(Early morning, winter. Residential street. House of PRIVATE
JACK MCALPIN and his wife ROBIN MCALPIN. ROBIN MCALPIN is lying in bed alone just waking
up to the sounds of a toddler crying.)
MRS. MCALPIN: (sleepily) Your turn. (no answer) Jack? (she
gets out of bed and crosses to the bathroom door where she hears someone being physically
ill) Honey? (toilet flushes) Are you still feeling sick?
PRIVATE MCALPIN: (angrily, coming out of the bathroom)
Whats the matter with you? Cant you hear the baby is crying?
(He roughly passes by her. Later, she sits at the breakfast
table with their toddler eating breakfast. )
MRS. MCALPIN: (to toddler) How bout some cereal, Honey?
(PRIVATE MCALPIN, still angry, comes downstairs in army
fatigues, pours himself cereal.)
MRS. MCALPIN: (quietly) You were having those awful dreams
again last night.
PRIVATE MCALPIN: I didnt sleep long enough to be
dreaming.
MRS. MCALPIN: I want you to go to the doctor. Find out
whats wrong. Will you do that?
PRIVATE MCALPIN: (yelling) Id just like to eat my
breakfast in peace! Do you think thats possible.
(MRS. MCALPIN cowers under his yelling and begins crying. The
baby begins crying and she tries to comfort him. PRIVATE MCALPIN takes a bite of his
cereal. When he looks in his bowl he sees an mass of wiggling meal worms. He spits out the
food in disgust and runs out the door.)
MRS. MCALPIN: (crying, not understanding) Jack, what is it?!
(He runs out door past jockey statue that has been painted
white. He gets in car and drives away quickly. Camera switches back to the statue which
now has black maggoty things crawling on its face. PRIVATE MCALPIN is driving very fast.
He looks at himself in the rearview mirror. His face is covered with black and red
pustules, but only in the mirror. We see that his face is actually clear. He steers the
car at full speed into the trunk of a large tree beside the road. The car is totaled.
Camera pans around to show an intricate symbol painted on the backside of the tree.)
Opening Credits. Mulder Whooo. Scully rocks.
SCENE 2
COUNTY ROAD 10 FOLKSTONE, NORTH CAROLINA
(MULDER and SCULLY are driving along rural road. SCULLY looks
through the file on PRIVATE MCALPIN.)
MULDER: Private John McAlpin-- one of the few, the proud ...
the dead. Last week he wrapped his car around a tree. Died on impact.
SCULLY: (reading) Drug and alcohol tests came back negative.
Car shows no evidence of brake, steering or any other mechanical failure.
MULDER: The military is calling it a
suicideTheyre especially concerned because its the second one in as many
weeks.
SCULLY: Both at the same base?
MULDER: Yeah, except that it's not exactly a base. Flip to
the back. The Marines were all stationed at the Folkstone processing center in North
Carolina. More than 12,000 refugees waiting for asylum from Uncle Sam.
SCULLY: Wasn't there a riot there about a month ago?
MULDER: A ten year old boy was killed but the uh, details of
his death were never released.
SCULLY: Why did the military contact us?
MULDER: They didn't. Mrs. McAlpin contacted the Bureau when
the military refused her request to investigate her husband's death further.
SCULLY: She doesnt believe it was suicide.
MULDER: (pointing) There.
(MULDER stops beside the tree that MCALPINE ran into. They
get out and look at the symbol painted on the tree.)
MULDER: This is the tree that stopped Private McAlpin's car.
State police reported there's graffiti on the bark.
SCULLY: It looks like some kind of ritual symbol.
MULDER: Most of the refugees at Folkstone are Haitian.
SCULLY: Mrs. McAlpin believes voodoo was behind her husband's
death?
MULDER: Mrs. McAlpin doesn't believe her husband killed
himself. She wants to know who did.
SCENE 3
(MCALPINs house. The toddler plays on the floor as MRS.
MCALPIN talks to MULDER and SCULLY at the kitchen table.)
MRS. MCALPIN: Jack used to tell these jokes. Well, they were
pretty dumb, I guess, but the way he told them always made me laugh. Then he got
transferred to the camp and nothing was very funny anymore.
SCULLY: Did he ever discuss with you what went on there? What
his duties included?
MRS. MCALPIN: No. He'd just come home angry, mostly at
himself though sometimes he'd turn it on Luke and me.
SCULLY: Was he ever treated for depression or stress?
MRS. MCALPIN: No. I tried getting him to talk to someone,
even our minister, but Jack believed in dealing with his own problems.
MULDER: Did he believe in voodoo?
MRS. MCALPIN: The Marines, his family and football pretty
much sums up everything Jack believed in.
