faithfulskeptic: (• just a little prick)
Dana Katherine Scully ([personal profile] faithfulskeptic) wrote in [community profile] what_wings_dare2022-09-09 06:57 pm
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🅧 Please explain to me the scientific nature of 'the whammy'




[ n a m e ; ] Dana Katherine Scully
[ c a n o n ; ] The X-Files
[ g a m e ; ] spicy times in [community profile] noctiumrp


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bigfootfetish: (141.)

[personal profile] bigfootfetish 2024-02-08 08:10 pm (UTC)(link)
"Only you," he says, all affection, tracing shapes idly on her hip, "would geek out on an LSD trip."

Mulder'd like the answer to be you're psychic, Scully, anyone can see that, but even he can admit that what she's describing sounds less like a vision and more like she was high off her ass and doing the scientist equivalent of staring at her hand. "What was the Devil like?"

He, after all, is the only real connection to psychic possibilities. She'll tell him that Satan was a hallucination, too, and none of it actually meant anything, but if any of it was ESP, some message from beyond Beyond Beyond, a devil could have been. Mulder's far more willing to allow for demons within his cosmology than anyone on the other side.
bigfootfetish: (130.)

[personal profile] bigfootfetish 2024-02-11 02:59 am (UTC)(link)
"Sunlight knew the monster he was." On some level, whether conscious or not. Maybe he'd wanted to frighten Scully with an image of evil lurking, but his control over what Scully saw couldn't have been such that he'd orchestrated the details of the vision.

And then she speaks again, and it's everything he never would have expected. Mulder looks at her, taking in that momentary distance in her gaze as it sharpens into the here and now. "What did you see, Scully?"
bigfootfetish: (129.)

[personal profile] bigfootfetish 2024-02-11 07:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Exactly the kind of experience she flatly refuses to entertain in cases until forced. She has been holding out on him, if not - he assumes - on purpose. This can't be something a person simply forgets, but maybe she'd found ways to excuse the experience. Weird trips, stress about the murders, all kinds of strange little pieces of her life coming together to make her hallucinate. It's a thin explanation to cling to, but it sounds reasonable on the face of it. Scully loves reasonable, and as a kid with no prior experience with the supernatural, she must have needed to find a way to explain to herself what had happened.

"What happened?" He's not convinced that seeing a flash of a dead girl would be enough to burn the experience into Scully's memory; anyone could imagine that by accident, thinking of a death when everyone else is thinking of it, too. Something more must lie beneath her explanation.