The Bodyguard by Mercutio mercutio@europa.com SUMMARY: Mulder is assigned to track down serial killers to keep his mind off of Scully's abduction, and acquires a bodyguard in the process. Some mild relationship angst and Mulder-baiting. RATING: R for descriptions of child abuse and sexual torture (not terribly graphic, but certainly offensive to some) and profanity. The Bodyguard, by Mercutio (mercutio@europa.com) This was Mulder's third case in a month for the Violent Crimes Section. The first two still had unresolved paperwork chasing him across the country as he bounced back and forth, first to Philadelphia, then to Austin and now to Los Angeles. They were over now and not something he needed to think about. Except that he couldn't help thinking about it, couldn't just simply stop time-sharing his brain with a serial killer because someone said the case was over. It took time to forget, not that he ever truly forgot, but time at least to move on, to replace the immediacy of the emotions with other, newer experiences. Time he didn't have. A.D. Skinner had taken the tack of piling more work than three people could handle on him, perhaps on the theory that it would keep him busy. Too busy to think about Dana Scully. Too busy to chase after her, to find whoever had abducted her a month and six days ago. Mulder suspected it was the latter rather than the former. Skinner didn't strike him as the considerate or caring sort. Mulder twisted his shoulders, pulling them away from where he sat propped up against the wall at the head of his bed in yet another hotel room. At least it was a new hotel. The management of the last one had started complaining about the noise at night. Not that it was his fault. He couldn't help the nightmares, which only seemed to be getting worse. Mulder set the folder down on the bed and started rubbing the crease of his eyebrows tiredly. It wouldn't help. It was a permanent headache now. The first case had been the worst, actually. Teenagers being murdered on dates. Always male. Sometimes the girls had been killed as well, but Mulder had seen at once that those were incidental deaths. Accidental, as dreadful as that sounded. Someone in the wrong place at the wrong time. The killer had shot each of the male victims in the head at close range, usually in a parked car -- a detail which had gotten the case confused as a copy of the Son of Sam murders until Mulder had shown up -- and then taken the body to perform various ritualistic mutilations on it. The girls had all been killed or injured, shot immediately after their dates, but no ritual had been performed, and the murderer hadn't seemed to care whether they lived or not. Mulder had lived with the case in his head for eight days, reliving each one of the murders, *enjoying* them even as he went and threw up afterwards. He hadn't been able to eat anything resembling meat for the duration of the case, and refused to eat vegetables on general principles. Unfortunately, sunflower seeds didn't provide much in the way of nutrition, and his inability to sleep soundly only made his situation worse. And, in the end, when they caught the killer based on the description given by one of the girls who had woken up in ICU, Mulder had felt even worse. He had dragged his soul through the mud, wasted time he could have used looking for Scully, and all for nothing. He was unnecessary here. Then they sent him to Texas. That had been easier, relatively speaking. Fewer victims. Patterns he had seen too many times before to need any sort of emotional connection to write up his initial profile. It had really been nothing more than that; the killer had already talked with police as Mulder's profile of him had stated, and the efficient work of the Austin Police Department had separated him out from all the other people who had done the same thing based on that profile. Piece of cake. Except that Mulder still hadn't been able to sleep, still had the images running through his mind, and in his nightmares, the blood lust of the first killer, hunting in the night. Mulder was on the ragged edge now. And the interview this morning with Don Henderson, the Los Angeles ASAC, hadn't made it any better. "Agent Mulder," Henderson had said as Mulder walked into his office. "Sir." Mulder said, subdued, operating on automatic. He wasn't offered a seat, so he stood, staring at the window over Henderson's shoulder. "You look like shit, Mulder." Henderson waved a hand towards the wall behind Mulder. "For the rest of this case, you'll have a babysitter. Maybe he can do something about you." Mulder turned. A neatly dressed man stood up from the chair. He was a good ten years older than Mulder, his hair beginning to gray. His suit was just as dark as Mulder's, although his hair was shorter and his appearance not at all rumpled. The other man nodded to Mulder. "Special Agent Jack Sullivan. From the Secret Service." "Excuse me?" Mulder asked, startled into full awareness. "The Secret Service has taken an interest in this case. To make things easier on everyone, I've asked Agent Sullivan to follow the investigation with you. I'm sure you'll lend him all possible assistance with his portion of the investigation. In return, Agent Sullivan has agreed to look after you, and keep you out of the kind of self-destructive loose cannon behavior you engaged in during your last two cases. Maybe the Secret Service can keep a better eye on you than we can," Henderson said, seating himself behind his desk. "Because, God help us, I don't think anyone else could." He addressed Sullivan directly. "Make sure he eats and sleeps before I see him again." Sullivan nodded, and turned to Mulder, ushering him out. Mulder had been stiff with inner rage at the time, not speaking any more than was absolutely necessary to Sullivan. They didn't trust him. They never had. First they'd sent Scully as a spy, then Krycek, and now this man. Perhaps Scully had turned out to be something else, but that didn't change what the intent of sending her had been. And now he was sitting in his room, studying the case yet again despite his orders to sleep, listening to the Secret Service agent get settled in next door. Where Scully would have been. There was a knock at the connecting door. Without moving, Mulder called, "Come in." Sullivan entered. He looked impassively at Mulder. "These doors need to remain unlocked." Mulder didn't want to hear it. Any of it. "Sure. Fine. Whatever." "When was the last time you ate?" Mulder picked up the bag of sunflower seeds lying at his side and silently held it up for Sullivan's inspection. "When was the last time you ate an actual meal?" Mulder's expression grew genuinely irritated. He didn't like babysitters of any sort, and this wasn't this first time this had happened to him. The only thing he