Requiem Remix
EFC/XF
Premise: What if there was a
third agent investigating the crash?
Notes and disclaimer: This
is an ALTERNATE UNIVERSE version of "Requiem." Frank Tate, Ronald and
DeDe Sandoval belong to Majel Roddenberry and Tribune Entertainment. The
anarchists and miscellaneous characters are my doing. The rest are Carter's and
10-13's. Certain lines of dialogue and scenes are from Chris Carter's
"Requiem."
The legend quoted in this is
also the property of Tribune. However, treat it as a Gillian Anderson voice
over.
Part 1
The Omen
There
was a dire omen in the heavens, and the people were afraid. Two who witnessed
this were not afraid. Sha'ka'rava and his twin Um'rathma saw the sign and
quarreled over its meaning...Um'rath'ma did not want the people to believe it
was danger foretold in the skies.
Four figures in hemp jerseys and stiff pants climbed
over dead logs and carefully harvested firewood. Two of them had their arms
full of small sticks and logs for the fire tonight while the others filled
their arms.
One of them was not what he appeared to be. Two dark
eyes peered out from the stocking cap covering his equally dark hair. He also
stood out by being the only Asian in the group, shorter than the other man on
this gathering. The other thing that set him apart was the secret contained in
the tiny badge that practically burned in the hidden pocket in his loose
pants...an FBI badge that read
"Ronald Phillip Sandoval."
The Bureau might as well investigate the Amish. Aside from the
Abbie Hoffman books, not even J. Edgar Hoover would find this commune a threat
to national security...
He needed to get away soon to make his report and
pack up the contents of his hotel room - then it was a short drive back to
Portland for the debriefing and he'd be finally getting back home.
At least I'm glad DeDe isn't angry at me for getting
into these assignments. Some husband I'm turning out to be, chasing bogus bomb
threats while...
Sandoval stopped when he realizes he was lost. Great.
Well, he just needed to find something familiar, and he could at least get this
firewood back to camp.
He dropped some of the large
armload and stuffed a bundle under his arm, finding the deer trail that brought
him back to the marked tree and back to the commune.
He hit a small muddy patch on the trail and slid a bit,
dropping the firewood. He grabbed onto a tree the regain his balance in just
enough time to look up.
Two blue-white ships that looked like a cross between
a bug and an F-15 popped out of a blue white hole in the sky. They fired blue
pulses at something else, something that the blasts warped and curved around.
"What in the -?"
Getting into a clear spot for a better look, he saw
one of the ships swoop in front of it, still firing. It was like something out
of the cheesy arcade games he played as a teenager. They grazed the treetops
above him, and he dashed off after them, even as they dove dangerously close to
him.
The ship in front of the invisible target swooped too
close, unable to pull away. There was a collision and a large fireball before
something went down - hard. The woods lit up ahead of him and the sound of
impact was enough to deafen him. The other ship turned around and vanished into
a blue-white hole like it came from.
"Raven! Raven!" The rest of the party was calling for him. It was common practice
in this group to reject their given names and rename themselves in some
pseudo-shamanistic tradition. It took the Bureau plenty of hours just to
discover what most of their legal names were.
"Over here! I saw it go down. They dashed over
to the fires."
"Someone might need our help," said
"Mother," the person who had started the compound. Everyone looked up
to her, as much as she was an anarchist and didn't believe in leadership
positions.
The other two - River and Mouse caught up. River was
a thin-limbed teenager, still new to the commune life. Mouse had been living
there as long as Mother had. She was a tiny woman with thick glasses and a shy
demeanor.
The four approached.
"It's only burning in a circle," said
Mouse. "None of the other trees around it are on fire."
"You can see it?" River asked.
"A big ship. Looks like the stuff out of a bad
sci-fi book," Mouse answered.
Mouse reached out and her hand hit something. She
winced and pulled away. Mother stepped in front of her, also touching the
barrier. Her hand hesitated for an instant, and then went through.
"River, Raven, Mouse, I think we can pass
through this."
Sandoval looked around nervously. "Are you sure
we shouldn't find help first? Or call someone from town?"
"And trust Detective Miles or those other
fascists? This isn't a plane crash. Those bastards get a hold of this, or any
survivors, and they'll be vivisected like lab rats."
Sandoval waited until Mother and Mouse were through.
And didn't see a trace of them afterwards.
Sandoval followed his instinct and started to run
towards the road. Two silhouetted figures were ahead. Maybe he could ask one of
them for help.
Thundering the Crown Victoria down the logging road,
Bellefluer's sheriff listened to his radio.
"Confirmation of downed
aircraft. All units - we have a 10-13," the dispatcher said. The glow
ahead of him spoke of a forest fire in progress. This was going to be bad.
"Unit four, this is
Detective Miles. I'm coming right at you, Ray. You wait for back up before you
try anything, got that?"
No answer.
As the glow in his windshield got bigger, he gripped
the wheel. Damn deputy. He had better not have done something stupid...
There was a loud bang under the hood, and the car
swerved. Miles tried to regain control, but the car rattled and dove into a
ditch on the side of the road. A tall shadow emerged from the smoke. Miles got
out of the car and called to it.
"Deputy Hosie...Ray?"
No recognition. No change of
expression at all. Whatever this was, it wasn't Ray. "Oh my God...."
He tried to get away, but
the bounty hunter was anticipating this. It was easy to overtake him and snap
Miles' neck like a twig.
Sandoval could only watch
from his hiding space as the unknown man snap the detective's neck. Detective
Miles was one of the only people in town who knew that he was an FBI agent sent
to look at the anarchist commune. The murderer waited for a moment, and
Sandoval saw something that made his ill. The murderer didn't seem to notice
him, but made a cursory check for anyone watching. The murderer shifted face
and body to become a perfect copy of Detective Miles before disappearing again,
this time in the direction of the commune.
Sandoval waited, breath held
until he believed it was safe, then dashed back into the woods. He ran,
doubling back and making circles - he knew these woods from the time he had
spent there. He had to elude this hunter and tell someone - anyone who would
believe him.
He must have run forever. He
was panting and exhausted, his hands were cut and scraped from falls, and his
grubby anarchist clothing was stained with mud, grass, and some blood. One
piece of luck! A trail led to one of the back roads, where a trucker was
passing by. Sandoval furiously waved his arms and the driver stopped.
"I need a ride into
town!"
The driver looked puzzled.
"I don't take hitchhikers."
"It's an emergency! I need to get to a phone and
call in a murder."
The driver looked backwards.
"Please! The man who did it is still after
me."
The driver reached over to close the window. Sandoval
pulled out the tiny wallet from his hidden pocket.
"Do as I say or I can have you for obstructing
justice!"
The door opened, and Sandoval climbed in the cabin.
The truck sped off, but Sandoval took one look back to see someone standing on
the side of the road.
The fake Detective Miles was smiling.
Part 2
Sha'ka'rava saw the dire
nature of the omen. He spoke to the people of the worst, but having been
comforted by the lies of his twin, they did not believe him. He was thrown from
the village and into the Void where it was hoped his vision would narrow and
life-force fade to nothingness.
To insure he would not return, Um'rathma placed a
tool of violence in the hands of a judge, Sal'ja-hinn. Surely, having heard
Um'rathma, and swayed by the thoughts of the Commonality, Sal'ja-hinn would shatter the belief of the Truthseeker,
and put him to death.
However, upon reaching him, the Judge saw that his
life-force was already fading, but his faith and vision still strong. She did
not act until she had heard Sha'ka'rava's story. Sal'ja-hinn challenged him to
a Sharing. If his story were a lie, then he would be trapped in the World
Between for eternity. Sha'ka'rava accepted, and they Shared their thoughts.
Sal'ja-hinn was at first frightened to learn that Um'rathma, the respected man,
had lied. The Judger extended life-energy to Sha'ka'rava, restoring his wounds.
Upon hearing of their new-forged loyalty to each other through the Commonality,
Um'rathma cursed them both, severing them from the Commonality and making them
dependent on each other alone. It also insured that the Truthseeker and Judge
would not be believed...
Hoover Building
Washington DC
June 1, 2000
Chesty Short lived up to his
name. He was all of five-foot-five, and was accustomed to carrying around his
calculator and audit sheets. Now, the FBI had sent him to trim some fat from
the budget, and he had stumbled on more fat here than an entire health spa.
Short watched Agent Mulder
opened the door and marched in. Why wasn't this man fired years ago? Even his
medical records would have made him a bad investment. Hopefully, those two embarrassments could get fired and start
working somewhere more appropriate like the Weekly World News.
"It says you were
finished," Mulder said, walking over to read over Short's shoulder.
"I turned in my report,
and was asked to go over a few things." Short straightened his paperwork.
"As you know, the times we live in - the world is changing fast."
"I'm missing your
point."
"As I said, this is an
evaluation, Agent Mulder. To understand what you do, so that if you go forward,
you can do so more responsibly."
"That sounds like a
threat."
"Cost-benefit analysis,
but if you want the truth, I really don't care one way or another." He
looked up. "From what I can tell, you mostly record bizarre facts on
bizarre cases. Information gathering - something it seems you can just as
easily do over the Internet."
"I can't do my job from
an office. I promise you."
"Nowadays, most space
exploration is done sitting in an office, Agent Mulder. Why? It's just too damn
expensive putting men in outer space."
"I'm not looking in
outer space!"
"Bringing us to the
point. If you are going to spend so much time and money looking for aliens, responsibly
you should narrow your search."
"To where?
"To wherever they are.
It's not unreasonable - it's a just a matter of reducing your vision."
Short walked out and Mulder
hunched over his desk. Well, Short probably wasn't from the ranks of the conspirators,
just a nickel-and-dime man who didn't understand anything that wasn't
cost-efficient. Even his suit was made of the cheapest material available.
And to make it worse, Short
hadn't disguised his contempt for him and Scully as much as he smugly thought.
In fact, the little accountant had been practically broadcasting them from the
moment Mulder couldn't avoid the cursory handshake.
He almost was drifting off
when he felt a hand on his shoulder.
"Mulder?"
He looked back up.
