Dana Katherine Scully (
faithfulskeptic) wrote in
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 ![]() |
{ ACTION / NETWORK / VOICE / WHATEVER WELCOME }
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Every title here is fascinating, even the ones that sound kind of stupid or unlikely to live up to their promises. Develop Your Psychic Abilities And Get Them to Work for You in Your Daily Life. The Way of the Shaman: A Guide to Power and Healing. Out-of-the-Body Experiences - this one with an orange silhouette of a woman on the cover, just a hint of the outline of a breast included. He could imagine the image in Technicolor, but not with company. "Does anything look good to you?"
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She pulls out a paperback with the silhouette of pyramids on its cover. Something about past lives-- and then she realizes there's a naked woman gazing into the ancient distance, and quietly slides it back into place.
"Psychic abilities seem like a good place to start." She shoots a sidelong glance his way.
"Which school do you go to?"
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"How hard is it to develop those?" he asks, a little humor in the question. It doesn't seem likely; if psychic abilities exist, something he's willing to leave room for in his cosmology, they exist for other people. Not for members of the Mulder family. Interesting things happen to them, objectively speaking, but never good-interesting. Always life-changing-and-terrible-interesting.
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"I have no idea," she says, trying not to sound prim and stuck up about it. Quickly she adds, softening a little--
"I mean-- I haven't read much about it, we mostly come for the yoga classes." Missy would know what to tell him, probably. "But Carinda knows everything about this kind of thing."
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"Well, once she gets back, I'll be out of your hair." He ends up pulling out the book on developing psychic abilities, flipping directly to the index in search of useful keywords. "What's your name?"
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"I don't mind-- I just don't know how much I can really help," she admits. "I'm Dana."
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He might be faintly gentlemanly, but he's still inclined to tease.
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That can't really be his name, can it? Maybe one he picked. She's pretty sure Sunlight wasn't always Sunlight, after all. Which is fine-- if he wants to be Fox, that's his business.
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(Why does it matter if she knows he's telling the truth? Because the idea of falling into the same guy who calls himself Sunlight, on purpose, feels weird.)
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"You must get that all the time."
(Who calls their kid Fox, honestly?)
"Do you live here in Craiger...?"
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She comes here for yoga, often enough that it can be the 'mostly' reason for her presence. Craiger's a hike from civilization, as far as he's concerned; she has to be in the area.
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"We just moved here," she affirms. "From California. My dad's in the Navy so we move around a lot."
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"Welcome to the East Coast," he says lightly, having abandoned his book in favor of another one promising to teach the basics of psychic activity. "Do you like it here?"
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Other than yoga, and the ju jitsu class she's trying to convince her mother would be good exercise.
"This place is nice though, at least."
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He falls quiet for a moment, looking down at the book in his hands. Compared with waiting, talking to someone is capturing his attention far more easily. "Where in California?"
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"How did you end up here, though? We're a long way from Massachusetts, there must be some place closer that has books about psychics."
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(Why does it matter? It probably doesn't, really. She obviously doesn't recognize his name or face from the newspapers, and it's not like she has any connection to local child murderers; she won't pass his name off to the guy's brother to finish the job. But a momentary paranoia grips him, and he wonders just how bad an idea it was to come back to a place he nearly lost his life.)
He's quiet just a moment too long, and he knows it. A lie doesn't come to him half as quickly as the truth, so he doesn't bother with a cover story. "Last time I came here, I learned...way more than I expected. I thought they might be able to help me again."
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"I think that's what they try to do here," she says, with a little smile that's somehow sympathetic, though she has no idea why the moment feels like it merits that. If anyone in this world is actually psychic it probably is Carinda; she's not surprised that he'd want to come back, if he ended up talking to her somehow.
"Do you--" You can't just ask someone if they think they're psychic, Dana.
"Did you have some kind of.... strange experience?"
Do you dream about the Devil, Fox Mulder?
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"You could say that," he says, realizing in that moment that she really doesn't know. "You really don't know?"
Okay, it would be smarter to keep his mouth shut, but Fox Mulder would never. He only sees it a moment later and feels a vague sense of regret, from which he never actually learns. Nothing about that is likely to change this afternoon.
So instead of spending more than a moment regretting saying anything, he moves a step closer to her and drops his head towards her, voice quiet. "My friends and I used this place to track a serial killer."
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The way her eyebrows shoot up should make it obvious that she really, really doesn't.
"You're kidding," she says. If he's kidding, that's a terrible thing to joke about. But-- that can't possibly be true.
In Craiger? A killer here?
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It's not like they asked when they stole contact information for a suspected ritualistic killer.
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But she squares her shoulders and fixes him with a skeptical look.
"You're barely older than I am, why would you be tracking serial killers?"
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(Maybe he is. How would he know?)
"Because the cops didn't know what to look for." Obviously. This isn't getting him anywhere nearer to Samantha, but the store's staff are nowhere to be found. "Somebody had to pick up the slack."
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But more than anything-- somewhat shamefully-- she's terribly curious.
"I don't even know what to ask," she admits. "Or if I believe you at all."
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"I could tell you the whole story -" and he's tempted, if only to see how wide her eyes can get - "but not here. I don't want to risk getting banned from the premises if it gets back to Carinda."
And that, he assumes, is the end of it: she won't go someplace with him, not when he's basically a stranger. The thought disappoints him, for reasons he can't really place.
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BUT THEN, IN THE 90s . . . .
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