The X-Files, Season 6

The X-Files (1993-2002) is an American science fiction drama television series, which is a part of The X-Files franchise, created by Chris Carter. In the series, FBI special agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully are the investigators of X-Files: marginalized, unsolved cases involving paranormal phenomena. Mulder is a believer in the existence of aliens and the paranormal while Scully, a skeptic, is assigned to make scientific analyses of Mulder's discoveries which could ultimately be used to debunk Mulder's work and thus return him to FBI mainstream.

Mulder:
It would help if you'd shut the door. It would make it harder for them to see that I'm totally disregarding everything I was told.

Scully:
(closing the door) Everything we were told, Mulder.

Mulder:
They can't take away the X-Files, Scully. They tried.

Scully:
You know, Agent Fowley's report to OPR painted the facts in an interesting way. I hope you haven't been betrayed.

Mulder:
(not looking at her) Agent Fowley's report was a means to an end. Trying to protect the work. Protect the X-Files.

Scully:
Mulder, Agent Fowley's report states that the man you saw attacked was bludgeoned by an unknown subject. She makes no mention of a little boy who as it happens, is nowhere to be found. It would seem that her report protects everything but you.

Mulder:
Agent Fowley took me to that plant at great risk to herself where I saw something that you refuse to believe in. Saw it again, Scully. And though it may not say it in her report, Diana saw it, too. And no matter what you think she's certainly not going to go around saying that just because science can't prove it isn't true.

Scully:
I don't doubt what you saw, Mulder. I don't doubt you. I'm willing to believe, but not in a lie and not in the opposite of what I can prove. It comes down to a matter of trust. [He looks up at her] I guess it always has.

Mulder:
You asking me to make a choice?

Scully:
I'm asking you to trust my judgment. To trust me. [Hands him a folder]

Mulder:
I can't accept that. Not if it refutes what I know to be true.

Scully:
Mulder, these are test results. DNA from the claw nail we found matching exactly the DNA from the virus you believe is extraterrestrial.

Mulder:
[Takes the folder and looks at the papers inside] That's the connection.

Scully:
Which matches exactly DNA that was found in Gibson Praise.

Mulder:
Wait a minute. I don't understand. You're saying that Gibson Praise is infected with the virus?

Scully:
No. It's a part of his DNA. In fact, it's a part of all of our DNA. It's called a genetic remnant. It's inactive junk DNA. Except in Gibson it's turned on.

Mulder:
So if that were true, that would mean that Gibson is in some part extraterrestrial.

Scully:
It would mean that all of us are.

Scully:
Sir, I couldn't waste time explaining myself to your assistant.

Skinner:
Tell me what is so urgent.

Scully:
It's about Agent Mulder. He's done something incredibly rash.

Skinner:
I can't.

Scully:
He may be lost at sea.

Skinner:
I can't, Agent Scully.

Scully:
You can't what?

Skinner:
I can't help you. There's nothing I can do.

Scully:
This isn't for me; it's for Agent Mulder.

Skinner:
My hands are tied. I'm not your direct superior any longer.

Scully:
Don't you want to know what this is about?

[They walk back toward door.]

Skinner:
No, I don't. I don't even what to hear it.

Scully:
(pleading) Sir, this is about a man's life.

Skinner:
(louder) I'm not allowed to have contact with you - any contact with either you or Mulder.

Skinner's secretary:
She walked right past me, sir.

[Scully closes the door between the offices.]

Skinner:
You're out of line, Scully.

Scully:
No, sir, you're out of line. I'm sorry, but I'm coming to you for help and I've got nowhere else to go. I would hope that after everything that we have been through that you would at least have the courtesy and the decency and not to mention the respect to listen to what I have to say. Now, all I need is information. (Skinner takes note; glances at it.) You don't have to do anything else. Look, sir, if you know anybody at the Office of Naval Intelligence it would be of great help.

