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. It
was painstakingly typed out by Roni and
made available for your downloading enjoyment by moi, Tiny Dancer
from my website, Tiny Dancer's X-Files
Episode Guide .
Enjoy and be sure to visit Roni's terrific, and I mean that, website,
The X-Files Experience here:
http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Vault/1411/
This version is a variation of the filmed episode, it came from the
original script, which is not always completely the same as the filmed
version.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a typed copy of the The X-Files episode - "Irresistible"
(2x13) script, written by Chris Carter. Copyright 1995 Twentieth
Century Fox Film Corporation, All Rights Reserved.
I've included here all the original dialogues, but cut short some of
the descriptions. Also, all typos, are mine. What can I say?
I'm human.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Janelli-Heller Funeral Home
- A teenage girl stands at a pulpit, delivering a difficult eulogy.
YOUNG WOMAN: ...I think we all feel an empty place not just in
our hearts but in our lives. Everybody loved Jennifer, not just because
she was a special person...but because she was the kind of friend
who was always there for you. We'll all miss you, Jennifer. We'll
miss your smile...we'll miss your laugh and your sense of humor.
We'll miss the time we could have spent together. We'll keep those
memories close to our hearts until we meet again in God's kingdom.
(Mourners filing past the coffin.)
(Move to Donnie Pfaster, an employee of the funeral home, standing
near a door to the side of the pulpit. His eyes betray a fire of
fascination. This look evaporates when Jackson Toews, his supervisor,
enters near Donnie.)
TOEWS (quietly): The family has requested a graveside service now.
I've rescheduled the burial to tomorrow afternoon. We'll keep the body
overnight.
(The mourners have left by now. Donnie's approaching the coffin,
looking at the girl.)
DONNIE (sincerely): Such a beautiful girl.
(Donnie strokes the girl's hair lovingly, then closes the lid.)
Cut to: The funeral hall, at night.
(Jackson Toews enters a dark room, looking for something.
He hears noise, turns, staring into the darkness.)
TOEWS: Hello?
(The room is still. A sound of a coffin being closed.)
TOEWS (he's really spooked now): Who's there?
(A shadowy form is drifting through the coffins.)
TOEWS: I said, who's there?
(The form is a silhouette of a gargoyle-like, demonic creature.
Toews turns in terror, finds the light switch, flips it on.
He's turning to see:)
TOEWS (surprised): Donnie? What the hell are you doing here
this late?
DONNIE: Working.
TOEWS (noticing a pair of scissor in Donnie's hand): Working?
At this hour? (noticing a trail of blonde hair clippings scattered on
the concrete): What the hell were you doing? (opening the coffin,
to find the dead girl's hair has been cut off): Get out of here,
you freak! Get out of here, and don't come back!
(Donnie turns and walks away, a demonic smile on his face.)
[opening credits]
----------------------------------------------
Graveyard.
(Mulder, Scully and Special Agent Moe Bocks are walking
towards a gravesite.)
BOCKS: ...I got the call from Minneapolis PD, saying they wanted
the FBI to come out and have a look. Anything slightly freakazoid,
that's the drill: call Moe Bocks. As if I'm tight with all the nut cases
in town. So I shoot on down here to see what's-the-what and I'll be
damned if I'm not knocked on my butt by what they show me.
Twenty two years, I've never seen anything like it. I get one look
at the corpse and I'm on the phone to my pal Andi Schnider down
at the Mutual UFO Network. You know Andi?
MULDER: No.
BOCKS: Well, he knows you.
MULDER: Why'd you call Mufon?
BOCKS: I wanted to see if there'd been much UFO activity in the area.
MULDER: You think this grave was unearthed by aliens, Agent Bocks?
BOCKS: It has all the telltale markings, don't you think?
I mean, according to the literature.
MULDER: The literature?
BOCKS: Y'know. The way the hair and nails have been cut away.
Sort of like they do in cattle mutilations.
(Scully is clearly disturbed by the sight of the body.)
MULDER: I hate to disappoint you, Agent Bocks, but this doesn't
look like the work of aliens to me.
BOCKS: disappointed): No? How can you be sure?
MULDER: I've seen this kind of thing before. When I was with the
Violent Crime Section. Whoever dug this up probably used a
backhoe. If you took casts of the ground in the area, you'd
probably lift some clean new tracks off the garage around here
somewhere.
BOCKS: You think?
MULDER: He may work here, but it's not likely. Though he's probably
worked at a cemetery or a mortuary at one time or another. Probably
been busted before, but you're not going to find any record of it.
Not real good for business when these stories get around.
BOCKS: to be sure): You're saying some human's been doing this?
