| Within 8X01 |
Top |
SCULLY: They're not going to find Mulder this way. You
know that and I know that.
SKINNER: I told you last night, I will find him. I'm going to do that.
Okay? Now, I want you just to cool out. I don't want you doing anything
to upset your pregnancy. |
DOGGETT: (handing Scully a file) Agent Mulder's medical
records-- recent stuff, over the last year. Did you know about a medical
condition? Either of you?
SKINNER: No.
DOGGETT: A year ago, Agent Mulder was hospitalized. Ring a bell? Something
to do with his
brain?
SCULLY: (reading the file) His temporal
lobe.
DOGGETT: An undiagnosable condition, it says. Irregular brain
activity.
|
| Without 8X02 |
Top |
SKINNER: "Don't look now, but we've got a pair of
eyeballs on us. Just start walking.
I'll be right behind you." |
GIBSON: "I fell when I was running away."
SCULLY: "I think you might have broken it, Gibson. I'm going to make
you a splint, Gibson. OK? I can
set your leg,
but I need a car to get you out of here." |
SCULLY: "Gibson, what are you doing out here? Why didn't
you answer me?
GIBSON: "He's here. I hear him."
SCULLY: "What are you talking about?"
GIBSON: "Mulder. Somewhere out there.."
SCULLY: "He's got a really bad fever.
I think his leg might be infected." |
| SCULLY: (To injured agent) "Agent, can you breathe?
(To Doggett) He thinks it was me. He thinks that I did this to him.
How is that possible?" |
| SKINNER: "I don't like pointing guns at pregnant
women, any more than I like them pointing guns at me." |
| KERSH: So much here is undetermined... as remain the
whereabouts of Mulder. But some of your facts... like "a man falls
from the cliff and disappears..." "An agent has his throat
crushed by an assailant who vanishes into thin air." This reads like
a piece of pot-boiled science fiction. |
DOGGETT: Well, I've got some things I thought you'd
want checked out. A.D. Skinner is in stable condition, resting comfortably
and awaiting diagnosis and further
study. Ditto Agent Landau, his throat.
Gibson Praise is right now a ward of the state but I asked for special
protections, as I assumed you would yourself.
|
| Patience 8X04
|
Top |
THELMA: "Land sakes, George! What are you tryin' to
do?"
GEORGE: "I was trying to be quiet."
THELMA: "Quiet? I smelled you on the stairs. Thirty-nine years, I'm
still surprised that embalming fluid
of yours doesn't wake the dead." |
SCULLY: "Homicides. Two. In Idaho. White male, 62, undertaker
by profession. He was killed on his front porch about 10 feet away
from his wife."
DOGGETT: "Oh my God."
SCULLY: "Cause of death was blood
loss from numerous deep wounds and
bites. Any thoughts? Any questons?"
DOGGETT: "Bites?"
SCULLY: "On his
head,
torso and hands.
Two of his fingers
were missing. Eaten off."
DOGGETT: "By what? An animal?"
SCULLY: "These were murders. The bites
on his wife appear to be human." |
DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "Bodies were discovered by neighbors.
So there was contamination
of the general crime scene. My boys did a real damn good job of separating
the various shoe prints, and pulling these. C'mon over. Right there,
see that?"
DOGGETT: "What is it?"
DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "It's not human.
I know that."
SCULLY: "It's not quite animal either."
DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "There's only four
toes."
SCULLY: "That's not an unheard of birth
defect. No more rare than polydactyly." |
DOGGETT: "If the victim's laid out here for any time
at all, in a setting like this, it would be pretty remarkable if they
didn't attract animals."
SCULLY: "Post-mortem predation
is definitely a consideration here. But I only see one print. If it
were an animal, there would be numerous prints all over here and in
the yard." |
| DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "You know, I've got two old folks
in the morgue, mauled beyond recognition.
I have no motive to go on, no intent. There's not one shred of evidence
that cries out for a human explanation.
Yet you stand there telling me flat out that what we're looking for
is a man. Thanks for everything, Agent Scully. We'll take it from
here." |
DOGGETT: "You know there is a more obvious explanation,
a more basic answer. That what we're dealing with here is simply a
man, a psychotic killer with
a deformed
foot." |
DOGGETT: "V for victory."
SCULLY: "What?"
DOGGETT: "You said the male victim was missing two
fingers... how'd the
fingers get up here?"
SCULLY: "Well, from that smell, I'd say they were regurgitated.
Recently." |
SCULLY: "Well, to be honest what I found here leans
more towards an animal explanation. The scratches on the body match
the four-toed
prints that we found. And, uh, the bites
have fang-like tears. What I thought were marks left by human
molars
are now inconclusive because of enzymes
that were found in the marks which are clearly inhuman. Anticoagulants,
which are found solely in the saliva of
bats." |
DOGGETT: "Montana, headline circa 1956. Story's the
same as what you told me."
SCULLY: "The creature was taken to the county coroner
who confirmed it was neither man nor animal."
DOGGETT: "Two days later, the county coroner
was disemboweled by something
with sharp teeth and four-toed
claws. Something that ate several body parts and regurgitated
them elsewhere." |
DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "Honest to God. You just jump at whatever
explanation's the wildest and most far-fetched, don't you?"
SCULLY: "Well, I suggest that you jump at it, too. Because her body
may have been burnt for a reason, and you're gonna want to exhume
it in order to figure out why." |
DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "I don't know how you do it. I called
the judge's order in a half hour ago. You guys are fast."
GRAVEDIGGER: "Yep, we're really fast when someone's done most of our
work."
DETECTIVE ABBOTT: "What are you talking about?"
GRAVEDIGGER: "We got out here,.... somebody'd already dug up the box.
All we had to do was haul it out. Now, I don't know what they were
using, but they scratched up the wood on the lid real good."
DETECTIVE ABBOTT:"Let's get this down to the morgue.
The sooner, the better." |
| SCULLY: "This is the body pulled from the river. She
died of natural causes: congestive
heart failure. But her body was only burned afterwards." |
ERNIE STEFANIAK: "How's a man supposed to live when
his fear's become obsession?"
|
| Roadrunners 8X05
|
Top |
DOGGETT: Utah? What are you doing there?
SCULLY: The, uh, local coroner
wants a consultation on a
murder victim. A man who was found beaten to death in the desert.
Apparantly, his corpse shows some
anomalous characteristics.
DOGGETT: Anomalous, how?
SCULLY: What they're telling me, he is a 22-year-old backpacker who
was last seen by his family about six months ago in perfect health.
