Smokeout By Anna Otto Email: annaotto1@aol.com Category: SH Rating: PG Archive: sure, but do let me know Spoilers: Every ep with Spender - mostly The Beginning Summary: When a son cares for a father... what could be sweeter? Implied character death. Feedback: send all lighted Morleys to annaotto1@aol.com - please! Disclaimer: All characters belong to Chris Carter, 1013 Productions, and FOX - no copyright infringement is intended, no monetary profit is made. The situation described herein though will hopefully not visit their heads. Just a warning: if you are looking for something serious and thoughtful... it ain't this. Smokeout Special Agent Jeffrey Spender looked at the pharmacy shelf and blinked. For him, that was quite an emotional response. This time, it signified so many things: confusion, bewilderment, and, if he were honest with himself, which was difficult for him because he was rarely honest, also fear. Yes, Jeffrey was afraid. Of taking the wrong step, of assuming too much, of choosing the wrong color. What if his choice was distasteful? What if his good intentions were interpreted incorrectly? His jaw clenched as he reflected on the consequences of his actions, which could be painful. Finally, with a sigh of resolve, he reached out for the first available choice, carefully read the instructions on the back of the package, and made his way to the cashier. The young woman smiled at him sympathetically, and Jeffrey felt his back stiffen. That was nearly impossible, because he was already stiff and dull as hardwood, but then he always strove to push the limits. "Wish you good luck with that," she scanned the lone purchase. "Will that be cash or charge?" Jeffrey wordlessly handed her the exact amount. He liked to be exact, took pride in it, felt that it added shine to his persona. At home, he reread the instructions, because he wanted to know precisely what the rules were and how to follow them. Then he went to sleep and he dreamt the dreamless sleep of very innocent or very tired or very... well, bland and blank. Whichever was your pick. * * * Jeffrey stood up to greet the imposing tall man, nervously fingering a package in his pocket. "I was expecting you." The smoker nodded indulgently. At such times, he thought that it was so nice to have a family. The boy was a marvel: he gave no trouble, he fulfilled all of his requests without protests or questions, and he was easy enough on the eyes to give him a feeling of pride for his genes at work. "Dad," Jeffrey tried the word shyly. "I was thinking... we've been getting so close and..." "What is it, son?" the Smoking Man squinted at his dear child through clouds of cigarette smoke. Sometimes he exhaled so much nicotine that he was certain it might be enough to kill a horse; as it stood, people were probably more resilient. Or maybe they were just used to it. The dear child coughed a little in the haze. "Dad, I am worried about you. You work so hard - granted I have no idea what your job is or how you manage to walk the halls of FBI without any visible identification - and you're not young anymore..." At that moment, the Smoking Man felt tenderness toward the boy. He was actually worried about his father! Such emotion wasn't very good for future conspirator, but it was... sweet. He checked his teeth for damage from sugar and smiled a little. "What's on your mind, my boy?" "Dad, it's time for you to quit smoking." The next few drags on the cigarette were akin to breaths of a dragon lying in wait. "Think hard before repeating what you just said, Jeffrey." Spender closed his eyes but the puppy-dog expression was difficult to conjure, and what came out instead looked more like a horse dying from nicotine. "Look, Daddy," he rolled out a large poster with a couple of black shriveled blurbs. "What do you think this is?" "Your brains splattered on the wall behind you unless you change the topic of conversation?" Daddy was suddenly interested. "No, these are your lungs, after you've smoked for thirty or more years. Sometimes I wonder how you breathe," Jeffrey sighed, long-suffering. "I don't breathe. I smoke," Daddy corrected him. "By now, nicotine is a daily nutrient and I will die without it." "You are running a great risk of dying from cancer already." The Smoking Man smiled enigmatically, pulled out a little vial from his breast pocket. "When I am diagnosed, I will use this." Spender was horrified. "Cyanide?" The Smoking Man was disgusted. "Implant, you idiot." Spender blinked. "You really think this piece of..." he looked at it closer, his nose twitching in mistrust. "This