*XXVII*
4:30 P.M., George Washington University, Washington, D.C.
Tina glanced out the window at book-weary coeds huddled in dusk
at the student union's
bus stop. Slight, steady pressure on the gas and there was that
homeless guy cocooned on
the air vent by Jackie Onassis Hall. The emergency lights of the
stalled VW bus with the
Hole and Primus stickers still blinked, made her fingertips drum
the wheel.
"Okay," Hill sighed. "I'm going to drive
another loop and if Dana isn't on the curb I'm
leaving her....No. Strike that. I'm pulling over and dragging her
ass out and driving to St.
E's. This is all nuts. It's just so fucking fucked up,
it's--it'--oh, shit. Now I'm talking to
myself."
She rolled the Escort through the intersection of 22nd and K
and hung a left onto J street.
Honked when a cab in her lane suddenly chose to double park. What
a day. Asshole deep
in paperwork on sex toy and antique shops, hours on the road, not
one decent meal, a few
crappy hours of sleep. Tina smacked the steering wheel, felt her
silver bracelets jump,
heard them jingle as she wrenched the wheel and maneuvered around
the cab.
On-coming headlights hurt Hill's eyes as she turned onto 20th
Street. and rolled past
Foggy Bottom Metro. Took a right onto L Street to review the
facades of GW Hospital and
dorms, then to reach the corner where she had begun. "Dana.
Yes!" There she was, outside
at last--hair wild in the wind, coat blown back flat against her
thin body, hanging onto her
briefcase like a lifeline. Hill watched her dash into the street
and open the passengerside
door.
"You just about lost your ride," she told her.
"Even hourly wagers don't take this kind of
crap."
"Sorry." Dana slid inside, slammed the door.
"Only Byers was there and I had to explain
everything to him, make sure he knew what kind of connections
we're trying to make."
"Who's Byers?"
Her seatbelt clicked. "He's an...associate of Frohike's."
Tina stared at her, then blinked a few times. "And just
what connections ARE we trying to
make, Agent Scully?"
"Shut up and drive. We're not starting this again and you're blocking traffic."
"Okay-dokey." Tina stepped on the gas, heard Dana
thump against the seatback. Engine-
noise cone of silence as Hill looped the car around Washington
Circle, then headed toward
the Whitehurst Freeway. "So," she finally spoke as the
Escort climbed the ramp onto the
elevated roadway. "I guess if our Mystery Date bombs we make
phone calls to
businessmen? 'Excuse me for calling so late, sir. We understand
you own the Posh Old
Junk Antique Mall in Caucasian, Virginia. Would you happen to
have an FBI agent in the
trunk of your car?'"
"What did the caller sound like?" Dana asked.
"I told you three times: he sounded like an average white
male. Maybe fortyish. Maybe a
bit of a great white north accent--like Minnesota or
Wisconsin."
"I don't recognize that description."
"Of course you don't. If you did he wouldn't be a Mystery Date."
The freeway ended in a hairpin turn that spilled the car onto
Key Bridge. Rosslynıs office
towers loomed across the Potomac River. Dana fidgeted, shifted,
spoke, "Oh god, Tina," I
hope...." she trailed off.
Hill's heart went tight. Clots of annoyance melted. She
reached over and grabbed Danaıs
hand. "I hope, too, Bunny." Smiled when Dana squeezed
her fingers and released. Maybe
it was a good time to try again. "Don't you think one of us
should check out escapees and
parolees--?
The small woman stiffened. "It's not that simple. I told you that. It's not Props or--"
"Look," Tina interjected, "from what I know of
Mulder's early career, he put a lot of
vicious sonsofbitches behind bars and--"
"Well, if you knew a damn thing about profiling,"
Dana cut her off in turn, "then you'd
know that these guys don't come back to stalk the law enforcement
agents who stopped
them. They return to their old killing patterns. They can't help
it--it's what they HAVE to
do. That's not what's happening here."
"Oh yeah?" Hill scoffed. "Well, what about that
fuckwad who killed Reggie and tried to
shoot your ass off, too, just to get back at Mulder?"
"That was--Barnette was abnormal." Dana said quietly.
"And other serial killers aren't? Maybe this is another exception to the rule."
"No."
Hill blew out a breath as she slowed the car in the face of
brake lights. Turned toward her
friend. "Okay, look--you really think he went with these
SOBs because they might have
information on his sister?"
Dana crossed her arms on her chest and stared out the
windshield. "I'm sure of it. That
digital tape of Samantha--"
"That even a jack-stupid Lakota knows can be faked."
"Stop it, Tina....But you're right. And Mulder's
certainly smart enough to have known it,
too. They must have given him something else. Something that
cinched it in his
mind....Something we haven't found."
"Maybe we should be looking for that something,"
Hill suggested as the gridlock broke
and she shifted her foot from the brake to the gas.
There was quiet again as Dana pondered. Heard nothing but
road-rumble and the swish of
passing cars until they neared the Pentagon. "Mulder has a
safe deposit box. I've got a key.
I wonder...."
Hill glanced at her, then back to the highway. "You wanna head over there now?"
She saw Dana shake her head from the corner of her eye.
"No. We won't make it before
they close. The bank is out in Springfield. I'll see if I can't
get someone to meet us over
there late tonight, if nothing better comes up."
"Let's keep our fingers crossed."
Tina piloted the Escort through Crystal City's concrete
monoliths and they hit the home
stretch to Alexandria, moving at fifty-five along Route 1 as it
ran parallel with an
abandoned rail line on the left. Strips of autobody shops and
small, service-oriented
businesses lined the right. Just as they reached the overpass
into Old Town, curiosity killed
Tina Hill. "Why do you have a key to Mulder's safe deposit
box?"
A short silence, then Dana shifted in her seat. "I'm his next-of-kin."
"Oh." Then Hill's forehead wrinkled. Naw. They
couldn't be--could they? "You two
secretly married, Dana?"
"Tina, honestly."
"Hey, Iım asking a sincere question here!" She shot Dana a glare.
"Look, I've been his legal next-of-kin for a couple
years." The explanation was tense,
tired. "Mulder and his father were estranged and his mother
is wiggy. The rest of his
family--well, I know he had an aunt he was close to, but she's
dead and there doesn't seem
to be anyone else who gives a damn about him. So, it's me. I'm
what he's got--just his
partner and Frohike and a few others."
"Stray dog syndrome, huh? Do you let him hump your leg?"
She felt Dana's eyes bore into her profile. "Does Andy Vanderbilt hump yours?"
"Uh-huh," Hill nodded, trying to smile. "But just my leg. So, do you and Mulder--"
"It's none of your business."
"I know that, but I want to know." Hill put on the
blinker and passed an old man in a
brown Buick. "C'mon, Mutt. We're supposed to be
bonding--getting all intimate and
buddy-buddy again. You can't not tell me. It's--it's just not
politic."
