565 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
565 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
From: madge@uclink.berkeley.edu (Peggy Mei-Ling Li)
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Date: 11 Sep 1994 19:19:47 GMT
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CONSPIRACIES
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Adam Webb
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An X-Files story. Second season. Category - thriller. Rating PG.
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This story is (c) 1994 Adam Webb. The characters Fox Mulder, Dana Scully
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and the name X-Files are (c) Fox Network Programming & Ten Thirteen
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Productions. E-mail correspondence to the author via the Internet should
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be addressed to
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AWE@CIX.Compulink.Co.UK.
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*Note. This story continues the events begun in my earlier work
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ZEITGEIST. While it can be read as a stand-alone piece, certain
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references and events will make a lot more sense if you are familiar with
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the first story.
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***************************************************************
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Memorial Park, Washington D.C. Day One, 7:12am
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It was shaping up to be a fine summers day. Those already taking
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advantage of it included a handful of joggers, one bleary-eyed Romeo only
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just making his way home, and two casually dressed men out for a brisk,
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early morning walk in the park. One of these men had a face that was a
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familiar sight to anyone who regularly watched any of the national
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television news programs. Although now sheathed in the veneer which came
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with success and power, his rugged frame and alert manner spoke of
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tougher times, when he d lived by his wits. Leaving the park by the
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Beaker Street entrance, the older man brought his companion to a halt
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with an out-swung arm.
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Senator Peter Van Thewsen, Chairman of the Senate Committee for
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Defence Systems Development, inhaled deeply. Almost immediately his
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craggy features wrinkled in disgust.
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This is Washington D.C. The very heart of government. Van
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Thewsen rumbled like a rusty tank, lecturing his aide as if the man had
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no idea what city he was in. And the air smells like a God-damned Cuban
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whorehouse! Yes, sir. The Senator s assistant replied doubtfully.
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Never having been in a Cuban whorehouse, or for that matter any other
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kind, he didn t feel qualified to comment further. Besides which, word
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had it that contradicting the Senator one to many times was what had cost
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his predecessor a promising career.
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Yes sir. Van Thewsen mocked. Is that all you can say,
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Revenau. Doesn t it make you sick to your stomach? No, don't bother
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answering, he warded off another automatic agreement with a scowl.
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Today, Revenau, we re going to do something to redress the imbalance.
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Today, we re going to say no to those warmongering four-star
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sons-of-bitches! Clapping the younger man on the back he continued,
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Then, when the hullabaloo has died down, we ll take a few million of
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those tax payers hard-earned dollars and use them to make this a better
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place. Revenau nodded enthusiastically. Although he agreed with the
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Senator one hundred percent, he was smart enough to be very careful about
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who knew it. Van Thewsen was a powerful figure, but then so were some of
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those who opposed his anti-armament stance. Joining the Senator for his
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early morning constitutional was about as much of a public statement as
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it was prudent for someone in his position to make.
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Come on, Revenau. The Senator said, smoothing back thick
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strands of iron-grey hair. Time for breakfast. We ve got work to do,
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and the world won t wait. Only recently had he discovered how very true
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his favourite saying was.
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The truth had been revealed during an unexpected meeting with a
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man dressed in black. A man who had, quite literally, changed his mind.
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He knew now that the world was about to alter dramatically, as the
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balance of power tipped further in the Alpha s favour.
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The two men stepped off the kerb and began to cross Beaker
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Street, taking a slalom-like course between the many potholes which
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marred the tarmac s once smooth surface. Being a good twenty-five years
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younger than the Senator, Revenau heard the noise a second or two before
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his boss. He turned quickly, and was shocked to see a sports car bearing
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down on them, its driver making no attempt to stop. The was no time to
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shot a warning, no time to do anything except try to stay alive.
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Survival instincts kicking-in, Revenau flung himself backwards, a hand
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grabbing for the Senator s jacket collar. He caught the material, but
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felt it ripped from his grasp, as the Van Thewsen hesitated a fraction
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too long.
