Dara walks toward a figure
shrouded in darkness. Dropping to her knees in front of the
figure, arms raised as if in supplication, Dara is bathed in
a sudden bright light that seems to pour from the figure.
The father, reaching Dara too late, finds her dead in this
frozen position with her eyes burned out.
The case takes on a certain
personal slant for Scully and forces her to deal with the
loss of Emily that she has thrust to the back of her mind in
her continued work on the X-Files.
The coroner's only
conclusion for the death is lightning, due to the burning of
her eyes, but he says, "It's as if God Himself struck her
down." Dana studies Dara's medical records, occasionally
slipping into her own thoughts as she gazes at a picture of
Emily she's kept.
Father Gregory talks of an
ongoing battle for souls between good and evil and Scully
feels that he is speaking directly to her.
During the autopsy, she
glances at the body and, instead of Paula, she sees Emily
lying on the exam table. Extremely shaken, Scully turns away
and tries to calm herself. On the verge of tears, she turns
back to the table when she hears a small voice say, "Mommy."
Emily is lying there and says beseechingly, "Mommy,
please."
Gregory says that he risked
his life to protect their souls from the devil who sought to
claim them for his own. Gregory says to Scully, "You know.
You've already guessed what they are. The last one is still
out there. The Devil is here and if he finds her, his
victory will be complete."
"Scully, I think you're the
one who is being misled. Not just willingly, but willfully.
I've never seen you more vulnerable or susceptible or more
easily manipulated and it scares me because I don't know
why." She confides in him about her visions of Emily.
Starkey wants to know where
the fourth girl, Roberta, is. "I will not be denied this
time, Father. The others were taken from me. I will not
allow that to happen again." When Father Gregory fails to
provide the information, he suddenly begins to smoke and
burn as Starkey looks on.
Scully slowly looks up at a
man whose head is surrounded by a fiercely bright light.
Scully sees the head turn to reveal faces of various
animals. As Mulder tries to get her attention, Scully
silently stares at the presence in front of her as the light
blazes even brighter.
The legend describes the
seraph as an angel who descended from heaven and fathered
four children with a mortal woman. The offspring, known as
the nephilim or fallen ones, have the souls of angels and
are deformed and tormented entities. The seraph is sent to
earth by God to bring back the souls and prevent the Devil
from claiming them as his own.
Emily, her small hand in
Scully's, pleads with her, "Mommy, let me go. Mommy, please
let me go." A torn and confused Scully is being drawn from
all sides. Starkey is yelling at her from the one side,
rationally she knows Roberta is who she is protecting, but
the vision of Emily is beseeching her to release her into
the light. As Scully makes her painful decision, she
releases Emily's hand and watches her disappear into the
dazzling light.
The priest asks Scully, "You
believed you were releasing her soul to Heaven." "I felt
sure of it," Scully replies. "Has it occurred to you that
this, too, is part of what you were meant to understand,"
the priest asks. "You mean, accepting my loss?" Scully asks.
"Can you accept it?" the priest continues. Scully finally
answers, "Maybe that's what faith is."
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All Souls
"All Souls" opens with the Scully family priest, Father
McCue, arriving at the home of one of his other parishioners
(obviously a priest who doesn't mind making house calls).
The mother and father are the adoptive parents of a girl,
Dara, who is mentally and physically handicapped. Father
McCue has arrived on a terribly stormy night to baptize the
girl into the church. Later that night, as the storm rages
on, Dara's father wakes to find the girl missing. As he
peers out the window through the pouring rain, he sees her
walking down the street, her wheelchair abandoned and
seemingly unnecessary. As her father rushes out to get her,
Dara walks toward a figure shrouded in darkness. Dropping to
her knees in front of the figure, arms raised as if in
supplication, Dara is bathed in a sudden bright light that
seems to pour from the figure. The father, reaching Dara too
late, finds her dead in this frozen position with her eyes
burned out.
From this strange beginning, the episode segues into a
narrative with Scully in a confessional relating the story
of her involvement in the case to a priest. She tells him of
being approached by Father McCue following Easter services
and how her own experience with losing Emily was his
motivation for approaching her. Possibly helping this other
family in dealing with their loss will be an elixir to her
own grief. And this is the only relation that this episode
really has to the mytharc. Not even to the mytharc itself,
but more in line with Scully's "Christmas Carol / Emily"
arc. The case takes on a certain personal slant for Scully
and forces her to deal with the loss of Emily that she has
thrust to the back of her mind in her continued work on the
X-Files.
As Scully begins her narrative to the priest, her
confessor, she says that she is responsible for the death of
a young girl; a death she could have prevented. This seems
to echo her grief over the loss of Emily for which she
continues to harbor pain and guilt due to her inability to
save the child. Possibly some anger toward a god who would
let this child die, which is something she has in common
with Dara's father who can't understand why his god would
take this innocent girl.