MULDER: If you want to call him that.
BOCKS: embarrassed): Well, don't I feel like a dumb butt.
(Scully ventures one last look into the grave, the image giving her a
cold shudder. Mulder & Scully move back to their car, Bocks stays
behind.)
MULDER: You okay, Scully?
SCULLY: Yeah... I've read about cases of desecrating the dead,
but this is the first time I've seen one.
MULDER: Nothing can prepare you for it. It's almost impossible
to imagine.
SCULLY: Why do they do it?
MULDER: Some people collect salt and pepper shakers.
The fetishist collects dead things. Hair, fingernails... no one
quite knows why. Though I've never quite understood salt and
pepper shakers myself.
SCULLY (looks curiously at Mulder): Sometimes you surprise
me, Mulder.
MULDER: Why?
(opens car door for Scully, then goes around the car to get in)
SCULLY: How that didn't shock you back there.
MULDER: I've prepared myself for it before we left Washington.
SCULLY (gives him a look, they are in the car now):
You knew it wasn't UFO-related from the start?
MULDER: I had suspected as much.
SCULLY: Mulder, we flew three hours to get here. Our plane
doesn't leave until tomorrow night. If you suspected, why -
MULDER (pulls two tickets from his pocket): Vikings versus
Redskins, in the Metrodome. Forty yard line, Scully. You and me.
--------------------------------------------
Ficicello Family Frozen Foods.
(Marilyn sits behind a desk, interviewing Donnie Pfaster.)
MARILYN: Have you lived in the Twin Cities area long, Mr. Pfaster?
DONNIE: I grew up here. I was away for a few years.
MARILYN: What kind of work were you in before?
DONNIE: Cosmotology. Hair and makeup.
MARILYN: Oh, that's interesting.
DONNIE: If you don't mind my saying, that's a lovely color lipstick
you're wearing. Is that Indian Summer?
MARILYN (flattered): Yes. Yes, it is. You're applying for a job
as a deliveryman -
DONNIE: To put myself through school. I've gone back to school.
MARILYN (smiles, writing this down): What are you studying?
DONNIE: Comperative religions.
MARILYN: Oh. Are you religious yourself?
DONNIE: Yes. Very.
MARILYN (smiles, leaning forward): I'm probably not supposed to say
this, but Mr. Ficicello feels very strongly about religious backgrounds.
He prides himself on the honesty of his employees.
DONNIE: Can you put that on the application?
MARILYN: I'll attach a little note. (winks)
DONNIE: Thank you.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Agent Bocks is sitting in his office, watching the Vikings vs.
Redskins game. Scully & Mulder enter. Bocks turns the TV
sound down.)
BOCKS: I was glad I could catch you before you left.
(Mulder stares longingly at the mute screen)
BOCKS (hands to Scully a file folder): We found more bodies dug up.
SCULLY: Did you get your forensics report on this one?
BOCKS (nodding): Somebody was down there in the grave alright.
Cut the hair with a pair of pinking shears. Gotta wonder about this guy.
MULDER: How many bodies does this make?
BOCKS: Three in the last two days.
MULDER: What else can you tell me about the analysis of the
corpses?
BOCKS: The hair was cut from the heads of two of the bodies.
From the third one, the fingernails were pulled out with what looks
like a pair of needlenose pliers.
(Scully looking at photos in the file, and sees herself as one of the
victims! A wave of nausea comes over her. She lays the file on the
desk and leaves the room. Mulder noting this)
MULDER: Alright, I want you to draft an eyes-only memo to everyone
in this office, and to all law enforcement agencies in the metropolitan area.
BOCKS: Saying what?
MULDER: That the Twin Cities have an escalating fetishist on their
hands.
BOCKS: A what?
MULDER: An escalating fetishist. Security should be tightened around
the city cemeteries. Mortuaries, funeral homes and hospitals should be
notified. There should be warning of a possible stalker in the area.
BOCKS (hesitating): This isn't New York, Agent Mulder. People still
leave their doors unlocked here. This is going to scare them.
MULDER: You can leave out the more gruesome aspects in your press
release.
BOCKS: Why do you want to alarm folks anyway? I mean, if this guy
only preys on dead people...
MULDER: His compulsion is growing. He may resort to homicide to
procure his corpses. Once he gets a taste of a warm body, he's
probably going to want more.
BOCKS (shaking his head): Maybe I've been isolated up here in the
great white north too long.
MULDER: How's that?
BOCKS: People wondered why it took them so long to catch that kid in
Milwaukee. Thought someone would have noticed he was killing those
young boys. Truth is, no one ever believed it could happen.
MULDER: If you catch this guy before he kills, maybe they can go right
on believing that.