However, his body is now showing advanced osteoporosis,
arthritis and kyphosis
of the
vertebrae. In other words, he's
got the
spine of an 90-year-old woman. |
SCULLY: Well, actually, there might be, if you don't
mind. Somewhere in our files there is a, uh, an unsolved murder case.
Unfortunately, I, uh, don't remember any of the particulars, like
where or when it took place, but I do remember that there were some
glycoproteins found at the
crime scene.
DOGGETT: Glycoproteins.
SCULLY: Yeah, mucus. |
SCULLY: Can I ask what happened to your
hand?
GAS STATION MAN: Aww...I was changing the blade on my bow saw. Kinda
gross.
SCULLY: Yeah. There was a murder out here last week, about 15, 20
miles off the state road. You, uh, you hear about it?
GAS STATION MAN: Yes, I did. Scary.
SCULLY: Yeah, you're gonna want to wash this out, put some iodine
on it. You don't want it to get infected.
|
SCULLY: Don't hold him down. How long has he been seizing?
FEMALE BUS DRIVER: Uh, three...four minutes? |
FEMALE BUS DRIVER: What's wrong with him?
SCULLY: He had a grand mal seizure.
As far as I can tell, he's in status.
It's a continuous seizure state.
He doesn't smell like acetone which
indicate that he's hyperglycemic
and he doesn't appear to have any head injuries. He could be epileptic
and just ceased taking his medication. |
FEMALE BUS DRIVER: Nothing's happening.
SCULLY: Well, I'm sorry, but I'm just winging it here. I mean, raising
his blood sugar only helps if
his condition is brought on by hypoglycemia,
but this could be the result of any number of things.
FEMALE BUS DRIVER: So what do we do?
SCULLY: Well, I'm afraid that I have done all that I can do. Unless
you know how to get a hold of diazepam
or
phenobarbital other than
the nearest hospital. Which is where we should be, of course. |
| SCULLY: A murder took place about 20 miles from here.
A man was stoned to death. His head was so badly crushed that they
couldn't identify him from his teeth. |
SCULLY: This wound
in your back -- it seems to be a point of entry for a parasitic
organism that has taken up residence
along your
spine. |
DOGGETT: Sheriff, does this wound
look familiar?
SHERIFF CIOLINO: It's the victim in our morgue.
Where'd you get it?
DOGGETT: That's not your murder victim. That's a photo of a John Doe
found off a west Texas highway in 1991.
SHERIFF CIOLINO: Our guy has the same wound.
DOGGETT: Yeah, I thought you were gonna say that. Arizona '93, New
Mexico '97, Nevada '99. All four victims had their
brains beaten out, and were dumped
in remote areas. All four cases are unsolved.
LEAD AGENT MAYFIELD: How'd you run these down?
DOGGETT: Well, Agent Scully had me track down this first one. It noted
glycoproteins at the crime
scene, which is what she found. The same wound
kept showing up. |
| SCULLY: No, no, I'm pregnant! |
SCULLY: Now it's gonna come to my
brain. Cut it out now!
|
| Invocation 8X06
|
Top |
| SCULLY: "This isn't just a horror story. This is a biological
impossibility." |
SCULLY: "You are ignoring the fact that he is still
seven years old."
DOGGETT: "Failure to thrive.
Isn't, isn't that the term? I mean, aren't there diseases that delay
puberty, and so on?" |
SCULLY: "He's the same boy who was taken ten years ago."
DOGGETT: "We knew that."
SCULLY: "I mean the same boy. He has no cavities,
he has no
tooth decay.
He still has four baby teeth that
he's never lost. He had a routine blood
test six weeks before he disappeared in 1990. His cell
counts, his enzymes, his hormone
levels -- they're all exactly the same as they were ten years ago." |
| SCULLY: "There are X-Files cases that describe similar
paranormal findings. Alien abductees who came back with anomalous
medical stats." |
LISA UNDERWOOD : "Joshy! Oh my God! Are you hurt?"
JOSH UNDERWOOD: "No."
LISA UNDERWOOD: "You're bleeding."
|
| SANCHEZ: "Just got word back from the lab. Ran the blood
twice and there's no doubt about it. It's the little boy's." |
SCULLY: OK. The clothes, the age and condition of the
bones, the location of the grave...
There is no doubt that that is Billy Underwood's skeleton
that is in that grave.
DOGGETT: "We spent time with this boy. Doctors took Billy's blood.
You examined him yourself. Now, I can't accept it. I can't believe
we're asking them to."
SCULLY: "I know, but the forensic
evidence is gonna come out, and what then? What if I'm right?"
|
| Redrum 8X03 |
Top |
LAWYER: Don't lower your
eyes. It makes you look guilty. |
| PROSECUTOR: Your Honor, with cold calculation Martin
Wells brutally stabbed his wife in
their own home. |
DOGGETT: Agent Scully, would you mind taking a closer
look at his injuries. Maybe check
his scalp?
WELLS: I know this all sounds crazy, but I'm telling you the truth.
This cut, for instance, it was on my cheek
when I woke up yesterday. I woke up this morning, it wasn't there.
This afternoon I got cut. |
WELLS: I know who did it now.
DOGGETT: You know who killed Vicky.
WELLS: Latino, maybe 40, 5'10", 185 lbs. He's got a tattoo
of a spider web on his left
hand. |
BEAT COP: Tell you what...we'll take a few sweeps of
the neighborhood. Keep our
eyes peeled. We're a phone call
away if you need us.
|
| Via Negativa 8X07
|
Top |
| SKINNER: One of our men doing routine surveillance on
a cult group-- the Ibogan Temple. We had a tip they were trafficking
narcotics. Nobody suspected anything
like this. |
DOGGETT: This couldn't have happened here.
SKINNER: Blood splatter on the seat
says it did. [Ed. To learn more about
blood splatter analysis, check out the Forensic
Science Center.] |
| SKINNER: These people were all killed the same way as
our guy. All 20 cult members dead from a single deep wound
to the forehead. |
DOGGETT: I don't care how devoted they were. These people
wouldn't just lie here and let their leader bash their
brains in. I got to figure at least
one of them would have had a problem with that.