"Whatever, Tina."
"Okay," Hill shrugged, accelerating the Escort.
"You don't have to tell me, or tell me
whenever."
"All right!" Dana's voice hiked. "You know, I'm
getting pretty sick of bonding--if that's
what we're doing. Seems more like we're ripping each other's
throats out."
"Nah. We're just slicing our palms and mingling blood.
Look, it's bullshit to think this
could happen any other way. We've got a lot of emotional baggage
and we've changed a
lot. But we'll come to a new smooth place, Bunny."
"Yeah, I guess."
"So...?" Hill glanced toward Dana, eyebrows raised. "Do ya?"
"Well, what do you think?" A little sparkle in the
eyes. Maybe even a leer, if Tina was
seeing correctly in the dim light.
"I think you're both virgins." She grinned and Dana
harumphed. "Kidding....But what do
I think, Mutt? Let me tell you what this crime scene says to me:
I think you've both seen
each other naked and you like what you see. I think that you go
down on each other when
you're feeling safe. But I don't think you've ever popped the
metaphoric cherry 'cause
both of you are too damn scared of what sex symbolizes, or that
it will get you split up
which it won't, by the way. If you played with the rest of us
you'd know Freeh's pulled a
Clinton--no ask, no tell." Hill tossed Dana another glance
as she swung the car left onto
North Wythe.
Her companion looked out the window, hands clasped in her lap.
"You're a better profiler
than I thought."
"Hey, I've read Patterson's best seller, too."
It was just a few blocks until the right turn onto Pendleton.
Hill eased the car to a stop in
front of the townhouse, close against a plowed-up snowbank. Dana
squeezed out, hefted
up her briefcase and several reams of Xeroxes and headed up the
unshoveled drive.
Grunting, Hill lifted the second pile of copies off the back seat
and followed--big feet
trying to fit inside Scully's Cinderella-sized footprints,
obliterating them instead. She
shrugged her coat off in the vestibule as a tinny voice echoed
from the kitchen.
"Dana, it's Mom. I picked up Queequeg but I couldn't find
his leash so I went ahead and
bought a new one--the kind that stretches out and retracts. I
think he likes it. Anyway, call
me, honey, when you find Fox. I--I can come sit with him, like I
did last time. Well...bye-
bye, sweetheart."
Tina heard the click of the rewind then Scully's footsteps
moving into the dining room.
Walked quietly into the kitchen to catch a glimpse of Dana
looking down at the oriental
carpet. "Tell me when it's time to go, Jeff. But right now,
I need to be by myself."
"I'm just getting my Ben and Jerry's," Hill kept her voice soft. "You take your I-time."
"What's I-time?"
"You know, Myers-Briggs. Youıre an introvert. You recharge alone."
"Hmmmm."
Tina watched Dana wander off toward the back of the house with
her suitcase. Heard the
washer start while she made a cup of instant coffee. The dryer
cranked up as she pulled her
ice cream from the freezer. Well, Dana'd always been the only one
on the fitness course
with clean sweats.
Hill walked back to the living room to drop onto the
pinstriped couch. Shoveled in
Rainforest Crunch and surveyed the Pike's Peak of paper. Wondered
how to begin to make
sense of the documents--of any of this fucked up mess. Nothing
made sense. Not a
damned thing. She wasn't a lawyer. The Bureau paid lawyers and
legal investigators to
look through crap like this and translate it into the vulgate.
Okay. She scooped at the contents of the perspiring carton.
She'd start simple. She'd make
piles.
Half an hour later, Tina sat on the floor surrounded by
stacks. Rubbed her eyes and looked
at her watch and decided that Dana could hide for a few more
minutes. It was better than
sitting in the damned car watching Dana watch the clock. She
lifted another sheet of paper,
skimmed through its contents, and placed it on the proper pile.
Ophelia here. DT there. At
least after the sorting was done then the cop stuff could start.
Names, leads, interviews.
That was familiar; that had a comfortable, grinding forward
momentum.
Hill took another peep at her watch. Six-twenty-five. "Dana!" she called. "It's time to go!"
In just a moment, the redhead was standing under the arch
between the living room and
dining room, tugging on her coat. "Okay. Let's get moving.
I'm ready. Let's meet this
guy." She strode across the room, toward the vestibule and
front door. "C'mon, Jeff. Get
off your ass and let's go."
Get off her ass? Get off her ASS? Hill rose and slipped long
arms into her black coat.
"Hey, am I allowed to talk to you yet?"
"Yeah. But don't start on me." Her friend moved out into the December night.
Hill followed, passing her to thud down the steps into the
snow while Dana locked the
front door. "I wouldn't dream of starting on you."
"Sure," the redhead muttered. "Right."
"Mutt, I would not dream of starting a damned
thing." Hill's eyes skimmed along the row
of townhouses. The cheerful yuppie neighbors were home and
Christmas lights glowed--
little, twinkley points of goodwill toward men that coated the
front porch posts, edged the
rooflines--seemed like they belonged in someone else's universe,
not the Twilight Zone
that Dana inhabited.
Hill heard car keys jangle in Dana's hand as the small woman
kicked through the calf-deep
snow to where the Escort sat parked on Pendleton. "Tina, if
you start on me, I swear I'll--"
"Shoot me?" Hill tramped along to the car.
"Hey, I heard this rumor. Maybe you can tell
me the real poop. Andy says you shot Mulder. Is that true?"
Dana glared over the roof of the car. "You better believe I shot him, Tina. Now get in."
The auto-unlock tripped and Hill gripped the cold door latch.
Popped it. Squeezed herself
between the snow bank and the body of the car to slide inside.
The Escort jiggled as Dana
climbed in and slammed her door. "So? Why did you plug
him?" Hill prompted. "Mulder
living up to his rep and you just couldn't take it anymore?"
A long-suffering sigh from Dana and a growl from the engine as
it kicked over. "I shot
him, Tina, because he was being an asshole. Of course, he was
drugged with an exotic
dopamine at the time. You don't have that excuse."
"So, you gonna shoot me and shove me out of the car?"
Dana sighed and slid the driver's seat forward until it bumped
the end of its track. "I
probably won't shoot you unless you're going to fuck up and kill
someone you shouldn't.
That's why I shot Mulder. Can we talk about something else
now?"
"With a teaser like that? Are you out of your mind?"
Tina clipped her safetybelt and
snuggled in her heavy coat against the cold seatback as Dana
eased the car away from the
curb, took the Escort down the slushy street. "Why was
Mulder going to shoot this perp?"
"He wasn't exactly a perp. He'd been Mulder's temporary
partner and he killed Mulder's
father."
"You're kidding? I heard Mulder's dad died in some botched robbery or something."