"That guy is going to shut us down, Scully."
"We have been shut down
before, and we still fight back."
"Against what?"
Another blast of pain hit his head and jolted down to his arms. These were
becoming a little too frequent. He massaged his palms and looked over at her.
"How can we justify ourselves in a way others can understand?"
"We find others who are
willing to believe. We gather our evidence..."
"What evidence? Every
time we get just a piece of it, something destroys it, or there's a cover story
in place. I'm tired of swinging at windmills. I just want..."
"To tell that
accountant where he can shove it."
"Yeah."
She walked over to the other
side of the desk. "At least one piece of good news - the MRIs came back.
Your brain activity is still high, but there are no trace of tumors or anything
else other than the high amount of bran activity to indicate anything
abnormal."
"Then, tell me why I
can shake that little shit's hand and instantly know what he's thinking?"
Scully reached out and
brushed her hand against his. He seemed to instantly brighten up.
"Thanks."
"Whatever is wrong with
you, believe me - I am trying to find a way."
"I don't have to
believe with you. I already know." He got up. "Come on, let's get
back to work - while we still have some to go back to."
* * * *
Sandoval changed back into his suit, and found a
phone that worked in the manager's office. After twenty minutes on hold, he had
gotten through to his partner.
"Joe, this is Ron."
"Ron? Where the hell have you been?"
"Running for my life. Did you get the report I
sent?"
"I didn't, but the boss did. You're in the
shitter."
Sandoval gripped the phone. "What? I told the
truth about what I saw. I saw the sheriff murdered and a plane go down."
"Experimental military aircraft, and your dead
sheriff answered the phone this morning. They're coming over to take care of
it, and you're off the case. Get up to Portland to make your report."
"I still have the anarchists to investigate, and
three of them are missing."
Sandoval could practically hear the shrug his partner
gave. "Didn't you hear? There are no more anarchists."
The
young agent pulled his ear away from the phone, not believing his ears.
Joe explained. "CDC says they caught them with
some biological warfare materials. Ended up killing them when you were running
back into town to fax in that report."
"CDC? Biological
weapons? That has to be a joke. The worst they had was the cow manure, and I
watched all of that go on their farm!"
"Ron, everyone there is dead."
Sandoval was certain he didn't want a mirror, as his
facial expression must have looked dumb at the moment.
"Something about this doesn't sound right."
"We're sending down a car in two days to get
you. Manpower's a little tied up right now, and I don't think the taxis will
got out there."
Sandoval was nervous. "Joe, I know what I
saw!"
"Ron, did you eat anything they made? Those guys
could have laced it with funny mushrooms or just about any other
hallucinogen."
Sandoval sighed. "Never mind. I'll draft up
another report in Portland." *If I live that long, * he added silently.
"Good. Maybe you can salvage your career.
Bye."
Sandoval hung up and huffed. Well, if he was going to
be stuck in a death trap for 2 days, he had better not be a sitting duck.
Sandoval barely had time to change back into his suit
and borrow the hotel manager's car. He felt like he was on a deadline. He
NEEDED to see what had happened to the anarchists - he just could not believe
what Walsh told him. Besides, the shop said it could be a few days before the
part needed to get the rusted out heap would be in stock, and technically, the
Bureau was trying to find a next case. Using what time he could scavenge to see
what became of the compound certainly couldn't hurt. And anything to get that
strange sight out of his mind.
It took him almost two hours to get to the wooden
gate of the campground-turned-commune - one hour on the highways, another
navigating the labyrinth of back roads. A man in a local PD uniform met him at
the junction near the cabin.
"Sorry, sir. Official business."
Sandoval pulled out his badge. "It's all right.
I'm assigned to this case. Did Agent Walsh call your superiors?"
"Sorry sir. No one comes near. Official
business."
Sandoval felt a twinge of suspicion. "May I see
your badge?"
The deputy hastily covered an irritated glare.
"Sir, turn around."
Sandoval rolled up the window and turned around the
car, going around the first bend. Something just was not right.
He picked up the cell phone, and dialed another
number.
"Deputy Miles? Billy? Yes, I need to speak to
you - alone. Yes, this is Raven from the commune...but what your father didn't
tell you was who I really am. Meet me at the café. Do not tell your father - I
cannot emphasize that enough."
* * * *
Part 3
The Raven
***And, so began the long,
slow climb from the Void. However cut off from the Commonality, the Truthseeker
and Judge were not as alone as Um'rath'ma wanted. Others they had touched -
others that also came to suspect Um'rath'ma...***
Scully arrived at the office
first, like normal. Mulder was probably at the vending machine picking up more
sunflower seeds or coffee. It took him longer to actually buckle down to a
task, but it was a pattern that ceased to bug her some years ago.
The door clicked open and
Mulder tiptoed in, shutting the door behind him.
"I think I'm in big
trouble."
"I told you earlier
-"
."Yeah, but I never
actually assaulted an auditor before," Mulder said, an evil grin tugging
at his mouth.
Scully was shocked, but
after it faded, she couldn't help it. She also started to smile. "Did you
hurt him?"
A full brown grin crossed
Mulder's face. "I...reduced his vision a little."
The phone's ring cut off the
conversation. Mulder tapped the speakerphone button and answered.
"Agent Mulder."
"Agent Mulder..."
the voice on the end stuttered a bit. "Is Agent Scully still with
you?"
"Yeah. Yeah, she is.
What is this about?"
"It's Billy Miles. I
don't know if you remember me, but..."
"Yeah. The case in
Oregon, seven years ago. You claimed to have multiple abduction
experiences..."
"Uh, look. It's strange
to be calling you guys, but I think you're the only other people that will
believe us. I don't know where to turn. I told Raven I'd get help."
"Raven?"
"He claims he's one of
you guys - from the FBI that is. From with it looks like, it's happening
again."
"The abductions?"
Mulder asked.
"Yeah," Billy
answered. "But not to me this time. No one believes Raven - not even his
bosses in the FBI. He gave me something you guys need to see." A pause as
a door clicked shut in the background. "Can't talk. Not now. Gotta
go."
The phone clicked and went
dead.
Scully looked over at Mulder
expectantly.
With exaggerated worry,
Mulder looked up, a wide grin on his face. "More alien abductions,
Scully,"
"I don't know how we
could *possibly* justify the expense," she said, turning to the door,
returning the grin. It really was infectious.
"We'd probably turn up
nothing," Mulder said, stepping behind her.
Scully raised an eyebrow.
"Let's go waste some money."
* * * *
Gary and Richie were two
boys from the town. They heard all the talk from their older siblings and
friends about the abductions, and heard from their parents about how it was all
bunk, how those missing kids had just run off as an act of teenaged rebellion.
Well, armed with a Geiger
counter ordered through the mail, and two flashlights from the hardware store,
they were indulging in a little rebellion of their own. It was now well past
dark, and even the words of the sheriff they ran into earlier did little to
discourage them.
"I'm getting something
here, Gary." Richie waved his counter, the large yellow box cradled in his
arm had a small window. The needle jiggled back and forth
"I told you,
Richie."
Gary went over to the right
a bit while Richie went straight ahead.
"You really think the
anarchists are behind this? Or that it was a military aircraft?" The
needle started going wild. "Hey, man. Look at this...Gary...Gary...!
There was no answer. Richie
turned around. No sign of Gary, not even a sound.
Gary climbed over a log and
into a small clearing. There were small logs and sticks dropped here in about
three small piles, and a blue kerchief. He remembered one of the anarchists
wearing it when she went into town for any reason. All the other ones called
her "Mother" for some reason. Gary was intrigued. He planned on
sneaking over to one of their meetings some time. Truth was, the local rumor
was that they grew weed over there.
He reached down to pick it
up, and took another step forward.
WHAM!
He was up in the air,
shaking all over. It seemed like forever before he passed out.
Richie climbed over the hill
into the clearing, shining his light around.
"Gary?"
He tried the shine his
flashlight across the clearing. The light seemed blocked. No - bent! Richie
waved his light, watching as it curved around something. He started to get
close.
A flash of light, almost
blinding, lit up the woods. The Geiger counter started to scream. Richie
covered his eyes with his arm and staggered back. His hand started to burn -
his flashlight!
Richie dropped the
flashlight and dashed back done the deer trail to the road. Whatever got Gary
wasn't going to get him!
The flashlight hit the
grass. It was already in flames.
Just before dawn Sandoval went back to the compound,
dressed up in his anarchist clothing - grateful for all the pockets - both
obvious and not so obvious on it. Gloves covered his hands, and he wore a
stocking cap. He did carry his ID and service weapon, but dreaded the thought
of having either be discovered.
He'd been lucky enough to
take a camera with him, hoping to finish up the case file with some documented
evidence of their demise.
Sure enough, there was no
sign of life as he snuck around the perimeter to the back entrance and into the
tight group of converted campground buildings.
The main hall was in
disarray, like a theft had occurred, but it was cleaned up. No evidence and no
trace that anyone was investigating. No police lines, no spray-painted marks on
the ground. It was like the place was robbed. After finding nothing appreciable
in the hall, he walked out towards their fields.
When he got to the small
cabin out in a clearing near the farm the first thing he noticed was the
stench. Then, he noticed the dead body lying on the ground outside,
disemboweled. Hawk, otherwise known as James Hemblen, was the unfortunate
victim. It took a lot of willpower not to be sick - the man looked like he had
exploded from the torso. Beside it was a covered figure that didn't look human,
something with a bluish haze around it, or was he just seeing things? Black
sludge dripped from Hawk's eyes and mouth. Sandoval backed away.
He avoided the body, looking
in the cabin. It was one of the storage buildings, but it was storing something
else. Bodies were stacked like cordwood in a way that reminded him of the
concentration camp pictures he'd seen in his college with the mass graves.
He snapped pictures and
dashed back behind a compost pile, dragging a discarded rake behind him to hide
his footprints. A truck was coming through the gates. It parked next to the
mass grave in the cabin.
