From: Sean Smith X-From: rkwong@engin.umich.edu (Roberta Chi-Woon Kwong) Newsgroups: alt.tv.quantum-leap.creative Subject: "Quanta" part 2/17 Date: 12 Apr 1995 21:48:06 GMT Message-Id: <3mhhqm$ah2@srvr1.engin.umich.edu> This is being posted for Sean Smith , who is having some difficulty posting from his account. Please direct all comments to him. Apologies if any line noise remains in these posts. -------------------------------------------------- Part 2 of QUANTA "Okay Mulder, I give up. What _do_ tomatoes, Sacramento, and a Tom Clancy novel all have in common?" By now their rental car was cruising south on Interstate 5 toward Sacramento and the flooded fields extended toward the horizon on either side of the forest green Ford. "Very little actually." "Mulder..." The tone in her voice prompted a quick if bemused reply. "The tomatoes are just a way to get us out here. As for the other two; have you been keeping up on the lists of Military base closings, lately?" "No. Just the usual political infighting about whose district should take cuts." "Well, Sacramento has two prominent bases. One's being closed; no real surprise there. But it turn's out that the one being kept seems to be the superfluous one. They're dumping the one that has some seriously unique aircraft repair facilities; the kind that keep all the big transports and bombers in the air." "So you why are they abandoning this Air Force base?" "I think they're getting rid of it because it would be suspicious if they kept two bases so close together. I want to know why they're keeping this smaller base." "Dare I even ask what you suspect," she slowly blinked twice as she drawled it, her eyes twinkling. The tires hissed along the gravel as the car rolled south toward the rising dark mass of an impending storm. Mulder paused as the car was buffeted by a windstorm. "I suspect that we're hunting the most elusive radio station known to mankind." * * * Dana Scully keyed her password into her PowerBook's security program, and shrugged out of her jacket while it decoded files. Standing, she walked across the small motel room to hang it in the built in closet. Of the many things that could be said about the house-sized motel she and Mulder had checked into, one of the few positives was that it was close to the campus. For two sparsely furnished singles, the shriveled woman behind the desk had asked an exorbitant price. The excuse she'd given while scratching a narrow wrist was that it included a parking space. Winter light filtered through dull tan curtains, catching upon the dust motes spinning in the air. In the semi-dark of the motel room, the brown polyester bedspread seemed to blend into the thin carpet. She assumed Mulder's room was just as promising. Returning to the small table in the corner, and the straight backed wooden chair she'd dragged to it, Scully began her report. She couldn't believe that the only connection to that book was the acronym ELF. TA relatively recent addition to the spate of government conspiracy theories is known as The Hum. An unknown number of apparently unrelated individuals nationwide have reported a loud, low-pitched, persistent humming. Their symptoms have no observed phenomonological or physiological causes. The obvious remaining option has been found to be psychological treatment, a choice with which almost all physicians and psychiatrists concur. Nonetheless, a small group, led by outspoken sufferers who call themselves 'Listeners,' disagree. They claim that they hear this hum because they are attuned in some way to a frequency which the rest of the populace cannot detect. Despite a total lack of proof, and no evidence of any 'physiological differences' between t he Listeners and the general populace, they continue to search for the source of The Hum. The target for most of the searches is the government's Extremely Low Frequency, or ELF, radio system. Intended to communicate with American submarines worldwide despite their locations, the ELF transceivers use frequencies which can penetrate ice, water, and even solid rock. It is via this system that submarines receive orders, conceivably even those to launch a nuclear strike. Because of its tactical importance, the number and location of the ELF transmitters is secret, as is their budget. It is Agent Mulder's belief that Mather AFB, located in a suburb of Sacramento, is one such site. He also believes that it is the base's location, adjacent to the northernmost shoots of the San Andreas fault, that permits the alleged ELF signal to radiate away from the shoreline, and affect individuals