MULDER: So, when did you first think that his death involved
something out of the ordinary?
MRS. MCALPIN: One of the boys in his squad told me what they
found at the accident and he said it was some kind of voodoo curse -- the same one they
found on the stool that Puerto Rican boy used to hang himself.
MULDER: Who told you that?
MRS. MCALPIN: Harry Dunham. He's from New Orleans so he's
pretty superstitious about that type of thing.
MULDER: What about you?
MRS. MCALPIN: My husband had just died so I didn't give it
much thought either way... Not until Luke dug this up out of his sandbox.
(MRS. MCALPIN reaches down and produces a large pink conch
shell with the same symbol that was on the tree painted on the lip of the shell. MULDER
and SCULLY look at each other.)
MRS. MCALPIN: I know it sounds crazy me worrying about all
this but the truth is, I'm scared. I'm scared for my child... And I just don't know what
to do anymore.
SCENE 4
FOLKSTONE INS PROCESSING CENTER
(MULDER and SCULLY enter military-like compound with an armed
escort, SCULLY a pace behind MULDER. Barbed wire fences and aluminum buildings. Not a
pleasant place. Haitian male refugees stare at them. In the mess hall, one of the men
grabs SCULLY and begins yelling at her in Creole. A young Haitian boy, CHESTER, pushes the
man away from SCULLY.)
CHESTER: Go! Go! Get away! Get away! (the man leaves)
Hes crazy. Too much rum. (smiles at SCULLY, a young con artist) For such a pretty
lady its dangerous out here. You need something pour vous gardez --- for protection.
(produces small decorated cloth bag from his pocket) Your lucky charm.
SCULLY: (ignoring him) Come on, Mulder.
MULDER: How much?
CHESTER: Five (changes mind) Ten.
MULDER: Ill give you five.
SCULLY: (over it) Lets go, Mulder.
MULDER: You should always carry protection. Hold on. (hands
CHESTER money and takes small cloth bag) There you go.
(Later, MULDER and SCULLY sit in COLONEL WHARTONs
office. COLONEL WHARTON is tough, no nonsense Marine.)
COLONEL WHARTON: I'm still not clear just what it is you're
investigating here.
SCULLY: Two of your men have died in the past two weeks
allegedly of self-inflicted injuries.
COLONEL WHARTON: And I've taken every measure to see it
doesn't happen again. I've even flown in the 528th combat stress control detachment from
Camp LeJeune.
SCULLY: But your soldiers aren't in combat.
COLONEL WHARTON: In some ways what we're dealing with here is
worse.
SCULLY: How so?
COLONEL WHARTON: We're soldiers. We're not prison guards. And
we're being asked to police a hostile population of foreigners without the resources to
feed or house them. There are bound to be some conflicts.
SCULLY: So your men are getting the brunt of the refugees'
frustration?
COLONEL WHARTON: It's hatred, plain and simple. They hate us
and all I can do is see that they're processed as efficiently as possible.
MULDER: Colonel Wharton, a, uh... A certain ritual sign was
found at the scene of both deaths. Is there anything you can tell us about that?
COLONEL WHARTON: Not much. Apparently, it's some sort of
voodoo marking.
MULDER: But you haven't investigated it as a possibility.
COLONEL WHARTON: Possibility of what? All I know is voodoo
caused a riot in my camp. One night they held some secret ceremony. The next day all hell
broke loose.
MULDER: We understand a refugee was killed-- a young boy.
COLONEL WHARTON: No one felt that tragedy more deeply than
me. Fortunately, I was able to isolate the one responsible for instigating all the
trouble.
MULDER: Who would that be?
COLONEL WHARTON: His name is Bauvais. Pierre Bauvais. Thinks
he's some kind of revolutionary.
MULDER: Do you think we could speak with him?
COLONEL WHARTON: If you don't mind listening to his laundry
list of complaints.
SCULLY: I'd also like to examine Private McAlpin's body. I
have a signed consent from his wife.
COLONEL WHARTON: (indicating soldier standing at the door)
Private Dunham will help you with whatever you need.
(PRIVATE DUNHAM opens door for them. MULDER guides SCULLY
out, his hand on her lower back. As they pass him, PRIVATE DUNHAM glances nervously back
at COLONEL WHARTON, then follows MULDER and SCULLY.)
SCENE 5
TEMPORARY CAMP MORGUE
(SCULLY is interviewing the coroner, FOYLE.)
CORONER FOYLE: Cause of death was no great mystery. That boy
was doing 60 when he hit the tree.
SCULLY: So they pronounced him at the scene?
CORONER FOYLE: His head was hanging on his shoulders like a
broken peony and he had no respiratory or cardiac functioning. I saw no reason to conduct
an autopsy then and I still don't. Well, you can see for yourself.
