He sat there now, chair tilted back as he wadded up blank sheets of paper and tossed them toward a metal wastebasket set in front of a pair of brown metal file cabinets. “Toward” was the right word. “Into” would have been nicer, but that rarely happened.
Like visiting with Jefferson, it helped him think.
Today, it also helped him kill time while waiting to be summoned to his appointment with his new immediate superior, Arlen Douglas. The word on the floor was, the man, even though he was only in the slot temporarily, wasn’t pleased with the success rate of his agents, and he was hunting for scalps.
Which was why the floor in front of his filing cabinets looked like a snowfield when Carl Barelli walked in, visitor’s pass clipped to his sports jacket’s breast pocket.
Mulder tossed, missed, swiveled his chair around and said, “Michael Jordan is safe for another season.”
“Jordan retired last year.”
Mulder rolled his eyes. “That’s the trouble with you, Carl. You pay too much attention to details. It’s the big picture you have to consider.”
To his surprise, his old friend didn’t respond. Instead, he wandered around the room, fingers drifting but touching nothing, glancing at without really seeing the charts and Most Wanted sheets, the notes and NASA posters taped and tacked to the wall.
He was a swarthy man with thick black hair and a classic Italian profile dented and scarred just enough to prevent him from being pretty. He was also a former semi-pro footballer who had all the heart and few of the major skills to make it in the NFL or Canada. Luckily, he had recognized the shortcomings before it was too late; now he wrote about the sport for the revitalized New Jersey Chronicle, and once every six weeks or so came down to Washington to check out the Redskins, or to see what Congress was up to with a recent flurry of sports safety legislation. While he was here, he always dropped in, looking for a free meal, or a long night of pub-crawling.
Mulder never asked how his friend always managed to get a pass without calling ahead; he had a feeling he didn’t need to know the answer.
“So,” Barelli said, finally lighting on a chair, kicking aside the paper balls as he stretched out his legs. He glanced through the doorway to the quiet flow of agents outside, then back at the walls.
“So,” Mulder echoed.
“So where’s Scully?”
“She took some time off. She went West someplace, to see friends, I think. She’s too cheap to send me a postcard.” A shrug with his eyebrows. “Today’s Wednesday, the fifth, right? She’ll be back on Monday.”
“Too bad. I could’ve saved her.”
Mulder smiled, but it wasn’t wide, merely polite. Carl had been trying to get Scully out of the Bureau and into his love life, not necessarily in that order, ever since he had met her just over a year ago. Scully, although she claimed to be flattered by the attention, didn’t think this was the guy who would, as she put it, light up her life.
Neither did Mulder.
While he liked Carl a lot, and they had good times together, the man was incorrigible and unrepentant when it came to chasing women. As far as Mulder was concerned, Scully was permanently out of bounds.
Barelli folded his hands over his stomach, pursed his lips, licked them, blew out a silent whistle.
“What?” Mulder was puzzled. No handshake, no raucous invitation to debauchery, no futile attempt to show him exactly how to shoot a basket. The established routine had been abandoned, and he didn’t care for the way the man refused to meet his gaze.
The reporter shook himself elaborately, forced a smile, crossed his legs. “Sorry, pal. To be honest, I’ve had a pretty shitty week, all in all, and it sure ain’t getting any better sitting in this place. When the hell are you going to get a room with a view?”
“I like it here. It’s quiet.”
“It’s like a tomb is what it is.”
Mulder didn’t take the bait. “What’s the problem, Carl?”
The man hesitated before clearing his throat. “You remember Frank Ulman?”
Mulder wadded up another sheet. “No, I don’t think so. Should I?”
“He was at my sister’s a couple of Christmases ago. Skinny kid? Regular Army? He kept hitting on my cousin Angie, she kept shooting him down, and you decided to show him how to do it right.”
Suddenly, as he threw the paper ball, he remembered the night, and the memory brought a smile. The kid, and he wasn’t much more than that, had paraded around the Barellis’ suburban North Jersey house in his dress uniform, desperately trying to find a woman who would be impressed by his bearing and ribbons. He was so eager, he was laughable, and Mulder had finally taken pity on him. Unfortunately, the heart-to-heart they had had in the rec room didn’t take. Barelli’s cousin’s brother had had to be physically restrained from punching the guy into the new year.
“Yeah,” he said, nodding. “Yeah.”
The ball went in.
“Well, a couple, three months ago, he and Angie got together. Kind of serious, actually. I heard they were talking marriage and stuff.”
Mulder’s eyes widened. “Your cousin and that guy? Really? Why didn’t her brother kill him?”
Barelli winced and looked away.
Oh shit, Mulder thought; open mouth, insert foot.
He abandoned his slouch for a posture more attentive. “Tell me.”
“He was killed last weekend.”
“Damn. Hey, I’m sorry, Carl. I didn’t mean—”
Barelli waved him silent. “It’s okay, don’t sweat it, you couldn’t have known.” His smile was bitter. “Not exactly national news, you know?” Then he inhaled slowly. “The thing is, Mulder, he was stationed at Fort Dix, some kind of pissant clerical job, even though he thought he should have been something else. You know, glamorous? Green Berets, something like that. Anyway, he got himself into a fight at a bar in a nearby town, they call it Marville—”
“Over a woman, I’ll bet.”
“Yeah. Something like that. Anyway, he ended up at the base hospital Friday night, busted up some, and was supposed to stay in bed until Sunday. Frankie didn’t want to stay in bed, apparently. He was found on a road just south of the post, on Sunday morning.”
“How?”
Barelli swiped at something invisible on his shirtfront. “Somebody cut his throat.”
Mulder closed his eyes briefly, both in sympathy and at the image. “Have they caught the one who did it?”
“No.”
“Witnesses?”
The man snorted. “Oh yeah, right. In the middle of the night out in the middle of nowhere? Jesus, Mulder, gimme a break.” Then he shrugged. “Yeah. Actually, there was one. A woman.” He leaned forward, bracing his arms on his legs. “But Jesus, Mulder, she was hysterical and drunk and maybe doped up. You know what she said? She said the damn tree grew an arm and killed him.”
Arlen Douglas could have been anywhere from his early forties to early sixties. His perpetually tanned face was finely lined, his hair an aristocratic mix of brown and silver, and his figure one of someone who was in close to perfect shape. He sat behind his desk and took a single swipe at his tie before closing the manila folder that lay before him on the leather-trim blotter.
It hadn’t taken him long to make the office his — framed photographs of his family on the desk, framed photographs of him and three presidents, a handful of movie stars, and a dozen senators on the walls. An American flag in a brass stand to the right. Behind him, a large window whose view of the city was cut off by pale beige blinds.
When his intercom buzzed, he touched a button, said, “Send him in, Miss Cort,” and checked his tie again.
Special Agent Webber opened the door hesitantly, smiled, and stepped across the threshold.
Another hesitation before he closed the door and marched to the desk.