piece of metal will help?" "You have so much to learn yet, my boy," his father hid the vial. "So much to learn." "Daddy," Jeffrey Spender whined. "I want you to live forever. I want to celebrate Thanksgiving and Christmas with you. I want you to read to me before I go to sleep. I want you to take me to the zoo and buy me a turtle. I want to collect butterflies and pin them in a little box and I want to show them to you. I want to learn how to be a conspirator and I want you to be proud of me." "Enough!" the smoker barked. That butterfly thing was really disturbing. So was Thanksgiving. "So I missed your childhood! At least I am trying to make up for it now." "And that's why I bought you a smoking kit," Jeffrey sniffed, extended a box to his father. "See, it has a very easy-to-follow program. Just chew a piece every hour or so for six weeks, then chew a piece every four hours for three weeks, then..." "Twelve weeks?" his father was outraged. "I am supposed to chew gum for twelve weeks?" "Please, Daddy," Jeffrey pushed the box into his father's heaving chest. "For me?" The Smoking Man stared at the boy, wondering how he would look with black oil poring out of every orifice. Reminded himself that this was family and he was supposed to be more benevolent and atone for his sins. "All right," he took the last regretful drag on a cigarette and popped out a piece of gum. "Only for you, my darling son." * * * The Smoking Man looked in the mirror, his forehead wrinkling. This was very inconvenient. Not to mention downright embarrassing. But he forgot his own name. The one that his mother used to call him by when he was a little boy, the one that would have been written in his driver license had it been real. He practiced assumed names since he was seven, but after switching twenty-six identities, he decided that having no name was really more comfortable. Besides, everyone else felt that they had to invent awesome nicknames for him. And while Black-Lunged-Son-of-a-Bitch was clearly the least attractive, and Cancerman running a close second, he had to admit that his favorite was - The Cigarette Smoking Man. It defined him. It conveyed the truth yet covered it in multiple layers of lies and smog. It was all the more precious because his enemy gave it to him. It was a gift - and now it was ruined and in tatters. He wasn't a Cigarette Smoking Man any longer. He was a Gum Chewing Man. His lifespan was increasing by the minute, but the meaning of it was gone. He popped another piece of Nicorette in his mouth and chewed it in thoughtful distaste. * * * "Are all present?" the First Elder asked without lifting his head. After all, it wouldn't do to show he cared. "Yes, let's proceed," someone replied. "Wait," the Second Elder lifted his wrinkled fingers. "Someone is missing." "You're right," another voice corroborated. "Something doesn't feel right." The members looked around the clean room, the air for once so clear and unpolluted that one could see the rainbow - and some of them flinched in surprise. For the first time, they really saw each other - the wrinkles, the sagging skin, the glint of old watery eyes. "Where is our cover? Where is the smoke?" the First Elder raised his voice, which happened very rarely. "We need the smoke!" he whined. "It is a requirement!" "The conspiracy doesn't work without smoke," someone hissed in desperation. In the crystal clean air, the words reverberated forever. "Where is our friend who smokes? Did someone put out a hit on him again?" the First Elder was outraged. Not that he minded disposing with the guy, but... he had to be informed. At least five minutes before assumed death. "I'm here," the Gum Chewing Man replied wearily. "I quit smoking." "What?" there were several shouts from the members. One of them had a heart attack, another one was reaching in the pocket for Pepcid AC. "My dear son made me quit. He wants me to live a long and healthy life," the Gum Chewing Man explained with pride. "I am following the easy-to-quit program," he pulled the Nicorette from his pocket and showed it to everyone. "I am on week five now." The First Elder stared at the Gum Chewing Man in disgust - then picked up the phone. "I need one special-effects expert, stat," he barked. "No, I don't care... what, you mean we employ world-class killers-for-hire and special-order butcher surgeons but we don't have a special-effects expert? If you don't bring me one..." The members exchanged dark looks. "I need someone to create fog! From dry ice! And sprinkle it around the room so it looks like there is smoke and I can't see