374 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
374 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Kadaitcha
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by Michael Aulfrey
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Part 4/7
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Crawford opened the door and came in bearing a roll of paper,
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which he lay out on a table. It was a geographical survey map,
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centred on Starkey's Creek and the area around it. Mulder popped
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the top of the marker again.
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"So. Frank Mereweather was found..."
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"Here." Crawford put his finger on the spot. "Ten kilometres out
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from the town. And the truck was found fifteen klicks away,
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here." Mulder dotted each place.
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"Five kilometres. Not a lot of distance between the two," said
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Scully.
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"Well, if we assume that they represent a diameter..." Mulder drew
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a circle taking the two points in. "The centre is this point,
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here. Where's that?"
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Crawford scrutinised the place. "It's private property. Western
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Mining, or something like that."
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"Have they got a mine out there?" asked Scully. Normally, mining
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towns were boom towns.
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"No. A few years ago, some surveyors came out here and marked off
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the area, saying it showed potential. But they never did anything
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about it. Think we should take a look?"
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Mulder chewed the inside of his lip. "Not much to put a search
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warrant out for...and Scully and I aren't even from this
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jurisdiction..."
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The phone rang, and Crawford picked it up. "Yeah." Pause.
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"Why?" Pause. "All right. But we haven't got time for anything
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crazy, right? Okay, we'll see you in a while. Bye." He put the
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phone down. "That was Charlie Duggan. He says he wants to see us
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at the Kaladjuma settlement."
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"Another killing?" asked Scully.
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"No. He just wants to see us about something he may have turned
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up." Crawford picked up a notebook and stuffed it into his pocket
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on the way out of the office.
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* * *
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"Why does he call you Rob?" asked Scully on the way out to the
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settlement. The car bumped and rattled on the gravel road.
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"Charlie?" Crawford glanced at her, beside him in the front seat.
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In the back, Mulder came out of his reverie to hear him. "We've
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known each other for a long time. Matter of fact, the reason I
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was assigned out here was because I was born here. And grew up
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here, as well. There's only been two people ever to graduate from
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university from Starkey's Creek. That's me and Charlie. Then he
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came back here, became a local cop...and I went to Canberra and
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joined the federal police. We've had him help us out on a number
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of occasions, simply because he's the best." Crawford squinted
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into the distance. "There it is."
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The settlement itself was little more than a series of broken-down
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asbestos-walled houses. Dogs sniffed at overflowing rubbish bins.
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Here and there, a rusted car or two sat awaiting reconstruction.
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The people walked slowly along the streets, looking intently at
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the strangers as they drove through the town to Charles Duggan's
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house. A carbon copy, Scully thought, of any native settlement
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across the world where they had been displaced by white
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conquerors. She shook the thoughts away and focused on the task
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at hand as Crawford pulled over at one house that looked no
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different from the rest.
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The front door was covered with a flyscreen, and it trilled like a
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snare drum as Crawford banged on it. A couple of seconds later,
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Duggan came out, his eyes quiet and unassuming as usual.
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"Come in," he said simply.
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They walked in. Loose boards creaked under their feet. The place
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was a little bit on the inside than it looked outside. It was
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clear Duggan had made some effort to keep the place fairly neat.
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"What did you want us here for, Charlie?" asked Crawford. "We've
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got an investigation to run at Starkey's Creek."
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"You haven't got anything to run," replied Charlie in that same
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finality as he had spoken when Mulder had seen him last. "Like I
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said. You didn't find anything at the site, and your fellas won't
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find anything in the daylight, either."
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"Look, Mr. Duggan, Charlie, whatever your name is, we're getting a
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little tired of this stuff. We're not the enemy. Why don't you
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try telling us what you know?" Mulder squared up to Charlie.
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Movement caught Mulder's eye, and he flicked a glance at a doorway
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from the front lounge. An old form, thicker, stockier than
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Duggan, shuffled off into the bowels of the house. "Who's he?"
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asked Mulder.
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"My grandfather," said Charlie. "All right. You want to know
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what I know? Take a seat." He motioned at the chairs, and they
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sat down. Charlie chewed the inside of his lip for a second, then
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breathed deeply and spoke. "I looked over the site already. No
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tracks...nothing. I tried everything I was taught to find some
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trace of whoever murdered those five boys, but there was nothing
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at all. The only thing I found was that all the animals around
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the area were scared half to death."
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"Animals?" Scully's eyebrows were raised.