Skinner:
(pauses; hands back the note) I could lose my job, my pension, I could even be subject to legal action.

[Scully sighs, exasperated; Skinner slams the door and holds it shut.]

Skinner:
Use your head, Scully. It'll save your ass.

Scully:
Save your own ass, sir. You'll save your head along with it.

[Mulder lying on his side in a hospital bed, unconscious; Scully leans over him.]

Scully:
Mulder? Mulder, it's me. Hmm?

Mulder:
(waking) Where am I? (tries to sit up)

Scully:
You're in a hospital.

Mulder:
Ooooo.

Scully:
Lie still.

Mulder:
I feel... Like hell.

Scully:
I don't blame you. You've been through the wringer, I'd say.

Mulder:
What happened to me?

Scully:
You did something incredibly stupid.

Mulder:
What did I do?

Scully:
You went looking for a ship, Mulder. In the Bermuda Triangle.

Mulder:
Say that again?

[Lone Gunmen enter the room.]

Frohike:
Gilligan awakes.

Mulder:
You were there.

Scully:
Hmm?

Mulder:
You were there, Scully.

[Skinner enters.]

Langly:
(to the others) He's delirious.

Mulder:
(referring to Skinner) And he was there, too.

Skinner:
(dropping a bouquet of flowers on the nightstand) Right - Me and my dog Toto.

Mulder:
No, you were there with the Nazis.

Scully:
Mulder, will you settle down? It's an order.

Skinner:
Not that he takes orders...

[Mulder rests the back of his hand on Scully's waist which is against his bed rail. Is happy, but obviously drugged.]

Mulder:
You saved the world, Scully.

Scully:
Yeah... You're right. I did.

Frohike:
What kind of drugs is he on?

Langly:
I want some.

Mulder:
No, no, no... The Queen Anne- I found it. You were there with Thor's Hammer. I told you you had to turn the ship around and then I jumped overboard.

Scully:
Yeah, I bet you did. The boat that you were on was busted into a million pieces. And as for the Queen Anne... it was nothing more than a ghost ship.

Mulder:
No, no, no. You and I were on that ship, Scully. In 1939.

Skinner:
Get some rest, Mulder, 'cause when you get out of here I'm going to kick your butt but good.

[Mulder grins, Skinner and the Gunmen leave the room.]

Mulder:
I would've never seen you again. But you believed me.

Scully:
In your dreams. (as if talking to a child) Mulder, I want you to close your eyes and I want you to think to yourself "there's no place like home."

Mulder:
Mmm. (chuckles) [Scully starts to leave; he calls her back.] Hey, Scully. (leans up on his elbow)

Scully:
[Comes back and leans close to his face.] Yes?

[Long pause. They look deeply at one another.]

Mulder:
I love you.

Scully:
Oh, brother... (turns away and leaves the room)

[Mulder watches her go; starts to lie down, but as his face touches the pillow he leans back up in slight pain and rubs his jaw where 1939 Scully hit him. He gazes after her and smiles.]

[Scully and Morris (as Mulder) pull up in their car next to Mulder (as Morris). Scully gets out to stand next to Mulder; Morris stays in the car.]

Mulder (as Morris):
You don't look too happy. Don't tell me I'm going to have to put two kids through school.

Scully:
(hesitantly) That is you in there, Mulder, isn't it? (Mulder nods; Scully folds her arms, hugging herself) I, uh... I just got off the phone with Frohike. They were able to download and analyze the crash data and, yes, there was an anomalous event that night.

Mulder (as Morris):
And how do I get back?

Scully:
(not easy for her to say) Well, that's just it. It's all about random moments in time... About a series of variables approaching an event horizon. And even if we... could recreate that moment if we could sabotage another craft... Mulder, if we were... If we were off... If the event were off by even one millisecond...

Mulder (as Morris):
I might wind up with my head in a rock.

Scully:
Something like that, yeah. (long pause)

Mulder (as Morris):
(depressed) What about him? I mean, me. Whatever. Whoever he is.