disliked more than having his opinions disregarded and ridiculed was being treated with extreme solicitousness, as though he were a child, incapable of taking care of himself. "They gave me something on the flight from Texas that they pretended to call food. If it really matters to you, go get a pizza." "Toppings?" "See if they have chocolate-covered grasshoppers." Sullivan left the room without a word and Mulder looked back at the file sitting next to him on the bed, running his hand over it. So it was true what they said about the Service. No sense of humor at all. This was going to be a fun week. Hopefully he wouldn't be here any longer than that. Sullivan came back into Mulder's room. "Forty-five minutes. They didn't have grasshoppers, but they do have pine nuts." "Pine nuts?" Mulder asked. Sullivan nodded and took a seat, gazing steadily at Mulder. "It's a California thing." His continued presence annoyed Mulder. What the hell was he doing there? A Secret Service agent belonged in a serial killing investigation like a Reticulan spaceship belonged on the White House lawn. Maybe less. "So what's the Secret Service's connection to this case?" "Victim number four." Mulder paused, eyes narrowing as he brought the details of that file to mind. Nothing leapt to his attention immediately. It certainly fit the pattern of the other killings. "And?" "And Kristin Duncan was the President's niece. He's concerned about finding the person who did this, and asked us to step in." "So why haven't you?" Mulder asked, a threatening tone to his voice. "Why not just run this through your people and forget about the amateur league?" Sullivan shrugged, a glint of humor in his eyes. "Maybe we thought you needed some time with the big leagues so you could see how it was done." "Very funny." Mulder stared at the man, then sighed and backed down. Sullivan had given as good as he'd gotten without getting upset -- not something too many FBI agents could boast of -- and it didn't look like Mulder was going to be able to go over his head and get him reassigned either. So he was stuck with the guy. For the moment, at any rate. Ah, well. It could have been worse. He could have been Krycek. Mulder picked up the case file, or part of it at any rate, and tossed it at Sullivan. "Read this." Sullivan caught the file easily, and started reading through the pages. Mulder started talking while Sullivan was still reading the first page. "The papers are calling these the Mallrat Murders. Southern California, mostly the Los Angeles area rather than the Valley, victims abducted from local malls, young children. The killer doesn't seem to be making a distinction between gender." Mulder smiled grimly. The case was already giving him a headache. "If you look at the pictures..." Sullivan looked up from the file. "What pictures?" Mulder paused for a moment, then waved a hand over the bed, which was littered with files, note paper and photographs of all shapes and kinds. "They're here somewhere. Anyway, if you look at the pictures, you'll see that all the victims were young, still almost sexless. I think that matters more to him than the gender." He took a long breath, wondering why he was bothering with the detailed description of the case. *It must be Scully's influence,* he thought. He would have told her about the case, was in the habit of running each of his cases down for her --the ones she heard about, anyway. A small smile curved his lips before being banished. She was gone, and he was stuck here, working on catching serial killers -- something any trainee fresh from the Academy could be doing. What he *needed* to be doing was looking for her, not this. "But Kristin Duncan was 14 years old," Sullivan objected, breaking into Mulder's reverie. "Isn't that a little old to call sexless?" "Judging by the photo I saw, no." Mulder made the concession of digging through the mess on the bed to find the photograph. "Here." Sullivan took the photo from Mulder. It showed Kristin with her parents and her uncle and his wife, all dressed formally. Kristin was wearing a velvet dress more suited for a girl of 10, with a wide Peter Pan collar, and polished patent leather shoes. Her hair was long, with bangs cut straight across her face. In no way did she look like a teenager. "I see what you mean," Sullivan said, tucking the photograph into the file. He was familiar with Kristin Duncan, but had never considered her appearance in terms of what it said about her apparent age. Mulder nodded. "Do you have a profile yet? Henderson said..." "Henderson said that I was a burn-out who might possibly do a decent job if someone sat on me night and day and forced me to stop screwing off." "Not to me he didn't." "Yeah, well you kinda have to read between the lines. He rejected my first profile, the one I did on the plane on the way here. Said it was too general to be any good." "Was it?" Mulder shot him a cold look, then proceeded to shut the other man out entirely, concentrating on the case file. When the pizza arrived, he accepted the portion Sullivan handed to him without comment, eating it from the pizza box the other man placed on the bed. **** "Scully!" Mulder came upright in the bed, crying out Dana's name. Sitting there in the half-dark of the room, which was illuminated only by the test pattern on the TV, he stared blankly at the curtained window opposite the bed. He'd somehow managed to fall asleep, still lying on top of the bedspread, fully clothed. And then the nightmares had come. Next door, Sullivan heard the noise, and was in the room with Mulder without even entirely waking up himself. Automatically, he checked the room for sign of any intrusion, gun drawn in his hand. There was no one there but Mulder, not that he had expected anything else. Carefully, he set the safety on the gun, then moved over to the bed where Mulder was still sitting, unmoving. Sullivan laid the gun down on the nightstand next to the bed. Mulder's silence was eerie. You'd think he'd have *some* reaction to someone bursting in on him in the middle of the night with a loaded gun. But, no. Keeping his voice low, he said, "Mulder? Can you hear me, Mulder?" Mulder shook his head like a dog shaking off water and looked over at Sullivan. Despair was drawn deeply into his face. Sullivan didn't move, didn't reach out to him, although his first reaction was *Oh, shit. I didn't know it was this bad.