MY NOTES: Four long months in
the creation--anything else
you've read by me (mostly MSR)
pales in the wake of this
baby. The challenge I gave
myself was to try to follow in
the humble footsteps of Vince
Gilligan, and write the best
damn X-Files episode I possibly
could in novel form. True to
the show, I've worked like
hell to get my characterization as
accurate as possible. That
is what I committed myself to. You
the precious reader are left
to judge whether or not I completed
my mission. I *worship* the
X-Files with a blind devotion. This
is my gift to the rest of the
fans who follow with absolute faith
as well. The truth is out there...
TIME FRAME: Aftershock takes
up with the characters during
the first few episodes of the
fifth season after Scully's recovery
--sometime around Detour. At
the start of season five, it was
obvious their relationship
had evolved considerably and I felt
I wanted to explore some of
those sentiments a bit more closely.
I also wanted to devise a way
to create a greater intimacy for
them without actually disturbing
the delicate balance between
professionalism and personal
involvement. God! I hope you like it.
If nothing else, you'll at
least learn a thing or two about plate tectonics!
EVENTS/LOCATIONS: Some of the
events described in this
novella are based on my personal
experiences during the
7.1 Loma Prieta Quake of 1989.
I know what it's like to try
to get through a day while
pelted by continuous aftershocks.
As for locations: I live 40
minutes from San Francisco and
visited twice to scope out
locations for this work. Some
San Franciscans will no doubt
inform me that some of my buildings
are on the wrong streets, and
there aren't any restaurants in
Pacific Heights, etc. But the
locations themselves are for the
most part true to the real
thing. The fog effects were digital.
DISCLAIMER: Okay, here we go.
I don't own them,
I'm just borrowing them because
the grand high
sci-fiction genius Chris Carter
invented them
and I'm horribly envious. All
devoted regards to
1013, FOX, and such. No infringement,
no money intended,
just one fan's way of worshipping
perfection.
FEEDBACK: PLEASE!! Give me a
reason for living.
My toil as a magazine editor
is sapping the life
out of me! Terma99@aol.com
(My friends call me Sharon)
Missing chapters?
Goto: www.geocities.com/hotsprings/8334/fic.html
****************************************************
Aftershock
by Terma99
(1/11)
Pacific Heights
San Francisco, CA
THURS: 11:45 PM
Special Agent Fox Mulder bent
to one knee and pulled the
black sheet back from the head
of the body lying face-up on
the hardwood floor beneath
him.
Sarah Maples, 28 years old,
5'3", 112 lbs., legal secretary,
homicide victim. Apparent cause
of death--strangulation.
With a gloved fingertip, he
brushed the blond strands of hair
back from where they had fallen
across her neck. Clearly visible
in the apartment's dull lighting
were dark bruises in the form
of fingers and thumbs branded
into the pale skin of her throat.
A man's hands, thick and strong,
but somewhat short, not
nearly clearing the circumference
of her neck. Still, it was
enough to finish the job with
crushing force.
Mulder chewed his lip in thought
and raised his eyes to the
span of picture windows across
from him, the lights from a
nearby restaurant cast a dull
bluish hue over the apartment's dark
interior. He stood and moved
close to the cool glass panes
looking down over the rooftops
to the white pinpoint lights of
the San Francisco Marina several
blocks below. Something
about this murderer wasn't
ringing true, he could feel it.
Just then, the view through
the window began to shudder
accompanied by the slightly
queasy feeling of the room gliding
out of place. He reached out
to balance himself and stepped
away from the glass instinctively.
And then, it was over.
"Aftershock," muttered Detective
Meyer, looking up from his
spiral notebook. "They hit
about once every four to five
hours according to those seismologists
out at Point Reyes.
Except we're only feeling the
bigger ones."
Mulder nodded and turned to
look out the window again. Down
on Greenwich St. he could see
frightened tenants gathering
outside their apartments, jabbering
and gesturing toward
the rooftops. San Franciscans
had reason to be jumpy tonight,
just 36 hours earlier this
city had been jolted by a major
seismic event--a 6.7 magnitude
earthquake centered 20 miles
south of the city on the San
Andreas Fault--the same fault
responsible for the devastating
1906 quake. Not necessarily
"the big one" but certainly
a big enough one to take out quite
a few windows and retaining
walls and slow traffic along
residential areas where a series
of apartments and homes
were jostled off their foundations
in the sandy shoreline bayfill.
The SFPD had assured him this
particular block of apartments
was build on more solid ground.
From five floors up Mulder
could still detect a slight
sway as the aging walls settled back
into place. Not a feeling he
was accustomed to, unlike the
usually quake-carefree Californians
who took mild trembles to
no more notice than an occasional
lightening flash. *Give 'em a
Friday night drive through
an average DC snowfall--and the
story would be quite different*,
he mused, shaking the
uneasiness from his head.
"Well that was an experience."
Mulder turned to see his somewhat
shaken partner enter from
the hallway. She had been downstairs
in the lobby querying
residents about the victim's
movements earlier that day.
"Thank goodness I remembered
to take the stairs." She crossed
the blue-hued hardwood floor
to him, tucking an errant strand
of copper-red hair behind her
ear. "So what do you make of this
case, Mulder?"
He shifted his weight from one
leg to the other glancing behind
her at the half uncovered body
on the floor. "Something isn't
right here, Scully. We've got
four victims in three different
neighborhoods. Different heights,
weights, sexes and even races.
All apparently murdered within
36 hours of one another. All
apparently by the same pair
of stubby thick hands--bad jokes
don't get around that fast."
Dana Scully folded her arms
across the front of her dark
double-breasted pantsuit, pursing
her lips thoughtfully. "Yet
you're still convinced we're
looking for the same perpetrator
in all four cases?"
Mulder nodded slowly, his darkened
hazel eyes staring past her
to the small window in the
north wall of the flat. He led her over
to it, pointing to the freshly
dusted pane. "This was the only
window found open. Fingerprints
match those of the victim. Her
front door was found bolted
and locked. There are no other
possible entrances. And according
to Det. Meyer, no evidence
of forced entry was found at
the other crime scenes either."
He looked down at his partner
as she stood on tip-toe to look out
the window and the five floor
drop to the alley below.
Questioning, she matched his
glance--"So you would think the
victim knew her assailant.
Let him in perhaps?"
He agreed, his eyes narrowing,
"Except he somehow managed to
lock the door on his way out.
As well as the front doors of a
machine repairman in North
Beach, a bicycle messenger in
the Mission, and a hairstylist
in Excelsior District. None of
whom appear to have any known
connection to each other--
at least according to their
families and neighbors."
"Locksmith?"
"Possible. SFPD is already following
up that lead," he shrugged,
crossing back over to the body.
Crouching down he pointed to
the side of the strangled neck.
"These bruises are nearly identical
on the bodies of all four victims.
No other signs of struggle have
been found. All were found
fully clothed, their personal effects
seemingly untouched." He lifted
his eyes panning across the
small studio, its small kitchenette,
bathroom, and bed nestled
between two bookshelves set
next to the picture windows; his
gaze coming to rest once again
on the lifeless body below. He
stood, his trenchcoat casting
a blanketing shadow over the corpse.
"So what would you say Agent
Mulder? Do we have a serial murderer
on our hands?" Detective Meyer
asked, gesturing
to the body.
"It's still premature to make
an absolute assessment, " he
answered, stepping closer to
the shorter sandy-haired man.
"But I'd say a connection is
most likely."
"A prolific sonovabitch, ain't
he?" Det. Meyer scratched his
head wearily. "Just what we
need right now in the middle of
this shaker."
Mulder nodded. "We're glad to help you out."
Det. Meyer motioned to his partner,
"Agent Scully, were you
able to gather any more information?"
"I spoke to the superintendent
and an elderly woman who both
live near the lobby," she began.
"The super said he was home
most of the day and didn't
see or hear anything unusual. The
woman, Mrs. Ping, told me she
saw Maples enter the building
at approximately 5:45 PM, her
usual time to return from work.
She greeted her. Maples was
alone as was the norm. Mrs. Ping
didn't think she was seeing
anyone."
"Yet time of death has been
estimated at 6 or 7PM," continued
Det. Meyer. "If there were
any sounds of a struggle coming from
this apartment, one of them
would have heard it."
"And neither one of them remembers
hearing anyone ring the
buzzer for the lobby door either,"
added Scully.
"Strange..." mumbled Det. Meyer.
"A fellow usually makes a
mess when he strangles a person.
Scuffs the floor at least,
knocks over a lamp, at least
makes a thump or two. Unless
her neighbors are seriously
hearing impaired, this guy must
have some kind of power over
his victims."
Scully shot Mulder a quizzical look.
Mulder shook his head slowly,
"No detective, I think what
we've got here is someone who's
found a unique way of
killing quickly and quietly.
Probably by slipping the victim
a delayed-action drug, or posing
as a maintenance man or
bible salesman."
"That kind of act takes some
practice," added Det. Meyer.
"This is the first time we've
seen this guy's MO."
"Do you have someone looking into the national database?"
"The boys at the station are running a search."
"At this time the other three
bodies are awaiting examination
at the city morgue?" Scully
asked, flipping her case file open.
"Yeah," answered Det. Meyer.
"The exams are scheduled for
six tomorrow morning."
Mulder gave Scully a look she immediately recognized.
"I'd like to observe the exam tomorrow, if that would be no problem."
"No. No problem at all. Like I said, we could sure use the help."
Mulder pulled his card from
the inside pocket of his coat and
handed it to the detective.
"This is my cellphone number. Call
us if you turn up anything
else."
END (1/11)
********************
(2/11)
********************
Exiting the apartment, the pair
of agents picked their way
through an assortment of crumbled
stucco and broken glass
to the steep sidewalk running
down the dimly lit street to
their rented sedan. Pacific
Heights had retired for the evening,
most of the residents finding
their way back inside their
tremulous homes for the night.
The San Francisco air was
dewy with a light fog that
anointed the street lights with
faint haloes.
"Whatta you say Scully? Take
a late-night drive with me
down Lombard street?" Mulder
quipped, nodding vigorously
over the hood of the car at
her as he unlocked the doors.
Scully slid into the passenger's
seat stifling a yawn. "I'd settle
for a drive down Van Ness,
to our hotel." That earned her a
genuine grumble as he shut
the driver's side door. "Mulder it's..."
she paused to glance at her
watch. "it's two...three in the morning
our time."
"Night's still young here in
fog city," he sighed, starting the
engine. She gave him a raised
eyebrow and he chuckled
softly pulling out onto the
street.
********************
Their Columbus Ave. hotel was
nestled between the steel and
glass urban forest of the downtown
Financial District and the
spirited edge of Little Italy's
North Beach district. It was an
older building with classic
bay windows turned toward the
arching white cable lights
of the Bay Bridge.
But Special Agent Dana Scully
was in no condition to enjoy the
view. Exhausted from a six
hour flight and a two hour delay at
SFO due to the quake, she was
more than ready for sleep by the
time she shouldered her bags
into the eighth floor room. It was
a decent hotel, but far from
the luxuries of Union Square's
St. Francis. Mulder's rather
frugal taste in travel arrangements
were all too familiar to her,
but she wondered if his choice of
North Beach had less to do
with the promise of the best
restaurants in San Francisco
and more to do with Big Al's Adult
Book Store one block over at
the end of Kearny St.'s infamous
red light district.
Eighth floor. As close as they
could get to the ground. She closed
her eyes and wrapped her arms
more tightly around the pillow.
She didn't relish the idea
of running for the staircase in the middle
of the night. In the room next
door she could faintly hear her
partner flipping channels on
the TV. News reports of the quake
now almost three days old still
clogged every network. How
he managed to function so well
on so little sleep was beyond her.
To be honest, she wasn't exactly
thrilled to be smack in the middle
of the aftermath of a major
seismic event. Her little shake up in
the cracking Pacific Heights
stairwell was the first and last time
she wished to experience an
earthquake first hand. Still, it
would have been impossible
to talk Mulder out of joining in
the chase for a mysterious
serial strangler in the midst of a
public emergency free-for-all.
The SFPD had called in every
favor it had to help get a
handle on things. The governor had
already declared most of San
Francisco county a disaster area.
She sighed, trying to forget
the disaster long enough to fall
asleep before her 6 AM date
with the coroner. One wall over
Mulder had evidently found
a late-night talk show that amused
him. She took a deep breath,
released, and let exhaustion pull
her away with the faint echo
of his muffled laughter in her ears.
********************
North Beach
FRIDAY: 9:30 AM
Mulder sat on a wire rimmed
sidewalk cafe chair outside one
of North Beach's multiple espresso
and danish shops. He took a
sip from the tall glass mug,
wiping the milk froth from under
his nose with a napkin. It
was some kind of sweet espresso
amaretto thing. No one in California
just ordered coffee anymore.
He set the mug down to cool
a bit and broke off a hunk of
pastry, careful to let the
buttery flakes fall on the table instead
of his tie. Presently a yellow
checkered cab pulled up and
Scully emerged from the back
seat with her black filebag.
She crossed the street and
joined him in the rickety chair across
the table from him.
"What's that?" she asked, eyeing the steamy mug.
"Hmm, not sure yet. 'supposed
to have caffeine in it, that's all
I need to know. Had breakfast
yet, Scully?" She shook her head.
Mulder pulled a small yellow
bag out from his coat pocket
and bounced it in front of
her. "Plain toasted bagel...light
cream cheese."
She smiled and took the bag from him.
"Thanks."
She started to unfold the neck
of the bag and was interrupted
by a tap on her wrist.
"What did you find?"
She set the bag in her lap.
"I have to hand it to you Mulder,
you certainly have a way of
honing in on cases featuring
bizarre forensic evidence."
"How's that?"
"It would seem strangulation
was not the primary cause of
death," she answered, giving
him a wary glance.
His expression immediately brightened, "Really?"
"Aside from the bruises, we
did not find any of the characteristics
typical of oxygen deprivation
from restriction of the windpipe.
No elevated carbon dioxide
levels, no vessel damage..."
"This keeps sounding better by the minute..."
"Wait until I get to the punch
line...Our internal examinations
revealed an abnormal
swelling of the brain and heart tissue in
all for bodies coupled with
elevated levels of myoglobin in the
urine--a condition normally
observed only in burn victims."
She paused to let this sink
in while she made a grab four the
contents of her bag.
She managed to get the wrapped bagel onto
the table before the next bullet-fire
inquiry.
"And there was no other external
evidence, of burned or
bruised tissue?"
"No. The bodies were clean.
The crime lab did a sweep for fiber
and hair evidence prior to
the autopsies. They weren't able to
come up with anything conclusive.
However our killer commits
these crimes, he does it with
a minimal amount of fuss," she
added, unwrapping the paper.