SKINNER: It's something I've considered. I'm running tox
tests on all the bodies for drugs. |
| SKINNER: Anthony Tipet served 12 years
for the bludgeoning death of his
wife. After his release, he became a minister preaching a hybrid
of evangelical and eastern religions. He claimed a higher plane of
being could be reached by the Via Negativa -- the path of darkness
-- the plane closer to God. Once reached, it would let the spirit
travel unhindered. Tipet believed hallucinogens
would lead him to this plane -- specifically compounds of the bark
of an African tree... the Iboga. |
| SKINNER: We found no trace of the drug
in the blood of any of the victims. |
| DOGGETT: Tipet was paranoid,
but nothing indicates he was ready to take the lives of his own people
or our men. |
SKINNER: Agent Doggett. Coroner's
report.
DOGGETT: Victims all killed by a single blow from an axe blade, six
to eight inches long.
SKINNER: These photos of wound patterns
don't match up to any known make or manufacturer. |
DOGGETT: It's a ceremonial axe used over a thousand
years ago to cleave
the
skulls of unbelievers. |
DOGGETT: So we got something?
SKINNER: No. There's no concrete evidence against him. There's no
fingerprints, no hair
and fiber. [Ed.
More on the science of hair and fiber at the Forensic
Science Center.] |
| SKINNER: All right, just suppose... suppose that this
drug finally did what Tipet said it
would. That his spirit could be in one place while his body was in
another. |
SKINNER: You always up at this hour Dr. Bormanis?
ANDRE BORMANIS: It's when I dissect
my rats. Neighbors can't hear 'em screaming. |
SKINNER: You mean drugs.
You supplied Anthony Tipet with drugs,
isn't that right?
ANDRE BORMANIS: Hallucinogens
were Tipet's way into the depths of the soul, the heights of consciousness,
planes of being that our feeble
brain chemistry cannot begin to imagine. |
| SKINNER: Lab tests showed that the drug
that Bormanis was cooking up was some kind of a super amphetamine.
Legal or not, no one's ever seen it before. Do you think it was intended
for Tipet? |
DOGGETT: I see where you guys are going with this. Tipet
believes he opened his third
eye.
BYERS: Yes, exactly.
DOGGETT: But the placement of the wounds
on his victims could suggest he's trying to destroy theirs. |
LANGLY: They gave LSD
to a bunch of people to see what would happen. Didn't bother telling
them first.
FROHIKE: They understood the power of hallucinogens
to harness the mind.
DOGGETT: Tipet was the one on hallucinogens,
not his victims. |
BYERS: You believe that?
DOGGETT: No... but if Tipet does... he'll need more drugs...
to keep killing. |
| ER DOCTOR: I want a stat
trauma panel
with full tox, EKG,
and metabolic profile. Keep that
compress on his head. |
| DOGGETT: Yes, sir, um... "Via Negativa"--
the path of darkness. Tipet believed he reached it. Uh, he believed
that the drugs took him inside the
subconscious minds of anyone
he knew. |
| SKINNER: Anthony Tipet is in a coma,
never to regain consciousness. |
SCULLY: Anthony Tipet is dead. I got the call from Skinner
on my way over here. He never regained consciousness.
|
| Surekill 8X09
|
Top |
DOGGETT: Except I don't see any bullet holes in the
walls.
SCULLY: Well, the round seems to have entered through the top of his
head. |
SCULLY: Unless he could see. The light out
eyes can register is only one small
portion of the electromagnetic
spectrum. Other wavelengths
from infrared to gamma
have other properties. X-rays, for instance, can pass through solid
objects.
DOGGETT: Walls, for example. So, you're saying this guy used some
kind of x-ray machine. Wait, you're
not saying this guy has x-ray vision.
SCULLY: I'm remarking that these wavelengths
exist and the only thing that is stopping us from seeing them, if
you will, is the biochemical
structure of our
eyes. I'm conjecturing if this
structure were somehow different, we'd have the ability to see things
that we don't. |
SCULLY: And how does a dead real estate agent figure
into that?
DOGGETT: That I don't know... yet. But I did find out one more thing:
sulfuryl fluoride. |
| DWIGHT: I've got bad peepers. Legally blind
since birth. |
DOGGETT: We found some evidence at a crime scene. A
piece of fabric on which we found traces of a chemical,
sulfuryl fluoride.
SCULLY: It's an insecticide
used only by licensed exterminators. |
DWIGHT: Come here, baby. You know I can't see worth
a damn. I just want to have a look at your
eyes. The
eyes are the windows to the soul. |
| DOGGETT: How does a legally blind
guy steal a car? |
SCULLY: They share the same birthday. They're twins.
|
| Salvage 8X10 |
Top |
DOGGETT: I was able to reconstruct a section of the
windshield and lift a print from the glass.
SCULLY: Whose?
DOGGETT: Raymond Aloyssius Pearce. Husband of Nora Pearce. The woman
I spoke with at the accident site? Her recently deceased
husband.
SCULLY: Well, if he was recently deceased,
it must have been an old print.
DOGGETT: Well, what you would think. Except along with the print,
there was evidence of fresh blood,
and that belongs to Ray Pearce, too. |
DOGGETT: Going back through your husband's medical records
it says that he died after a long, debilitating
illness.
NORA PEARCE: Gulf War Syndrome. No
one will cop to that, but I aim to prove it -- put the blame where
it belongs. |
| DOGGETT: I'm having trouble proving something myself,
Mrs. Pearce. You signed a form to have your husband's body cremated,
but it appears it never happened. |
HARRY ODELL: Are you saying Ray faked his death?
DOGGETT: We found Ray's blood and
fingerprints on Curt's car.
NORA PEARCE: I watched him die. I nursed him when he was sick and
couldn't eat. What you're saying is impossible. He couldn't even walk,
or lift his
head, at the end. |
DOGGETT: Did you find anything to go along with the
holes in Curt Delario's
head? Paint on his
hands and
nails? |
| DOGGETT: Well, somebody took a blast. Blood
all over the doors, trailing down the stairs, here to there -- massive
blood loss. |
| LARINA JACKSON: Ray? Ray. You OK? Somebody saw you come
in with blood on you. |
| DR. PUVOGEL (German, no H. Want him to spell it for
you?): The idea is to one day build things that are indestructable.
Cars, equipment -- built of alloys with molecular
memory. |
| SCULLY: As it happens, Ray Pearce's illness is pretty
incredible, too. I've reviewed Ray's medical records from the VA.
What his wife was calling Gulf War Syndrome is nothing of the kind.
His entire cellular makeup was affected
by exposure to some non-identifiable contaminant.
