Authors: Thomas Ligotti,Brandon Trenz
HELEN
What is it?
BRADY
End of the line. Whatever is behind all this is in there.
HELEN
I'm not sure I can do this.
BRADY
Do you want to keep having that dream the rest of your life? (Beat) I know I don't.
Helen closes her eyes. She's silent for a moment. Then she opens them, a look of grim determination on her face.
HELEN
Right.
She steps into the roaring darkness. Brady is only a half-step behind. In a second they're gone--swallowed up.
CUT TO:
SWIRLING DARKNESS
Vague impressions of whirling currents. Subtle layers of darkness, like a storm of chaos. The ROARING is amazing--like a combination of a hurricane and some wild animal.
Just as the ROARING reaches its apex, the blackness splits down the middle--
CUT TO:
INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS - HALLWAY
Elevator doors slide open. Brady steps out, gun in hand. We hear a SINGLE GUNSHOT from OFFSCREEN.
INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS - OFFICES
Brady rushes in through the door, gun drawn. The room is in utter chaos--FBI agents surround Larry Johnson's desk. One of them is kneeling over a figure on the floor.
BRADY
What happened?
FBI AGENT #1
He's dead.
The circle of agents breaks up. Larry Johnson is lying on the floor, his gun in his right hand. Half his head is blown off.
HELEN
Jesus Christ.
FBI AGENT #2
He just started freaking out--screaming like a wounded animal. Before I could do anything he had drawn his gun.
BRADY
This isn't right. There's supposed to be--
HELEN
--another man.
Brady turns around. Helen's eyes are fixed on his. They stars at each other like they're each trying to remember something ... something elusive.
The CAMERA PANS toward Larry's left hand. On the floor, spread out like a fan of playing cards, is a sheaf of identical black-and-white photographs. Each one depicts a tattered and stained curtain, CLOSING ... CLOSING.
JOHNSON'S FOV - looking up through a FISH EYE LENS we see one of the agents reach over to gently close Larry Johnson's eyes. The SCREEN GOES BLACK.
EXT. FBI HEADQUARTERS - EVENING
Brady comes out of the main entrance, looking exhausted. He descends the stairs to the sidewalk.
HELEN (O.S.)
Excuse me.
Brady looks over. Helen is standing nearby, leaning against a light pole. She still looks a little confused.
HELEN
That agent, the one who ... did you know him?
BRADY
A little. (Beat) Not really, no.
HELEN
Oh. You just looked a little shaken up.
BRADY
Yeah, I guess I am.
They are quiet for a few seconds, alone with their thoughts.
HELEN
Listen, I'm not sure what that was all about ... what we said in there, about another man--
BRADY
Forget it. I already have.
HELEN
Okay, then.
She starts to walk away. Brady watches her silently, a decision forming in his head.
BRADY
Wait a second.
She stops, turns around, waiting.
BRADY
What was your name again?
HELEN
Sweeten.
(she points to the stick-on nametag on her jacket)
Helen Sweeten.
BRADY
Helen ... have you ever seen
Titanic
?
Brady catches up with Helen, and they walk down the street together.
RICKY (V.O.)
They can do anything They want. They can change the entire landscape of things--make things happen that couldn't possibly happen.
The CAMERA PANS to show the backside of the light pole that Helen had been leaning against. Someone has taped a colored flyer to it: a magician's grinning face; printed above it, "SPECTACULAR DISPLAY OF ILLUSION AND VENTRILOQUISM".
RICKY (V.O.)
Nothing is real--nothing but Them.
FADE TO BLACK.
Thomas Ligotti and Brandon Trenz
This version was published online in 1998, and was later reworked as the 2003 Durtro publication.
FADE IN:
SUPER: J. EDGAR HOOVER BLDG., WASHINGTON, DC
INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS
A MAN exits an elevator and walks through the halls of FBI headquarters. We never see his face, only glimpses of slicked-back blond hair and his clothes: a black suit, stiff white cuffs, white gloves, shiny black shoes--classic stage magician attire.
Though he walks without pretence of stealth, his passage seems completely undetected. The FBI agents that mill about the halls and offices do not notice him as he goes by, or their attention is drawn elsewhere just as he comes into view. Those in his path appear to step out of his way without even knowing it.
CUT TO:
INT. ELEVATOR
AGENT FOX MULDER and AGENT DANA SCULLY enter the elevator on another floor. They are in the middle of a conversation. Judging by the look on Scully's face, she's wishing it was over already.
MULDER
So, seriously, you never saw Star Wars?
SCULLY
Nope.
MULDER
Never?
SCULLY
What did I just say?
MULDER
How could you not see Star Wars?
SCULLY
I was a little more into Grease at the time.
MULDER
Jeez, Scully, it's only like the most popular movie ever.
SCULLY
No, that's Titanic--which you never saw.
MULDER
Yeah, well, I know how it ends.
CUT TO:
INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS
The blond man enters a door marked "Criminal Division." At one of the half-dozen or so cubicles inside sits AGENT LARRY JOHNSON, studying a sheaf of black-and-white photographs. The man strides to Agent Johnson's desk and reaches into his jacket.
BLOND MAN
(in a dead voice)
Larry Johnson?
AGENT JOHNSON
(looking up)
Yes?
Johnson's face goes ashen.
AGENT JOHNSON
How did you get in here?
JOHNSON'S POV: We get a very brief glimpse of the invading figure's face--handsome but bland, forgettable--before it is blocked by the BARREL OF A .44. The .44 EXPLODES--bang! bang!
The ROAR of gunfire breaks the spell. FBI agents turn toward the gunshots to see Agent Johnson slammed backwards, thrown out of his chair, knocking down the wall of his cubicle.
The AGENT nearest Agent Johnson leaps at the assassin, tackling him around the waist. The two men hit the ground with an alarming CLATTER.