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"Didn't you hear it, too, miss? I don't think so. You people
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from the city have been half-deafened by your cars and trucks so
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you don't hear much now at all. Not your fault. I was like you
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for the few years I was in the cities studying. But if you
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could've heard it, you would have. There wasn't a single cricket
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out there last night. And that's odd; even when people are
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around, they still carry on regardless. But last night, the
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crickets were not at that place. I also lied about there being no
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tracks. There were some. Animal tracks. Snakes, fieldmice, a
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kangaroo...but they were all headed out of the area. The animal
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population of that stand of timber decided to migrate."
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The old man shuffled back in at that point, and they got their
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first look at him. His hair was shockingly white against the dark
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of his face, and his beard was like white steel wool hanging from
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his chin. He didn't even spare a second glance for Mulder and
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Scully. He began speaking to Duggan in a harsh tongue that Mulder
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didn't recognise. Charlie shook his head and replied quietly in
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the same voice. But the old man made a cutting gesture with his
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hand, and Charlie pressed his lips together. The old man pointed
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at them again, and spoke once more. Charlie breathed out slowly.
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"What seems to be the problem?" asked Mulder, his gaze flicking
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from the old man to Duggan.
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"It's no problem," said Duggan, though his eyes wouldn't meet the
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old man's. "He just wants to know who you are and why you're
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here. I told him you were policemen."
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The old man pointed to them again and began speaking, but Duggan
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cut him off with a stream of words that they didn't have to guess
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at. It was in the way of an admonishment. The old man frowned
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deeply, turned and shuffled out of the room again. Charlie gazed
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after him with an air of sadness, then looked back to the FBI
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agents and Crawford. "I think you'd better leave now. I have to
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go talk to him."
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"Is that it?" asked Crawford. "That's all you had to tell us?
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That the animals decided to move?"
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"That's it," said Duggan. He got up from his chair and started
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for the door the old man had passed out of. "You can show
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yourselves out." And like a shadow, he was gone into the back of
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the house. Crawford shook his head.
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"Good old Charlie. Never fails to piss me off. Even when he's
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doing his job."
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But Mulder was quiet all the way back to the car. Scully didn't
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ask him why. She'd seen him enter this pattern before. It
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usually telegraphed the coming of another of his wild theories.
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She didn't bother to laugh at him inwardly. She merely tried to
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put the evidence together in a way that would logically explain
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any wild intuition he had. At the moment, she wasn't having much
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success.
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* * *
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"Why did you not tell them, grandson?" The old man watched the
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foreigners' dust clouds fade into the distance, standing there on
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the verandah of the house. Charlie was looking at the ground. He
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was silent. The old man looked at him directly. "You should have
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told them."
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"Grandfather, they wouldn't believe you. I don't believe you."
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Charlie stalked off a few paces and looked at the horizon.
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"Kadaitcha has returned. The time has come--"
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"That's just a story, grandfather!"
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"You were there. The animals knew. Explain it otherwise." The
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old man hobbled off into the house, leaving Duggan to stare into
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the distance.
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* * *
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FILE #2847654
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PRIORITY CLEARANCE
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AUDIO TAPE, RADIO NATIONAL NEWS AUSTRALIA
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BROADCAST DATE: 3/12/95, 7:00 pm.
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EXTRACT OF TRANSCRIPT:
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REPORTER: Western Australia, and a series of murders in the north
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west has shocked the small town of Starkey's Creek. John Gates in
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Starkey's Creek has the story.
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GATES: Last night, five young men were found dead in a utility
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truck fifteen kilometres out of town. Details of the murders are
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as yet sketchy, but Detective Robert Crawford of the Federal
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Police spoke with me today regarding the murders.
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CRAWFORD: At this stage our investigation is merely opening. We
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are utilising all resources at our command to apprehend the
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killers. There is little more that can be added at this stage.
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GATES: Is it true that the murders were perpetrated at close
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quarters, detective Crawford?
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CRAWFORD: (pause) As I said, our investigation is as yet still in
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its early stages. I'll be able to speak more on the matter later.
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GATES: Rumours are also circulating that these five killings are
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not the only ones to have occurred. Locals have noted that at
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least two areas have been cordoned off by police, and there is no
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indication at this stage of any lead on the matter.
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EXTRACT ENDS.
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COPY TO DIRECTORATE ASAP. CLEARANCE DAMOCLES REPEAT DAMOCLES.
