802 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
802 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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Kadaitcha
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By Michael Aulfrey
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Author's Note: this is actually a crossover with something else,
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but it would spoil the story to say what. Anyway, all rights
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reserved to them and Chris Carter and 10-13 productions.
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All except the characters of Robert Crawford and Charles Duggan,
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who are soon to be released in an action doll line. :) :) :)
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I'd rate this story NC-17 for the occasional violence in it.
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It doesn't have any sex scenes.
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It's also an attempt at an international X-File, and actually
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the first I tried to write. All kinds of feedback are welcome.
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Tell me if you'd like to see more of the characters or the
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international setting!
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Other than that, enjoy, everyone!!! :) :)
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Prologue:
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Frank Mereweather finished up at 11:00 pm. He called for last
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drinks and put the beer away as the regulars staggered outside to
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their dust-laden trucks. He said goodnight to Christine as she
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picked up her purse and left the pub. The flyscreen door banged
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loudly in her wake. A fine girl, Christine. Sure as hell
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deserved more than what was available to her in this town. He'd
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seen her mother a couple of days ago--apparently Christine was
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doing well at school; her reports had been close to straight-As.
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Which was pretty good for a kid who had only ever been to school
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twice in her life. That was for her Year 11 exams, down in the
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city. Rest of the time, she studied with an ear close to the
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radio; the School of the Air was very efficient.
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Frank wasn't like her. Not that he didn't understand the
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advantages of getting a better education. But Frank had lived in
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this town for thirty years. It was as much a part of him as the
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sand and dirt of his home. He sighed. No, he wouldn't have given
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this away for the world.
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He turned off the lights and locked the door. It creaked closed.
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It was in need of a repaint. Like most of the wooden and asbestos
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houses in the town. But it was home.
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The night was warm but clear; the stars twinkled brightly on a
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carpet of ebony above. Frank went to his car--an old station-
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wagon showing more dents and scratches than a car of its age ought
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to have. The engine roared to life quickly, despite the hours of
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standing in the day. He peeled out of the carpark and out onto
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the gravel road, dust misting behind him and the headlights cones
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of brilliance reaching down the road.
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Frank didn't live "in town"; he had a small shack about ten miles
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out, near Starkey's Creek. Which was a misnomer. It was a light
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watercourse, only flowing in the wet season and then only with a
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heavy fall of rain. The last time he'd seen rain had been when he
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was almost flooded out.
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The memories of that time returned as he reached the place. He'd
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had to move up onto higher ground. Onto what the Aboriginals of
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the area called Yurrina, but the rest of the world called
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Beazley's Hill. That had been a bad time. In amongst the rock
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paintings left there by former residents, he'd shivered, and
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waited for the rain to stop. Surprisingly, the shack had stayed,
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and the water had taken nothing except the old outhouse down by
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the creek....
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He got out of the pickup, breathing in the clear air. Even the
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town, as it was, had an aura of pollution over it that the mass of
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human bodies concentrated together in the same place generated.
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Some young man had come up from the city one time for some reason,
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and over a drink he got to talking with Frank. Eventually, the
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multiple beers took effect, and when the doctor had heard Frank's
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story, he'd called it agoraphobia. Fear of crowds, or something
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like that. Another reason for not living in town.
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He breathed again, the rushing of air loud in his ears. He
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stopped, curious. It was quiet. Really quiet. No crickets. No
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frogs. He couldn't even hear a dingo howl in the distance, and
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tonight was a full moon. Strange. Frank slammed the door of the
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car, the sound unnaturally loud in the heavy stillness. He walked
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towards the house. His shoes crunched heavily on the remains of
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the gravel driveway. Reached the front porch. Wooden floorboards
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creaked under him. The door was in front of him, a beaten,
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weather-torn thing. The doorknob creaked under his hand, and he
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thrust open the door towards whatever lay within.
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The door banged against the wall of the house. Nothing. Nothing
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materialised from the shadows. No burglar, no wolf, no razorback-
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--what a joke of a movie that was, he chuckled to himself. Frank
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grunted and closed the door behind him, switching on the lights.
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He scrounged in a pocket for the day's takings and tossed it onto
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the table.
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Still that quiet. He would have expected the animals to resume
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their chatter once he'd gone out of their territory, but inside
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the house it was quiet as the proverbial tomb.
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For a moment.
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Then the squeal came. It was a high-pitched, guttural screech,
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little better than an animal's, really, and it sounded close
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enough for Frank to spin around as if it was behind him. Nothing.
