THE AGENTS SUSPECT A MENTALLY-DISTURBED MAN IS
CONNECTED TO THE DEATHS OF SEVERAL GIRLS WHOSE SPIRITS ATTEMPTED TO MAKE CONTACT WITH THE
LIVING. Angie Pintero, the working-class owner of a bowling
alley, tells one of his employees, a mentally-disturbed, compulsive man named Harold
Spuller, to go home for the evening. Shortly thereafter, Angie discovers a badly-injured
blond girl wedged inside a pinspotter carriage. The girl attempts to speak, but no words
come out of her mouth. Angie notices police in a nearby parking lot and rushes outside to
get help. He realizes a crowd has gathered around the dead body of the same girl he saw
only moments earlier in the bowling alley.
Angie relates his bizarre tale to Mulder and Scully. Mulder
suspects that Angie encountered the dead girl's ghost, a spirit that was attempting to
communicate with the living for reasons unknown. Three similar encounters, and three
similar murders, were reported in the area in as many weeks. The agents discover the
words, "She is me" written on the bowling lane where Angie saw the spirit. But
its meaning remains a mystery.
Detective Hudak tells Mulder and Scully that an anonymous
caller phoned 911 with a message regarding Penny Timmons, one of the killer's victims. The
caller claimed that Timmons' last words were "She is me." But Hudak notes the
victim's larynx was severed, making it impossible for her to utter dying words.
The agents trace the source of the 911 call to a payphone at
the New Horizon Psychiatric Center. Mulder notices one of the patients, Harold Spuller,
avoiding his gaze. After viewing photographs of the murder victims, Scully comes to the
conclusion that Spuller fits the killer's profile: a compulsive person consumed with the
desire to organize, clean and reorder.
Scully uses a rest room to attend to a nose bleed. There she
encounters the spirit of another blond girl. Moments later, Mulder relays word that the
body of yet another victim was found nearby.
Mulder discovers Harold holed-up in a dimly-lit room
accessible from the bowling alley. The walls of the room are covered with score sheets,
including those of the victims. Mulder realizes that Harold met each of the murdered women
at the bowling alley. Suddenly, Harold lapses into a strange seizure. From his point of
view, he sees Angie's ghost standing behind Mulder. He rushes out of the room and makes
his way to the bowling alley, where Angie lies dead, the victim of a heart attack. Mulder
tells Scully that every person who saw the apparitions was about to die, implying that
Harold may be next. Scully, who also saw a victim's ghost, is struck by the implication.
Harold is transported back to the psychiatric center. There,
he is tormented by Nurse Innes, who ridicules his intellect and physique. Later, Mulder
finds Innes lying on the floor, half-conscious. Innes claims Harold went berserk and
attacked her. One of the other patients, Chuck Forsch, tells Scully that Nurse Innes was
trying to poison Harold. Scully slowly realizes that Innes, not Harold, was responsible
for the murders. When Innes attacks Scully with a scalpel, Scully draws her weapon and
fires, striking her in the shoulder. Afterward, Scully tells Mulder that Innes has been
ingesting Harold's medication, triggering violent and unpredictable behavior. She
hypothesizes that Innes was out to destroy the love Harold felt towards the young women.
Later, Harold's body is discovered in a nearby alley, the apparent victim of respiratory
failure. But Scully suspects Harold died from what Innes took away from him.
Scully admits to Mulder that she saw the ghost of the fourth
victim shortly after she was murdered. Later, Scully sees Harold's spirit sitting in the
back seat of her car.