A metal. |
| TV NEWSCASTER: ...Police are still searching for clues
in last night's bloody murder and
robbery at Muncie's Southside Salvage. Workmen found the body of 53-year-old
owner Harry Odell outside his office at approximately 7:30 this morning. |
DOGGETT: Sorry I'm late.
SCULLY: It's all right. I just got the blood
tests back on Ray Pearce and it was indeed the same Ray Pearce that
was pronounced dead three days ago. But that's not all. By all medical
standards he should still be dead. His blood
has enough metal alloy
in it to poison an elephant. |
DOGGETT: Well, that's why I was late. I asked myself
that same question. Ray was an outpatient
at the VA. He had a history of substance
abuse, did some time for a couple of DUI's.
SCULLY: This was 10 years ago.
DOGGETT: Cleaned up his act. He met Nora and married her in '91. Checked
himself into rehab and got straight.
This is a guy to root for, Agent Scully. |
DOGGETT: The Ray Pearce in this file is no murderer,
let alone a man who would hunt down his friends and crush their
skulls. |
SCULLY: Agent Doggett... Look at this. You see this?
DOGGETT: Is that blood?
SCULLY: Turning itself into metal. |
PUVOGEL: Then he got sick. He was working with an alloy
with a genetic algorithm
built into it. It converted electrical
energy into mechanical. Gave it
memory.
SCULLY: And it poisoned him.
PUVOGEL: We immediately shut down the project. It was too late. He
didn't have any family, his work was his life. He wanted to leave
us to continue working on the science.
DOGGETT: And leave you to ship this barrel and his body to Southside
Salvage where it infected somebody
else.
|
| Badlaa 8X12 |
Top |
DOGGETT: Hugh Potocki. Importer/exporter from Minneapolis
laid over in DC on his way home when all this blood
drains from his body.
SCULLY: Did the M.E. see
it? The body?
DOGGETT: Yeah. Tox test rules
out hemorrhagic fever,
eboli, anything exotic. Something
killed this guy, but it doesn't seem to be any foreign disease. |
SCULLY: Tissue damage.
Massive trauma to the lower
intestine and the
rectal wall.
DOGGETT: Is that from something going in or coming out?
SCULLY: Well, unfortunately, there's so much damage it's hard to tell.
SCULLY: I took MRIs which revealed
further shredding throughout the abdomen
and into the
stomach area. |
SCULLY: Are you suggesting he's a mule? A courier of
heroin or opiates?
Drug dealer?
DOGGETT: Fills a latex balloon with
heroin, swallows it. We've all seen
this kind of thing before. But what if someone got to him en route,
forcibly extracted the drugs, tearing it from the
stomach.
SCULLY: Well, I'd say that's a good theory Agent Doggett, not to mention
a graphic one. But there would have been traces of drugs left in his
system. Nor does it account for the blood
loss this man experienced. |
SCULLY: I ran a decay
analysis to determine the time of death. Liver
temperature, build up of gasses, extent of rigor
-- routine stuff. |
DOGGETT: I did get you a translation of Mr. Brecht's
autopsy results.
Internal trauma, tearing in the
abdomen -- you're the doctor, but
it sounds like the same MO, doesn't it Agent Scully? |
SCULLY: But it's the father that I have a problem with
here. I mean he had none of the massive hemorrhaging
that we found in Mr. Potocki. In the coroner's
initial report he makes it sound like the guy died of a cerebral
embolism. The one salient detail
in the external exam are the
eyes, in which only the blood vessels
are broken. |
| SCULLY: This is Special Agent Dana Scully. I'm a medical
doctor, about to perform an unauthorized procedure on a body. The
subject is a caucasian male, age, uh, I don't remember at this particular
time. His height is about 6 feet. His weight is quite possibly subject
to change. I suppose distension
could be due to decomposition
gasses, but that seems unlikely. |
| SCULLY: About six months ago, the plant inadvertantly
released a cloud of methyl isocyanate gas. |
SCULLY: A woman died of mysterious circumstances
not three blocks from a previous victim. External signs are a direct
match. That woman's eyes?
DOGGETT: I saw her
eyes.
|
| The Gift 8X11
|
Top |
DOGGETT: "What's that there? Is that
a dialysis machine?"
HANGEMUHL: "My wife sufferes from end-stage
renal failure. She's a very sick woman." |
DOGGETT: "This is the muzzle of Mulder's
pistol. You see that there?"
SKINNER: "It's blowback."
DOGGETT: "Macrospatter of dried blood
in a semi-circular pattern." |
DOGGETT: "Marie Hangemuhl suffered
from a
kidney disease." |
DOGGETT: "The doctor says Mrs. Hangemuhl's
kidneys have spontaneously healed."
|
DOGGETT: "Mulder was dying, but he
kept it a secret. He had an undiagnosed brain
disease."
|
| Medusa 8X13
|
Top |
| SCULLY: You've got a dead man who's got
over 1/3 of his body tissue completely
eaten away and until we figure out how and why, that tunnel cannot
be reopened. |
BIANCO: The train briefly lost power during
which time an assailant killed a Boston transit cop. That man is still
at large.
DOGGETT: An assailant using what?
BIANCO: Acid, lye...
the examination of the victim must have told you something.
SCULLY: No, it didn't. That's the thing. Until we culture
the tissue and run the proper tests,
we're not gonna know what killed him or if he can infect
others.
BIANCO: The Centers for Disease Control
had robotic sniffers in that tunnel all night. They found no evidence
of biological or chemical
agents. |
LYLE: Doctor Hellura Lyle, Special Pathogens,
CDC.
SCULLY: We were told that you folks said the tunnel was clear of pathogens.
LYLE: I guess I'm just here for moral support. |
SCULLY: You've got capable people with you,
Agent Doggett. What I need down there are eyes
and ears.
DOGGETT: Okay. I'll be your eyes
and ears. |
| SCULLY: The third rail's powering down.
You're clear to enter the subway floor. As long as you stay on this
line, there should be no chance of accidental shock or electrocution. |
MELNICK: My shirt, my neck...
get it off!!
KARRAS: What's going on?
MELNICK: Burning! Something's burning!
SCULLY: What just happened?
DOGGETT: I don't know. He's got a burn
on his neck. Silver-dollar sized. |
DOGGETT: Maybe it's not a man we're looking
for but some kind of toxic leak.
BIANCO: We were told there were no contaminants
down here. |
LYLE: Tell her I'm sending this. We're transmitting.
DOGGETT: You online, Agent Scully?
SCULLY: Yeah, I got it. Getting a reading. Sample analysis
is showing carbon, bromide,
boron and calcium.
