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|    Message 314 of 1,627    |
|    ravenwald@adelphia.net to All    |
|    xfc: The Chilmark Project: Part II - Mot    |
|    14 Dec 04 17:51:40    |
      Title: Chilmark: Part II - Mother's Day       Authors: Wylfcynne and Ravenwald              See Authors Notes and Disclaimers in Part I:       Demonology              +++              The Board of Directors Meeting Room Fifth       Avenue, New York City. Thursday, June 27, 2000              Topic: progress review of long-term projects.       Currently on the table: the suspended Chilmark       Project: Project 1961-#28              Mr Harmon: It has been thirty-nine years since this       Project was initiated. Why is it on the table, now?              Mr Lermontov: I have a personal interest in the       Project, and I believe the Board would be       interested in some of my findings...              Mr Webber: Was your continued interest in the       Project authorized?              Mr Lermontov: It was. Chilmark was the first       genetic manipulation study we did; we used our       own children because access to other subjects put       the Project, and the Group, at too great a risk of       exposure. My son is part of the Project, and I have       been monitoring the other survivors as well.              Mr Harmon: Survivors? What was the study's       catastrophic failure rate?              Mr Lermontov: None of the initial groups of       subjects died as a result of the project. One of the       females in this first group died in an airplane crash       at age nineteen, and another one suffered       irreversible brain damage during surgery after a car       crash at age twenty-six and died just recently in a       long-term facility. The other four are still alive and       functional. There were several miscarriages at the       initiation levels of the Project, but we could never       prove, one way or the other, if the miscarriage       might not have happened anyway. That's why,       despite eight couples volunteering their children, in       the initial phase, there were only six subjects, and       two of them were siblings.              Mr Webber: The Chilmark Project was a failure.       Why do you want it reviewed, now?              Mr Lermontov: It was NOT a failure! We simply       got results that were totally unexpected! This is a       request for an active intervention, not a review. I       have reason to believe that one of the male       subjects who lost his original partner has       successfully attached himself to another female,       one from a different group, and that this       relationship appears to approximate that of       bondmates in all significant ways. If this is true, and       the bondmate relationship can be initiated in       appropriate partners even after adulthood, then the       Chilmark Project has succeeded beyond our       wildest imaginings.              Mr Webber: What sort of intervention do you want       us to authorize?              Mr Lermontov: I want the four original subjects       brought in for testing and re- evaluation. Mr       Harmon: I don't suppose the subjects are aware of       their participation in the Project?              Mr Lermontov: No. They were told nothing; it was       feared that any such knowledge on their part might       affect the outcome of the Project. They know       nothing.              Mr Harmon: Then how do you propose to get them       in for this testing?              Mr Lermontov: Abduction, of course. Surely you're       not squeamish about these things...?              Mr Harmon: No! No.              Mr McClintock: Excuse me, but I believe that Mr de       Kuiper has a personal interest in one of these       subjects. He has exempted Subject B, I believe,       from any participation in our research programs; he       is a member of Mr de Kuiper's family and I believe       he is an heir presumptive or some such.              Mr Lermontov: This is not a new project, merely a       continuation of an old project that Mr de Kuiper was       made aware of at that time. He lodged no       objections then.              Mr McClintock: On your own head be it. Old       Johannes is not always rational about family       matters and less so as he ages. His health has       been precarious, lately, and his heir is an idiot. He       needs Fox Mulder whole, sane and functional.              Mr Lermontov: I repeat; this is not a new project,       nor is it a project termination. It is merely a       maintenance exercise. There is no anticipation that       upon its conclusion that any of the subjects will be       unable to resume their lives."              Mr McClintock: I see that you will do what you will.              Mr Slate: I move in favor.              Mr Webber: I second.              Mr McClintock: I abstain.              The Chairman: All in favor? Motion is carried, Mr       Lermontov. Have them brought in. Do you have       facilities in mind?              Mr Lermontov: Yes. One of the rail labs is free,       and it will do for the two men. There is also a lab in       Santa Fe that is doing related work; it will do for the       one pair still together. At a later date, assuming       results from this testing are positive, I will want to       reunite all five under controlled conditions. When       they were children, there was evidence of a bond       between all six of the members of the original       group, and the one sibling pair has maintained a       powerful bond, despite the length of their       separation.              The Chairman: Very well. We expect a full report       on the results, Mr Lermontov. Now. On to item 17       on our agenda...              +++ +++              Mother's Day, 2000 Sunday afternoon, 3:48pm       Greenwich CT              Fox Mulder picked up the flowers he had chosen,       pink roses with baby's breath and ferns, and       climbed out of the car. His mother's house looked       dark. He knocked and rang the bell, but there was       no answer. His gut tightened.              (*Could she have had another stroke?*)              "Mom!" he called, making a fist to pound on the       door.              "Young man!"              Mulder whirled, to face an elderly woman on the       sidewalk walking a pair of tiny black Pekingese       dogs.              "Young man, are you looking for Teena Mulder?"              He blinked and recognized her. "Mrs. Herringer?       It's me, Fox. Her son."              The woman smiled sadly. "I remember you, now,       lad. It's Mother's Day, isn't it? But Teena isn't       home; she went antiquing with a new friend of hers,       Patsy McClain. They're staying over in New       Hampshire, somewhere." She gestured helplessly.       "They left yesterday."              Mulder stared at her. "She... left? Yesterday?"              The elderly woman nodded, and her smile faded.       "I'm sorry, lad. I think she should have told you."              (*Yeah...*)              The elderly lady resumed her walk. Mulder       watched her go, and then walked down the steps       again.              +++              It was well after midnight when Margaret Scully       heard a car pull into her driveway. Nervous, being a       woman alone, she peeked cautiously out through a       curtain. She was startled to recognize the car and       driver: that was Fox Mulder, and he was alone.              This was unusual; she had invited her daughter's       partner to come and join her and her family for       various holidays in the past; he almost always       declined. Margaret could not help but wonder if he       expected to find her daughter here. Dana had been       there but had gone home hours ago.              Mulder was still sitting in the car. Puzzled that he       made no move to get out or approach the house,       Margaret finally pulled on her raincoat over her       housecoat, and went outside.              He did not seem to see her approaching and when       she tapped on the glass to get his attention, he       flinched. Then he rolled down the window. "Mrs.       Scully?"              He sounded confused, and Margaret frowned.       "Fox? Are you all right?"              He looked up at her, and she was deeply disturbed              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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