The characters, plotlines, quotes, etc. included here are owned by Chris Carter and 1013 Productions, all rights reserved. The following transcript is in no way a substitute for the show "The X-Files" and is merely meant as a homage. This transcript is not authorized or endorsed by Chris Carter, 1013 Productions, or Fox Entertainment. Transcript downloaded from: http://www.allthingx.com ----------------------------------------------------------- THE X-FILES "THIS" #11x06 (WHISPERING): Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou among women, blessed is the fruit of thy womb PILOT (OVER RADIO): We're taking heavy fire. We're gonna drop 'em off, get back in the air ASAP. SERGEANT: For the next few hours, this crate is all that matters. You're gonna protect it like your mama's inside of it. - Is that clear? - SOLDIERS: Yes, sir! You do not drop it, you do not scratch it, you do not peek inside of it. And for God's sakes, you do not lose sight of it. - Is that clear? - SOLDIERS: Yes, sir! Quon will guide you to a site east of Hill 862, where you're gonna deliver this crate to Bravo Company. - Is that clear? - SOLDIERS: Yes, sir! Divert south of the river, divert south of the river. (TRANSMISSION CONTINUES INDISTINCTLY) Got three o'clock, three o'clock. Rendezvous back at the drop site at approximately 1900 hours. - Is that cl - (BULLETS RICOCHETING) PILOT: We're on, let's go! Go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go! (GRUNTING) You all right, John? No, I'm scared as hell, man. (GUNFIRE CONTINUES) Man, look at me, look at me. Everybody's scared. I got your back. And you got mine, okay? - Okay. Okay. - Okay. We go. There's a village in there. Go. - (GUNFIRE) - JOHN: Damn! Go! Go! - (WOMEN SHOUTING) - (QUON SHOUTS) - Quon! - What the hell are you doing? He's been hit, - I got to go help him! - No! We got to stay with the crate! (GUNFIRE CONTINUES) Please. Stay put. (GRUNTS) (GUNFIRE) (PANTING) Quon. - You're gonna be all right. - (GROANING) (GRUNTING) (WOMAN SCREAMS) (PEOPLE SCREAMING) John? John? John, where are you? - (WHEEZING) - (WOMAN SCREAMS) John! (MAN COUGHING) John? JOHN: Monsters. John. John John, it's me. John, it's me. It's Skinner! Deputy Director Kersh? KERSH: I'm gonna ask you once and only once: where is he? Sir, of whom are we speaking? Cut the crap, agents. Have you ever wondered why, after 35 years in the Bureau, Walter Skinner isn't sitting on this side of the desk? Or even perhaps running this whole damn agency, for that matter? Are you looking for Skinner? Let me be unambiguous in the event that there are any questions about this in your conspiracy-addled minds: Walter Skinner's stalled career has everything to do with his blind loyalty to the both of you and your misguided search for some imaginary truth. Sir, what is this about? Skinner's gone AWOL, Agent Mulder. Without warning or explanation. And frankly, I don't buy your naiveté, not even for a moment. He hasn't been the same since the two of you returned to the Bureau. Sir, has anyone checked his apartment? Could he have had some kind of medical emergency? The director's asking questions about Skinner's activities that I can't answer. There's some implication that he recently started poking around in places he shouldn't be poking. What sort of places? I couldn't say. But if you truly care about his future in the FBI, I suggest you bring him back here while he still has a future to return to. What happened to the old, reliable Skinner we knew and loved? Well, based on his dubious behavior the past couple months, it's safe to say the old Skinner has left the building. Mulder, do you think his disappearance actually has to do with us? Or something to do with William, or that business with the Purlieu Services? MULDER: There's no way to tell what Skinner's been up to - recently. - (LOCK CLICKS) But I'll keep my eyes peeled for cigarette butts. Maybe he's out meeting with an interior decorator. I noticed this the last time that we were here. No personal items, no mementos, no knickknacks. No family photographs. You know, it occurs to me, Mulder, that even after all these years, we know precious little about Walter Sergei Skinner beyond the professional. It appears he may suffer from moderate-to-severe constipation. I'm sorry to be a wimp, Mulder, but this just feels wrong. This feels like a real invasion of his privacy. Well, it's not like Skinner to just disappear without telling anyone. You know, and as much as I don't trust the guy right now, if he's gotten himself into a dangerous situation, he's