"Did anything turn up in the blood samples?"
"No, interestingly enough, the
toxicology screen came back
clean...Well, with the
exception of a moderate sample of TCH
in the bicycle messenger."
"And what scientific explanation,
Dr. Scully, have you constructed
for this quartet of lightly
toasted organs?"
She managed a fingertip swipe
of the cream cheese and paused
a moment to pop it in her mouth
before answering.
"I couldn't tell you. Intense
heat? High-voltage current? Neither
of which explain the lack of
epidermal charring or blistering...I
was hoping you'd take over
about now with an equally bizarre
but brilliant theory."
He parried her comment with a self-effacing tilt of the head.
"Don't worry, I've got one in the oven that's sure to impress."
She separated the bagel and
took a bite from the lower half,
she chewed thoughtfully, then
swallowed, her eyes falling to
his mug.
"You mind?" she asked innocently.
He grinned slightly and
pushed the caffeinated beverage
towards her. She took a
timid sip. "Mmm, sweet...there's
espresso in this?"
"Somewhere."
She craned her neck to look
into the cafe window.
"You don't suppose they serve
regular here, do you?"
"I was afraid to ask."
Mulder's cellphone began to ring.
He pulled it from his coat pocket and answered it.
"Mulder."
Scully could catch what sounded
like Det. Meyer's voice on
the other end.
"MmmHm...where is that in relation
to North Beach?" Mulder
turned to his right to look
up at the peaks of the Financial District.
"We'll be right over." He beeped
the phone off. "Better get that
coffee to go, we've got another
body."
********************
(3/11)
**********************************
Embarcadero One was the first
of four 40 floor office
buildings connected at the
base by a bayside shopping
center just north of the Bay
Bridge. Embarcadero Center
was only a 10 minute walk from
their cafe down Columbus
St. over to Sansome, past the
skyline landmark Transamerica
Pyramid. The air was
cool and pleasant that morning, the
fog blanket had retreated a
few miles back out to sea. Through
the rotating glass doorway
in the building's main lobby, the
agents were greeted by Det.
Meyer and an Embarcadero
security guard who signed them
in and issued magnetic passes.
"At about 7:30 this morning
building security was called to
the Hewitt Associates' 32nd
floor offices," Meyer informed
them. "The body of mailroom
supervisor Kimberly Kholer was
found face up on the floor
near the copiers. Victim showed bruises
on the sides of the neck and
trachea."
"Sounds like our boy," Mulder
said, following the detective and security
guard into the elevator.
Scully followed in suit, glancing
down a second before stepping
over the half inch separation
between the tile floor and the
elevator. The 32nd floor was
a long ride up.
The uneasy glance Mulder gave
her as she came to stand beside
him told her he wasn't all
that thrilled about taking the ride
himself. Unconsciously, she
reached behind her and eased
herself against the railing,
her eyes on the digital floor readout.
The security guard took his
pass and held it against an
electronic sensor, activating
the elevator panel. He punched the
"up" button. The doors closed
and the car sprang into motion,
expressing them to the
20th floor lobby where they switched
cars for the final climb.
The Hewitt offices occupied
the entire 32nd floor. The mailroom
was located on at the back
end of a plain gray carpeted hallway.
The security guard unlocked
the door and they entered the
bright fluorescent-lit room.
The mailroom roared with the sound
of a large humidifier nestled
near the west wall, followed by racks
of paper boxes and duplication
equipment. The north wall was
set with one-way windows that
looked out over the city rooftops.
On the east wall were four
office-class color copiers. The outline
of the body of the mailroom
supervisor was taped in red to the
floor next to them.
"When was the estimated time
of death?" Scully asked the
detective while Mulder walked
over to study the outline.
Det. Meyer flipped open his
notepad. "Around midnight last
night. The victim was working
the night shift and the
timeclock shows she punched
in around 11:15."
"Was anyone else working on this floor during those hours?"
"Not according to the timeclock."
"Did the lobby attendant report
seeing anyone suspicious enter
the building around that time?"
"No, we've interviewed the night
guard and she didn't recall
anyone arriving other than
other nightshift employees."
"Is there anyway someone could
have accessed the building
from another entrance?"
"Yeah," answered the guard.
"If you got the right pass you can get
in through the loading doors."
"How many people have access to that entrance?"
"Quite a few I'm afraid," answered
Det. Meyer. "We're looking
into that."
"The security cameras in the
hallway..." she continued. "Did they
pick up anything?"
The security guard shook his
head. "No ma'am, quite a few of
our cameras went down for a
while last night--probably due to
all the quakes we've been having."
Mulder stood up from between
the copiers. "Did anyone note
the time the cameras started
malfunctioning?"
The guard looked confused and shook his head.
"But you have a tape of what they did pick up, right?"
"Yeah, but you won't see much."
"Show me."
********************
Back in the lobby the guard
cued up the evening's security
footage from the 32nd floor
hallway. The tape was clear until
about 11:35 when Kholer was
clearly seen entering the
mailroom alone. Then around
11:50 there was a shuddering of
the footage followed by intermittent
static and finally the
camera went dead around 12:15.
"Rewind to 11:50," Mulder asked
the guard as he stood behind
him eyeing the playback. "Stop
there," he added when the
camera began to lose the image
briefly. Mulder tapped his finger
at the screen. "11:50 last
night we were being shaken from the
fifth floor of a Pacific Heights
apartment building." He reached
into his coat pocket and removed
the morning's Chronicle,
unfolding the front page. "When
was the estimated time of death
of the other murders?"
Meyer reached for his notes.
"Uh, 6:30PM Tuesday, 1:30AM,
and 5:30PM Wednesday..."
"...and 6:30PM Thursday," Mulder
finished, handing the front
page earthquake report over
to the detective. "All of the
murders were committed within
forty minutes after each aftershock."
Det. Meyer eyed up the times.
"Well, I'll be damned. We've
been shaking so much around
here I didn't even think to make
the connection."
Scully moved closer to the two
men, she touched her partner's arm
to get his attention. "Mulder?
What are you saying?"
"Look at it this way, Scully.
Somehow this guy was able to breach
the security systems in this
building, and get in and out of the
mailroom unnoticed. I
don't think it's a coincidence that the
cameras went black within half
an hour of the last seismic event."
"They could have been damaged by the quake."
Mulder turned back to the security
guard. "When did the 32nd
floor cameras come back online?"
The guard fiddled with the VCR
a minute before replying, "Looks
like they straightened themselves
out around 12:45."
Mulder gave Scully a confirming look.
He then turned back to the detective.
"I think you should have
some of your people re-examine
the crime scenes for evidence
of electronic tampering."
"Electronic tampering?"
"Yeah, we've got what appears
to be some creative electrical
effects on the bodies as well."
Det. Meyer looked at Scully, questioning.
She explained the chief medical
examiner's findings in brief,
adding that electrical shock
could be a cause of the tissue
damage they observed.
"Most of the other locations
were private residences," resumed
the detective. "What should
we be looking for?"
Mulder tapped his index finger
on his lower lip, "I don't know...
try security systems, VCRs,
computers, anything plugged in
that seems out of whack. Oh,
and check out the Pacific Heights'
security door. It runs
on an electrical release system."
"Okay, we're on it."
Mulder turned and brushed his
hand over his partner's
shoulder. "Come on Scully,
we're gonna take a drive up the coast."
"Where?"
"Point Reyes, earthquake country."
********************
(4/11)
**********************************
Point Reyes National Seashore
1:30 PM
"Hey Scully, come take a look at this."
Mulder had wandered up the trail
that ran past the Point
Reyes Seismological Laboratory.
His sleeves were rolled up and
his suitcoat tossed over one
shoulder as he turned to call to her--
the pleasant afternoon breeze
tousling his hair across his forehead.
They had taken the scenic hour
drive north up Hwy. 1 over the
steep sea swept Marin Headlands
to the yellow grasslands of
the triangular land formation
known as Point Reyes. On a map,
the landmass looked like a
slice of pie separated and pushed
northwards from the mainland
by the deep cut of the San
Andreas fault. Here is where
California did indeed look like it
was being pushed out to sea.
Scully closed the distance between
them, squinting into the
warm sun. Mulder had stopped
at the edge of a short wooden
fence.
"According to the sign here.
This fence moved eight and a half
feet during the 1906 quake,"
he said, pointing further up the
path where it appeared the
second half of the white picket fence
had scooted south quite a distance.
"That's right," said a new voice
coming up the path behind them.
"This fence used to be
connected. You both have the dubious
honor of standing directly
on the mighty San Andreas." Scully
looked down and stepped to
her right. "Don't worry," he
laughed. "The ground won't
open up on you."
The young, yellow-haired man
held his hand out to her. "You must
be Agents Scully and Mulder,"
he noted, shaking their hands.
"I'm Russ Nilsen, Point Reyes
Seismologist. They told me you
two were coming up."
He gestured enthusiastically
up the trail. "You see how this path
runs up here 200 feet or so
and then there's a gradual rise
walling the trail at a 70 degree
angle? That's the fault. That six
foot rise is the point where
the North American Plate and the
Pacific Plate collide. This
path is just a slice of the 800 mile-long
San Andreas fault system."
"How far does the fault move
day to day?" Scully asked, eyeing
the disrupted fence line.
"We measure a drift rate of
as much as two inches per year. The
fault moves horizontally, a
type of displacement known to
geologists as a right-lateral
strike-slip. During the 1906
earthquake, roads, fences,
and rows of trees that crossed the
fault were offset several yards,
and the road across the head
of Tomales Bay was offset almost
21 feet, the biggest offset
on record!"
"How far has the fault moved since the quake a few days ago?"
"Well, a major earthquake creates
an offset in only one section of
the fault at a time. There
are sections that remain "locked" and
quiet over a hundred or more
years while strain builds up--then,
in great lurches, the strain
is released. The quake we experienced
last Tuesday occurred
in one of these locked sections just 20
miles south of San Francisco
near Crystal Springs Reservoir.
It displaced a stretch of highway
by six and a half feet near
the epicenter."
"Are earthquakes of this size at all predictable?" Mulder asked.
The younger man gave a conservative nod.
"We have a time-frame that we
can work with. Large earthquakes
occur at about 150-year
intervals. The last large earthquake on
the southern San Andreas occurred
in 1857, that section of the
fault is considered a likely
location for an earthquake within the
next few decades. The San Francisco
Bay Area has a slightly
lower potential, since the
1906 quake occurred under a hundred
years ago. But there's
still a good chance of a magnitude 7
occurring near here in the
next 30 years. The San Francisco Bay
Area has one of the highest
earthquake hazards in the world."
Mulder nodded thoughtfully,
"I'm particularly interested in what
you can tell us about the aftershocks
we've been experiencing."
"Hmm, I can probably better
illustrate that on the seismograph.
Why don't you follow me inside."
Inside, the Point Reyes Seismological
Laboratory amounted to
one part laboratory and two
parts visitor center and natural
history museum. Nilsen lead
the agents past various indigenous
wildlife displays with
stuffed bobcats and snakes to the
readily visible seismograph
stationed near the back wall.
Nilsen directed them over to
it.
"We record earthquakes via a
world-wide seismographic
network. Each seismic station
in the network measures
the movement of the ground
at the site. This seismograph is
basically a pendulum mounted
on a spring recording ground
vibrations at frequencies
of about 1 cycle per second," he
said, pointing down at the
readout pen drawing an ink line on
a sheet of paper mounted to
a slowly rotating drum. As they
watched the pen began to waver
a bit left to right.
"It looks like we're moving right now," Scully noted warily.
"Oh, those small wiggles you
see are caused by local disturbances
or noise. You want to see some
real noise, take a look at the
wall here. These seismograms
have recorded all of the activity
over the last three days."
The paper records were stretched
out flat and tacked to the wall
like music notation with tightly
aligned parallel lines drawn by
the pen with each turn of the
drum, marking the passage of time.
On the far left was the frantic
scribble of the recent 6.7 magnitude
quake. The following
pages to the right were the records of
the periodic aftershocks highlighted
and dated clearly in red pen.
"I see you've recorded a lot
more ground movement than the
local media," Mulder noted.
"I believe I read about only five
aftershocks since the
quake."
"Thousands of small quakes occur
in California each year.
Humans usually only feel those
with a magnitude of 2.0 and up,"
answered Nilsen, regarding
the seismograms with affection.
"Are there any signals, emissions of any kind that accompany
an event?"
"Well, we do observe what are
called P- and S-waves that
travel deep within the earth's
crust. When a fault slips vibrations
are released. The vibrations
are of two basic types--compression
waves that travel fast
through the earth and are known as
primary or "P" waves and then
the shear or "S" waves which
arrive later."
"Could an average person detect these waves?"
"Some are low frequency, some
high frequency. The high frequency
waves are often audible.
In an earthquake, people may feel an
initial thud or shock
of the P-wave, followed a few seconds later
by a swaying or rolling motion
that marks the S-wave. Yeah, you
could certainly get a
feel for it, if you were paying attention."
********************
"P-Waves, Mulder?" He glanced
over at her, sure enough, he was
met with a patented "Mulder-you're-nuts"
look that only Scully
could have perfected into a
fine art. This was the left-eyebrow
version that also required
a slight twist of the lips.
"I don't think it's a coincidence
our killer acts out his aggressions
after each aftershock,"
he reminded her in a mildly amused
tone. They were driving out
route 12 past the Point's historic
cattle ranches, winding their
way back to the freeway.
"Look Scully, cows..."
"I see them, very nice. But
just how do you suppose these waves
are affecting our suspect?"
Mulder slowed the car, up ahead
a team of ranchers were driving
a head of steer across the
road. They came to a stop and he turned
to give her his full attention.
"Man's ability to communicate
with the earth pre-dates civilization.
The Aztecs were said
to have been able to predict weather
patterns by listening to voices
deep within the earth...not unlike
the shamanistic practices of
the Early American..."
Mulder's photographic-memory
slideshow was clicking blithely by
as he rattled off half a dozen
ridiculous references. Scully quickly
brought him back to the
point.
"So what you're saying, in effect,
is that these aftershocks are
releasing detectable
high and low frequency waves that
somehow drive this man to kill?"
"Uh, huh."
"Did you consider the possibility
that these events are instead
triggering a suppressed
trauma in this man, causing him to act
aggressively towards
the closest bystander? For example, maybe
he experienced a loss or injury
during an earthquake as a young
boy and those memories are
just now resurfacing for him?"
"Oooo, when did you start snuggling
up with my psychology
books?"
"I'm serious Mulder."
"No, it's not that his particular
timing doesn't fit the trauma
profile; it's the ease at which
he's able to get at these people.