"Jeff, if I tell you will you shut up and let it
drop?" Dana rolled the car to a red-light stop
and turned toward her.
A quick Cheshire Cat grin in Dana's direction. "Sure. Just making conversation, Bunny."
Eyes slid shut. Reopened. "Okay," Dana sighed again.
"Short form. The forces of evil
drugged up the water in Mulder's building so he'd act crazy and
discredit himself."
Hill snorted. Saw her friend's mouth go tight. "It's
true. He decked Skinner and was
suspended and was really feeling paranoidah!--say it and
you're out on the pavement."
"With or without the bullet?" Tina sniggered.
"Don't push your luck," Dana warned.
"So--anyway--Krycek shows up to do who knows
what--"
"Krycek? That's the former partner?"
"Alex Krycek. Right. Krycek shows up and Mulder knows he
killed his dad and he goes
berserk. I thought he was going to vent the little weasel."
"Well, I'm siding with Mulder on this one. I'd have
plugged him good if he'd killed my
dad."
"Yeah, yeah, Mankiller. And cut out his beating heart and
eaten it, too, right? But Mulder
would have gone down for his father's death and Krycek's if he'd
done that. So I shot him
in the shoulder to make him drop his weapon. I just didn't have a
choice. Come on,
damnit!" Dana laid on the horn at the traffic light, still
stubbornly red.
"It can't hear you, bunny.... So, what happened then?"
Her friend huffed through her nose. "Well, I drag him to
New Mexico and he gets himself
dry-roasted in the desert; we all think he's dead; Frohike shows
up at my place drunk, then
makes the moves--"
"Holy hell! Did you shoot him, too?"
"No. I did not." Pupils glimmered at the sides of
Dana's eyes. "You want to hear more?"
Hill affected a clownish frown. Nodded. "Okay, so shut
up....Next Mulder pops up alive
in the middle of a Ruby Ridge between Skinner and me. Before we
blow each otherıs
heads off, we figure out that we're all friends. Somehow we find
the goods to clear
Mulder's name, then we're back in business. The end." The
light finally turned green and
Hill felt her weight press back as Dana floored the Escort.
"You're really not shitting me, are you?"
"No. I'm not."
"Umwho are the 'forces of evil'?"
"If I even knew, Tina, I wouldn't tell you."
"Whatever," Hill whispered, rolling her head away to
gaze out the window at holiday bulbs
and snowmen glowing in the night. They were leaving Alexandria's
outskirts, and there
was a short pass through the dregs of a swamp that had once been
as large as the city. Sped
by National Airport against the flow of rush hour traffic.
"This is all too crazy," Tina
finally spoke. "I don't know how you expect me to believe
it."
"Right now I really don't care."
"Yes, you do. You want me to believe. And I can't believe
you even want me to believe it!
Okay, Mulder's a nut case. Everyone agrees on that. But Dana
Scully isn't--at least not the
Dana I knew."
The tall office and apartment buildings of Rosslyn loomed
again on their left as the road
curved, hugging the form of the river. "Look," her
companion sighed, "I know it sounds
like a James Bond movie--"
"No." Hill shook her head. "It's more
ridiculous than that. I keep thinking I should
experiment--like ask about the JFK assassination to measure how
whacked out you've
become."
She watched Dana scowl. "Lee Harvey Oswald shot Kennedy. Screw you."
"Very funny. But do you really believe that?"
"You know," Dana said softly, "I don't think I
want to tell you what I believe. I think I just
want you shut up and back me. That's what I need: back-up, not
mouth."
"Fine," Hill crossed her arms. "I always knew you loved me for my body, not my brains."
It wasn't far now. Man-made lights vanished as the car sped
down the GW parkway,
highbeams reflecting the white of snow and the tangle of denuded
tree limbs. Salt-melted
slush puddled along the sides of the road and lay in pools in the
parking lot of the scenic
overlook. The thick lakes parted in waves for the tires of the
Escort as Dana pulled the car
in. There were no other cars in the small lot, no overhead glow.
Just satiny, natural
darkness. "Shit. Do we have to sit here and play this
waiting game again?" Dana
wondered.
"C'mon. Get your flashlight." Hill popped the
passengerside door and the dome bulb
suddenly illuminated the redhead. Tina watched her squint, pulled
the cool metal tube of
her flashlight from her pocket. "He said he wanted to star
gaze. Maybe he's down the
footpath a little."
Dana dug around under her seat as Hill stood up, slammed her
door, switched on the sharp
shaft of bluish light, and aimed it at the curtain of skeletal
trees. Dana's beam cut on and
danced with her own. The impact of their soles against asphalt
ended abruptly at the curb,
turned to soft crunching as they made their way through snow.
Hill broke through the treeline with Dana at her side. The
sweep of the Potomac beneath the
shore of the District stunned her. Tina had never stopped here
before. Never known just
how far down the river really was--it must be eight hundred feet
to the ebony water. Lights
from houses on the opposite bank twinkled on liquid black. Lights
from above, too. Hill's
eyes drifted heavenward as she heard Dana mumble, "My God,
it's full of stars."
Tina chuckled, looked away, pointing her light along the path
by the edge of the drop-off.
The metal safety rail glinted as the beam struck it. "I
didn't know you were a sci-fi fan,
Mutt."
"I wasn't--I'm still not really a big fan, but with Mulder it's been learn or die."
"That which does not kill us makes us stronger?" The
soft, unexpected voice so close to
Hill made her jump, reach into her open coat for the gun in her
shoulder holster. Dana had
jumped, too, lost her footing, and the beam of her flashlight
skittered as she landed in the
snow. Hill clicked off the safety and aimed dead-drop at the
shadow, the gun held one-
handed as she turned the ray of light on the unknown entity.
Auburn hair sparked. "What's the problem?" The man
put his hand up to shield his eyes.
Puffs of vapor as he spoke. "Haven't you seen 'Conan the
Barbarian'?"
"Sure," her voice quavered a little. "Just
don't quote the bit about the lamentations of the
women and we'll get along just fine....Mr. Right, I
presume?"
"I'll be the Late Mr. Right if you pull that trigger.
Just ease off." The man's wide mouth
turned up a bit. He leaned forward slowly, the color and detail
of him lost as he moved out
of the light to extend a hand to Dana. "I'm sorry. I didn't
mean to scare you."
Hill smirked as Dana struggled to her feet on her own,
ignoring the outstretched palm, and
shook off her coat. "Who are you?" she demanded.
He squinted as Hill re-angled the light to shine in his face.
His hair was fire-brown, his
padded coat a brilliant peacock blue, but his face was cool and
wan. There were dark
circles under his eyes. A pinch around his cheeks. "Well, I
suppose I could tell you. I
suppose it doesn't make any difference if I do."
