A Little Knowledge (5/7) **************************** by Patti Murphy By 4:30, Mulder had driven down so many gravel roads that he thought his teeth were going to shake right out of his head. The addresses that Danny had been able to find for the three new phone lines installed that month in Wolf County were deep in what a real estate agent might have called a charming wooded setting. His patience failing with the afternoon light, Mulder was more inclined to think of it as the middle of nowhere. He'd stopped at a small general store hours ago, in search of sunflower seeds and directions, but had gotten neither, and now he was hungry as well as lost. He tapped the steering wheel impatiently and scanned the road ahead for any sign of civilization, but the forest met the gravel in an unbroken line. The trees, still translucent green with their spring leaves, managed nevertheless to block out the late day sun, imposing a tinted twilight on the road. Mulder realized that when the sun finally did set, it was going to be very dark. If he didn't find this last place before then, he was going to have one hell of a time finding his way out of here. The driveway was so narrow and overgrown that he nearly passed it. At the last second, it registered. He slammed on the brakes, then threw the car in reverse and backed up, the tires spitting gravel all around. There was no mailbox or sign, just a path that led off into the thick woods. Mulder pulled the car off the main road, easing the wheels into the ruts in the path, and hoped that whatever mud he encountered wasn't deep. A few hundred yards later, the car emerged into a rough clearing. There was a small cabin, built mostly of logs, with a clapboard covered addition on the back. A Nissan Pathfinder was parked a short distance from the cabin and Mulder pulled up behind it. The clearing was bathed in shadows and when Mulder got out of the car, he spotted a light on in the cabin. The smell of wood smoke hung in the air. Good, he thought, as he made his way across to the cabin, somebody's home. He was still several yards from the cabin when the door opened and a woman looked out. He saw the colour drain from her face. "Dr. Hamilton?" he said, as he reached into his pocket for his i.d.. "Dr. Leslie Hamilton?" The woman, who looked like she might cry, nodded. Mulder stopped a safe distance away and held out his credentials for her to inspect. "I'm Special Agent Fox Mulder, with the F.B.I.. I'm here to help you." She looked at him for a long moment, cast a glance at his identification, and then her shoulders sagged. "It doesn't matter anyway," she said. "I'm tired of hiding. If you're here to kill me, you might as well come in and get it over with." As Mulder watched, she turned and walked wearily back into the cabin. Scully checked her answering machine as soon as she got back to her apartment. There were two messages, one from her mother, just to say hi, and one from Peter, saying he was sorry that he'd missed her and that he would try to reach her again later. She stepped out of her pumps and stripped off her suit jacket as she listened to his voice, made tinny by the machine. She debated whether or not she wanted to be home for his next call as she padded down the hall to her bedroom. By the time she'd unclipped her holster and exchanged her skirt and blouse for black leggings and a t-shirt, she was still undecided and beginning to wish it would all just go away. She sighed as she sat on the edge of the bed to lace up her sneakers. There just wasn't time to think about Peter right now. Her mind was racing, trying to sort through all the pieces that had been dropped in her lap these past few days. She needed to put them in some sort of order so that she could find the holes and figure out what pieces were still missing. The apprehension that had been with her since Mulder had given her the disk still gnawed at her insides, had in fact grown noticeably since her conversation with Beth this afternoon. They had something big here and it was important to do it right. She pulled on a grey sweatshirt and grabbed her keys, carefully locking the door behind her. She stretched quickly on the front steps, anxious to start running, to hopefully clear her mind. Once she had her thoughts in order, she would call Mulder and tell him what she knew about the retrovirus that Dr. Hamilton and the others had engineered. She trotted off down the sidewalk, heading towards the running paths at the park. A few moments later, a silver Oldsmobile Ciera pulled out of its parking spot and drove down the street. It reached the end of the block, signalled and turned in the direction of the park. The driver didn't notice the grey Taurus that fell in behind it in the next block. The interior of