The agent rises on his elbows.
AGENT
What the hell?
What previously was a man dressed in stage magician's clothes is now a BROKEN-UP PLASTER MANNIKIN. The head has become detached from the body and is still SPINNING a few feet away.
CUT TO:
INT. FBI HEADQUARTERS, MINUTES LATER
Agents Mulder and Scully step off the elevator into chaos: FBI agents and EMS personnel are swarming around the fallen Larry Johnson.
MULDER
(to the nearest agents)
What's going on?
AGENT
You don't want to know.
ANOTHER AGENT
It was Johnson.
MULDER
Larry Johnson?
EMS personnel wheel a gurney past them--on it, the body of Larry Johnson.
SCULLY (O.S.)
Did you know him, Mulder?
Mulder looks at the mannikin parts strewn across the floor, and for a moment he hesitates, as if trying to remember something.
SCULLY (O.S.)
Mulder?
CLOSE UP on the mannikin's face.
CREDITS
INT. AUTOPSY ROOM, NEXT DAY
Mulder enters the swinging doors, holding a folded newspaper. Scully stands next to an operating table in scrubs. On the table is the body of Larry Johnson.
MULDER
Well, the Bureau's collective underwear is really up in a bunch on this one. The word from Skinner is that the Director wants hourly reports until this thing is cleaned up. You should see it, it's like a Fed convention around here. They've already come up with the "official" story.
He unfolds the newspaper, showing Scully the front page.
SCULLY
(reading)
"Assassin guns down FBI agent. Terrorism not ruled out." What terrorism?
MULDER
My sentiments exactly.
SCULLY
Actually, at this point it's probably as good an explanation as anything else.
MULDER
I take that to mean the autopsy has proved less than illuminating.
SCULLY
Agent Lawrence Johnson died at two-nineteen p.m. yesterday of a massive heart attack.
MULDER
Heart attack? Well, that explains it.
SCULLY
Explains what, exactly?
MULDER
How this could kill him.
Mulder holds up an evidence bag containing what appears to be the .44 used to shoot Agent Larry Johnson. He pulls the gun out, points it in the air, and pulls the trigger. Out of the barrel POPS a little flag with the word "Bang!" on it.
SCULLY
But weren't there gunshots?
MULDER
The agents on the scene seem to be having trouble remembering little details like that. What's more, the security cameras on that floor apparently began malfunctioning about the time the, uh, terrorist entered the building. Started picking up television signals.
SCULLY
All of them?
Mulder shrugs.
MULDER
(pointing to Johnson)'s body)
So, what do we tell Skinner about this?
SCULLY
I'm not sure yet, but I think Larry Johnson saw the gun and believed he had been shot, and the shock killed him. He was, for lack of a better expression, tricked to death. It's not exactly common, but it has happened before.
She lifts the sheet off Johnson to show Mulder the body.
SCULLY
And then there's this...
Scully takes a penlight and, opening Johnson's eyelids with her fingers, shines it into Johnson's dead eyes. THE PUPILS SHRINK as the light hits them. Scully points the light away. The PUPILS EXPAND.
JOHNSON'S POV: Looking up from the table, we see Scully shine the light down again, then move it away.
MULDER
Ah. That.
SCULLY
Mulder, when we got to the scene of the shooting, or whatever it was, you clearly recognized Larry Johnson. Do you have some idea what this is all about?
MULDER
Meet me back in my office.
JOHNSON'S POV: Still looking up, we see Mulder walk out of view. Scully looks down at Johnson's body, then pulls the sheet back over him, covering the CAMERA.
INT. MULDER'S OFFICE
Mulder and Scully are watching a series of videotapes on a small television.
MULDER
About seven years ago, Johnson and his partner, Ricky Smith, were following a fraud case--late-night infomercials for a psychic hotline.
On the TELEVISION SCREEN, gaudy red letters announce "The Mystery Line," along with an 800 number. The words dissolve into the image of a blandly handsome BLOND MAN, sitting at a desk next to a heavy black telephone.
BLOND MAN
(on the video)
What lottery numbers will make you rich? How can you make that someone special notice you? What is your purpose in life? When will you die? The Mystery Line has the answers to all your questions.
The man holds up the receiver and looks at the camera, appearing to almost stare through the screen.
BLOND MAN
(on the video)
Call now, if you really want to know.
Mulder hits eject and fishes for another tape, popping it into the VCR.
MULDER
I was with Violent Crimes at the time. Johnson and Smith called us in when they visited the homes of some of the Mystery Line's clients.
On the TELEVISION SCREEN, a hand-held camera documents the interior of an apartment. Several FBI agents stand over the body of a middle-aged woman, her dead eyes open and staring. Near her open hand is a telephone receiver. In the background we can hear television STATIC.
MULDER
Eleven people, mostly in the Midwest, were found like this. No apparent cause of death. Television on. Phone off the hook--still connected to the Mystery Line. And check this out.
Mulder points to the television screen. An agent takes a penlight and inspects the dead woman's eyes. The PUPILS CONTRACT as the light hits them.
MULDER
Look familiar?
SCULLY
Larry Johnson. So, what was the deal with the Mystery Line?
MULDER
Johnson and Smith never made any headway. The phone number was traced back to an answering machine in an abandoned warehouse in Arizona. None of the victims were actually charged for the hotline's services, so there was no way to follow the money.
Mulder points to the television screen again.
MULDER
There. That's Ricky Smith.
On the SCREEN, a rotundish man with a neatly trimmed beard is giving orders. At one point he turns angrily toward the camera.
RICKY SMITH (ON THE VIDEOTAPE)
Get that thing out of my face!
MULDER
He had a reputation as an arrogant s.o.b., but he was actually a hell of an agent. Tenacious.