Release Valve (10/10): TechGnosis
(To read this in its entirety, go here)
Scully awoke suddenly to the sound of pounding at her door. Mulder came awake next to her a second later with a sharp intake of breath. Mulder reached for his service weapon on the bedside table, paranoia running deep. “Want me to get it?” He asked. Scully shook her head, and quickly donned her robe. When she got to the door, she checked for Mulder behind her- he was clad in only jeans with the button and belt still undone. He had his weapon in his hand, though lowered to his thigh. He nodded at her. She opened the door. Isaacs stood there with Stone hanging limply off her shoulder, his face pale and sweating. Isaacs didn’t look much better. She’d obviously struggled getting him to Scully’s door, and looked on the edge of exhaustion. She had a small black backpack hanging off her other elbow. “Jesus!” Scully said, and swung the door wide, “bring him in!” They stumbled in, and Mulder was at their side in an instant, grabbing Stone around his other shoulder. “Into the bed!” Scully ordered. Scully stripped the duvet off the top and they deposited Stone in the bed. He gave a weak groan. Scully immediately went to the bedside, and pried his hand away from his side. “He’s been shot!” She said, turning an accusing eye toward Isaacs, who was bent over, hands on her knees, breathing heavily. Isaacs nodded at her.
“We need to call an ambulance,” Scully said. “No!” Isaacs said quickly, “We can’t! Can you treat him?” Scully cut her eyes to Mulder, who gave her an imperceptible nod. “After I do, I want to know exactly what the hell you guys have been up to,” Scully said, not amused. Scully’s bedside manner with Stone was much more gentle, though she began quietly barking orders to Mulder and Isaacs, who hopped-to. Mulder retrieved her doctor’s bag from her closet. After a thorough triage, it looked like the bullet that hit Stone went through cleanly, and the bleeding had slowed. Scully got some liquids into him and sewed him up, wishing she’d had some anesthetic. She got him resting comfortably and headed for her living room, closing the door halfway so she could still hear if something went wrong. She found Mulder, now fully dressed, and Isaacs sitting on her couch, deep in discussion. She interrupted them. She was fuming. “Agent Stone lost a lot of blood,” she said, “he should be in a hospital.” “Scully,” Mulder started to say. “Don’t,” she said, swinging her eyes to Isaacs. “What happened tonight?” “We were following a lead,” Isaacs said, “at a Department of Defense offsite location.” “Of course,” Scully said bitterly, looking at Mulder, “I guess you did train them up your way.”
He had the good sense to look contrite.
“Agent Scully, are you aware of some of the cyber security countermeasures Stone has enacted on behalf of the X-Files unit?” Isaacs asked her. It was Scully’s turn to look abashed. She’d not invested much time following up on how the newer agents were settling in to the unit or what they were up to. She’d relied on Mulder doing that, having been taken up with her own concerns, having been taken up with him. She shook her head. “Agent Stone wrote a program,” Isaacs went on, “when he first started with the unit. I can’t claim to understand exactly how it all works, but in essence, it monitored our computers for interference.” “He found someone interfering?” Scully asked. “Today,” Isaacs nodded. “The Department of Defense?” Scully asked. She’d been around the basement office long enough to not sound too skeptical. “It was an offsite location,” Isaacs said, “I’m not sure how ‘official’ it is.” Scully nodded, all of this sounding familiar. “Stone convinced me we should check it out before we brought it you and Agent Mulder.” “Why?” Asked Scully. “Because of what we found,” came Stone’s voice from behind her. Stone stood weakly in the bedroom doorway, his hand on the door handle. “Let me explain,” he said, as Scully rushed to his side. “You need to be resting,” she said gently but insistently, and helped him back into bed. Mulder and Isaacs came to stand in the doorway. “Come in, please,” Stone said, his voice quiet. Scully started to protest, but he held up a hand. “I need to tell you,” he said, “in case something happens.” Once again Scully tried to object.