the cabin was lit by two tired lamps and was sparsely furnished. A couple of armchairs that had seen better days were pulled up by the fieldstone fireplace and an upended orange crate with a lantern and a stack of books on it stood between them. The kitchen consisted of a hotplate with two burners, some whitewashed cupboards, a tiny table with two chairs and a sink. At the far end of the room, there was a wooden partition that blocked off what Mulder supposed was a bedroom. The woman was pouring water from a plastic jug into a kettle. "Well, since you've come all this way to protect me, Mr... uh..." She turned and looked at him. "What did you say your name was again?" "Mulder," he replied. "Fox Mulder." She snorted and turned back to the kettle. "Well, Mr. Fox Mulder, since you've driven all this way to save my antique ass, the least I can do is offer you a cup of tea." She put the kettle on the burner and turned a dial. "You might as well sit down. You look like you've got a lot of questions to ask." Mulder tossed his trenchcoat over the back of an armchair and sat down at the kitchen table. "How did you find me?" she asked, as she rummaged through the cupboards. "The e-mail that you sent Dr. Inglis," Mulder said. "We realized that you had a phone line and Mrs. Inglis remembered you mentioning this cabin." She brought a plate of cookies to the table, shaking her head. "I knew I was leaving myself wide open on that one, but, I felt I owed Bill at least a warning about what I had unleashed." She put the cookies down in front of Mulder. "Here, you look like you haven't eaten in days." She went back to the cupboards, started rooting for tea bags and cups. He ate a cookie and watched her preparing the tea. She moved slowly, and Mulder detected a hint of stiffness in her walk, but she looked much younger than her seventy years. She wore faded jeans and a man's red flannel shirt with a turtleneck underneath. Her hair was silver and very neatly pulled up into a bun. When she finished at the cupboards, she came and sat opposite him at the table, leaning forward on her elbows. "So, how much do you know, Mr. Mulder?" "I know that twenty five years ago you were involved in some sort of top-secret government project to design a virus and that you probably tested that virus on an unsuspecting population," he said. "I know that this information isn't quite as secret as it used to be, due to some action on your part. I also know that of the four scientists who worked on the project, you're the only one who hasn't met a sudden and suspicious death." Her eyes were a frosty blue and there was no emotion in them as she studied Mulder. "You're not here to kill me, are you?" she said. Mulder shook his head. "How could I after you've gone to all the trouble of making me tea?" A trace of amusement in the icy eyes, as if he was a child who had just recited his lesson well. Mulder helped himself to another cookie. "What do you want to know?" she asked. "Who were you working for? Who authorized the development of the virus?" "Ultimately some covert group in the government that everyone would swear doesn't exist, but most of our contact was with military types. They probably took their orders from somebody higher up." "Was it a biological weapon you were developing?" Mulder asked. She smiled grimly. "We preferred not to call it that, particularly after Nixon signed that treaty in '68 which outlawed biological agents." "But that's what it was, wasn't it?" The emotion was gone again and her eyes were the colour of frozen smoke. "It was the atomic bomb of biological agents, Mr. Mulder," she said. "This wasn't some rinky-dink little bug that the army would set loose on a battlefield to take down a few thousand troops. This was an agent that was designed to neutralize the entire population of the Soviet Union." Mulder stared at her. She nodded. "Yes," she said, "it was that big." The kettle whistled and she got up slowly and went to turn off the burner. "Many of my colleagues believed that it was much safer than nuclear warheads. None of that annoying radiation to worry about afterwards." She poured the boiling water into the teapot, and clouds of steam rose from it. "You must remember that this was the 1960's, and we believed that not only were the Russians developing even more deadly strains of viruses, they were months, if not years ahead of us." She turned to look at Mulder, to read his expression, then turned her attention to the teapot again. "How old were you during the Bay of Pigs fiasco, Mr. Mulder? Two, maybe three years old?" "About that," Mulder said. "Well then let me tell you that while you were still in diapers, this whole country experienced fear on a scale it had never known before. The enemy was in our very