Message-ID: Date: Sat, 25 Jul 1998 14:42:51 +0100 From: Heather Markham Subject: alternus-tempus.p01 CHAPTER ONE Syracuse Military Police Headquarters. February 25th 1997. Mulder and Scully descended the long flight of stone steps leading from the large Military building. They discussed the evidence of their most recent case. They were both concerned and disturbed about the events surrounding the plane crash and the mysterious events leading to the death of Max Fenig, who had died in the crash. Max Fenig had claimed to be a UFO abductee and that he had vital evidence proving the existence of extraterrestrials and also the Governments conspiracy in developing UFO technology. He was thought to have been carrying that vital piece of evidence with him when he boarded the ill-fated plane. Scully was bringing Mulder up-to-date with the events of the previous night. "On the night we left the crash site, Sharon Graffy was found wandering, in a daze, around the same area. Strange lights were witnessed in the sky above the spot where she was found." "Max's sister?" asked Mulder, as they reached the bottom of the steps and began walking from the building. Scully answered the question, "That's another thing....she's not Max's sister. She's spent most of her time in and out of mental institutions. That's where she met Max." Mulder raised an enquiring eyebrow, "Why would she lie?" Scully stopped walking and turned to face her partner. "All I know is, that plane continues to kill people as it sits on the ground." She paused, sadness and concern showing on her face, "Mulder, Pendrell is dead." Mulder's expression changed to one of surprise and disbelief, he could hardly accept the information. "How, why?" he asked. Scully swallowed in an effort to dislodge the lump in her throat but she couldn't hide the emotion in her words, "He was shot in an attempt on Sergeant Frisch's life in our local bar back in Washington. Mulder, Pendrell saved his life....and mine too." She moved as if to walk away from the awfulness of it all, the needless waste of an innocent life. Mulder put out a hand to stop her, "Hey, Scully, Scully." She stopped and searched Mulder's face, searched his eyes hoping to find some kind of sense to it all. Mulder put a comforting hand on her shoulder. Her voice reflecting her sadness, "Mulder, what are all these people dying for? Is it the truth or is it for the lies?" A tiny muscle twitched at the side of Mulder's jaw, it was a question he often asked of himself, "Probably for the truth. If we owe them anything Scully, we should make sure of that. Pendrell's life shouldn't have been sacrificed for nothing." *** **** **** **** **** **** *** Sam's body tingled, a blue light crackled and flashed around him as he leaped. He opened his eyes and blinked, he was staring intently down a long dark tunnel at some hideous, crawling mass of worms. He recoiled back in horror and disgust. The microscope he'd been peering down toppled over. His sudden movement sent his seat careering backwards on its castors, it collided with someone behind him. Something crashed, his chair overbalanced and sent him sprawling to the floor in a very undignified heap. The heavily built figure of a man dressed in a white coat looked down at the mess and swore. "Oh damn....Pendrell there goes another piece of evidence from the Mandon case. Well, you can explain it to Skinner this time!" Sam surveyed the damage he'd caused, the broken remains of glass test tubes and jars lay amongst puddles of blood and other suspicious looking substances. He looked down at himself, he was wearing a man's dark coloured suit, over that was a white lab coat, it too, was spattered with blood and something he didn't care to think about too deeply. He looked up at the big man......."Oh, boy, what a doof!" he muttered to himself as he took stock of the situation and took in the surroundings. He seemed to be in some kind of combined office, laboratory or forensics lab and his name was Pendrell, he supposed that, at least, was something. Sam struggled to regain some kind of composure. He grabbed hold of the seat in an effort to pull himself up, only to find that the wheeled chair seemed to have a mind of its own, one which appeared to have an appreciation for slap-stick comedy. It suddenly shot from his grasp and dumped him right back onto his butt, right in the middle of the mess. His latex-gloved hand slipped through the mess, he grimaced and cursed silently as he wiped them off onto his overall coat. If he'd felt a doof before, he now felt an even bigger jerk! The big man's sour gaze drew from the mess to regard him. He stretched out a large plump hand towards Sam and hauled him to his feet. He looked at the state of Sam's coat and clothing, apart from the blood, most of the mess had ended up all over the unfortunate time-traveller, "Jeez! What the hell were you doing? You should be more careful! Look at all the mess. It's a damned good job that stuff had already been tested and was on its way out and not on its way in. At least we know it's not something toxic." The man paused to sniff the air, "Argh, sheesh, it may not be toxic but it sure as hell stinks!" Sam's nose was beginning to pick up the offensive odour. His face creased into a look of repulsion and his nose wrinkled in disgust as he sniffed tentatively at his coat, "God, that's awful! What is it?" he