As many people before me have already said, this was a very unique and original story. I don't think there is another one like it in the fandom. I liked how the writer gave us the story from the point of view of the group(?) Oil consciousness, which was even creepier than the individual Oil entity. It seemed very objective, even cold, compared to the individual entity, as though in becoming a hive mind, it lost the ability to have feelings. The most interesting part of the story for me was the way the Oil entity thought about water, as though it had a consciousness of its own.
Truly, this is the water's world, you thought. It walks the whole of the Earth, perfectly mated to every form, every being. And the Earth crumbles beneath its touch: a slow, ages-long swoon.
You took the host and jumped with him into the lake.
And the lake jumped into you, filling eyes and nose and ears and pores. Its touch was endless -- no part of you was secret. It held each individual hair on your head.
The lake told you of its existence. A gentle push spoke of geese taking flight from the surface. A ripple spoke of fish, and slower waves of smoothly kicking frogs. The lake warms your foot, speaking of a beaver diving low -- a hot visitor from the land. Whatever intrudes, the water always swallows. Infinitely welcoming, yet so forgetful. The water has no memory after the ripple dies.
You came out, and the water collapsed back on itself -- you didn't leave a hole. Some of it came with you, clinging. Already, it was making its escape into the air. The cold you felt was its goodbye.
This story made me think about water and how important it is, how dependent we are on it for life. How we take it for granted, just being able to turn it on and off. How it isn't like that for everyone in our world.
We also got interesting little glances at three characters: Mulder, the Smoking Man, and of course, Krycek. The Oil refers to the Smoking Man as "the old man." I assume this is because this is how Krycek sees him. Oil is impressed that he wasn't fooled even for a minute. The Oil refers to Mulder by his last name, so that must be how Krycek thinks of him, too. From the point of view of Oil, Mulder doesn't like Krycek much, and speaks to him rather sharply, even rudely, although this judgment may be from my human mind or maybe from Krycek's. Mulder was pretty easily fooled by the Oil entity. Krycek is never referred to by Oil as anything but "the host," but that shouldn't be seen as a sign of disrespect. Krycek "never stopped pushing" according to Oil, who was never able to "seep all the way in." That phrase made me feel a little sick, and even rather sorry for Krycek.
At the end we learn that the Oil entity felt envious of water, perhaps for how it is in everything and is everywhere, so effortlessly. From the point of view of Oil, we are relatively unimportant here. I like the last line: "Whether or not there is anyone to know it, the water will be there, and it will flow its circles until the end of the Earth." Very memorable. Very creepy indeed.
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Truly, this is the water's world, you thought. It walks the whole of the Earth, perfectly mated to every form, every being. And the Earth crumbles beneath its touch: a slow, ages-long swoon.
You took the host and jumped with him into the lake.
And the lake jumped into you, filling eyes and nose and ears and pores. Its touch was endless -- no part of you was secret. It held each individual hair on your head.
The lake told you of its existence. A gentle push spoke of geese taking flight from the surface. A ripple spoke of fish, and slower waves of smoothly kicking frogs. The lake warms your foot, speaking of a beaver diving low -- a hot visitor from the land. Whatever intrudes, the water always swallows. Infinitely welcoming, yet so forgetful. The water has no memory after the ripple dies.
You came out, and the water collapsed back on itself -- you didn't leave a hole. Some of it came with you, clinging. Already, it was making its escape into the air. The cold you felt was its goodbye.
This story made me think about water and how important it is, how dependent we are on it for life. How we take it for granted, just being able to turn it on and off. How it isn't like that for everyone in our world.
We also got interesting little glances at three characters: Mulder, the Smoking Man, and of course, Krycek. The Oil refers to the Smoking Man as "the old man." I assume this is because this is how Krycek sees him. Oil is impressed that he wasn't fooled even for a minute. The Oil refers to Mulder by his last name, so that must be how Krycek thinks of him, too. From the point of view of Oil, Mulder doesn't like Krycek much, and speaks to him rather sharply, even rudely, although this judgment may be from my human mind or maybe from Krycek's. Mulder was pretty easily fooled by the Oil entity. Krycek is never referred to by Oil as anything but "the host," but that shouldn't be seen as a sign of disrespect. Krycek "never stopped pushing" according to Oil, who was never able to "seep all the way in." That phrase made me feel a little sick, and even rather sorry for Krycek.
At the end we learn that the Oil entity felt envious of water, perhaps for how it is in everything and is everywhere, so effortlessly. From the point of view of Oil, we are relatively unimportant here. I like the last line: "Whether or not there is anyone to know it, the water will be there, and it will flow its circles until the end of the Earth." Very memorable. Very creepy indeed.