gonna forgive us this little trespass. Look at this, Mulder. "Lance Corporal Walter Skinner, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines, United States Marine Corps. " Peculiar way to address it. There's no, uh, return address. Ugh. - Is that a? - Desiccated human ear. There's a note. "The monsters are here. " Monsters, Mulder. Does that get your juices flowing? As much as I appreciate any reference to my juices, Scully, my only concern here is for Skinner. Now I'm worried about him. Me, too. MULDER: Mud Lick Messenger. Mud Lick? SCULLY: Well, this is strange. Based on the way that package was addressed, I requested some basic information about Skinner and his platoon in Vietnam, like, names of his fellow Marines, et cetera, and I've just received word that I've been denied access by the Bureau. That the information is classified top secret. Well, the sheriff here in Mud Lick says he's got a body in the morgue minus an ear. I have a hunch that that victim turns out to be one of Skinner's platoon-mates from that classified list. You ain't gonna find no kitten. What? Ain't no kitten out there. No. All right. STENZLER: Dr. Matthew Wegweiser. The victim's a medical doctor? That's correct, ma'am. Doc Wegweiser is was our one and only town doctor. He's a terrific guy. Beloved. Went out for a hike Thursday last, never to return. Mrs. Wegweiser told us he hiked the same route several times a week. We found him right there on the trail. Got himself snared in some kind of hunting trap. A hunting trap? How do you account for the severed ear? Well - I can't, honestly. - And the missing teeth? Missing teeth? Well, the autopsy says that he was missing several upper and lower molars and, uh, a couple of bicuspids. But there's no evidence of advanced tooth decay or periodontitis. No evidence of manual extraction. MULDER: That mean something to you? Well, it's funny, because I just happened to have lost two teeth in the past month, myself. And my wife lost one yesterday. We were puzzling over it at breakfast. Hmm. The autopsy also says that there were wood splinters inside the wound. This hunting trap, did it have some kind of a spear or stake element? Yes, ma'am. It was a primitive whip trap. It's a bent piece of bamboo held by a trip wire. It's a sharpened spear attached at the end. It's a punji stick. - Pardon? - It's a-a simple spear made of wood or bamboo. It was used in Vietnam in any one of a number of insidious traps or weapons. Was Dr. Wegweiser here by any chance a Vietnam vet? I don't believe he was, no. Are there any other Vietnam vets in town that you know of? Oh, sure. Yeah, there's an institution outside of town called Glazebrook. Lot of guys were sent up there in the '70s after the war. Lot of them stuck around Mud Lick when they got out. - I think we passed one on our way in. - Yeah. That's old Trigger Davis. He's harmless. Trigger. Is Glazebrook a mental hospital? That's right, ma'am. It's a government-run facility. I'd like to see a list of past and current patients, if I could. Do you have access to that, sir? Probably not. They run a tight ship up there, but I'll see what I can drum up. Thank you, Sheriff. Anything to dispel the craziness everyone in town is buzzing about. What kind of craziness is that? People are swearing they seen some kind of monster out in the woods. Hmm. (DOG PANTING) (WHINES) (DOG BARKING) Pippet? Pippet? - (PIPPET WHINING) - Pippet. What is it, girl? What is it? (YELLS) (PIPPET WHINING) STENZLER: Tell 'em what you told me, Ed. Well, Banjo called me up and said he saw a damn monster out here in his woods. Could I come out with him and take a look around? We was having that look around when he just straight disappeared. Did you say Banjo? Ozzy Krager. Friends call him Banjo. This is his property. Did he describe this monster? (SIGHS) First he thought it was a bear. - (PIPPET WHINING) - Shh, shh, shh. But then he saw big ole horns. And it was walking on two feet. Same as people in town was talking about. Uh, Mr. Krager, I mean, uh, Banjo w-was he a Vietnam vet? Yeah, he was. And this may seem like an odd question, but was he missing any teeth? Yeah, he was. He'd just keep losing them like he's an old man or something. Well, I can't make much fun of him 'cause I been losing some, too. What's this? That's, uh that's one of them deer cams. Hunters use them for game surveillance. They can send an alert to your phone when they detect movement. Can we review what's on it? Should be able to see it on a computer back at the station. Is there something