Scully:
Agent Mulder has become AD Kersh's new golden boy. He's been tasked with returning the flight data recorder that he and I stole. The son of a bitch confesses to Kersh even more than I do to my priest. I'm just tagging along for the ride.

Mulder (as Morris):
What do you mean, "just tagging along?"

Scully:
I'm out of the Bureau. I've been censured and relieved of my position.

Mulder (as Morris):
No. You can explain it to them like you explained it to me. You have the data. You can make them understand. You can get your job back.

Scully:
(can't help but smile; looks up at him fondly) I'd kiss you if you weren't so damn ugly. (Mulder smiles back)

Morris (as Mulder):
(honking the horn; yelling out the window) Take a picture - it'll last longer!

[Mulder and Scully pause and look at the car.]

Mulder (as Morris):
(through clenched teeth) If I... shoot him, is that murder or suicide?

Scully:
Neither, if I do it first. (Squeezes his arm, then walks toward the car. He stops her.)

Mulder (as Morris):
Hey, Scully...

[He holds out his closed hand to her; she holds out her palm. He drops a handful of sunflower seeds into her hand; takes one back and eats it. They look at each other. Mulder watches, depressed, as Scully drives away.]

[Mulder and Scully are searching a haunted house]

Scully:
These are tricks that the mind plays. They are ingrained cliches from a thousand different horror films. When we hear a sound, we get a chill. We-we see a shadow and we allow ourselves to imagine something that an otherwise rational person would discount out of hand. The whole... the whole idea of a benevolent entity fits perfectly with what I'm saying. That a spirit would materialize or return for no other purpose than to show itself is silly and ridiculous. I mean, what it really shows is how silly and ridiculous we have become in believing such things. I mean, that... that we can ignore all natural laws about the corporeal body... that-that we witness these spirits clad in-in their own shabby outfits with the same old haircuts and hairstyles never aging, never... never in search of more comfortable surroundings-- it actually ends up saying more about the living than it does about the dead.

Mulder:
Mm-hmm.

Scully:
I mean, Mulder, it doesn't take an advanced degree in psychology to understand the... the unconscious yearnings that these imaginings satisfy. You know, the-the longing for immortality the hope that there is something beyond this mortal coil... that-that we might never be long without our loved ones. I mean, these are powerful, powerful desires. I mean, they're the very essence of what make us human. The very essence of Christmas, actually.

[A door slightly opens by itself]

Mulder:
Tell me you're not afraid.

Scully:
All right. I'm afraid... but it's an irrational fear.

Maurice:
You drink? Take drugs?

Mulder:
No.

Maurice:
Get high?

Mulder:
No.

Maurice:
Are you overcome by the impulse to make everyone believe you? (Mulder looks surprised) I'm in the field of mental health. I specialize in disorders and manias related to pathological behavior as it pertains to the paranormal.

Mulder:
Wow. I didn't know such a thing existed.

Maurice:
My specialty is in what I call soul prospectors - a crossaxial classification I've codified by extensive interaction with visitors like yourself. I've found you all tend to fall into pretty much the same category.

Mulder:
And what category is that?

Maurice:
Narcissistic, overzealous, self-righteous egomaniac.

Mulder:
That's a category?

Maurice:
You kindly think of yourself as single-minded but you're prone to obsessive compulsiveness, workaholism, antisocialism... Fertile fields for the descent into total wacko breakdown.

Mulder:
I don't think that pegs me exactly.

Maurice:
Oh, really? Waving a gun around my house? Huh? Raving like a lunatic about some imaginary brick wall? (Mulder looks over at the brick wall in the doorway) You've probably convinced yourself you've seen aliens. You know why you think you see the things you do?

Mulder:
(like it's obvious) Because I have seen them?