anyone! I mean it!" the First Elder cried. "Do it now! We've been here for an hour and we still haven't talked about the Project!" Everyone in the room exhaled a collective sigh. They clearly weren't going anywhere for a while. * * * "You," Mulder breathed out, his voice cracking. "You..." The Gum Chewing Man stared at his nemesis, waiting for a brighter response. Really, for someone who had an IQ of a thousand or so, the man was unintelligible sometimes. "You look different," Mulder finally stumbled. "You look... rested." "Yeah, the work on the Project has been put on hold," the Gum Chewing Man explained. "Until we can get a special-effects guy to create fog." Mulder squinted. "Is that a code word? Operation 'FOG' which signifies another step closer to the end of the world?" "No," the Gum Chewing Man popped a piece of Nicorette in his mouth. "We just need someone who can make a smoke and fog effect. Do you know how to do that?" "I am not working for you, you Black-Lunged-Son-of-a-Bitch!" Mulder exclaimed in stale passion. "No deal." "Yeah, whatever," the Gum Chewing Man waved his hand. "And the latest x-ray of my lungs shows much improvement." "Wait a second. You quit smoking?" Mulder staggered under the weight of the realization. "Yes, my dear child made me," the Gum Chewing Man replied. "I feel good. I am on the sixth week already." "Hmm..." Mulder looked uncharacteristically sympathetic. "I quit smoking once. It's suffering unlike any other. Getting shot is better. Being infected by retrovirus is better. Hell, being infected by black oil is a vacation in Hawaii in comparison." The old man's chewing intensified, his fingers flexing instinctively. "The longing to put a cigarette in my mouth - the intense, burning desire to inhale the sweet smoke - the roll of a precious tobacco in my fingers..." "Stop it," the Gum Chewing Man moaned. "Stop it!" "The lungs constricting in purifying pain..." "You're torturing me!" the Gum Chewing Man covered his ears. "Oh, what did I ever do to deserve this fate!" "Except for destroying my life and almost killing me a few times - oh, nothing," Mulder was clearly enjoying himself. "You know, since I quit - I always carry a pack with me. To show that I can avoid the temptation." The older man's breathing stopped. "You... I... smoke..." Mulder pulled the packet from his breast pocket, flaunted it with flare. "Ohhh... they smell delicious." "Give me this," the Gum Chewing Man lunged for the cigarettes, ripped the box open, pulled one out with shaking fingers. "Light?" the young man offered helpfully. "Enjoy." The Cigarette Smoking Man inhaled sweet smoke, spit out the gum. "Thank you," he peered at his enemy. "You only gave me these so that I would get lung cancer and die, didn't you?" Mulder smiled, embarrassed. "You know me so well." * * * "Daddy," Jeffrey Spender beamed at his father. "I have a surprise for you." "What is it, son?" the Cigarette Smoking Man seemed distracted. Spender was too excited too notice. "My mom is back! And she wants to meet with you." "What?" he couldn't believe the audacity of his offspring. "This is your chance to make things right, Dad," the dear child asserted. "And for us to all be a happy family once again." The smoker pulled out a cigarette, a murderous glint in his eyes. "I don't think so. Son." Spender stepped back a bit - stumbled over a chair. "Dad - you were doing so well! Why did you start smoking again?" "Because the Project must go on," the Smoking Man mused fatalistically. "And the conspiracy cannot exist without a nice, healthy dose of Morleys every day." The natural sinister look back in his eyes, he picked up a phone. "Hello. Call a meeting. We don't need a special effects person anymore," he listened for a moment, smiled slightly. "No - I will bring a box of cigarettes and create atmosphere... yes... yes... see you then." He glanced over at his speechless son, and cringed. "Oh wait - do we still have these killers-for-hire? Yes, I will need one." The receiver back in the cradle, the Cigarette Smoking Man smiled at Jeffrey Spender. What one created, one could destroy. "I would have loved to take you to the zoo, son." He took a delicious, long drag on the cigarette. "But the future of mankind is more important." The End Thanks to Rachel for inadvertently putting an idea for an ending in my head. Also huge thanks to the inane Nicorette commercials. For someone who despises smoking, I sure seem to be rooting for it in fanfic - go figure. Take Me to Your Leader: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Labyrinth/1495/ annaotto1@aol.com