BOCKS: I'm afraid we don't have the manpower or expertise to move on
this with any speed. Going to be hard to round anybody up on a
Saturday. Could be Monday or Tuesday before we get our ducks in a row.
(Outside of the office, Scully sits alone, with a disturbed look on her
face. She's startled when Mulder leans out the door, but she's not
looking at him.)
MULDER: I'm going to cancel our flight.
We've got some work to do here.
(Scully stares forward, still not looking at him)
MULDER: Scully?
SCULLY: I'll be right with you.
(Mulder ducks back, while Scully remains there, shaken).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Agent Bocks' office. On a computer screen, there's information
regarding all sorts of murderers and maniacs, accompanied by
photos of them.)
SCULLY'S VOICEOVER: A complete model or psychological profile
of the death fetishist does not exist. Extrapolating from material on
file at the FBI's Behavioral Science Unit, the compulsion is the result
of a complex misplacement of values and a deviation from cultural norms
and societal mores - often accompanied by extreme alienation from
normal social interaction and traditional avenues for interaction with
others. He is more likely to be white, male and of average to above
average intelligence. Cases of fetishists with IQs over 150 have been
documented. The progression of the pathology can be traced from the
fantasy stage to the eventual acting out of fetishistic impulses,
including opportunistic homicide. Agent Mulder believes strongly that
the suspect in this case is escalating toward this action. It is my
opinion from reading these case files that death fetishism may play
a stronger role than suspected in cases of serial murder. That once
he begins to murder, it is the killing that draws attention away from a
deeper motive. A motive which most people, including law enforcement
professionals, dare not imagine. It is somehow easier to believe, as
Agent Bocks does, in aliens and UFOs, than in the kind of cold blooded
inhuman monster who could prey on the living to scavenge from the dead.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Donnie Pfaster. Cruising in his car, down a street lined with working
girls. He stops near 2 hookers, one of them (Satin) bends down,
leaning on the car.)
SATIN: Hi.
DONNIE: Hi.
SATIN: Are you looking for a date?
DONNIE: Yes.
SATIN: Do you want to pull around the corner over there.
DONNIE: I'm interested in a couple of hours.
SATIN (smiling): Where do you have in mind?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Donnie's apartment. Donnie and Satin enter. Normal apartment.)
SATIN (hugging herself): Don't you have any heat in here?
It's freezing.
DONNIE: The forced air unit is broken. I'd like to run you a bath.
(heads towards the bathroom)
(Donnie's bathroom. Little bottles with shampoos and soaps neatly
placed on the side of the tub. The water is running, Donnie's adding
bubble bath into the water. Satin enters.)
DONNIE: Is your hair treated?
SATIN: What?
DONNIE: Do you need a shampoo for chemically treated heir?
SATIN: You want me to shampoo my hair?
DONNIE: I'm happy to pay extra, if that's something out of the
ordinary.
SATIN (looks at him, then reaches down to take off her high-heeled
shoes. Her fingernails are long and painted bright red):
Nobody's ever asked me.
(Phone rings from another part of the house.)
DONNIE (starts to walk out of the bathroom): Excuse me.
(Donnie's bedroom, he's answering the phone.)
DONNIE: Hello.
MARILYN: Is this Mr. Pfaster?
DONNIE: Yes.
MARILYN: Hi, this is Marilyn at Ficicello Frozen Foods. Sorry to
bother you so late, but I'm calling to say you've been hired,
Mr. Pfaster. We'd like you to start right away.
SATIN (coming down the hallway): Hey, what's going on here?
The water's ice cold. (entering the bedroom, with only a towel
wrapped around her. Her expression changes to one of terror):
Oh God...
(Donnie's bedroom is full of funeral sprays, most of them are
wilting. He looks calmly at Satin.)
MARILYN (on the phone): Mr. Pfaster...?
DONNIE: Yes. That's wonderful news. Thank you so much.
(hangs up the phone, looking at Satin, as she backs away into the
hallway)
SATIN: Don't you come near me! Get away from me!
(Donnie's getting up, moving towards her.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(An alley. Night. Police cars are all around, there's a body
covered with blue satin sheets.)
BOCKS: We're still waiting for someone to ID the body.
(approaching with Mulder & Scully) Judging from this area,
I'd say she was probably a working girl.
(The prostitute that was standing with Satin when Donnie picked
her up, is approaching, seeing the body, becoming hysterical.)
PROSTITUTE: Oh my God! Oh my God! Who did this to her?
Who did this?
(she's being pulled away)
MULDER: Was it him?
BOCKS: It looks like it. Knife wound the length of her torso.