paused for a second, while he surruptitiously read the name on the man's displayed identity tag. It was an FBI tag, which bore the name, Jones.....Special Agent T. Jones. Sam's eyes widened a little in surprise as he realized he was an FBI agent of some sorts, yet again! He stammered slightly as he continued, "Jo...Jones, I recognize it from somewhere....it smells like..." Jones cut in before he could say more, "Yeah, manure or to be more precise, Theyrozine liquid fertilizer. Mandon's suspected of making homemade bombs. That was part of the evidence!" One of several other men who were sitting across the other side of the large crime laboratory, swivelled his chair around to watch the scenario. The young man pulled a face and pinched his nose, "Hey, Pendrell! What's going on? Of all the things to trash, you have to go and choose that stuff! You were thinking about her again, weren't you? You know, if you kept your mind on the job and a little less on a certain lady, we'd all be better off, besides she's way out of your league and you know she never dates any of us guys, she's too wrapped up in her work!" Sam wondered who the young man was referring to, who was the mysterious 'she', he surmised that it was probably one of the women in one of the other offices, one on which the man he'd replaced must have had an obvious crush. Or was there more to it. After all, as he knew, life and his leaps were never that simple. He shrugged, grinned apologetically and tried to think of a suitable comment, "I wasn't thinking of her. I wasn't thinking of anyone, I guess I just leaned too far back in my seat. It just kinda flipped over from under me." Jones had covered his nose with a handkerchief, "You'd better go and get washed up. Look, it's getting late anyway, you may as well go home and change." Sam nodded in agreement, he didn't much care for the way he was smelling either. He'd be glad to get out of the tainted clothes but where was the washroom, more to the point, where was home and where was Al? He looked back to the floor, gesturing with his still gloved hands, "What about all this, shouldn't I clean it up first?" "No, I'll phone through to get that done, dump the coat and gloves with the mess. If you put them in the sterilization bin they'll stay there for most of the night and reek the place out. I'll have them removed but you can still explain this to Skinner....first thing in the morning! Although I dare say we can salvage something from it and we already have the report......So, I suppose not too much damage has been done. Now, get outa here. I don't think my nose can stand being around you much longer!" Removing the name tag from the offending coat, Sam dropped it carefully into his jacket pocket then peeled off his spattered white coat and surgical gloves, unceremoniously dropped them to the floor, stepped over the remains of the broken glass tubes and container jars and moved back to his desk. He righted the toppled microscope, tidied a few scattered papers and uncovered a standing desk calendar. It was turned to show February 97 but none of the days had ben crossed through, still, he thought, at least it's something more. It was only a small clue as to what he might be there for but there was something about the date, something about February 97 that pricked at his thoughts, it was something he thought he ought to remember. Temporarily he put it to the back of his mind as he turned to walk from the room. The young man who'd spoken before called out to him, "Hey, are you going over to the 'Headless Woman', later on? The rest of us guys will be there from about nine o'clock. Come and join us." The big man Jones shouted across the room, cutting into the conversation, "Hey, Barnes! You speak for yourself, me and Rutherford are working late tonight. I doubt if we'll be able to make it. And anyway, don't you guys ever get tired of that place?" The young man called Barnes ignored the remark and continued, "If you're real lucky SHE might be there too. Hey, that reminds me, how come you weren't there for the surprise party last night. I wouldn't have thought you'd want to miss out on that." Sam half turned and glanced back at the man. He assumed the 'Headless Woman' was their local bar but he had no idea about the rest of the conversation. He wasn't sure where he'd be that night but he felt he'd better say something and if Al didn't show up, at least he'd have someone to talk to, someone he could glean a little information from. "Er....well Barnes, something important came up last night, but yeah, okay," He looked down at his clothing and sniffed again, unfortunately, his lab coat had been unbuttoned and his suit had also been spattered with the foul-smelling chemical. "If I can get this smell off of me, I'll take you up on the invite." He walked through the door and looked both ways down the bustling corridor, now, he thought to himself, which way to the washroom? It appeared he was on on an upper floor of a large building. He decided it probably wouldn't matter which way he went, sooner or later he'd come to a wash room. He turned right and casually walked down the corridor, taking stock of the lay-out and functions of each office as he passed them. >From somewhere deep within his subconscious, a familiarity for the place seemed to seep through his mind. It irked him that he couldn't quite remember it properly. It