(CORONER FOYLE roughly opens the drawer. They stare in shock
at the badly decayed dog carcass lying where a human body should be.)
CORONER FOYLE: What kind of a sick joke is this? Jackson!
JACKSON: (voice off camera) Sir?
CORONER FOYLE: (exiting) Who the hell's been in here?!
Someones tampered with McAlpins body and I want to know who!
(SCULLY looks down at the dog corpse.)
SCENE 6
PROCESSING CENTER BRIG
(Same time, PRIVATE DUNHAM leads MULDER down to
BAUVAISs cell, solitary lockup area.)
MULDER: Youre Harry Dunham.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: Yes, sir.
MULDER: You knew Private McAlpin? His wife said you were
friends.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: We were in the same squad.
MULDER: Any idea why he might have killed himself?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: I can't say, sir.
MULDER: You can't say or you won't say?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: I'll be right here if you need me.
(MULDER enters BAUVAIS chain link cell. BAUVAIS is a
large Haitian man, very calm and mysterious. Thick Creole accent.)
MULDER: My name is Mulder. I'm with the FBI. I was hoping you
could answer some questions about the two US Marines who took their own lives.
BAUVAIS: It is a terrible shame.
MULDER: I'm not convinced it's as simple as that.
BAUVAIS: You do not believe I was involved in this, do you?
How could I be... When they keep me locked up in here?
MULDER: You tell me. These photographs were taken at the
sites of both deaths. (shows him photos) The shell was found buried under one of the
soldiers' homes. Can you tell me about the symbol?
BAUVAIS: Why? What do you expect to learn from this?
MULDER: Just the truth. One of the Marines left behind a
wife. She's too frightened to even mourn. She deserves some peace of mind.
BAUVAIS: It is the Loco-Miroir the crossroads between the two
worlds-- the mirror in which a man must confront his true self. These Marines... Maybe
they didn't like what they saw.
MULDER: Colonel Wharton says you incited the riot last month.
BAUVAIS: My country was born on the blood of slaves. Freedom
is our most sacred legacy.
MULDER: Does that mean you would kill to preserve it?
BAUVAIS: Wharton will not let us return home... Which is all
we ask.
(SCULLY enters.)
SCULLY: Mulder, I need to speak with you.
BAUVAIS: Shes come to tell you the Marine is gone.
(BAUVAIS and SCULLY stare at each other. SCULLY is clearly
unnerved by the man. [CarriK: But of course still completely able to take care of
herself!] )
SCULLY: How did you know?
BAUVAIS: Its the spirits. The Loa have warned you.
(BAUVAIS stands backlit. SCULLY can only see his outline.
Shades of "Irresistible".)
SCULLY: Somebody stole McAlpin's body and replaced it with
what looks like a dog's corpse.
BAUVAIS: They will only warn you once. After that, no magic
can save you.
(MULDER quickly steps between BAUVAIS and SCULLY blocking her
from the prisoners intense stare.)
MULDER: Come on, Scully. Let's go.
(They exit.)
SCENE 7
(Night. MULDER and SCULLY on the road. SCULLY driving.)
MULDER: So what do you think happened to Private McAlpin?
SCULLY: Somehow, Bauvais must have switched the bodies.
MULDER: It's quite a trick considering he's been confined for
the last month.
SCULLY: Well, then he had somebody else do it.
MULDER: But you said there was no trace evidence. And
security is practically impossible to breach.
SCULLY: I was only suggesting that whoever did it was clever
and thorough. I wasnt suggesting that some kind of spirit did it.
MULDER: Well, just in case, I believe in covering my bases.
(MULDER hangs the cloth charm he bought from CHESTER in the
camp on the rearview mirror. SCULLY rolls her eyes.)
SCULLY: Mulder, voodoo only works by instilling fear in its
believers. You saw how Bauvais tried to intimidate me. I'll admit the power of suggestion
is considerable but this is no more magic than a pair of fuzzy dice.
MULDER: Scully, look out!
(SCULLY slams on brakes almost hitting a figure who is
walking in the middle of the road as if sleepwalking. MULDER and SCULLY get out of the car
and approach him.)
MULDER: Hey...
SCULLY: Private McAlpin?
(MCALPIN does not respond.)
(Commercial 1.)
SCENE 8
PCYCHIATRIC INFIRMARY
(Camp medical facilities. MCALPIN sits rocking, still in a
daze.)
SCULLY: Hes nonverbal, nonresponsive to voice, touch or
pain. The neurologists suspect he suffered a severe concussion resulting in amnesia.
MULDER: Its a plausible diagnosis. Only I'm more
interested in how he came back to life.