The truck was also
suspicious. It didn't have government plates or the appropriate hazard warnings
on it. Someone wearing a lab coat chatted to an old man in a suit. Too bad he
was too far away to hear what was going on. He saw the man in the suit nod,
light a cigarette, and puff away on it while talking to the other man. The
smoker wasn't dressed for something like this - if it were official.
Sandoval ducked in the
bushes and brought up his camera, snapping picture after picture of the bodies
before they were loaded up and sent away. He managed to get back into the woods,
hopefully without being seen.
It was dawn by the time
Mulder and Scully arrived. They arranged a meeting with Billy on the old
logging road. It was almost like coming home, Scully thought. She was so naive
and young when she was here last. She felt ancient as she stepped out of the
car, looking around. When did the person who had been here before cease to
exist?
Mulder interrupted her
thoughts. She saw him shake the hand of a young man in a deputy's uniform.
Billy Miles, it appeared, had done his own share of leaving his old self
behind.
"You're now wearing a
badge!" Mulder looked proud as he shook Billy's hand.
"Never thought I'd be a
cop, but my dad got me started," Billy said shyly.
"You're married,
Billy?" Scully noticed the glitter of gold on Billy's left hand. Well, at
least some people went to live a normal life after the hell they went through.
"Divorced - I live back
with my dad."
"Have you been able to
get over the abduction?" Mulder
asked.
"Well, I have, but some
other people haven't..." Billy looked up, sheepish. "My dad still
denies it ever happened."
"Does he deny that's it
happening now?"
Billy looked uncomfortable.
"He says that it was a military jet that went down. That he's working with
the FAA, but..."
"But, what?"
"He's been acting
strange and he's really been no help. Insists on handling it without help. Says
people are already on it, but I haven't seen anyone, and Raven saw something.
He says he saw what went down and that it's not a military craft. Then again, I
don't know what to believe."
"Can we meet this
Raven? If he's an FBI agent..."
"He showed me his
badge, but he only wanted to be identified as Raven. His supervisors don't
believe him."
"But you do?"
"Yeah. He told me that
he saw how I treated the anarchists. I never had a problem with them. He said
that he thought I was a good cop. I told him that the two of you might believe
what he saw. I know I do, but you guys already know why."
Behind them, Detective Miles
drove up. Billy looked nervously back. "Come on. I think I know where
Raven is."
"What are you
doing?" asked Detective Miles.
Billy seemed guarded.
"Just talking to people you might remember - from the FBI."
Scully stepped forward.
"Agent Scully. Agent Mulder."
"Well, what brings the
two of you out here? Surely not some UFO."
"It was an unidentified
craft," Mulder insisted.
"Well, you might want
to follow up," Miles said. "It's not looking like a crash at
all."
****
They drove to the scene.
Billy insisted on riding with them.
"I don't know if Raven
was right or not. He just said not to trust my dad. I think I believe
him."
"Why?"
Billy looked ahead. "I
just get a bad feeling. It's a side effect, you know? Like the others who were
taken. Sometimes, we just...get things. Most of the time, we ignore them, but
when I started trusting those, I solved a few cases. I trust those
instincts."
"And what are those
instincts telling you now?" asked Scully.
"That the guy riding in
my car might look like my dad, but it's not him."
****
They stopped a mile into the
woods. Scully got out of the car first. Mulder stopped after a few steps, his
eyes on a large orange X on the pavement. "It's déjà vu all over
again," he commented.
"That was already here,
in case you were wondering." Miles said. He looked a little too eager to
provide answers - a sign he had something to hide.
*Or
a sign that you are succumbing to paranoia after all these years of chasing
bumps in the night, Dana, * she thought. "I know," she answered
aloud. "Mulder painted it here, seven years ago."
"What
for?" asked Miles.
"To
mark an electrical disturbance. A place where nine minutes went missing, and
our car powered down in the middle of the road." Mulder saw a nearby set
of skid marks - fresh ones, and started to follow them.
"The
skid marks are mine," Miles was trying to get ahead of Mulder, almost to
stop him.
"Is
that your deputy's car sitting up there, without its lights on?"
"If
it were his car, I would have seen it." Miles seemed flabbergasted, but
Mulder wasn't fooled. Something made the hairs on the back of his neck stand up
when he looked at Miles.
"My
point," Mulder said dryly.
Scully
walked over, following another sign - footprints.
"Detective!"
When Billy approached first, with his father following, Scully pointed to the
shell casings on the ground.
"Did
the deputy carry a .38?" she asked.
".38
Special," Billy answered before his father, or what he claimed was just an
image of him, could cut in.
"This
shell casing was discharged," said Scully. "It could have rolled from
up there." Scully put one of the shell casings in Miles's hand.
"Well,
what was he shooting at?"
"Probably
nothing," said Mulder, a note of sarcasm entering his voice. Miles looked
at him coldly.
"Well,
nothing is all you seem to find here," said Mulder.
Miles
looked frustrated. "Billy, get back here. You're riding back into town
with me."
"Dad?"
"If
they want to chase nothing let them. Now, this is an order. You come with
me."
Billy's
eyes darted back and forth to the two agents, then back to his father. Not
appearing to see a way out, he walked reluctantly back to the car. Miles
followed, and after the driver's side door shut, the car made a U-turn and
peeled back in the direction of town.
After
the other car left, Mulder kept staring after it.
"I
don't like this. Billy's in deep trouble."
"I
don't suppose his father's happy to see us, no," Scully said. "And he
is hiding something."
"If
it really is Detective Miles," Mulder said.
"Mulder,
you don't really believe what Billy Miles told us about that not being his
father? He seemed like the same, charming, Detective Miles to me."
"Yeah,
but he was nervous. He's got something to hide, Scully, and I think we're going
to find it in these woods." Mulder walked in the direction of the
abandoned car. Scully puffed out a sigh and followed.
"If
we get lost, it's your fault."
Mulder
looked around the car. "More footprints, but these are fresh. Someone was
just here."
Scully
paced around the car, a bad smell hit her nose as she neared the trunk.
"Mulder...the trunk."
She
looked up. Mulder was staring into the woods, a small patch of bushes was
swinging violently.
"What
are you doing there? FREEZE!"
****
He
had managed to walk through the deer trails for an hour and was getting close
to the main road back town before he heard them.
"What
are you doing there? FREEZE!"
Sandoval
turned around. A tall man and a small woman were emerging from the woods. In
their suits, they looked as out of place as the men that came for him at the
remains of the commune. Probably more of those goons "cleaning up."
They might want to "clean" him, too. He got up, thought of DeDe, and
dashed off into the woods.
Following
broken branches and noise, they followed. Scully was glad she wore flats this
time. She trailed behind her taller partner as they searched for the man. He
was possibly the only witness they had, and if he did see anything, they needed
to find him before the others did.
Sandoval
could hear them on his trail. He pumped his legs faster. The months he spent
working undercover on the anarchist farm had made him very strong and fast.
Plus, he was dressed for the woods and they weren't.
He
ducked under a tree limb, and made a hard cut through some bushes, but he
misjudged a step and went crashing to the ground. He looked up to see his
pursuers were catching up. He reached for his gun, ready to make a final stand.
They
pushed through the bushes to see their man lying on the ground. He had a black
gun trained on them, a Sig Sauer. Scully and Mulder instantly reached for their
weapons.
"Stay
down on the ground! Hands where we can see them," Scully ordered.
"Drop
your weapon NOW!" Mulder yelled.
The
man yelled out something they NEVER expected.
"Federal
Agent! Identify yourselves!"
Tall
man stared at him, but didn't drop his weapon. "What the hell? Put the gun
down and show us some ID."
A
split-second look between them. Tall man still had his gun pointed at him, but
the small woman balanced hers in one hand, and pulled out a wallet, flipping it
open to an FBI ID.
"We're
on the same side."
Sandoval
shakily holstered his weapon, as did the man and woman. He picked up his
wallet, and showed his badge. "Guess we are." He pulled himself off
the ground, still watching the pair of them. Walking up to the woman, he
offered his hand.
"Agent
Ronald Sandoval - Otherwise known as Raven." Sandoval looked around.
"Come on. I know my way out of these woods and what place is safe to
talk."
* * * *
Part
4
Disciple
***One
who stepped forward to join the Sha'ka'rava and Sal'ja-hinn was Mar'san. He had
seen the omen, but was not certain what it meant. Seeking his own answers, he
encountered the Truthseeker and Judge when they emerged from the Void and
demanded answers.***
Two
Firs Cafe
Bellefleur,
OR
June
8, 2000 - 5pm
Two
things that Claire Hill served at her café was a good cup of coffee and
silence. She had seen enough to know when not to get chatty about her
customers, unlike Martha Taylor at the haircutting place who would spill out
every secret or bit of gossip told in her shop.
The
scene in front of her was good reason to keep her mouth shut. She recognized
those people from seven years ago. It was hard for them not to stand out. They
weren't locals by any stretch of the imagination - the tall man with a gravelly
voice and penchant for flying saucers, or the small woman she saw with him.
They looked more hardened and tired since she saw them last. They were talking
with one of the anarchists. Funny, but those people never set foot in her café.
She heard they were a bunch of druggies and losers. Well, so long as the bill
was paid, she didn't care.
"I
was investigating an anarchist commune. About ten miles south of town,"
Sandoval drummed his fingers against the table. "So, I've gotten to know
this community. The young man cracked a smile. "Not to mention a good
recipe for vegan casserole. Until today, only a couple people knew I was FBI.
It would blow my cover."
"Why
did you choose to reveal yourself to us?" Scully asked. Sandoval was
watching them carefully - so far, no alarm bells.
"A
standoff with firearms? Not much of a choice, is there?" Sandoval puffed out a breath. "Billy
Miles said he was going to call someone he knew in the FBI about what I saw,
especially after he got nothing from asking around about Hosie's disappearance.
He thought that 'it' was happening again, but I kept getting a brick wall just
what 'it' was." He searched their faces before adding. "I trust Billy
Miles - he's a good cop. I watched him around the anarchists. He wasn't so
quick to assume they were trouble just because of what they happened to
be."
Mulder
leaned back, one long arm sliding across the seat. "What did you
see?"