"Doesn't make a difference to whom?" Dana asked.
He shielded his eyes again. "To me, mostly. I mean, if
they find out, then they find
out....Excuse me, Agent Hill, but can you get that light off my
face?" Tina lowered the
beam to focus on his chest, marking his heavy jacket with a
bulls-eye of white.
"Okay." Hill nodded. "So...?"
"I'm Carl Handford. I'm the assistant special agent in
charge of the Forensic Accounting
Unit."
Hill felt her eyes widen. "Now why would we stumble across an ASAC out here at--"
"Hush, Tina." Scully suddenly stepped in closer,
cutting across the beam of Hill's
Maglight, raising one hand to silence her while the other leveled
her own flashlight on
Handford. "We don't have time for games. Sir, if you are who
you say you are, you know
we don't have time. What have you got for us?"
Hill watched Handford slip his hands into his pockets. His
head dipped, sliding bangs
down his forehead. "Don't call me 'sir'. I'm not carrying my
badge."
"Then why are you here?"
"I'm here because Fox Mulder and I are kindred spirits."
Hill saw Dana draw up, stiffen.
"How so?" Tina inquired quickly, stepping up to
nudge her friend to the right, to form the
third side of a triangle with Handford at its zenith--his back
against the precipice and the
starry sky.
"Agents, turn off the flashlights, please. That way we won't be such clear targets."
Her scalp prickled, hair lifted. Hill turned, aiming her
weapon and light in a sweep of the
night void around her. The beam bounced from tree trunk to
scrubby evergreen. Nothing.
"A target for who? What are you pulling here?"
Handford's voice was calm in the dark behind her. "I'm
not setting you up. I don't think I
was followed, but I'm not sure you weren't."
"Why should we be followed?" she questioned, eyes
still straining, looking for movement,
for the reflection of eyes.
"Because they know you're trying to get Fox Mulder
back," he said softly, "but they don't
know I'm talking to you--unless they followed Dr. Preftakes the
other night."
"Preftakes? He sent you?" Dana asked.
Hill pried her eyes and the light away from nothing and put
them back on Carl Handford.
The adrenaline was quick in her veins--adrenaline and sugar. Her
crystallized breath hung
in air. "Come on. You brought us out here to talk, so do
it."
"He asked me to talk to you, yes. But the decision was
mine," Handford brushed back his
bangs and looked up at the tiptops of the trees. "Now turn
off the goddamned flashlights."
Dana hit the off button. Tina sighed and took her cue. The
darkness settled in, wrapping
around them in a deep swathe. Hill heard her friend's voice
waiver just perceptibly. "All
right, ASAC Handford. Go on." Tina couldn't see his face
now, but the man's silhouette
shifted back and forth in front of the field of stars. "This
is not the time to get cold feet,
sir," Dana warned.
"I know, I know." An outrush of breath, then,
"Your partner is in a real mess right now
and I don't know if you're too late to help him or not. He's been
gone for four days, right?
It's got to be over by now--"
Hill felt her stomach drop. Dana moved uneasily beside her,
interrupting, "What do you
mean? Mulder's dead?"
"No, he's probably alive."
She gulped at the frigid air as she heard Dana prod, terse, "Go on!"
Handford sighed again. "He's already broken. Hell, he was
probably already broken when
Preftakes came to me. They've got to be teaching him the rules
now--"
"What rules?"
"Well, rules like how to please, how to keep from having
the shit kicked out of him
anymore."
Pleading--nearly--Dana prodded, "Give me details, sir.
You're here to talk to us. Don't
yank us around."
"I can only tell you what happened to me, Agent Scully," Handford replied.
"All right--do it."
"Okay. Okay." He lifted his hands, palms open.
"I'm a paperhound and I followed a trail. I
found things that...well...." Hill heard him swallow.
"Things that shouldn't exist. Mulder
must have found something a lot like I did. Have you two ever
heard of 'purity control'?"
"No," Hill snapped as Dana gasped, "Yes!"
Handford laughed quietly. "I'm glad one of you is still in the dark."
Tina bumped against Dana's small form, leaned in to ask in her
friend's ear, "What the hell
is he talking about? What haven't you been telling me now?"
Dana shook her head. Soft ends of hair brushed Tina's cheek.
"Not now." Louder: "Go
on, ASAC Handford."
"Dana--"
"Leave it!" Dana barked. "We'll discuss it later. Now go on, sir!"
Handford's shape shuffled in the dim. "Like I said, Agent
Scully, I went too far. I thought
I was doing what was right. Whatever that really means....I
forwarded some of what I was
finding to someone I knew in the White House. Then I got a
package at the office--" Small
thuds as the toe of his boot churned up snow. "It was a
packet of photos of my kid on the
school playground and my wife coming out of the Safeway. Shots
taken with a long-range
lens. No message, just their faces circled."
The man paused and Hill heard him take a deep, slow breath.
"A few days after that I got
an e-mail. An animation file showing pictures of my house going
up in flames and of my
wife with a bullet exploding her head. Pretty clever stuff,
really. She was morphed in this
really wild way with Kennedy in the Zapruder film."
"I just love synchroncity," Hill muttered.
Handford paused. She thought for sure he'd raised an eyebrow.
Then Handford went on,
calmly. "Things started escalating. I think next I got a
call at work telling me it might be
prudent to arrange for some personal time off. Then Narin--my
wife--a day or so later she
called me from the emergency room. My son had been clipped by a
car when he was riding
his bike. Broke his leg. And then," another pause to breathe
deep again. "I guess you can
imagine I was getting kind of spooked?"
"I'm sure, sir. Go on." Dana's voice was as millpond flat.
"So I got another call. This guy told me that I had made
some serious errors and that I
required correction--that I should send an e-mail to
such-and-such account so the
arrangements could be made--"
"Correction?" Hill interjected. "What does that mean?"
"I'll get to it, Agent Hill. Just hang on."
Beside her, Dana shifted. "What happened? Did you send the e-mail?"
"No. I told the guy to take a flying fuck, then hung up.
Wouldn't you? The next day, the
guy me called back. This time he told me that I must accept
correction or my wife and child
would be removed. I asked him what the hell that meant and he
said they'd be unharmed if
I cooperated--that if I didn't accept correction my family would
be taken as hostages for my
good behavior. I--I lost it. I threatened to call in the cops,
the feds, whoever. That evening,
my little boy Joshua--he was eight then--he was playing in our
yard with our dog, hugging
the dog--and someone shot it--shot the dog right in his arms and
killed it. Josh was covered
in blood. I thought--at first, I thought--I mean, maybe they
weren't trying for the dog...."
Hill's mouth felt dry. The ASAC's shadow shoulders hunched.
Silent pause. "So, when
the fucker called me back again, giving in to correction seemed
like the best thing to do. I
loved my family. I couldn't let them be hurt. They were
everything to me. So I met them
and they took me away."