SCULLY: Well, obviously, he never left. Dr. Foyle made a
gross mistake when he signed the death certificate. Its not the first time something
like thats happened.
MULDER: Did you get a copy of the blood test?
SCULLY: Yeah. (reads) Electrolytes, white and red counts are
all normal. Except this is strange. The lab detected trace levels of tetrodotoxin in his
blood. (MULDER begins pacing.) That's a poison found in the liver and reproductive organs
of puffer fish-- a Japanese delicacy.
MULDER: Somehow, I get the feeling Private McAlpin didn't
frequent too many sushi bars.
SCULLY: You have a theory how it got into his blood?
MULDER: What do you know about zombies?
SCULLY: Well, I hope you don't intend to tell Robin McAlpin
that she married one?
MULDER: In 1982, a Harvard ethnobotanist named Wade Davis did
extensive field research in Haiti on the zombification phenomenon. He analyzed several
samples of zombie powder prepared by voodoo priests and he found tetrodotoxin to be common
to all of them.
SCULLY: But, Mulder, its a lethal poison.
MULDER: But in small enough doses it can cause paralysis and
depress cardiorespiratory activities to such a low level that the victim might appear
clinically dead.
SCULLY: Well, zombie or not, Jack McAlpin is alive.
MULDER: Exactly. Which is what makes me wonder about the
other Marine who allegedly killed himself.
SCENE 9
FOLKSTONE MUNICIPAL CEMETERY
(Graveyard. Day. MULDER and SCULLY walk into the cemetery.)
SCULLY: Why did they bury Private Guttierez here?
( A large black dog growls at them. GROUNDSKEEPER comes up
behind the dog. )
GROUNDSKEEPER: They beat you to it. You're the FBI, aren't
you? (to dog) Stay. Easy, Wong.
MULDER: (showing badge) Yeah. We've arranged to exhume the
body of Manuel Guttierez.
GROUNDSKEEPER: Right. The Marine. I prepared the dig as soon
as I got the judge's order, but it's too late.
SCULLY: Too late?
GROUNDSKEEPER: Yeah. The body snatchers got there first. I
caught them more than few times right in the act but it's getting I can't keep up anymore.
That's, uh, why I got this.
(Opens his coat to show them a pistol.)
SCULLY: Don't the police intervene?
GROUNDSKEEPER: They got their hands full trying to protect
the lives of the living. I am all these people have to preserve their rest.
MULDER: These body snatchers What do they do with the
bodies?
GROUNDSKEEPER: Ah, they sell them.
MULDER: To who?
GROUNDSKEEPER: Well, it varies. When the local medical school
ran short of cadavers rumor had it that the snatchers got $200 a head. But mostly, it's
the voodoo types who do the buying. A lot of folks in these parts go in for that with the
medicines and the potions and... Yeah, here we are.
(They look into an empty grave.)
GROUNDSKEEPER: Look at that. They dug him up right under my
nose. Hows he supposed to rest in peace like this? (MULDER looks at the name on the
coffin) They can do what they like with the pigs and the chickens but this is a
desecration. This is uncool.
SCULLY: Mulder ..
(She points to a figure digging near a grave several yards
away.)
GROUNDSKEEPER: Look at that. See what Im talking about?
(Begins to pull out his pistol, but MULDER stops him.)
MULDER: Let us take care of this.
GROUNDSKEEPER: Knock yourselves out.
(MULDER and SCULLY run toward the figure digging near a
grave. It is the young boy from the prison, CHESTER. He tries to run, but MULDER grabs
hold of him.)
CHESTER: (struggling in MULDERs grasp) Let me be! I
didn't do nothing! What did I do?
MULDER: Maybe you can tell us.
(They look down at CHESTERs bag which has fallen open.
It is full of live frogs which begin hopping away. MULDER and SCULLY look at each other.)
SCULLY: (looking at the frogs) Maybe I should kiss a few and
find out if one is Guttierez.
(Later, they sit in a fast food restaurant. MULDER and SCULLY
watch as CHESTER greedily devours a cup of french fries.)
CHESTER: Fresh bones. They pay good. But I go there for the
frogs. You find the best frogs at the cemetery.
SCULLY: How do you get out of the camp?
CHESTER: I go, and then I come back.
SCULLY: What about your parents? Are your parents at the
camp?
MULDER: What about a name?
CHESTER: (proudly) Chester Bonaparte.
MULDER: What do you do with the frogs, Chester?
CHESTER: For each one I catch, I get 50 cents.
MULDER: From who? Who pays you for them?
CHESTER: (mysteriously) Bauvais. His magic is the most
strong. He even made my fries disappear.
MULDER: Hey, Chester. I got magic, too, and I bet I can make
your fries reappear.
CHESTER: Merci!