Sandoval's
fingers curled around the coffee mug. "I tried to tell my supervisors in
the Bureau, and was told flat out not to pursue it. I'm told that the anarchist
camp dies because a biological toxin they were working on to poison others blew
up in the faces – that's a load of garbage. No toxin we read about at Quantico
makes you bleed black like that."
"Did
you see something in the sky recently? An explosion? That's why we're
here." Scully asked. "We think it has something to do with Deputy
Hosie's disappearance."
"I
did see an explosion and what looked like aircraft in the sky chasing each
other, but after that..." Sandoval stared into the brown liquid.
"After that, it turns into a blur. I swear I saw Detective Miles killed
right before my eyes. I swear that whatever killed him now looks like him.
People vanished. I see the anarchist compound turned into a mass grave, but
then my superiors come up with a reasonable explanation - namely, they can't
prove it, so it didn't happen."
"Um...Agent,
Sandoval," Mulder was testing the waters. "Do you accept the
theoretical possibility of extraterrestrial life?"
"Oh,
it might exist," Sandoval said, leaning back. "That much I can
believe. I also think the surest sign that there is probably intelligent life
in the universe is the fact that we've never been contacted by it." He
seemed to suddenly realize what he was saying. "Wait one damn minute. You
are asking me about ALIENS? Little Green Men? With straight faces? Are you two
nuts?"
The
pair in the other seat shot a bemused look at each other. Sandoval sighed. He
must have stumbled into a private joke of theirs.
Sandoval
scowled, dug in his pocket and pulled out a ten-dollar bill, putting it on the
table. "You know, the Portland field office has already issued their
report. The craft was an experimental Navy jet and the anarchists poisoned
themselves with a biological toxin. Maybe I'm better off not seeing or saying
anything at this point. Find someone else to laugh at."
He
slid out from the booth and walked out the door.
Mulder
looked towards the door. "Well, that was helpful. I don't suppose we can
ask him to pick up the tab."
"What
now?" Scully asked.
"We
have Hosie's address. Might be some clues there."
****
Hosie
Residence
June
8, 2000 - 6:30pm
The
door creaked open, a thin, dark-haired woman standing in the door. Scully was
the first to speak.
"Sorry
to bother you, Mrs. Hosie. We're with the FBI."
"Are
you here about my husband?" she asked, peering out from the darkened front room
enough for Mulder to get a look at her face. She was a little more pale now,
and she put on a little weight, but it was definitely another familiar face.
"Teresa?
Teresa Nemman? Seen years ago, you came to Agent Scully and I for help. You
were afraid of being abducted?"
"Oh,
my God." A flash of recognition passed over her. She opened the door fully.
"Please come in."
They
all took seats in the living room. Teresa went over and picked up her baby, a
chubby-cheeked boy who mouthed his mostly toothless gums on a rubber duck.
"I
kinda lost it when I realized who you were," she said.
"Anything
you can tell us that might find your husband," asked Scully.
"We
had no idea you were his wife," Mulder added, a touch of sympathy coming into
his voice.
Teresa
looked about nervously, still cradling the obviously anxious child. "I don't
know if it's important. I'm hoping it's not, but Ray and I have this
connection. It's even deeper for us."
"He
was an abductee, too?" Mulder asked.
"He
kept it secret from everyone. It doesn't make you popular around here," she
admitted. "His experiences were a lot more severe. He was taken many times and
–" she spat the word out. "Tested. I have extensive medical records, photos of
his scars. I'll get them."
Teresa got up and handed the
baby over to Scully. She turned a little red as she took the kid and sat it on
her lap. By the time Teresa had left the room, however, Scully was bouncing the
child on her knee, singing to it in her off-key contralto.
Mulder's thoughts wandered
far from the case, watching. There were too many feelings and layers of
feelings to make sense of. It was both the most beautiful and the saddest sight
in the universe.
Scully picked up a small toy
duck from the table and started playing with the baby. She shifted the baby a little, cooing.
Those abducted kids were
living normal lives – families, jobs, friends…Once upon a time, his life and
Scully's were normal.
Maybe there was still
hope.
****
"Yeah, DeDe. I can't
really fathom it either. The Bureau has already made up its mind what it
is...No, they haven't seen it...Yes, I will be back in Portland soon. I just
don't want to get any more of these assignments. Well, I'll look forward to
your cooking. Bye, honey."
He hung up the phone and
settled back down on the cheap, sagging motel bed. He just didn't know how to
explain this to himself, much less anyone else. How was he going to file a
report that any supervisor would believe? Human bodies gestating creatures
better suited to horror movies, a dead commune, vanishing townsfolk, an
apparent plane crash, and these two agents who were either great candidates for
the loony bin or knew a lot more then they were telling.
The camera burned in his
pocket. Who would believe him? Who could he trust now?
Through the paper-thin walls
of the motel, he heard an argument in the next room. It was probably a marital
spat, since he could hear a woman's contralto and a man's baritone in
counterpoint. Great. He wasn't going to sleep tonight. He settled to the most
comfortable position he could on the far left side of the bed (out of habit),
and resigned himself to a backache in the morning.
The argument suddenly
peaked, and Sandoval snapped to attention.
"But, Mulder, he needs
to know. Isn't it why we're doing this? So others can know the truth? He saw
something and doesn't know how dangerous it is."
"Do you think he'll
even believe this? He's even worse than you were."
The hair stood up on the
back of Sandoval's neck. What weren't they telling him? Grabbing a bathrobe to
toss on over his pajamas, Sandoval grabbed his key and went to confront the
other agents.
"And how do we know
Sandy's not just going to be a good little Boy Scout and report everything he
sees to his superiors. We know the Bureau has a lot of moles, Scully, can we
risk it?"
"Risk what?"
Both of them turned around
to see Sandoval in the doorway, credit card in hand, and door closing behind
him. He looked at the card, then back up at them.
"Good to know that
trick does work from time to time. Now, whatever you have to say about this
case, say it. Or, I could report you both for hiding evidence. Don't give me
any of this alien nonsense, either."
Another quick look passed
between them. It was downright unnerving, even senior agents twenty years in
the field didn't appear to be communicating telepathically like these two did
frequently.
He saw them nod, then
gesture for him to close the door. Sandoval closed the door and locked it, then
walked over to the bed and sat down, noting the open drawer and the missing
hotel bible. In its place was a device he knew to be a bug sweeper. Sandoval
looked for an explanation. "What is it you REALLY work on? Are you with
some other agency?"
Scully studied the
discolored rug for a moment before looking at him and giving the explanation.
"No, but even explaining this to you could put you in danger. The people
behind this are very powerful, and could kill you or worse."
"You could also turn
into a Bureau joke, Knowing this could destroy your career, your life, the
lives of those around you..." Mulder pulled up a chair, and put it at the
foot of the bed Sandoval was sitting on, giving him a clear path to the exit.
Sandoval felt the
temperature in the room drop ten degrees, and pulled the robe around himself
tighter. The pair in the room sat expectantly, waiting for an answer.
"The truth," he
said. "What are we dealing with?"
****
Sandoval still didn't
believe half of what he was hearing, but choked down his knee-jerk responses.
He didn't have many choices on whom he could trust.
"I have…something you could
use," Sandoval said. He reached inside his robe and pulled out the camera. "I
took photos of the anarchists and what happened to them. I caught someone
cleaning up - that's why I ran from you. I thought…" Another heavy breath.
*What in hell did I just bury myself nose-deep in?*
"Photos? You can actually
verify these independently and are willing to testify if it gets to that?"
Mulder said.
Sandoval cocked his head to
one side. "Well, if you think it's little green men, you'll have a damned hard
time arresting them, don't you think?" He puffed out a breath. "Sorry. This
is…a little much. There might also be something at the compound those bastards
missed. I don't suppose you brought anything appropriate?"
A half hour later, Sandoval
was looking every part the anarchist in his rugged outdoor clothing. Mulder and
Scully settled for some "civilian" clothing they were saving for the plane trip
home. She wore a turtleneck and slacks while he was in sweats. Sandoval noticed
for the first time how small Scully actually was - he wondered idly if the
woman always wore those back-breaker heels.
"OK. It's a few miles up the logging road. Closer to the
creek. It might be a good idea to approach on foot rather than use the main
gates." Sandoval loaded another roll of film into his camera, putting the spent
roll in his jacket. "I can't believe I'm doing this, but…" Clearing his throat,
he continued. "I can also show you where that object crashed, or at least get
you close. Hopefully, you'll get what you came for and I can find out if I'm
crazy or not."
Mulder stepped ahead. "I'll
warm up the car."
As soon as he was a few
steps ahead, Scully started after him, but Sandoval stopped her.
"Honestly, do you think this
is crazy? I don't think you follow this as much as he does."
"I don't," she admitted.
"But there is more here than any of us understand. I'm sorry you had to find
out about it like this."
Sandoval paused, then took
Scully's wrist and put the roll of film in her hand, along with a sealed
envelope.
"If something happens to me
on this or shortly after…use the film. The envelope's for my wife. The Bureau's
not going to lie to DeDe and get away with it."
Scully looked at the two
objects in her hand and back up at Sandoval.
"I just get a feeling I can
trust you, Agent Scully. That is all."
Sandoval followed her out to
the car.
****
They got a little close to
the compound for Sandoval's liking - practically up to the front gate. Pulling out field kits from the trunk, all
three crept in through a side fence.
Sandoval snapped photo after
photo. Things easily missed by untrained eyes. Their first stop was the main
hall.
"It looks like they were all
rounded up here," said Scully. "Look at the footprints."
Mulder knelt by a broken
table. "Also looks like they didn't go without a fight." Mulder pointed to a
speck of blood on the broken part, almost buried in the cracks. "And whoever
did the clean-up was in a hurry to eliminate traces. They missed a few spots."
A hair here, a fingernail
there, Even a speck of blood and a dirt with a spot of something staining it
and even some dried, green foul-smelling substance that Scully scraped off the
wall. She showed it to Mulder.
"Green acid. It's spattered
on that wall in a wound pattern. You were right about them not going without a
fight."
He took the vial. "You
mean…" a choice four-letter word came out of Mulder's mouth.