hundreds of miles away. Presently, there is no evidence of any kind to support such wild conjecture. There is also no information as to what Agent Mulder plans to do in order to garner such information.' Dana stopped typing and closed her small leather notebook. The blue glow reflected off her pale complexion as she reread her report. She paused a moment, then deleted the last sentence before she saved the report to her XFile Folder. Her hand hove ed briefly over the keyboard before she decided not to send her report to Quantico via modem. With that, Dana got ready for bed, and wondered if Mulder would be knocking on her door later that night. * * * "Do you know how we might leave a message for Dr. Holland, then?" Scully managed to keep her best smile on as she asked her third undergraduate where Davies Holland was. Agent Mulder had long since stopped smiling when he asked. Scully had seen the muscles in his jaw work after the last young kid with acne and a sweatshirt answered 'Sorry, I dunno.' That's when she decided that she ought to do the questioning. The undergraduate handed the two Federal Agents a slip of paper and suggested that they try leaving him a note. "Thank you very much. By the way, when did you last see Mr. Holland?" Dana kept smiling conversationally. "Oh, I almost never see him. He picks up his mail by phone, and has his TAs teach his 123 class for him. Personally, I think he's clutching on his thesis." Scully guessed that the department had grad students do some of the secretarial work too. After filing the new information away in her head, Scully thanked the young man and headed for the door. Mulder managed to be there ahead of her, and held the door. "Thanks, Mulder." "Good news. We don't have to walk past that hog barn again. We've done everything we can to locate this Holland, and left him my mobile number. Now we've got some free time." "We're still working Mulder. We can't just disappear-S "Holland did. Why _can't_ we?" Scully's sidelong look told him what she thought. "Come on, we can't poke around his lab without his permission, even if we could find it. We've tried his home, his office, his department. He has no E-mail address, and we don't know who else to talk to. The most we could do is run around here digging up the facts old Disappearing Davies can tell us when he comes out of his burrow." "You just want to go poking around the airbase, and you don't care that its odd for this Holland to disappear all of a suddenS "Of course I care, Scully. Now I'll be twice as difficult when we meet him." Fox turned as he spoke, facing Dana with an easy grin, his black overcoat easily blending with the craggy trunk of the aging oak behind him. "Come on, you heard him yourself ; this Davies guy is never on time and is always missing. So we wait for him to return our calls. We'll have our mobile phones with us, so we'll still be in contact. If he doesn't call by tomorrow, then we look for him. Deal?" "Deal," Dana replied as she stepped past him and onto the street. "But don't blame me if the airbase is boring and the good doctor is really named Jekyll." She ended up facing Mulder across the dark, slick surface of the car. "Trust me, Dana...the airbase _won't_ be boring." * * * "Mulder, I'm impressed. Is this the point where you tell me we've run out of gas?" "I don't know Scully. Would it work?" Mulder finished parking the car amidst the high grasses of a hill overlooking Mather Airbase, and turned off the headlights. In the dim blue glow from the moon she could see the flash of his teeth as he smiled. Dana decided to ignore him. "So, here we are, a mile from your airbase. Do we don camouflage, and sneak in under the wire, or just run in with flashlights and badges?" Dana always could miss sarcasm by inches, and still hit humor. Fox unzipped his soft leather hiking jacket and repositioned himself in his seat. "I was thinking more of staking out the flights into and out of the base. There might be unusual cargo craft coming in and out of the base. That would be the best way to bring in parts and crew for any large radio installation." "That would make sense, Mulder, but there's a couple of problems. How do you know any shipments are being made tonight?" "I'm guessing." "We're here on a guess? I'll admit you've got a record-breaking streak of good hunches going, but isn't this a little extreme?" "Well, they just had massive flooding in this area, and the Pacific Fleet just scaled back submarine deployments..." Fox tapped the fingers of his left hand on the rim of the steering wheel. "...Because they need to