* "I'm all right," Mulder said in a scratchy voice. "You can go back to your listening post now. No more entertaining interludes from the captive beast to lull the night away." Sullivan was taken aback by the difference between the open, heartbroken despair the younger man had displayed upon first waking up and this... this almost callous indifference to his own feelings. But, hell, they were men, and men were supposed to be tough, right? Sullivan sighed. Yeah, right. What was happening to Mulder was not in the least bit normal and he knew it. And while the psychological health of his charge was not his responsibility, it could easily become so if Mulder became suicidal. And the look on his face when Sullivan had charged into the room, gun in hand, did not bode well towards that end. But if he stayed one minute longer, Mulder was sure to make some smart ass comment... Mulder beat him to the punch. "Going to rock me to sleep, Agent Sullivan?" "Just wanted to make sure the bedbugs weren't biting, Agent Mulder." Sullivan retrieved his gun and left the room silently. Mulder watched him go, then laid down, rolling to his side, burying his face in the pillow. The tears were buried too deep to allow him the release of crying. Instead, silent sobs racked his body, muffled in the pillow, as he wrestled again with the guilt and the pain. **** In the morning, it was though nothing had happened. Literally nothing. Mulder refused to acknowledge Sullivan's very existence. He collected his papers and his laptop with the newly finished profile on it and made his way down to his car, not troubling to knock on Sullivan's door. As Mulder walked past, Sullivan's door opened and the agent stepped out, neatly dressed and obviously wide awake. "Good morning, Agent Mulder." Mulder glanced at him and kept walking. Sullivan followed him to the parking lot, carrying a white bag and a briefcase. When Mulder pulled out his keys, Sullivan spoke. "I hope you won't try anything as childish as not unlocking the passenger door and leaving me here." Mulder looked up, eyes gleaming a bit. "Why, Agent Sullivan. I'm shocked. How could you suspect me of such a thing?" He got into the car, and put the key into the ignition, pointedly ignoring Sullivan. Who pulled a set of keys out of his pocket, inserted one in the door, and calmly slid into the passenger seat. "Because I really didn't want to admit to stealing your keys last night and taking them to the locksmith to get a copy of the car key." He opened the bag he was carrying and pulled out a paper cup. "I had breakfast earlier. I got you a coffee and a danish. Now, drink up. I want to be able to tell Henderson that you actually did get something to eat this morning." Mulder sat there, staring at him in disbelief. The man was simply too competent to be real. "Yes, Dad," Mulder said sarcastically, taking the cup. "God, even my mother was never as thorough as you." Scully had been, he thought. But that wasn't something he wanted to dwell on, and in any case, it sounded different coming from Scully. "Yeah, that's probably 'cause I'm a father of two. My son's thirteen, and my daughter's eight. Gives me a lot of practice with stubborn children who don't want to go to bed when you want them to, won't sleep when you get them there, and seem intent on achieving inner peace by malnutrition." "Oh, great. So I'm a child now." "No, you're not. You're a lot bigger. And you've got a gun." "Would that keep you from interfering in my life?" "No." Mulder drank some of the coffee and set the cup down before silently accepting the danish. He ate it while Sullivan watched the hotel's gardener mow the lawn, then wiped his fingers off, took another sip of coffee, and then finally started the car. Henderson's secretary ushered them into his office as soon as they arrived. "You're late," he said unceremoniously. "It's his fault," Mulder said, pointing at Sullivan. Henderson ignored that. "We have another victim. Number eight. He was found last night." Mulder nodded, instantly focused on the case, which was much more important to him than any amount of crossing the i's and dotting the t's, or whatever bizarre rituals it was that they wanted him to follow. "I want to see that. And I want to see the crime scene for victim number four as well, Kristin Duncan." "Why that one in particular?" Mulder very carefully didn't look at Sullivan. "Because I want to see it. I have the revised profile you wanted." He squared his chin. "I can give it to you now, unless you want to tie up my time with more meaningless bureaucratic nonsense because you can't believe anyone could do this better than you can, even when you're too blind to see the truth even when it's right in front of you." Henderson looked him over for a long moment, then turned to Sullivan. "Get him out of here. And try to make him keep his mouth shut. He isn't going to do his job very well if someone strangles him before he does us some good on this case." "Yes, sir." Sullivan turned to Mulder, with the evident intent of escorting him from the room. Once they were outside, Sullivan said quietly. "For a psychologist, you certainly have a charming personality and an intriguing way of winning friends and influencing people." "You should see me on a bad day." "Thank you for putting the Duncan case on the top of your list." *Although it wasn't necessary to piss off Henderson in the process,* Sullivan thought. Mulder glanced over at him. "It's nothing," he mumbled, looking down. "We have to go over them in some order." "Yeah." *And I know you did it for me, whether or not you'll admit it,* Sullivan thought. While he was nominally here to investigate that particular case, being assigned to babysit Mulder as well complicated matters. Henderson had impressed on him the likelihood of Mulder self-destructing, as well as the man's importance in catching the killer. Someone else could do it -- but no one else would do it as quickly or as professionally. Not that Sullivan had seen a hint of professionalism yet in Mulder's behavior. They got directions and drove to the place where the latest victim had been found, in a bathroom in the Fox Hills Mall in Culver City. Mulder and Sullivan got out of the car and walked over to the officer waiting for them by his car, in front of the entrance to the mall. "Hi. I'm Agent Fox Mulder, with the FBI, and this is Agent Jack Sullivan. I understand there's been another body found." The officer nodded. "Alec Baughson, LAPD. Yeah, this is it." "Do we know who the victim is yet?" He shook his head. "We're still trying to find that out. No ID on the body. And mall security had no reports of anyone missing. Should find out soon though. If he has a family, they'll contact us soon enough." His face and voice held doubt on the subject. Los Angeles had many homeless people, and still more people, especially young people, who lived a nomadic or squatters' existence, finding temporary "friends" and staying with them for days or years before moving on. "The body?" "They took it away. Autopsy's this morning." "Pictures?" "Yeah. They said you'd ask for them." He pulled them out and handed them to Mulder, who flipped through them one by one before handing them to Sullivan. As with the