Maurice:
'Cause you're a lonely man. A lonely man chasing paramasturbatory illusions that you believe will give your life meaning and significance and which your pathetic social maladjustment makes impossible for you to find elsewhere. You probably consider yourself passionate, serious, misunderstood. Am I right?

Mulder:
"Paramasturbatory"?

Maurice:
Most people would rather stick their fingers in a wall socket than spend a minute with you.

Mulder:
All right, now just, uh... Just back off for a second.

Maurice:
Spend every Christmas this way? Alone?

Mulder:
(confident) I'm not alone.

Maurice:
More self-delusion.

Mulder:
No, I came here with my partner. She's somewhere in the house.

Maurice:
Behind a brick wall? (Mulder smiles and nods) How'd you get her to come with you? Steal her car keys? (Mulder's smile fades) You know why you do it - listen endlessly to her droning rationalizations. 'Cause you're afraid. Afraid of the loneliness. Am I right?

Mulder:
I'd just like to find my partner.

AD Kersh:
The way these people died... the loss of life here - it is beyond words. I can't imagine how it must be for you - losing your mother.

Spender:
Yes, sir. But that's not why I asked for this meeting.

AD Kersh:
Why did you ask for it?

Spender:
Because I'm responsible for the deaths of those people at the Air Base hangar in no small way. I certainly didn't prevent them.

AD Kersh:
I can assume then you can explain how they died? Because I have yet to hear any explanation.

Spender:
Agent Mulder can explain it. I think Agent Scully, to an extent. They might have even prevented what you see in those photos.

AD Kersh:
Agents Scully and Mulder have been suspended by the FBI.

Spender:
Also my doing... and my mistake.

AD Kersh:
I would ask...

Spender:
I'd ask, sir - before you tell me that it's not my business - that you do everything you can to get them back on the X-Files. Far worse can happen... and it will.

AD Kersh:
Where are you going?

Spender:
To pack up my office.

AD Kersh:
Agent Spender... (Spender leaves; Kersh turns to Mulder, angrily) You have answers now? Why didn't I hear about those answers before?

Mulder:
I've had answers for years.

AD Kersh:
Then why didn't we hear about them?

Mulder:
No one would ever listen.

AD Kersh:
Who burned those people?

Mulder:
They burned themselves. With a choice made long ago by a conspiracy of men who thought they could sleep with the enemy. Only to awaken another enemy.

AD Kersh:
What the hell does that mean?

Mulder:
It means the future is here, and all bets are off.

AD Kersh:
Agent Scully, make some sense.

Scully:
Sir, I wouldn't bet against him.

Mulder:
I know. I missed the meeting.

Scully:
Well, not yet, but, uh, only because it's the longest in FBI history.

Mulder:
What are you doing down here, then?

Scully:
Well, I came looking for you. We took a five-minute break (looks at watch) three minutes ago. Mulder, your cell phone's not working. (He glances up at her.) Did you oversleep?

Mulder:
Scully, did you ever have one of those days you wish you could rewind and start all over again from the beginning?

Scully:
Yes. Frequently. But, I mean, who's... who's to say that if you did rewind it and start over again that it wouldn't end up exactly the same way?

Mulder:
So you think it's all just fate? We have no free will?

Scully:
No, I think that we're free to be the people that we are - good, bad or indifferent. I think that it's our character that determines our fate.

Mulder:
And all the rest is just preordained? I don't buy that. There's too many variables. Too many forks in the road. I meant to be on time to work this morning but my waterbed springs a leak flooding my apartment (Scully looks surprised) and the apartment below me so that makes me late for the meeting. Then I realize I got to write a check to cover the damages to my landlord but, as I'm walking to work, I realize that that's gonna bounce unless I deposit my pay. So now I got to go to the bank, which makes me even later.

Scully:
(curious) Since when did you get a waterbed?

Mulder:
I might just as easily not have a waterbed then I'd be on time for this meeting. You might just as easily have stayed in medicine and not gone into the FBI, and then we would never have met. Blah, blah, blah...