repair the ELF system to communicate with them," Scully finished Mulder's thought. "Okay, that makes sense. So how are we supposed to see these planes? Nightscopes?" "I stopped by the Lone Gunmen Press before coming here, and picked up a set of low-light binoculars. That reminds me, Froehicke sends his warmest regards." "I'm thrilled. Are those...people... the only ones you spend any time with off duty?" "Have you checked out the club scene recently? I'll stick with the monsters that _look_ like monsters. So, Scully, what else do you read besides _Red October_?" "A lot I pick up from friends," Scully knew full well he was switching the topic away from his private life. "I hadn't thought you'd have had time to do a lot of leisure reading yourself." "I don't. I heard about the ELF bit in the book at TLG." "Weren't you reading it back at the Hoover Building before we left?" "Just borrowed a copy to check up on what I heard from Froehicke." "What did you hear from him?" "Apart from a lot about how hot my partner was, not much." Scully had made more of an impression with the conspiracy freaks at TLG than she'd wanted. "Listen, why don't you break out the burgers we picked up on the way out here." "This is why you were looking for the drive through." "No stakeout is complete without junk food. I even brought some of my own." Dana heard the sound of a plastic bag crumple in the dark, and recognized the sound of Mulder's sunflower seeds. She started to reach for the bag of food they'd bought earlier, but stopped. "You know, it'll be next to impossible to tell the difference between the cargo shipments and the planes brought in for repairs. Once they wheel the plane into one of those hangers, they could load and unload anything they wanted to, and we couldn't see a thing." "Just one of those little hitches in an otherwise excellent stakeout. It certainly beats the hell out of listening to wiretaps for eight hours a day." Scully said nothing. She looked at Mulder for a moment, and a flash of recognition dawned in her eyes. She realized that this stakeout was definitely not what it appeared to be. With a thin smile, she unbuckled her seat belt and pulled two white paper bags up from the car floor. While Scully began setting the fast food on the dashboard, Mulder turned in his seat to rummage through his bag in the back seat. "Be careful, Mulder. If you keep bouncing, you'll lose your shake." Despite her words, Dana sounded amused. Mulder sat back in his seat, placing a leather case next to him. "Yes Mom Scully!" Even he had heard her mother's tone in her voice. "Try sister, Mulder. Melissa was always bouncing around and being difficult. That and the shakes remind me of her." Mulder was surprised at this. 'sually they didn't get into this sort of talk. "I guess that's another thing we have in common, Scully." Mulder sat and drank his shake quietly. "Somehow Mulder, I don't see a lot in common between you and my sister." She smiled playfully and bit into her hamburger. Fox set his drink down on his knee, and stared at his hands, "No, I meant you and I, Scully. My sister Samantha was difficult too." He didn't look up. He usually didn't say much about his childhood because of his sister's disappearance. Quickly, Scully swallowed her bite. She'd intended to try having a simple conversation with her partner and her friend. She didn't understand why his feelings were running so close to the surface tonight. Certainly, she'd missed his meaning at first. "I'm sorry, Mulder. You don't usually talk about her." "We don't usually share milkshakes. So, Scully, what do you figure an ELF transmitter looks like? I bet it's bigger than a breadbox." He smiled at her, and took a bite from his sandwich. "Look for something Army Green." For a moment, they both looked through the windshield toward the cluster of lights in the darkness that was the airfield below. The night was so impenetrable that they could barely see the grasses around the car sway in the wind. "I'll keep that in mind." * * * Several hours later, the car was still. Gone were the strains of Sheryl Crowe. Gone too the lively banter. The smell of fast food still lingered, as did the sleeping forms of the two agents. Fox's head was tilted back against his headrest, the binoculars loosely gripped in one hand. Even sleep did not deprive his face of its marks, the worry too firmly set in his mind to be uprooted by mere unconsciousness. His eyes flickered back and forth behind his lids. But whatever he saw there, it did not break him free from the little death of sleep. Dana was turned in her