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With a sickening thud the blue Mustang ploughed into Senator Van
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Thewsen, shattering his legs on impact and hurling him several feet into
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the air. The driver touched the brakes, and in that split second the
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body tumbled landing hard and sliding to a stop on the road in front of
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his vehicle. Anxious to complete his job, the driver s foot came down
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hard on the accelerator, sending the Mustang racing forward. Van Thewsen
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barely had time to raise a warding arm before the car was on top of him.
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Revenau heard a sickening pop, as the tyres bounced over the
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Senator s body, then the car was speeding away. Forcing himself to look,
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Revenau saw that the old man s head had been crushed like an over-ripe
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melon, leaving a red and grey tyre track which stained the road for
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several yards. Fighting down the urge to vomit, Revenau tried to collect
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his sense. The Police would want him to be very clear as to what had
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happened. The grating noise of an explosive collision from further down
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the road snapped him back to alertness. Scrambling to his feet the aide
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looked in that direction and saw a pall of thick black smoke rising from
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the overturned wreck of the blue Mustang. The maniac had crashed!
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Jesus! Revenau said, suddenly feeling dizzy. Lowering himself
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to the ground he sat on the edge of the kerb. In the distance he could
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hear the sound of a siren.
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CONSPIRACIES - Part 1 of 4
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From: madge@uclink.berkeley.edu (Peggy Mei-Ling Li)
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Date: 11 Sep 1994 19:21:20 GMT
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From: Adam Webb <awe@cix.compulink.co.uk>
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CONSPIRACIES - Part 2 of 4
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This story is (c) 1994 Adam Webb. The characters Fox Mulder, Dana Scully
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and the name X-Files are (c) Fox Network Programming & Ten Thirteen
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Productions. E-mail correspondence to the author via the Internet should
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be addressed to AWE@CIX.Compulink.UK.
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FBI Headquarters, Washington D.C. Day Two, 8:00am
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In a nondescript briefing room on the first floor of the imposing J.
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Edgar Hoover Building, eight Special Agents were seated behind bare,
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functional tables arranged in a U-shape. Director Skinner stood at the
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apex of the formation, reading from notes attached to a clipboard which he
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held like a shield. The pages were summarised evidence pertaining to the
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suspicious death of Senator Peter Van Thewsen, which the FBI had been
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ordered to investigate as a possible conspiracy. At the present time,
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nobody knew if Van Thewsen s death was a lone event, or part of a larger
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plot against the Senate Committee which he d chaired.
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Dana Scully was paying careful attention to everything that was
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said, hoping to spot something that had previously been missed. Being
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chosen for the task force was the first really interesting job she d been
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given since the closing of the X-Files. Someone was giving her a break,
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and that made her all the more determined to shine.
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Kremmer and Schultz, the Director nodded at the pairing, I want
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you to cover the medical angle. According to forensics, our mystery man s
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fingerprints were surgically removed. Very recently and expertly.
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Skinner informed. I want to know who did the job. Pausing momentarily
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he glanced at his notes. He hasn t had any facial alterations, as far as
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the lab can tell. At leasrapht not in the last five years. So the chances
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are that this guy s mug is in someone s files. Focusing on the two agents
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seated the farthest from him, he said, Now. Scully and Drake.
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To the left of his new partner, Special Agent Nick Drake was
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leaning forward, elbows on the table top and cigarette wedged in the
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corner of his mouth. He d already got the case pretty much worked out,
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but knew better than to come right out and say so. In almost twenty-five
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years with the FBI he d learned that each type of case had its own
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predetermined length; an amount of time that was considered appropriate
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for a full and professional examination of the facts. Even if the
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solution was the most obvious thing in the God-damned world, that time
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could not be screwed around with. Smart guys knew it, and went with the
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flow. Your assignment is to take a fine tooth-comb, and use it on Van
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Thewsen s past. There may be something there that can help us determine
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the killer s true ID. Skinner said.
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Great, Scully thought, another indoors job with the chain-smoking
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Nick Drake. Another day that would end with her clothes and hair reeking
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of stale nicotine. Eyes flickering briefly to the face of the man
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standing in the corner of the room Scully saw that, as if picking up on
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her discomfort, he too was lighting up another cigarette. The smoking man
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had made no comment and taken no active part in the briefing.
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Scully still didn t know who he really was, and didn t want to know.
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Knowing too much was the reason she d been reassigned.