(MULDER opens his wallet and hands CHESTER some money.
CHESTER grins and runs off to the counter for more fries.)
SCULLY: Mulder, certain frog species secrete a substance
called bufotoxin. It's chemically similar to what we found in Private McAlpins
blood. I think we should ask Bauvais what he's doing with those frogs.
MULDER: (speaking very quietly to SCULLY) I didn't want to
say anything before because I wasn't sure, but I think we're being followed. It's a gray
four-door sedan in the parking lot. Keep an eye on Chester.
(MULDER goes outside and sneaks around to the drivers
side of a gray car. He points his gun at PRIVATE DUNHAM.)
MULDER: Out of the car, Private. You've been following us.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: Look, I had to warn you.
MULDER: You didnt seem too interested in helping us
before.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: I couldn't talk then-- not with Colonel
Wharton so close by. And not with him right there. (indicates CHESTER as SCULLY helps him
into the backseat of her car)
MULDER: Chester? He's just a little boy.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: No, sir, he is not.
SCULLY: (approaching the men) Whats going on?
MULDER: Private Dunham was just about to tell us why we're in
danger.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: You're putting yourselves into the middle of
something you don't understand.
MULDER: But you do?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: Bauvais warned him. He told the Colonel he'd
take his men one by one unless...
MULDER: Unless what?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: Unless the Colonel let his people go back to
Haiti. But the Colonel... He just had us turn up the heat on all them beatings and all.
SCULLY: Colonel Wharton sanctioned beatings of the refugees?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: He ordered it, and worse. The things he is
making us do to those people.
SCULLY: Why hasn't anybody stepped forward or filed a
complaint?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: None of us feel good about it, Maam,
but you don't join the Marines to feel good.
MULDER: You said that Bauvais threatened the Colonels
men.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: He said he'd take their souls.
MULDER: You believe he can do that?
PRIVATE DUNHAM: Jack was my friend, and look what happened to
him.
SCULLY: Well, we don't know what happened to him but there is
a medical explanation for his condition.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: Back home, an associate of my daddy's, Clyde
Jessamin, once crossed a man on some kind of real estate deal. And not two weeks passed
before Jessamin's daughter took ill with something the doctors couldn't make heads or
tails of. All they could do was shoot her full of morphine the pain was so bad. She died
five minutes past midnight on her wedding day, and when they did an autopsy to try and
figure it out, all they could find was a bunch of snakes squirming around inside her
belly.
SCULLY: Sounds like an old wives tale.
PRIVATE DUNHAM: No, Maam. Its not. You see,
Im the one who was supposed to marry her.
(MULDER and SCULLY watch him drive away then head back to
their own car.)
SCULLY: Think hes telling the truth?
MULDER: Till I can figure out why hed lie, yeah.
SCULLY: Hes superstitious, and superstition breeds
fear. Its what Voodoo is all about. Its just as irrational as avoiding a crack
in the sidewalk.
MULDER: Why would he be trying to avoid Chester?
(Their car is empty, CHESTERs fry cup on the back
seat.)
MULDER: Chester? Chester?
(They see him several yards away. MULDER chases him on foot,
SCULLY follows with the car.)
MULDER: Chester! Chester! Stop! Im not going to hurt
you! (to SCULLY) Its okay. Ill get him. Chester! Chester!
(MULDER reaches the end of the pier. It is deserted. He looks
in the water. A black kitten is on top of a barrel near the end of the pier. It meows.
MULDER stares at it in confusion, then looks around.)
(Commercial 2.)
SCENE 10
(Next morning. COLONEL WHARTONs office. He is eating.)
PRIVATE KITTEL: Can I get you anything else, sir?
(Knocking at the door. COLONEL WHARTON is irritated.)
COLONEL WHARTON: Just get the door.
(MULDER and SCULLY enter.)
COLONEL WHARTON: (dismissively) Im sorry. Im
having my breakfast.
MULDER: (polite sarcasm) Thats all right. We already
ate.
(PRIVATE KITTEL leaves.)
COLONEL WHARTON: I understand you obtained a court order
yesterday to exhume Private Guttierez.
MULDER: Thats right.
COLONEL WHARTON: You should know I filed a complaint with the
Justice Department.
MULDER: His body was missing-- stolen from his coffin
apparently.
COLONEL WHARTON: Now you see what we're facing here. What
kind of barbaric religion would desecrate a grave?
SCULLY: We suspect it was an act of retaliation.
COLONEL WHARTON: Retaliation?
SCULLY: For your mistreatment of the detainees.
COLONEL WHARTON: What the hell are you talking about?
SCULLY: Physical abuse of political refugees is a
prosecutable crime under international law.