was a strange feeling, not like forgetting something because his memory had been swiss-cheesed and had huge holes in it, it was different, something subtler, more of an instinct about the place. Somehow, he knew he was in the Headquarters of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington D.C. He tried to shrug off the thought as he considered that perhaps he had been an F.B.I Agent on a previous leap or something and residual memories were lingering. He paused at a large window and peered out into the inkiness of the evening city street. Water sparkled on the outside of the rain-soaked window, the lights from the tall street lamps reflected and shone yellow haloes on the broad, wet sidewalk. Even in the darkness he recognised the scene outside, he 'was' in the J. Edgar Hoover Building. A sudden, electrifying jolt of pain stabbed through his head accompanied by a lightening flash of memory, the two things hit him and rooting him to the spot with intensity. A large chunk of solid memory slapped into his mind just as hard as if he'd just walked into a brick wall. He gasped from the sudden agonizing pain. He threw his head back and pressed his hands around his skull in a vain effort to squeeze the pain away. His face screwed into a look of agony. Shock and realization shuddered through him, he could recall who he had been in his last leap and most astonishingly of all, what had happened. He could clearly remember working for the bureau as a Special F.B.I Investigator. He could recall with clarity being in the persona of Fox Mulder! Then he remembered going back to the Project Centre, he remembered rewriting the retrieval program....his heart began to pound. He had been with someone, someone for whom he had cared for deeply, a woman for whom he'd had strong feelings. He could remember everything but that. Why couldn't he remember who she was? Why remember everything else but block that? There was something else too, something strange took place during that leap, something which seemed to be clouded in a thick swathe of mist, not forgotten exactly but hidden away. He struggled desperately in a vain effort to remember how the leap had ended, annoyingly, it evaded him. He felt it wasn't exactly lost, it didn't feel as though it had become one of the usual holes in his memory, it seemed to him as if it had been buried and covered over purposely, locked in a thick blanket of irritating amnesia. It felt as if that part of the leap had been put out of his reach by someone or something for a reason. Battling with his own subconscious, he fought hard to remember something, anything, he needed to know how the leap had ended, whether or not he had fulfilled his mission. The part for which he so desperately searched, frustratingly remained clouded and out of bounds. He prayed for Al to show up and help him but his prayers went unheeded. The impact of the thoughts and memories rocked him, the pain which had added to the confusion of the sudden revelations, brought a wave of dizziness and nausea. He staggered and leaned against the wall to steady himself. Two men who'd been standing nearby arguing the pros and cons of the evidence relating to a particular case or other, stepped forward to his aid, supporting him, "Hey, are you alright? You don't look too good, do you want us to call for the doctor?" The other man wrinkled his nose, "You don't smell too good either, what happened?" The words brought him back to the here and now. He swallowed hard and tried to shake away the confused feelings. Concentrating his focus on the man who'd first spoken, he stammered "Er, yeeeeah, th...thanks. I'll b...be okay. There was a slight accident back in the lab room, I got Theyrozine spilled onto me. I was on my way to the washroom. I guess the fumes are getting to me." The two men exchanged a knowing glance. One of them took hold of his arm, "It's Pendrell, isn't it? Why didn't you use the washroom just down from the lab, why come all the way down here?" It was a good question but Sam couldn't give the real reason, he just let his mind come up with yet another little white lie."Er...the other washroom was pretty crowded. I didn't want to walk in there and have everyone else run out!" "Well, that's very considerate but hardly practical. Come on, we'll get you to the bathroom along here." The uncomfortable feelings had only been brief and had now passed but he allowed the two men to guide him. After all, the quicker he got the stuff off him the better. Perhaps Al would deign to show up and give him some help, he really needed to see his friend. He needed to find out why he was able to recall so many things from his last leap. But most of all, he needed to know why he was here, he needed to know what he was supposed to do. The two FBI agents led him the short distance to the washroom. They'd been talking to him but the conversation hadn't really sunk in, his mind was still reeling from all the possibilities this new leap posed. The two good samaritans guided him to the appropriate door and left him to it, cautioning him to be more careful in future. Sam thanked them, turned and pushed open the door to the men's room. He sighed with relief, the white tiled room was empty. He headed straight for the sink, turned on the hot tap, scrubbed at his hands and washed his face. The hot water revived him, he felt a little fresher for