“This can’t wait,” he said. He cut his eyes to Isaacs. “Jasmine, will you grab my backpack?” She brought it to his side. He looked up at her gratefully. “The program Isaacs is talking about is kind of a ‘hack-back’ program. A computer at the DOD site tried to hack us today, and I backdoored into their system.” He took a breath, and Scully nodded, giving him a moment. “I designed it to be quick, in-and-out so I could remain undetected, but I set it up to search the invading system for keywords related to the X-Files. I picked a few names and references scattered throughout the files, old and new. Threat assessment. Trying to figure out what they were after.” He reached into the small pack and pulled out a sheet of paper, crumpled from being in the bag. He handed it to Scully. It read: <<<Vincent, Marcie Lynn#>>> <<< Scully, Dana Katherine#>>> <<<MUFON>>> <<< Hagopian, Elizabeth Marie#>>> <<<Spender, Cassandra Ann#>>> <<<Spender, (?)(***)#>>> <<<Northern, Penny# >>> <<<Kevin Scanlon, MD>>>
Scully felt her stomach drop. She sat on the bed and handed the sheet to Mulder. He stared at it. “After we got in,” Stone said, adjusting himself on the bed with a grimace and then pointing to the paper in Mulder’s hand, “I got a look at everything. I know what it means.” XxXxXxXxX Mulder couldn’t take his eyes off the paper. The implications of all the names on it were legion. Finally he looked up, connected eyes with Scully and then turned to Stone. “What does it mean?” He asked. “Of the pinged keywords that my computer picked up,” he said, “The names with the pound sign have a chip implanted in the back of their neck.” Scully looked like she was going to be sick. “The DOD, or whoever is running the off-site we went to,” he went on, “has a computer and a program that controls the chips.” He pulled a small black cube and a sleek looking computer out of the pack and held them up. “I’m calling it the God Module,” he said. Mulder felt suddenly galvanized. “That’s it?” Mulder said, taking a step toward the bed, “That’s the computer that controls the chips?” “The one and only,” Stone said in all seriousness. “And that’s not all I found.” He pulled a smaller device out of his backpack. It was Isaacs turn to take step closer to him. “Is that what you pulled off the PC?” She asked him. He nodded. “What is it?” “It’s the Master List,” he said. “It’s the names of everyone with a chip, and what current program each chip is running.” Mulder connected eyes with Scully, electric. XxXxXxXxX
The excitement of relaying the information he’d found had only momentarily energized Stone. He lost steam and was now fitfully asleep. Isaacs was passed out on Scully’s couch, an afghan thrown over her. Mulder and Scully were in Scully’s kitchen, heads bent together, talking quietly. They would not be sleeping that night. “We can’t keep them here,” Scully said, “they’re going to figure out who broke into the DOD building, and it’s not going to take a lot of algebra to figure out were they went next.” Mulder nodded, agreeing. “If that God Module really is what Stone thinks it is,” Mulder said, “we might have some leverage.” “If that God Module really is what Stone thinks it is…” Scully said, not needing to finish the thought. Mulder pulled her to him in a tight embrace. They stood like that for a while, breathing each other in. “The agents in this unit have a really terrible habit of breaking the law,” Scully said, her voice muffled in his shirt. Mulder chuffed out a breathy chuckle. Laws, he thought, were easy to break. For her he would have broken laws of physics, of time. For her he would create matter, destroy it, push an immovable object through an impenetrable force. “Comes with the territory,” was all he said, his nose in her hair, his heart in his throat. XxXxXxXxX
It was before dawn, and Mulder had gingerly loaded Stone into the back of his car. Scully got into the back as well, keeping an eye on her patient. Stone reached for the seatbelt with a grimace and Scully stopped him. “Skip it,” she said, and Stone looked relieved. He slowly sunk down until he was lying across the seat, his head on Scully’s leg. “We’re both going to pretend this isn’t awkward, okay?” He said. Isaacs jumped in front and they drove to Crystal City. Light traffic at a dark hour, Mulder was pretty sure they hadn’t been followed. Mulder pulled up to the curb in front of a high rise and made a quick call. Ten minutes later, Deputy Director Skinner came out of the front of the building in a tee shirt and jeans and leaned down to the open passenger window. “Sir?” Mulder said, bending down to look over, “I’m afraid we’re going to need some help.” Skinner took a look around the inside of the car, stood, and pinching the bridge of his nose, begrudgingly nodded. XxXxXxXxX The safe house was off Fort Hunt Road in a suburb near Mount Vernon, a small ranch house tucked into the woods with a long driveway, the prying eyes of neighbors kept at bay. Stone was set up in a small bedroom, hooked up to an IV drip, pouring over the computer in front of him. Mulder was perched on his bedside, intently looking at the screen. They’d been in deep quiet discussion for the better part of the day when Scully leaned in the doorway. “Everything okay in here?” She asked. She’d taken to one of the other bedrooms when they arrived and managed to get a couple of hours of sleep. Mulder had been too jacked on adrenaline. Stone