back yards, pounding on the door," she said. She brought the teapot over to the table, set it down then returned for the cups. "Everything we had held sacred suddenly crumbled before our eyes. For months, people walked around expecting it to rain missiles on them. We were all terrified." She put a china cup down in front of Mulder and one at her place and then sat again. "We thought what we were doing was the right thing. We thought that by having something equally lethal to wave under their noses, we could force the Russians to behave." "So you went ahead and tested a deadly virus on five hundred innocent people?" Mulder asked. "Acceptable losses, Mr. Mulder, or at least that's what the military called them," she said, her eyes on her cup. "Every good general knows that in any battle, men will die. And make no mistake, we were at war. The loss of life seemed minuscule compared to the greater risk of leaving ourselves open to foreign attack. We even managed to convince ourselves that those five hundred or so people who died were martyrs to a great cause." Mulder shifted in his seat. Her eyes flicked up as he moved. "I'm not asking for your pardon, Mr. Mulder. In fact, I don't expect you to understand. I'm just telling you what it was like." She ran her finger along the rim of her cup, and Mulder noticed that it trembled slightly. "It all seemed so very black and white then," she said. "How did you collect the data?" Mulder asked. "Operatives in hospitals, in major cities, posing as nurses, mostly. They had access to all the patient's records, and of course to their insulin. The operative would identify suitable candidates who were admitted to the hospital for some reason. They would incorporate the virus into their insulin and then they would wait. Within three to eight months, once their immune systems had failed, the subjects would usually be readmitted to the hospital, suffering from some illness which eventually killed them." She leaned forward, lifted the lid on the teapot and peered inside. Satisfied that it was properly steeped, she poured steaming tea into their cups, then looked at Mulder again. "When did it end?" he asked. "In a sense, it didn't," she said. She wrapped her hands around her cup, to warm them. "The research was going incredibly well, we had a 98% fatality rate and what we'd learned in a few short months about RNA viruses, as we called them then, it took the rest of the world a decade to figure out." "So what happened?" "I'm not sure," she said. "The project was very suddenly shut down. Maybe they lost interest or maybe there was a shift in the power structure. I don't know. For whatever reason, our services were no longer required and we were dismissed, with the reminder that our lives and the lives of our families depended on our continued silence." She sipped her tea, and stared at the tabletop. "Bill Inglis told me that every so often, they would follow his kids home from school." She shook her head. "Subtlety was never their strong suit." "So once your husband died, you realized that you had nothing to lose and decided to blow the whistle," Mulder said. She smiled, but there was a sudden weariness in her features that hadn't been there before. "It's much more ironic than that, Mr. Mulder. You see, my husband died of AIDS, probably contracted through a blood transfusion he received while undergoing routine surgery. He unknowingly infected me and eventually, this horrid little virus will kill me too, and so twenty five years later, justice will be wrought." She waited for Mulder's reaction, but he said nothing. "It's really rather poetic, don't you think? Watching someone you love die slowly and painfully from a terrible illness and living every day with the knowledge that you doomed hundreds of innocent people to that same fate." She took another sip of tea, then carefully set her cup down. "I am not afraid to die, Mr. Mulder, because I am no longer afraid of hell. It can't be much worse than what I've endured these past few years." Their eyes met and she held his gaze for a long time, challenging him to say something. Mulder kept his expression neutral and waited for her to go on. "And so, suitably chastised, I decided to do my part to bring this dirty little secret to light," she said, picking up her cup again. "The first step was to get my hands on the information, the data, the medical records. My late husband, who designed security systems for computer networks was a brilliant man, and although it took about a year and a half, he hacked his way into the necessary places and got me what I needed. Then, of course, the question was how to make this information public." The fire had died down to glowing coals and she got to her feet and moved stiffly to the fireplace. She