A SEEMINGLY INVISIBLE VIETNAM VET BEGINS KILLING THE
MILITARY'S TOP BRASS. A crowd gathers at the U.S. Capitol
Mall, near the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. As the re-dedication ceremony
begins, General Benjamin Bloch steps up to a podium and delivers his speech. A short
distance away, Mulder, Scully and other FBI agents feverishly hunt down an armed man
making his way through the crowd. When Mulder attempts to focus on the suspect, he
seemingly vanishes.
As the story unfolds in flashback, Lieutenant General Peter
MacDougal is gunned down at close range in the back seat of a limousine, a Death Card at
his side. Though the murder weapon is never located, the General's driver, who has ties to
a radical paramilitary group called the Right Hand, is held on suspicion of murder. But
the driver, who maintains his innocence, passes a polygraph test, and lab tests reveal he
did not fire a weapon. With dozens of high-ranking military officials arriving in
Washington for the re-dedication ceremony, Skinner assigns his agents to investigate the
Right Hand movement, and its leader, an ex- Marine named Denny Markham.
Markham gives the FBI a photograph of a man named Nathaniel
Teager, a Green Beret captured by the enemy in 1971. Markham's group liberated Teager from
a POW camp in 1995. When U.S. government commandos attempted to kidnap Teager, he suddenly
disappeared. Scully suspects Markham's story is a cover-up for an elaborately orchestrated
conspiracy plan. Meanwhile, Teager approaches a woman, Renee Davenport, as she views the
Memorial. He informs Davenport her husband is still alive and gives her his dog tags as
proof. Suddenly, Teager disappears.
Davenport positively identifies Teager as the man she saw at
the memorial. Scully takes Davenport to an ophthalmologist when her eye hemorrhages. She
is diagnosed with a floating blind spot-but the cause is undetermined.
Mulder learns that MacDougal was one of the original military
officials who signed Teager's death certificate (even though forensic evidence was
inconclusive). Mulder assigns two FBI agents to guard General Steffan, one of MacDougal's
counterparts (who also signed the certificate). But Teager slips by the agents and murders
Steffan.
A security camera captured Teager's image passing through a
metal detector at the Pentagon. Skinner is outraged. Mulder tells Skinner that Teager has
the ability to hide himself from a person's field of vision. He notes that, during the
war, U.S. soldiers reported that Viet Cong guerrillas had the ability to appear and
disappear at will. He speculates that Teager learned this trick during his 25 years in the
POW camp.
Mulder believes the only way to stop Teager is to find his
next victim. Marita Covarrubias tells Mulder that MacDougal, Steffan and a third general
headed a secret three-man commission that covertly disposed of South Vietnamese soldiers
who cooperated with the U.S. government during the war. Covarrubias reveals that testimony
from the generals could have been used in the calculation of reparations. Mulder realizes
the government wanted the generals dead all along. Covarrubias gives him the name of the
third general: Bloch.
Bloch is rushed from the podium at the re-dedication after the
agents spot Teager in the crowd. Skinner escorts Bloch toward an awaiting limo. Mulder,
however, realizes Teager is hiding inside. Skinner tackles Bloch moments before gunshots
flash from inside the limo. Teager puts the limo in gear and attempts to make a getaway.
Agent Hill opens fire, killing him.