and Mulder looked up simultaneously, with eager expressions on their faces, then Mulder looked to Stone, who nodded. Mulder rose and came to the door. “I think we’ve got this figured out,” Mulder said to her quietly, and closed the door halfway, leading Scully through the small living room. Isaacs was in the corner talking on the phone with her boyfriend in hushed tones. There was an agent on guard duty leaning on the kitchen counter with a cup of coffee. He nodded to them as they made their way through and out onto the small deck in the back. The day was sunny, and the woods surrounding the property were a sparkling jade. Birdsong filled the air. “So,” said Scully, leaning against the short railing of the deck, “what says the computer? Do I get to take this thing out?” She vaguely gestured to the back of her neck. Mulder turned so his backside was resting on the railing next to her, their bodies facing different directions. “Maybe,” he said. Mulder looked out at the blazing green woods and was reminded of the Emerald City. Once more into the breach of the great and powerful Oz. He already had courage, he thought, looking at Scully. He already had heart. XxXxXxXxX They were all gathered in the living room when Skinner came in the front door, the front door agent with him. He nodded at Mulder. “Murphy, Taylor, can you wait for us outside for a bit?” Skinner said. The agents on guard duty mumbled affirmatives and trooped out the door. Once they were out, Skinner looked to Mulder. “I’ve got the place,” Skinner said. Mulder nodded. “What place?” Scully asked him, confused. “A location for a meeting with the Smoking Man,” Mulder said. Scully felt her stomach turn. “Mulder,” she said. “No,” he replied before she could go on. “This time it’s on our fucking terms.” He turned to Stone. “Let’s show them,” he said. Stone flipped his laptop around on the coffee table and they all huddled in to see the small screen. “The Master List,” Stone said, pushing a few buttons. “It seems to be categorized by, let’s just call them ‘patients,’” he said, giving a deferential look to Scully. “This is the group of patients Agent Scully is a part of,” he brought up a subset of names. Scully leaned further in. Amongst the names in her group were Cassandra Spender, Betsy Hagopian, Penny Northern. “Penny…” Scully said, feeling a pang of emotion. “Agent Scully and the other patients on this list have their chip set to program ‘A.’” “Abductee?” Isaacs asked quietly. “Maybe,” said Stone, “we know from our files that many of the people on this list were abducted for a period of time. All returned. Many are now deceased.” “The ones who removed the chip,” Scully said with certainty. “It appears that way,” Stone said. He went on. “There’s another group of patients set to program ‘C’,” he said, pointing to the screen. “There are some names here, and some code names. Those I haven’t been able to decipher.”
Marcie Vincent. Names of other people. Other kids, thought Scully. “We don’t yet know the function of program ‘C’,” Stone went on. The information I downloaded only refers to these patients within the context of a ‘Project Ramet.’” “Are they…” Scully took a second, “are the Program C kids’ chips controlled by the God Module?” “Yes,” said Stone. “I’m almost certain.” “This group,” he said then, looking to Skinner, “have chips set to program ‘H’.” Mulder looked at the list, running his finger down the screen through the names. He stopped on one. “CGB Spender,” Mulder said, looking at Skinner, then at Scully. “From what I can glean,” said Stone, nodding, “the chips for the members of this group are set to a program functioning in accordance with the immune system.” “With what objective?” Isaacs asked. “To fight bacteria,” Stone said, “to fight viruses.” “So much for vaccines,” Mulder said. “That’s not possible,” Scully said, “the science… This kind of technology is decades away, if it’s even possible.” Stone looked meaningfully at Mulder. Mulder cut his eyes to Scully and she began to wonder if there was something they weren’t telling her. “Here’s the thing,” Mulder said, “with Stone’s God Module, we can take all program ‘A’ patients and deprogram the chip. Or change it to run program ‘H.’” “And vice versa,” Isaacs said, starting to understand what Mulder was saying. “You can turn the tables on this Smoking Man, or CGB Spender, or whatever his name is, and then we’re in charge of his chip.” “If he removes it, he gets cancer,” Scully added quietly. Mulder nodded. “And I suspect some of the other names on this list are other men we know. Men we know to be working with the Smoking Man.” “The Syndicate,” Skinner said. “Wouldn’t it be nice to have a little leverage?” Mulder asked, leaning back. “There’s leverage,” said Stone, “and then there’s leverage.” XxXxXxXxX
