Charles Grant - The X-Files - Goblins

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Opening the X-Files…
Meet Mulder and Scully, FBI. The agency maverick and the female agent assigned to keep him in line.
Their job: investigate the eeriest unsolved mysteries in modern America, from pyro-psychics to death row demonics, from rampaging Sasquatches to alien invasions. The cases the Bureau wants handled quietly, but quickly, before the public finds out what's
out there. And panics. The cases filed under "X."
Something out there is killing people, remaining invisible and unseen by human eyes until it strikes with deadly force…

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“Then what about the spray paint?”

Junis watched another truck pass. “Because she believes it, Agent Scully. She believes it as sure as you believe there ain’t no such thing. That doesn’t mean she’s certifiable.”

Scully wasn’t so sure about that, but she didn’t know enough to pursue it. Instead she asked about the other witness.

“Fran?” Junis lowered his gaze to the garden. “I can take you to her, if you want, but she won’t do you a whole lot of good.”

“Why not?”

His expression hardened. “The heroin she took that night was damn close to an overdose. I brought her to a facility up near Princeton.” He paused. “A mental rehab, by the way, we don’t have anything like that around here. She was pretty far gone.” He lit another cigarette and blew smoke into the wind. “She’ll recover from the overdose most likely, but as for the other… she isn’t going to be released for a long, long time.”

Swell, she thought; just what I need — an addict who probably can’t even recognize her own reflection. Interviewing Fran Kuyser quickly dropped toward the bottom of her list.

“Do you sit out here a lot?” Andrews asked then, not bothering to look at him.

He nodded to Dana, not at all fazed by the sudden change of subject. “Guess I do, come to think of it. I like to watch the world drive by, see who’s going where. People around here, those that work on post or at McGuire, they have their military doctors, and the others…” He shrugged. “Not a lot left, but I guess you already noticed that.”

Scully also noticed that he didn’t seem to mind. Although he was too young to step down yet, he appeared to be resigned that this practice wasn’t going to get him a retirement home in a better location, and that, for whatever reason, was all right with him.

“Oh, we have our moments,” he said, startling her. “And it beats all to hell working an ER.”

She wasn’t inclined to disagree, thanked him for his time, and told him where she was staying in case he thought of something else.

“I already know that,” he said. And grinned.

Back in the car, Andrews shook her head in disbelief. “You know, you can’t breathe around here without somebody knowing it. Hardly any privacy at all.” She forced herself to shudder. “That’s too weird for me.”

Dana grunted, but she wasn’t really listening. There was something not quite right here, something she and the others had missed. She didn’t think it was tied directly to the killings, but it was, somehow, important. Small, but important. She knew Mulder felt it as well. In spite of the afternoon’s attack, she knew it bothered him, and maybe by the time they returned to the hotel and he had rested, he would know what it was.

As long, she added glumly, as he doesn’t call it a damn goblin.

The motel lights were all on when they returned, highlighting the crown facade, flooding the parking lot with dull silver, making the clouds seem even lower and thicker than they were. After sending Andrews to fetch her interview notes, she pushed through Mulder’s door just in time to hear him say, “…a multitude of sins.”

“What sins?” she demanded. “And why aren’t you in bed?”

He sat in shirtsleeves at the room’s tiny table, his back to the wall, papers spread in front of him. Webber was on the bed, propped up by pillows, knees drawn up to serve as a rest for a legal pad.

“Hi, Scully,” Mulder said. “I’m cured.”

Webber refused to meet the rebuke in her eyes as she dropped into the chair across the table. “You’re not cured, and you’ve been working.” But the scolding was, as always, a waste of time; he would only give her one of two looks — the hurt little boy, or the sly-fox, lopsided grin — and do what he wanted anyway.

He settled for the grin. “We’ve been checking up on Major Tonero.”

“It’s weird,” Webber commented from the bed. “His office confirms he’s head of Air Force Special Projects, like he told us, but they wouldn’t explain what that means.”

“Which,” Mulder continued, “covers a multitude of sins.” He shook his head slowly. “Curiouser and curiouser. Why would an Air Force major, who isn’t even medical personnel, be assigned to an Air Force hospital on an Army post? Which, for the most part, is used as training for reservists, and a jumping-off point when troops have to get overseas in a hurry.” Then he pointed at her before she could answer. “And don’t tell me there’s a perfectly rational explanation.”

Oh, Lord, she thought; he’s in one of his moods.

“And,” Webber added eagerly, “why would he be so interested in the ambush? And why were his people there, too? Those two doctors, scientists, whatever.”

Scully stared at him for so long, he began to look embarrassed. “Well… it’s a good question, isn’t it?” He scratched the back of his head. “I mean, isn’t it?”

“Yes, Hank, it is,” Mulder said when Scully didn’t answer. “And I’ll bet I have a possible answer.”

“Mulder,” Scully said, her voice low and warning. “Do not read into this more than there is.”

“Oh, I’m not,” he protested lightly. “I’m not even going to begin to suggest that maybe these goblins have something to do with the major.” He leaned back in his chair. “I wouldn’t think of it.”

“Of course you wouldn’t,” she said. “Because you already have. Now look, we’ve got a—”

Andrews walked in then, smiled a not very sincere apology for being late, took a reluctant seat on the bed, and said, “So now what?”

Dana checked her watch; it was after five. “So now I think we’d better break for a while and have something to eat.” A look shut Mulder up. “There’s been too damn much excitement around here, and I want us to cool down for a while before we end up on horses.”

“What?” Hank said.

“A definition of confusion,” Mulder explained, hands clasped behind his head. “He jumped up on his horse and rode off in all directions.” He winked. “Scully likes wise sayings like that. She hordes fortune cookies, you know.”

Hank laughed; Andrews only snorted and shook her head.

Dana, for her part, did her best not to react, because she recognized the signs — he was high on an idea, the bits and pieces of the puzzle beginning to give him some kind of picture. The problem with him was, that picture was often one no one else saw but him.

It was what made working with him at once so fascinating and so damn exasperating.

Rather than try to derail him, however, it was better to give him his head and go along for the ride. For a while.

So she suggested they clean up and meet in the restaurant in half an hour or so for coffee. Her tone brooked no argument. When Andrews left without a word, Scully’s expression sent Hank along as well, deciding it would be a good thing to take a walk around the building.

When they were alone, Mulder’s expression sobered. “I saw it, Scully. I’m not kidding, I really saw it.”

“Mulder, don’t start.”

He spread his hands on the table. “It’s not like I’m the only one, you know. Even Chief Hawks admitted there were others.” He held up a palm to keep her quiet. “I saw it — okay, just a glimpse — but I also touched it. It wasn’t my imagination, it wasn’t wishful thinking. I touched it, Scully. It was real.”

She leaned away from him, thinking. Then: “I’ll grant you it was real. He was real. But it wasn’t any goblin, no supernatural creature.”

“The skin—”

“Camouflage. Come on, Mulder, Fort Dix is a training base. That means there are personnel who are experts in all sorts of weaponry… and camouflage. God knows how elaborate they can be, but it’s probably a lot more now than just smearing greasepaint on your face.”

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