COLONEL WHARTON: (chuckles) It's Bauvais, isn't it? He's the
one you're getting this garbage from. Look, nobody ever said this was a hotel but it's
hardly a concentration camp.
SCULLY: Then there is no official policy of harassment?
COLONEL WHARTON: If anything, its my men who are being
harassed. The UN, the relief organizations, theyre all so busy protecting the rights
of these refugees nobodys looking out for my men.
MULDER: Well, well let you finish. Wouldnt want
your breakfast to get cold.
(MULDER and SCULLY exit. COLONEL WHARTON returns to his
breakfast. As he cuts the slice of ham, he stops in horror as he sees fresh blood pouring
out of the ham.)
(MULDER and SCULLY outside are getting into their car, SCULLY
driving.)
MULDER: Whartons left these people no choice but to
fight back with the only weapon they have.
SCULLY: Sorry, Mulder, theres a big difference between
nasty looks and raising the dead.
MULDER: Not according to Private Dunham.
(SCULLY cries out as she takes hold of the steering wheel.)
SCULLY: Ah!!!
MULDER: What?
(SCULLY pulls a vine covered with thorns from the steering
column.)
SCULLY: More scare tactics. (tosses vine out the window)
MULDER: (reaching for SCULLYs bleeding hand) Let me see
that.
SCULLY: No. Its nothing.
(As they drive away, camera shows the symbol painted on the
pavement under the car.)
SCENE 11
(BAUVAISs cell. PRIVATE KITTEL has been beating
BAUVAIS. COLONEL WHARTON stands outside the cell.)
PRIVATE KITTEL: I don't think he's in any condition to talk.
COLONEL WHARTON: That's right, Private. You don't think. You
follow orders.
COLONEL WHARTON: (threatening, grabs BAUVAISs collar)
Ouvri barriere pou' moi. I want the secret. Maybe you should tell me now while you can
still talk.
BAUVAIS: Ma vie nan mains bon dieu..
COLONEL WHARTON: No, papaloi. Your life is in my hands.
SCENE 12
(MULDER enters his hotel room. Something falls from the top
of the door. A playing card, the 10 of diamonds.)
COUNTY ROAD 10
(Later, night, next to diamond shaped road sign, route 10.
MULDER sits in the car. Another car arrives. X opens the passenger door and gets in the
car.)
MULDER: I was surprised to get your card. I had assumed our
last contact... would be our last. Why are you here?
X: Your investigation is faltering, Agent Mulder.
MULDER: I've got a renegade Marine who may be violating every
human rights provision...
X: These people have no rights. In 24 hours all access to
Folkstone will be restricted to military personnel. No press, no third-party monitoring.
MULDER: What about Scully and me?
X: You'll be called back to Washington on a priority matter.
MULDER: (sighs) They're making the camp invisible. Why?
X: In case you haven't noticed, Agent Mulder, the Statue of
Liberty is on vacation. The new mandate says if you're not a citizen you'd better keep
out.
MULDER: Why hold them up? Why not just repatriate them?
X: During our most recent involvement in Haiti three US
soldiers took their own lives. Of those men, two were under Colonel Wharton's command.
MULDER: Youre saying the military's sanctioning
Wharton's revenge? These people are innocent civilians. Some people in Congress might have
a real problem with that.
X: By the time they get a committee together it'll be as if
none of this ever happened.
(X gets out of the car.)
SCENE 13
(SCULLYs hotel room. She is on the phone, frustrated.)
SCULLY: (on phone) You don't understand. I've been on hold
for half an hour. I'm trying to locate a Private Dunham.
(SCULLY scratches at her hand which is puffy and still
bleeding. She looks up at her reflection in the mirror with concern.)
SCULLY: (on phone) Yeah. Yeah. Thanks.
(SCULLY hangs up then knocks at MULDERs door, #7.)
SCULLY: (through door) Mulder, I just got through to
Dunhams barracks. Mulder? Your door's unlocked.
(SCULLY enters MULDERs room and crosses to the bathroom
where there is the sound of water.)
SCULLY: Mulder, listen to this. Dunham's been AWOL since last
night...
(SCULLY sees bloody water seeping out from under the bathroom
door.)
SCULLY: Mulder?
(Slowly, SCULLY enters the bathroom. A dead man lies in the
overflowing tub. It is PRIVATE DUNHAM.)
SCULLY: Oh, God.
(SCULLY turns off the water, then turns to see PRIVATE
MCALPIN stumble into the bathroom.)
MULDER: Scully? (enters bathroom holding gun on PRIVATE
MCALPIN)
SCULLY: (relieved) Yeah.
MULDER: I found him wandering around outside. You all right?
SCULLY: Yeah. It's Dunham.
MULDER: When I found him. He had this in his hand.