"Sandoval is probably
telling the truth." She put it in the kit. "But if we are dealing with that
following him…"
Sandoval walked over from
the far side of the hall. "If you're right, Mulder, then they were all rounded
up here first. They fought back, and…well, another place we can find more
evidence is out in the tool shed. That's where they were keeping the bodies."
Sandoval led them out the door in the direction of the shed.
A Bellefleur sheriff's car
drove across the compound, lights flashing, pulling between them and the shed.
Detective Miles jumped out of the car and ran up to them.
Mulder and Scully saw
Sandoval go ashen.
"You. What are you all
doing? This is under our jurisdiction, and Portland's sending men. CDC came
yesterday and did their report. It's not your case. Get out."
"We believe it is our case,
Detective Miles. We found someone claims to be a witness to the Deputy Hosie's
disappearance and led us here."
"You think the Anarchists
are behind it? Look, see that tangle of cop cars over there?" Far in the
distance, a tangle of red and blue lights flashed. "Over there, I have my son
and about a half-dozen others uncovering bodies. These guys were running some
kind of cult. I figure they were behind those disappearances. Kids come up
here, get drugged…then those cultists finish them off in the Satanic or voodoo
or whatever ritual. "I see you have one of them with you."
Sandoval backed away,
grabbing Scully and dragging her back with him. She tried to shake his grip,
but Sandoval whispered to her.
"Detective Miles knew I was
FBI, Agent Scully. That…killed him and I don't know how, but…"
"Shape shifter?" Scully
asked nervously. Sandoval nodded. "You're SURE?"
Sandoval nodded again.
She shook off Sandoval's
arm. "MULDER!"
Mulder was in the midst of
arguing jurisdiction of domestic terrorism cases with Detective Miles when he
heard Scully shout.
It dawned on him. In the
heat of it, he didn't put it together…
Bounty Hunter.
The Bounty Hunter saw the
look of realization and started to shift.
The trio ran like hell.
Sandoval turned to pull his weapon. Scully shook her head. Sandoval let go of it and the two of them
dashed to keep up with Mulder, whose longer legs put him at an advantage
sprinting.
The Bounty Hunter seemed to
glide after them. Sandoval looked back and almost tripped. Regaining his
footing, he sprinted into the woods. Hopefully, that whatever-it-was didn't
know the woods well enough yet.
As they ducked into the
woods, Bounty Hunter was about to follow. A black sedan pulled up next to him.
The driver rolled down his window. "You can stop now."
"The three from the FBI.
They saw - they have proof. Should I kill them?" Bounty Hunter stopped and
looked to the human who had hired him.
The old man took a puff of
his cigarette. "That is not your primary mission. Besides, the news that they
are together is an asset. The most recent ally is often the most fickle. Just
round up the witnesses and traces of your people's and the Colonist's work
here. I'll take care of whatever proof they think they have." A predatory smile
curled under the cigarette. "Besides, I see potential in that nice young man -
this Agent Ronald Sandoval…"
Part 5
Light of Truth
***Mar'san agreed to walk with the Truthseeker and the Judge, but because he
could not sense them, he silently doubted their tale. Still, they were the only
possible answers he had. Because he had not given Sha'ka'rava and Sal'ja-hinn
reason to doubt, they were glad to have them in their company.
But as there
had been one omen, along came many more…***
Around 4AM,
Teresa Hosie heard the bang on her door. Throwing on her robe, she dodged the
baby's toys to peer out the window.
She had bee
expecting Detective Miles, or maybe Billy to be coming with news about Ray.
News like they found him naked and afraid, like they had found him so many
times as a kid. Maybe they had found him injured, with another woman, or even
dead.
Ray was
standing on the front porch. His uniform was impeccable, hat in hand. It was
like he just came home from work.
Teresa opened
the door and embraced her husband. "Oh, Ray. I was so worried about you…"
Ray made no
move to embrace her - or even speak. Teresa pulled away, nervous.
"Ray, why don't
you say something?" There was more silence to greet her as she shuffled closer.
Teresa backed away, towards the baby's room.
"You're not my
husband!"
He became even
more menacing, a small smile crossing his face as he closed the distance.
Teresa started to run - the baby. She had to protect the baby!
He reached out
to grab her. Teresa saw her sewing scissors on a table. Grabbing them, she
jammed then into the intruder's chest as hard as she could!
There was a
small hiss like air being let out of a balloon, followed by an awful acid
stench. It burnt her face, and the stranger didn't look phased to have a pair
of shears embedded in his chest. He pulled them out, and Teresa gagged. The
skin on her hands and face was blistering like she'd been shoved in a fire.
She made it to
the front of the baby's room before she collapsed.
The baby was
howling, but the Hunter did not care. He swept Teresa into a fireman's carry
and casually walked out of the house, stuffing her into the back of the police
car and driving off on the old logging road.
***
Bang! Bang!
Bang! "TATE! Tate? Damn it. Open up!"
They had dashed
to the car, Mulder firing it up and speeding away. A black sedan trailed behind
them. The Bounty Hunter was after them. After veering off the main roads and
using practically every evasion tactic taught at Quantico and a few from *Gone
in 60 Seconds,* they believed they'd given their pursuer the slip. Sandoval
insisted that he knew a lab that could verify the samples they got. The trail
ended at the front door of a shabby-looking house off the campus of Willamette
University.
The door
cracked open, and a big-boned, trim man opened up. He had a large bowl of
popcorn in the other hand.
"What?"
Sandoval
assessed the man in the door. "I knew you'd still be up. And still eating like
a horse, I see."
Tate shrugged.
"You know us geeks - I was playing EverQuest. Besides, I run it all off, and
I'll be joining your sorry butt in government service. Application to Quantico
accepted yesterday. Now, what do you want?"
"Emergency,
Frank. We need you to open the lab over on campus."
Tate gestured
to the pair standing behind Sandoval.
Sandoval took a
deep breath. "Agents Mulder and Scully. They're…well, we stumbled into each
others' cases."
"Why not take
it to the lab in Portland?"
"Tate, we were
running for our lives an hour ago. Now, we need this done quickly - and
quietly."
***
Tate rounded up
half a dorm, it seemed. Unlocking the science lab, everyone set to work
analyzing the specimens with all the tools available to them.
The leader was
Aleta Cleghorn, a PhD student that was only a couple inches than Mulder. Her
wiry body bustled around the group of students, noting as another found another
oddity in the samples.
"Getting
up at 4AM to chart samples is not my idea of fun, Frank. And while we've got
forensic students here, it's no substitute for an actual crime lab. Just where
did you find this?"
"An
anarchist commune in Bellefluer," Sandoval asked. "and I didn't
realize that Tate could make the word spread so quickly."
"The ones
killed by biological warfare? Their own batch?"
"What you
are analyzing is the samples from there. They were all murdered, and not from
something they created."
"Well, I
believe this much. This isn't anthrax or anything you could make on a budget
out in the middle of nowhere." Cleghorn put the tube down. "I'm reading at
least TWO different nucleotides not found on anything else on Earth. Maybe it's
from outer space," she finished sarcastically.
Scully took the
folder of results from Cleghorn's hands. "You have no idea..."
Sandoval
reached for the phone. Mulder slammed his hand over Sandoval's "Who are you
calling?"
Sandoval looked
up, not budging. "The people you should have called in the first place - the
press. I know people in Oregon, Mulder. An ex-roommate is a reporter. We tell
him it's an emergency and do a controlled leak."
"A leak leading
to us and our dead bodies in a ditch, like you were planning."
"I plan
nothing! You've said it yourself - these people don't like exposure, save in
the sleaziest tabloid where no one believes them. We tell too many people the
truth - they can silence a handful, but not the entire public."
Both of them
looked to Scully for an answer.
"Pick up the
phone. After this, we had better take the samples and lie low. You have copies
of the results?"
Cleghorn
nodded. "I'll spread them. Once information is leaked - no way to stop it, is
there? Even Galileo couldn't be silenced forever."
***
It was almost
mid morning before press all over the country had been called, letters and data
results faxed to so many places no one knew where exactly all the faxes went.
Documentation
and more documentation followed. If they were going to detonate this, they were
going to do it in a spectacular fashion. Some of the more paranoid activists in
the science lab had tips on how to set off the data wildfire and keep it
burning.
For the first
time, not only did Mulder and Scully believe - they found others who believed
them.
Mulder and
Scully had spent most of the day sleeping. Sandoval made another call to the
Portland field office and one to his wife. The field office was now willing to
"reconsider" the prospect of the anarchists' fate. The news
broadcasts hinted of a firestorm.
Evening fell
and more data came by. Five o'clock news was going to be do or die - could they
really announce it?
"...And
the question 'Are We Alone.' has possibly answered tonight. Researchers at
Willamette university looking into the deaths of anarchists outside of
Bellefleur stumbled on something no less amazing. For the first time, we have
samples of DNA, soil samples, and what is likely the first proof of life
outside our own planet..."
Mulder watched,
too stunned with joy to do the dancing he thought he'd do when the news had broken.
He and Scully sat on the hotel bed. His arm was around her, and she was curled
up next to him in the same awe.
More and more
people from all over the country came forward - not just rednecks in pickups,
but scientists, professors, doctors. All of them brought evidence hidden in
their own labs. Alone, they had been too afraid. When Willamette University
spoke the truth and showed the data, one of the cars had gone straight to SETI
with the results. the time for gathering in silence had ended.
After the 11
o'clock news had ended their report, Mulder turned to her.
"They kill
any of them, and there's another one with the same evidence. The silence is
broken. The truth's here."
Scully said
quietly. "All it took was getting more people to believe."
He got up and
turned off the TV. "Too much exposure. Too much evidence. So much dry
brush that just needed the spark. It's out." He walked back towards the
bed, cupping her cheek with one hand. "It's over."
"Mulder?"
"The
truth's been exposed. It's over, Scully. We won."
"Is this
what you wanted?" she asked.
His hand
brushed the side of her neck and down her arm. "Not all of it."