All her hair was cut off. He took her fingernails. But this time,
he took some fingers, too. Do you want to see the body?
(Mulder starts moving towards the body, Scully doesn't follow.
He looks back at her)
SCULLY: I need a minute.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Nice neighbourhood - it's daytime. Donnie Pfaster, with his delivery
man uniform walks out of a delivery vehicle, with a frozen food
container. He walks up to one of the houses, and knocks the door.
A woman answers.)
DONNIE: Hi. I'm your new delivery man.
ELLEN: Oh, hi. Come in.
(They both enter the kitchen. Donnie starts placing the food in the
freezer, while Ellen is spooning out cookie batter onto metal cookie
sheets.)
ELLEN: Did they give you Skip's old route?
DONNIE: Yes, ma'am. I think so. I just started with the company.
ELLEN: Skip had been delivering to us for so long, we almost took it
for granted he'd always be around. Since before the kids were born.
(Lisa, Ellen's daughter enters the kitchen.)
ELLEN: Lisa, this is...
DONNIE: Donnie. Donnie Pfaster.
LISA: Oh, hi. (to her Mom): I'm going to Steve's, Mom.
ELLEN: Okay. You have a good time.
LISA (to Donnie): Bye.
DONNIE: Bye. (stares at her leaving)
ELLEN (to Donnie, after Lisa leaves): We have three daughters.
DONNIE: Oh. (smiles politely, as he closes the freezer door):
Pardon me, but can I use your washroom to wash my hands?
ELLEN: Oh, sure. There's a washroom down off the service porch.
(Bathroom. Donnie, thoroughly washing his hands. He dries them,
and looks down at a waste-basket. He reaches down, picks it up,
and puts his hand inside. He retrieves a hairball, looks at it lovingly,
and brings it to his face to feel its texture. He, then, puts it in his
pocket, and puts the waste-basket back down. He turns around to
exit, and when he opens the door, he finds himself face to face with
Ellen.)
ELLEN: I just wanted to tell you, if we're ever not home, we always
leave the back door open here.
DONNIE: Oh, Okay. I'll remember that.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(County Morgue. A group of men (doctors and medical examiners).
they stand around the body of the satin sheet covered dead hooker
on the autopsy table. Scully walks in, to perform the autopsy,
all men silently make room for her.)
SCULLY'S VOICEOVER: Death is a recorded event. For reasons
natural or unnatural, when a body ceases to function, the cause
of the effect can be clearly reconstructed. A body has a story to tell.
(She pulls the satin sheet back, and turns on the microphone above
the autopsy table.)
SCULLY: The time is eleven fourteen AM, Monday, November 14th.
The deceased is a female in her twenties... (her voice fades)
SCULLY'S VOICEOVER: If the victim was strangled, an examination
of the veins in the eyes will reveal this. If the victim was shot, entry
wounds and gunpowder residue can be used to reconstruct the events
leading to death and help to establish a possible motive. Body
temperature, preferably the temperature of the spleen, is an
accurate indicator of the time of death. As are rigor, livor and
levels of sodium in the blood. If the body was moved, sand,
small rocks, vegetable debris, even pollen can be removed and
analysed to determine the location of the original crime scene and
place the position of the body at the time of death. Extracutenous
stains and residues can indicate the use of poison or toxins.
Hair and fibres, slivers of glass, plastic, even insect casings can
serve to recreate the circumstances under which death occurred.
(Scully is now seated at Agent Bocks' computer, the heard words are
written on the screen by her.)
SCULLY'S VOICEOVER: It may be an irony only understood by those
of us who conduct these examinations, who use these pieces to rebuild
a narrative, that death, like life itself, is a drama with a beginning,
middle and end. It is my opinion, having conducted this examination,
that the victim died a wrongful death for the express purpose of
extracting her hair and fingernails.
(We keep hearing Scully's voice over, but now we see Mulder reading
a document from Scully's computer.)
SCULLY'S VOICEOVER: The time of death cannot be accurately
determined due to what I believe must have been immersion in a
cold environment, most likely water. Death came as a result of blood
loss and trauma from a deep knife wound which severed the plimonary
artery. Of the evidence examined, no one piece or combination gives
a clear picture of the killer, other than the motive implied by the
bizarre nature if the crime. For the record, it is also my opinion that,
outside of child homicide, which may be more tragic and heinous,
this is one of the most angry and dehumanizing murders imaginable.
(Mulder looks up from the page, he's now in a lineup observation room.
He stands with Agent Bocks, and the 2nd prostitute.)
BOCKS: to prostitute): Look at each man carefully.
PROSTITUTE (shakes her head): He was ordinary.
He didn't look like no freak.