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* * *
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The silence had been shattered by the morning. Mulder had just
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been getting to enjoy the quiet that came with sleeping in the
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back country. The catalogue of noise was almost without end:
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journalists checking into rooms, walking around the creaky
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floorboards, cars screaming off into the distance, camera crews
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reporting on the incidents so many times Mulder could just about
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recall the individual reports from memory.
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He hadn't had much success with the evidence Crawford's men had
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brought in from the field. Nothing useable. Only bits and pieces
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that told them no more about the killer than did anything else.
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Scully had stayed up to perform an inspection with Crawford
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observing on the skinned body, but Mulder's stomach had objected
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violently and he decided to work back in his room instead.
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Crawford had been a pale white when he emerged from the interview
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with the reporter. He had sworn blue murder against the officer
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who had leaked the news to the press of the close-range killings,
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and after that there had been no further talk of the local police
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to the media. Mulder and Scully managed to lay low when the
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reporters had come around sniffing for news; Crawford covered
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their retreat to the hotel by letting them out the back door of
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the station. Later that evening, he'd brought some clothes around
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for Mulder to try on. "Just so you don't stand out so much in
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your suit," he said. Mulder found the clothes amusing, but he put
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them on. Cotton shirt, jeans and boots. Like any native Creeker.
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At least this way the reporters wouldn't talk to him so much.
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Crawford had also taken Scully down to the clothing shop herself,
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and she'd picked out suitably nondescript clothing as well--summer
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dress and light shoes.
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7 am. Mulder stretched and rubbed the sleep from his eyes.
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The sound was quiet. If he'd yawned, he wouldn't have heard it.
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But it was there. The solitary creak of a floorboard, on a hall
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where the only two guests were himself and Scully in the next
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room. Mulder had learned from long nights studying cases with her
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that Scully didn't get up until 7:30 as a rule. Mulder flicked a
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glance to the door. Outside, the morning light was creeping under
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the door. Except for the two columns of darkness where someone's
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feet were placed. They didn't move.
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His breathing seemed loud in his ears. His eyes strayed to the
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draw of the bedside table, where the gun was. He started to move
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towards the drawer even as he called out, "Who's there?"
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Then the two columns of darkness were gone, and this time Mulder
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distinctly heard the sound of feet pounding on wooden floorboards
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as they ran towards the stairs. He cursed and jumped the rest of
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the distance to the draw, pulled it out and snatched the gun. He
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half-kicked the door down in his hurry to get out, and then was
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running towards the stairs, where he barely spotted a sweep of
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hair recede out the doorway. Mulder cursed again, even as he
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heard Scully call out from her doorway, and ran down the stairs.
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Unfortunately, as one loose floorboard was his observer's undoing,
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so another was his. His right foot got the floorboard, his left,
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the air where he thought the next step was, and he crashed down
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the stairs. Somehow he got his hand to the safety on the gun
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before it flew out of his hand and hit the ground at the bottom of
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the stairs. Mulder hit his head on the last step, and saw stars
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for a second or two. Then Scully, in her robe--how the hell did
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she get dressed so fast? he wondered--was coming down the stairs,
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calling his name. Her own gun was jammed into the cloth belt of
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the robe.
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"Damn it!" he cursed. Then Scully was kneeling down next to him,
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her hands going to his head and running through his hair.
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"Are you all right? Did you hit your head?"
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"No..." he winced slightly as he started to move, but the pain
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came from his ankle. "No, I'm all right, I think."
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"You didn't black out at all?"
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"No. My left foot hurts, though." Scully's attention immediately
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turned onto his leg. She touched it experimentally.
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"Tell me if any of this hurts, Mulder." She touched the bottom
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part of his calf, and it brought no response. She continued down
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the leg until she reached his ankle, none of which generated any
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response. She was intent in her doing so. Mulder stared up at
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the ceiling for a second or two, cursing his clumsiness, then
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looked at Scully, still testing his leg with the occasional prod
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or two.
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"You're not engaging in any fantasies, are you, Scully?" he
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grinned slightly. He thought he saw her smile, but it was quickly
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suppressed.
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"You're the one who has the videos in your top drawer, Mulder.
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Not me." She stopped merely putting fingers to his ankle and this
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time moved his foot slightly to the left. "How's this?"
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A jet of pain shot up his leg. "Yeah. That hurts," he said,
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trying not to speak through clenched teeth. Scully nodded slowly
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and sighed.