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Okay, let s go. Drake said as if issuing an order. Hauling
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himself out the seat he crushed the remains of his smoke into an ashtray
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and immediat- ely delved into his jacket pocket for another cigarette.
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Hey, he shook the packet, I m nearly out. Mind if we stop at the
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machine on our way down to the computer room?
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Not at all. Dana smiled icily. In fact you can stop there just
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as long as you like.
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CONSPIRACIES - Part 2 of 4
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From: madge@uclink.berkeley.edu (Peggy Mei-Ling Li)
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Date: 11 Sep 1994 19:21:52 GMT
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From: Adam Webb <awe@cix.compulink.co.uk>
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CONSPIRACIES - Part 3 of 4
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This story is (c) 1994 Adam Webb. The characters Fox Mulder, Dana Scully
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and the name X-Files are (c) Fox Network Programming & Ten Thirteen
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Productions. E-mail correspondence to the author via the Internet should
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be addressed to AWE@CIX.Compulink.UK.
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FBI Building, NYC. Day Two, 2:10pm
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In a windowless corner of the open-plan general office, Fox Mulder sat
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behind a desk busily annotating a report. The desktop was littered with
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stacks of paperwork. A small computer workstation was perched on the
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edge of the desk, its monitor black and dead. Ever since the closure of
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the X-Files, Mulder didn t trust electronic data systems. Contrary to
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official policy, he rarely made use of his terminal.
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Hey Mulder, I got big news. Special Agent Carrabelli said,
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almost succeeding at him attempt to sound sincere. When his new partner
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looked up, Johnny quoted from the newspaper held open between his hand.
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Says here that 22% of Americans believe Elvis was right to shoot TV
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sets! Grinning in delight he twisted around in his chair to see
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Mulder s face. How about that, Spooky. You think we should maybe start
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a file.
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No. Mulder said impassively. Features deadpan he added, I
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already have a file on Elvis.
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The bleeping of Mulder s telephone mercifully interrupted Agent
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Carrabelli s retort. Taking care that his expression gave nothing away,
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Mulder scribbled down a note, then replaced the handset in its cradle.
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Gotta go.
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Hey, wait up. Carrabelli started to rise.
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Sorry. Mulder smirked darkly. You re not invited. My
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informant is easily spooked. Without giving his partner the chance to
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think of an argument, Mulder snatched up his trenchcoat and headed for
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the exit to the street.
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He d walk for a few blocks before hailing a cab. That way he
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could be reasonably sure that no one was following. These days he
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watched every shadow. There was little in the way of real evidence, but
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he was convinced that he was under surveillance. Whether by FBI agents,
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or those loyal to the Alphas, he had no way of knowing.
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The call had been a coded message requesting a meeting. By using
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the phrase *bad weather* the caller had revealed that the information
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came from the Lone Gunman investigative group, and was urgent. Mulder
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didn t know the caller s name, and intended to keep it that way. Since
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his unnerving encounter with the MIB in Dayton, and the fiasco of the
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Ehrlenmeyer Flask, he preferred to keep all information on a need to know
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basis. What he didn t know, he could not be forced to reveal.
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The minute that Mulder was out of sight, Agent Carrabelli
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propelled his swivel-chair over to his partner s desk. Retrieving the
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notepad he squinted at the spidery scrawl that was Agent Mulder s
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handwriting. The message read; ELVIS LIVES!
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NYC, Lower East side. Day two, 3:00pm.
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In the lounge of a borrowed fifth floor apartment, Mulder took the
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go-between s invitation to sit. The worn sofa faced a large TV set which
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was on, but with the sound turned down. The CBS News broadcast was
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showing more pictures of Senator Peter Van Thewsen. On the journey, his
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contact had said almost nothing. But it was clear that he was scared by
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whatever had prompted the meeting. Whether that fear resulted from the
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information itself, or the possible consequences of possessing it, was
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not yet clear.
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Okay. Mulder offered a friendly smile. You want to tell me
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why I m here?
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Sure. The young man nodded, causing his long fair hair to fall
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over part of his face. Sweeping it back in an often used gesture he
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knelt before the TV, and pressed a button on the video player housed
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below it. They told me to say this was taken just over a week ago. The
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place is a few miles outside of Harrisonburg. That s about eighty miles
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south west of Washington D.C, as the crow flies.