She cupped the
side of his face, their silent understanding making words unneeded. Their
partnership have been for seven years, and an affair begun in secret only a few
months earlier had only served to make it stronger.
After they came
up for air after the kiss, he leaned over and asked her to marry him.
She said yes.
***
Sandoval got
the room down the hall, still reeling in shock. Was it only a few days ago that
he didn't believe in any of it? Now, he was walking behind two people he had
met only seventy-two short hours ago, along on their quest, and the catalyst in
helping them obtain it.
Waking him from
an uneasy sleep, his cell phone rang shrilly. Groping around in the dark, he
finally got a hold of it, and answered.
"Hello."
"Agent
Ronald Sandoval, I presume?"
He was
instantly awake. The voice on the other end sounded like an older man, with a
rasp to his voice and a slight Canadian accent.
"Who is
this?"
"I would
advise against aiding Mulder and Scully any further. I'm here to warn you,
Ronald. Stop you from making a big mistake. It isn't too late to save
everyone."
Sandoval
was getting a bit scared, but was not about to show it. "What do you
want?"
The mysterious voice sounded almost amused. "I'm just letting you know -
there are other things you can do with what you know. I'm offering you another
option. One that would be more suited to your interests."
Sandoval thought a moment. Asking more questions wouldn't do him much good with
this caller, but maybe taking another option would prove more fruitful.
"Keep talking."
"I can arrange a meeting with you sometime soon. Your test - tell no one
of this conversation."
He didn't feel comfortable, but he certainly was intrigued. "All right,
but do you have anything to convince me that this is not some prank call?"
"Look outside."
The phone went dead.
Sandoval pulled open the curtain, and saw the car in the middle of the parking
lot. It was all black with tinted windows, its lights were off, and the only
light he saw from it was from the reflection of the office's neon sign, and the
driver's side. The window rolled down, and Sandoval saw a small flame that
illuminated the face of the driver for a second. The driver smiled in a way
that made Sandoval want to run to a priest, and took a long drag on his
cigarette before rolling up the window and driving the unmarked sedan out of
the parking lot.
****
A phone's shrill ring woke
Mulder. He reached over and picked it up, careful not to wake his sleeping
partner.
"Mulder."
Billy Miles sounded like a
scared kid. "What happened to you? I see you found something. It's all over the
news.
"Well, did you guys find the
plane? We got the evidence that the anarchists were murdered."
There was a long
silence. "There were a lot of bodies buried there - some of them older than the
commune. My dad - or whoever he is - is trying to discredit it - saying it was
cult rituals. The bodies they've already identified…it's not like any cult
death I read about, even in the stuff you get at the supermarket checkout, and
usually they get any kind of exposure and they leave. They aren't leaving."
"The
plane?"
"It's not over yet," Billy
said. "He's still here and Teresa Hosie - she went missing."
***
"Yeah, DeDe. No, I really
can't talk much about it. Well, first of all, you wouldn't believe it. I don't
even believe it…Yeah, it had been a long night. I can't wait to be with you and
in my own bed! Really? Anyway, that case you're working on, how's the luck with
the subpoena? That good, huh?"
A sharp knock at the door
interrupted the phone call.
"Call you soon, DeDe. That
must be the ride back to Portland -"
He cut the phone call and
opened the door. Mulder and Scully stood in the doorway. "We may need your help
again, Agent Sandoval." Scully explained. "A witness went missing last night."
"Witness? To this case?"
Sandoval looked down. "Portland Field Office has already been informed?"
"Billy Miles reported it
yesterday. The sheriff's office is investigating, but with the bodies they
found in the anarchist commune, they can't look into this or the missing ship."
"Won't is more like it,"
Sandoval commented. "All for one, one for all, then?"
The drive back was
silent and nervous. Sandoval almost wanted to tell Scully about the mysterious
man that appeared outside the motel last night.
*Your test - tell no one…*
Failing this man's "test"
could be lethal, Sandoval concluded. He didn't want to endanger himself, his
new colleagues, and there was DeDe to think about in this, too. Besides, it was
just a crank call, an attempt to scare him off. He could convince himself of
that, right?
Using the main roads,
Bellefleur was only two and a half hours away. Navigating the roads like a
native, Mulder swung into the driveway of Teresa Hosie's house. A lone car was
there - Billy Miles.
He greeted them at the door.
"Mot everyone's gone. They took the evidence, or what they thought was
evidence," he said. He cocked his head and looked at the third agent. "Raven?"
"The same," Sandoval said,
shaking Billy's hand. "I look different out of the hemp and denim, don't I?"
Billy managed a smile. "A
lot."
He led the three of them
inside. "I found something. Tried report it to my dad and he said to ignore it.
Means it's the first thing I should show all of you."
Billy opened the heating
vent and pulled out a pair of sewing scissors in a plastic evidence bag "I
rescued this from the trash. I followed that guy and saw him throw it away when
he thought no one was looking."
The scissors were corroded,
speckled and pitted. Half of it seemed to be eaten away. Mulder took it.
Small pieces of burned
carpet formed a trail from the door to the back of the house. "What did they
say caused this?"
"Candles or cigarettes. Ray
did his smoking outside, though. He didn't want to hurt the baby."
A baby's high-pitched cry
came from the room at the end of the hall. In front of the child's room, a burn
the size of a basketball charred the rug. Sandoval knelt by it.
"Nice cigarettes."
Mulder also knelt by it. "I
know someone who might smoke something like that. Only if he's out of Morleys,
though."
Sandoval looked up at
Mulder. In the parking lot next to where the mysterious man was last night was
a fresh-looking Morley wrapper and a couple of butts. Sandoval dismissed it as
coincidence.
Damn it. He was turning into
a paranoid head case.
"Agent Mulder, could you
tell me more about this Morley smoker?"
Scully's knees buckled. She
put a hand on the wall to stabilize herself. Mulder got up and took her
shoulder. "You okay?"
"Fine. I'm fine," she said,
regaining her composure.
Billy came back, holding
Teresa's baby. There kid was obviously tired and upset, but there seemed to be
nothing else wrong. No burns, no blisters around the mouth or nose like they
had seen from the other victims of the Alien Bounty Hunter. Scully examined the
child.
"The baby was unharmed?"
Billy shrugged, cradling the
tot. "Aide from a dirty diaper and needing a bottle, Tony here is just fine.
His grandmother's coming in from Salem to get him."
"We need to get to that
ship," said Mulder quietly. "We still have no idea where it is. I think that the commune was a dumping place
for the victims when their abductors were done with them."
"The aliens," Sandoval
admitted. Acknowledging it for the first time out loud was liberating, but part
of him wondered whether he was just falling deeper into the same insanity.
Time for another truth.
"Mulder, what if I could lead you and your partner right to the ship?"
Mulder stared at Sandoval
incredulously. "You know -?"
Sandoval nodded. "If it
hasn't moved, I know exactly where it is."
Incredulity turned to anger.
"And you kept this quiet?"
"Isn't what you said back in
the hotel room? You don't know if you could trust me and were going to keep me
in the dark until Agent Scully pushed the issue. It's a matter of who to trust,
Agent Mulder. This case is forcing me to trust you and her whether I agree to
it or not."
Navigating the woods in a
suit was an annoyance. Tree limbs snagged fabric. Dirt streaked on pants
legs. Sandoval was wishing for
denim and hemp clothing and a sturdy pair of boots. Trails that were obvious
and negotiable when out with Mother and Mouse were little more then inches-long
cuts through blackberry bushes and huckleberry shrubs and climbs over nurse
logs full of moss and fungus.
He stopped to help
Scully over a few. Those heels should have been outlawed. Mulder was
negotiating just fine. Billy Miles brought up the rear.
Sandoval kicked aside a log
at the bottom of a small pile. The whole shaky pyramid collapsed. A vile, sharp
stench caused him to stumble back.
Under the pile, they could
see a hand. Clearing away more logs, they saw the remains of a ragged-looking
young man. Grabbing a long stick, Billy turned the body over.
His unseeing eyes were
blacked over, a congealed substance that had bled from his mouth, ears, and
nose. Billy dropped the stick as all of them backed up.
"That's how the anarchists
died," Sandoval said. "I saw a body on the commune just like that before it was
'cleaned up.'"
"Billy, call someone you can
trust. You know the local law enforcement better than even Sandoval. This is a
bio-hazardous emergency."
Billy nodded, turning around
and running back for the cruiser. "Know just who to ask."
"What about us?" Sandoval
asked.
Mulder started down another
path, around the body. "We need that ship."
Sandoval gestured to Scully. "It's this way. Over the hill and not
much further."
The large clearing appeared to be empty. Nothing was there to disrupt the clear
view of sky. Trees circled all sides.
"Here," said Sandoval. "I'm
sure of it."
Scully looked at him
skeptically.
"I'd swear the souls of my
family on it." He said. "See what you can find. I'll rescue your wayward
partner."
Sandoval vanished into the
bushes. Scully walked cautiously towards the center of the clearing. There was
nothing here. What was Sandoval so intent on showing?
Her foot hit something - a
chunk of plastic. She knelt by it. It had been burnt - melted into something
that now barely resembled a flashlight and was only recognizable by the
exploded remains of what had been batteries.
She reached out to take the
flashlight. Her hand hit something. She could almost swear there was something
- an electric field just past her fingertips. Ignoring the flashlight, she took
one step forward.
It was like getting hit by a
car.
Sandoval and Mulder pushed
past the bushes. Scully was five feet off the ground, shaking violently like a
caught insect. They rushed towards her. The force ended and she crashed to the
ground. Mulder dropped next to her, his eyes the size of plates as he felt her
neck for her pulse.
She groaned and stirred.
"What happened?"
Mulder looked over at
Sandoval. "We need to get her out of here. Which way back to the logging road?"
Sandoval pointed the way.
Mulder scooped up Scully and started off.
Closing his eyes and taking
a deep breath, Sandoval tried to reconcile what he had seen in the past week
with anything rational, anything that made sense. He failed. The image in his
mind of Mother and Mouse going through here and vanishing, the Hunter, Mulder
and Scully - just let it stop. Just end this trip through the rabbit hole!