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"Sprained ankle. I think we'd better get you back upstairs."
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"It's not that bad. I'm not a cripple."
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"If it had been your neck that you twisted, you could well have
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been. Come on."
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"But I---"
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"Mulder." Scully's eyes brooked no argument. "Now." She picked
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up his fallen gun. Between the two of them, they got him on his
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feet, braced against the narrow stairway's walls. Leaning on her,
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he hobbled back up the stairs with her. Despite the fact he was
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on one foot, she didn't find him too heavy at all. "So. You want
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to tell me why you came sprinting out of your room?"
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He looked at her with genuine surprise. "You didn't see him?"
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"No. Who?"
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He motioned to the door of his room, and they stumbled inside.
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Mulder leaned against the wall as he shut the door behind them.
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"There was someone outside my room this morning, Scully. Someone
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who didn't want to be heard or seen. I heard floorboards creak,
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and the second I called out to him, he started running."
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"That doesn't make any sense. You probably scared off some
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newspaper boy or something."
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"No way. Whoever it was weighed a lot more than some kid, to make
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the floorboards creak like that." He forgot his ankle for a
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second, leaned on it and remembered with a powerful wince that
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made him groan in spite of himself. Scully was instantly back by
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his side, but he waved her away as he sat down on the bed. "Any
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idea how long I'll be like this?"
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"I'll find a bucket of water for you to soak it in. That ought to
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reduce the swelling. You'll be limping for a couple of days, I'd
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say. In future, I wouldn't try running down stairs so much."
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"Thanks. I'll take it out of my callisthenics course." He smiled
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with that wry tilt to his grin that he knew exasperated her so
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much. Scully shook her head and went back to her room, leaving
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his gun on the bedside table. He sat there staring at the gun for
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some time.
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* * *
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It was 10:00 am. before they finally got to the police station.
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Once more, they had to enter by the back door; at least one
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journalist's car was out the front of the place. Crawford was in
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his office, reading over the reports of the inspecting police at
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the site of the last murders. Dark circles were under his eyes.
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He looked up wearily as they walked in. "Oh--hello." He looked
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at Mulder's foot. "What happened to you?"
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"I fell down some stairs. Find anything?"
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"Nothing. I've read this one report so many times I'm seeing it
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behind my eyelids. It seems the metal slivers are still our best
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lead. No tracks...nothing. It's like they were killed by a ghost
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or something."
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"Well, I didn't turn up anything else from their bodies. It would
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take a full autopsy to determine anything further," said Scully.
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"So what's on the plan today?" said Crawford. "I'm sure as hell
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stuck for ideas, anyway."
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There was a sudden trill from the phone. Crawford picked it up.
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"Crawford." He suddenly stiffened. "Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Yes, I
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saw it myself. Well, I don't think that's quite a fair assessment-
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-" He broke off again, his face melting into a mask of anger.
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"Sir, I don't see why--no, sir. It's just I think that--dammit,
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Jack! Cut the bulldust! Why are you doing this? This was my--yes,
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sir. No. All right." Crawford raised his voice once more. "No,
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I don't like this, sir. Not one bloody bit!" He slammed the
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phone down. "Bastard!" He got up and strode around the room.
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"What's wrong?" asked Scully, and at her voice the Australian cop
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slowed down slightly. But his voice was thick with anger.
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"They took me off the case. That was my supervisor. He just told
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me they've decided to assign someone else to the case. Seems
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they're not too happy about the big TV interview yesterday."
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Mulder cast a sidelong glance at Scully, who shrugged. "So what's
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this mean for us?"
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"It means your presence is no longer required, or wanted," said
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Crawford, his voice a growl. "They specifically told me to tell
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you this new detective they're putting on the case doesn't want
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any help. You might as well go pack. I'll meet you outside your
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rooms in an hour. Just give me enough time to pack my stuff."
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Mulder looked like he was about to argue, but Scully put a hand on
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his arm, and they disconsolately left Crawford alone in the
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office.
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"You think there's something more to this, don't you?" said Scully
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as they walked along. Mulder had been deep in thought again.
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"I don't know, Scully. I honestly don't. It's like you said.
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There's nothing here that is really unexplainable. And all the
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case lacks is a lead. There isn't much more we can do here."
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Scully nodded. "All right. I'll meet you back at the hotel.
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There's a couple of files I left at the mortuary that I have to
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pick up." She walked off.
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END OF PART 4/7
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