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When the screen flickered into life, Mulder felt a chill of
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dread. The video, apparently shot at night in open country, showed an
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image that had been branded into his mind. In a moonlit, star-filled sky
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there was an object which should not have been there. It hung in the air
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like a Christmas bauble, seemingly spinning about its own axis. Exactly
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as he remembered, the craft which had been codenamed Zeitgeist 516
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dropped at speed and hovered motionlessly above a dense grouping of pine
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trees. The intense white glare which had surrounded the craft winked
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out, leaving a large black shape which was difficult to see against the
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sky. Moments passed during which nothing appeared to be happening.
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Then, just as Mulder was about to ask a question, five pencil-thin rays
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of green laser light lanced groundward from the bottom of the craft.
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Here it comes. The go-between warned. Keep your eyes on the
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left of the screen, down at ground level.
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What exactly am I looking for? Mulder probed, eyes unblinking
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as he tried to extract as much data as possible. The cameraman seemed to
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know what he was doing, and the equipment was good. Though almost
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inevitably the picture was not as sharp as he would have liked.
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Just keep watching. The young man said nervously. You ll see
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soon enough.
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A shadowy shape appeared for a fleeting instant within the area
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defined by the lasers. Mulder had time to see only that whatever or
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whoever it was definitely travelled in a downward direction,el then the
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guide beams were gone. There was the impression of movement from the
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unlit UFO, and the camera tilted abruptly upward, recording a brilliant
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white light shooting straight up at incredible speed.
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Now. The young man said, drawing Mulder s attention back to
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earth even as the camera was hastily refocussed on what appeared to be
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two figures, emerging from between the trees.
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Mulder let out an involuntary gasp. One of the men was dressed
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in black. The other wore casual attire, but there was something familiar
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about him. Possibilities tumbled like dice inside Mulder s mind for the
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seconds it took the cameraman to zoom in for a brief close-up. As the
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famous face came into clear focus, the lensman was heard to mutter, *Holy
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shit. It s him!* The video finished without warning, leaving Mulder to
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presume that the Lone Gunman team had done what *he* would have done at
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that point, and gotten the hell out.
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Rendered temporarily speechless, Mulder found himself wishing
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desperately that Scully was there to confide in. Then, regaining control
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over his emotions, he was glad that she wasn t. He wanted Scully nowhere
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near this. Taking a deep breath he looked at the young man. His steady
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gaze was returned by one of apprehension, as if the go-between feared
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that he d be arrested on the spot.
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They were right. Mulder confirmed. It was Van Thewsen.
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Saying the name out loud seemed to break the almost palpable tension
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which had invaded the room. Now, you re obviously quite a smart guy.
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Mulder continued. Smart enough to know how dangerous this information
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is. Correct? The young man nodded once. Its okay, you re not in
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trouble. Just as long as you listen to me and do exactly what I tell
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you. Is that absolutely clear?
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Speaking quickly but calmly, Mulder told the go-between to record
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over the tape, and when that was done, pass on a verbal message to the
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Lone Gunman group. They were to be informed that the safest course would
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be to destroy any remaining copies, and to forget what they d seen. If
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asked for a reason, they were to be told that what they d stumbled upon
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was something that was classified above top secret. Something they were
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simply not equipped to handle.
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As Mulder shut the door of the apartment behind him, he found
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that he was shaking. He didn t know whether the Lone Gunmen would take
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his advice, but was certain that if they didn t, some of them would end
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up dead. Since discovering the truth about Zeitgeist, he d thought about
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little else. Making discrete enquiries on his own time had revealed
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little, other than the frightening fact that the Men In Black had a very
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long reach. But what might happen to the Lone Gunman group wasn t the
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reason that he had the shakes. That had to do with his ex-partner. He d
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heard through the grapevine that Dana Scully had been assigned to the Van
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Thewsen case, and been pleased for her. Until he d seen the evidence
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captured on video. Whether the Senator had been one of the so-called
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Alphas, or merely a high level messenger, was the burning question. It
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was something he now had to find the answer to, before Scully got wind of
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the high level conspiracy.