other killings, the victim was nude. "The victim's clothing?" "Already bagged." Mulder nodded. "Let's go." Baughson led them inside, and up to the second level, then down to the men's bathroom, which was sealed off from the public. Another officer was waiting there for them, keeping people out. Sullivan and Mulder went in, Sullivan standing by the door, watching Mulder look the scene over. Although the body had been removed and Forensics had already been there, the room was still much as it had been the night before. "The murder took place while the mall was still open," Mulder said suddenly, turning around from where he stood by the bathroom stalls. "The killer locked the door after he got his victim in here." Baughson raised his eyebrows. "Yeah. That's right. They found the body just before the mall closed. Somebody complained to the security guard about having the bathroom out of order, and when they sent the janitor to fix it, he found the body. A real live locked room mystery. They wanted to ask you how the guy got out of here; as you can see, there aren't any windows, and the vents aren't big enough." "Oh, they're big enough," Mulder said, thinking of Tooms. "But you can see traces of shoe prints on the toilet here. I think your janitor narrowly missed being victim number nine." "Damn. Nobody said anything about that. We'll need to get Forensics back in here." "He's cool," Mulder said, loud enough for everyone to hear him, but more to himself than anything else. "He took a big risk there, first by taking a victim with the mall open and then by waiting for someone to find the body. It could have been a security guard rather than a janitor. Someone who did a more careful check and had a gun." He swung around and paced back towards the door. "Or he's not getting high enough off the murders anymore and needed that little extra thrill of almost getting caught to make it better for him." Sullivan saw the intense, fever-glitter brightness of Mulder's eyes. "That good or bad?" "It depends," Mulder said, focusing on him. "He isn't escalating by taking more victims or more frequently, which is good for the potential victims. But if he keeps it up, he *is* going to get caught, and the person who catches him like that is going to wish they hadn't. He'll be waiting, *wanting* to kill them." Baughson spoke up. "We can warn people. Alert security guards, janitors, the relevant personnel at the area malls, to take extra precautions when entering a locked bathroom." Mulder nodded. "Let's just hope he doesn't leave the door unlocked next time." "Will he?" "If the excitement of having the door locked isn't enough, yeah. Probably. He might do something else instead." He went back to circling the room, going first to the spot where the victim's clothes had been stacked neatly in the corner. They were in the photographs, even though they were no longer there. Mulder visualized the scene in his mind. The killer had made the boy undress, had watched it with relish -- no, had watched it, every piece of clothing coming off confirming in the killer's mind that he deserved what the killer was about to do to him. Mulder went over to the urinal where the body had been positioned, reaching out and touching the drain, and rubbing his gloved fingertips together. It was still slightly wet. Condensation, or... "Did they try to get a sample of fluid for analysis from the urinal?" There might have been enough fluid left when Forensics was here for them to get a decent sample. Baughson looked at a list from his notebook. "Yeah." Mulder didn't say anything, kneeling down next to the spot, avoiding the blood on the floor. It seemed to be dry, but there was no use taking chances. He closed his eyes and visualized the pictures. The boy had died in a kneeling position in front of the urinal. That wasn't in the photos, but it was consistent with two of previous victims who had also been found near urinals, and Mulder was certain that the autopsy of this victim would prove the same to be true here. He had been made to lick something from the urinal -- no one was sure on that issue yet. Urea had been found in the mouths of some of the previous victims, but it was impossible to say whether it was that of the killer. Mulder thought not. The victim had been killed in that position, probably while still begging for his life, his throat cut from behind, blood mostly going over the urinal and the boy, and less to splatter on the killer. An improvement in his MO that had shown up first with victim number three. Then the victim had been raped, after his death. That wasn't something that showed in the photographs, and wouldn't be known definitively until the autopsy results were in, but Mulder knew it had been done. With the plunger from the bathroom. It had been removed as evidence, but it was in the pictures, too obvious to miss, the end jammed down the victim's throat as far as the killer could make it go. He stood up, stripping off the gloves he had put on when he entered the room. There was nothing to see here that he hadn't seen before in the other case files, other than the shoe prints in the stall from the killer's latest embellishment to his style, but somehow being here in person made it all more immediate, more real in his mind. More nightmarish. And more effective. "That's all I needed to see." He nodded to Baughson. "Thank you." **** When they were in the car again, Mulder looked at Sullivan. "This murder happened at 9 p.m. last night. The police knew about it before ten. Why wasn't I called in then?" Sullivan stared at him for a moment, giving Mulder an utterly blank face. "You knew about this. Don't try to tell me you didn't. You were up too early. Ready to go." "I knew. You weren't in any condition to go in then. And it wouldn't have changed anything if you'd gotten there immediately." "You don't know that. Something crucial could be missing. Things could be changed. And if we had found important evidence, time would definitely be a factor." "And if you had gone there last night, your judgment would have been clouded by your lack of sleep and failure to eat." Mulder stared at him stonily. "I've been putting up with you because I don't have any choice. But if you hinder my investigations, I will find some way to get rid of you. Don't stand in my way." Sullivan matched glances with him. "I understand your point-of-view. But I won't allow you to endanger your own investigations." Mulder shot him a glance that said very clearly, 'Fine. We'll see about that.' **** Speaking as little as possible, Sullivan directed Mulder to the site of the fourth killing. It had long since been restored to public use, all evidence that a crime had taken place there removed weeks before. "Too bad he only uses men's bathrooms," Mulder quipped as they got to the door. "This