A trauma victim is often paralyzed
by his fear or overwhelmed
by a need to relieve his anxiety
through avoidance behavior or
aggressive action. Those
responses are incongruous with the
carefully planned pre-meditated
murders we're observing--
the complete lack of struggle
or fiber evidence.
"How was he able to breach security,
or activate electrical panels?
He's got something more
about him that's not fitting into place.
I don't know exactly what it
is yet, but I'm willing to bet our
quivering pair of plates
are going play a big role in it."
********************
(5/11)
********************
North Beach
5:30 PM
Later that evening found them
dining at one of North Beach's
popular Tuscan restaurants.
They sat on stools across from
each other at the corner of
the faux onyx bar waiting for their
meal. The restaurant was crowded
for a typical Friday night
but the service was fast and
efficient--even if their waitress
was sporting an arrangement
of metallic body art that ringed
her earlobes and eyebrows,
with an accent or two through her
lower lip.
"I guess you need to be on the
lookout for more than a hair in
your soup," Scully commented
wryly, noting the waitstaff's
unique appearances. A spiky
blue and red haired fellow was
ringing the register to her
left, his tongue stud flashing as he
told a customer "thank you,
come again."
Mulder laughed outright at her
observations, stabbing at his
Caesar salad with a fork.
Scully turned to him leaning
on her elbows with a curious half
smile of her own.
"Mulder, what's up with you?"
she asked with growing
amusement. "You've been irrepressibly
happy ever since
we landed at SFO? What is it
about this city?" He looked
up at her, stupefied--caught
in the act so to speak. And
was surprised to find himself
suddenly slightly nervous
by her question.
Happy? Sure he was happy. Happier
'n hell that she was
sitting across from him, smiling
at him, breathing, bumping
her knee into him each time
she reached across to pluck a
crouton out of his salad.
"Don't know...maybe it's the
Pacific air..." he mumbled,
unconvincingly. "Are
you sure you don't want me to order
you a salad?" he asked slyly,
trying to change the subject.
She stopped, a pilfered crouton
balanced at the edge of her
mouth between index finger
and thumb--caught in the act
herself.
"No Mulder, I'm not that hungry,"
she lied coolly, and crunched
down on it unabashed. He grinned
and resumed stabbing his
romaine. Maybe he was
so damned happy just from the
realization that his mind could
easily conjure up this same
scene, except with him alone
without a pair of blue eyes to
remind him there was more to
living than surviving the next case.
"You know, I think I have you
figured out..." she continued,
pausing to take a sip of sparkling
water. He looked up from
his bowl, mid-chew--now most
certainly nervous.
"You've got a twin. An identical
twin, and the two of you switch
off when I'm not looking."
"What?" he chuckled, resuming his munching.
"Yeah, that would explain why
you never sleep. You've got a
second team. One a little more
jovial than the other." She blinked
up at him, seemingly very pleased
with herself for this deduction.
"Hmm, well don't worry Scully,
I'm sure "moody" Mulder will
be making an appearance long
before this case is solved..."
The glasses hanging from their
stems on the overhead bar
rack began to jingle and clink
together. Their waitress holding
two pasta bowls stopped a few
feet from their seat at the bar
and turned her face up to the
swaying track lighting strung
across the open warehouse ceiling.
Guests stopped mid-swallow
and fell silent as the room
shuttered with a low rumble and
then stopped.
And then, just as if someone
had pushed the play button again,
the room came back to life,
instantly filled with the second half
of sentences and the busy sound
of forks, knives and cups
colliding softly. Their waitress
resumed her job and set their
meal down on the bar in front
of them with a shrug.
Mulder glanced at his watch and shot his partner a grave look.
"Eat fast Scully, we'll be getting a call soon."
********************
Golden Gate Park
6:45 PM
The hulking horned beast that
filled the circle of Mulder's
flashlight beam snorted indignantly--spewing
a film of snot from
its cavernous nose before using
a deep grunt and with complete
lack of grace, heaved itself
down into the mud.
"I forget, is it buffalo or bison?"
Scully was panning her flashlight
beam across the chainlink
fence that housed one of Golden
Gate Park's lesser-known
attractions--the buffalo
paddock.
"I don't know Mulder, but they
sure do smell the same," She
replied, wrinkling her nose.
The call came approximately
fifteen minutes into their pasta.
Sure enough, the suspect had
struck in due fashion: The
only difference, his strike
was slipping, his victim had survived.
By the time the FBI arrived
on the scene an ambulance had
spirited the unresponsive woman
away to SF General and the
SFPD was busy interviewing
a key witness and developing
a composite. Other officers
were combing the park and
surrounding neighborhoods for
a glimpse of the suspect.
Mulder and Scully were surveying
the scene by flashlight.
Footprints near the paddock
indicated the suspect followed
the woman for some time before
closing in to grip his hands
around her throat once they
cleared the chainlink fence and
entered a grove of tall aromatic
eucalyptus trees.
Mulder was crouched close to
the ground tracking the damp
prints when Det. Meyer approached
them from the squad car
where the officers were questioning
the witness.
"The girl says she was jogging
with the victim up the pathway
here when her friend stopped
a few feet back to adjust her shoe.
She kept going until she came
to the edge of the paddock and
was trying to pet a buffalo
when she turned around to see her
friend walking with a short
dark-haired man towards these
trees," he explained, pointing
up to the towering eucalyptus
surrounding them.
"She said it looked as if her
friend knew the guy or something,
he had his hand lightly on
the back of her neck. She called to her
has they moved out of view,
grew concerned, and ran up here
in time to see the guy choking
her. Once he saw her approaching,
he let go and ran off into
the brush over there," Mulder stood
and followed Scully over to
the edge of the grove where the
foliage had been clearly disturbed.
"The trampled escape route the
suspect took ends at the street
side. We're questioning people,
but haven't been able to
determine which direction he
went from there."
Scully peered back towards the
patrol car where the witness
was sitting, talking to the
sketch artist. "It looks like they're
finishing the composite--can
we speak to her now?" Meyer
invited her to proceed.
Scully stopped near the patrolmen
at the door of the car and
with her flashlight illuminated
the sketch pad the artist still held
in his hand. The face was square
with dark curly hair and
stubble. An average nose, small
eyes and somewhat larger
than average brows.
"Our suspect appears to be an
Italian-American, about five and a
half feet, with a stocky build
and small thick hands," described
the artist waving his hand
over the sketch. "He was last seen
wearing gray-blue overalls
with a striped short sleeved shirt
and heavy construction boots.
The witness says he appeared
to be carrying a few tools
in a large pocket on his pants leg."
"What kind of tools?"
He shrugged. "She couldn't say."
A patrolman who was finishing
his notes stepped aside so
Scully could approach the girl.
She stepped off the curb and
steadying her hand on
the roof dipped her head slightly so
she could see her sitting,
shaken in the open back seat of
the car.
"I'm Agent Scully from the Federal
Bureau of Investigation,
I'd like to ask you some more
questions..."
The girl nodded timidly, her
arms wrapped tightly around her
waist. She was wearing a longsleeved
jogging outfit with her
wavy brown hair pulled back
in a matching band.
"What's your name?" Scully asked gently.
"Jenna...Jenna Abraham."
"Jenna, did either you or your friend..."
"Amy," the girl interjected.
"Your friend Amy," Scully calmly
emphasized. "Did either of
you notice you were being followed?"
"Unh, uh...we were jogging in
the open...it was still light out," she
said defensively, as if reciting
a handbook for women's safety.
"We come through here all the
time."
"Did you see any suspicious vehicles slowing near you."
"No. There were still people
around here then. We weren't
exactly alone, you know."
Scully eased down so she could
match eye level with the girl.
"Jenna, you didn't do anything
wrong," she said, carefully
capturing the girl's nervous
gaze. The girl crumpled then
and lowered her face, speaking
into her hands.
"I didn't even see him coming.
I didn't even think anything
was wrong at first. I...I thought
they must know each other
because she wasn't trying to
get away from him, she was
just walking away. And I didn't
even think to shout or do anything
at first. They seemed like
they knew where they were going..."
she was beginning to cry, but
kept talking through her fear. "I
got there too late; he was
choking her and she was just
standing there, staring straight
ahead like nothing was going on..."
"Was he restraining her?"
The girl looked up suddenly
then, struck calm all at once with
tears on her cheeks. "No...no,
not at all. It was like he was barely
touching her, you know?
He didn't look as if he was really trying
to hurt her. Just...he had
his hands on her neck was all and she
was just standing there."
Scully narrowed her eyes a bit
in thought. "You told the
patrolman you saw tools. Can
you describe them?"
The girl shook her head slowly.
"They were in his pocket on his l
eg. Like I don't know...a screwdriver
or something, maybe a
handle..." she began to make
a gripping motion with her hand.
"You didn't see anything that
might resemble a stun gun or
electrical shock device?" The
girl shook her head again. Scully
patted the girl's hand and
started to stand. The girl reached for
her arm to stall her.
"I um...you know I think I smelled
something. I just remembered
when you said electrical,
because I thought I smelled something
like, you know, when you burnout
your hairdryer...It didn't
make any sense to me--I forgot
about it until now."
Scully paused, looking down at her thoughtfully for a minute.
"Thank you Jenna, that's very helpful to us."
Her partner was just finishing
up with Det. Meyer as Scully left
the patrol car and met them
back up the hill near the paddock.
Mulder looked pleased
about something. He came up to her
and leaned in close, speaking
in a subdued tone only she could
hear.
"Meyer and the others reexamined
the crime scenes. They
found minor electrical shorts
and scoring on various items in
the victims' homes. One had
faint scorches around the telephone
jack and in the receiver, another
had some partially melted wires
in the home security alarm
panel, and an Embarcadero electrician
reported tripped fuses
for the cameras in the lobby, elevator
landings and the 32nd
floor hallway. In each case, the
equipment was still operational,
which is why it was missed."
"Did they check the lobby door
in Pacific Heights?" Mulder shook
his head. "Not yet, they had
the building evacuated temporarily
for earthquake inspection.
They'll let us back in there tomorrow
afternoon."
"Well, you'll be pleased to
hear this. Our witness just told me
she smelled something akin
to an electrical short when she
came upon the assailant in
the grove. She also remembers seeing
him carrying some type of hand
tools in his pocket."
Mulder thought it over a second.
"An electrician. Someone
who knows security and telephone
systems..."
"That would be my guess," she
concurred. "And someone
who's probably also capable
of creating or using a device to emit
an electric pulse, effectively
shocking his victims into submission."
"That's one way to get people to notice you," he added grimly.
"So we know he's capable of
tripping electrical devices, but how
was he able to unlock and lock
dead bolts?"
Mulder's eyes were dancing excitedly,
"I don't know, yet--but
we're getting closer."
********************
(6/11)
*********************
San Francisco General Hospital
SAT: 9:30 AM
Mulder eased back into the chair,
trying to get comfortable. As if
it was possible for him to
get comfortable in the cold, sterile
hospital hallway. He had logged
too many hours recently in a
very similar situation, staring
at the blank walls, the flat ceiling,
waiting. Waiting for news,
waiting for change, waiting for
resolution. He dug around the
inside pockets of his coat searching
for an orphaned seed or two.
Lint, a long-forgotten ticket stub,
and some empty wrappers were
the best he could come up with.
He was about to give in and
go find the snack machine when the
door finally opened slowly
and Scully slipped out, quietly
shutting the door behind her.
Her eyes to the floor, she came over
to him and sat on the edge
of the chair next to him with a sigh. He
sat up and leaned closer to
her, she looked somewhat upset,
haunted, he thought.
She sat very still for a moment, collecting herself before she spoke.
"I'm afraid we're not going to find what we're looking for here, Mulder."
"Were you able to talk to her?"
"No. I don't think anyone will
be for a very long time, she's..."
Scully stopped again and brushed
her hand over her lips trying
to find the words. "She's suffering
from acute retrograde
amnesia. Her short term memory
function is impaired. She
can't remember much more than
the last hour or so at a time.
She keeps asking where she
is, and they have to keep telling
her over again from the beginning."
"Is this condition permanent?" he asked softly.
Scully shook her head, "Her
physician isn't sure yet. According to
her mother she seems to only
recall events from many years
ago, nothing recent. As with
the other victims they did find
some fluid and mild swelling
around the cerebrum; and when
she was brought in she was
experiencing an atrial arrhythmia
which now appears to be under
control."
"Could electrical shock have caused this?"
"Very likely, but they also
found something else--a
dangerous reduction in her
serum electrolyte levels, which can
not be explained by electrocution
alone. She had abnormally
low levels of potassium, calcium,
sodium and magnesium which
is usually only found in patients
suffering from Addison's Disease
or kidney failure--either of
which would have certainly kept
her from jogging last night.
"Mulder, if our suspect is shocking
his victims, then they would
be frozen in place, unable
to move, yet this girl's friend saw
her gently being led away by
him seemingly willingly...and we
still don't understand how
he's storing or releasing the charge."
Mulder straightened suddenly
and laid his hand on her forearm
to interject. "Maybe that's
*exactly* what he's doing when he kills
--recharging."
Scully looked truly puzzled.
"Electrolytes are dissolved charged particles in the body, right?"
She nodded.
"If my two semesters of forgotten
college chemistry serve
me, potassium and the other
ions you mentioned all carry a
positive charge."
"Yes they do."
"You know that bizarre but brilliant
theory I've been working on?
I think it's about ready to
get a fork stuck in it."
********************
Pacific Heights
11:00 AM
"Mulder...Your theory?"
He met her with a mischievous
grin and whispered, "I'm working
on it..." They were waiting
along with Detective Meyer and
an electrician for the superintendent
to unlock the front doors of
the apartment building they
investigated their first night in
San Francisco. Mulder was fidgeting
with impatience. He was
close, very close, and he knew
somehow this apartment building
was going to give it up to
him any minute now.
Once inside, the electrician
set upon the front security door
searching for damage. When
he pronounced the door in good
working condition despite its
age, Mulder had him remove
the resident doorbell panel
just outside the lobby. It too appeared
to be in good order.
"Maybe he didn't take the front
door," Mulder reasoned to
himself rushing back outside,
looking up at the dark stone
building. Scully followed him
around to the west side and into
the filthy narrow eight foot
alleyway choked with the
apartment's trash bin. Mulder
was gazing up at the rusty fire
escape, unreachable from the
ground. Or was it?
To her surprise he flipped the
lid closed on the dumpster and made
a leap up onto it with a loud
crashing echo. This brought him
five feet closer to the fire
escape landing. "Scully, hand me
those crates." There was an
assortment of milk crates half-
stacked between the dumpster
and the wall. She reached down
and selected a couple. He took
them from her and stacked
them together making to stand
himself on them.
"You know Scully, I might be
making a big mistake...this may
require a trip to the laundry."
