| MULDER SEARCHES FOR A VIETNAM VET WHO CAN PROJECT HIS
CONSCIOUSNESS INTO OTHER PEOPLE'S MINDS. In New York City, Dr.
Saul Grissom, a pioneer in sleep disorders, calls 911 to report a fire outside his
apartment. When emergency crews arrive at Grissom's building, they do not find a fire. But
they do find Grissom's dead body. Skinner assigns Mulder and Alex Krycek, another agent
for the FBI, to investigate the mysterious incident. Annoyed at the prospect of working
with Krycek, Mulder travels to Connecticut by himself. He interviews Dr. Penelope Charyn,
who explains that Grissom revolutionized sleep therapy, and developed a process whereby a
person's dreams can be altered by electric stimulation.
Mulder grudgingly accepts Krycek as his partner. They visit
Scully in the autopsy bay. She explains that Grissom shows classic physiological responses
of having been burned alive in a fire... yet his flesh is not charred. Interest in the
case grows when another man, Henry Willig, is found dead in his apartment with forty-three
internal hemorrhages-signs that he had been shot to death. But upon examination, no
bullets or signs of foul play are detected. Mulder realizes that both Willig and Grissom
were Vietnam veterans, and that both were stationed at Parris Island. After further
checking, the agents determine that Augustus Cole is the only surviving member of a
special squad that included Willig. But Cole turns up missing when he is traced to a
psychiatric ward.
A mysterious government operative, X, meets Mulder in a dark
parking structure (as did Deep Throat). He claims that Grissom conducted sleep deprivation
experiments as Parris Island in an attempt to make soldiers aggressive and fearless. The
woman warns that Augustus Cole has not slept in twenty-four years. The agents get a break
in the case when Cole robs a pharmacy of anti-depressants. Mulder and Krycek are shocked
when two officers shoot one another while searching the drug store. Mulder theorizes that
Cole possesses the ability to project his consciousness into the minds of other people.
The agents locate Salvatore Matola, a former member of the
special marine squad whose name was not officially listed on any government documents.
Matola claims that a Dr. Girardi participated in the experiments. He also admits that his
entire squad went AWOL and massacred everyone who lived in the Vietnamese village of Phu
Bai. Mulder concludes that Cole is punishing everyone associated with the massacre for its
twenty-fourth anniversary. The agents rush to a train station to intercept Girardi. Mulder
draws his gun when he sees Cole, pistol in hand, approaching Girardi. But in reality,
Mulder is reacting to images projected into his mind. Seeing that Mulder is pointing his
gun at innocent bystanders, Krycek shoots at Mulder. Luckily, he misses.
The agents track Cole and Girardi to a train car in a railway
yard. Girardi is badly injured, the victim of Cole's dream projection. Mulder finds Cole
and tries convincing him to testify in court about the experiment. But Cole projects an
image into Krycek's brain, making it seem as if he is pointing a gun at Mulder. Krycek
falls for the trick and shoots Cole. Later, Krycek reports to a mysterious tribunal that
is bent on eliminating Mulder and Scully forever.
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