(Shows her a bloody knife.)
(Commercial 3.)
SCENE 14
(MULDER and SCULLY interrogate MCALPIN back at the base.
COLONEL WHARTON is also present.)
MULDER: Do you recall leaving the hospital?
PRIVATE MCALPIN: These past few days I don't recall much of
anything... Except feeling real heavy like Im asleep and I can't wake up.
MULDER: Do you remember killing Private Dunham?
PRIVATE MCALPIN: All I remember is being there seeing him in
all that blood.
SCULLY: Why did you sign the confession?
COLONEL WHARTON: The Private asked and I apprised him of what
you found at the crime scene.
PRIVATE MCALPIN: Who else might it have been?
MULDER: Colonel... Can we have a word outside?
(COLONEL WHARTON steps out of the cell with MULDER and
SCULLY.)
MULDER: What exactly did you tell him?
COLONEL WHARTON: If you're suggesting that I coerced Private
McAlpin...
MULDER: I need to know that he signed that confession
voluntarily?
COLONEL WHARTON: Of course he did.
MULDER: Since his reappearance has Private McAlpin had
any contact with Bauvais?
COLONEL WHARTON: Not to my knowledge.
MULDER: Well, we'd still like to speak with Bauvais.
COLONEL WHARTON: I'm afraid that's impossible.
MULDER: Why?
COLONEL WHARTON: (smug) Because he's dead. Last night he cut
his wrists with a bedspring. I'll have the report sent to your motel along with the
Private's confession. Since both matters are being handled internally Ill assume
your business here is finished.
(COLONEL WHARTON leaves. SCULLY rubs her head with a small
moan. )
MULDER: What's wrong?
SCULLY: (holding her head) I'm fine. It's just a headache.
(MULDERs phone rings. While he talks, SCULLY turns away
and rubs her hand. She is NOT fine. )
MULDER: (on phone) Mulder. .. Okay, Mrs. McAlpin.
We can be there in fifteen minutes.
SCENE 15
(MCALPIN house. MRS MCALPIN is very upset.)
MRS. MCALPIN: First I thought I lost him... As if that wasn't
hard enough to deal with. Now they're saying he's killed Harry.
SCULLY: He said it himself. He signed a confession.
MRS. MCALPIN: I don't care. It doesn't make sense. Jack and
Harry were friends.
MULDER: Mrs. McAlpin, you said on the telephone that Private
Dunham came here last night. What did he want?
MRS. MCALPIN: He was on his way to see you.
MULDER: For what reason?
MRS. MCALPIN: He wouldn't tell me. He said if anything
happened to him... (crosses to a drawer) I should give this to you. He told me not to open
it.
(She hands them a sealed envelope. Off camera, we hear the
baby crying )
MRS. MCALPIN: Luke's been in a mood since all this started.
It's almost like he knows what's going on. I'll be right back.
(MRS. MCALPIN leaves the room to attend to the crying baby.
MUDLER and SCULLY look at a black and white photo of soldiers in a tropical area.)
SCULLY: (looking at picture) Thats Bauvais. And
Wharton? They must have known each other when Wharton served in Haiti.
MULDER: When in Rome
SCENE 16
(Night. COLONEL WHARTONs office. MULDER and SCULLY
enter the deserted office and begin looking around with a headlight on a stick. SCULLY
finds a paper in the trashcan.)
SCULLY: Mulder Dunham and Guttierez both filed
complaints against Colonel Wharton. They both cited incidents of abuse --- dates, times
(MULDER finds a set of dogtags in a trunk.)
MULDER: Scully . Look at this. Check out the name on
the dogtags.
(Door opens. PRIVATE KITTEL interrupts their snooping and
holds them at gunpoint.)
PRIVATE KITTEL: Come with me, please. Take the light out of
my eyes.
MULDER: Wheres Wharton?
PRIVATE KITTEL: Youll find out soon enough.
MULDER: He killed Bauvais. If you know anything about it
youll be tried as an accessory to murder
PRIVATE KITTEL: Shut up! Bauvais got what he deserved. After
what he did to McAlpin and Guttierez?
SCULLY: It wasnt Bauvais.
PRIVATE KITTEL: (unsure) What are you talking about?
SCULLY: Those men were about to testify against Colonel
Wharton. He stopped them before they did.
MULDER: If you dont believe us, look in the trunk.
(PRIVATE KITTEL does. Sees human bones.)
MULDER: (handing over dogtags) This is whats left of
Private Guttierez. Now wheres Bauvais body?
PRIVATE KITTEL: We buried him this afternoon .. in the
municipal graveyard.
SCENE 17
(Later, in graveyard. Night. Lots of candles surround
gravesite. COLONEL WHARTON drags a coffin out of the ground.)
