain. Mulder woke up to see her being roughly thrown onto her cot. "Best stay put, Miss. This be man's work," Higgins said with a glare. "Scully?" Mulder asked sleepily. "Shh, Mulder," she said, sitting stiffly on the edge of the cot, listening intently to the activity on the other side of the white cotton curtain. "He seems to be coming 'round, Doctor," Higgins said hopefully. "He should be fine for now. I'll sit with him. You get some rest, Higgins. I'll need you in the morning, to attend to the others." "Do you think she's right, sir? Could it be the fever?" "She's a woman. She has no knowledge of medicine." "They say the fever goes through a boat, makes ghosts of the crew," Higgins said in a trembling voice. "It will be fine, Higgins. Off with you, now." It grew quiet once again. "Scully," Mulder whispered. "One of the crew has malaria, Mulder," she whispered back. "I'd forgotten how archaic medicine was back in the 1800s. The doctor was bleeding him to balance his humors," she added through gritted teeth. "I take it that's not the right approach," he muttered. "Exactly the wrong approach," she agreed. "That man will be dead of dehydration and blood loss by morning. And from what Higgins said, there are more like him." "We need to get off this ship," Mulder whispered with a sigh. Scully nodded in the darkness. He pulled on her arm and silently convinced her to lie down beside him again. "We can't say or do anything, Scully. They wouldn't understand and it would give us away." She said nothing, but he could feel her tears fall on his hand as she clutched it to her cheek. Morning broke and it looked just as dreary as the night before. The fog hadn't lifted and the air was almost perfectly still. Jack stood at the rail, staring off into the murky distance. Stephen came up behind him and stood silently beside for a few moments before Jack acknowledged his presence. "Smythe?" he asked. Stephen nodded solemnly. "Brady, as well. Two dead, seven taken ill. We need to get to land, Jack." Jack pounded the rail with his fist. "How do you suggest we do that, sir? Row?" he spat out angrily. "There is no wind! Not a damnable breeze! Look at the sails!" Stephen flinched at his friend's anger, but realized it wasn't directed at him. He stayed quiet, letting Jack calm down. "I'm doing all I can," Jack said evenly. Then, looking at his friend he added, "as are you. It's all we can do until the winds pick up." Stephen started to say something else when something caught his eye and he turned abruptly. "Madam! I warned you . . ." "Dr. Maturin, my . . . husband has taken ill," Scully said formally. Inside she was screaming. It was bad enough that they were stuck on this ship, adrift at sea. Now, when they'd awoken, Mulder had complained of muscle aches from the small cot. An hour later, he commented that the room was stuffy. She'd dismissed his complaints until he suddenly began vomiting. "I'll be right down," Stephen assured her. As she turned to leave, she noticed the looks the men were giving her. Jack noticed the looks as well. "Back to your work!" he ordered and all eyes immediately averted from the woman passing by. Jack groaned inwardly. He knew that discipline only went so far when running head long against superstition. He really didn't want to resort to lashings to keep the men in line. For all he knew, their guests might have something to do with their bad luck. Sadly, he turned his attention back to the horizon, hoping for a whiff of moving air. They found Mulder lying on the cot in the curtained off corner of the sick bay. He looked up blearily. "Scully?" She sat down and shushed him, taking note of the doctor's furrowed brow. "My middle name is Sally. It's a nick name." Stephen seemed to relax a little, accepting her explanation. "If I may?" the doctor asked, and Scully stood to allow him to exam Mulder. "When did it start?" "This morning. He complained of an ache in his joints, but he said it was from sleeping on the small cot." Stephen smiled up at her. "They really aren't that comfortable for two," he noted and hastily dropped his eyes back to his patient. "He has a fever." "I don't know how high it is. If you have a thermometer . . ." The look Stephen gave her caused Scully to stop in mid sentence. It was obvious he didn't know what she was talking about. "Never mind," she said quickly. "Well, for now, let's cover him, get him to sweat it out. If he worsens, we'll take on more drastic measures." He hoped to reassure her with his words, but they had the exact opposite effect. "I must object," she said, slowly at first, then rushing the words from her mouth. "He needs water, lots of fresh water. And we don't want to cover him up, that only keeps the heat in. We need to cool him off. An alcohol rub would be helpful, but even sponging in cool water would be better than nothing. And more importantly, he needs quinine." Stephen sighed and rolled his