“So,” Stone began. He had the God Module up and ‘running,’ had played with it for a while, getting a feel for the technology. “What’s the location for the meeting with CGB Spender?” Skinner told him. “I think I need to convert that to coordinates,” he said. “Latitude and longitude.” While Isaacs, Stone and Skinner were trying to figure that out, Scully put a hand on Mulder’s arm. “You’re going to program his chip to send him to this location?” She asked him, her voice low. Mulder squeezed her hand. “Let’s see how he likes it this time,” he said. “I’m coming with you,” she said. “Scully—“ He started. “No,” she said, “I want to see the look on his face.” Mulder gave her a small smile. “Atta girl,” he said, quietly. XxXxXxXxX The location Skinner had picked had been an old quarry in Maryland. There were two FBI snipers on either side of the cliffs, and several teams handpicked by Skinner located at the entrance. There was no other exit. Mulder and Scully waited in a car in the middle of the open quarry, Isaacs and Skinner in another about 50 yards away. Stone was still at the safe house with the God Module, in constant contact with Isaacs. If the Cancer Man showed up as he was ‘programmed’ to do, they would know the device was working and Stone would immediately reprogram all of the patients. Scully wondered if she would feel anything. At the hour appointed by the God Module, a large dark sedan pulled into the quarry, tires crunching as it slowly pulled up to the car Mulder and Scully were waiting in. When the car’s ignition was cut, Mulder and Scully got out. CGB Spender got out of the car slowly and came to stand in front of them. He said nothing, his eyes were unblinking. Mulder and Scully exchanged a look. With a sniff of awareness, he came to himself, blinked and looked around. Scully took in the flash of surprise on his face with some satisfaction. “Wondering how you got here?” Scully asked. “I can relate.” The man took a moment before responding. “You have it, then?” He asked. “We have it,” said Mulder. “Then you’d better keep it safe,” he said. “You’re not calling the shots anymore,” Mulder said. Scully could see the muscles flex in his jaw. “I never was,” the man said. Scully saw a flash of something in the man’s face, but couldn’t put a name to it. “We want Marcie Vincent returned to her family,” Mulder said. The man nodded. He didn’t even attempt to put up a fight. “And I want to know about Project Ramet,” Mulder said. For the first time the smug smile returned to the man’s face. “I’ll just bet you do,” he said, reaching into his pocket to pull out a pack of Morleys. Mulder pulled a small knife out of his pocket and took a step forward. “Your chip is running program A now,” Mulder said, “and there’s nothing I’d like more than to cut that thing out of your neck right here, right now.” “Killing me won’t stop Project Ramet, Agent Mulder,” the man said, “and there are some things even I don’t know.” He pulled a lighter out of his pocket and lit his cigarette. “You’ve ensured Agent Scully’s enduring health, you hold the technology to exercise great power, and you have me and other members of my cabal over a barrel, as it were.” The man went on, “You’re closer now than you ever were to finding what you seek.” XxXxXxXxX “We should have arrested him,” Scully said. She and Mulder were in their car, on their way back to the safe house. They needed to figure out where to keep the God Module, how to keep it safe. There would be a never ending line of parlous adversaries out to get it. “We need him to release Marcie Vincent,” Mulder said, pulling into a scenic overlook off the Parkway. “And we’ll probably need him in the future. You could say he works for us, now.” Scully nodded. He was right. “What are we doing?” Scully asked. Mulder didn’t answer, just walked over to the passenger seat and opened it up for her, gave her a hand out. It was another beautiful day, the sky a piercing blue. The overlook was perched over the Potomac, and there were few people pulled in. A young couple was sitting on top of the small neat stone wall, sharing a sandwich. Their dog, a yellow lab, was sitting at their feet hoping for a dropped morsel. Mulder grabbed Scully’s hand and walked with her toward a wooded picnic area. The dog rose as they passed, his tail wagging gently. He gave one short woof once they were past. “Everyone’s a critic,” said Mulder. They sat down at a picnic table, turned toward the river. “So it’s done,” Scully said, knowing that the minute the Smoking Man showed up to the quarry Stone had reset her chip. “It’s done,” Mulder said. XxXxXxXxX He hadn’t realized that the ever-looming threat of her illness coming back had weighed so heavily on him. A world without Scully was not a world he wanted to live in. It was like a release valve had been flipped open, the pressure on his heart hissing out into the ether. He took one deep breath and let it flow out of him, feeling lighter, feeling free. They sat for a moment in comfortable silence. “How soon do you think I can takethis thing the hell out of my neck?” She asked, leaning companionably into his shoulder. He took a breath. “There’s one thing Stone and I discovered while we were in the safe house that he didn’t share,” Mulder said. “Something you need to know.” Mulder saw Scully tense, and he reached out and took her hand. “If you leave the chip in,” Mulder said, his voice steady, his gaze locked on hers, “the God Module can restore your fertility.”
Scully’s eyes slid closed, and with a slight upturn of her lips, she canted her face to the sun.
“I get it now,” she finally said.
“Get what?” Mulder asked gently.
“You,” she said, simply.
He cocked his head to the side, a question.
“Mulder, I want to believe,” she said. He knew then what love was. It was the gunmetal slide of a pistol, a snow cat prowling at 40 below. The whorls of her fingerprints pressed into his skin. It was purpose and frustration, illumination and regret. It was her smile in profile, composed against the sky.