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Exiting the building, Mulder automatically checked for signs that
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he was being watched. He d taken about a dozen steps when he spotted
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Johnny Carrabelli. His partner was standing on the opposite side of the
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road, grinning like a hob-goblin. Carrabelli said something into his
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mobile phone, and the next thing Mulder heard was the unmistakable sound
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of breaking glass. Realising that it was coming from somewhere behind
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and above him, he turned on his heel and looked up.
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The go-between fell screaming like a fire engine, and struck the
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sidewalk head first. Shards of shattered glass landed all around him;
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deadly rain peppering the flagstones. Mulder didn t need a doctor to
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tell him that the young man hadn t survived the imapct.
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Pulling his gun from its holster, Mulder wheeled around,
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orienting on Carrabelli s position. But his murderous new partner had
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vanished. Putting the weapon away Mulder turned and ran full pelt. He
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had no idea where he was going, only that he had to get away. The day
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that he dreaded had finally arrived. MIB were closing in on him.
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CONSPIRACIES - Part 3 of 4
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From: madge@uclink.berkeley.edu (Peggy Mei-Ling Li)
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Date: 11 Sep 1994 19:24:19 GMT
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From: Adam Webb <awe@cix.compulink.co.uk>
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CONSPIRACIES - Part 4 of 4
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Computer Room, FBI HQ. Day two. 3:46pm
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Fingers gliding smoothly over the plastic keys, Scully coaxed information
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from her terminal. She was currently linked via modem to a secure
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database maintained by NASA. Stored in its electronic files were the
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details of everyone who had ever worked for the organisation, including
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one Peter Van Thewsen; a civilian analyst who d worked on attachment to
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NASA s lunar information collation programme between January 1972 and
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February 1973. Van Thewsen had a string of glowing testimonials from his
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former employers, and during his second month had taken a battery of
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physical and mental test, which all personnel were required to take on a
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yearly basis. The tests included an IQ assessment, in which Van Thewsen
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had achieved the staggering score of 195. A person only required an IQ
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of 135 to join Mensa; the society for anyone considered to be a genius.
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The strange thing was that the results of the same tests, administered
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just twelve months later, showed an IQ that was only slightly above
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average. I guess this must be an error. Scully thought aloud.
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All other records show the Senator as normal.
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Sure. Drake agreed, exhaling a cloud of dirty grey smoke.
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What else could it be. Now, you ve got that bee out of your bonnet,
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maybe we can get back to some real work. Huh?
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Real work is what I m attempting to do, Agent Drake. Scully s
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eyes flashed fire. We were taught to be thorough at Qunatico. If you
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can remember that far back.
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You prissy little bitch -
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Special Agent Drake s coming diatribe was interrupted by the
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unexpected entry of Johnny Carrabelli. Dana twisted away from the
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monitor as her name was called. Even if Carrabelli s body language
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hadn t given it away, the tone of his voice would have been enough to
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warn of trouble.
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Hey, Scully. You re wanted in Skinner s office. Right now.
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Is something wrong?
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Uh-huh. Carrabelli responded. I ve been temporarily
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reassigned to take your place on the Van Thewsen case. The bossman
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thinks you ll be more useful on, a new line of enquiry.
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Scully was confused. What s going on here? She asked, trying
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to catch Carrabelli s eyes. Come on, Johnny. This sounds like it s
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serious. Tell me what s happened?
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It s your crazy ex-partner, red. Carrabelli lied flawlessly.
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He just murdered a man in cold blood. Threw him right out of an
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apartment window. Carrabelli gestured with his hand. The poor sap
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did five floors in as many seconds.
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Mulder murdered someone! Scully responded, unable to keep an
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element of shock out of her voice. There must be some mistake. He
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wouldn t do anything like that.
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We got him on tape entering the building taking the elevator to
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the victim s floor. Johnny said. Next thing we see is a guy crashing
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through a pane of glass. Mulder leaves the building about a minute
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later. When he sees me, he pulls his gun. Right about now there s a
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warrant being issued for his arrest. He s considered A & D.
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Wait a minute. Scully frowned. Back up a little. You said
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this incident was recorded on tape. She hesitated, almost afraid to ask
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the obvious question. Does that mean Mulder was under Bureau
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surveillance? Hey, don t give me a hard time. Carrabelli shrugged.