Scully discusses Dara with the coroner. She mentions the
kneeling position that Dara was found in and the coroner
uses the term "genuflecting", forcing the religious
suggestion despite Scully's possible avoidance. There is a
scar on the outside of Dara's hand which the coroner says
was from the removal of an extra finger. Dara had
polydactyly on both her hands and feet. The coroner's only
conclusion for the death is lightning, due to the burning of
her eyes, but he says, "It's as if God Himself struck her
down." Scully contacts Mulder and asks him to find the
adoptive records on Dara. In the meantime, she studies
Dara's medical records, occasionally slipping into her own
thoughts as she gazes at a picture of Emily she's kept.
Meanwhile, we see a priest, Father Gregory, arriving at a
psychiatric hospital to pick up Paula Koklos. Inside her
room, the girl can be recognized as an identical version of
Dara, although the sixth finger on each of her hands has not
been removed. Anxious to finalize his adoption of the girl,
Father Gregory is thwarted by her newly assigned social
worker, Aaron Starkey, who wants a chance to review the case
before allowing the Father to assume custody. We later see a
dark figure approaching Paula's room. A radiant burst of
light fills the hospital corridor then subsides. Inside her
room, Paula is dead; frozen in the supplicating attitude of
prayer identical to Dara.
Mulder comes through with the birth records of Dara, but
her adoption records are sealed. Dara and Paula are more
than twins...they're quadruplets. They notice an upside-down
cross in Paula's room and Mulder speculates that the deaths
might be religiously motivated killings by someone who
believes they're doing god's work. Father Gregory seems a
likely suspect. In his church, Mulder and Scully find prayer
books with the image of the upside down cross on their
covers and Gnostic texts contained within. Father Gregory is
surprised by the death and claims he was only trying to
protect Paula. He tells them that he knew Paula's
birthmother; was her confessor. She died in childbirth and
to reveal who she was would be a breach of the sanctity of
confession. Gregory talks of an ongoing battle for souls
between good and evil and Scully feels that he is speaking
directly to her.
During Paula's autopsy, Scully finds two bony protrusions
on the girl's shoulders possibly suggesting vestigial wings
(!). During the autopsy, she glances at the body and,
instead of Paula, she sees Emily lying on the exam table.
Closing her eyes, she reopens them to see only Paula.
Extremely shaken, Scully turns away and tries to calm
herself. On the verge of tears, she turns back to the table
when she hears a small voice say, "Mommy." Emily is lying
there and says beseechingly, "Mommy, please." As Scully
recounts this to the priest, she says she feels she was
meant to see Emily as a sign and that it wasn't simply a
stress-induced hallucination. Scully thinks Father Gregory's
words and this sign had a purpose; to instruct her to save
the girls.
Mulder calls Scully to tell her that he and Starkey have
a lead on the third sister. She turned up at a homeless
center in DC and he and Starkey are about to canvas the
area. As he talks to Scully he sees a car with an upside
down cross hanging from the rearview mirror. Scully tells
Mulder that the girl most likely has the same progressive,
degenerative bone disease that her sisters had so can't get
too far. She also tells Mulder about the wing-like processes
she found on Paula. As Mulder searches the area, we see the
third girl identical to Dara and Paula in an old, abandoned
building that looks like a church. She is approached by the
same dark figure and, as she falls to her knees and raises
her arms in a vision of prayer, we see a brilliant flash of
light flow from him. As Mulder arrives at the scene, he
finds Father Gregory who he orders to stop at gunpoint.
Gregory tells Mulder that they're both too late; the girl is
already dead. Mulder finds her in the familiar position of
prayer and supplication with her eyes burned out.
In an interrogation room, Mulder questions Father Gregory
while Scully silently watches. Mulder is convinced that
Gregory is sick and is responsible for the girls' deaths.
Gregory isn't interested in Mulder's mockery saying that he
risked his life to protect their souls from the devil who
sought to claim them for his own. Gregory says to Scully,
"You know. You've already guessed what they are. The last
one is still out there. The Devil is here and if he finds
her, his victory will be complete." As she recounts the
story, Scully says she believed Father Gregory's words. "But
I already knew I was meant to save her."
Scully and Mulder review the information on the fourth
girl, Roberta Dyer. Scully stares at the picture and tells
Mulder that Father Gregory calls the girls "Messengers".
Mulder thinks Scully is letting the Father's mania get to
her but Scully thinks Mulder is being misled. Mulder thinks
just the opposite and says, "Scully, I think you're the one
who is being misled. Not just willingly, but willfully. I've
never seen you more vulnerable or susceptible or more easily
manipulated and it scares me because I don't know why." She
confides in him about her visions of Emily. He wants her to
step away in a belief that her personal issues are clouding
her judgment. Scully tells him to go find the girl and
she'll finish up with Father Gregory. She is going to let
him believe that he can find and save the girl though it's
clear she feels it's her mission to complete.
While the agents are out of the room, Starkey enters to
question Gregory alone. He wants to know where the fourth
girl, Roberta, is. "I will not be denied this time, Father."