"I hope you're not doing this
to impress me," she called up after
him as he made a clean leg-up
using the crates to step over onto
the escape landing.
He bounced himself on the landing
a moment checking it for
stability as if his half-jump
couldn't have ripped it from the
aging wall first. It seemed
to be pretty solid. "Not bad for an old
G-man, huh?"
She answered him with an uneasy squint.
He took to the stairs and climbed
the rattling metal platforms
until he was nearly even with
the roof's edge. He gracefully
pulled himself up and over
the low wall, landing on the
building's flat roof out of
her line of sight. In a moment or two
his head popped back over the
edge looking down at her.
"Scully, go back inside and
find the door to the roof. It's locked
from up here--I'll need you
to let me in."
"Okay!" she called up and made her way back inside to the stairs.
Once she arrived at the top
of the fifth floor landing she could
hear Mulder's impatient tapping
on the metal rooftop door just
up the hall. She pushed it
open for him and he rushed into
the hallway, pausing for a
moment, first eyeing the rooftop exit
and then the victim's apartment
door just a few feet down the hall.
He raised his eyebrows at her.
"That's a little convenient, don't
you think?"
She simply stood back watching
as his odd thought process
unveiled itself. He walked
over to the victim's door and bent at
the knees to look closely at
the door handle and jiggled it. It
was locked as was the deadbolt
above it. He touched his finger to
the keyhole a moment and then
fiddled in his coat pocket,
removing the rental car keys.
He stood then and waved the
dangling keys limply in front
of the knob.
"Mulder?" This was certainly
growing stranger by the minute--
even for him.
"Too heavy..." he mumbled, turning
to her. "Scully, you got a
hairpin, paperclip, or something
in your pocket?"
"Hmm?"
He looked at her eagerly. She
reached in her deep coat pockets fumbling
around.
"Something small, metallic..."
She wasn't coming up with much.
"Anything..." he pleaded.
"Oh wait," she said, and reached
for her ear, removing the thin
metal loop with tiny drop pearl.
He took it from her, dangling
it between his first finger
and thumb.
"Nice."
He crouched back down in front
of the door knob and
delicately placed the metal
loop against the lock and just as
carefully pulled his fingers
away. The earring stayed in
place catching the light from
the window as the tiny pearl
shimmered and relaxed against
the keyhole.
Mulder turned his head back to her, his hazel eyes bright.
"The locks have been magnetized,"
he said with wonder and
moved her earring to the deadbolt
where it too hung suspended.
She took a cautious step forward. "And this is evidence of...?"
Mulder was staring past her
back up the hall to the roof door speaking more
to
himself than her. "He can reset
the tumblers
with a focused magnetic field,
letting himself in."
"He can what...?"
He looked down at her then,
an odd half-smile crossing his lips.
"That theory you've been so
patiently waiting for, here it goes...
I believe our killer is and
of himself a walking electromagnet. He
has an ability to generate
electrical current and magnetic fields.
It would explain the physical
evidence at the crime scenes and
his methods for committing
them."
As predicted, he was met with
his partner's careful gathering
of critical analysis--punctuated
by a tiny perplexed frown.
"Mulder, the human body isn't
capable of safely carrying an
electrical charge more powerful
than your average static zap from
a doornob; and yet you're claiming
that this man possesses
an unknown ability to collect
and store current capable of
causing serious internal tissue
damage?"
"Essentially, yes." He shrugged
plausibly, waiting for her to
continue.
"Have you considered the much
more likely explanation that
he's simply devised a method
of rigging himself with electrodes
or small insulated wires that
might not be noticeable to the
passing eye?"
He blinked down at her. "Certainly,
but why is there lack of
burn evidence on the skin of
the victims?"
"If he's able to make full contact
with the skin first before
applying the current there
would be minimal epidermal damage..."
"True, but wouldn't he also
be releasing the charge into himself
as well as his victims if contact
is being made? How is he able
to survive it?"
She hadn't considered that yet
and pursed her lips a moment
in thought.
"I don't think we'll know exactly
how he does it until we find
him and search him," she added.
"We haven't ruled out a
locksmith yet, it's not uncommon
for handymen to magnetize
their tools for holding screws
and nails in place, and our Golden
Gate Park witness did note
he was carrying tools of some kind."
Mulder dipped his head to try
and bring her closer to
his understanding of events.
"The girl in the hospital Scully, she
was drained of her body's natural
positive charge. It's been
theorized that when the body
dies it releases an energy field,
some people even go so far
as to call it the soul. In the 1890s
a French physician named Roucher
captured photographical
evidence of this energy exiting
the bodies of his terminally
ill patients at the exact moment
of death..."
That earned him a seriously
raised eyebrow. "Are you
suggesting that this man is
capturing his victim's souls?"
"He's certainly capturing their ability to live."
"You still haven't explained
to me how all this connects to
'voices from the earth.'"
"Okay," he conceded, "that's
the other part of my theory still
in progress..."
"You must be slipping Mulder,
you usually have it all figured
out in the first few hours,
then spend the rest of the time
convincing everyone you're
shamelessly correct in every detail."
"I do?"
She answered him with a smirk.
"Scully, how can you stand me?"
She plucked her earring from the lock.
"You're an acquired taste, Mulder."
********************
1:00 PM
Scully stood at the roof's edge
looking out over the tops of
the upscale apartments and
homes out to the bay waters to the
steep shores of Alcatraz and
beyond to where the fog was
beginning to billow up against
the red cables of the Golden
Gate suspension bridge. The
wind was picking up slightly,
sending a chill through her
and she hugged her arms to her
chest.
It was more than just the incoming
fog that made her shiver, it
was looking into the pale blank
eyes of the girl in SF General
earlier that morning. It was
as if part of the girl's mind had
been removed from her skull,
carved out--leaving her with
only distant echoes of her
past.
Scully tried to shake the thought
and turned back toward the roof
in time to see her partner
several feet away on hands and
knees, face almost to the tarred
surface searching like he did for
the unobvious in the most ridiculous
of locations. In a moment
he sprang back up to his haunches
animatedly pointing out to
the detective some scuff or
minor scrape to the roof's already
well-trampled and warped texture.
It made her smile. Five
years together and he was still
able to amaze her with his
boyish enthusiasm. Never a
dull moment if you're working a
case with Fox Mulder, the most
misunderstood agent in the
Bureau. She was grateful for
it—this scene playing out to her
on the rooftops was one she
would keep with her, something
she could hold onto and remember
to get her through the
dimmer times. Not every pleasant
memory was without its
darker half.
Memory, it was something she
held sacred, and very, very
personal. That girl had something
indescribably intimate taken
from her through violence,
fear, shock...she still wasn't sure,
except for the fact that it
shook her to the core. The cancer that
had been working its way inward,
invading her and violating her
not so many months before had
also carried with its promise of
pain a much greater threat
to her--the threat of stealing
her memories. She had never
spoken of it, but it had been by
far the symptom she had feared
the most.
Would she have even noticed
when her past began to drift
away? How would it have begun?
Would she have forgotten
what she ate for dinner, or
forgotten who she had eaten it with?
This was why this moment, this
rooftop, this case, this city, was
now so much more than just
a day at work to her--it was
an experience that combined
with all the other experiences of
her life and came to make her
who she was, they defined her.
And as are the eyes of many
who take a glancing blow with
death, she now looked at each
moment with greater clarity,
greater reverence. Which was
how she looked at him now as
he stood to move toward her.
*Jesus, Scully...don't look
at me like that. At least not here
anyway...*
He crossed to her from where
he had been tracing the path of
the killer across the rooftop
to the now notably magnetized roof
exit door. As involved as he
had been in connecting the dots,
some long-distance sonar in
his mind was telling him Scully
was pulling out of range and
if he wanted to keep her within
certain boundaries, he'd better
send out the search party quick.
She was standing looking over
at him with a very serious, very
open expression. He wasn't
sure if he was welcomed into
this contemplation, but one
look in her direction had
enveloped every other investigative
thought in his
head, extinguishing it. He
believed he asked the detective to
meet him downstairs and perhaps
the man had sonar of his
own because he had made a very
brisk exit back into the building.
"Hey Scully, what's up?" he
tried to ask casually, as he met her at
the roof's edge. She tilted
her head to look up at him, not yet
willing to break the gaze.
Her hair was sweeping up and around
her face, dancing across her
cheeks like tiny fingers. A
curiously tender smile curving
her lips.
"I was thinking," she said in a clear bright tone.
"'bout what?" he asked, and
turned to lean against the waist-
high ledge, needing to escape
her large blue eyes for just a
moment. He looked down, in
the courtyard below a large hairy
man in a sleeveless T-shirt
was watering his lawn with a
leaking hose.
"About how we choose to live..." she broke off.
*This one's going to be serious...I wonder if I'm up to it right now. *
He choked down the defensive
impulse of making some half-
handed wise crack about inflatable
lawn furniture and took a
deep breath instead, easing
himself against the wall, and turned
to face her. To his relief
she was looking out at the water.
"How's that?" he managed.
"Why did I choose to join the FBI?" she said without expression.
It was a rhetorical question.
She was opening up to him, preparing
to unveil another layer of
herself to him. As much as he wanted
to know her this way, to let
her uncover herself to him, he was
never quite prepared for it--never
confident of how he
would respond. He felt a touch
surreal as if the ground was
moving under him again and
was thankful for the wall against
his side.
"And why do I choose to stay..." she finished.
He felt something tighten in
his chest. She was talking about
her recent illness and it's
all too obvious connection to their work.
His work, his quest. There
was a moment of silence. Was he
supposed to answer for her?
She dipped her head and looked
down, gathering her thoughts.
"You talked to me about fate
once Mulder. About having no
personal choice in what we
do."
Yes he had. It was the most
sane thing he could think of a few
years back to explain the horrendous
couple of weeks they had
just experienced--his father,
her sister, gone in a blink of the eye.
She took a breath and looked
directly into his careful hazel eyes.
"I don't think I can believe
in that anymore. Not after the last
few months."
The knot in his chest had taken
another full turn taking his
stomach with it. My god, she
wasn't about to leave him, was she?
Not here, not today, not on
this rooftop with the wind in her hair...
"I have to believe I stay because
there is nothing else in this
world that I would trade for
it." She paused, letting this sink in.
Mulder did everything he could
do to stand perfectly still. His
mind was flip-flopping on him.
What the hell was she saying?
He most certainly wasn't up
for this. If she didn't finish her
thought soon, he was going
to take his chances and leap over the
wall onto the fat wet man below.
"Do you understand what I'm
saying, Mulder?" her chin
dipped slightly, her expansive
blue eyes were burrowing
themselves into him. Hell no,
it would take a thousand years
before he could ever begin
to get the most basic understanding
of her. He didn't think he'd
ever get that much time. It wasn't
that far to the ground...
"I think so..." Did he speak?
He didn't know how he could have spoken right
then.
She lowered her eyes and gave
a small sound that was like a
sigh and a laugh, and she squeezed
his hand.
"Come on Mulder, let's get you
inside before you completely
lose track of this case." Numbly,
he followed her retreating form
back inside like a small child
being led from the playground.
*******************
(7/11)
*****************
Post St. Police Station
3:00 PM
The Post St. police station
was centered halfway between the
elegant temple spires of the
Japanese Cultural Center and
Kabuki Theatre and the decaying
Hayes Valley projects.
Interracial tensions, roving
neighborhood gangs, recent
emigrants, hard-working laborers,
and drug dealers called this
part of the city home.
Mulder held the door for his
partner has they rushed up the
dingy stone steps and inside
to the front desk.
Mulder pulled his badge as did
Scully. "FBI...Agents Mulder
and Scully, we received a call
from Inspector Meyer who should
be arriving shortly."
The receptionist looked up briefly
eyeing the badges. "You're here
for the Pirelli interview?"
she asked.
"Yes," Scully answered. "We
understand she hasn't been
questioned yet."
"Not yet," the woman answered.
"They're still trying to track down
an interpreter. You can go
ahead upstairs, however. Room 5."
"Thanks."
Upstairs the hallways smelled
musty with aged fog- and
mold-soaked stone walls--a
scent unique to San Francisco's
vintage structures. A small
huddle of detectives had gathered
outside the door to interrogation
room 5. Mulder flipped open
his badge again and was directed
to enter the observation room
that doubled as a cleaning
closet just beyond. Inside the
narrow room Mulder and Scully
could see into the next room
through the one-way mirror
to where the tearful woman was
sitting in a straight back
chair opposite two officers with a
tape recorder. She was nervous
and jabbering incoherently.
"Hees no my husband..." she
was trying to say in painful English,
then gave up lapsing into her
native tongue. Mulder once again
found himself swearing he'd
find the time to acquaint himself
with more than the one, so
far useless, Latin language he
had bothered to study.
"Where the hell is that interpreter?"
Detective Meyer's gravely
voice could be heard moving
up the hall. Presently he entered
the cramped room and made his
way over to the agents.
"Thanks for getting here so
fast," he said. "Didn't interrupt
another meal, I hope...Anyway,
we didn't have much
trouble identifying the face
in the composite once it
circulated through the precincts,"
he paused and flipped through
the stack of paperwork in his
hand, pulling out a mug shot.
Mulder took it from him. He
held it out to Scully so they could
both recognize the similar
features.
"Vincent Pirelli, age 42, 5'4",
small eyes, small hands--
we're analyzing his palm prints--arrested
three years ago
in connection with a small
check cashing fraud operation down
on Geary. Couldn't make the
crime stick however, he was
released. Since then he's been
doing honest work for Bay Area
Rapid Transit."
"What kind of work?" Mulder asked.
"Uh, maintenance of some kind..."
Meyer flipped more
pages. "According to this,
general contract work, some metal
work, some electrical. General
repairs it seems. We're trying to
get his manager on the horn...Oh
thank god!" Meyer had spotted
a young man coming to the door,
one of the other detectives led
him into the interrogation
room where he took a seat opposite
the woman. They began to communicate
in a lyrical flow of Italian.
"She's the one who helped these
guys nail down his identity,"
Meyer said in a low tone, stepping
closer to the mirror,
pointing through the glass.
"Reported her husband missing
early yesterday, except without
a translation, no one really
took her seriously at first."
"How long had her husband been missing?" Scully asked.
"You're gonna love this--since the day of the quake..."
"Detective?" An officer peeked
in catching Meyer's attention. "Anderson
wants to talk to you."
"I'll be right back," Meyer said, exiting the room.
Mulder turned to Scully who
was still eyeing the suspect's
wife through the glass. The
frightened thin dark-haired woman
was shaking her head saying
the only word she knew well in
English, "No, no, no, no."
"I hope she has some idea where we can find him..."