could be interesting otherwise." Relieved that Mulder still seemed to be speaking to him -- not that it would have kept him from doing his job if Mulder *had* stopped communicating, but it would have excessively complicated matters -- Sullivan answered, "Why is that exactly? Isn't it more difficult for him to get his victims that way, especially the girls? He isn't hitting them over the head and dragging them in -- someone would have noticed if he were." Mulder shook his head. "No, he's not." He pointed to the door to the women's bathroom. "In all the sites where a female victim was chosen, the women's bathroom is close to the men's. It would have been easy for him to grab someone just on their way out or in." "But surely someone would have seen..." "It's the age factor. The children he's targeting are old enough for their parents to send them in to the bathroom alone, but young enough when it comes to the girls that it's not overly odd that their 'father' is escorting them into the men's bathroom. So no casual observer walking by would have noticed anything unusual. And as for observers *inside* the bathrooms, he's seems to have been very careful at picking times when he won't be interrupted." Mulder stood outside the door, facing Sullivan. It was because this needed explanation. Not because he was avoiding facing another place where a young girl had died. Where even more lurid images would arise to haunt him. "That's the thing that's going to catch up with him eventually. These places are too public, and what he does takes too long. He's been lucky so far, but that won't last much longer." "Except that he's started locking the door." Mulder shook his head slowly. "I thought that earlier. But it could be..." He thought about it for a minute. "It might be that he's been locking them for a while now -- it's just recently that he's started waiting." Sullivan looked a little pale. "Then we can't wait for his luck to run out." "We never could. Let's go." Mulder pushed the door open and walked inside. He opened up the case file, using the notes and photos to bring the scene to life. This was the case Sullivan was most interested in,and Mulder needed to get him involved in it. Make the man feel useful; give him something to justify his job to his bosses back home. "This one happened in one of the stalls." Mulder led the way over. "Here. Similar scenario to the one we saw this morning. Lab tests say it was her urine, though." He looked up at Sullivan to see if he had a reaction to that fact, but Sullivan's face was professionally expressionless. "He either scared her into urinating or forced her into it. Then he had her turn around and kneel over the toilet bowl while he cut her throat. Interestingly enough, he flushed the toilet before leaving -- the bowl didn't have nearly as much blood in it as they would have expected to find normally under those circumstances." "Interesting?" Sullivan asked in a strangled voice. "You develop a warped sense of interesting after a while with these cases." Mulder looked back down at the file, giving Sullivan a moment to compose himself, although it was impossible to tell from the man's face whether he needed it. Mulder was deliberately avoiding mentioning the victim's name. It was easier to do this if you didn't personalize them, although it was mostly for Sullivan's sake, as it would have been for Scully's sake if she'd been here. As she should have been here. "This time, there was anal penetration, with a comb that belonged to the victim. It was again left in her throat, deeply wedged in." "Anything else to go on?" Sullivan asked. This was where Mulder's expertise would come in handy, because God only knew that there was nothing he could do to further it, despite the infinite wisdom of his superiors which had sent Sullivan here to investigate. Mulder shook his head. "Nothing that was found. Again, no witnesses. Her mother had taken her and her brother with her shopping. The brother is six months old. According to the mother, she had taken them both into the women's bathroom. The boy needed a diaper change, and the girl asked if she could go and look at one of the stores immediately outside. The mother let her go, and when she came out with her son, the girl was gone." "God," Sullivan said in a low-voiced exclamation. "Or someone anyway." Sullivan took a deep breath and turned to Mulder. "Is there anything special about this particular scene? Anything different from the others?" Mulder shrugged. "There's minor differences between each of them. The first one is the most interesting -- I want to look at that one next. He really took his time there; he'd been thinking about that one and planning it for a very long time. That victim was male. It was also the clumsiest of the killings. He's never given us as many clues to go on since then." Sullivan looked at his watch. It was after three. And if there was nothing more to be gained here, they might as well move on. Despite the fact that Sullivan had promised to do his best to deliver results on this, he was capable of recognizing when further effort was futile. This case was going to be solved as part of an overall whole, not by itself. "Tomorrow. You need to get that profile turned in today, and then a meal." "It can wait." "So can the crime scene." Mulder stared at Sullivan. "The sooner we do this..." "What? We could tour all of the sites in one night, but you won't find much more than you already have in those file folders of yours. And while you may have a point about seeing new scenes as soon as possible, the old ones aren't as urgent. You can do the analysis from a table with food in front of you." "I'm not hungry." "I am." "So go get something to eat. You're not chained to me." "That could be arranged." Sullivan found himself wondering idly if he were going to have to shoot Mulder in the leg to keep him from running off without him. It wouldn't look good on his final report, but then, anyone who knew the man would understand. "Fine." Mulder stalked out, Sullivan following him. Mulder was angry, but to a certain extent he knew that the other man was right. There wasn't anything new at these scenes, and if there had been something missed by the forensics team, it was too late now. Too many people traipsed through here every day, obliterating all traces of possible missed evidence. The best work he could do was in his own head, not out in the field. And for that, he needed to be alone, preferably back in his hotel room. **** Mulder took his laptop inside the office building with him to print out the file. He could have put it on disk back in his hotel room and left the laptop there, but with as much travel as he'd been doing, he didn't trust that one would have stayed magnetized. Sometimes strange things happened to disks with too much