When he opened his eyes, he
was alone in the woods, standing in the clearing where it all began. He was in
his grass-stained suit, and it was daylight. Part of him had hoped that he
would be here in the darkness, Mother deriding him again for daydreaming when
he was supposed to be doing his chores on the commune. Part of him wished it
was a bad dream or bad mushrooms.
He walked up to the edge of
the place where Scully had been suspended, and reached out his arm.
There was a moment of
resistance, and his hand passed through it, up to his elbow. It was like
submerging his hand in pure energy. Nothing past his elbow was visible.
Sandoval pulled his hand back and held it up.
His arm was fine. No
shaking, nothing burnt or amputated.
*Down the rabbit's hole and
I think I am stuck there. *
He headed off after Mulder
and Scully.
"Yes. You recovered
the body? Good. Take it to this address…"
As Billy recited the name
and address of the contact he had in Richie's hometown (Richie had moved to
Bellefleur from another town), he watched the door nervously. The second
cruiser pulled up and the simulacra of his father was coming towards the door.
"Yeah. Thanks. You have it.
Ok. Good."
The key slid in the lock and
the deadbolt turned.
"Can't talk longer. Yeah,
thanks, Charlie. Just remember to send the results. Yeah, bye."
He hung up the phone just as
his father - no- the Hunter crossed into the room. Billy backed up.
"Who were you talking to,
Billy?"
Billy shuddered, finally
backing against the wall. "We found a body out in the woods. Guy moved here
recently. Might be part of the anarchist case."
"Case has been solved,
Billy. And so has Teresa and Ray's disappearance. It's over, Billy. Do you want
me to show you? Anyway, you and me are going on a long trip. Time to get away
from all of this, son."
The cold implications of the
Hunter's words sunk in, even as the voice was careful. It was a replica of his
father's in every way. Billy noticed the hole in the hunter's uniform and drew
his 38.
"You aren't my father! Stay
back."
The Hunter took a step
forward, his voice an eerie singsong that Billy had never heard from his
father. "You'd really shoot me?"
"Get away from me! Where are Teresa and Ray? What the hell is
going on?"
No answer. He just closed
the gap between them and grabbed Billy's arm, forcing the gun clattering
uselessly to the floor. Another hand gripped Billy's neck and squeezed gently.
Within a minute, Billy stopped struggling, sliding like a rag doll to the
floor.
The hunter assessed the
young man. He was groggy, but still alive. Tossing Billy's service weapon on
the floor, he carried Billy Miles to the car's back seat out of sight as gently
as one would put a newborn in the cradle. Billy's handcuffs were used to cuff
him to the grille, and a piece of his own police uniform was ripped off and
used as a gag.
The Hunter left one last note.
Billy's return phone call got this message.
"This is the home of
Detective and Deputy Miles. We're going to be out of town for a while on a
fishing trip. If this is an urgent matter, hang up and dial 911. For all other matters, contact the sheriff's
office at 555-5432."
****
Scully's injuries were
enough to prompt them going back. A quick check indicated that she was
exhausted, but otherwise fine. The Portland FBI was showing up by the truckload
and had pulled Agent Sandoval in for case reports. Mulder pitied the poor
bastard and hoped Sandoval could come out of it career intact.
All that was left to do now
was wait for the axe to fall. In the meantime, he finished editing the case
report and was tossing a basketball
above his head when Skinner walked in.
*Time for the noose.*
"What's our punishment this
time?" Mulder asked. "Thumbscrews or 40 lashes?"
Skinner didn't answer, just
sullenly hovered in the doorway.
Mulder didn't even see the point of being formal. His ass
was getting canned anyway. "Come on in, Walter. Sit a spell. This could be
the last time you take a trip down to these offices."
"It was the two of you,
wasn't it?" Skinner pulled out the Washington Post from behind his back. The
headline was screaming "Evidence of Aliens Found? Oregon Scientists Think So."
Skinner put it on Mulder's desk. "It said three agents from the FBI provided
the evidence while investigating a routine case. Well, what passes for
'routine' here. Who helped you?"
"Ron Sandoval. He's based
out of Portland." Mulder fingered the newspaper. "He's a real prick, but
without him…who knows? Is he being punished for this?"
Skinner didn't answer that
one. "So, the two of you did go."
"Guilty as charged. And
if they're coming down on you for that, then I'm sorry. I truly am."
"Agent Sandoval is actually
getting a commendation for going above the call of duty on a case. As for me,
well, fortunately, they think that I made a contribution to the Bureau."
Mulder put the basketball on the floor. "Oh
well yeah, stick to a budget they say your making a contribution, but push the
limits of your profession, and they say you're out of control."
Skinner
sighed. "You could bring home a flying saucer and have an alien shake
hands with the President...hell, you practically did. What it comes down to
Agent Mulder is... they don't like you."
"I
didn't bring home an alien or a saucer, and those results are going to be
forgot-"
He
was too shocked to speak when Skinner turned towards the door.
A
man wearing a leather jacket and dark gloves walked in, followed by a blond
woman - both were far too familiar. Mulder bolted from his chair, practically
knocking over his boss to make the leap for Krycek. Skinner grabbed Mulder's arm before the first punch could land.
"Back
off! Hear what they have to say first!"
To
his credit, Krycek didn't back up at all. "You've got every reason to see me
dead." Did he shrug? "But you have to listen to me now. You have the singular
opportunity."
Marita
cut in. "The Smoking Man - he's running out of cards."
Mulder
relaxed a little.
She
continued. "He wants to rebuild the Project, keep using the old tactics, but
there are too many unknowns now. The war between the Alien Rebels and the
Colonists has escalated. The Rebels are winning, and more factions of aliens
may have come into play. Now, the ship in Oregon…"
"We
didn't find any ships," Mulder half-lied.
"It's
there," said Krycek, "but it's cloaked in an energy field while evidence is
being destroyed, even what you were able to expose."
"What
evidence?"
"The
Alien Bounty Hunter. Billy Miles. Teresa Hoese, her husband. He's eliminating
proof of all the tests. We're asking ourselves, we're asking ourselves, 'Where
are they?' They're right there. They're right under our noses. I'm giving you
the chance to change that, to hold the proof," Krycek says.
"Why
now?"
Krycek
shoved his hand in his pocket, the prosthetic left arm hanging at his side like
always. "Why not?" His face darkened. "Truth is - I want to damn the soul
of that Cigarette Smoking Son-of-a-Bitch - wreck the thing he spent his whole
life on."
The
door opened a third time. All partied turned to see Scully walk in and
practically jump upon seeing the assembled group before her. Her eyes went
right for her partner.
****
Skinner's
Office
2AM
If
a camera could see this proceeding, it would remind someone of a cheap parody
of DaVinci's Last Supper. Mulder stood at the table, flanked by his small army.
Scully, Skinner, Krycek, Marita, and they added the odd triad. Frohike almost
hung up until they were able to drive home how high the stakes were. Even after
hearing that, Langly spent the first ten minutes asking questions, while Byers
grumbled something about "aliens not really being our line of work."
Once the dance
of suspicion and introductions was done, and it was made clear that the whole
house of conspiracy cards was about to get trashed, the three hackers talked
among themselves, agreed to the plan, and ordered Chinese takeout. It was going
to be a long night.
The
table in the center of Skinner's "War Room" was littered with papers, files and
Chinese take-out containers. As
data came in, the older piles of printouts were discarded for new. Scully
looked almost cold, arms crossed protectively. Krycek was obviously agitated,
the Russian pacing the room several times during the night. Marita was glacial,
like usual. Skinner rarely took his eyes off Krycek. The energy in the room was
so high that one could light up a city.
Frohike
threw a map on the table, knocking over an empty take-out container. He pointed
out the readouts on the bottom. "What's amazing is that even the military
satellites don't see it."
Langly
shrugged, pulling over a paper of waveform data. "But J.P.L.'S Topex Poseidon
shows it only as waveform data."
"And
here it appears simply as a microburst of transmission error on the European
Space Agency's ERS-2." Byers put his stack of satellite readouts between those
of his partners.
"In
other words?" asked Skinner.
Frohike
piled the papers on the table into some kind of order. "In other words, you'd
never know it's a UFO."
Buers
cut in. "If you didn't know what you were looking at or looking for."
"No
wonder we couldn't see them." Langly said, rescuing a paper.
Krycek
glowered at the trio. "Listen, it is not going to be there forever."
"As
we all stand here talking it's rebuilding itself," Maria barked.
Scully
was choking on this. She threw her hands to her sides and stormed out of the
office. Watching her leave, Mulder followed.
She
felt dizzy. It was all too much, too soon. Proof - now, they had it. Part of
her knew it, and another part still shouted in disbelief. Another part of her
was glad their new ally wasn't around. Sandoval had helped them more than he
knew with the data his friends in low places exposed - mixed with data from the
Gunmen. She also wanted to talk to him, see if he was coping with this any
better than she was.
A
hand took hers, and the now-familiar flash of thoughts crossed her mind. She
looked up. Half-lit in the hallway, Mulder stood above her. He pulled his hand
away, rubbing his palm.
"Sorry,
Scully. I shouldn't do that to you."
She
looked up and smiled. "Do what?"
"You
know my handshakes are going to become deadly weapons, Scully," he teased. "But
don't pretend this isn't happening. I may not know what causes it, but I know
what it's doing."
She
responded by taking his hand. "Mulder, I don't care. I know how much worse it
is for you, but whatever happens, *we* will face it. You stood by me with the
cancer…time for me to return the favor."
He
brushed a lock of red hair out of her eyes. "You're still scared. I don't have
to read your mind to know."
She
sighed. "Mulder, if any of this is true..."
Mulder
pulled his hands away. "If it is, or if it isn't I want you to forget about it,
Scully."
"Forget
about it?" She stared at him. How dare he suggest…?
"You're
not going back out there. I'm not going
to let you go back out there." She could see he was afraid. He tried to create
distance, getting up and pacing away. She stood up and stared after him.
"What
are you talking about?"
"It
has to end sometime." He hung his head and looked back. "We have the proof, and can expose it to the
world. - that time is now."