BOCKS: Do you remember what kind of car he was driving?
What color it was?
PROSTITUTE: I think it was white.
BOCKS: Okay, you can go. Just leave a number and address where
you can be reached.
PROSTITUTE: Are you gonna catch this guy?
BOCKS (unconvincing): We'll catch him.
MULDER: Might be a nice week to take that paid vacation the boss
owes you.
PROSTITUTE: Yeah. Right. (leaves the room)
BOCKS (to Mulder): If this guy looks regular-like, and if he doesn't
have a record, he's gonna be near impossible to find.
MULDER: Until he kills again. Or until we can determine what's
driving him.
BOCKS: I read your profile. Sounds like a guy who can't make it
with women. Which would explain the hooker.
MULDER: The hooker was just convenient. This guy's not after sex.
He's after trophies. His victim was a young attractive woman. The
corpses he dug up were those of young women. Yet there's no
evidence of any sexual activity. What fuels his need? What is
important about the hair and fingernails to him? It's as if it's not
enough that they're dead. He has to defile them. There's a deeper
psychosis at work here. And anger toward women, possibly his
mother.
BOCKS: I'd say she'd be pretty fried at him, too.
MULDER: The next thing to do is call all the psychiatric facilities.
See if they have any record of patients with similar pathologies.
This kind of killer isn't made overnight. He's been fuelling this
fetish for years.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(A classroom, at night.)
TEACHER: ...the necessity of the story, the myth or the legend in a
culture is almost universal. We think of myths as things that entertain
or instruct, but their deeper purpose is often to explain, or make
fanciful, wishes, desires or behavior that society would otherwise
deem unacceptable. Myths often disguise thoughts that are simply
too terrible to think about, but because they are conveyed in a
wrapping of untruth - the story - these thoughts become harmless
fiction.
(Donnie is seated in the back of the classroom. He stares at a pretty
short-haired blonde coed in the front row. she touches her neck,
her fingernails are filed, long and colored. The teacher continues.)
TEACHER: Take, for example, stories that we recite for children,
such as Snow White or Alice in Wonderland. The subtextural themes
where the Queen orders "off with her head", or the prince wakens
Sleeping Beauty with a kiss, are what Freud would describe as
death/wish imagining.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Parking lot. The pretty coed is walking to her car, and opens the door.
Donnie appears on the other side of the car and surprises her.)
DONNIE: Excuse me. I'm in your mythology class.
COED: Oh.
DONNIE: My name's Donnie. I sit a couple rows over.
Maybe you've seen me.
COED: I-I don't know. I -
DONNIE: I know. You sit up front. I just... (moving to her side of the
car) I was going to my car, and I saw you, and... did he ask us to
read chapters ten and eleven, or eleven and twelve?
COED: Oh, I think it was... (reaches into her bag, to check in her
notebook) It was chapters ten and eleven.
DONNIE: Oh, thanks.
COED (puts the notebook back in her bag, in the meantime,
Donnie's got closer to her, and has her penned in the tight V
made by the open door) I have to go now. (tries to pull the car
door from Donnie's grasp, and fails)
DONNIE: Don't go.
COED (angrily): Let go of the door!
(Donnie takes a step closer, and she knees him in the groin,
followed by a punch, which sends him to the floor)
COED: (screaming) HELP!!! SOMEBODY!!!
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(County morgue. The body is lying on the autopsy table, covered with
a satin sheet. Agent Scully walks in, wearing her autopsy uniform,
and moves to the body. She removes the sheet from the body,
and with a horror expression on her face, she sees... Herself!
Lying on the autopsy table. From the dead Scully's point of view,
we see the demonic figure from the beginning, where the examining
Scully stood before. Phone begins ringing.)
(Motel room. Scully's bolting upright in bed, waking from a nightmare.
She answers the ringing phone.)
SCULLY: Hello.
MULDER: Scully, it's me. They've arrested somebody they think may be
our guy.
SCULLY (still under shock): I'll get dressed.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Jail block, at night. Scully, Mulder and Bocks walk down the jail
corridor, heading towards a cell.)
BOCKS: He's got a history of assault. A 911 call came in from a
security officer who saw it happen. She hurt him really bad.
(They arrive the cell, look inside. The man inside is not Donnie.
He has a knife wound across his cheek and nose.)
MULDER: Who cut him?
BOCKS: A working girl. They're all carrying knives since what happened.
(They enter the cell. Behind them, in another cell, Donnie is standing,
his face pokes out of the bars. He's staring at Scully with the same
look we've seen before. After a while, the agents leave the other
man's cell, and move a few steps from the bars.)
MULDER: He's not our guy.