eyes. "Madam, I don't know where you get this fantasy that tree bark can cure a fever --" "I know quinine will work because I am a doctor," Scully blurted out suddenly. Once the words passed her lips, her eyes grew to saucers and she covered her hand with her mouth, as if to keep any other confessions from sneaking past. "You . . . are a doctor?" Stephen asked, crossing his arms and glaring at her in abject disbelief. "Yes, I am a medical doctor. I work as a forensic pathologist." A smile played at Stephen's lips. "You . . . work? As a . . . what did you say?" "I'm a pathologist. You don't know what that is because the specialty hasn't been developed yet. For that matter, no specialties have been developed. It will be years before you even have surgeons," she sighed and sat down heavily on the empty cot across from her partner. "I am . . . we are not from this time," she said slowly, as if talking to a child. "We were caught in a . . . riff, a temporal anomaly caused by the storm. We are all caught in the Bermuda Triangle." "The Devil's Triangle? That's a myth, a ghost story to frighten midshipmen!" Stephen laughed heartily. "Madam, I have sailed through this part of the ocean on several occasions and never once . . ." "Yes, well for Mulder, this is the second time this has happened," she said tersely. "The last time wasn't so bad. He was banged up, but we found him and got him to a hospital in time. This time . . . I will not allow you to kill him. Not till we get back home and I can do it myself," she ground out angrily. "So, if you aren't from . . . this time, where do you come from?" Scully chewed on her lip. At best he would believe her. At worst, he would consider her completely insane. Not much of a choice. "We are from the year 2004," she said softly. "Two thousand . . . but that's two hundred years from now!" Stephen cried. Then he looked at her closely. "Why would you conjure up such a fantastic tale?" he asked softly. "Why indeed?" she returned. "Please, I beg of you. Search the ship, there might be some quinine on board somewhere. At dinner you were talking about having just left the West Indies. Surely someone there might have shown it to you. Oh, what did they call it?" she muttered anxiously. Her head jerked up and she smiled at her own recollection. "Jesuit bark! Or Peruvian bark, either one." Stephen sat down beside her and took her hands in his. "Mrs. Mulder --" "Scully. My name is Dana Katherine Scully. This man," she nodded toward her partner, "is Fox Mulder. We work for the American Government, an agency called the Federal Bureau of Investigation. We work in Washington, DC, which hasn't even been laid out in this time," she said with a tired sigh. "Look, I know none of this makes sense. Look at it this way -- maybe you're dreaming, or maybe I'm dreaming or maybe Mulder is dreaming both of us up, but what I am telling you is the truth. Ordinarily I wouldn't care if you believed me or not, I'm used to that. But Mulder's life is on the line. And that is very important to me." "You aren't married?" Stephen asked, raising an eyebrow. "We're . . . partners. For all intents and purposes . . ." she shrugged her shoulders. "I won't sit here and watch him die," she said flatly, not acknowledging the tear that careened down her left cheek. Stephen looked down at their still joined hands and gently placed her hands back in her lap. "Madam, I have been a doctor on this ship for three years now. I have seen fevers before. I know of this bark you speak of, but it doesn't always work. Sometimes, nothing works." "Please, you have to try. I understand that this is beyond your comprehension, but believe me, the symptoms Mulder and these men are displaying are those of malaria, a bacterial infection caused by the sting of a specific species of mosquito found in the tropics. It can be cured -- with quinine. In a few years, your country, Britain, will conquer the continent of Asia because of this discovery! It will enable you to live and work in tropical jungles, building railroads and plantations across India. You'll even invent a drink to make it more palatable -- you'll mix it with gin and it will be famous!" "If what you say is true . . ." Stephen began. "It is! Every word of it!" Scully thought hard, trying to come up with something she could use to persuade him. "OK, look, on June 22, 1815, the British forces will defeat Napoleon's army at the Battle of Waterloo. And you'll never have to worry about Napoleon again! In fact, in our time, you will be allies with the French." Stephen stared at her, expressionless. Finally he clapped his hand on his leg and laughed loudly. "Now, that is a tale worthy of retelling!" he said in between guffaws. "Doctor, is there a problem?" The Captain stood in the doorway, holding the thin curtain to one side. Stephen stood and nodded toward Scully. "I'm afraid the stress has become too much -- " "We're not from