COLONEL WHARTON: (places knife on coffin, then sprinkles a
powder around the coffin) Au nom de saints et de la lune. Au nom de saints et
de la lune. Au nom de saints et des etoilles.
(MULDER and SCULLY arrive at the graveyard. SCULLY has her
hands over her face as if in pain.)
MULDER: What is it, Scully?
SCULLY: Im all right.
MULDER: You dont look all right.
SCULLY: No, Im fine. Ill catch up with you. Just
go get Wharton.
(MULDER nods, gets out of the car and heads across the
graveyard. SCULLY watches him go then looks around herself nervously. She scratches her
hand which is very swollen. She looks in the rearview mirror then begins gasping for air
in terror. She looks back at her hand. A clear pus like fluid seeps out of the wound then
a pair of mens fingers push up through the wound. SCULLY screams weakly, and the man
who approached her when she first arrived at the camp suddenly appears in the car with her
and begins throttling her.)
(CUT TO: MULDER walking through graveyard toward COLONEL
WHARTON who is making the symbol on the ground.)
MULDER: Federal Agent! Drop the knife, Wharton.
COLONEL WHARTON: (speaking Creole)
MULDER: Drop the knife!
(COLONEL WHARTON, still speaking Creole, begins to lower
knife to the ground, but then suddenly stabs it into the earth. MULDER screams in pain and
falls to the ground clutching his gut.)
MULDER: Ah!!!
(COLONEL WHARTON is startled to see BAUVAIS standing behind
him.)
BAUVAIS: Ca qui fait mal, ce mal li we. He who does evil,
evil he will see.
(BAUVAIS blows powder into WHARTONs face. WHARTON
screams and falls back.)
(CUT TO: Interior of car. SCULLY still being choked by the
Haitian man who is speaking Creole to her. SCULLY desperately reaches for the charm
hanging on the mirror. As soon as her fingers close around it, the man disappears. SCULLY
looks down at the charm in her hand which is not hurt. She is startled by a cats
meow. She looks up to see the black kitten on the hood of the car. Shaking, SCULLY gets
out of the car. SCULLY runs to MULDER and helps him sit up.)
SCULLY: (breathing heavily) Mulder
MULDER: Youre okay?
SCULLY: I feel better than you look.
(They sit for a moment catching their breath and looking at
each other.)
SCULLY: What happened?
MULDER: I dont know.
(SCULLY looks at COLONEL WHARTON.)
SCULLY: Hes dead. Did you kill him?
MULDER: No. It was Bauvais.
(SCULLY opens the coffin and sees BAUVAIS, also dead, lying
in it.)
SCENE 18
(Next day at the camp. Detainees are being loaded into
trucks. MULDER and SCULLY arrive.)
SOLDIER: Heres the passenger manifest you asked for.
SCULLY: Thank you.
SOLDIER: Theyre petitioning to have Bauvais returned to
Haiti.
MULDER: Too bad it has to be in a box.
SCULLY: Is this a complete list?
SOLDIER: As far as I know.
SCULLY: There was a boy. His name was Bonaparte. Chester
Bonaparte?
SOLDIER: Poor kid. He died six weeks ago in that riot.
(Surprised, MULDER and SCULLY watch the soldier leave. They
dont look at each other.)
SCENE 19
(Graveyard, day. Dog stands over an open grave barking.
GROUNDSKEEPER drives up in bulldozer to fill in the grave. Camera pans down to inside the
casket in the ground as it is covered. COLONEL WHARTON is conscious and panicked as he
realizes what is happening to him. He screams and beats on the casket, but there is no
chance of him being overheard over the sound of the barking dog and the motor of the
bulldozer. Fade to credits.)
US Airdate: February 3, 1995
writer: Howard Gordon director: Rob Bowman
STARRING: David Duchovny as Special Agent Fox Mulder Gillian
Anderson as Special Agent Dana Scully
Guest Cast: Colonel Wharton ................ Daniel Benzali
Private Jack McAlpin ........... Kevin Conway Private Kittel ................. Roger Cross
Robin McAlpin .................. Katya Gardner Private Harry Dunham ........... Matt Hill
Lieutenant Foyle ............... Peter Kelamis Skinny Man ..................... Adrien
Malebranche Groundskeeper .................. Callum Keith Rennie Chester Bonaparte
.............. Jamil Walker Smith Mr. X .......................... Steven Williams Pierre
Bauvais ................. Bruce Young
"I wonder", he said to himself, "what's in a book while it's closed. Oh, I know it's full of letters printed on paper, but all the same, something must be happening, because as soon as I open it, there's a whole story with people I don't know yet and all kinds of adventures and battles." Bastian B. Bux