She
walked up to him, cutting off his path. "Mulder..."
"Scully,
you have to understand that they're taking abductees," Mulder said. "You're an abductee. I'm not going to risk..." His voice broke on
the last words. "Losing you. Not now."
They
hugged each other, understanding the heavy odds. They were so close to victory,
and she had to stay behind and let him fight the last battle alone.
Scully
whispered into his shoulder. "I won't let you go alone."
***
Part
6
Re-embrace
the Void
**Even
with their new allies, the Judge and Truthseeker were still vulnerable. A part
of the Light was still not within their grasp. Sha'ka'rava sought it the only
way he knew how. Leaving his beloved companio in the hands of his allies, the
Truthseeker once more sought the Void, knowing the last shard of the Light was
there.**
Arrangements
were made, bags packed. Scully was going to lie low with the Gunmen for a few
days. Mulder trusted those men almost as much as he did Scully. He doubted they
would do anything worse than feed her some of Frohike's home cooking and try to
teach her how to hack into the DOD.
Their
rented Chevy Malibu stood out. The
Gunmen had lent them some equipment and "funky poaching" attire. Mulder and
Skinner were all in black outfits with many pockets. Darkness fell early, it
seemed, and it was pitch dark by the time they arrived on the logging trail
outside of Bellefleur.
Skinner
popped the trunk, extracting a bag. "This is starting to feel like the snipe
hunt I was afraid of."
"There's
no such thing as a snipe, sir," Mulder countered as he shouldered the backpack
and started down the trail. "I know which one Agent Sandoval marked."
Skinner
glowered. "Hey, you know, my ass is on the line here, too, Agent Mulder."
"I
know that." Mulder turned around. There wasn't a need for "thank you," or many
idle words at all. Mulder was the first up the hill, into the woods. Skinner
took a look back. Nothing like going into the rabbit hole.
Scully
and the Gunmen spent the time chewing through the stacks of data. She pulled
out the medical records and bolted from her chair, walking over to the triad.
"This just can't be."
Frohike
met her halfway. "What are you looking at?"
Her
eyes didn't leave the stack. "Medical records-- Billy Miles and other known
abductees in Bellefleur, Oregon. They
all experienced anomalous brain activity."
"Electro-encephalitic
trauma," Byers said, pulling out another medical record.
"Which
is exactly what Mulder experienced earlier this year," Scully said, almost
pumping past them.
Langly
was perplexed. "I don't understand."
She
stormed over to the table, rifling through the medical records. "There was
something out there in that field. It
knocked me back. Because it didn't want
me. Mulder thinks that it's me that's
in danger of being taken." She looked up.
Frohike
was the second one to do the math. "When it's Mulder who's in danger."
"Mulder's
already on the plane there," Byers said. "We'll never be able to warn him in
time."
Scully
pulled out her cell phone. "Not quite. We might not be able to help him, but
maybe someone else can."
***
Sandoval
had just finished washing the dinner dishes as DeDe prepared for her morning
court case when his cell phone rang.
He
pressed the talk button. "Hello?"
"Sandoval,
this is Agent Scully. I need a favor. Mulder is in trouble and I need your
help..."
DeDe
saw her husband mutter a few words and affirmatives into the phone. Getting a
call from his work this late at night was not usually a good sign. After
finishing the conversation with "I'll be right there," he hung up and
went for the closet.
"Ronald,
what's going on?"
"A
case, DeDe." Sandoval told his wife a half-truth. "There might be a
break in those disappearances. I'll be back late. Sorry about this."
DeDe
sighed and looked up from her manila folders. "Still don't want to cash it
in for the relatively sedate world of legal briefs?"
He
chuckled as he pulled on a jacket over his shoulder holster. "Sorry,
honey."
On
his way out the door, he got a chilly feeling. Turning back, he saw DeDe
working on her files at the desk. Striding over, he put a hand on her shoulder.
She turned around and looked up.
"Forgot
something, Ron?"
He
nodded. Cupping her face in his hand, fingers savoring the texture of her curly
blond hair, Sandoval belt down and kissed his wife good-bye. She smiled at him
afterwards. Sandoval waved to her as he left the apartment.
***
A
five-hour white-knuckle drive down streets and back roads he could negotiate in
his sleep brought Sandoval to the place where the Chevy Malibu Scully described
was parked.
He
felt the engine. Still warm. They had to be near. Taking the fastest, and most
perilous trails, he ran until he could see a shadowy figure reach the clearing.
"Wait!"
The
figure stopped. Sandoval caught up with the man. He was looking at a stranger,
a big, bald man with glasses.
"Who
are you?"
"Assistant
Director Skinner of the FBI. Who are you?"
Sandoval
backed up a step, and pulled out his wallet. "Sorry, sir. I'm Ronald Sandoval.
Scully sent me."
"Why
would she send you?"
"Is
Agent Mulder here?"
"He
went on ahead. Why?"
"She
said he was in danger. That -"
An
eerie blue light sliced through the trees. Both of them staggered back,
blinded.
Sandoval
broke away from Skinner and darted up the hill. "Mulder!"
He
reached the clearing to see Mulder. Sandoval saw Mulder shuffle towards the
almost blinding light, dazed - or maybe entranced.
"Agent
Mulder!"
The
light rippled, and in an eye's blink, Mulder was gone.
Sandoval
dashed into the clearing, but an unseen force was pushing against him. Like a
rock hitting water, the resistance was only for a second, and then he went
straight THROUGH! Falling to the ground hard, he rolled until he could see what
was going on.
The
whole group was standing there. Mother, Mouse, and River smiled at him. Teresa
Hosie and Billy Miles stood with them. There had to be at least a dozen others.
All of them were smiling, entranced, and waiting in the circle of light beneath
the large ship.
Sandoval
saw Mulder shuffling towards the light, the same blissful look on his face.
"Mulder,
you can't do this. Mulder, step away. Close your eyes! Don't look. Fight
back!" Sandoval attempted to get to his feet, but his legs were like
rubber and wouldn't obey him. He attempted to crawl over to Mulder, but could
not manage it. A sinking feeling washed over him.
He
couldn't save them - any of them.
Two
figures emerged from the light. Sandoval made another attempt to get to his
feet, but they tingled and ached so badly that his body refused to obey.
"Mulder!
Mulder, come back here! Can you hear me?"
The
figures, a man and a woman approached. One was a woman with dark curly hair and
hazel eyes that practically glowed. Something in the woman's angular features
reminded him of Mulder, but he didn't know why. Both their hands glowed bright
white, the light taking up most of their palms. The man appeared to have pale
hair and middle-aged features.
"He
is still human," said the woman, hovering her hand above him. "But
suitable to be a Host for one of our own."
"No,"
said the man, passing another hand over him. "I see him as being useful to
us later. We will let him go with what he has seen. His people will not believe
him." Sandoval's eyes grew wide as
he watched the man's hands glowing a chilling blue-white.
"What
in hell are you?" Sandoval croaked.
The
man smiled. "When we meet again, you will know."
The
woman pulled back her glowing hands. "Ha'Gel, we already have what we
need."
The
pair turned away from him and walked back towards the captured humans. All of
them were watching with expressions of eerie bliss. Mulder looked relaxed, at
peace.
The
glow increased as the alien pair rejoined their prey. The light grew brighter
as Sandoval regained his feet and rushed towards the light. There was an
explosion and he felt himself being hurtled through the air...
"Mulder!
Agent Sandoval!" Skinner plowed over bushes and sticks. If anyone was
around to hear him, it didn't matter at this point. "Agents! Can you hear
me?"
There
was a shout and Skinner saw Sandoval streak past him backwards as if tossed
from a catapult. The young agent struck the trunk of a large Douglas Fir, then
slumped to its base.
"Sandoval?
Agent Sandoval?"
Skinner
heard Sandoval grumble something incoherent before passing out. Skinner was
about to check on how badly injured Sandoval was when he heard it.
Thundering
over the treetops, the ship was the size of a football stadium. It hovered over
him for a few seconds, rose straight up to loom ominously above the treetops
then zipped off to the west at unbelievable speed.
* * * *
Sandoval
woke up in a hospital bed. The doctors explained to him that he had been very
lucky not to be in worse condition, and DeDe had hovered over him. He had been
unconscious for several hours, and in and out for a few hours more. They were
keeping him here for another day for observation. After this long wait, he'd persuaded his wife that he would be
fine and to get something in her stomach before she passed out herself.
Less
than three minutes after DeDe left, Scully walked in. She looked as bad as he
felt.
"Agent
Scully?" Sandoval pushed himself to sit up, magnifying the throbbing in
his skull. "They told me you were ill and in Washington."
"It's
just exhaustion. I'm off duty for a few days." She looked at him hopefully.
"Skinner told me about Mulder. He said you were the last to see him."
He
said, voice tight. "He's gone, Agent Scully. There were creatures...a
ship, a light..."
She
grabbed his arm, the only indication of how upset she was. "Describe them.
Anything you can remember, even if it seems unimportant or unbelievable."
"Dana,"
he said, cutting to the point. "I have a concussion, so I'm not sure WHAT
I saw. All I can remember is that he's gone. The ship took him...and some of
the others. Most of the ones we were not able to find."
A
terrible range of emotions washed down her face. Shock, grief, and sadness
finally ending in a calm face where only her eyes betrayed the rest. She put an
envelope in front of him. "Skinner told the head of your field office and
some of the officials in Washington about your help on the case. They gave this
to me to deliver to you." She looked up. "Excuse me."
Turning
around, she walked out of the room.
The
envelope was from the Bureau, looking official. Sandoval turned it over, still
blaming himself. No doubt it was going to be a summons for a competency hearing
or a dismissal. The best case would be a formal citation for allowing a senior
agent to vanish and investigating cases not formally assigned to him by the
Bureau.
Tearing
open the paper, he unfolded the note. The news he received was something he
didn't expect...
*Agent Sandoval,
In light of your outstanding
work and bravery in the line of duty, you have been promoted and reassigned to
the Paranormal Division. Effective after your medical leave, you will be
transferred to Washington DC...*
30