exposure to airport security. And aliens. Serial killers were less hazardous to equipment, but better to be safe. Sullivan stayed with him, one step behind as they walked in through the open floor of agents in the FBI's Los Angeles bureau. Mulder ignored him, going straight to the desk which Henderson had assigned him for the duration of his stay here and which he had no intention of using more than was absolutely necessary. A head popping around the corner of the cubicle reminded him why. "If it isn't the Spookster. How're you doing on the Mallrat Murders?" Mulder didn't look up as he searched for one of the office's disks to transfer the file onto. With his luck , the only computers he was going to be able find would be Macintoshes. "They called me in because you guys couldn't do anything with it. How are you coping with the performance anxiety?" The other man's face clouded and grew vicious. "I see you've traded in your partner on a newer model. Didn't she like your technique in bed? Or did she leave you for an alien?" Sullivan watched with fascinated horror as Mulder went a sickly grey. "Something like that," Mulder said in an absolutely flat voice. The other man grew positively cocky, knowing from Mulder's reaction that he'd scored a hit. But before he could say anything else, Sullivan stepped between the desk Mulder was sitting at and the open side of the cubicle. "I think you have business elsewhere." "And who the hell do you think you are? Spooky Junior?" Without seeming to move, Sullivan drew himself up to his full height and assumed the completely implacable expression that his training with the Secret Service had only reinforced. He had always been an intimidating bastard. He was now an intimidating bastard who no one in their right mind would dare cross. And neither did this man. Under that level stare, he broke and turned away, walking quickly in the opposite direction. Sullivan watched him go, then turned around and looked casually at Mulder. "Think you could teach me that?" Mulder asked. The Secret Service agent shrugged. "He was a wuss." Mulder grinned at the remark, and then held up the disk. "Success. I just need to give this to one of the secretaries to get it printed and we're out of here." "Don't want to print it yourself?" As soon as the words were out of his mouth, Sullivan regretted them. Normally, he wouldn't be this talkative with someone he was guarding -- it just wasn't done. But then, he wasn't exactly guarding Mulder. But for this once, he wished he'd followed the dictates of his training rather than his natural instincts, because Mulder looked stricken again, and Sullivan knew why. He wanted to get them out of this office as soon as possible before some other insensitive bastard reminded Mulder about his missing partner. "Sounds like a good idea to me," Sullivan continued smoothly, before Mulder could say a thing. "I'm getting pretty hungry. What say we blow this joint?" "I'm afraid I neglected to pack the TNT." "Too bad." **** Sullivan maneuvered Mulder into eating by the simple expedient of beating him to the car, and then driving them to a restaurant. Much to Sullivan's surprise, Mulder didn't say anything about the underhanded tactics, but almost meekly went inside with him. After they had ordered, while they were waiting for their meal, Sullivan realized that Mulder's apparent acceptance of the inevitability of dinner was more due to his being withdrawn into himself than any realization that Sullivan would have gotten him to eat if it had required two large henchmen and a Slimfast shake. He didn't know what Mulder was thinking about, if it was the case, or his partner, but either way, he didn't like it. To break Mulder out of his self-imposed silence, Sullivan threw out a question. "What did you put in that profile anyway? I've always been curious about exactly how you people do that. Seems like witchcraft." Mulder looked up, lips twisting in a smile. "Almost *spooky*, maybe?" There was that word again. Sullivan had never heard the nickname 'Spooky Mulder', but he could tell there was something significant attached to the phrase, something he wanted to avoid. "Nah. But something I don't understand. I mean, I read about this string of killings in Atlanta once, a bunch of young boys, and they came up with everything but the guy's birthday and favorite ice cream." "Rocky Road. Your ice cream of choice for serial killers." Sullivan looked faintly alarmed at the remark, and Mulder waved a dismissive hand. "No. That was a joke. But seriously, a lot of it is just observation, experience and intuition. For instance, on this case, the killer is an older man, not a young person. I put 40 to 50 in my official profile, which is old for one of these, although not unheard of. The stressor that touched this off was the death of the abuser, the person from the killer's past who did these same things to him. Possibly the emergence of repressed memories, but I don't think so. The killer's been thinking about this for a long time, dwelling on it. The death of his abuser deprived him of an external target to seek revenge on, and when he couldn't deal with not having that target there anymore, he started looking for another release." Mulder's eyes lit up as he put another thought together, building a new theory. "An older man who's spent most of his life caring for a debilitated relative, possibly a relative in a vegetative state. He couldn't seek his revenge while the person was alive, because they weren't aware enough for it to be satisfying, and his guilt would have been too great due to their helplessness, although he may have taken his anger out in little ways. But it wasn't until they died that he realized how powerful his drive for revenge was." Sullivan shook his head. "Way beyond my level. I majored in Bible Lit." "You did?" Mulder asked, appearing genuinely interested. "Yeah." Sullivan looked ashamed of himself. The waitress arrived with their plates, and he waited while she set them down. "Thanks," he said, smiling at her, before picking up his fork and turning back to Mulder. "Not your usual educational background. The guys get a kick out of it; most of them think I'm joking." "Did you study just the Protestant version of the Bible, or all versions? And in the original languages or just translations?" Sullivan cut a piece of his steak and popped in his mouth, chewing and swallowing before answering. "I don't speak Latin or Greek, but the course material was pretty comprehensive. Traced the history of the Bible from its early roots with the Jewish faith, out to the major variants in use today. Even covered the Book of Mormon." He cut another piece, relieved to notice that Mulder was eating during the explanation. One less thing to have to take care of. "It's been a pretty useless degree. I went into the service after that -- the Marines -- reversed the usual pattern. getting my degree first. The military was a more useful path, career-wise." "Not at all useless. In fact, if I were still working in Violent Crimes, I'd get your number. Someone with a comprehensive background in religious literary works would be invaluable. You don't know how many times a criminal, particularly serial killers, will latch onto something from one or more religious traditions. There were several cases when I would have done anything to have someone available to consult who could identify *which* religious tradition was involved and give some expert advice." "You're not with Violent Crimes? But I thought..." Sullivan shut his mouth abruptly as Mulder went pale again. *Good job, asshole. Put your foot right in your mouth and screw it in tight.