LYLE: It's just seawater.
SCULLY: Let me get on the phone. Maybe I can get a molecular
analysis. |
| SCULLY: I see signs of tissue
degredation like in the other victims.
We may have a contagion here
after all. |
| DOGGETT: The CDC
may be wrong. |
SCULLY: You don't understand. They could
be infected and contagious.
KARRAS: With what? Seawater? You are being irrational here. The CDC
says there are no contaminants.
I gonna take their word on it.
SCULLY: Then who are those dead men, and how did they die?
KARRAS: Probably tunnel rats, squatters. Attacked by the same man
who killed my transit cop.
SCULLY: Then take a look at the man who fits the description of your
killer. Just look at his injuries.
He died the same way. |
DOGGETT: What do you want us to do?
SCULLY: I want you to leave those bodies where you found them and
go after whoever it is whose still in that tunnel. We need to know
if he's causing this, or if he's infected
himself. Either way he may kill more people. |
SCULLY: I don't know what to say. It's something
attacking the dermis.
DOGGETT: Attacking? It ate his arm off.
SCULLY: I hate to say this Agent Doggett, but it looks like it might
be some sort of chemical weapon. |
MELNICK: What the hell is this thing?
DOGGETT: It might be a terrorist using some kind of biochemical
agent. |
LYLE: This man ain't goin' nowhere.
DOGGETT: Then you take care of him. I'll have a HazMat
team come down here and prep him for quarantine. |
SCULLY: Dr. Lyle? Dr. Lyle, how are you
feeling?
LYLE: Me? Well, I seem to be OK, but Melnick... Melnick is getting
worse.
SCULLY: Well, we got vehicles on the way. The CDC
doctors have been informed of your conditions.
LYLE: So what are they gonna be treating
us for? How are they gonna treat
Melnick?
SCULLY: I'm working on that. |
SCULLY: Hey! What are you doing? Hey! Where
are you taking them? Those bodies go to the CDC.
Look, as a federal agent, I order you to stop and explain yourselves.
KARRAS: Agent Scully, we are on a deadline here that's fast approaching.
SCULLY: These bodies need immediate examination and diagnosis. |
KARRAS: I'll give you anything you want.
SCULLY: Good. Now let's get these bodies to the CDC
where they're supposed to go. |
BOWE: Yes, I'm Dr. Kai Bowe. I was sent
a scribbled note and a saltwater sample for analysis.
I'm a marine biologist from BU.
SCULLY: I'm sorry. Yes, Dr. Bowe, please. Did you get an analysis.
BOWE: Well, yes, I have something to show you. That's for sure. I'm
going to assume you're in a hurry. This is an image taken from a stereo
microscope called a Medusa. Your saltwater
sample was rather deceiving. It's components were exactly what you'd
expect, except for higher levels of calcium.
This creature is primarily that.
SCULLY: Calcium.
BOWE:Yes, it's what powers it's movement and gives it bioluminescence.
SCULLY: So you're saying this is a sea creature. Which is why the
CDC missed it.
BOWE: Well, it's hard to find. I daresay, I'm not even sure it's of
the sea. But wherever it's from, it's quite incredible.
SCULLY: It's killing people.
BOWE: How?
SCULLY: I don't know. There is seawater in that subway tunnel. And
it's eating people's flesh off. It's
producing some kind of a reaction that looks almost electrical.
|
DOGGETT: I don't see Lt. Bianco. He's infected
with something. I saw it glowing on his skin.
SCULLY: And what's your condition, Agent Doggett?
DOGGETT: I'm going to assume it's not good.
SCULLY: I'm gonna send a quarantine
unit down to get you, Agent Doggett. I want you to stay right where
you are. |
| SCULLY: Dr. Bowe, I need you to get on the
phone with the CDC. Tell them everything
we know. We have to learn as quickly as possible what sets this thing
off. |
| SCULLY: You listen to me. Your lietenant
is infected and at large in the
system. And he is looking for a way out. |
SCULLY: This organism
that's on your skin, something triggers
it, and I don't know what. It could be body temperature,
it could be
heart rate. |
| SCULLY: You're on with the CDC?
I need anything they can give me about what sets this organism
off. An idea, a notion, a wild guess. |
DOGGETT: Agent Scully, what do you want
me to do?
SCULLY: Get out of there, Agent Doggett?
DOGGETT: What about this man?
SCULLY: I'm gonna send a HazMat
team down to get you. |
SCULLY: I think I just figured it out. I
might know what triggers this.
DOGGETT: What is it?
SCULLY: Sweat. Perspiration
is a conductor for calcium ions,
promoting a chemical- electrical
reaction.
DOGGETT:Electricity?
SCULLY: That's right. And since the boy's sweat
glands aren't fully developed, he
wouldn't be as conductive. |
| DOGGETT: Agent Scully, I don't know if you
can see this, but I think I found the source of the contagion. |
| SCULLY: If I could put a HazMat
team together, we could have you out in about 15 minutes. |
| SCULLY: Your skin
and body have been rid of the organism.
A simple alcohol bath cleans it
right up. |
| SCULLY: What I'm saying is that the organism
is no longer extant. It's destroyed. |
DOGGETT: We have victims. Dead bodies.
SCULLY: Infected by a pathogen
of unknown etiology.
|
| Per Manum
8X08 |
Top |
| OB NURSE: I'll check on her dilation. |
| OB DOC: Nurse, get the team in here for
an emergency c-section. |
DUFFY HASKELL: And then this year, they
came right into our bedroom and implanted an alien embryo
in Kath.
SCULLY: I don't you have any medical proof of this.
DUFFY HASKELL: I have an ultrasound
here. |
DOGGETT: The abduction, the tests, a bout
with cancer, then a remission.
SCULLY: What exactly are you getting at?
DOGGETT: That's your story, agent Scully. That's it right down to
a tee. I mean, except the pregnancy. |
| SCULLY: I was left unable to conceive
with whatever tests were done to me. |
| MULDER: During my investigation into your
illness I found out the reason you were left barren. Your ova
were taken from you and stored in a government lab. |
| MULDER: The doctor said that the ova
weren't viable. |
| DR. PARENTI: Ms. Scully... I've got a good
report for you. I've looked at the ova
you've given me and consulted with some of my colleagues. We all feel
that with the proper approach we might be successful. Got a good chance
to get you pregnant. |
| DR. PARENTI: I can get you genetic
counseling on finding an anonymous donor, if that's what you want... |
| DR. PARENTI: I looked at this ultrasound
you sent me. I don't know what I'm supposed to be seeing... but it
looks fine to me. As does your own ultrasound. |
DOGGETT: Agent Scully, I just got a call
from a Dr. Parenti's office. About an ultrasound
you left there this morning.