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The house was quiet, dark.
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Frank headed for the closet, threw it open. Standing inside was
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the .22. The most chances at hunting the locals got around here
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was the occasional rabbit or fox--a legacy from their colonial
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ancestors--but everyone hung onto some sort of weapon. Deaths
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from hitchhikers had happened around here. Man and woman knew to
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keep guns and use them. Frank grabbed the gun, chambered a round
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and stalked over to the front door. He switched on the outside
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light, then threw open the door, his body retracting into an
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aiming posture.
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Nothing. No movement. He panned the muzzle of the gun around a
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bit. So what the---?
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He saw it at the edge of the pool of light generated by the lamp
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above him. It was big and furry. Not moving. Frank's finger
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almost tightened on the trigger, but he spotted the dark stain
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spreading from its midsection. Blood. Frank took a cautious step
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down off the verandah, closer to the thing. Now he saw it, and
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his finger eased off the trigger. Speak of the devil. A
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razorback. Feral pig. Big as the boars those little guys ate in
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Asterix comics. Hadn't been too many around, since the government
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declared them vermin. Still less, with the hunting population of
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the town.
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He heard something behind him. From the house itself. He spun
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around again, finger back on the trigger.
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But he didn't fire.
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The sheer sight of it precluded that.
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And its eyes were almost hypnotic. Like pools of phosphorus in
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the air. He was looking into those eyes and they came at him and
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oh God something smashed into his abdomen but he couldn't even
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scream because the scream was lost in those eyes and he thought
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he'd spin into infinity with them and all of a sudden he was
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falling red rain around him and those eyes those eyes those
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eyes....
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His last sensation was hearing the crickets quietly resume their
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song.
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* * *
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KADAITCHA
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Fox Mulder, special agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation, had
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had enough. He'd seen a lot of blood in his time, but the scene
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in the hotel reception area was beyond anyone's comprehension. It
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just showed that the child pornography industry was getting better-
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armed all the time. And, it seemed, better-informed.
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Of course the bust had gone bad. The two officers coming in the
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front door had run straight into a hail of bullets from the
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receptionist herself when she swung an Uzi into view and sprayed
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the room from left to right. One of them was caught in the head
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and shoulders; the other's Kevlar had left him with enough
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strength to squeeze off a couple of wild shots as he fell. He got
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lucky; the receptionist's chest was a spray of gore even as they
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went down.
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The other officers crashed through the door as the hired toughs
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came in with pistols loaded, and the place had erupted into
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bedlam. Meanwhile, Mulder, Scully and the others had gone through
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the back. A lack of chivalry had saved his life.
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They'd gotten their evidence. The photographs of pale, young
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bodies in various circumstances were still drying in the
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darkrooms. Invasion of further rooms revealed reams of material
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prepared for publication. And yet the boss got clear, killing one
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officer who tried to arrest him with a nightstick and a pair of
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handcuffs. Mulder could deal with that. What he couldn't was the
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blood and horror. In his ears, the Code Ones and cries for
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ambulances rang like a funeral dirge, until he had to walk outside
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and take in a couple breaths of air. And there he'd remained for
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the past hour or so now, sitting there on a low ornamental wall,
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watching as the photographers went in and the black bags rolled
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out.
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Scully's approach was quiet, despite her shoes, and with his eyes
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closed he wasn't aware of her until she spoke. "Maybe you should
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go back to the office, Mulder. I can finish this up myself."
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"I'm fine."
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She paused, and even with his eyes closed, he could see her chew
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the inside of her lip. "How long has it been since you got any
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sleep?"
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The stakeout had taken longer than he'd estimated. Twelve hours,
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no relief. "I can stay awake long enough." He took a deep
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breath. "What've we got?"
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Scully's gaze bored into him for a moment longer, then she
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shrugged and glanced back in the direction of the hotel. "Pretty
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well everything we need. Guns, photographs, mailing addresses--I
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guess they thought they could take on Washington's finest and
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win."
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"Everything except Rezatti himself."
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"We've got his passport, and an officer or two on all of his usual
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haunts. He can't run that far."
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"Skinner's going to be mad as hell."
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"I don't think so. He's got all the evidence he needs and more.
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We just need Rezatti now."
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Mulder stood up and looked towards the hotel. "We'd better finish
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it, then."
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"Mulder."
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He turned towards her.
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"Relax. I'm not having much more success than you with this
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thing."
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He nodded slowly, and they walked back up towards the hotel.