poked at the ash with a long stick, then tossed on another chunk of wood. "At first I considered contacting all the families of the subjects," she said, "but in the midst of researching the whereabouts of the surviving relatives, I came across that young reporter and decided that he was the most logical choice." She pushed at the log with the stick, trying to position it on the hottest embers. "His father had been a victim of our little creation and so I thought he would be highly motivated to get to the bottom of this." "Wait a minute," Mulder said. "You gave this information to a reporter?" She straightened up and nodded. "Yes. The young man at the Washington Post." She looked at Mulder quizzically. "That's why you're here, aren't you? Because he contacted you?" A knot began to form in Mulder's gut. "I was tipped off by an anonymous source," he said. "What is the reporter's name?" "Peter O'Hara," she replied. The knot tightened. "Oh, shit," he said. Threatening grey clouds had followed Scully on her run, blotting out the sunset and eventually forcing her to turn back, but the rain held out until she was home, the first fat raindrops starting to dot the pavement as she trotted up her front steps. She stood, hands on her hips, and watched the rain fall, while she caught her breath. It had been a good run, even though it had been cut short, and her muscles felt warm and loose. She couldn't wait to step into the shower. She propped one leg on the iron railing, grabbed her ankle and eased her body forward until her forehead touched her knee. Not bad for an old woman, she thought. She held the position for a while, then switched legs. She studied the bushes under her front window as she stretched and noticed that they were badly trampled. She was reminded of the scene that had taken place on these steps last night and she sighed. She had just decided that she was going to have to call the building super to come and repair the damage to the bushes, when she spotted something shiny in the dirt. She leaned over the railing and squinted in the half-light, trying to make out what it was. Unable to identify it, she descended the steps and waded in, pushing branches out of the way, searching the ground. She located the object and bent over to retrieve it. It was a bracelet, with a heavy silver chain and an oval plate in the middle. She held it up to the light. On one side was a caduceus -- two snakes intertwined around a winged rod -- and the words MEDIC-ALERT. She turned it over. One word was engraved there: DIABETIC. The rain came down harder, but Scully stood there, clutching the bracelet, her thoughts churning in her head. "Oh, my God," she said. "Peter." A moment later, she slammed the door to her apartment and flipped on the living room lights. She strode across the room to her computer, not bothering to take off her sneakers. There was an antique crystal vase on the table beside the computer, which held the roses that Peter had brought her yesterday. She glanced at them as she turned the monitor on. She stopped abruptly, one hand on the computer, and a tingle of fear ran through her. The monitor was warm. She felt it with her other hand to make sure. It was definitely warm. She sensed, rather than heard someone come up behind her. It was at that moment that she realized she had left her gun and holster on her bedside table. Leslie Hamilton stood by the fireplace, giving Mulder an odd look. "Mr. Mulder, you're very pale all of a sudden," she said. Mulder got up and grabbed his trenchcoat, felt in the pockets for his cellular phone, swearing at himself when he realized that he'd left it in the car. "Is something wrong?" she asked, as he headed for the door. Mulder opened the door and took a couple of steps towards his car before he saw the headlights, way off in the woods. As he watched, they were extinguished. The vehicle moved so slowly that Mulder could scarcely hear it. He bounded back into the cabin, shutting the door behind him. "Is there another way out of here?" he asked. The woman hesitated. "I think the people who want you dead are in your driveway and we have to move quickly. Is there another way out of here?" he said. "There's a window in the bedroom," she said. Mulder took her by the arm, and rushed her across the cabin to the tiny space that served as a bedroom. There was a cot and a small chest of drawers. Mulder looked around, then guided the woman to the corner furthest from the door. "Stay down," he said. "And don't make a sound." She nodded, her eyes wide with silent fear, and she crouched in the corner. He tried to open the window but it wouldn't budge. He pushed against the frame in a few places, and heard a cracking noise where it had been painted shut. He tried again to open