Scully:
Fate.

Mulder:
Free will. With every choice, you change your fate.

Phillip Padgett:
(voiceover, as Scully looks at the charm left under Mulder's door) Her prompt mind ran through the golconda of possibilities - was this trinket from the killer? Was there a message contained in its equivocal symbolism? Was he a religious fanatic who had, in fervid haste licked the envelope, leaving the telltale DNA that would begin his unraveling? She had a condign certainty the killer was a male... and now, as she held the cold metal at her fingertips she imagined him doing the same trying to picture his face.

Phillip Padgett:
It would be a plain face, an average face... A face people would be prone to trust. She knew this inherently, being naturally trusting herself. But the image she conjured up was no better than the useless sketch composites that littered her files. Preconsciously, she knew this wasn't her strength as an investigator. She was a marshall of cold facts, quick to organize, connect, shuffle, reorder and synthesize their relative hard values into discreet categories. Imprecision would only invite sexist criticism that she was soft, malleable not up to her male counterparts.

Phillip Padgett:
Even now, as she pushed an errant strand of titian hair behind her ear she worried her partner would know instinctively what she could only guess. To be thought of as simply a beautiful woman was bridling, unthinkable. But she was beautiful... fatally, stunningly prepossessing. Yet the compensatory respect she commanded only deepened the yearnings of her heart... to let it open, to let someone in.

[Scully enters a church to look at a painting of Christ with a burning heart. Phillip Padgett comes up next to her.]

Phillip Padgett:
I often come here to look at this painting. It's called "My Divine Heart" after the miracle of Saint Margaret Mary. Do you know the story... The revelation of the Sacred Heart? Christ came to Margaret Mary his heart so inflamed with love that it was no longer able to contain its burning flames of charity. Margaret Mary... so filled with divine love herself, asked the Lord to take her heart... and so he did placing it alongside his until it burned with the flames of his passion. Then he restored it to Margaret Mary sealing her wound with the touch of his blessed hand.

Scully:
Why are you telling me this?

Phillip Padgett:
You came here specifically to see this painting, didn't you?

Scully:
Yes. How did you know that?

Phillip Padgett:
I saw you enter. The way you knew right where it was.

Scully:
I know you. You live next to somebody I work with. Why are you following me?

Phillip Padgett:
I'm not. I'd only imagined that you'd come here today.

Scully:
You imagined it.

Phillip Padgett:
Yes.

Scully:
(dryly) Yeah.

Phillip Padgett:
I'm a writer. That's what I do - imagine how people behave. I have to admit I've noticed you. I do that... Notice people. I saw that you wear a gold cross around your neck so I was taking a chance with the painting - explaining something you may have already known. I saw Georgetown parking permits on your car dating from 1993 and a government-exempt sticker that lets you park anywhere you like. You don't live in this area but as a federal employee, you have reason to frequent it. You're fit, with muscular calves so you must exercise or run. There's a popular running route right nearby that you might use at lunch or after work. You'd have noticed this church in passing and though parking is always a problem in this part of town your special privileges would make it easy to visit... not as a place of worship but because you have an appreciation for architecture and the arts... and while the grandeur is what you'd take away from your visit, this painting's religious symbolism would have left a subconscious impression jogged by the gift you received this morning.

Phillip Padgett:
I have to admit to a secret attraction. (she looks away and rolls her eyes) I'm sorry I didn't include a note explaining that but you didn't know me then.

Scully:
Yeah, and I don't know you now and I don't care to.

Phillip Padgett:
I see this is making you uncomfortable (she rolls her eyes, like "obviously") and I'm sorry. It's just that I'm taken with you. That never happens to me. We're alike that way.

Scully:
Mulder, it is such a gorgeous day outside. Have you ever entertained the idea of trying to find life on this planet?

Mulder:
I have seen the life on this planet, Scully, and that is exactly why I am looking elsewhere. (Scully opens a paper bag and takes out something that looks like ice cream) Did you bring enough ice cream to share with the rest of the class?