With a deep rattle, the floor
began to thrash violently. Scully made
to reach out to steady herself
and realized the mirror was not
an option, instead she tipped
backwards just as the lights cut
out knocking herself into Mulder
who in turn to made a reach
for both her and the packed
utility shelf next to him bringing
its unsettled height crashing
to the floor next to them in a
raucous symphony of tumbling
plastic, metal and shattering
glass. The woman next door
issued a scream. The floor it seemed
had come unhinged and was writhing
in a disjointed dance.
In another breathless moment
it was over. The close walls
around them relaxing, but the
lights that had once illuminated
both the windowless observation
and interview rooms stayed
a stubbornly inky black.
"Shit..."
"Mulder, you okay?" He had released
her and she could hear
him raising a hand to his head.
"Yeah. I just got beaned by Pine Sol--you?"
"Mmm...I think I'm standing in something sticky."
The small bulb light overhead
hummed and hissed back to half-
life casting a brownish hue
across the disheveled room. Scully
raised a hand to fend off the
glare, realizing it wasn't necessary.
"Brown-out," Mulder mumbled,
rubbing the back of his head
while making an effort to get
to the door, pushing a rolling
bucket and mop out of his way.
An outside hand turned the
knob and opened it for him,
flooding the room with faded light
from the dirty hallway windows.
"Anyone hurt?" asked an officer.
"You guys really need to clean
in there," Mulder said, turning
to make sure Scully exited
the room without anymore missteps.
"Goddammit! What the hell is
this shit?" blared one of the
inspectors. "I thought these
damn aftershocks were supposed to
get easier on us."
"Evidently not," noted Det.
Meyer who was helping a female
officer coax the now terrified
Pirelli woman out of the
darkened room. "Take her to
the lounge. Let her calm down,"
he said. "You get anything
from her?" he asked the interpreter.
"Yes I did, at least what I could understand."
"Well?"
"She says her husband hasn't
been himself since late
Tuesday evening. He apparently
came home from work very
late acting strangely...she
says he wasn't like himself at all. As if
he was a different person altogether.
He was insisting he needed
to check in with some guy named
Applegate. According to her
they don't know anyone by that
name. His BART main-
tenance supervisor is named
Webster."
"Did he tell her where he had been that night?"
The younger man shook his head,
"No, he didn't give her
any explanation at all...Oh,
she said he seemed to have
trouble finding his way around
the apartment, asked her where
the bathroom was...very strange."
"When did she notice him missing again?" asked Mulder.
"About a hour or so after he
arrived home he left, just wandered
out. Didn't say where he was
going."
"Mulder..." Scully looked as
if she was just becoming aware
of something. "I think...I
remember from the case file...the
first victim, Reynolds, worked
at Applegate's Body Shop."
Mulder looked at Meyer, questioning.
The detective flipped
through his file again. He
looked up in assent.
"She's right."
"He must have tailed his first
victim from his workplace,"
she reasoned.
Mulder was shaking his head
pondering the connection for a while.
"I don't think so, Scully.
I don't think he was ever near the place."
"Why?" asked Meyer.
"The first aftershock occurred
at about 6:20PM. The murder
followed about thirty minutes
later. That report will tell
you Reynolds had gone home
for the day much earlier
around 4:00PM, thirty-eight
minutes before the major quake itself."
"How would he know about Applegate then?" asked Meyer.
"This may sound a little odd,
but I think he stole that
information straight from Reynold's
head." Meyer looked
perplexed. Scully braced herself
for what was to follow.
"Pirelli's wife claims her husband
seemed to have trouble re-
membering his way around his
own house, and yet he was very
clear about needing to contact
Applegate." Mulder looked to
the interpreter. "Did she say
if her husband actually called the guy
or not?"
The interpreter shook his head.
"I'll go ask." He headed away
from them toward the lounge.
"Wait a minute..." Meyer paused.
"Exactly what do you mean by
*stole* this information
from his head?"
Mulder drew himself up to accentuate
the fact he really did
believe what he was about to
explain. "It's my opinion that
Pirelli possesses an ability
to extract memory in the form of
electrical energy from his
victims, damaging parts of their
central nervous system in the
process--the brain and the heart
--centers for memory retention."
Meyer was making a valiant effort
to comprehend this train
of reasoning, thus far Agent
Mulder had shown an uncanny ability
to be right about this case,
but this was beginning to
gravitate beyond his comfort
level of normalcy. His
confounded expression must
have communicated as much
because Mulder responded, "I
know it doesn't sound very
probable, but so far the evidence
is suggesting as much, at
least to me," he looked at
Scully, she was saving her opinion for
later, he could tell. "Okay,
I could be wrong, but at least look
into the phone records from
that evening. I suspect he made
the call."
Meyer regarded the taller man
with a questioning faith.
"We'll get right on it," he
said with a shrug and stepped away.
Mulder turned back to his partner
and prepared for a healthy
round of intellectual tennis.
She was looking up at him slyly
through her lashes. "Evidently
your reputation did not precede
you to the West Coast," she
said with a patient little smile. He led
her further down the hall so
they would be out of earshot.
"I may be mistaken, but I don't
remember the part of medical
school where we studied the
heart's memory center," she
said quietly, looking up at
him. His face was set--fully determined
to defend his carefully contrived
theory.
"Heart transplant recipients
have frequently reported
assimilating personality characteristics
of their deceased
donors--speech patterns, personal
habits, sometimes even
memories. It's known as cellular
memory."
"Mulder," Scully began in her
best physician's consultation
manner. "Memories are formed
in the brain as a result
of electrochemical signals
moving through a network of billions
of nerve cells. No other part
of the human body has the
proper hardware to function
in this manner."
He gave her an obstinate grunt.
"All right then, think about it
this way. Modern technology's
developed computer neural
networks that imitate the brain's
ability to learn and
store information for future
use. What if this man harbors a
unique biological ability to
access and in effect download from
the brain's electrical memory
centers just like downloading files
from a hardrive? Extracting
both energy and memories in
the process."
Scully was standing firm in
her convictions, her arms coming to
cross over her chest. "I can
understand someone developing
a method for killing with electromagnetic
energy resulting in
the type of tissue damage we've
found in the victims--but you
can't extract memories Mulder,
it's not possible."
She was interrupted by someone
up the hall whistling loudly to
get everyone's attention.
"Listen up people--we've got
our suspect in sight. He was
just reported accosting a doughnut
delivery man near the Wharf!"
*************************
(8/11)
********************
Fisherman's Wharf
4:30 PM
"Mulder, it's me."
"Where are you, Scully?"
"I'm standing at the corner
of Taylor and Jefferson watching
a homeless man disguised as
a bush scaring people as they walk
by for spare change," she said
into her cellphone with a some-
what perplexed tone as a couple
of startled teens started
shrieking.
"That's called street performance, Scully. Go give him a dollar."
"I thought I was supposed to be keeping an eye out for our suspect?"
"And?"
"Well, I see about fifty or
so strange faces walking past me every
few seconds wearing badly matched
T-shirts, ballcaps, and
video equipment."
"You're experiencing tourism.
When this is over, I'll by you an
ice cream and we can try to
fit in."
"Not likely Mulder, we don't seem to fit in anywhere."
"Have you tried sneaking into an insurance sales convention?"
She smiled wanely at his feeble
attempt at FBI humor. "What's
your position looking like?"
"The same, except I get the
occasional taped bloodcurdling
scream coming from the House
of Medieval Torture behind me.
Sure you don't want to checkout
the local attractions later?"
"I'll pass. Sixteenth-century
bondage is more to your taste,
I think."
"I can compromise."
"Have the other officers checked in yet?"
"Yeah, we're all in position
now. Pirelli wasn't very successful
with the doughnut man, he'll
need to kill soon--keep you ears
open for commotion."
"I think I'll need to move a
bit further from the local attraction
here then."
"Okay, but stay in contact with me."
Scully kept the line open and
worked her way further up
Jefferson weaving through the
early Saturday evening
Fisherman's Wharf congestion--easily
San Francisco's
biggest attraction--infused
with the smell of boiling seafood
and fresh-baked sourdough bread
wafting into the air. The
streets of the Northern-most
tip of San Francisco's peninsula
were packed with an array of
attractions; from Ripley's Believe
It or Not Museum and the Underwaterworld
Aquarium, to
camera shops, fast food, ice
cream, and crab cocktail stands
lining the garishly cluttered
street.
Pausing near the overhang of
a store selling scenic placemats
and personalized license plates,
she squinted into the
human confusion flowing toward
her.
It was hard to focus on distinct
features--the jambalaya
of backpacks, hooded sweatshirts,
baby strollers, bicycles,
and balloon hats made it difficult
to discern specific features.
After several minutes, a large
bus pulled up temporarily stalling
the flow of people. As the
coursing cleared, Scully was able to
see across to the street parallel.
Near a line of people she could
just make out the color of
gray-blue overalls.
She raised the phone to her ear, calm.
"I've got Pirelli in my sight.
He's standing near the line for the
Wax Museum on Embarcadero.
I'm moving east to get a closer look."
The voice of her partner was
immediately in her ear. "Scully, listen
to me. I'll meet you at your
location. Just keep an eye on him.
I'm hanging up a second to
alert Det. Meyer. I'll call you right back."
Mulder redialed his phone and
made the call while heading back
up Leavenworth to intercept.
He rounded the corner and took
a moment to navigate through
a wave of camera-adorned
Japanese businessmen pouring
out of a bus.
He punched his auto-dial.
"Scully."
"Can you still see him?" he asked.
"Yes, he's moving east. I'm crossing to Embarcadero..."
"Scully, stay at Jefferson until I reach you."
She didn't answer.
"Scully?"
He looked down at his phone--the line was still open.
"Scully?"
The phone went dead in his ear.
He punched the buttons and
dialed her again. It rang...no
response.
*Damn...*
Mulder turned and made a quick
right, running two blocks up
Beach before turning left at
the last block to reach tourist-
impacted Jefferson a few breathless
minutes later. He could see
the entrance to the wax museum
clearly from there. She wasn't
in sight.
He crossed the street--and turned
east, the crowd blocking his
view as he pierced the swarm
vainly trying to catch sight of her.
He shouted her name and pushed
his way up the narrow
sidewalk past the tacky cablecar
souvenir stands and through
the steaming stench of the
sidewalk crab pots--knocking into
an irritated tourist or two
in the process.
"Scully!"
He stopped at the corner of
Jones and whirled around urgently
trying to guess her last move.
Then he caught sight of a swath of
red hair on the sidewalk just
across the street from him half
hidden under the shadow of
a chowder stand.
"Hey!" He yelled, as he started
through the incessant traffic congestion to
reach her.
"Somebody help her!"
Until his shout, no one had
bothered to recognize her fallen form
for what it was, moving unquestioning
past her, carrying
packages and cameras. *Bystander
apathy*. The psychologist in
him noted. As soon as he got
to her he knew the once
indifferent throng would suddenly
all stop to hover around
with keen interest. They were
beginning to hover already.
He ran up to her, pushing people
aside and knelt, taking her
up carefully and turning her
over. Her eyes were rolled back
and nearly closed. He felt
her neck, her pulse was strong. Her
eyes closed as he moved her
and she gave a faint moan.
"Scully?" he called to her,
brushing the hair from her cheek.
"Scully, can you hear me?"
Her lids fluttered and with
a gasp she came back to herself, her
arms winging out to steady
herself. She blinked up at him as
he steadied her across his
knees, holding her against his arm.
"Mulder? What?" she looked past
him squinting at the strange
faces circling them. Realizing
that she appeared to be in
close proximity to the ground.
"Did I fall?"
Her partner was clearly out
of breath with beads of sweat
sprinkling his forehead. "Mulder?
Where are we? Why am I on
the sidewalk?"
"What's the last thing you remember,
Scully?" he asked with
obvious concern and dread.
She shook her head. She felt
funny. Her fingers and legs
were tingling. She struggled
to a sitting position and touched
her forehead. She felt very
strange indeed.
"I remember...sea lions...I
was watching the sea lions..." His eyes
told her that was the wrong
answer. She thought it over...
sea lions. Why did she say
sea lions? The memory was leaving
her and she felt that fuzzy
vision replaced with one that seemed
a lot more familiar.
"We were...we were talking to
Det. Meyer--they'd spotted the
suspect near the Wharf..."
His mouth tightened, "That was over an hour ago..."
"Hmmm?"
"That bastard got to you Scully.
He got into your head, stole an
hour from you. He could have
taken a lot more."
"But how--Mulder, I don't even
remember..." her feeble attempt
at creating a scientific defense
at this moment was ridiculous even
to her. Her memory was missing
and she could feel it. Instead
she pushed away from him and
got to her feet.
"Careful..." he began, straightening to steady her.
"I'm fine, Mulder." A tense
flash of hazel told her that line was all
but useless.
A cellphone rang. It was hers,
lying just under the chowder
table. Mulder bent and picked
it up, answering it.
"Hello?" Silence for a second
or two and then it hit with a
piercing electronic whine.
He winced and pulled the phone
away from his ear. The phone
shrieked and chattered for a
few seconds more and then disconnected.
Dial tone.
"It must have hit the ground..."
she began to say...but Mulder
was staring at her, shaking
his head with a very serious expression.
"He's got your number," he said flatly.
********************
Davies Medical Center
10:00 PM
Scully sat obediently on the
edge of a gurney in the Davies
Medical Center emergency room.
Through the window she could
see Mulder pacing the hallway
like a leopard. His tag team twin
had most certainly arrived.
They'd argued all the way over
here from the Wharf, him insisting
her condition was a hell of a
lot more serious than she could
believe it was. She sighed, trying
to calm herself. This had to
stop. She wasn't sick anymore, he had
to believe that--to trust her
to not fall to pieces on him. A spill to
the pavement could easily explain
her bit of missing short
term memory. From what he told
her, she didn't miss much.
Pirelli had vanished from the
area and surprisingly enough no
bodies had been found. The
doughnut man reported feeling a
little hazy, not much else.
He could clearly remember seeing
Pirelli approach him from behind,
asking him for directions,
then taking him by the neck
started to push them back into an
ally. He kneed the smaller,
huskier man in the stomach and ran
off to find a nearby police
officer.
The nurse was speaking to her,
telling her what she already
knew--take it easy, get some
rest, call if she felt nauseated...
She was fine, dammit. And she
wanted to get out of there, they
had wasted enough time on her.
The nurse told her she could go
and gathering herself with
a deep breath, Scully slid off the
bed, grabbed her coat and headed
for the door into the lion pit.
Mulder stopped his pacing and
stood staring at her as she
walked toward him, his jaw
set.
"We're switching hotels," he said without room for debate.
"Mulder, don't be ridiculous..."
she felt herself on the thin edge
of patience. "I'm tired, I'm
hungry. I'm going back to the
hotel, ordering in and going
straight to bed." She turned away
from him and made a brisk getaway
for the door. He followed
close behind her, his hand
issuing a not-so-restrained pressure
on the small of her back as
he pushed the door open for her.