it, struggled for a moment and then felt it give. It moved a few inches and stopped. Another heave and it slid open. With a glance back at Dr. Hamilton, he hoisted himself through the window, landing quietly on the ground. He drew his gun and instinctively crouched, making his way to the corner of the cabin. When his eyes adjusted to the darkness, he spotted a figure emerging from behind his car. Mulder waited until the man was out of his line of vision, then he rounded the corner and pressed himself against the wall. He moved soundlessly, his pistol grip loose, his heart thudding in his chest. At the next corner, he paused and listened. There was no sound. Mulder fell into a crouch, his back against the cabin, straining to hear some hint of the man's movements. The faintest squeak of old hinges reached Mulder's ears. He waited, holding his breath. A few seconds later, he peered around the corner. The man was inside the cabin. Mulder bounded around the corner and into the doorway, his weapon pointed ahead of him. The man was twenty feet away, standing by the table where Mulder and Dr. Hamilton had been drinking tea. "Don't move!" Mulder shouted. The man started to spin around and Mulder saw the flash before he heard the shot. Mulder managed to fire twice as he threw himself to the ground. He rolled away from the door and hurriedly got to his feet, breathing hard. There was no movement inside the cabin. Mulder moved cautiously back into the doorway, keeping his gun trained on the body on the floor. He got close enough to determine that the man was dead, then scooped up his gun and sprinted out of the cabin towards the path to the road. The man's car was a few hundred feet away from the clearing and Mulder circled it once at a distance before he approached. There was no one in the car. He found the keys in the ignition, but the trunk and glove box were both empty. He ran back to the clearing and his car, stopping to grab his cellular phone. Ten minutes and three phone calls later, Mulder had both the county sheriff and the U.S. Marshall on their way to the cabin, with promises to arrive within the hour. He tried Scully's number next, then her cellular, but didn't get an answer at either. The knot in his stomach tightened another notch. He returned to the cabin and called to Dr. Hamilton. "I think it's safe to come out now," he said. She appeared in the door, her eyes wide, and looked at the body laying on the kitchen floor. "I shot him," Mulder said. She nodded. "I can see that." "Someone from the U.S. Marshall's office is going to be here within the hour to place you in protective custody. Your whereabouts are no longer a secret and I think it's the best way to keep you safe." "You mean alive." Mulder nodded imperceptibly. "I have to contact my partner and get back to Washington. I want you to take this gun and wait for the Marshall to arrive. They told me that they would be here soon." He crossed the room to give her the gun. She took it with trembling hands. "Just stay inside and you'll be safe." Mulder had grabbed his trenchcoat and was at the door when she spoke. "Mr. Mulder," she said. He turned. "I am in your debt," she said. Mulder nodded and hurried out the door. She sat down at the kitchen table, for a while, clutching the gun, then moved to an arm chair. She fidgeted around the cabin, stoking the fire a half-dozen times. She managed to stay busy for a few more minutes then decided to wash the tea cups they had used. She had just finished drying them and putting them away when she heard the van pull into the clearing. Surprised by the rush of relief that she felt, she hurried to the door and peered out into the darkness. A man got out of the van and started walking towards the cabin. She wondered for a moment why he wasn't wearing a uniform. And then she tried to remember where she had put the gun Mulder gave her. He fired once. The bullet pierced her skull and she crumpled to the floor. The man stepped over her as he entered the cabin, paused long enough to glance at the other body that lay on the floor. He placed a small canister in the center of the room and then left. A few moments later he climbed back into the van and nodded to the driver. He pulled out his cellular phone and dialled. In the depths of a building in Washington, D.C., a phone rang. The man who answered it had just lit another cigarette and a haze of blue smoke hung in the air. He picked up the receiver and held it to his ear, but said nothing. "The target has been neutralized," the man in the van said. A puff of smoke. "Did Mulder get away?" "Yes, sir. It went exactly as we expected." "Very good." He hung up. The van had reached the main road and was accelerating when the two men heard the explosion back in the woods. cont.