* But Mulder recovered quickly. "Yeah. Well, I got out of VCS. This is temporary. I'm in charge of the X-Files now." "Ah." Under normal circumstances, Sullivan would have indulged his curiosity on what exactly those were. But right now, a diversionary tactic seemed more appropriate. "What kind of cases did you have that called for someone with my background? Maybe I could tell you whether you would have been wasting your time to call me at all." Mulder was successfully diverted, and they had an stimulating discussion during dinner on the ins and outs of religiously oriented serial killing. **** The next morning, Mulder made sure to knock conspicuously on the door connecting Sullivan's room to his. Sullivan opened it before Mulder had knocked more than twice. "Good to see you're actually there," Mulder said. "Where'd you think I'd be?" Mulder quirked his eyebrows. "After last night, I half-expected you to spend the night watching over me while I slept." "How do you know I didn't?" Instead of getting offended, Mulder dropped his eyes, almost pouting. "And I didn't even get tucked in." Sullivan laughed. "You're worse than my kids. What, you didn't like the bedtime story?" "You told your kids stories about serial killers to get them to go to sleep?" "Doesn't everybody?" Sullivan switched gears. "While you were sleeping in..." Mulder looked a little taken aback. Sleeping in? He'd already been up, gone running, come back and taken a shower. And it wasn't even eight yet. "...I called and got directions for the place the first victim was killed. This one's in the San Fernando Valley. The guy on the phone wished me luck in getting there before noon." "Trapped in a car with you for four hours. I don't suppose you're one of those people who insists on listening to country-western music on long car trips." "Is there any other kind?" Sullivan asked innocently, handing Mulder a cup of coffee and a small white paper bag. "Stop at the store before we get too far. I need to pick up some ear plugs." The drive wasn't as long as had been gloomily predicted, and Sullivan was rather surprised when *Mulder* insisted on turning the radio on. He tried to protest that he'd been joking, but Mulder had none of that. Which left nothing to do but to sit back and enjoy the music. No one met them at the mall when they arrived. Sullivan took out his notebook with the directions. "We're going to the Food Pavilion in the middle of the mall. Second floor bathroom, next to the El Pollo Loco." *Scully would have teased me about investigating that as an X-File,* Mulder thought, his throat closing over. He could almost hear her now. 'Crazy chicken running amok in a suburban mall. Definitely something you'll want to look into, Mulder.' Sullivan looked back at him, and Mulder quickened his steps, following him. When they arrived at their destination, he went in and looked around, ignoring the other people already using the bathroom, who in turn either ignored him or discreetly fled for the exit. Mulder stepped in behind him, and Sullivan glanced over. "You said that the first was the most interesting." "Yeah. You read the file?" Sullivan nodded. "Didn't seem too much different than the others." "It's not. Not really. But it's the first, and that makes it more important." "Unless there's another one before it that you don't know about." "Ah, yes. Therein lies the rub." Mulder didn't look too dismayed. "Still, I think someone would have mentioned finding a nude body in a public restroom." There were other possibilities. The killer could have started with someone else, a practice killing that failed to fit the parameters of the following murders. Unlikely in this case, but possible. Or even less likely, there *had* been another killing, exactly like the others, only a second, unrelated person had stolen the body for their own purposes. Anything was possible. "Very logical of you." "Thank you. I took lessons." From someone who he would most likely never see again. Logically, at any rate. His heart said something different, that both Scully and Samantha were still alive, somewhere. It had to be so. He couldn't let it not be so. Sullivan was watching him patiently. "So what's important about this one in particular?" Mulder came back to himself with a start. "A couple of things. The victim here was male, thin, blonde-haired, described by his mother as innocent looking. Considering the nature of the crime, that's probably a good description of the killer at the same age." "Uh huh." Sullivan was impressed. He didn't know how much of this would check out when all was said and done, but if it did, Mulder was better than having a half dozen psychics running around. "Then there's the physical evidence. After this one, he started to avoid touching them personally. The others, he either ordered them to do what he wanted themselves, or he used some sort of implement, like the comb that we saw with the last victim. Or the knife that he's been using to kill them. The evidence gathered here hasn't been helpful yet, but it will be when it comes to trial when we catch him." "If we catch him." "We will." Mulder's cellular phone went off, and he answered it. "Mulder." He listened for a while, then nodded. "We'll be there as soon as possible." He folded up the phone and stuck it back into his pocket, a sick half-smile on his face. "There's been another killing. Santa Monica this time. A girl." "So soon? The last one was just two days ago. Not even that." "That's the way it is in the business. He's been doing this too long. The thrill from the last one wasn't enough. So he had to do it again." "I thought you said that the thrill of getting caught was substituting for that." Mulder shrugged. "Maybe he changed his mind. Maybe he realized it was too risky. Or it didn't live up to his expectations. Didn't satisfy the need the way that the killings do." He smiled again, still with a sickly lopsided look. "If that were enough, he'd just be a garden variety