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Summary
When Dana Scully uncovers some devastating personal news, she heads out into the night looking for some semblance of control.
Her plans are interrupted when she meets Fox Mulder, a lonely man drowning his own sorrows.
They find that they are instantly drawn to one another, though the road ahead will be littered with obstacles.Through late-night drives, nervous emails, and desperate bids to be together, they form a bond that neither has ever felt before.
Though their lives are complicated and their pain is heavy, they find themselves fighting to remain at each other’s side, whatever the cost.Series
- Part 1 of Strangers
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Deep down, Mulder knew that if they were entangled even more tightly, he’d eventually become more irritated than aroused by her voice. He’d hear it in reference to uneaten vegetables and unopened mail and unfolded laundry. That holy righteous rage of hers, that unquenchable fire that roared at him to be better and do better and live better, would illuminate not just his career but the entirety of his being. And he doubted he could live up to that scrutiny. After almost almost getting her killed any number of times, somehow Mulder knew that asking her to forgive more mundane betrayals would be the final straw. Abduction? Possession? Cannibalism? All in a day’s work. Leaving sunflower shells everywhere? That was a bridge too far. It was better, safer, sweeter, kinder to love each other the way they did. To keep some mystery alive, and with it her steadfast belief in him. Delaying consummation was delaying his inevitable disappointment of her.
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Inspired by Lepusarcticus' beautifully-written series "Incrementum," a series of interlinked, internally-consistent, episodic MSR vignettes in roughly canonical order.
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In which the author attempts to play Dave Filoni to Chris Carter's George Lucas.
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This is a series of meta (also posted on Tumblr— account name is fmluder24) that analyzes the ways Jews and Jewishness operate in The X Files, and how antisemitic tropes are woven into the show. The name is a reference to the book People Love Dead Jews by Dara Horn. Major TW for discussion of antisemitism and Jewish history. I also mention treatment of Native Americans and genocide in Chapter 1. Discussion of sexual violence and medical rape throughout.
The first chapter talks about the fetishization of the Holocaust in the early myth arc, and themes develop from there.
Bookmarked by File999
18 Feb 2026
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"Do you ever think about having kids?" It rushes out of her, softer and more tremulous than she intends for it to sound. She watches as Mulder swallows, his Adam's apple bobbing like one of her father's ships in the Pacific.
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Try as she might, Scully can't leave Kevin Kryder behind.
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Summary
When a series of ritualistic murders draws Mulder and Scully to a small Virginia town, the case proves disturbingly opaque—and frighteningly intimate. As the bodies pile up and answers refuse to surface, Scully’s failing health and Mulder’s quiet devotion blur the line between partner, protector, and something neither of them dares to name. Some things are carved into flesh. Others are carved into the people who survive.