this time," Scully shouted out before the doctor could finish. "We're from a time in your future. We, all of us, are caught in the Bermuda Triangle, in a riff in time. I am trying to explain to the doctor that the treatment he is proposing will kill my partner, and the rest of your crew!" Stephen removed his glasses and rubbed them with the sleeve of his shirt. "As I was saying --" "What do you suggest we do differently, Mrs. Mulder?" "Scully," Stephen corrected, before the agent had a chance to do it herself. "Her name is Dana Scully. They aren't married." "The soup thickens," Jack said with a smirk. "Miss Scully, then. What do you think the doctor should do?" Scully glared at the doctor, expecting him to say something else. He shrugged and remained silent. "The correct treatment in cases of malaria is mefloquine, or Malarone. But since I know you haven't developed those yet, quinine is an acceptable substitute." "Jesuit bark," Stephen explained with a dubious expression. "Is there any danger in trying what the lady suggests, Doctor?" Jack asked calmly. Stephen flinched as if slapped. "No, of course not. But it does delay proper treatment. If I were to balance the humors --" "Which will definitely kill him!" Scully exclaimed. "I refuse to let you touch him!" "The lady seems quite convinced," Jack said mildly. "Do we have any of this Jesuit bark on board?" Stephen shrugged. "One of the men might have picked some up in port," he offered. "Try asking the ones who aren't sick," Scully said with a sneer. Jack held back a smile; her temper was as fiery as her hair. "I'll send Lt. Pullings round presently. We must do something, Doctor. Two more men have succumbed." Stephen sighed heavily and nodded. In an hour Lt. Pullings arrived back at the sick bay with a canvas pouch. "I was able to gather this much," he told Stephen. In a lowered voice, he added "and it was just as the lady said. The men who had it weren't among the sick." Stephen rolled his eyes, but presented the pouch to Scully. "How do you propose to administer it?" he asked, arms crossed. Scully chewed on her lip a moment. "Pulverize it, mix it with water. I'm not entirely sure." "But you said -- " "In my day and age, Doctor Maturin, this comes in pill form, produced in a factory under very carefully monitored conditions. I've never had to produce it in the wild," she blustered. "Here," he said with a put upon expression. "I'll see what I can concoct." It was a long night. Mulder continued to suffer from the fever, as did the other men. Over half the crew was affected and Scully feared the quinine that the Doctor had brewed would run out before all of them had received treatment. In the end, it was like the proverbial loaves and fishes, there was just enough for everyone. Sometime near dawn, Mulder started tossing and turning. Scully watched near helpless, applying wet compresses and talking in soothing tones. As the first streaks of light came through the small portal, she saw the sweat break out on his forehead. Soon, he'd soaked through the bedding, but she wasn't at all worried. His fever had broken. At the same moment, there was a shout from the crow's nest. The sails were filling with a southerly wind. Mulder was still a little weak, but feeling much better later that day as he stood on the deck with Scully and the Captain. Beyond the bow they could see the shores of Bermuda. "Do you think you can handle the dingy, Miss Scully?" Jack asked with a raised eyebrow. "Oh, I don't think that is a problem, Captain," she replied. "I really don't understand why you've refused my offer to let us take you into port. I've been to Kingston, it's a lovely village," Jack said. "I just think it might be best for us to part ways out here, Captain," Mulder explained. "That time riff you spoke of?" Jack asked. "You don't seem as skeptical about it as the good doctor," Mulder said with a smile. "Well, when Stephen has been on the sea as long as I have, he'll find it's easier to change his mind than to change the facts," Jack said with a broad grin. "God be with you both," he said with a bow to Scully. "And with you and your crew, Captain Aubrey," Scully said as the two agents crawled down the rope ladder to the waiting dingy. Scully took up the rows as Mulder waved goodbye. "Let me know when you get tired, Scully." "I won't get tired, Mulder," she said with an affectionate smile. "So, are you going to come up with some sort of scientific explanation for how we just spent two days on a ship from the early 1800s?" "No, Mulder, I'm not." His eyes grew as wide as his smile. "Good heavens, Scully. What's gotten into you?" "It's what Aubrey said, Mulder. It's just easier to change my mind than to change the facts," she said with a shrug. "Thank you, for saving my life again." "Don't mention it, Mulder. And the next time you suggest we go sailing, remember this trip." "That I will, Scully. That I will." The end