exhibitionist and we wouldn't be here at all." "Suits me." **** This time they got to the crime scene before the evidence had all been removed, within two hours of the time that the body had been discovered. It would have been sooner if not for the traffic. Police cars were still in front of the mall, and the building was crowded with curious onlookers. Mulder and Sullivan pushed their way through the crowd, showing their badges as necessary. A police officer directed them to the site where the murder had taken place, in a bathroom in a back corner of the mall, opposite the fountain. The forensics team was waiting for them. The body had been removed, but the evidence collection process was still well underway. A dark haired woman met them halfway, holding out her hand. "Linda Lewis. Forensics. I understand you're working this case for the FBI, Agent Mulder." He nodded to her. "Word gets around, I see." She smiled back at him, then got down to business. "Take a look at this." Mulder followed her across the room, Sullivan right behind him. She pointed to the wall next to the urinal. He crouched down and looked. "Well, I'll be..." It was a bloody fingerprint, half-hidden by the bulk of the urinal, not easily visible unless you looked right at it. A large fingerprint. Too large for a child. "He was careless," Mulder said. "Something went wrong." "I'll say," Lewis said. "Look at this." She waved at the room, shaking her head. The body was gone, loaded onto a gurney even as Mulder had walked into the room. But everything else was still in place. And blood was splashed everywhere. Not just around the urinal, but spread out over the floor. "Something went really wrong," Mulder said. He looked around. "Where are her clothes?" Before anyone could answer, he spotted them lying in a heap half under one of the sinks. He put on a pair of plastic gloves and looked at them, touching them carefully. A white T-shirt, none too clean, a pair of very small denim jeans, and a pair of pink silk underwear. He gingerly went through the pockets of the jeans. Nothing. He stood up, a faintly disappointed look on his face. "I thought I might find something..." Lewis shook her head. "We already went through those. Haven't bagged them yet; that's a little farther down the list. Want to see what she was carrying?" Mulder nodded. Lewis left the room and came back with a plastic bag. Mulder carefully upended it in one of the sinks. Three condoms. A plastic wrapper, about a half inch wide and four inches long. A movie stub. Forty three dollars and nineteen cents. And an ID card proclaiming the dead girl to be 22 years old. "Find what you were looking for?" "She was a prostitute." "Excuse me?" "That's what caused this." Mulder waved at the blood-spattered room, talking his conclusions out loud and not really caring if anyone else could follow them or not. "He never used much force on his victims. Not until after he killed them. So when he forced her to strip and told her to do whatever was first on his list today, she sized him up and propositioned him. Probably thought she was saving her life. Maybe thought it would be a thrill." "And?" "And he lost it." Mulder shook his head, imagining it. The killer wanted pre-pubescent children. Non-sexual. The apparent age at which he had undergone the majority of his abuse. Not too many prostitutes of that age. Except this was L.A. And a drug addict might very well look considerably younger than her years. Not innocent, but thin enough to fit the killer's requirements. Mulder didn't want to think about who the dead prostitute's clientele had been. That was an entirely different kind of crime. Not his job. He dutifully continued cataloguing his impressions of the scene, but his mind was on stand-by. If he was right about his profile of this person, then the case was virtually over. As he had continued collecting data and processing what he knew, he had been refining the profile. And Mulder felt that it was a near certainty that this man had been arrested as juvenile for some crime, most likely minor, such as shoplifting. Something which his father or mother would have insisted on making into formal charges, to 'teach the boy a lesson'. And that meant that his fingerprints would most likely be on file, just waiting to be matched up with this newest piece of evidence. **** "So that's it?" Sullivan asked. The fingerprint had been clear enough to permit easy identification, and once Forensics was done with it, it had been put through the computer. Which had turned up a match relatively quickly, in far less time than he and Mulder had spent on leg work, much less how much time the combined police forces involved had spent. "That's it," Mulder confirmed with a weary nod. "The police will do the rest. I may get called back when this goes to court, and the paperwork will follow us for the rest of our lives, but that's it." "Anti-climatic." "Envisioning breaking into his house with a search warrant, throwing him to the ground and maybe roughing him up a bit while you get the handcuffs on?" "It'd be a good start." "Yeah, well, if you want to get in on it, talk to Henderson. He'll get you in with the people who actually make the arrest. But it usually isn't that dramatic." Sometimes it was worse, but at least this time, there was no actual *need* for him to be involved. "No. All I need is to make sure that he's the same person who killed Kristin Duncan, and that he's properly convicted of the crime." "Better start looking in the paper." "For what?" "A house. You'll be here a while." Sullivan shrugged. "Whatever it takes. They'll probably let me fly back after the arrest is made." Mulder studied him. "Want me to have the desk clerk send you up a copy of the Los Angeles Times? I can tell him on my way out. My flight leaves at eight a.m." Sullivan started to retort, then looked at Mulder, really looked at him. "Where are they sending you? Out on another one of these?" Mulder nodded. "They want to. But my flight's back to D.C. I have unfinished business." *I'll bet you do,* Sullivan thought. *And I'll bet it has something to do with someone named Scully.* But he didn't pry and wouldn't. **** Mulder sat, staring at the curtain between coach and first class, on the plane back to D.C. If only it were that easy to find Scully. A fingerprint left in an unlikely place, a search warrant, and then that would be that. There was no way it would ever be that easy, given the forces arrayed against them. But he would find her. He would get her back. And she would be all right. He could live with himself no other way. -the end- ---mercutio@europa.com--- "You are never given a wish without also being given the power to make it true. You may have to work for it, however." --Richard S. Bach, "Illusions" From mercutio@europa.com Wed Jan 01 19:37:33 1997