it. He grabbed a handful of paper towels from the dispenser, soaked them with hot soapy water and sponged at his stained jacket. It didn't make much of an impression, the stains were still there but at least the smell had decreased. Why hadn't Al shown up yet, where the hell was he, what was keeping him? The worried quantum physicist called quietly into the emptiness of the room "Al, where are you? Come on, come on, old buddy, I could do with some help here?" Nothing happened, no response, no Al. He shrugged and resigned himself to the fact that this might be another awkward leap. Slipping his hand into his inside jacket pocket he drew out two wallets. One contained an FBI Special Agents badge. It told him that he worked as a forensics specialist here at bureau. The other contained money, identity papers, driving licence and insurance documents. He was glad that for once he'd leaped into someone who had the good sense to carry so much useful information. He put the badge wallet down on the edge of the sink and extracted the I.D. papers from the thicker wallet and read the details. Daniel Pendrell, thirty-two years old, five foot ten. Address I35 West 65th Street, Washington D.C. He studied the face in the photo accompanying the document. He looked up and into the steamy mirror above the hand basin, carefully wiping the away the condensation with one hand, he stared intently at the face of Pendrell then looked back to compare himself with the depicted photograph. Apart from the fact that the face in the passport-style picture bore no expression, it was quite a good likeness. He had short wavy, dark red hair, penetrating blue eyes and pale eyebrows and lashes. It was a pleasant, open, honest face. It had the well scrubbed shininess of a man much younger in years. Sam turned his attention to the driving licence and insurance papers. Somewhere he had a car, the papers gave a description and the number plate, it was a red Ford Taurus. He patted at his pockets, searching for the car keys. A jingle in the pocket of his pants soon disclosed their whereabouts. He took out a bunch of keys attached to a car alarm activator. He turned them over in his hand, looking at them, wondering what secrets the keys would unlock. With a burst of noise, the washroom door opened and a group of laughing, joking, dark suited men barged into the quiet room. One of them made a rude comment about the pervading odour. Sam cringed, he'd hoped it wasn't that bad now, it was obviously still a little offensive, he gripped the bunch of keys in his hand and decided it was definitely time to leave and go home.....wherever home was. He wondered what this man's home would be like, would it be an apartment, a house or what? He still had no idea if he lived with anyone. Though, he guessed he didn't have a girlfriend or was married, otherwise Pendrell would have kept his fanciful feelings for the mystery woman to himself. Still in deep thought, he hurriedly left the room muttering quietly to himself, "Okay, I have a car but where do I have it? Where the hell did Pendrell park it? Well, I suppose I'd better try the most obvious place first......the car park!" Finding an elevator, he rode it down to the bowels of the large building. He checked his watch, it was six-thirty p.m. He idly wondered how long it would take to reach his intended destination. The elevator reached the desired level, the doors swished open and an icy draught swept in and wrapped him in a cold, winter's dampness. He shivered and turned up the collar of his jacket, wishing Pendrell had brought a long thick overcoat to work with him, as most of the other FBI officers seemed to have done. Feeling a little despondent, he began to search the parking lot for Pendrell's auto. He pulled his jacket tighter about his body as he walked between the seemingly never ending rows of parked cars. It was gloomy and deserted. As he walked, his footsteps echoed through the enclosed concrete compound. Even though it was beneath the FBI building it wasn't the sort of place he really wanted hang around. It seemed to him that the world and his dog owned the same type of car as Pendrell. Red Fords seemed very popular here. The search was becoming tedious, he had a sudden thought, stopped, smiled and took out the bunch of keys, he separated the car alarm, held it at arms length, pressed the de-activation button, made a sweep of the area and listened for the tell-tale beep from his car. The smile turned into a wide grin of satisfaction as he was rewarded with a beep-beep sound emitting from one of the cars just off to the left of him. He strode over to the car, peered into the dark interior, then opened it and slid into the comfort of the front seat. The time-travelling quantum physicist edged the car from its day-time home and followed the street signs across the town to his......to Pendrell's address. Every now and then Sam checked the rear view mirror, hoping, half expecting, that Al would appear in the back seat making some wise-crack, or trying to sneak up and surprise him. He let out a deep sigh, no such luck! His worries were growing, it wasn't like Al to leave him unobserved and stranded for so long. He frowned and stared intently at the passing scenery, as if he were searching for an answer somewhere out there in the rain-soaked city night. What kind of problems could be keeping his friend from