about that camera that's troubling you, sir? Banjo don't have no deer cams. I mean, least none that I seen, and I hunt with him, like, every week. The camera is motion-activated, so it shouldn't take terribly long to find what we're looking for. SCULLY: Oh, geez. MULDER: There. STENZLER: I don't believe it. There's our killer. Why do I get the distinct feeling you two know who that man is? That how it's gonna be? I've been nothing but courteous to y'all, and I don't appreciate being played a fool. Excuse me, I got to go tell my people we found their monster. Sheriff. That man is our boss. Assistant Director Walter Skinner of the FBI. Well, what in the hell was he doing at my crime scene last night? - That's what we're here to find out. - So, you're telling me you knew that man was here in Mud Lick all along? Walter Skinner didn't do this. He's a good man. He's a smart man. He's been at the FBI for over 30 years, and this murder's sloppy. I mean, not-not that he's capable of murder, but if he was, he certainly wouldn't get himself caught on camera at a crime scene. So, tell me, Agent Scully, what's your good man doing standing over a dead body in the woods in the middle of the night? A body which he neglected to call in to any law enforcement agency, including his own? Well, I know it looks bad, Sheriff, but I assure you, he's not your man. You can assure me all you want, Agent Mulder. I'll decide who my man is when I get a chance to bring him in and have a conversation with him. Now, if you'll excuse me, I got to go put out an APB for this Walter Skinner. What are you doing? There's more on that tape, Scully. STENZLER: I'm putting out an all-points bulletin for a Walter Skinner white male, glasses, last seen Hurry up. You're gonna get us run out of town. STENZLER: Suspect is presumed armed and dangerous. What did we just see, Mulder? We find that monster, we find Skinner. Tell me you don't think that was some real, actual monster we just saw. Well, for once, Scully, we agree. Monsters don't dig pits and set traps. That was most certainly a man in a mask. But I'm more concerned about Skinner's state of mind right now. (INDISTINCT CHATTER) Maybe Skinner's experiencing a delayed form of PTSD from his time in Vietnam. It's, uh, not without precedent. And even the shock of receiving that ear in the mail that's a pretty plausible trigger. What? You said trigger. Trigger. Banjo. Kitten? I already told you. Yeah, you said I wouldn't find Kitten. But is, uh, is Kitten a person? Is that somebody's nickname? I told the Eagle where to find Kitten's kitten. - The Eagle. - Hmm. Is the Eagle bald? (ANIMAL BLEATING) (ANIMALS CHITTERING) (KNOCK ON DOOR) Hello? Anybody here? So I unload into this ditch, right? And they're deader than a bag of tent stakes the whole lot of them. And I kneel down next to this little one. Now, he's got to be no more than ten, 12 years old, and I'm about to add another little adorable charm to my necklace, huh? I take out my Ka-Bar, I slice that little monster's ear off like a hunk of Wisconsin cheddar. MAN: Oh, man, Kitten But all of a sudden, he opens his eyes. Screams like a banshee! Takes off into the trees, hollering the whole way! (LAUGHING) You're bleeding, man. Dang. That's the third one this week. Hey, they got a tooth fairy in 'Nam? SKINNER: Get down! (YELLING) JOHN: Speak of the devil. (JOHN LAUGHS, WHOOPS) MAN: What are you doing in my house? John, is that you? John. I'm not John. I'm Davey. Davey. Well, you're John's son. You're Walter Skinner. That's right. Father sure talks a lot about you. Your father and I we went through a lot together. Calls you baby killer. Where is your father, Davey? Father says it's your fault the way our life turned out. Because of your testimony against him after the war, Father spent 38 years in Glazebrook. Until I got a letter from him last week, I thought he was dead. I spent years searching for him after his trial, but they vanished him. His records were sealed. - Even from me. - Who vanished him? Same people responsible for turning him from the good man he was when I met him into Into what? I only want to help him. (LAUGHS SOFTLY) I'm sorry, I don't believe he wants your help, Walter Skinner. Father told me all the stories about his time in Vietnam. There were monsters in that jungle. Because of his exposure to an experimental weaponized gas. (SCREAMING) He wasn't crazy like you said at his court-martial. But no one believed him. Not even Mother. No one except me. Listen to me, Davey, I know what he saw out there. I got a