SCULLY: Dr. Parenti's my doctor.
DOGGETT: Come on, Agent Scully.
SCULLY: You don't believe me?
DOGGETT: That ultrasound is
the one Duffy Haskell left here yesterday. Dr. Parenti is one of the
doctors he consulted with during the course of that pregnancy. |
| DOGGETT: Dr. Lev is a serious physician.
A leader in the field of birth
defects. |
| ARMY DOC: I'm Dr. Miryum. These are the
best team of obstetricians one
could hope to assemble. |
| DR. MIRYUM: You're going to have this baby,
Ms. Hendershot. Our big concern is that you have it safely. Whatever
is in you, we'll know in a few hours if we induce labor
immediately. |
DR. MIRYUM: At this stage, the fetus
is still only about 8 centimeters but we still should be able to get
a pretty clear picture of it's development. Do you see it? I see 2
legs,
two arms,
and hands.
I see what would appear to be a healthy baby at 14 weeks. |
SCULLY: I just want to be certain it's OK.
DR. MIRYUM: We could do an amnio. |
| DR MIRYUM: I know I don't have to tell you,
but you need to take it easy now after the procedure. The baby's at
risk if the membrane were to rupture,
all right? |
| DOGGETT: Look, this involves doctors. Doctors
who may have killed pregnant women. |
SCULLY: This woman could give birth
at any minute. I hope you realize that.
KNOWLE: You're in good hands. These men are all experienced field
medics. |
KNOWLE: Agent Scully, we're going to have
to sedate you.
|
| This Is Not Happening
8X14 |
Top |
SKINNER: What exactly did they do to her?
DOCTOR: Inside her cheeks there's tissue
damage in a linear pattern. Her chest
was cut into. Organ tissue in her
abdomen's scooped away. In the
x-rays I see damage to her soft palate.
SCULLY: In the x-rays did you see
anything else? Foreign objects?
DOCTOR: I'm not sure what you mean.
SCULLY: Little pieces of metal. Implants. |
SCULLY: Implants? I don't understand.
REYES: Metallic implants, placed in the body. Oftentimes in the nasal
cavities. Sometimes made of bone or
cartilage, making detection a
little more difficult. |
SCULLY: Examination of victim Gary Edward
Cory reveals cuts and abrasions
from ligature or binding devices,
accompanied by distal and proximal
bruising radiating in a symmetrical
pattern around the
ankles, the
wrists, and the face.
|
| DeadAlive
8X15 |
Top |
| DOGGETT: In six weeks you go on maternity
leave. Kersh transfers me out, guess what? He gets to lock that door
over there for good. |
CORONER: I see a surgical
cut or cut on the
sternum. Linear pattern scarring
on each facial cheek.
But for a certain postmortem
tumescence, this man is unremarkable.
Short of this body sitting up and telling us what happened, I'd say
we've got a long night ahead.
DIENER: Doctor? It moved.
CORONER: Joke's on me, right?
DIENER: Its
mouth, its
lips... it moved |
| SKINNER: I got a call from a police pathologist
down in Wilmington, North Carolina. |
| DOGGETT: This thing pans out or not, you're
going to reopen wounds that still
need a lot of healing. Not to mention the fact that she's had a difficult
pregnancy. |
| SKINNER: The kid they pulled from the ocean,
Billy Miles, from the extensive tissue
necrosis they think he could have
been in the water for months. Heartbeat, rate of metabolism
-- slowed to imperceptibility. I mean, the body had rigored. |
GAFFIN: Assistant Director Skinner? Arthur
Gaffin, county coroner.
SKINNER: I asked you to keep this thing low key.
GAFFIN: Word spreads. Exhumation's
big news any day of the week, and you have the body moved to another
county to a specific pathologist.
Well, that takes people and paperwork. |
| DOCTOR: It's so improbable... and I would
have said impossible before this. The clinical fact he's alive, when
effectively this man, his tissue,
and I presume his neuro and
vascular systems are all in a
state of decomposition. |
| SCULLY: I was just looking in on the patient
and he started to go into grand mal
seizure. |
KRYCEK: I can push a little button and send
the thousands of nanobots lying
dormant in your bloodstream sizzling to your brainstem
and all I want to do with that power is save a man's life.
SKINNER: I don't think his life can be saved.
KRYCEK: I have a vial that contains a vaccine.
Mulder knows of it. His father developed it to fight the alien virus.
SKINNER: There's no vaccine that
can help the man I found in that grave. |
SKINNER: Why are you questioning that when
it could mean the doctors are wrong about Mulder?
SCULLY: Because it doesn't make sense. I mean, there should be blood,
fluid, electrolyte imbalances,
loss of
brain function. But as it is, it's
like he shed his skin and literally
became a new person. And I don't mean the same person.
SKINNER: What are the chances this could be due to alien influence?
Could it be a virus? |
SCULLY: I strongly believe that Agent Mulder
is infected with a virus.
DOGGETT: A virus?
SCULLY: A virus that seems to keep
the body just alive enough to take it through a transformation. |
SCULLY: That's it.
DOGGETT: What's it?
SCULLY: How Billy Miles came back so perfectly. I stood there and
watched his body go into seizure
just before this happened. |
SCULLY: I need a surgical
bay, a team of doctors. I have to keep Mulder's body stabilized in
order to administer the vaccine.
DOGGETT: What vaccine?
SKINNER: The one I asked AD Skinner to get me. |
SKINNER: I had no choice. He wanted me to
kill Scully's baby.
DOGGETT: Who?
SKINNER: Alex Krycek -- for the vaccine. |
| KRYCEK: You looking for this? It's the vaccine.
For Mulder. |
| SKINNER: Agent Doggett. Agent Mulder's in
the OR. Did you get the vaccine? |
SCULLY: I really don't know how we could
have known.
DOGGETT: What?
SCULLY: That by keeping him on life support we were incubating
a virus. We were hastening it along. |
SCULLY: If we can stabilize him and his
temperature, give him courses of antivirals...I
think it could work.
|
| Three Words
8X18 |
Top |
SCULLY: Whatever neurological
disorder you were suffering from it's no longer detectable. After
a course of transfusions and
antivirals, it has rid your body
of the virus that was invading it.