seat, her arms fast around her. With the hood of her jacket up, and her head nestled against the chair, she was nearly unrecognizable. In the dark, it would have been difficult to see her knuckles whiten as she clenched her jacket tighter. In her mind, she was gone. Or rather, she remembered the terror of her abduction, and the fear of _being_ gone. Her mind replayed every autopsy, every exhumed body, every identification by family, and numbered her amongst the desecrated dead. Nothing left but an abused, abandoned shell. She remembered nothing of her earlier kidnapping, despite the months that had passed. But in this dream, she could replay every scenario, imagine every extreme possibility she'd excluded from her waking mind. And interspersed with it were images. Images of Donnie Pfaster, the man who had nearly killed her. Images of Fox Mulder, the man who- Scully awoke with a small start, blues eyes staring wildly into the depths of the night. Her breathing still quickened, Dana pushed her hair back from her face and closed her eyes. Her eyes popped open. The blackness behind her eyelids was too full, too empty. Far better to keep staring around the car. For a moment, Dana played with the crucifix around her throat. That cross, however, now reminded her more of her partner than anything. It had been his only link to her when she had been kidnapped before, and although she now wore it again, it reminded her of how he must have felt. Blinking slowly against her fatigue, Dana turned to look at Mulder. He breathed softly, unaware he was being watched. More than anything, she wanted to wake her partner, to talk to him. When she awoke in the hospital, months after her first disappearance, Mulder had been haggard and drawn. He'd brushed off her questions with his usual humor, and yet he'd seemed darker somehow. Her mother and sister had been there that time, and she'd talked some with them. From them she'd heard that Fox had tracked down every lead zealously, and treated her family well, never giving up the search. She expected no less of him. But they too se emed to be holding back from her. And that she hadn't expected. And now her experience with Donald Pfaster highlighted her own uncertainties. When Fox had come through Pfaster's door, he did not seem to be a caring partner, but an avenging angel. Something, somewhere, had changed with him, and she knew not what. She prided herself on her strength and abilities, just as her late father raised her to do. She'd trained to deal with crises, and death. And she'd learned to how to work well, professionally, with a partner. Now all these things seemed to hang by the slimmest of threads. For a moment, Dana was aware of the crux she found herself in. She looked at the sleeping form of her partner, Fox. His brow wrinkled, and he murmured something unintelligible. Mulder continued to speak softly in his sleep. Quickly, she decided to soothe her insomniac friend. "It's okay Mulder, go to sleep." Her breathy voice was low and soft. Mulder turned his head slightly. It brought his face into the light of the moon, and she saw the pain burnt into his sleeping face as he would never show her when he was awake. "Find her." Two words, barely coherent, escaped him in his sleep. "We'll find her, Mulder. Go to sleep. I'll help you find your sister." She rested her head on the seat again, still speaking with Fox soothingly. "Pfaster." Dana's eyes came fully open. She realized he'd been speaking about her. "You found me Mulder. I'm right here. Everything's okay, Fox." Slowly, Mulder quieted down, like a child locked in the grip of a dream. Now they were both face to face, and she scrutinized him while he slept. Almost without thinking, she spoke the last aloud. "Time." Discussions of morality and ethics are a fine thing. But 'Time,' was too much of the wrong type of answer for Scully. "What time, Mulder? What time" She touched his arm gently. "With Scully." "Why?" Her voice was taunt. "Excuse." "An excuse? To talk to me?" It took effort to speak softly. "No." "No?" That _really_ took effort to keep her voice soft. "Away. From work." Earlier, that thought had occurred to her. The stakeout was so flawed, that she'd wondered if the whole thing might be for her benefit. At the time, it had seemed sweet. Now, it took on an insulting light, Dana dropped back into her seat and crossed her arms. Scully was too tired to track down all the things about this she didn't like. She tried listing them all, so she could tell them all, loudly, to Mulder when he woke up. She was asleep before she found a third reason.