BOCKS: I thought we had him.
(They start leaving, as Donnie keeps staring at Scully.
She turns around, feeling his look. She looks at him,
then turns away, shaken. They all reach the door.)
SCULLY: Mulder, can I have a minute with you?
MULDER: Yeah.
(Scully looks at Bocks, she wants to talk to Mulder alone)
BOCKS (gets the message): I'll be out front. (exits)
SCULLY: I think I might better drive this investigation if I focused
on the evidence.
MULDER: What are you suggesting?
SCULLY: That I take the body back to Washington. I'd like to run it
through the fingerprint lab there. You know those guys, they can pull
a print -
MULDER: If you're having trouble with this case, Scully, I want you
to tell me.
SCULLY: I'm not having trouble, Mulder.
MULDER: I'd understand, Scully. This isn't exactly easy to stomach.
SCULLY: I'm fine with it. Really. I just think we're a long way from
catching this guy. If we could get a print, we'd have something to go
on. Right now we're at a standstill.
MULDER (knowing she's hiding something): I think it's a good idea.
(puts his hand on her shoulder): I just don't want you to think you
have to hide anything from me, Scully. I've seen agents with twenty
years in the field fall apart on cases like this.
SCULLY (quietly): I'm fine, Mulder. I can handle it.
(gently, she pulls away from his touch, and they both leave)
DONNIE (to the guy in the cell next to him, whom the agents
were talking to): Hey, what's your name?
SUSPECT: You talking to me?
DONNIE: Yeah. Were those FBI agents?
SUSPECT: Yeah.
DONNIE: What were they asking you?
SUSPECT: They thought I was some freak who's been digging up
corpses. Man, I'm in enough trouble already.
DONNIE: What were their names?
SUSPECT: Who?
DONNIE: The younger agents.
SUSPECT: Um. I don't remember his name, but she was Scully,
like that baseball announcer.
(A jailor approaches, and opens Donnie's cell.)
JAILOR: Let's go. Mr. Pfaster.
DONNIE: Go where?
JAILOR: Lady's dropped the charges against you. They're letting
you out soon as you talk to psychiatric social worker.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(FBI headquarters. Fingerprint analysis lab.)
EXAMINER (studying a piece of satin through magnification
eyeglasses): At first glance, there's not much to work with.
Satin doesn't hold a print real well. There could be a latent
somewhere in these blood stains, but I suspect the killer
used gloves.
SCULLY: The body was shipped on my flight.
I should be here within the hour.
EXAMINER: We'll take a look. How long are you in town,
Agent Scully?
SCULLY: I've got a flight back to Minneapolis booked for tonight.
But I might cancel.
EXAMINER: I've put all other work aside.
(Scully nods and exits)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(FBI headquarters. Scully is walking down a hallway. She reaches a
door marked: "Employee Assistance Program, K. Kosseff L.C.S.W.".
Scully looks around to see no one's looking, then enters. Scully's
seated across Karen Kosseff, struggling with her emotions.)
SCULLY: You think you find a way to deal with these things. In med
school, you develop a clinical detachment to death. In your FBI
training, you are confronted with cases, the most terrible and violent
cases. You think you can look into the face of pure evil. And then
you find yourself paralysed by it.
KOSSEFF: Are you aware you've been talking about yourself in
the second person?
SCULLY: No. Was I?
KOSSEFF: Do you know why?
SCULLY: Probably as another way of trying to detach myself from it.
KOSSEFF: You're a strong person. You've probably always felt you can
handle any problem yourself. But you feel vulnerable now. Do you know
why that is?
SCULLY: No.
KOSSEFF: Is it your partner? Is there a problem with trust -
SCULLY (firmly): No. I trust him as much as anyone.
I'd trust him with my life.
KOSSEFF: Can you talk to him about the way you're feeling?
SCULLY: No. (pauses) I know it sounds crazy, but I don't want him to
know how much this is bothering me. I don't want him to think he has
to protect me.
KOSSEFF: I know you lost your father last year. And I read in your
file that you were very ill recently. That your life was threatened.
Exposures like these can leave you extremely vulnerable.
SCULLY (tears well up in her eyes, but she's not crying):
I know these things. I'm conscious of them. I know the world is full
of predators, just as it has always been. And I know it's my job to
protect people from them. And I've counted on that fact to give me
faith in my ability to do what I do... I want that faith back...
I need it back.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(FBI headquarters. Fingerprints analysis lab. Scully enters.)
EXAMINER: There you are. I've been looking for you.
SCULLY: I had a meeting.
EXAMINER: I've got good news.
SCULLY: What did you find?
EXAMINER: Well, as I suspected, there was nothing on the sheets.