He somehow managed to reign
himself until they reached the
car, then he let loose.
"Dammit Scully, why won't you
trust me on this?" he said
petulantly, his eyes flashing
a heated green.
"Mulder, I'm through with this."
"Don't you realize what this
guy is capable of? Don't you see
what he's after?"
"I think you're overreacting."
"He took your memory from you.
He knows...god knows what
about you. He has your cellphone
number, maybe even your
room number..."
"How? How does he have these
things? You can't just take
thoughts from people, Mulder!"
"Okay, then explain something
to me. Why did you say
you remembered sea lions when
you first came to?"
*Sea lions...yes, that was strange...*
Mulder bent closer to her, touching
her shoulder to see if he
was possibly beginning to get
through.
Scully's shoulders gave a bit.
"I don't know..." she answered
without much conviction.
"You remembered sea lions because
you were witnessing
another person's memory," he
said carefully, his voice
suddenly dropping to almost
a whisper, catching her large blue
eyes and holding them in his
gaze. "A random orphaned
memory from one of his victims,
suddenly infused in you like
a dying battery charge."
"But how..."
"Have you asked yourself Scully,
why out of all the people on
the Wharf today he chose to
go for you? When I found you, you
were blocks from your last
location. I told you to stay and wait
for me."
"Maybe I decided to pursue him alone."
"Maybe, or maybe he called you to him."
She stared back at him incredulously.
"Every crime scene has one thing
in common...a manipulated electronic
device."
She dropped her head slightly,
her thoughts turning inward. Yes,
she was beginning to understand.
"That damned chip in your neck.
It was described once as a
micro processing unit for receiving
and storing electrical
impulses along the spinal column...for
storing memories."
She bit her upper lip and looked
up at him again. He pulled
back releasing his breath,
feeling the tension across his
shoulders begin to relax. She
believed him now.
"OK Mulder," she said with quiet
resolution. "What do we need to
do to stop him?"
********************
(9/11)
********************
North Beach Hotel
SUN: 4:45 AM
The room was cold. The San Francisco
fog had invaded with
a vengeance in the pre-dawn
hours and poured like thick white
paint over the city where it
hung churning slowly in the rolling
air.
Scully woke suddenly. Her left
arm was chilled and damp where
it had escaped the wrap of
the comforter in which she had
cocooned herself in an effort
to keep out the fog. Sleepily, she
mused she should make an effort
to get up and turn up the
wall heater which had now fallen
silent, cracking and banging
as it cooled. She began to
slip back into her dreams when a
shiver caught her shoulders
and she decided the poorly
performing heater did indeed
need her encouragement. She
sat up slowly and blinked,
trying to build up the muster to leave
the meager warmth of the bed.
Mulder wasn't fairing much better.
He had left the sanctity of
his own room and bed for the
less-than-ideal side chair
cushioned into the corner of
her room near the window. He'd
pulled the blanket and bed
cover from his room and
wrapped himself in it as best
he could against the draught of
the tall bay window. He was
asleep, his weapon drawn across
his lap, his fingers loosely
curled around the grip.
Scully moved carefully and drew
her covers quietly around her
as she pushed herself into
a sitting position. She watched
him, studying the outline of
his face enclosed in sleep. He had
been insistent that evening
that she allow him to keep close to
her, to keep guard for their
suspect should he follow her here
to her room. He had intended
to remain awake she was certain
and although the deep rise
and fall of his chest proved otherwise,
she was also equally certain
the slightest sound from her or
the street below would instantly
rouse him to full alert. Like a
spider on its web--still, but
ready to strike without warning.
But at this moment she didn't
wish to disturb those delicate
threads just yet.
She had been furious with him
last night. A type of fury only
he seemed to have the ability
to instill within her. He had
an unsettling way of getting
under her skin, goading her out
from her easy professional
detachment into a storm of
insurgent emotions barely held
in check. Their unique brand
of intellectual warfare could
exhaust her at times. Yet she
relished every battle, marching
into the skirmish freely
with weapons drawn. It was
as enthralling as it was intense
and afterwards when he would
give her that look that meant
*it's over now, I'm finished*--she
would be diffused,
disarmed, dropping all her
defenses with the will of his glance.
Scully pulled the comforter
tighter. The realization hit her
hard sometimes when she wasn't
expecting it--the sway he held
over her--how he could tug
and pull at her like no other man
she had ever known. Mostly
she tried to not think about
its significance and just focused
on the matters at hand, comforted
by the knowledge that for every
thread he had strung within
her there was an equal binding
tie within him. Of that she
was certain, and at the same
time that knowledge terrified her.
Terrified her to a point that
it had paled even the gripping fear
of her own death not so very
long ago as he had come to her side
in the final days before her
miraculous recovery. The cancer
eating away at her body was
wrecking an even greater damage
in him. She could see it. And
she hated herself for adding to
the carnage that his ill-fated
life had already carved into him.
What would he have done for
her if she had failed to survive?
Would he have continued the
fight in her memory, or would he
have given into his growing
despair and executed an equal
revenge on his enemies with
deadly force, destroying his own life
in the process. This was the
nature of the terror for her. To
know with absolute clarity
that the flawed and cracked soul of
this man was held together
by such a delicate and impermanent
thing as her flesh.
Scully moved again, slowly,
silently and eased herself to the side
of the bed wrapping the comforter
around her and cautiously
slipped down onto her feet.
And even more soundlessly she
stepped tentatively closer
to his chair. She smiled slightly as
she regarded him, his face
half cast in shadow. He didn't move,
but she could see his eyes
slipping in tiny movements behind
their lids--dreaming. The slight
knit of his temple betraying
the nature of his dream. What
did he dream about now?
she wondered. Was it the lies
and betrayals, or the guilt and
self-deprivation he imposed
upon himself as a daily penance
for all their losses and tragedies?
*If I can save you Mulder, let me...*
If only he could just let it
go. If she could by some means repair
the cracks and seams and help
him to rebuild into something
that could endure anything,
even losing her. This is what she
wished for him. What she prayed
for. Why she knew she could
never leave him, no matter
what the cost to her.
Scully felt a tightness filling
her throat and moistening her eyes.
In that instant, she was overcome
with an undeniable need to
gather him up into her arms
and hold him tightly to her, her
fingers in his hair, soothing
him with tiny whispered
promises, pulling his face
to hers and delicately kissing
away his demons with feather
touches to his lips, his eyes,
his nose...
But, these were things she could
not do. Would not allow herself
to do. For fear beyond a doubt
that in this she would
completely undo him, unravel
him, and unloose his drowning
soul and in its surging wake
be washed away completely.
Instead she said his name.
He was instantly awake, tousling
his coverings to the floor. His
grip coming down hard on his
weapon.
"Mulder, it's okay." she said
softly touching his shoulder as
he blinked up at her, his mouth
half open in question. "It's early,
but I'm going to get up now."
He looked at her obstinately.
"What time is it?" he asked,
his eyes scanning the room, the tone
of his voice already indicating
his irritation with himself for
falling asleep.
"It's five or so. Look--I want
you to go back to your room and
really get some sleep. We've
got until 9:30 before we're scheduled
to meet with Det. Meyer."
"Scully..." he began...
"No Mulder. It's my turn to
be insistent." And with a gentle shove
she convinced him to listen
to her.
*************************
Market St. BART Station
11:45 AM
"You're not hoping to find another mutant down here are you?"
"Don't know...but I think it's your turn to catch him."
Dana Scully smiled mildly at
his nostalgic answer as they rode
the escalator down from street
level to the underground Market
St. station. She was not having
a good day. Too little sleep and
an aggravating dull headache
at the base of her head were
clouding her normally active
mind into a puddle of semi-alert
mush. She blinked, trying to
clear her head.
Mulder, however, had emerged
that morning infuriatingly
refreshed, thrilled with the
prospect of descending three floors
down into the bowels of the
Bay Area Rapid Transit system.
They had received a call earlier
that day from Webster,
Pirelli's supervisor. The SFPD
had finally gotten in touch with
him over the weekend. It seemed
he had sent Pirelli home
about 5PM the day of the quake.
He had appeared to be
acting "spacy." Webster thought
he might have gotten too close
to the high-voltage third rail
on the track they were repairing
during a quake-related power
surge. He hadn't reported to
work since.
Webster and four other men in
familiar gray-blue overalls
were waiting for them as they
stepped off the escalator and
walked across the orange tiled
floor. To either side of the
platform ran two tunnels plunging
into darkness under the
streets of San Francisco. A
rushing sound accompanied by a
blast of stale air coursed
through one of the tunnels.
Announcing itself with a tonal
beep, the angular snake-like
strip of the commuter train
emerged from its lair and
whooshed to a stop on the right
hand side, spilling and
collecting humans through its
sliding automatic doors.
Mulder made their introductions to Webster.
"We're waiting for one more,"
the tall bony man said,
shaking Mulder's hand.
"Detective Meyer?"
"No, some guy from the seismology
center up north--a Nilsen,
I think."
Mulder looked surprised. "A seismologist? Why?"
"Dunno, he called me. Said they'd
been analyzing some data from
the last aftershock. Wanted
to come by and have a look at the
tunnel. I figured I'd save
time and scheduled you both together."
"Oddly enough, we've already met him."
Webster looked confused and
then turned his gaze up toward
the entrance. Mulder turned
in time to see a wide-eyed
Nilsen, yellow hair unbound,
running down the escalator. He
sped over to the collection
of people waiting for him like a
tour group.
"Sorry I'm late...parking, you
know," he said out of breath. His
eyes were bright. He nodded
a quick greeting to the agents
before turning back to Webster,
"Can we get into the Daily
City tunnel today?"
"That's where we're headed,"
the thin man replied. "Hope
you brought your flashlights."
Pausing to don flaming orange
hardhats at the equipment
shed, Webster escorted the
group into a security passage and
down three long flights of
stairs to an emergency exit door
which opened up into the Daily
City line--closed for service
and repair ever since the quake.
The air was heavy and
stale, smelling of urine, rat
droppings, and mold. They shuffled
along the elevated narrow concrete
pedestrian walkway
by flashlight, the tiny blue
and red tunnel lights serving more
for location markers than illumination.
Single-file, they made their
way--Nilsen between Mulder and
Scully filling then in on the
latest seismographic readings
measured by the Point Reyes
Lab.
"We didn't know at first what
to think," he explained excitedly.
"We thought we were picking
up some kind of magnetic
interference, skewing the data.
But that doozy of an aftershock
we all felt last night rang
it all in. We weren't seeing anomalies
after all--we were in fact
observing fresh quake readings right
here in downtown San Francisco."
"You're saying we're sitting on top of the epicenter?" Mulder asked.
"Better than that. We're walking
right on top of what appears to
be a newly formed fault, jarred
loose by the other quakes. It
didn't really give a good shove
on its own until last night's 4.2."
"Do you know the exact location of the fault?" asked Scully.
"Not yet. I'm hoping I can detect
some evidence at the sight of
the power surge these guys
said they had last Tuesday during
the major quake. It could have
started shifting as early as then..."
"Holy crap! Would you look at
that?" They suddenly came to a
dead stop.
"Jesus almighty. How the hell are we gonna repair that?"
They stood still for a moment,
Mulder raised his flashlight over
his head, trying to get a peek.
"Hold up everyone. Let's not
move until we get a light on
this," ordered Webster from
up ahead. Two of his men
had shouldered a flood light
with them and carefully
slipping through the handrail,
lowered down the light. In
a moment or two the set-up
was complete. The men flipped
on the battery pack.
>From behind him, Mulder could hear Scully's gasp.
"Oh my god..."
What was left of the previous
week's construction equipment
sat teetering on the edge of
a gaping jagged eruptive crack
carved from the near wall in
a jumble of twisted metal and
rocky debris expanding into
a black zig-zagging hole that had
opened in the ground swallowing
the southbound line and
ending as far as they could
see at wider gash ripped into the
far tunnel wall like a narrow
cavern.
"Looks like someone's been doing
a little re-routing."
Mulder commented as he followed
the workmen down,
bending under the handrail,
and slipping down off the four-
foot ledge to the ground below.
Nilsen volleyed right behind
picking his way carefully toward
the chasm. Mulder stopped
a moment turning to his partner.
"Coming down, Scully?" She looked
undecided. Exploring the
raw edge of a giant gash in
the earth wasn't very high on her list.
He held a hand up to her, beckoning.
"Come on. I'll catch you."
She slipped down to her seat
and swung her legs over the
edge. Taking the rail in both
hands, she ducked her head
under it, and pushed off the
edge into his arms. He caught
her at the waist and deposited
her onto her feet with a thud.
"You putting on weight, Scully?"
She snorted at him, tugging her coat back into place.
"Keep it up Mulder, and you're going in the hole."
Panning the disrupted tracks
carefully with their flashlights,
they came up and stood with
the others as close as they dared to
the edge of the rift. Nilsen
was picking his way along its
length through the upheavaled
black rock, shining his
borrowed flashlight beam at
various points gleefully.
Mulder made his way up to Webster
who was standing near
the leading edge, shaking his
head.
"When was the last time your men were in this area?"
"Not since Friday," the man answered, still stunned.
"I take it, it didn't look this bad last week."
"Sure as hell didn't, there was ground here."
"Was this the location Pirelli
was working on when the big
quake hit?"
"More or less. He seemed okay,
just a little stunned. Later we
found readings of a power surge
hitting this track, which was
strange considering the breakers
were all shut off. I got
worried about him then. Told
him to take the day off--go get
checked out."
"You're still uncertain of the source of the surge?"
The tall man shrugged, "It could
have been anything--an arc
from a neighboring line...who
knows. I can show you the
computer log."
"But the high-voltage third
rail that registered this surge
is electromagnetic, correct."
"Yeah, pulls the train forward via a magnetic field."
Mulder was suddenly hit with a flash of light to the face.
"Agent Mulder, you're gonna
want to see this!" It was Nilsen.
He was laying prone, as close
to the far edge as possible near
the widest point in the span
at the far tunnel wall. He lowered
his light, aiming his beam
back down into the gash, peeping his
head over the edge.
Mulder waited a few seconds
for his eyes to adjust and
stepped carefully over the
remaining BART tracks to just a
few feet behind him.
"Down here," Nilsen urged Mulder
to slip down next to him. He
eased down onto his stomach
and closing his coat against the
filthy debris, pressed toward
the edge until he could just
glance over.
Nilsen's beam was descending
an obscenely long drop into the
chasm. In fact, the fairly
decently bright beam failed at a point
at least 500 feet down where
the expanse continued unhindered
in a layer cake of black and
brown dirt sediments, cracked
and ripped apart by massive
forces. Mulder reached and picked
up a tiny stone, tossing it
over the edge. It was several long
seconds before it tinked against
solid stone.