"Where?" Dana demanded. "To where?"
"I didn't know, Agent Scully. To a house. To a house with a dungeon in its cellar."
"You mean, like in 'Dungeons and Dragons'?" Hill
blurted, feeling cold, feeling sick
because the question had been flung at her own horror, to shield.
"No, no, Agent Hill." Handford chuckled again. "Think Torquemada instead."
"They tortured you?" Dana's stepped up toward
Handford. "That's what correction is--
torture?"
"In part, yes. They messed me up pretty bad. Beat me,
raped me quite a few times. Tried
out some other interesting shit. They were creative guys--I'll
give 'em that. I'd never felt
anything like I felt in that room. It knocked all my pins out,
you know?" Hill felt her mouth
drop open, felt her color leach away. "And the whole time
they were torturing me and
screwing me, and in between, they were....How can I possibly make
you understand?"
"Try," Dana whispered.
He drew in a deep breath and exhaled gently. Hill saw him lift
his face to the sky. "I was
changed. My mind...me. I was--I don't know the right
word--altered. Modified into what
they wanted me to be." A tiny hint of disgust. "They
made me what their employers
wanted."
"What did they want?"
"A slave," he answered Dana, quiet. "Someone
who works close to sensitive information
and knows better than to tell a presidential aide who turned up
dead in a park just a few
miles from here. You know who I mean. I don't need to say the
name, do I?"
Beside her, Dana swayed. "N-no."
Tina reached for her friend as her mind spun three-sixty.
"What? What body in the park?
What...? Oh holy shit." It clicked and Hill looked back to
Handford. "You're saying
YOU'RE the reason President Bubba's buddy ate his gun? You told
him about Purity
Control? What the fuck is--what the fuck...?"
Handford and Dana said nothing. "Is that what they're
doing to my partner, sir?" Dana
shrugged off Hill's arm. "They're torturing him and changing
him?"
Handford's head bobbed up and down. "Odds are he's going
through the same thing I
did."
"Where is he? I've got to get him out of there. Please tell me where he is."
"I don't know for sure, Agent Scully. I know where the
place is in vague terms, but I don't
know the exact house and I don't know if it's the right
house."
"You don't know where they took you?" Hill
challenged. "You mean these bastards fucked
you silly and beat you shitless and you never tried to hunt them
down? What did they do,
cut your balls off?"
"Tina!" Dana snapped.
But Handford was laughing again--gentle, bemused. "Agent
Hill, 'never give in' is a crock
of shit when you're hopelessly out-numbered."
"Listen, if it was me--"
"If it was you, you'd snap just like I did. It wasn't a
choice. It isn't a choice. It just
happens and you can't stop it."
"I--"
"Be quiet, Tina." Dana's voice cut through misplaced
outrage and left Hill huffing. "Sir,
what do you mean, 'it may not be the right house'?"
The ASAC sighed. "He may be with other breakers. He might
not be with the same men
who had me."
"Does this go on so often that these breakers have their own Union?"
"I don't know just how often it happens, Agent Scully.
But I do know there is more than
one place where people like me are taken."
"So just tell us where they took you," Hill told him, jaw tight. "We'll find the fuckers."
"But what then?" Handford seemed to smile. "You
may get Agent Mulder back for a few
days, but I guarantee he'll be a car wreck statistic in a week.
You might be, too--both of
you. The people behind this don't take interference lightly. But
then, you lost your sister
recently, so you already know that. Right, Agent Scully?"
A dark pause, then Dana sounded tired. "I'm willing to
take the risk. Just tell me where
you think they held you."
"Near White's Ferry." Hill's ire rose when Handford
shook his head. "But I can't tell you
more than that. I mean, I won't. I won't let you go there unless
you're prepared to win.
Otherwise, I'm going to be responsible for more deaths. And
you're not going to win with
a sig sauer and a boot heel through the front door."
"How about the boot heels of a swat team?" Hill was angry, indignant.
"No. You don't get it, do you?" Handford's voice
inflected, yet stayed far from
emotionality. "You need to be smarter than that. That kind
of shit will only get you killed.
The people who have Agent Mulder don't play by any rules but
their own. You want to
live? You want your families and friends to live? You want to get
that man out--then trade
him out. It's the only way. Get a nuclear card and trade him out.
Otherwise, just hang tight
and they'll give him back when he's learned his lessons."
"I can't leave him there--I can't just let him suffer!" Dana protested.
"Agent Scully," the voice was very, very kind.
"They've probably already stopped hurting
him. As soon as he breaks, they'll stop."
"How long did it take until they stopped hurting you?"
Hill saw Handford's shadow shrug. "About three days. I'm
told I was one of the tough
nuts to crack. Pardon the pun."
"So now they're messing with his mind?" Hill asked.
"Only if Mulder has broken," Dana replied.
"Look, I know it's cold comfort," Handford assuaged,
"but I'm sure he has. Once you
stop fighting, they stop hurting you."
"And if you don't stop?" The direction of Dana's
voice had altered. Hill saw she was
looking up again at the deep of the universe. "What if your
whole life has been one big
fight? What if that's all you know how to do? What if you can't
stop? Please, sir, please
tell me more specifically where you think they took him."
Another headshake from Handford. "You get yourself a
bargaining chip and it won't be
hard to find out. You won't need me to tell you. If I had the
nuke, I'd give it to you, Agent
Scully. I really would. But I don't....Now, if you ladies will
excuse me, its a long way
home. I'd appreciate a head start. Goodnight." Handford
pushed past them and
disappeared into the darkness, the crunch of his footsteps loud,
then fading, as he moved
through the trees dividing the overlook from the parking lot.
"Well, what the fuck to we do now, Bunny-Bunny?"
Hill mumbled, holstering her gun
then slipping her arm around Dana's small, stiff shoulders.
"We start looking for that nuclear card," she
sighed.
9:02 P.M., Pendelton Street, Alexandria
The key's click hung in quiet cold air. Tina could almost hear
the electric buzz of the
neighbor's Christmas lights. "Dana...." she said, then
her voice trailed off leaving a puff of
frozen air.
"Don't." Dana pushed the door open, moved into the
yellowish vestibule light. "I'm too
tired."
Hill snorted, then dropped her eyes when Dana turned to glare.
Kicked a lump of soggy
snow off the hardwood onto the doormat.
"C'mon." Dana turned back, headed into the living room. "We've got a lot to do tonight."
"Turn the lights on, will you?" Hill dropped down on
the settle to yank off her boots and
toss them away from her, making twin thumps. She heard Dana's
receding steps and the
snap of the light switch that brought up a soft glow under ivory
shades.