But we got something nice off the body. At first it didn't look like it.
Nothing on the torso, the face, the arms, the hands. The guy cut her
fingers off though, right? But not all of them. On her right hand, he
left a thumb. (hands Scully a print of the fingerprint) I pulled this
off the nail polish. There must have been a struggle before he killed
her. Before he put the gloves on.
SCULLY (excited): I've got to call Agent Mulder. (goes to the phone)
EXAMINER: Oh. Somebody called for you.
SCULLY: Who?
EXAMINER: He said he was an Agent working out of Minneapolis.
I told him you were out, but had a flight booked back tonight.
SCULLY (with a look of concern, as she dials): Was it Agent Mulder?
EXAMINER: I didn't recognize the print.
SCULLY: Did you tell him about the print?
EXAMINER: I hadn't found it yet.
MULDER (on the phone): Mulder.
SCULLY: Hi, it's me. We got a print.
MULDER (to Bocks): Scully got a print.
BOCKS: Fantastic!
SCULLY (on the phone): I'm going to modem it out to you right
away to see if you can run a match.
MULDER: Are you staying on there, Scully?
SCULLY: No. I'm coming back tonight.
MULDER: Look, Scully. I know this is a pretty horrific case -
SCULLY: I'm okay with it, Mulder. You can use my help.
MULDER: Always!
SCULLY (smiles faintly, then): Mulder? You or Agent Bocks
didn't call here looking for me earlier, did you?
MULDER (to Bocks): Did you call for Agent Scully?
(Bocks shakes his head)
MULDER: No.
SCULLY (curious) Okay, I'll see you when I get there. (hangs up)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Donnie Pfaster's apartment. The door is broken down by uniformed
officers. The bedroom, just as before, flowers all over. No sheets on
the bed. From out of the zippered end of one pillow, protrudes a
stuffing of long human hair. Mulder and Bocks enter the apartment,
Mulder walks into the kitchen as Bocks is talking on his walkie-talkie.)
BOCKS: The suspect does not appear to be at home. Let's put out an
APB on Donald Addie Pfaster, age twenty eight -
(One of the officers opens the freezer, showing something to Mulder.)
MULDER (showing it to Bocks): Take a look.
BOCKS: Holy mother of God.
(It's a box of frozen food, that contains brussel sprouts, and
also some fingers, and a long fingernail, painted bright red.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Airport, at night. Scully exits. She goes to a car rental company.
She exits the rental company, and approaches her rented car.
From another car nearby, a man is watching her. It's Donnie Pfaster.
Scully's in her car, driving. Behind her, a pair of bright headlights
looms up behind her. The lights grow brighter and nearer, and
Scully is taken totally by surprise, as her car is rammed from
behind. She gets hold of the wheel, trying to correct the forced
swerve, but her car is being rammed again.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Agent Bocks' office. Night.)
MULDER (worriedly checking his watch): She should have been here.
BOCKS: She was on the flight. And it arrived three hours ago.
AN FBI AGENT (entering): We found Agent Scully's car.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(A road. Scully's dented car lies on the side of the road. A team
of FBI officers are around. Also Bocks and Mulder. There's a white
scratch on the car. Mulder looks inside, the airbag is out, and torn.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Donnie is in a dark house. He's going down a corridor, entering a
bathroom. The bathtub is filling, we can guess the temperature of the
water. There are little bottles of shampoos etc. on the side of the tub.
Donnie is again, walking in a corridor, entering a bedroom. He opens
the closet door. Inside we see Scully, huddled in the corner. Her
hands and feet are tied, her mouth gagged. Her face is bruised,
her eyes are closed. She opens her eyes, and sees...
The demonic figure from her dream. Donnie's closing the door.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Bocks' office.)
BOCKS (on cellular phone): Nothing registered to Donald Pfaster?
Right... right. Got it. (hangs up) (to Mulder): The paint is called
Ivory Bone. It's a two-step enamel used by three makers of late model
mid-sized car. They estimate there may be about sixty thousand cars
that fit this description in the metropolitan area.
MULDER (on his own cellular phone): Nothing? No one saw her leave
the rental agency...? There was no attendant in the area...?
(presses the 'end' button in frustration) (to Bocks): People
videotape police beatings on dark streets. They see Elvis in three
cities across America every day. But no one saw a pretty woman
being run off the road in her rental car.
BOCKS: He could have taken her anywhere. How're we going to find her?
MULDER: We've got to go back to the beginning. As nasty as it seems,
we've got to get into this guy's head. How he thinks. Where would he go?
BOCKS (shrugging): Anywhere but his mother's right?
MULDER: What do you mean?