"Cool..." was Nilsen's comment.
"What are we seeing here?" Mulder asked quietly.
Nilsen answered him in an equally
hushed voice. "This
fault, according to our readings
is somewhat of an exception
to the types of fractures we
normally find along the San Andreas..."
"Mulder, what the hell are you
doing?" Both men turned and
slunk back from the edge at
her disapproving call--coming to
their feet and stepping back
to a safer distance.
"You're going to get a closer
look than you think," she argued,
slightly out of breath, brushing
the dirt from her partner's coat.
"Abnormal in what way?" Mulder
continued, ignoring her stern
look.
"This fault is what we call
a Vertical Strike Slip. Its movement
is primarily upwards, rather
than horizontal, resulting in
an unusually deep fracture.
Most faults in this area reach a
depth of 10 miles or so. This
one however, is currently estimated
at at least twice that. If
the data checks out, one of the deepest
faults on record."
Mulder turned to face his partner in awe.
"Voices from the earth, Scully."
**********************************
3:00 PM
Mulder stood just inside the
door to the BART maintenance
office where he was going over
computerized track routing
and signal records with Webster.
Looking out onto the orange
tile platform he caught sight
of Scully settling back against a
support column. Her arms were
folded across her waist, her
head held a little low, hugging
herself for either warmth or
comfort, he wasn't sure which.
In the dank glow of the
florescent lights she looked
a few tones paler than her
average porcelain color. He
excused himself from Webster
for a minute and made his way
toward her.
"Scully, you okay?"
"What...?" she asked, lifting her eyes.
He touched her arm. "You look tired."
She rolled her eyes up at him,
"I am tired Mulder, I didn't sleep
well last night--it was a little
crowded in my room."
He flinched slightly at her
remark. He knew she didn't appreciate
the intrusion, but he couldn't
allow last night to go any other
way, she was too important
to risk. But still he knew her
tight remark wasn't just a
result of poor rest. Her body had
made remarkable progress in
repairing itself, but a little touch
of her resilience had yet to
spring back into full bloom. Although
he'd never say it aloud, he
could see she was not all back
together again--a little too
thin, just a little bit fragile. As much
as he dreaded to admit it,
he was wearing her down--running
her all over this city. It
was just too soon to expect everything
from her.
"Don't look at me like that
Mulder. I'm fine," she closed her eyes
then and smiled a little.
"If that's the case, then I'll
have to insist you go wait for me in
the car." He rummaged in his
pocket for the keys and handed
them to her. "Just don't play
the radio too loud okay?" he
quipped with a small grin.
She looked at the keys a moment
and opened her mouth as if
she wanted to protest, but
her wavering form was simply
too exhausted to put up a front.
She sighed and took them from
him, letting herself lean slightly
toward him, brushing her
shoulder against his arm briefly
in appreciation before
walking carefully away.
He watched her go. Give her
time. She's going to be okay, he
thought. She was back with
him. It was going to be okay.
*************************
(10/11)
*************************
San Francisco Hall of Justice
8:30 PM
The task force team meeting
was going fairly well. They
had assembled around 7PM to
go over the finer points of the
case and plan a tactical strategy.
Mulder sat in a cold plastic
scoop backed chair behind a
thin folding table like the others
--inspectors and officers of
the SFPD--facing the evidence board
and listening to Detective
Meyer's assessments, bringing everyone
up to date.
He was explaining the connection
between Pirelli's behavior and
the electrical damage observed
in the bodies and at the crime
scenes in a fairly rational
manner--a slightly edited version
of Mulder's perceived "wild"
theory of human electromagnetism
and communion with the earth's
core.
Mulder really didn't mind that
much, as long as they were
together on certain end points:
Namely, that the killer
possessed some kind of method
for drawing and
releasing electromagnetic energy,
and the fact he had a
spotless record for making
his move within 40 minutes
or so of each quake. He wasn't
always successful, but he
did at least make the attempt.
As far as they knew, there
had been no more murders or
attacks attributed to him
since Scully.
"And how is your partner?"
Mulder looked up from his folded hands.
"She's fine. She took a fall,
experienced some confusion,
but she's okay. She's downstairs
speaking with the coroner
right now, actually." He wondered
if they had found something new
--she should have joined them
by now. He fingered his phone,
but realized vainly that the
morgue was in the basement.
"We've also discovered," continued
Meyer, "that the killer
collects information from his
victims and seems to take on
some personality quirks. These
quirks may be real or perceived,
but for certain, we do know
he was able to obtain secret access
codes for Embarcadero and also
according to phone records, was
able to place a call from his
home to an unlisted number of
the employer of one of his
victims."
"Agent Mulder can you share
with the rest of us the
observations you made to me
earlier on the progression
of the attacks?"
Mulder swiveled to face the
assemblage. "Pirelli's wearing down.
His recent attacks have fortunately
been unsuccessful. His last
two targets, of which I feel
my partner was one, resulted in
minimal memory loss. He has
not struck again today which leads
me to suspect he harbors the
impulse to kill only within a
certain time-frame of each
quake. If he is not successful during
that period, he lapses back
into a passive state until he
feels compelled to act again.
We will most likely see him begin
to select easier targets. The
elderly, or young..." His statement
was interrupted by a rattling
sound hitting the windows and
the men and women in the room
reached to steady their coffee
mugs. It was a relatively light
one this time and gratefully
over quickly.
"I think that's our signal to
get moving," said Meyer gravely and
the meeting began to break
up.
Mulder stretched his back and
looked at his watch, 8:45 PM. He
was getting hungry. Time to
slip out of here, collect Scully, and
grab a late dinner. He stood
and quickly snuck out ahead of
the officers and made his way
over to reception.
"Can you ring the morgue please?"
The clerk punched the
number and held the desk receiver
to him.
"Hello, yes. Can I speak with Agent Scully please?"
A pause.
"Agent Dana Scully. She was meeting with the coroner."
"Can I speak to the coroner then?"
Another pause, longer.
"This is Agent Mulder, I'm looking
for Agent Scully...is she still
down there?"
"She left? When?"
Mulder twisted his arm to look
at his watch again. She had left
the morgue almost an hour ago.
Strange. He handed the receiver
back to the clerk. Maybe she
was working on a tangent.
"Are there any other forensic departments open at this hour?"
"No sir, everyone's pretty much checked out for the evening."
He left the desk and reached
for his cellphone—dialing. It
rang several times. No answer.
Mulder told himself not to worry
as he hurried down the flat
cold hallway back toward the
meeting hall. No big deal, she
wouldn't appreciate him thundering
around checking up on her.
He tried the lounge. The door
was locked and the lights were off.
*She was looking pale...*
Mulder made an even sweep of
the main and second floors.
It didn't take long as most
of the building was shut tight and locked.
*Come on, Scully. Where are you?*
Mulder entered the front lobby
and waved to get the attention of
the desk clerk engaged in a
phone call. The lobby was
nearly deserted. He clerk held
his hand over the phone.
"If you can wait a minute..."
"I can't wait a minute," he felt his patience beginning to give a little.
"I need to know if you saw a
petite red-haired woman come
through here over the last
hour or so..."
The clerk was still listening
to his call..."I'm sorry can you
repeat that...?"
Mulder brought a frustrated
hand down on the cradle, ending the
call abruptly.
"Hey!"
"Listen to me," his voice was
slow and clear. "I'm looking for
my partner, Agent Dana Scully.
She stands about *this* high,
brilliant red hair, lavender
suit..."
"Agent Mulder, something wrong?" It was Det. Meyer.
Mulder turned away from the
flustered clerk--his eyes fading
into a worried gray.
"Scully...she left the morgue over an hour ago."
"She what?"
"She's gone," he said simply.
Meyer knitted his brows still confused. "You mean she left?"
Mulder was suddenly struck by
a thought. He padded his coat
pocket. Relief began to flood
through him,
"I gave her the keys earlier--she drove us here..."
*Maybe she's just waiting in the car.*
Meyer caught his meaning and
the two men hurried for the
parking garage.
*She was tired, why did you drag her back out here...*
Because sending her back to the hotel alone was not an option.
As they entered the first floor
of the garage Mulder's worst
fears were realized as he scanned
the few remaining cars for
the deep maroon of their sedan.
He didn't see it and he was
pretty damned sure they had
parked along the South wall--
occupied now by only an old
forgotten pick-up.
"Are you sure you parked here?" Meyer asked, out of breath.
Mulder nodded gravely.
"Would she have gone back to your hotel?"
"Not without telling me. She wouldn't do that."
*She was wearing down, just
like Pirelli, just like that bastard...
Why the hell didn't you see
that?*
His thoughts must have been
reading clearly on his face because
the older man gave him a questioning
frown.
"You think it's Pirelli? How...how
the hell could Pirelli have
possibly found her here?"
"I have very good reason to
believe he had means of tracking
her."
Out of frustration, he hit is
auto-dial for her cellular again.
It rang five, six, times. Mulder
was pacing now, staring at
the concrete ceiling feeling
the pulse rising in his chest. He
pulled the phone from his ear
with a rough sigh and was
about to beep off when the
phone picked up and issued an all
too familiar shattering screech.
*************************
SFPD Special Teams Garage
9:13 PM
Mulder sat in the back of an
unmarked SFPD surveillance van
staring down at the softly
chattering cell phone held gingerly in
his palm. Silently he urged
it on, to continue its rattling wail--the
last tenuous connection he
had, the only hope they had of
locating her with any accuracy
or speed.
*don't hang up...just don't hang up...*
"I'll show you what we've got
here..." His internal mantra
was interrupted by the SFPD
electrical technician who sat behind
the equipment desk finishing
the final start-up of the
CellScope 2000 cellular tracking
unit.
Carefully shifting the phone
to his right hand, Mulder released
a deep breath and leaned in
to view the monitors. He didn't
know what terrified him more--finding
her dead or finding her
gone, the slate of the past
five years wiped clean from her mind.
"This is the very latest in
cellular monitoring technology,"
the technician said, pointing
to the custom CPU and duel
monitor system. "We've got
an antenna on the hood of the van
that feeds into the CellScope.
The computer basically works as a
radio receiver, honing in on
cell calls like a radio tuning to a
station. The signal is then
analyzed by the directional
navigator which gives us a
display indicating direction of the
call and distance," he said,
pointing to a multicolored digital
readout on the screen. "Green
for left, red for right, and blue
for straight ahead."
"Now the hard part's over...we
know the cellphone number to
scan for," he said, punching
the keyboard. The system readout
the number and the speakers
began to blip through cell calls as
the scanner searched like a
dial on a radio for the number. It
found the characteristic shriek
very quickly. The technician
raised his brows eyeing the
readout—"We've got it and it looks
like it's not too far away...let's
try south on Mason," he called to
the driver and the van began
to roll forward.
Mulder glanced down at his watch
again. Time was passing at
an alarming speed—already 28
minutes since the aftershock. He
ran a hand through his hair.
"If she's near the other end
of that line--we'll find her," offered
Det. Meyer who occupied the
seat opposite. "We've run
down hundreds of drug dealers,
foreign call racketeers, hackers,
you name it with this thing.
I know...this means a lot to you."
Mulder gave him a grave nod.
*You have no idea...*
The van pulled from the station
garage and started down
Mason. After five or six blocks
the signal began to fade and
they stopped and doubled back
a block or two before picking
up an indication to turn left.
They continued this zig-zag
chase for several minutes,
pulling forward, then doubling
back and turning, or sometimes
just cruising straight ahead
to keep moving closer to the call.
While they waited at a light,
the technician pulled out a small
device from a black case under
the desk. He held it out to Mulder.
"What's this?"
"It's a pocket model of the
CellScope. The wall unit is only
accurate for about a two block
radius. Once we pin-point the
right area, you'll need to
hop out and finish the search with this."
He flipped the power on and
punched in a series of keys on
the surface pad before passing
it to him. "Here on the top are
your LED display lights. They
indicate direction, same as the
main unit, except here you
follow the panning lights and this
readout just below gives distance
in meters."
The van lurched ahead again
and made a right. "We're getting
close..." noted the technician
turning back to the monitors.
"Very close, make a left on
Bay." They drove forward
slowly watching any indication
of signal fade, lest they drive
right past it. "Keep forward..."
the van drove up Bay St. to where
it narrowed to a one-way dead
end in front of the San
Francisco Palace of Fine Arts.
The tech pulled on his lower
lip, thinking, his eyes darting
back and forth across the screen.
"Okay, okay," he said aiming
his pointer finger at the screen.
"I think you'd better take
to the street now. We're very close
and you'll save time on foot."
**********************
(11/11)
*************************
9:25 PM
The fog hung low and thick over
the Palace of Fine Arts where it
had poured in past the Golden
Gate Bridge just three miles
offshore. Visibility was slight,
not more than a dozen yards or so
in any direction. The Palace
of Fine Arts covered three acres of
what was once the 1915 Panama-Pacific
International Exposition.
Its architect had envisioned
a Romanesque ruin, mutilated
and overgrown with time. A
combined Greek and roman construction,
its four-story-high rust-toned
concrete Corinthian colonnade and
massive rotunda all reflected
in the waters of a shallow lagoon
running the length of the complex.
Tonight the column capitals
and stone lachrymose figures stood
solid and cold swathed in white
air, the rotunda's massive
patina dome just visible above
the fog bank, the waters of the
lagoon dull and flat in the
stiff air. The men gathered at the
curbside and in coordination
with five other patrolcars, split up
to cover the area. Mulder,
Meyer, and two patrolmen entered
the complex from the grassy
hillside at the southern-most end of
the park, following the LED
indicator lights into the wide span
of trees and foliage that rimmed
the lagoon.
Mulder held the pocket scope
in his hand and lead the party
forward into the moist air.
The signal was strong, not more than
450 meters from the source
which appeared to be emanating
from the densest patch of greenery
just east of the edge of
the lagoon. His cell phone
in his trench inside pocket still
scrambled and chirped, urging
them forward. Elsewhere there
was very little sound. It was
as if they were surrounded by
packing foam, insulating and
isolating. Their footfalls were dull
and fell where they stepped
in the damp grass failing to travel
any distance. Although it kept
them quiet, it also kept anyone
else in the park seethed in
silence as well.
"Hold up, I think we're turning."
Mulder panned the scanner
back and forth through the
air in front of him trying to get a fix
on the direction. Ahead of
them was a grove of plum
trees surrounded by a low circular
hedge. The LED readout
indicated the general location
of the shrubbery. Meyer and
Mulder exchanged a look and
the four of them spilt into teams
of two each taking the opposite
direction around the grove.