reaching him, were there problems back at the Project Centre or was it connected with his last leap, or rather his leap-out? He still didn't know. He was annoyed with himself that he, Dr Samuel Beckett, noted quantum physicist, Nobel prize winner, someone with an IQ almost off the scale and possessing a photographic memory could forget something so simple.....just a few hours worth of memory! He had remembered most of everything else, why couldn't he make himself recall all of it. With furrowed brow, his jaw set in concentration, mouth forming a tight, thin line, he was determined not to let it beat him. Slowly, very, very slowly something began to surface from the deepest reaches of his memory, something to do with problems back at the Project Centre. It had something to do with trying to leap home. A tightness in his chest informed him that he'd been holding his breath in sheer effort of deep concentration. He drew in a deep lung full of air and let it out slowly, a few more memories were trickling back, little pieces that would would eventually fit together to reveal the bigger picture of the jigsaw puzzle of that leap. He'd been back to the Project, he'd re-written the retrieval program, there had been problems with unidentified power fluctuations. Is that what had happened to him, had he tried to leap home and something had gone wrong, he'd failed? Had the power surges hit at critical mass, had it blown out the accelerator or the Imaging Chamber, had it damaged the sensitive workings of the hybrid super computer? Was that the reason he couldn't remember the last part of the leap, had an unexpected power surge temporarily, short circuited his brain causing a selective memory? The questions spun around his head, one question chasing the next. Suddenly and seemingly out from nowhere, a stray dog dashed out into the road. Sam just caught sight of it in time, he swerved to miss it, a car hooter blared from somewhere behind him. It overtook him, the angry driver mouthed something at him and drove on. Collecting his thoughts and pulling himself together, he nosed the car over to the curb, looked out of the side window, checking to see if the animal was okay. The dog was happily scampering up the street, stopping now and then to sniff at lampposts. Sam shook his head and smiled, if only life was as simple as that. It might be quite nice to lead a dog's life, perhaps one day he might even get the chance! His notice was drawn to a 'Pay-and-Read' Newspaper stand. Now, that could be useful, he thought. He hurried out to the stand, found a coin, fed the machine, lifted the lid and helped himself to a paper. Back inside the car he read the date at the top of the front page, it was the 24th of February. Okay, another piece of the jigsaw. His eyes were then drawn to the headlines...... 'Passenger Air Crash Disaster.' Over three hundred souls lost in Syracuse plane crash.' He read on, 'Sabotage is being considered as the possible cause of the tragedy. The F.B.I and Special Airline Service Inspectors are to make a thorough investigation of the site.' Sam hated to read about bad news, there always seemed to be so many bad things happening. Why would anyone want bring down a passenger flight, who would want to cause the deaths of all those innocent people? His face creased into a look of unfathomable horror, as he considered what possible purpose could something like that fulfil, what warped mind could conceive of a plan to deliberately destroy all those people's lives? A cold shudder ran through his spine, setting the hairs on his neck crawling. How many other people's lives would be affected by that plane crash? How many families had been waiting for their loved ones to return home on that flight? More than three hundred people had died, men, women and children. What of all the people whose lives might have been touched by those that were killed. Sam's eyes closed in sorrow, the misery didn't stop with the loss of those lives. The passengers and staff aboard that plane had families somewhere, wives, husbands, children, sisters and brothers, mothers and fathers. What about all the people that were left behind. Could a reason ever be found to quantify the actions that caused that plane crash. He sighed deeply and wished he was home, his real home. It had been several years since he'd seen any of his family. It hurt him to think that they might think that he had forgotten them, that he had abandoned them in his passion for his work, or was just too damn busy, too self-absorbed by his work and not interested in them to even bother to return their calls or go home for Thanksgiving or Christmas. Perhaps, he could contact them during this leap. It was 1997, he wasn't too far in the past, there was no reason not to call his family. He could easily pretend to be calling from the Project Centre, he could cover the difference in his voice by saying he had a bad throat. Surely there would be no harm in it, from his point of view, there was absolutely no reason not to do it! The idea began to generate an almost childlike excitement within him, raising his spirits with an overwhelming feeling of happiness. The grin on his face broadened until it almost stretched from ear to ear. Yes, if Al didn't show up, he would do it tonight. With that thought in mind he drove on, with added incentive, to find Pendrell's home. -- Heather Markham