glimpse of it myself. But it wasn't real. It was the gas using his own fear against him. Your dad was exposed to a lot more of it than I was. And it changed him. I watched it happen. And yet you said nothing about that gas at his trial. Did you? They'd let me visit him sometimes up at Glazebrook. I had to sign all manner of non-disclosure documents. Do you realize how painful it was for me to see my father wasting away at that sanitarium? They kept him behind glass the whole time. I couldn't even touch him. I couldn't touch my own father. How could you let that happen to your friend? I was forbidden to speak about the gas at his court-martial. I was following orders. Doing what my superiors commanded me to do. I'm not saying it's right. It's not. And I have lived with the guilt of that decision every moment since. I think about him every day. But you got to understand, your dad murdered innocent people. And I know it was because of the gas, I knew who he was before. But the man it changed him into he was dangerous, Davey. People are getting hurt again, and we can stop it. But you've got to believe that I am here to help him. I only want to make things right. Please. Take me to him, Davey. Okay. I'll take you to him. His name is John "Kitten" James. He is, or was, in fact, a patient at Glazebrook Hospital, but his military files, like the other files I've tried to access, are classified. You think it's true, Scully, what Kersh said? What's that? We're the sole reason Skinner's career hasn't advanced in 30-some years? No, I hope not. I'd like to believe that his choice to stay loyal to us - Was exactly that: a choice. - Yeah. If there's one thing I know about Walter Skinner is, he's a man ruled by his moral compass above all else. There was a time I would have agreed with that, unequivocally. I realize that his conduct has been strange, but don't you think that we should give him the benefit of the doubt after everything we've been through with him? I mean, especially in light of what we now understand he may have sacrificed for us. (SIREN WAILING) Let's just hope we find him before somebody else does. (INSECTS CHIRPING) Where we going, Davey? DAVEY: It's not far now. This is what they drove him to. Oh, God. No, John, what have you done? John. (YELLS) (LAUGHS SOFTLY) (SKINNER GRUNTING) (PANTING) Now who sees monsters? (VEHICLE APPROACHING) Help me! Is somebody out there? Help! Why? No! Can I help you? Special Agent Mulder. Special Agent Dana Scully. Are you related to John James? - I'm his son, Davey. - MULDER: We're looking for a man who we have reason to believe may be in the area and may have served with your father in Vietnam, Walter Skinner? Uh, I don't believe I've ever heard that name before, no. Is your father home? No, I'm sorry. I I haven't a clue where he is. I haven't seen him in weeks. Is it okay if we come inside for a brief moment? We'd like to get some insight on a few things. By all means. Right this way. (ANIMAL CHATTERING) - (DOOR OPENS) - (SQUEALING) (PANTING) (GRUNTS) (SHOUTS) (SHOUTS, MOANS) He Help! I never met real live FBI agents before. Please. Father said there's two refuges in life from sorrow. Music and, uh (CHUCKLES) cats. But I think cats are creepy. ("FEAR IS A MAN'S BEST FRIEND" BY JOHN CALE PLAYING) Could I offer you some tea or-or something? - No. No, I'm good. - SCULLY: No, thank you. Um Mr. James, we understand that your father was a patient at Glazebrook? Uh, yes, uh That's right, for many years. And when was he released? He was released one month ago. On what grounds? Sorry? Why was he released after he had been confined for so many years? They, uh, determined that he was no longer a danger to himself or anyone else. Not that he ever was. Well, I I guess he was a threat to someone. Is this your mother? Mother died many years ago. Father's incarceration was very hard on her. Do you mind if I ask how she died? Yes. Darkness, warmer than a bedroom floor Mr. James, a minute ago, you said that your father was a threat to someone. What did you mean? Father had secrets. Secrets? About the government. Father was poisoned by an experimental weaponized gas in Vietnam. Because of his exposure, they continued to do tests on him and other soldiers like him for many years at Glazebrook. What kind of tests? Chemical, biological. They were trying to learn how to control human behavior. Harnessing our fears to manipulate us into violence. (YELLING) Using this weaponized gas? The gas in, uh, the war was still in the experimental stage. And they still haven't perfected