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I was just doin my job.
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Why was he being watched? Scully demanded, already halfway
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sure that she knew the answer.
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If Mulder was being watched, it was the result of what he d
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discovered during their last X-File case. All that she knew about the
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contents of the Ehrlenmeyer flask was considered hearsay. But Mulder had
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actually seen with his own eyes the results of what might have been alien
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gene manipulation. Perhaps he d seen more than even he realised.
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You know better than to ask that. Drake chipped-in. Give the
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guy a break, for Christ s sake. Anyone would think you had somethin
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goin with old Spooky.
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Oh, we did. Dana said, coldly furious. Rounding on her
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obnoxious partner she added, It s called friendship. Something that you
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wouldn t know much about, Drake.
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Carrabelli coughed politely into his hand. Skinner s waiting.
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Nodding curtly in response, Dana stood and walked out of the
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room. No matter what the evidence might seem to be, she knew Fox Mulder.
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Under certain circumstances he might kill. As would any FBI Agent. But
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he would never deliberately hurl an unarmed man to his death. Something
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was going on, and it smelled very much like a set-up.
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Fullman s Warehouse, Hoboken. Day three. 11:37pm
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Crouched down behind a large packing crate, Mulder was ready. He d
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chosen the warehouse because it offered a lot of cover and three possible
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routes of escape. Both advantages might be required if Johnny Carrabelli
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brought company. The meeting had been set via a call made from a public
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phone booth to Agent Carrabelli s home number. Mulder knew that his
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partner had an answering machine hooked-up, and that he wouldn t be
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able to resist an opportunity to continue what he d started. The real
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|
problem was in deciding how deep the conspiracy against him went. For
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some reason, Carrabelli and at least one other accomplice had set out to
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frame him.
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Alone in the darkness, Mulder sighed. The only thing in his
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favour was that the Alphas didn t seem to want him dead. What had
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happened was probably as a test, conducted to see what he d do under such
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dire circumstan-
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ces. Or more specifically, who he d turn to for help. That was the only
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answer which made any kind of sense. The truth of the matter was that he
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hadn t told anyone about Operation Zeitgeist or the Alphas incredible
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plot. But they couldn t know that. Someone was obviously concerned
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|
enough to take drastic action.
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A loud metallic grating noise brought Mulder fully alert.
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Someone was entering the building via the side door, and they obviously
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didn t care who heard them.
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Agent Mulder. An unfamiliar voice called out. You can come
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out now. I m not armed.
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Mulder peered around the edge of the crate and saw a man standing
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in the beam of an overhead fluorescent tube. The man was holding open
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the flaps of his jacket, which like his trousers and tie, was coloured
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black. Memories ran like a slideshow inside Mulder s mind, flickering
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past until he came to the one he wanted.
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I know your face. You were with Major Starlin, in Dayton.
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The man grinned lopsidedly. I was told you had a photographic
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memory. We were never formally introduced, but you re right. My name s
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Draeger. Al, to my friends. I was one of Major Starlin s aides.
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You ll remember the other one.
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Gun aimed at Draeger s heart, Mulder stepped from behind his
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cover and walked slowly toward him. The sequence of event had taken yet
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another unexpected turn.
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How do I know whose side you re on now?
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I guess you don t. Draeger admitted. Maybe it ll help if I
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tell you that by this time tomorrow, you ll no longer be wanted by the
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FBI. We ve been watching Agent Carrabelli for some time.
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Carrabelli. Mulder repeated. Where is he?
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Right at this minute, he s at home sitting in his favourite
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armchair. Unfortunately, the Lieutenant smiled, Johnny has an extra
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hole in his head, and a gun in his hand.
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So how does that clear my name? Mulder asked.
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|
It doesn t. Draeger smirked. But, when your former
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colleagues check Johnny s pockets, they ll find certain damning evidence.
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No one will doubt that he planned the hit on Van Thewsen, on behalf of a
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|
political extremist group. Other evidence will point to him setting you
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|
up because you were close to discovering his duplicity.
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|
But he didn t plan Van Thewsen s death. Mulder stated, seeing
|
|
something in Draeger s eyes.
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Of course not. We arranged that.