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* * *
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Saturday came and went, Mulder spending most of it writing up the
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report for the forced entry of the premises housing Rezatti's
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ring. He'd expected to be able to sleep in on Sunday, but the
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phone trilled in his ear at 8:00 am, rousing him from a dreamless,
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recuperative sleep.
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"Mulder," he mumbled into the phone.
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"Skinner," answered the voice on the other end, hard as an iron
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bar. Damn. The guy had decided to tear into him after all. And
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on a Sunday, no less. "I need you at the office, Mulder. It's
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urgent."
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He focused on the words, his brain carefully putting them together
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and considering their implications. It was a good three seconds
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before he was wide awake. "Sir...is it a---"
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"Be here by 8:45. Don't keep me waiting." And the phone rang off
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in his hand.
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* * *
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Like several large law firms, it was common practice at the F.B.I.
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that on weekends, the employees could dress fairly casually, since
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they weren't per se on duty. Of course, a number of agents did in
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fact go on Saturdays to continue their work, and the level of
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casualness did go to jeans and T-shirts in some cases. But one
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didn't observe such a dress standard when meeting with Deputy
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Director Walter F. Skinner--weekends or otherwise. Rumour had it
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that the last agent who did got himself booted all the way back to
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stakeouts. So only a stream of suits came in and out of Skinner's
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office.
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Mulder made it to Skinner's office at 8:41, notwithstanding the
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traffic between his house and F.B.I. headquarters. Scully was
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outside waiting, looking no less dishevelled for the early call
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she'd gotten.
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"I was worried you wouldn't make it," she said as Mulder walked
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over to her.
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"There was a traffic accident on the freeway," Mulder said, gazing
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at the frosted glass of Skinner's office door. Vague dark shadows
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moved behind it. "Who's he got with him?" Scully shrugged.
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"They've been in there since I arrived. One of the higher-ups,
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maybe."
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"On a Sunday? That's not like Skinner. He's usually at golf this
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time in the morning."
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"We'll know soon enough."
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No sooner had she said that than the door opened, and Skinner
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appeared. "Scully; Mulder. Come in, please."
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Please? Mulder directed a glance in Scully's direction. She
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raised her eyebrows in reply.
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Inside the office were another woman and a man. The woman's
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identity was simple enough; Jennifer Benson, the legal attache to
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the Australian embassy here in Washington. Mulder and Scully knew
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of her by experience, but she introduced herself formally anyway.
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The identity of the second man was more of a mystery. He was
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tall, tanned. Black hair. Freckles spattered his face like a bad
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paint job. His uniform was curious. Not the standard Washington
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cop's uniform, but instead a deeper, darker blue matched by gold
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studs and other regalia. But a cop's uniform nonetheless. Not
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American. That was all.
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"Mr. Crawford, I'd like you to meet Special Agent Mulder; Special
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Agent Scully," said Skinner, timing his words to their respective
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handshakes. "This is Robert Crawford, from the Australian Federal
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Police, Homicide Division."
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"A pleasure," said Crawford, and immediately that thick Australian
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accent was apparent. At the memory of "Crocodile Dundee", Scully
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couldn't help but smile slightly. But then she frowned
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slightly...Robert Crawford...
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Mulder turned to Skinner. "So what's the story?"
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Skinner looked at the Australian. "The F.B.I. is participating in
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an ongoing scheme where we take in police from other,
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international jurisdictions and train them in certain advanced
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police enforcement techniques. I think you'd know about this from
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your work at the Academy, Scully."
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The memory clicked. "Yes. I remember now. Mr. Robert Crawford.
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Graduated top of your class, I believe."
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He gave a self-depreciating little shrug. "I had good teachers."
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Then he turned serious, and before Skinner had a chance to go on,
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he spoke. "We might as well cut through the red tape. I came
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here because I need your help. Your particular help." He
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produced a folder and handed it to Mulder. "The photographs are
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of Frank Mereweather, a proprietor of a local hotel. Three days
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ago he was murdered at his home at Starkey's Creek, Western
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Australia. It's my jurisdiction out there, so I took a look at
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the file. The regular force don't want to look at it, now that
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federal police have intervened." Mulder was looking at the
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photographs. Standard black-and-whites of the murdered man in his
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position. "The photos look normal, but there are some interesting
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anomalies here which I can't quite explain. I'd heard at the
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Academy that you two were really into this kind of thing, so I
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thought I'd ask for a little help from my teachers." Mulder
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turned an amused eye on Scully, now--seemingly--identified with
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his own "spooky" ideas.