Hill wandered into the livingroom on stockinged feet. Stepped
on slush left by Dana's
progress to the kitchen and cursed quietly as the cold wet spread
along the arch of her foot.
"I'm going to make coffee," her friend was saying.
"You want anything else? Or did you
get enough junk food to keep you running?"
She shrugged her coat off onto the couch. Didn't have to raise
her voice in a house where
they could hear the clock on the upstairs landing. "Hey,
Bunny?"
Dana looked back, eyes blue and fathomless over the shadows of exhaustion. "What?"
Tina had to say it. Jesus, sometimes a battle was the only
way. Sometimes, when death
was inevitable--but was it so here?
Probably.
'Truth is light, Nothing good can grow in night.' her mother's
goofy doggerel rhyme came
back. "Look, you can't keep me in the dark, Dana," Hill
spoke on a lift of resolution. "You
need to tell me the truth about what Handford found--and about
some other things, too."
She watched a little more color go from an already pale face.
Dana hesitated, then asked,
"Like what?"
"Like where you were for those three months when no one
saw you. It had something to
do with all this shit, right?"
The topaz eyes stared, blinked. "I'm making coffee, Tina.
We've got a lot of work to do."
Then she turned and walked away. Hill frowned and bit her lip.
Made a mental image of
Monty Python's big cartoon foot smooshing Dana. Made the rasberry
sound aloud.
She unclipped her holster and set the heavy gun down on the
coffee table, then rubbed at
the familiar sore spot where its weight pressed her skin.
Stretched, sucking in her gut and
her temper in at the same time. The howl of the coffee grinder
drew her into the kitchen to
breathe the earthy richness of coffee, to watch Dana carefully
measuring it and pouring cold
spring water from the jug in her refrigerator. The ritual was
comforting: each point made
sense, each motion was defined, each item right where it should
be. Finally she had to
break the peace, to reach out her hand, and turn her friend
around. "Talk to me, Dana. You
didn't say a word in the car. What are you thinking, Bunny? What
are you thinking?"
She saw Dana swallow, lock her arms over her belly.
"What? What do you want me to
say?"
"Tell me what you heard out there, for a start."
"What did I hear?" Dana's final word squeaked up. "You heard it too."
Hill nodded, trying for a monotone, trying to keep the volume
low. "I heard it. I heard
what Handford said. But what he said and what you heard and what
I heard may not be the
same thing."
Dana's jaw worked. Eyes glittered. "I heard him tell me
my partner is being tortured. I
heard him tell me Mulder's running out of time."
"Anything else?"
"WHAT?" The shout was loud--made Tina squeeze her
friend's shoulder reflexively.
"What do YOU think he said? What are you fishing for here,
Tina? Looking for more
codependency stories? Want to know how often Mulder and I do it
in the road?"
Oh, for Pete's sake... "No," she answered simply. "I want to know about Purity Control."
The percolating water in the coffee pot bubbled and hissed as
Dana drew herself up another
half inch in height. "I'm not putting your life in
jeopardy."
"Goddamn it, Dana, according to Handford, my life is in
danger just meeting him--just
knowing Mulder and you!...Okay. Look," Hill snapped.
"If you won't spill the boo-
spooky secret of Purity Control, then I want to know where you
were for those three
months."
"You do? Why?" Dana pursed her lips. Hill didn't
answer, just watched Ol' Blue Light's
gaze slide to some focal point in the distance. "Tina, you
won't believe it. You don't
believe anything I say." Heard a finality there. Thought
about Stonewall crossing the river
to rest in the shade of the trees.
"Dana," Hill sighed the name. "I don't think
you're lying. I am just questioning your
interpretation of the facts."
Words hung on her friend's lips, half-formed.
"I--I..." Tears pooled up now. One dripped
down a white paper cheek, singed Hill's heart like hot lead as it
dropped. She'd never seen
Dana cry. God, but in the old days they'd spent all their time
laughing.
The little body was resolute in Hill's embrace. Shook stiffly.
The sobs were loud and
harsh. Hill burnished cinnamon hair, kissed the top of Dana's
head. "What is it? Tell me,
Mutt. What happened?"
"I-I can't remember. They took it." A little jagged
voice, inspiring a slow-spreading fear. "I
can't. Oh hell, Tina. They took all of it. They just keep taking
everything and you never get
it back. I'm so scared. I'm so scared...."
Ice ants ran over her skin as Tina pulled her friend around,
tugged and led her into the
living room. "Here. Sit down, Bunny. Here." Dana
sniffed and grabbed a pillow from the
end of the sofa, wrapping herself around it. Springs creaked as
Hill settled her own bulk
uneasily at the other end of the couch.
"There's no time for this." Dana shook her head.
"There's time. There's gonna have to be time." She
tried to sound firm. "What did they
take from you? Tell me." Dana drew her knees up, snugged
around the pillow in her arms.
"Go on," urged again.
"Oh, you know." Saw Dana's lips tremble, trying to
smile. "Just....things. Like...like my
memory and Mulder's sister and--" She sniffled again, rubbed
her nose on her sleeve.
Tissues on the end table. Tina wisked a few from the box and
stuffed the soft paper into
Dana's hand.
"And what?"
Creaky and raw. "They took my memory away, and they
killed Melissa. I mean, they tried
to take the X-files away and when they couldn't stop him, they
took me and his father and
Melissa and now they've taken him." She blew her nose
loudly.
"So 'they' keep taking things--people--?" Tina kept
her voice carefully neutral. Had to.
This was no act. Her friend believed it. Christ, she didn't want
to have to really listen,
didn't want to think that Dana lived with this creeping fright.
"Tell me a couple of things?"
Dana nodded. "What memory did they take?"
Dana's mouth pulled into a mockery of a smile. "If I knew
that, they wouldn't have taken it
would they? They...there was this man. Duane Barry. And--oh God.
There were so many
things, but he broke in and took me and--"
Jesus. "Took you?"
"Yeah." Dana hesitated. "Not--not like rape or
anything. He didn't assault me. He tied me
up and threw me in the trunk of his car and I thought I was going
to die. A state trooper did
die, but me....He took me up to Skyland Mountain. He said the
aliens kept taking him and
hurting him and...well. He was going to buy them off. Give them
me in his stead. I
remember this light, and then....God. Nothing. Nothing at all.
Not until I woke up in the
hospital and three months were gone and I've never remembered
except--except a little in
nightmares, maybe."
Dana rocked, pillow clutched tightly. Hill stared at her. "And did you ever try?"
"Yesyesyes!" More sobs. "What do you
think--that I LIKE having a three month hole in
my life when my mom put up a goddamned tombstone? Tina,
listen--Mulder's the only one
who believed I'd be back. He's the only one who ever really
just--just expected me to
come--to come back." She shook her head and moaned.
