Forward:
This story was written based on the X-Files characters created by Chris Carter and Ten
Thirteen productions. In no way this story is being used to infringe or defame these
characters or the X-Files television series. The story is based on my speculation of
what happened to Agent Fox Mulder's sister when she was a child. According to the
writers of the X-Files, this story has no affiliation to what really happened to Samantha
Mulder when she was a child, as no one really knows the whole story. As the series
unfolds, we will hopefully learn more about what happens. I have submitted my story to
the writers & producers of the X-Files via the Internet in hopes they will use my story
in a future episode. This story is also available over the Internet on my home page so
others can view it at their leisure.
The idea for this story has been in the back of my mind before I was assigned this
project. I have always loved the X-Files since it premiered and within the past year, I
have submitted my stories, ideas, and suggestions to the writers of the X-Files.
Unfortunately, none of my ideas have been selected. Lots of activity regarding the
X-Files goes on over the Internet, and through discussions are where I get a lot of my
ideas for the stories that I write.
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June 8th, 1996 6:58pm-
Washington, DC, Scully's Apartment
Dana Scully arrived home to find a package sitting in the hallway outside her door.
Curious, she picked it up and tucked it under her arm while she let herself into the
apartment. Once inside, she set the box wrapped in brown paper down on her dining table
and left it there while she hung up her coat and kicked off her high heels. Mulder would
be coming over later to discuss the case they were currently working on, but until then,
she wanted to relax.
She made herself a cup of hot coffee and carried both it and the package with her over to
the sofa. She noticed that her mother's return address was on the label. I wonder what
this could be? She didn't say she was going to be sending me anything.
Dana set her tea down and ripped the paper open. Inside she found a rather old, very
familiar shoebox with an envelope taped to the top. She opened the envelope and read the
letter her mother had enclosed.
Dear Dana,
I found this when I was going through some boxes in the attic and almost threw it away,
but was afraid you would kill me if I disposed of it without consulting you, considering
how important some of this stuff was to you as a girl. So, I decided to send it to you
and let you dispose of it as you see fit. Here's hoping that it will bring back pleasant
memories for you.
Love,
Mom
Smiling at some of the memories the box did evoke, Dana reverently lifted the lid. It was
filled with smudged envelopes with the name "Danni" scribbled on them in a child's
handwriting.
Danni had been her nickname in elementary school, a name she had gotten through a pen-pal
program between her class and a third grade class somewhere in New England. Dana had
complained that her pen pal had a boy's name, and from the moment said pen pal first
heard about it, she had insisted on calling her Danni, so they would be even.
The envelope on the top was the last one she had received. A sad smile crept over her
face as she remembered what had brought a stop to their correspondence...
October 7th, 1971 11:30am -
New Ridge Elementary School, Ithaca Naval Base
Danni was excited. It was pen pal day, and she was expecting a letter from Sammie. These
two girls had become closer than any of the other pen pals in the two classes because
they were so much alike. Sammie's dad worked for the government, and Danni's was in the
Navy. They both had older brothers, though Danni also had another brother and a sister.
And both of them LOVED reading fairy tales and ghost stories, though neither of them
believed in fairies or ghosts.
Of course, there were differences between them too, but that just served as fodder for
conversation. Sammie's family didn't go to church, so she had been eagerly awaiting
Danni's account of her first Holy Communion, which she had just sent to her in the last
letter. And then there was the fact that Sammie's parents had been fighting a lot lately.
She was scared they were going to get divorced, and Danni was the only one of her friends
she had told about it.
Because of their closeness, Danni looked forward to pen pal day for the whole month. Just
recently the two girls had discussed exchanging photos when school pictures came out, and
maybe even talking their parents into finding a way for them to meet in person. Danni
couldn't wait to see if Sammie had thought of anything.
The children clustered around Miss Reynolds as she entered the room with the box full of
letters and began handing them out. Danni was right at her knee, since Sammie's was
almost always on top.
But something was wrong. She could tell from the way Miss Reynolds had looked at her when
she pushed through the crowd of other kids. There was a strange sadness in her eyes, as
if she was thinking about something she didn't want to be thinking about.
Finally, all the letters had been distributed but one, which Danni knew had to be
Sammie's since she was the only one left. But she didn't like the way Miss Reynolds kept
looking at her so pityingly. What was wrong? Was Sammie hurt.
The teacher pulled her aside. "Dana..." she handed her the envelope with a somber sigh.
"I'm afraid this is the last letter you will be receiving for a while."
The little girl frowned. "But, why? Did something happen to Sammie?"
Miss Reynolds nodded reluctantly. "I'm afraid so. Dana...Sammie has been kidnapped. Her
family is searching for her, but--God, I hate to tell you this-they don't have much
hope."
Danni fell back against the back of her seat, stunned. Her pen pal had been kidnapped!
Even though she had been told that it was babyish for a nine-year old to cry, she
couldn't help it. The tears came out of their own accord.
"I'm sorry, Dana. I know how close you two were."
"I'll pray...every...day that...they find her," she managed to gasp out between sobs.
Almost crying herself, the teacher put her arms around the girl and held her until the
weeping subsided.
"You do that, honey," she whispered softly. "It's all any of us can do for her now."
June 8th, 1996 7:16pm-
Washington, DC, Scully's Apartment
Blinking back the tears that had resurfaced with the memory, Dana opened the last letter
she had received from her pen pal and began to re-read it. Suddenly, she froze as one
part unexpectedly caught her eye.
"He says the girls have started calling him 'Foxy' at school. Dad teases him about it,
saying that he should be flattered, but he hates it. He told me that when he grows up,
he's not going to let anyone call him by his first name. Except me, of course, because
I'm his sister."
Oh, my God... she thought to herself, stunned. Because she hadn't read the letters in so
long, she had never made the connection before now. But now, the name that was always
signed at the bottom of the letters came back to her in a rush, without even looking at
it--Sammie Mulder.
As if she were once again the little girl learning that her pen pal had disappeared, Dana
began to cry, holding her face in her hands. The agony Mulder had gone through all those
years looking for his sister took on a more awful reality in the light of this new
revelation.
The doorbell rang. Forcing herself to regain control, Scully wiped her face and went to
answer it, still clutching the letter tightly in one hand.
The first thing Mulder saw when she opened the door was that she had been crying, and
crying hard. His face instantly expressed his concern.
"Scully, what's wrong?"
She couldn't answer, and her hand shook as she held out the letter to him. He took it,
and his eyes filled with pain as he recognized the handwriting. Then, the meaning of the
envelope he held in his hands sank in, and he glanced up at his partner in surprise.
"You were Danni?" he asked softly, amazed.
Dana nodded. "My mom sent me the letters so that I could decide what to do with them. I
hadn't looked at them in years, never made the connection... until now."
"Oh, God." He had never imagined that she shared his keenest loss with him in this way,
and all he could do was wrap his arms around her and let her cry, while his own tears
fell into her hair.
When they were both calmer, Dana pulled away and walked over to the box. Picking it up,
she brought it back over to where he was still standing just inside the door.
"I know we have business to discuss, Mulder, but I thought that first, you might like to
read some of these."
It wasn't often that Fox Mulder was given an opportunity to see something new about his
beloved sister, and his eyes filled with tears again at the suggestion.
"Yeah, Scully," he replied softly. "I would love to."
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