Mulder and a patrolman took
the lagoon side and headed around
the solid line of manicured
bushes, vainly peering into the
swirling air for a shadow of
movement within the grove. The
tree leaves hung like wet black
rags from the heavy tangle
of branches. They cleared one
quarter of the circumference
before the scanner began to
rotate to the right.
Mulder shifted the scanner to
his left hand and pulled his gun,
the patrolman followed suit.
"It's in the center," he whispered
and catching the man's eyes,
mouthed to go on three,...one...two...
On three they crashed through
the hedge and divided into the
grove aiming weapons behind
tree trunks, through branches and
into dark corners zeroing in
on what soon proved to be a very
dark, very empty grove.
*Damn...*
Mulder looked back to the scanner.
It read five meters to the
left. Mulder pocketed it and
pulled his flashlight. Panning left
he illuminated the crumpled
folds of a dark coat lying flat in
the undergrowth beneath the
plums.
"Hey, you find anything?" It
was Meyer and the other men
pushing and cracking their
way into the ring. Mulder bent down
and lifted the lapel of Scully's
empty black coat and pulled
her cellphone from the inside
pocket.
"Hers?" asked Meyer.
Mulder scrubbed his chin with
the back of his hand, and looked up
at him, his eyes deepening
to a dark cold gray.
*************************
They pulled back out of the
grove and onto the rolling grass
slope. Mulder slipped the dead
phone into his pocket. "We'll need
to split up--cover the complex
from all sides."
Meyer and the two patrolmen
took forward, left, and back.
Mulder went right...the direction
he felt drawn to take. Weapon
in hand, he headed away from
the others down toward the
cement lagoon path, a low green
park bench sprang into his
flashlight beam just in time
for him to avoid catching a leg on it.
He flicked the flashlight off.
It was only contributing to the opacity
of the fog blanket. He blinked
once or twice to let his vision
readjust. Now in the darkness,
he could see the muffled drape
of trees and the thin cold
line of the water just slightly
illuminated by the half moon.
There was a dulled rushing sound
of the lagoon fountain as he
drew closer and the lazy cluck of
sleepy ducks drifting in the
algae-scented water. He reached
the cement and began to walk
quickly and silently to the
north around the lagoon.
*..I just got her back...*
The inside of his mind was dividing
itself into two different
tracks. The one more dominant
controlled the grip on his gun,
the stealth of his steps, the
scan of his eyes and sensitivity of
his hearing--checking and rechecking
input, gathering any and
all external stimulus--the
movement of the air, the muffled echoes
in the fog, a rustle in the
bushes, and the shifting wafts of
miniature shadows gray against
white. While quite against his will,
a second seeping whisper lapped
at his concentration like deep
blue flame, feeding and fueling
his primary focus, snapping
each nerve to full alert. It
spoke to him in little verses
of consciousness...remembrances,
beliefs, truths that kept
themselves buried below his
frame of recognition waiting to
slowly bleed forth whenever
the fear cut into him.
*...nature is woefully indifferent to whether we live or die...*
He believed it was true, or
else how could anything with a flicker
of sentience pull her away
from him again--to give and to take
so carelessly. To test him
like this over and over in a myriad
of trials--some quick and hard,
some slow and terrible.
He kept his pace, strong and
even--his eyes vigilantly darting
back and forth across the path
and back to the water, trying to
catch the finest variation
in the natural background.
*...something we have no personal choice in...*
What sick fuck could devise
a disease so insidious that he would
be forced to watch her shrink
before his eyes growing
smaller everyday, her brightness
dimmed and fading into
the crumpled sheets of a hospital
bed. Driving him to fight like
hell against the hourglass
to gather all the answers--to search, to
run, to kill.
But was it this same hand that
devised a way to save her, to
bring her back changed but
new and warm with renewed spirit
so bright it sometimes blinded
him? And then just as soon as
the sweet respite served to
build him up again, to let the wounds
just knit, it cut her away
again to lay forth a new task, a new
tangled knot--leaving him to
pray to whoever would listen that
he could unravel the cords
in time to catch her.
*...what happens when I run out of time...*
His pace had briskly drawn him
up alongside the lagoon's
north island--dark and choked
with foliage. The path curved to
the left around it and began
to turn towards the north end of
the hulking stone colonnade.
Just as he passed the edge of the
island, his hearing detected
the ever so muffled sound of a voice.
A single syllable straight
ahead just across the water, smoothed
and buffed by fog, lighter
than air--a note he knew, could hone
in on clearly in a room choked
with voices without question.
*...she's here...she's close...*
He picked up into a light run
and cleared the island, following
the snaking path to the west
flanked by Monterey cypress. He
passed the chainlink fence
that bordered the parking lot and came
to rest up against the first
of a cluster of six foot thick columns
that held up the towering semi-circular
Grecian colonnade.
Mulder pinned his back to the
cold wet stone and holding his
weapon tight against him, lunged
left drawing his arms out
straight targeting the barrel
into the complex from left to right,
his aim coming to rest on nothing.
His ears had betrayed him.
The dislocation of the sodden
air, disrupting the path of her
single note.
His breath was issuing from
his lips in billowing pants. Quick
and tight, the moisture from
his lungs collecting on his brow
and layering his hair flat
against his forehead. He glanced at
his watch again--49 minutes.
His pulse was hammering in his
chest faster than he'd like
it to be.
*...I need more time...*
His secondary consciousness
was falling back on the simplest
of tactics--a plea. A plea
to whoever controlled this twisted
and contrived world to at least
grant him some space to
maneuver through this. How
many errors was he allowed?
How many missteps? Who thought
to half blindfold him in this
thick blank air and leave him
to fumble with echoes and false
clues? It wasn't fair, it wasn't
right.
*...you need to give me more time...*
He stepped into the open air
path running between the line
of columns on the left and
the curved stone walls of the
museum building to the right.
High above, weeping ladies bent
in sorrow lay their weary heads
on the column capitals
casting melancholy moonlit
shadows across his path. He was
passing them by, approaching
the mammoth rotunda, were it
stood cold and indifferent,
dwarfing the colonnade--nearly double
its height in size. Mulder
moved forward onto the grass,
his insignificant silhouette
held in blank regard by the
Greek maidens that circled
the rectangular bases of the colonnade
--holding together a wreath
of laurel arm to arm forever frozen
in stone relief.
He heard a noise. Scattered
at first, but now growing stronger as
he jogged silently forward
trying to clear the last stone base and
slip through the central columns
into one of the six arched
entrances of the rotunda. It
was the shuffling of shoes on gravel
on cement rising into the air
amplified and bouncing in echo off
the dome's interior. Mulder
cut over the dewy grass to the
nearest arch flanked by two
20 foot Grecian urns set
upon rectangular base walls
carved with visages of Greek
soldiers strained in battle.
He lay back flat against the
nearest entrance wall and eased
himself toward the edge,
following the eyes of the soldiers.
Carefully without sound
or breath he peered around
the edge.
He saw them.
In the pale curtain of moonlight
that draped itself from the apex
of the arch to the center of
the floor. Pirelli had her in his grasp.
He was holding her by the shoulders
up against the corner of a
wall at the inside edge of
the archway just across from him.
Mulder stilled his mind entirely,
and aiming his weapon carefully
for Pirelli's head, crept silently
toward them from behind.
Scully's eyes were open staring
straight ahead at the stocky man,
her lips slightly parted. She
seemed loose in his powerful hands,
as if she would fall if he
didn't hold her upright. Mulder forced
his breath to stay even and
slow as he circled to the right for a
clean shot. He was almost in
position when Pirelli released his
hold of her arms and brought
his hands down in a tight grip
around her throat.
"Let her go!"
Mulder's cavernous shout didn't
make the man even flinch.
Mulder stepped closer, both
hands gripping his gun, steadying
his aim, raising it to Pirelli's
right temple--another few feet and
he'd have the shot.
There was a sound like popping
static and the air around the
man and his captive began to
hiss with the acrid smell of
ozone. Scully's eyes began
to roll heavenward.
"Let her go, or I'll fucking shoot you!"
Her head snapped back violently
and Mulder fired...once...twice
into the right side of Pirelli's
head blowing a red spattered mixture
of flesh and gray matter across
the gothic stone relief. The
stocky man slumped forward
knocking Scully to the ground
under him.
In a second Mulder was on him
pulling him off of her and
turning him over, throwing
him flat on his back to the ground,
his hands on his neck.
And then it began.
As the blood coursed from the
gaping wound in Pirelli's head,
Mulder could feel an uneasy
sensation beginning in his fingers
where they were gripped to
the man's flesh. The sensation grew
and spread rapidly, intensifying,
radiating up his arms and across
his chest, down his back and
legs. It froze him to the spot unable
to move and then it came...suddenly...
oh god...it was incredible...it was...
...images...thoughts...sensations...
...it was...
...what that man had just seconds
ago stolen escaping through
him, into him, alighting within
his very nerves, cells, blood...
...it was her...
What she saw, what she felt...scattered
events over the last few
days coursing into him. She
was inside him...he felt the warmth
of her skin, the blink of her
eyes, the rise and fall of her chest,
the steady pulse of her heart,
the movement of her body...the
playful brush of her hair across
her face...her lips holding back
a laugh, a sigh, relaxing into
a hidden smile...her small body
nestled in warm linen...her
eyes closing blissfully into sleep...
Mulder felt his grip tighten
madly around the man's throat
he wanted it, all of it, none
of it would be allowed to escape him.
He saw how she looked up at
the fog as it rolled over the red
towers of the Golden Gate Bridge.
He saw her watching the
sailboats flitting across the
bay. He saw how she peered into the
dark gash under the city streets.
He saw her looking out her
hotel window to the beckoning
bell tower of St. Francis of Assisi...
And then he saw himself
as she crossed the street to meet him
in front of the cafe. He saw
himself smiling up at her as she took
the seat next to him. He saw
himself bending close to her to speak
of things he only trusted her
ears to hear. He saw himself stand
and move to her at the rooftop
and the color his eyes took as
they met hers...and the gentle
way she leaned into him wishing
him goodnight before tuning
away and closing the door.
But more than that, he knew
her thoughts, the way she felt when
she had experienced these little
things. Why her spirit lifted
when she looked up into his
eyes and followed the sound of
his voice...into an elevator,
the car, a darkened hall, a muddy
hillside, up a decaying stairwell,
or along the city sidewalks--
a sweeter brighter reinvention
of those hundreds of little
moments they shared together
every day...
And then he saw something he
had not shared with her,
something he had not seen until
now.
*If I can save you Mulder, let me...*
He saw her moving from her bed
in the darkness, moving silently
to look down at him asleep
in the hotel room chair. He saw her
eyes focusing on his face in
the half-light. Just watching...breathing
so softly to not awaken him.
He felt her emotion welling within
her and incredibly sensed her
need to touch him, to bring him
close to her, to press her
lips against his face, his mouth, to
entwine her delicate fingers
in his hair, to tell him all the things
she feared for him, wished
for him, to tenderly soothe him with
her sweet caresses...
And then as quickly as it had
come--
the sensations began to fade...
...no...
She was leaving him, her electric
pulse was dying and his
own familiar rhythms were returning
one by one. He begged for it
to remain even as his vice-like
grip released from the dead
man, falling away.
He gasped, pulling air into
his lungs...he had been holding his
breath. He sank to the ground
with a groan, exhausted--sucking
air in his lungs in great labored
gasps.
She was lying near him, her
face to the ground. He blinked,
how many seconds had passed?
He struggled over to her and
gently turned her onto her
back, stroking her hair from her
face, brushing the dust from
her cheek with a tremulous hand.
Her eyes fluttered open, liquid
blue, staring up into his.
"Mulder..." she uttered faintly
as they lay on the ground under
the Palace dome side by side.
"Mulder, where are we?"
*************************
MON: 11:45 AM
Mulder sighed and opened his
eyes. The memories he had
been replaying in his mind,
her memories, were growing ever
fainter with each rerun--becoming
less and less her and
more tainted through his own
inevitable embellishments. He
couldn't help but slowly kill
them from his efforts to own them
to him. His mind was not her
mind and his perceptions
would eventually unintentionally
falsify them. Were they all
now just fragmented images
of truth cut up and reassembled
by what he wished she had believed?
His recollections were becoming
the memory of her memory. She
was leaving him, the events
of the last few days were now just
lost electrons rejoining the
fabric of space. An assortment
of experiences as lost to her
as they were to him. With her
unaware, he silently mourned
their passing. He could not
bring himself to tell her--he
just simply couldn't find the
words to describe it.
The meaning of her memories,
however, were not lost to him. He
had come to many understandings
in the span of a few
breaths under the Palace arches
the night before. He was
expressly grateful for them,
in awe of them, and at the same
time frightened by their significance.
How often had she longed
to reach out to him? How often
as a friend, or partner, or
whatever word could describe
what they were to one another,
had she given herself pause?
Why did she hold back? She had
shown him the answer--her fear
of undoing him.
He turned to her now asleep
in the window seat next to him
and glanced down at the pale
curve of her face turned toward
him. The plane was taking them
home from the trembling
Pacific coast to firmer ground.
He reached out and delicately
laid his hand over hers where
it was lying limp against her
thigh, tracing her open palm
with his thumb.
*It's too late to save me from you, Scully. Much too late.*
When had it begun? he wondered.
Was it when he first saw her
lying prone in that hospital
bed strapped to a network of
machines, her eyes taped shut.
Or was it earlier when she
first tentatively spoke his
name and he quickly silenced her in
a futile attempt to create
some brand of ineffectual detachment?
No, it was earlier than that,
it began when she began. When
she invaded his private basement
with her confident handshake
and charmed smile. He knew
somehow right then that nothing
was ever going to be the same
for him. It had all changed
suddenly in the instant his
eyes fell on hers. Fate. Inescapable
as death and life. She had
become his life, all the rest was a
mere charade of tales and battles
they were destined to play out.
She stirred in her sleep, and
perhaps in response to his faint
touch, moved and let her body
relax against him, her temple
coming to rest against his
arm. He dipped his chin and let his
nose and lips fall against
the crown of her head, feeling at peace
with knowing that, since it
began, all he ever wanted was to love
her as he knew now without
doubt, she loved him. As separate
as they were one.
"Just stay with me, Scully,"
he whispered into her hair so softly
his breath barely moved a strand.
"Don't ever give up on me."
His eyes closed and her hand
moved to fold into his.
(END 11/11)
*****************************************************
FEEDBACK: Four months of my
life here folks...was it worth it?
It'll be worth it if you just
let me know you read it. Actually
made it through alive. This
was a killer to write and I plan on
just turning out SMUT for a
while. But do let me know if you
feel another X-File opus from
me might be worth another
four months of butt-numbing
labor in front of the computer!
Terma99@aol.com.