The scars on your
face, on your
hands, on your
feet on your
chest. They seem to be repairing
themselves. Mulder, you are in perfect health. |
| MULDER: Scully, you're gonna give birth
in a couple of months. |
DOGGETT: Absalom. That's your name, right?
What are you lookin' at?
ABSALOM: The back of your
neck. |
ABSALOM: On your
knees, John Doggett. |
SKINNER: You're being paranoid,
Mulder. Even for you.
MULDER: Do you want to hear something really paranoid?
If the FBI gets its way, there gonna be nobody down here left to ask
the paranoid questions. |
DOGGETT: What kind of secrets?
SKINNER: The names of people the federal government's tracking using
the U.S. Census. Names of people who have a certain genetic
profile. |
DOGGETT: Agent Mulder, I don't know what
that information is.
MULDER: Well, you're about to, along with a lot of other people. They'll
know that they've been targeted because of their genetic
profiles for abduction and replacement by alien facsimiles.
|
| Empedocles
8X17 |
Top |
CLERK: Is that Scully? Dana? She's got what?
Abdominal pains?
MULDER: Her doctor is Dr. Speake. |
MULDER: What did the doctor say?
SCULLY: That I had a partial abruption.
Which means that my placenta started
to tear away from the uterine wall.
They're going to need to monitor me for a while. |
JEB DUKES: I didn't do what they said, Kath.
It wasn't me, OK? It wasn't.
KATHA DUKES: What's that on your face? Is that blood?
|
| Vienen 8X16 |
Top |
DOGGETT: The company attributes that to
an explosion on the rig--a "blowout"--which is what they
say caused Simon De La Cruz's burns.
MULDER: ... burns the M.E.
said in his report were not inconsistent to exposure to high levels
of radiation.
DOGGETT: "Not inconsistent." That's not exactly what I'd
call a ringing endorsement.
MULDER: These files include the same kind of radiation
phenomena. Tissue destroyed by exposure
to...
DOGGETT: ... black oil. Five years ago you and Agent Scully investigated
a case of a world war II plane salvaged from the bottom of the pacific
ocean where a substance was brought to the surface which you describe
as a highly contagious virus
of extraterrestrial origin that has radioactive
properties and can take over a man's body and is part of an alien
conspiracy to colonize the planet, if I'm not mistaken. |
KERSH: And I'm sending someone from the
x-files to investigate.
MULDER: You're talking about an oil rig that's 150 miles out at sea.
You can't send a pregnant woman.
KERSH: I'm not sending Agent Scully. |
| DOGGETT: Simon De La Cruz's body was found
with flash burns. What's that got
to do with him going off the deep end? |
SCULLY: About what I found in my autopsy
of the oil rig accident victim Simon De La Cruz.
SKINNER: Agent Scully, this man's body was supposed to be transported
back to Mexico completely intact.
SCULLY: I found it by accident in the third ventricle
of his brain. |
SCULLY: No, it can and I've seen that happen,
but that's the thing. I mean, this man was clearly infected
by the alien virus. It entered his system and it was massing in the
pineal gland. But it's dead.
SKINNER: What killed it?
SCULLY: Well, intuitively, you would say the same thing that killed
him: Exposure to high levels of radiation.
But it makes no sense because the virus
itself has radioactive properties. |
SKINNER: Don't ask me to go to Kersh with
this evidence telling him to order an evacuation for something you
can't even explain.
SCULLY: If the virus is loose Agent
Doggett's life is in danger. |
MULDER: You need me out here, Scully. You
know that better than anyone.
SCULLY: Well, I hate to say as of this morning, I'd have to agree.
MULDER: Who's flouting orders? You found something, didn't you, in
that victim's body? The virus?
SCULLY: Yes, I did, and it's dead, Mulder.
MULDER: Dead? What killed it?
SCULLY: Possibly radiation.
MULDER: No, that's not possible...
SCULLY: I know, I know, and this could be an isolated event but that
he's infected at all means that
everybody out there could be at risk and that means you and Agent
Doggett
MULDER: We've got to quarantine
this rig.
SCULLY: No, Mulder, we've got to get you off the rig. Have Agent Doggett
give the order. We can quarantine
you and the crew when you get back here.
MULDER: Scully, if these men are infected,
the last place we want them is on shore where they can infect
other people. You're sitting on the answer right there, Scully. The
body-- you find the virus you can
find what knocks it out. You can find what kills it. |
| SAKSA: All right, listen up! I'll make this
brief. We've been given an order to quarantine
the rig. |
TAYLOR: Oh, man! Protection from what?
DOGGETT: From a possible contagion. |
SCULLY: This man was exposed to a virus.
ORTEGA: And... why do I need to see this?
SCULLY: To understand what your crew may be infected
with--what they risk spreading on or off that rig.
ORTEGA: You understand Galpex is eager to cooperate but shutting down
a producing rig costs in the neighborhood of $150,000 a day. And according
to my OIM, no one on that rig is sick. They're just hungry and tired.
SKINNER: You don't know that for sure.
ORTEGA: ... what symptoms would
they be showing? What would we see?
SCULLY: Unexplained behavior. Possible detection in the eyes. |
| DOGGETT: You know, I quarantine
a whole damn oil rig without any evidence to support what you're saying--not
one damn thing. But you still have yet to give me a straight answer
as to what you think is going on out here. Now, if these men are hiding
something ... if they're protecting something then what the hell is
it? |
| MULDER: Agent Doggett ... I didn't come
out here just to bust your ass. I'm telling you, I've seen this substance.
I've seen how it can take over a man's body. This crew could be infected
and not even know it. They may have no idea they're being controlled. |
MULDER: The man from Galpex Oil lied.
DOGGETT: What? He's infected,
too?
MULDER: No, that new oil province that he wants to protect--it's already
in production. It's being pumped and drilled by this rig. That's how
this crew got infected.
DOGGETT: You're reaching, Agent Mulder.
MULDER: Billions and billions of barrels lying right underneath us
waiting to be produced. Waiting to infect
that 90% of the planet you talked about.
DOGGETT: These men are hiding something? That'd sure be something
to hide.