Scully:
(smugly, eating) It's not ice cream. It's a nonfat tofutti rice dreamsicle.

Mulder:
(returning to his book, disgusted) Ugh. Bet the air in my mouth tastes better than that. You sure know how to live it up, Scully.

Scully:
(continuing to eat) Oh, you're Mr. Live-it-up. Mulder, you're really Mr. Squeeze-every-last-drop-out-of-this-sweet-life, aren't you? On this precious Saturday you've got us grabbing life by the testes - stealing reference books from the FBI library in order to go through New Mexico newspaper obituaries for the years 1940 to 1949, and for what joyful purpose?

Mulder:
Looking for anomalies, Scully. Do you know how many so-called "flying disc" reports there were in New Mexico in the 1940s?

Scully:
I don't care. Mulder, this is a needle in a haystack. These poor souls have been dead for 50 years. Let them rest in peace. Let sleeping dogs lie.

Mulder:
No, I won't sit idly by as you hurl cliches at me. "Preparation is the father of inspiration."

Scully:
"Necessity is the mother of invention."

Mulder:
"The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom."

Scully:
(taking another bite) "Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we may die."

Mulder:
"I scream, you scream, we all scream for"- nonfat tofutti rice dreamsicles! (sets the book down; lunges for Scully. He grabs her arm and takes a bite of the dreamsicle, breaking it; it splatters on the page)

Scully:
No-ho-ho-ho-ho-ho! (laughing) Mulder! (she looks at the page; accusingly) Mulder!? You cheat. I can't believe that you've been reading about baseball this whole time.

Mulder:
Reading the box scores, Scully. You'd like it. It's like the Pythagorean Theorem for jocks. It distills all the chaos and action of any game in the history of all baseball games into one tiny, perfect, rectangular sequence of numbers. I can look at this box and I can recreate exactly what happened on some sunny summer day back in 1947. It's like the numbers talk to me, they comfort me. They tell me that even though lots of things can change some things do remain the same. It's...

Scully:
(interrupting) Boring. Mulder, can I ask you a personal question?

Mulder:
Of course not.

Scully:
Did your mother ever tell you to go outside and play? Mulder?

Mulder:
(looking at the page the ice cream spilled on; to himself) Is that ...Arthur Dales?

Scully:
Mulder?

Mulder:
(fake) Ah... Choo! (fake sneezes and rips the page out; Scully pretends to be horrified)

Scully:
You just defaced property of the U.S. Government. (he grabs the page and his jacket and runs out of the office; she smiles slightly) You rebel.

[Nighttime at a baseball field; Mulder is wearing a "Grays" jersey, hitting balls thrown by a pitching machine.]

Scully:
So, uh... I get this message marked "urgent" on my answering service from one "Fox Mantle" telling me to come down to the park for a very special very early or very late birthday present. And, Mulder... I don't see any nicely wrapped presents lying around so, what gives?

Mulder:
You've never hit a baseball, have you, Scully?

Scully:
No, I guess I have, uh... found more necessary things to do with my time than- (a foul ball hits the fence; she jumps) slap a piece of horsehide with a stick.

Mulder:
Get over here, Scully. (he holds the bat out to her, she takes it, but he keeps his hands on it, wrapping his arms around her and holding the bat with her, around her hands)

Scully:
(warily, not thrilled) This my birthday present, Mulder? You shouldn't have.

Mulder:
This ain't cheap. I'm paying that kid ten bucks an hour to shag balls. Hey, it's not a bad piece of ash, huh? (gives him a "Look.")The bat - talking about the bat. Now, don't strangle it. You just want to shake hands with it. (doing silly voices) "Hello, Mr. Bat. It's a pleasure to make your acquaintance." "Oh, no, no, Ms. Scully. The pleasure's all mine." (she laughs, and they hold onto the bat) Okay, now, we want to... we want to go hips before hands, okay? (holds his hand a few inches from her hip) We want to stride forward and turn. That's all we're thinking about. So, we go hips... before hands, all right? (gingerly touches her hip and, with his hands and his own hips pressed against her, turns her correctly)

Scully:
Okay.