The priest wants to know how he got in there and what he's
talking about since he's sure Starkey already took the other
three girls. Starkey tells him, "The others were taken from
me. I will not allow that to happen again." When Father
Gregory fails to provide the information, he suddenly begins
to smoke and burn as Starkey looks on. Outside the
interrogation room, Scully tries to get in but the door has
somehow locked. Inside, Father Gregory is already dead; his
body burned and blistered.
Mulder heads to the Dyer residence with the police to
locate the fourth girl. Flashing a warrant to search the
house, Mulder questions the adoptive father about her
whereabouts. In an obvious lie, he tells them that she's
out...she's at school. Mulder tells him they know she hasn't
been at school for over a week and that they believe her
life is in danger. As the police search, they find a door
under the stairs leading to a dark, dirty basement room.
It's clear that Mr. Dyer has forced the girl to live in
these terrible conditions, but she is nowhere to be found.
Mulder angrily shouts at Mr. Dyer, asking where Roberta is
and in response, Mr. Dyer says, "They're going to cut off
the checks, aren't they? He said he'd take her off my hands,
but I could keep the disability." When asked who told him
this, Dyer admits it was Father Gregory.
Meanwhile, outside the police station, Scully makes her
way to her car as she answers her ringing cell phone. It's
Mulder and she tells him that Father Gregory is dead. As she
tries to unlock the car door, she drops her keys and,
bending to pick them up, sees someone's legs standing just
in front of her. As Mulder continues to apprise her of the
latest on the fourth girl, Scully slowly looks up at a man
whose head is surrounded by a fiercely bright light. Trying
to see clearly who this person is, Scully sees the head turn
to reveal faces of various animals. As Mulder tries to get
her attention, Scully silently stares at the presence in
front of her as the light blazes even brighter.
Scully turns to Father McCue to find answers about the
image she witnessed. Pulling an old Gnostic text from his
shelf, he tells her what she's describing is known as a
seraph. A drawing in the book shows a man with four faces
and four figures below. The legend describes the seraph as
an angel who descended from heaven and fathered four
children with a mortal woman. The offspring, known as the
nephilim or fallen ones, have the souls of angels and are
deformed and tormented entities. The seraph is sent to earth
by God to bring back the souls and prevent the Devil from
claiming them as his own. Scully asks how he brought back
their souls and is told that "they were smote with the
brightness of his countenance". Apparently, to look upon the
seraph in all his glory is to give up one's soul to heaven.
Which begs the question regarding Scully's encounter. Though
Scully clearly is convinced this is what she saw, Father
McCue is hesitant to put his faith in it.
Upon leaving the church, Scully runs into Starkey who
tells her that he and Mulder have found the fourth girl and
that they are supposed to meet Mulder at Father Gregory's
church. When they arrive, Scully enters the church but,
curiously, Starkey stops and stands just on the threshold.
As Scully calls out for Roberta, she sees Starkey's shadow
cast on a wall and it's a horned visage (a bit cheesy in
driving home this point). Despite seeing this, Scully
continues to search for the girl and finds her hiding under
the stairs. Talking soothingly to the girl, Scully reaches a
hand out to her and coaxes her from beneath the stairs.
Scully leads the girl further into the church as Starkey
calls out to them from the doorway.
As Scully holds the girl's hand, the church is suddenly
flooded with a brilliant light. Roberta looks at the light
and tries to move toward it as Scully attempts to hold her
back. Meanwhile, Starkey continues to demand that the girl
be brought to him but he is helpless to enter the church and
remains fixed in the doorway. Scully, maintaining her hold
on Roberta, looks back toward Starkey and, when she returns
her gaze to Roberta, is startled to see her own Emily
looking back at her. Emily, her small hand in Scully's,
pleads with her, "Mommy, let me go. Mommy, please let me
go." A torn and confused Scully is being drawn from all
sides. Starkey is yelling at her from the one side,
rationally she knows Roberta is who she is protecting, but
the vision of Emily is beseeching her to release her into
the light. As Scully makes her painful decision, she
releases Emily's hand and watches her disappear into the
dazzling light, calling after her, "Emily? Emily? Oh, God."
As the light fades and dissipates, Scully finds herself
alone in the church with the body of Roberta. The girl is
dead in the frozen image of kneeling supplication and
Starkey is nowhere to be seen.
We return to the present and the confessional where the
priest asks Scully, "You believed you were releasing her
soul to Heaven." "I felt sure of it," Scully replies. But
now Scully is finding it hard to reconcile her momentary
conviction with the death of Roberta. The priest asks her if
she believes in a life after this one and Scully answers
yes. The priest asks her if she's sure of her answer and she
cannot reply. "Has it occurred to you that this, too, is
part of what you were meant to understand," the priest asks.
"You mean, accepting my loss?" Scully asks. "Can you accept
it?" the priest continues. Scully finally answers, "Maybe
that's what faith is."
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