MULDER: But, Agent Doggett, what if that's why this man is in hiding
... Diego Garza. Because he knows what they're up to and he knows
what they're up to because he's the only one who's not infected
with this alien virus. |
| KERSH: Well, I'm giving the order this quarantine
is lifted. |
GARZA (in Spanish): *Red Blood.*
DOGGETT: Yeah, my blood is red! |
SCULLY: This is an SEM image pulled at random
from anonymous donors. Blood ...
more specifically, normal t-cell
antibodies. By comparison ...
these are from the blood of the oil
rig worker. T-cells in impossible
numbers. In layman's terms this victim was a virus-fighting
machine.
SKINNER: How do you explain that?
SCULLY: Well, there are isolated cultures--northern Italy for one--where
people are immune to certain diseases--heart
disease in that case--through a genetic
mutation.
SKINNER: So this man had what? A kind of genetic
immunity to alien virus?
SCULLY: Well his employment records list Mr. Simon De La Cruz as of
mixed Mexican ancestry when, in fact, he is Huecha Indian. The Huecha
are an indigenous Mexican culture that has a rare, undiluted gene
pool. Now, these genes may have
an innate immunity to infection.
SKINNER: Okay, so he was immune
to the virus. That's still not what
killed him. He died from being burned.
SCULLY: No, not burned-irradiated.
Because the virus had no effect on
him and the crew members who were infected
by the virus couldn't control him.
So they killed him by irradiating
him. |
MULDER: Tell her all the men here are infected.
She's got to get the word to the choppers not to land on the platform.
DOGGETT: Well, how are they supposed to get us?
MULDER: Well, that issue is rapidly becoming moot!
DOGGETT: Agent Scully, listen. There are three men on board here that
are not infected -- me, Mulder
and a man named Diego Garza, who may be mentally unstable. Could be
why he tried to wreck this radio equipment just like his friend Simon
de la Cruz. He may resist rescue attempt because he believes there
are men in flying saucers who are coming to get him. Agent Scully,
did you get that? Agent Scully? You're breaking up, Agent ... !
|
| Alone 8X19 |
Top |
| Essence 8X20 |
Top |
MULDER: We call it the miracle of life.
Conception: A union of perfect
opposites-- essence transforming into existence--an act without which
mankind would not exist and humanity cease to exist. Or is this just
nostalgia now? An act of biology
commandeered by modern science and technology? Godlike, we extract,
implant, inseminate... and we
clone. But has our ingenuity rendered
the miracle into a simple trick? In the artifice of replicating life
can we become the creator? Then what of the soul? Can it, too, be
replicated? Does it live in this matter we call DNA?
Or is its placement the opposite of artifice, capable only by God?
How did this child come to be? What set its
heart beating? Is it the product
of a union? Or the work of a divine
hand? An answered prayer? A true miracle?
Or is it a wonder of technology--the intervention of other
hands? What do I tell this child about
to be born? What do I tell Scully? And what do I tell myself? |
MULDER: Zeus Genetics.
That ring a bell?
DOGGETT: Yeah. That's where Scully believed they were doing tests
on women-- putting alien babies in them or something like that-- against
their will. Wasn't ever completely explained. |
| MULDER: Hey, I told you Dr. Lev was a founder
of the clinic. Would you like to know who his cofounder was? Dr. Parenti.
Agent Scully's obstetrician
through the first two-thirds of her pregnancy. |
DOGGETT: How about you explain what you
are doing? What these things are?
DR. PARENTI: They are what we are all working so hard to prevent--
children with non-survivable birth
defects.
MULDER: Does that work include experimentation with alien embryos?
Work that you would destroy to cover up such allegations? |
DOGGETT: We found teeth
and a porcelain bridge. We're waiting on Dr. Lev's dental
records to make positive ID.
MULDER: Anything else?
DOGGETT: Unidentifiable biological
material fused with laboratory grade silica. |
DOGGETT: Duffy Haskell.
SKINNER: Yeah. Came to see you and Scully on a case involving pregnant
women carrying alien babies. Coroner
says that the way his neck is severed defies logic and use of any
conventional-type weapon. |
DOGGETT: What is this place?
SKINNER: An illegal medical facility for the purpose of human cloning.
It goes on from here. In fact, it occupies the entire warehouse. |
| SKINNER: No, nobody's saying that, Agent
Doggett. At least not yet. But what I do have to tell you is not going
to put your mind any more at ease. We found prenatal
records here. A Dr. Lev and a Dr. Parenti working with this Duffy
Haskell monitoring Scully's pregnancy. |
SKINNER: I've had my suspicions. That is,
until I found out that you had questions. Questions about Scully's
pregnancy itself.
MULDER: You want to know who the father is, that's Scully's business.
But if you're asking me how a woman who was diagnosed
as barren and unable to conceive
is about to give birth in a couple
days, that's an answer I can't honestly give. |
| LIZZIE GILL: For the past ten years I've
been working as a research scientist trying to produce human clones--
long before the media circus with sheep and cows. The work was painstaking,
largely unsuccessful but there was a lot of interest and a lot of
money. |
LIZZIE GILL: We were surprisingly successful
with a clone from a human egg and
alien DNA. DNA
that the government had since 1947.
SKINNER: What do you mean by success?
LIZZIE GILL: Alien babies. Birthed by human mothers desperate to conceive.
They didn't live more than a couple of days, but tissue
and stem cells is what we were
after for other experiments.
|
| Existence
8X21 |
Top |
PATHOLOGIST'S ASSISTANT: Looks kind of like
a vertebra. Only metallic.
DR. LANGENHAHN: Note it on the report... and fax me. |
| SCULLY: Well, there's no water from this
rock. We're going to need some water and a place to boil it. Along
with sterile supplies and a clean
place to do this delivery. |
DOGGETT: Uh-huh. And this so-called prototype...
what is he after?
KNOWLE ROHRER: Oh, I think you know that, too, John. He's after your
partner, Scully. You may not be aware that she was part of a program
herself. Six years ago, Agent Scully was taken in a military operation
staged as an abduction. They put a chip in the back of her
neck to monitor her. It was also used
to make her pregnant with the
first organic version of that same
super-soldier. |
MULDER: You heard about this, right?
DOGGETT: How is he?
MULDER: He's got a concussion.
They're going to keep him here for observation. |
MULDER: What exactly did he tell you?
DOGGETT: He said that Billy Miles isn't what you think he is. He's
a product of a government program looking to build a super soldier.
He said Agent Scully's a part of that program, too; that her pregnancy
was triggered by a chip they put in her
neck. |
SCULLY: They said that he couldn't be stopped!
REYES: Dana, he's got no vitals.
He's lost too much blood. |
| SCULLY: No, I mean, I, um... I just felt
a contraction. |