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|
Because Van Thewsen was an Alpha?
|
|
No. Draeger shook his head. The Senator had to be taken out
|
|
because he was about to cast the deciding vote as Chairman of the Senate
|
|
Committee for Defence Systems Development. That vote would have severely
|
|
limited funding for a new missile project. The missile is a cover for a
|
|
black program, developing a device that can interfere with the automatic
|
|
guidance systems of Zeitgeist craft.
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|
Jesus. Uncocking his weapon, Mulder returned it to its
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|
holster. So what am I supposed to now. Go back to work?
|
|
Not for the FBI. The Lieutenant winked. Your still a wanted
|
|
man, Mulder. Wanted by Operation Zeitgeist. Reaching into his jacket
|
|
pocket Draeger produced a folded sheet of paper. Take a look at this
|
|
list. These are individuals we ve identified as Alphas. I believe
|
|
you ll be familiar with some of the names.
|
|
Mulder quickly scanned the list, and as predicted recognised about
|
|
a third of the people. One name in particular caught his attention. It
|
|
was another reason why he could never go back.
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|
FBI Headquarters, Washington D.C. Day four. 10:00am.
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|
The phone on Dana Scully s desk began to ring. Answering, she found
|
|
herself talking to Fox Mulder, who hurriedly explained that he wouldn t be
|
|
coming back to work.
|
|
Why not? Scully asked. You re in the clear.
|
|
Yeah, I know, Dana. It s not that. Mulder said, evidently
|
|
uncomfortable with the situation. I have a new job, and that s all I can
|
|
really say. You know how it is.
|
|
I know that we used to trust each other. Scully said, hurt to
|
|
discover how things had changed.
|
|
Dana, please believe me. Mulder begged. I do trust you. It s
|
|
just that there are some things I m not allowed to discuss. Even my new
|
|
job title, stupid as that probably sounds. God, I don t believe I m
|
|
saying this, but it s for your own good. Things are going to happen,
|
|
Scully, and no one is invulner-able. I won t risk your life because
|
|
someone may think you have privileged information. All I can tell you is
|
|
that what I m doing now might make a difference.
|
|
Okay. Scully said, caught between emotions. I won t pretend to
|
|
be happy about it, but I guess I can understand. Maybe we could meet for
|
|
lunch, some time?
|
|
At the other end of the line, Mulder sighed deeply. No, that
|
|
wouldn t be a good idea. For a long moment he was silent. When he spoke
|
|
again it was with genuine regret. If there was another way, I d take it.
|
|
I ll miss you, Dana.
|
|
Me too. Scully admitted, choking up despite her efforts to stay
|
|
detached. Hey, Mulder. Send me a post card, okay. That can t be
|
|
against the rules.
|
|
Mulder chuckled. I will. Pausing for a second, he added.
|
|
Trust no one.
|
|
The line went dead.
|
|
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|
|
Director s office FBI HQ, Washington D.C. Day four. 10:03am
|
|
|
|
The small speaker of the telecommunications monitoring system on Walter
|
|
Skinner s desk announced the end of former Special Agent Mulder s
|
|
conversation with his ex-partner.
|
|
Do you think she knows anything? Skinner asked the man who sat
|
|
perched on the corner of the desk.
|
|
Agent Scully knows a great deal. Drawing in smoke through the
|
|
filter-tipped cigarette which protruded between his fingers, the man held
|
|
it for a second, then exhaled a grey-blue cloud. Though nothing of
|
|
significance where you are concerned.
|
|
For now. Skinner said humorlessly. Although she does suspect
|
|
me of aiding and abetting those who would obscure the truth. At some
|
|
point, our clever agent will have to be dealt with.
|
|
Terminated? The smoking man asked.
|
|
Turned. Skinner replied with a quick shake of his head.
|
|
Someone with Dana Scully s qualities has much potential. She is clearly
|
|
wasted among the Betas.
|
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This story is (c) 1994 Adam Webb. The characters Fox Mulder, Dana Scully
|
|
and the name X-Files are (c) Fox Network Programming & Ten Thirteen
|
|
Productions. E-mail correspondence to the author via the Internet should
|
|
be addressed to AWE@CIX.Compulink.UK.
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