it, but after years of testing it and honing it, - they are getting close. - To what end? DAVEY: Imagine the power of a government that could literally control the minds of millions and millions of its citizens. To influence every choice and decision they made simply by exposing them to this poison. You'll have to forgive me, Mr. James, but this sounds like, uh like a dystopian novel. It's happening right now in the United States of America. Do you honestly believe that, after 30 years of research and development and decades of experimenting on American heroes like my father, it would just be thrown in the trash, never to be utilized? Unlikely. The DoD and the CIA have been working on various incarnations of mind control projects since the '50s. Project BLUEBIRD, MKUltra, MKDELTA. Well, those programs were supposedly ended in the early 1980s. - Supposedly. - DAVEY: My father believed he was part of the program MK-NAOMI. It was a, was a successor to MKUltra. We don't know how they're using this chemical now, but we know for certain that they are. Best friend Maybe they're poisoning our water? Or the food supply? Maybe they're putting it in those chemtrails behind all those commercial jets that fly over our country every single day? It brings you down Thank you, sir. Thank you, Mr. James. (DOOR OPENS) Well, say fear is a man's best friend You drive. What's going on, Mulder? Let's just get in the car and drive away. Say fear is a man's best friend. (CAR DOORS OPEN) (ENGINE STARTS) Mulder, you want to tell me what's going on? He claims not to know who Skinner is, but in that photo album I was looking at, there were all these photos of his dad and Skinner, like they were BFFs. And did you check out that shiny new SUV parked beside the cabin? Yeah, that definitely wasn't his. Skinner could be back there somewhere. Then, why the hell are we driving away? Let's pull over here. Get somewhere you can get cell reception. Call the sheriff, have him get every available officer - down here as soon as he can. - What are you gonna do? I'll try to do for Skinner what I would hope he would do for either of us. Mulder. Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend You add it up, it brings you down You add it up, it brings you down Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend Say fear is a man's best friend SKINNER (IN DISTANCE): Help! Help! (DOOR OPENS) (DOOR CLOSES) Come on. Damn it. SKINNER: Somebody out there? Hello? Mulder? Skinner. Get me the hell out of here. I'll boost you, I'll boost you, okay? Davey. Davey, please. Let us out. - Let's do this quickly. Come on. - Okay. (SKINNER GROANING) Davey. You don't have to do this. (GUNSHOT) Scully. Where's Davey? Go. Go! (GROANING) (GRUNTING) (PANTING) Thank you. Ambulance is on its way. I would call Kersh as soon as you get cell reception. Something you want to share? Kersh indicated to us that we were responsible for your lack of upward mobility in the Bureau. If it wasn't for you two, I wouldn't be here right now. I'm not talking about the fact that you showed up here today. I enlisted in the Marine Corps the day that I turned 18. I was a kid. Full of callow self-confidence and faith and this this kind of uncorrupted belief that I was doing the right thing. John James He didn't enlist. He, uh, he was drafted. And his whole life was completely upended by a war that he really, truly didn't even understand. He was so afraid all the time. I felt like I had to protect him. But I didn't. I couldn't. That experience in Vietnam with John, it it put a dent in that blind faith that I had in my government. It planted seeds of-of mistrust. I tried for years to to suppress that mistrust, but it gnawed at me. (SCOFFS) Then you two You two came along and you taught me not to hide from it, but to have the guts to shine a light directly into the darkest corners. And if given the choice between advancing my career by being blindly loyal to some faceless puppeteers pulling strings from the shadows or to throw in with you two, make no mistake about it, I'd make the same decision every single damn time. So I'm gonna go back. I'm gonna kiss the ring. But I intend to do right by this man. And that means finding the truth of what the hell it was they used him for. No matter the cost. I owe him that. (SCOFFS) I owe myself that. Skinner. We're with you. DAVEY: Imagine the power of a government that could literally control the minds of millions and millions of its citizens. Simply by exposing them to this poison. It's happening. It's happening right now. THE END