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But Scully had the photographs, flicking through them one at a
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time. "What kind of anomalies?"
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Crawford looked hesitantly at Benson and Skinner. "Trust me; it's
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right up your street, as I think they say here."
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Mulder looked at Skinner. "Are there any jurisdictional problems
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if we go, sir? What exactly would we be doing?"
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"Well, the Director hasn't got a problem with you two taking a
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quick vacation. As far as anybody else is concerned, you'd be on
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exchange to Australia to observe their investigatory techniques.
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The department's approved it, so there's nothing stopping you
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going."
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They looked at Crawford. "I think we'd better pack our sunblock,
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then," said Mulder.
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* * *
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Qantas was the safest airline in the world, without a single crash
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in its seventy-year history. Flight 567 out of Washington over
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the Pacific to Sydney International Airport, then a brisk walk to
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a connecting cross-country flight to Perth, the capital of Western
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Australia. They touched down at midday. Crawford was there to
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meet them as they emerged from the passenger egress into the
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terminal.
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"Good to see you again," he said. "We've got another connecting
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flight to Geraldton, about 300 kilometres north of here. There's
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a car waiting there that will take us to Starkey's Creek."
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The plane that took them to Geraldton was a smaller jet. Unlike,
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so Crawford said, the turboprop aircraft that worked the southern
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air routes. Then conversation turned to the murder. Crawford
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handed them another file. "This is the information which the
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local police wouldn't touch. You see, we haven't conducted a full
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autopsy on Mereweather yet, but even from external evidence it's
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plain that this wasn't a simple shooting."
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"If it was, you wouldn't have called us," Scully pointed out.
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"Exactly. Anyway, Frank Mereweather was killed five days ago
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outside his house, give or take twelve hours. They found a loaded
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.22 rifle next to him, but I think you'll see it's plain that he
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wasn't shot." Mulder pulled out a photo, looked at it. Handed it
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to Scully, who raised her eyebrows.
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"Was he found like this?"
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"Yeah. Forensics think some of the damage might have been done by
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scavengers. Dingoes, crows, that sort of thing. But whatever it
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was that killed him was a lot bigger than any scavenger. There's
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some small maceration and tearing around the main wound from the
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animals when they came to have their share of his body, but the
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fatal cut, so far as we could see, was about a metre long and
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ripped him from neck to sternum. We're not sure whether it was
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made by a large knife, but maybe you can tell us more."
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"There's nothing really unexplainable here," said Scully, "Murders
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have been known to have been perpetrated by people waving swords
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around. What's wrong with the picture?"
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"The rest of it. It's like he cut himself to pieces. The reason
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Forensics was so careful with their examination was because they
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didn't have anything else to work on. We've got no footprints,
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one set of tyre tracks from the poor sod's car going in. And
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Starkey's Creek is mostly sandy soil. If there were any
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footprints, we should've seen them."
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Scully took another photo, stared at it. The item in the frame
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was not human. Unmistakably animal. And large. "What's this?"
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"Oh, yeah, there's that, too. About four metres from Frank's body
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they found a feral pig dead, killed in much the same way. Large
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slit in the abdomen. We estimate the times of death to be
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concurrent or close to it."
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"Was it the victim's?"
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"No. He didn't have any pets. Nice bachelor, by all accounts.
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No wife or children. Owned a pub but didn't make enough for it to
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be profitable. Just your average bloke. No hidden caches of
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money or anything that would make anyone want to kill him."
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"He had a gun, though," said Mulder, one eyebrow raised. He'd
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heard about the strictness of Australian law on that point.
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Crawford shrugged. "Everyone out here has a gun, agent Mulder.
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It's common practice. Rabbits, foxes--anything feral qualifies as
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vermin. And they're pests enough so that they're worth wasting
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bullets on."
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"Just your regular holiday camp," said Mulder.
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Crawford looked evenly at him. "I realise the rest of the world
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probably sees the average Australian as a back-country Paul Hogan,
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agent Mulder, but unlike America, most of the country is desert.
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Bad things can happen out there. People insure themselves." He
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nodded at the photographs. "And sometimes your policy comes up."
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Mulder was rational. "There still isn't enough here that says
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it's out of the ordinary. You haven't got any footprints, but
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that doesn't mean the murderer couldn't have come in from another
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direction."
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"You're still not listening," replied Crawford quietly. "Maybe
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you'll understand better when you actually get a look at the
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site."
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END OF PART 1/7.
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