Mulder:
One more time. (he touches and turns her hips more confidently) Hips... before hands, all right?

Scully:
Yeah.

Mulder:
What is it?

Scully:
Hips before hands.

Mulder:
(speaking right into her ear) Right. We're going to wait on the pitch. We're going to keep our eye on the ball. Then, we're just going to make contact. We're not going to think. We're just going to let it fly, Scully, okay?

Scully:
Mm-hmm.

Mulder:
Ready? (he tries to readjust their grips on the bat; they struggle with it for a moment)

Scully:
I'm in the middle. (gets her hands back between his; both grining)

Mulder:
All right, fire away, Poorboy. (a ball comes at them; they hit it together) Ooh! That's good. All right, what you may find is you concentrate on hitting that little ball... The rest of the world just fades away - all your everyday, nagging concerns.

[Scully giggles; they continue hitting the ball.]

Mulder:
The ticking of your biological clock. (hit) How you probably couldn't afford that nice, new suede coat on a G-Woman's salary. (hit) How you threw away a promising career in medicine... (intimately into her ear) to hunt aliens with a crackpot, albeit brilliant, partner.

[She gives him another "Look"]

Mulder:
Getting into the heart of a global conspiracy. Your obscenely overdue triple-X bill. Oh, I... I'm sorry, Scully. Those last two problems are mine, not yours. (hit)

Scully:
(smiling happily) Shut up, Mulder. I'm playing baseball.

[They continue to hit the balls. Scully laughs. As the balls fly up into the black, star-studded night sky, we see them turn into shooting stars.]

Scully:
(voiceover) From Space, it seems an abstraction-- a magician's trick on a darkened stage. And from this distance one might never imagine that it is alive. It first appeared in the sea almost four billion years ago in the form of single-celled life. In an explosion of life spanning millions of years, nature's first multicellular organisms began to multiply... and then it stopped. 440 million years ago, a great mass extinction would kill off nearly every species on the planet leaving the vast oceans decimated and empty. Slowly, plants began to evolve, then insects, only to be wiped out in the second great mass extinction upon the Earth. The cycle repeated again and again. Reptiles emerging, independent of the sea only to be killed off. Then dinosaurs, struggling to life along with the first birds, fish, and flowering plants - their decimations Earth's fourth and fifth great extinctions. Only 100,000 years ago, Homo Sapiens appear-- man. From cave paintings to the bible to Columbus and Apollo 11, we have been a tireless force upon the earth and off cataloguing the natural world as it unfolds to us. Rising to a world population of over five billion people all descended from that original single cell, that first spark of life. But for all our knowledge, what no one can say for certain, is what or who ignited that original spark. Is there a plan, a purpose or a reason to our existence? Will we pass, as those before us, into oblivion, into the sixth extinction that scientists warn is already in progress?

Scully:
Or will the mystery be revealed through a sign, a symbol, a revelation?

Scully:
It began with an act of supreme violence-- a big bang expanding ever outward, cosmos born of matter and gas, matter and gas ten billion years ago. Whose idea was this? Who had the audacity for such invention? And the reason? Were we part of that plan ten billion years ago? Are we born only to die? To be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth before giving way to our generations? If there is a beginning, must there be an end? We burn like fires in our time only to be extinguished. To surrender to the elements' eternal reclaim. Matter and gas... will this all end one day? Life no longer passing to life, the Earth left barren like the stars above, like the cosmos. Will the hand that lit the flame let it burn down? Let it burn out? Could we, too, become extinct? Or if this fire of life living inside us is meant to go on, who decides? Who tends the flames? Can he reignite the spark even as it grows cold and weak?


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