BOCKS: Being that he's so pissed off at her.
From what your profile says.
MULDER (interested): Where does his mother live?
BOCKS: I don't know.
MULDER: Let's find out.
(Donnie in that dark house, moving towards the closet and opens it.
Scully is in there, very frightened.)
(Bocks' office. Mulder and Bocks look at a computer screen.)
BOCKS: The mother lives in Boca Raton, Florida. Correction.
She used to live there. She died a year ago.
MULDER (disappointed): Did she have a car registered to her?
BOCKS (checking): A late model white sedan.
MULDER (realizing): He inherited the car. Boca Raton could have
been a winter house. Was there a residence here in Minneapolis?
(Bedroom. Inside the closet. Donnie's near Scully, he's inspecting
her fingernails. He uses a sharp knife to cut the rope that binds her feet.)
SCULLY (her mouth still gagged): Get the hell away from me!!
(to her terror, she sees Donnie's face, transforming, and becoming
different men's faces. Those are the men she saw before, in the
computer files she checked. The figures then change to that
demonic creature again, then back to Donnie)
DONNIE: Don't be afraid.
(Donnie takes Scully, hands still tied, mouth still gagged. He leads
her to the bathroom, where the tub is filled with water and bubbles.
Donnie walks around her in the bathroom, to check the shampoos.)
DONNIE: Would you say your hair is normal or dry? (he turns around,
as Scully backs out towards the door) Now where are you going?
(Donnie moves towards Scully, grabs her, but she pushes him hard
straight into the freezing water in the bathtub. Scully then rushes out
of the bathroom. Donnie pulls himself, wet, from the tub, and starts
chasing her. He walks out of the bathroom, and looks around.
Scully has disappeared. He's moving around the house, looking for her.
Scully reaches the front door. It's locked. She runs for a place to hide.)
DONNIE: There's no way out, girly girl. (enters a bedroom, and retrieves
a gun from the dresser) I know this house, girly girl. There's nowhere
to hide.
(He then hears a noise from one of the rooms, and rushes in that
direction. He moves towards a closed door and opens it. Scully
jumps forward, her gag removed, with a spray bottle in her tied hands.
She sprays him in the eyes, and runs off, while he's stumbling backwards.
Scully runs towards the staircase, Donnie after her. He catches her at
the top of the stairs, and they both tumble down the staircase. As they
hit the floor, Donnie's gun slips out of his grasp. Scully starts crawling
for the gun, Donnie sees her, and leaps on top of her. As she's pointing
the gun at him, she, again, sees the demon from her dream, which
shocks her, and allows Donnie to snap the gun from her hands.
At that moment, the door bursts open, Mulder, Bocks and a few
officers rush in.)
MULDER (gun brandished): FEDERAL AGENTS! HANDS IN THE AIR!
(Donnie slowly puts his hands in the air, and the other men take him
forcefully. Mulder kneels down to Scully. She's dazed, as she's
trying to get up.)
MULDER (loudly): Let's get the paramedics out here!
SCULLY: I'm okay.
MULDER: Just stay there, Scully.
SCULLY (she insists on getting up, Mulder helps her): I'm fine.
Just help me get my wrists undone.
(As Mulder starts untying her): How did you find me?
MULDER: His Mother used to own the house, willed it to the sisters.
I played a hunch. A patrolman spotted the car out front.
(Her wrists untied, Scully rubs them. She doesn't want to meet
Mulder's eyes. She's looking over at Donnie, who's being bound
on the floor.)
MULDER: Why don't you sit down until someone can take a look at you.
SCULLY (quietly): Mulder, I'm fine.
(Mulder looks at her, and tips up her chin. She, then, meets his gaze,
and that's all it takes. Her eyes well up, and she begins crying.
Mulder's holding her now, though she keeps her arms crossed in
front of herself. She, then, allows herself to hold him, to fully let
her emotions out. Scully continues to cry in Mulder's arms, while he
holds her tight and strong.)
(Photos of Donnie as a child, and his family, are fading one into
the other, as we hear Mulder.)
MULDER'S VOICEOVER: The conquest of fear lies in the moment of
its acceptance. And understanding what scares us most is that which
is most familiar, most common place. That boy next door, Donnie
Pfaster, the unremarkable younger brother of four older sisters,
extraordinary only in his ordinariness, could grow up to be the devil
in a buttoned-down shirt. It's been said that the fear of the unknown
is an irrational response to the excesses of the imagination. But
our fear of the everyday, of the lurking stranger, and the sound of
foot-falls on the stairs. The fear of violent death and the primitive
impulse to survive, are as frightening as any x-file, as real as the
acceptance that it could happen to you.
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