"I....You know, sometimes even I
don't believe all of it. I'll never believe like Mulder does. He
believes in everything, Tina. I
have to rein him in and make him see all this rationally."
"See what rationally?"
"Whatever this is....I know that didn't help.
Sorry." Dana grimaced. Then from out of the
blue: "Did you know that I'm going to die?"
Tina gaped at her. "What?"
"Yeah. When they took me, they did things to me. Put an
implant in my neck--maybe
there's more of them in other places....We still don't really
know what all they did. But we
know a batch of other women just like me are dying of cancer. I
don't know when I'll get
it. Hell, I can't remember why, but I'm going to die and, you
know--I really want a chance
to hit back. I don't want to die, I don't even know who I am or
what I believe and the only
one who believes is Mulder and they took him and they shot
Melissa and they--they--" her
words tumbled to a stop. Dana sniffed and slowly, slowly, leaned
forward to bury her face
in the pillow and weep.
"Dana. Bunny...."
"S'okay. S'okay, Tina. You won't believe me. I wouldn't
believe me....But they took so
much away. My sister's dead because of them, and Mulder's dad,
and so many, many
people. It's like, everywhere we go, Tina. And no one ever
realizes or puts it all together
because they can't believe people can still do these kinds of
things to each other. I mean,
Hitler was supposed to be the last one, right?" The words
were just a hoarse whisper.
"Hitler...? What are you saying?" Tina reached to
stroke her hair, but Dana twitched away.
Hill's hand hung there, trembling. She settled it on the back of
the sofa. "Who are they,
Dana?"
"I dunno. Maybe our government or the military. Maybe
it's bigger than that. Like Carl
said, all those masks--but you thought he lied, too. All I know
is I saw bodies, Tina. A
whole pit full of bodies. A mass grave."
"Jesus," Hill swallowed. Leaned in closer.
"Look, I believe you saw that--and that those
people were dead, and your sister's dead, and I don't know who
killed her, or Mulder's
dad, or any of that other shit, but--but you really believe this
stuff is happening? You're
talking genocide Treblinka-style?"
"No." Dana blew her nose again. Still sounded stuffy. "I'm talking mass experimentation."
"Huh? In America? Dana, it's like he's saying we've got
goddamn Stasi or some shit like
that. It's just--just--"
She watched Dana rub her face. "I can't convince you,
Tina. You just have to see what I've
seen. But please, please, Mulder's life--"
"I know, I know. But Dana--"
"You heard Carl Handford!"
"I heard." Tina leaned back. "I heard him. But--"
"Make up all the reasonable lies you want. That's what
they want, too. Just help me do
what we have to do, Tina. Work this case my way."
"I'm afraid he's going to die if we do that, Dana."
Hill caught Dana's eyes and tried to hold
them, to punch through this paranoia and kill the unresolve deep
in her own stomach.
"Please. Think. Yeah, I'm not wild about the guy, but I
really do want to find him for you.
I sure don't want him dead. But this conspiracy shit--"
"Sounds crazy to you. It sounds crazy because it's
supposed to," Dana insisted. "How else
do you think they do it?"
"But they--" The sudden pounding was thunder, startling both women up from their seats.
Dana stared wide-eyed at Hill as it happened again. "It's the back door."
"Jehovah's Witnesses?" Hill snatched her weapon off
the table. Heard the crisp slide of
metal over hard leather as Dana drew her own gun from its
holster. They stayed low
through the dining room, into the utility room where the air was
warm and sweetened by
fabric softener. The back door rattled and they crouched, weight
balanced on toes and
fingertips. White calico curtains blinded them to whoever wanted
in so badly. The knob
turned uselessly, then the door rattled again.
Hill nodded when Dana gestured, pointing with two fingers.
Heard indistinct whispers
with no gender or meaning as she moved to cover Dana. Held her
breath and snapped the
safety off her weapon. Dana crept to the door, reached up to
unlatch the chain lock. Did it
slowly so that the links didn't clatter. Hill hardly breathed as
she watched Dana set her
shoulder against the door and carefully twist the deadbolt's
latch. The door slammed into
the wall when Dana yanked it open, and they leveled their guns at
two startled faces.
"Oh. Hi." Dana clicked on her weapon's safety,
reholstered it, and turned. "Look, Tina.
It's not Jehovah's Witnesses; it's Santa's elves."
The dark dapper one, Hill learned, was Byers; the blond hippie
type with the butt-ugly
glasses was Langly. Frohike's compadres. Partners in paranoia.
Hill blew on the surface of her coffee, saw that Byers's hands
trembled, wrapped around
his own coffee cup. "Agent Scully, while I appreciate
well-placed suspicion as much as the
next man, you do have a singularly disconcerting means of
answering the door."
"I've already apologized for scaring you." Dana
slumped back into her corner of the sofa,
wadding the throw pillow she'd cried on up behind her. Byers and
Langly perched on the
edges of the comfortable chairs. Tina eyed them with open
curiosity. "So where's the
Hickey? Out waxing the sleigh?"
Byers adjusted his necktie, eyes fixed on the salt-glazed toes
of his wingtips. Langly
fidgeted, watching the windows. Dana rose and pulled the drapes
closed. "Thanks, Scully.
You set us to find some really ugly dudes and the last thing I
want is them knowing who I
am. If they don't already." Langly shuddered.
"You've got something?"
"Maybe." Byers glanced at Hill, then back to Dana.
"You can talk in front of Tina," the redhead
assured. "If I didn't trust her she wouldn't be
here."
Tina grinned excessively. "Well, sure is nice to hear
it." Pasted on an innocent moue when
Dana shifted to scowl at her.
"You two usually don't come out of your bolthole."
Dana turned back to the nervous men
sitting across from her. "Do you know who's got
Mulder?"
"Not who has him, but we think we know who paid for it."
Langly nodded, heavy glasses sliding down the bridge of his
nose. "Yeah, do the words
'your tax dollars at work' mean anything to you?"
"Do you people always play charades?" Hill had
leaned forward to glare at them. "I'm too
tired to play twenty questions. What did you find?"
Byers scoffed, "Agent Hill, we did not simply 'find' this information."
"Tina, just let them talk." Dana commanded her.
"Everybody's an aristocrat." She crossed her arms on
her chest. Frowned and sat back
against the overstuffed cushions.
Langly's mouth pursed. He shoved the thick, black frames back
up his nose. "Like Byers
said, we had to turn over a lot of rocks to find the bugs. We
started with Mulder's account.
Backtracked the CompuServe account he was talking to. It was only
created a month before
Mulder got in touch with it. We found a lot of accounts like that
for that credit card number.
They get started up and they run for a few months, then they're
shut down. When we
cracked a few, we found all this shit about appointments for subs
and doms. It isn't all
through Hellfire or anything, but the accounts are always run by
a dom and all the contacts
get the cryptic instructions for contacting their masters."
