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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"Some kind of bite? Or needle marks-- maybe an attempt to make it look like a bite."
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And so far, he has to admit she seems engaged. "The county coroner couldn't tell us. All we have to go on is the substance found in the surrounding tissue."
Click.
"Recognize that molecule?"
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"Some kind of synthesized protein?" she hazards, unsure. "I don't recognize it. What is it?"
At this point she could care less about whether Fox Mulder is kind of a jerk, or if he remembers her. This still isn't a Hardy Boys book, but these days she absolutely could help solve a murder, or catch a serial killer.
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Click. This one's a teenage boy.
"I haven't been able to identify it, and neither has anyone in Sturgis, South Dakota." Click. Another body, unidentifiable so close up. "Or in Shamrock, Texas. We have a nationwide mystery on our hands, Scully. Probably international, but I haven't been able to verify cases outside the country."
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"Do you have autopsy reports?" The pictures don't show much detail, especially not with the fuzziness of the projector. And though Fox clearly knows his stuff, she doesn't expect him to have answers for all the questions she might come up with, the nuts and bolts of mysterious deaths.
"What's your theory?" Of course he must have something in mind.
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She's on board - he thinks she is, anyway. Even if all of this is going to end up in the inboxes of a few well-placed suits upstairs, her questions sound genuine so far.
He's been walking around as he talks, in what space there is to pace, and now he comes back to her. "My theory is that we should take this case out of the category of unexplained phenomena and put it somewhere a little more concrete. We're investigators, Scully. Refusing to investigate, consigning this case to history's junk drawer, is a cowardly act."
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It's an awkward thing to say, she realizes. But she doesn't sound the least bit sarcastic-- she's fully on board with the notion. His reputation does speak for itself.
"Agent Mulder, what are you suggesting?"
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"Theories the Bureau would prefer we weren't pursuing. Tell me, Scully: Do you believe in extraterrestrial life?" One hand comes up, fingers wiggling - oooh, spooky.
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Which was probably an intentional move on his part. She blinks it off.
"Not in the way you're suggesting-- it's logically impossible, to imagine that beings would be able to cross the sort of distances necessary-- even that they'd want to."
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"Where's the logic in these deaths? Our Oregon female -" and he's turning back to grab the clicker, backing them up to the face of their most recent victim - "isn't the first person from her school to end up this way, Scully. She's the fourth.
"Science has failed her and her classmates. Reason has failed her. And if we can't rely on science and reason -" with a little flourish, like he thinks this is a teaching lecture rather than the start of a criminal investigation - "at some point, we must start to consider more...extreme possibilities."
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She frowns, glancing back at the screen.
"The fact that science hasn't yet uncovered an answer doesn't mean it's failed her. It means there's still work to be done."
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In the meanwhile, though, she's right about one thing - that last one. "That's why they put the "I" in F.B.I. Our plane departs for Oregon at eight AM tomorrow."
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She lifts her chin a little with a small, professional smile.
"I'll see you then," she says decisively, and without anything else, turns to head for the door.
But she pauses before stepping out, hesitant. She can't say it was nice to meet you because she already has, but this doesn't feel like the moment to get into their earlier brush with investigating the unexplained. So she settles on:
"I am looking forward to working with you."
Restatement, because he hasn't scared her off, and she doesn't want him to think it's only stubbornness (even if it's largely stubbornness) that will have her at the airport on time tomorrow, packed and only slightly bleary with sleeplessness.
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Even if he can't, he has the feeling the next few days are going to be interesting.
In the morning, he slings his overnight bag over a shoulder and heads out to Dulles, meeting up with his new partner at the gate.
"Morning, Scully." Mulder has the irritatingly chipper manner of someone who woke up at two in the morning and made his peace with exhaustion. (It's a long ride to the other side of the country. Maybe he'll sleep then.) He holds out a sizeable foam cup of coffee to her. There's another in his other hand, already half drunk. "Ready to look at some extremely pedestrian and definitely terrestrial phenomena?"
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"I have the case history to review on the plane," she answers evenly. Overstuffed file folders full of dead teenagers over airline breakfast-- who wouldn't be excited?
"Did you mention extraterrestrials in your 302, Agent Mulder?" She's half-joking but doesn't sound it.
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Having the little tray table will probably make a difference. In the meanwhile, since they've got another ten minutes or so before anyone's going to let them aboard, he takes a seat. His legs stretch out like he's hoping to be a tripping hazard. "Unless you want to play a solitary game of I Spy, I think we're going to have to talk to each other."
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"About your theory," she says, casually. Off the record, if there were one. "I still don't understand why that seems like the most logical explanation to you. There are so many things that haven't been explored yet-- things the local investigation might have missed; environmental hazards; someone with a grudge against the victim... Why jump to..."
Ahe tips her head a bit to the side, as if to say you know what. It still feels too crazy to accuse an FBI agent of wholeheartedly believing in aliens, even if he's already professed it.
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And this one seems liable to make or break their work together, so he does her the service of a real answer. "Have you heard of cattle mutilations?"
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That allegedly is for her, naturally. "These incidents of mutilation are frequently reported after sightings of UFOs in the area. Strange lights in the sky one night, animals cut into pieces in the morning. We aren't looking at mutilations here, but we are seeing a nationwide pattern of inexplicable marks on corpses after they've been abducted - potentially by extraterrestrials. The only way to know for sure is to investigate every possibility."
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"There's a big difference between mutilated cattle and murdered teenagers. Besides-- were there accounts of strange lights in Oregon?"
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"Part of me wonders if you're hazing me."
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