Langly and Byers traded a glance. "Agent Scully,"
Byers prodded gently. "If you know
more about this matter, it would help us in tracking
Mulder."
"Or from going missing ourselves." Langly made a
nervous twitch, looked at the shaded
windows.
Dana frowned, the offered, "We met someone tonight. Another one who went missing."
"Who said he went missing," corrected Hill.
She saw Dana make the effort to ignore her. "What more did you find?"
"The net accounts are always paid precisely on time.
Frohicke and Langly here managed to
crack the encryption code for the banks that issued the
card," Byers explained.
Langly smirked. "Credit companies have better security
than the Defense Department. Hell,
in America, it's more important to know what the population buys.
You wanna know how
much the Republican candidates pay for 900 numbers?"
"I WANT to know who's paying for my partner to be tortured."
"Ignorance is bliss." Langly shrugged. "Anyway,
we traced the card. It was registered to
an individual one month after his death and were only active for
a few months. It got paid
precisely on time by money orders purchased through the United
States Post Office. We
tracked the numbers of issuance--computer accounting programs are
way cool. The post
offices were located all over the country."
"Then somebody made a mistake," Byers cut in, brown
irises glittering. "They got lazy,"
he said. "One of the bills was paid by a check. We tracked
it to an account in an offshore
bank. That's when it got really bad."
"Oh, come on," Hill finally just couldn't keep
quiet. "Those banks use cutting-edge
security technology--firewalls and private-key encryption and
crap. You three stooges
aren't going to tell me that you cracked them?"
Byers smiled diffidently. "Maybe. Maybe not...."
Damn, he had pretty Bambi eyes.
"Actually, the ones we can't crack at all are the Zurich
banks. They use high-tech locks on
their doors and high-tech scramblers on their phones, but the
security mechanism that
keeps them untouchable is older than Egypt. They still use
written records."
"Byers, DID you crack the account?" Dana raised her
eyebrows, leaned forward with a hint
of threat.
"Erm...yes. If you look, you'll find that most security
systems are built around
randomizing programs, but there is no computer program that can
be truly random. And
chaos is not as unpredictable as it looks. If you know how to do
it, you can set a system to
gauge the frequency of repetition and to keep hammering away
until it arrives at a pattern
based on mathematical principles. Then it's just a matter of time
until you manage to match
patterns. We matched fifteen hours and thirty-seven minutes after
we started."
"Yeah. Whatever." Tina snorted. "If it's that
simple, why doesn't everyone do it and make
some free money?"
"Because, Agent Hill, not everyone has the equipment, or
the time. And as it regards
money, you can look but you can't touch. Take something and you
leave traces. We can't
take that risk. And, although it may seem outmoded to you, we're
honest."
"Okay, who owns the account?" Dana demanded.
"We do. The account is funded in U.S. tax dollars. It's a
business account administered for
a hypothetical American business."
"Hypothetical?"
"It's held like the Contra money was. A private company
wholly owned by the U.S.
government. We matched the expenditures up against the 1995
budget." Langly's mouth
pursed fishlike and satisfied as he nodded a 'so there.'
"They were moderately appreciable expenditures,
too," Byers added. "Agent Scully, the
account that paid for Mulder's...situation has been in existence
for decades. Prior to
computer accounts, payments were made for courier deliveries and
undifferentiated
expenditures. And for mortgages and automobile rentals. Before
computer records there are
payment records for homes. We reviewed them, and found all the
homes to be large and
gracious--"
"Stately Wayne Mannors," the hippie interjected.
"Yes. And none of them are currently held by the same
person who operated at the time we
were able to find records. As near as we can determine, when the
records were kept on
paper the expenditures were more carefully detailed and never
accessed under subpoena or
other discovery method. When the records went to computer and the
possibility increased
for computer snooping, the entries became more cryptic unless the
party receiving payment
was unavoidably identified, as with CompuServe and the credit
cards. Then, the
intermediate layers of the credit card companies were used to
shield the account. We
became privy to our information because the paper records are
being entered into computer
now to allow historical tracking."
"I don't care why--" Dana began.
Langly cut her off. "Yeah. But we looked back at those
houses we found the account
covering. There were big bucks spent to fix the basements of
those places before they
could be sold--those that weren't torched. We have transmittals
from some of the
contractors. They charged for removal of bolts from ceilings and
walls and for cleaning up
bloodstains."
Tina's eyes widened. "Were you able to track current
expenditures?" There was
desperation in Dana's voice now and Hill reached out to lay a
hand on her friend's knee.
The clock on the landing was chiming ten. Hill thought about a
usual Friday night at home
with Tom, snuggling and watching 'Homicide: Life on the Street'.
Ignorance was bliss.
"The accounts, yes," Byers was saying. "We
found large cash sums withdrawn. But no
instructions or methods to identify them. They know they can be
tracked and they've found
new ways to mask themselves. We only found them because of that
one check paid out for
the credit card. Because of human error. So far, they haven't
made an error in paying their
ultimate contractors. Whoever has Mulder is receiving payment in
cash. Probably through a
dead drop."
"The numbers on the bills, did they keep...?"
"No, Agent Scully." He shook his head. "We
couldn't find any such records, and we
looked. Frohike's still looking. You said Mulder was being
tortured. My guess is that
security around whomever does the work is very tight, and payment
is especially
clandestine. The telephone pick-ups we found to date were all
forwarded and then the
messages obtained from a number we can't identify. They've
anticipated some very
sophisticated searchers. Whoever they are, they aren't preying on
unsophisticated victims.
They've used extremely effective methods to baffle
searchers."
"And this had been going on for years?" Dana's inflection hiked a little too much.
"Decades." Byers set his cup on the coffee table.
"I can only extrapolate from their security
and from Mulder. They've been stopping people like Mulder for
decades."
Langly shoved himself onto his feet and stood, hunched,
staring at the toes of his Keds.
"We'll keep looking, Scully. Mulder's a brother, and sooner
or later they'll slip and we'll
have 'em."
Dana stood, too. "I'm not sure Mulder even has 'sooner'.
And I know he doesn't have
'later.'" She gestured at the stacked papers. "I need
you to look at this stuff. Maybe
between us....We've got to keep looking." She swallowed,
digging her hands in her
pockets.
"All right." Byers surveyed the piles.
"I'll go through it tonight," Hill told him. "Then I'll drive it all over in the morning."
"Hey, Scully, we'll find him." Langly gave Dana a
grimace. "After all, how else am I
going to impress Tina enough to get a date?"
"In your dreams, Garth. You know the Hickey's the only
man for me."
"I'll tell him so....Hey--No," he grabbed Dana's arm
as she headed for the front door. "I
wanna go out the back door, Scully. The front door just wouldn't
feel right."