Date:         Tue, 6 Feb 1996 12:33:46 -0700
Reply-To:     Hank Wyckoff <wyckoff@AG.ARIZONA.EDU>
Sender:       Highlander TV show stories <HLFIC-L@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>
From:         Hank Wyckoff <wyckoff@AG.ARIZONA.EDU>
Subject:      NEW (3/10) The Duplicity

The Duplicity (3/10) -- By Henry Wyckoff
A Crossover between Highlander/Forever
Knight/X-Files/A Poem by Rudyard Kipling/and
Sharpe's Rifles

A continuation of When the Veil is Lifted

Disclaimer --

The "worlds" of Highlander et al are not of my own creation
-- however, the plot and general story is mine, as are the
characters Axer Carrick, Coleen, and Patrick Morgan (even
though he does become Krycek in the last part, the P.M. part
is not property of the series writers).  Anybody who wants
to look up who produced the shows can look it up on their
own time.

Now, on with the show.

Chapter 3

Nick, LaCroix, and Axer sat in one of the back rooms.
Though Axer's spirits seemed to have improved, he looked
very worried.  "Now that we have some privacy," said Nick,
"perhaps you'd like to tell us what's on your mind."  Axer
nodded.  "Everyone knows that I vanished a few years back,
after the incident with those FBI agents... Well, what isn't
common knowledge is where I went.  It was a place so well
hidden that nobody would WANT to find me. ...Someone did
find me.

"I interrogated this man after he tried to kill Coleen and
target me for a convenient little kidnaping, and I
discovered some useful information.  There is a secret
society that transcends all national boundaries, and they're
after us.  They're not Hunters, but most likely members of a
society as old, if not older.

"There was a tattoo on his left palm."  He produced a piece
of skin.  In the center was the symbol of an arrow.

Nicholas and LaCroix observed it and shook their heads.

"It's a Nordic rune which corresponds to our letter 't'.
Our problem is that while we know what the letter says, we
don't know what it *means*.  The only immortal who knew the
hidden meanings behind the letters is Darius, and the
Hunters killed him.  There is no other immortal who was a
part of the culture and knew the secret ways."

"Wait a moment," said Nick, interrupting him.  "Are you
saying there are *more* immortals like you?"

"I thought you knew," apologized Axer.  "When I said that
Coleen was my student, I thought you understood the
implication."

LaCroix nodded silently, but Nick felt like he'd been hit in
the head with an oak paddle.  "I had no idea!"

LaCroix spoke up.  "Tell me about this Darius."

"I never met the man myself -- I was too busy fighting in
wars or getting drunk, and I had no stomach for priests
cowering on Holy Ground.  The man was an old one -- I never
paid enough attention to the rumors as to his true age --
but he had developed a reputation for being a powerful
warrior king who had led the most powerful army across the
face of Europe.

"When he reached Paris, however, he met the guardian of the
city, another old immortal.  He killed the old man and
something changed.  He disbanded his army and built a
cathedral which still stands to this day.  He renounced his
warrior ways and became a Catholic priest.

"I've always assumed the guy was just sick of killing, but
regardless, he did stop.  He's pretty much stayed on Holy
Ground, leaving once and a while to go out for lunch or do
some holy deed.  He refused all challenges against him, and
must have made a big impact on those born in the second
millennium, because they all flocked to him like iron to a
magnet."

LaCroix was deep in thought, speaking slowly when he said,
"Darius drew the younger immortals to him like a magnet."

"Yes."

"Could it be that he took some of them on as students?"

"Oh yes," nodded Axer.  "Some of them were well known
killers who reformed -- or at least became less
bloodthirsty."  LaCroix smiled at that.  "Let me see...
Duncan MacLeod... Richard Sharpe... countless others."

"What did Darius teach them?"

"His brand of philosophy, mostly.  He'd have them unload
their whole life story on him, and he'd play the
psychoanalyst, asking them enough questions until they
figured out what was wrong in their lives.  I suppose he
performed an essential service, but the guy didn't
understand the necessity of war and death."

"So he taught them philosophy and civilization."

"More like his own brand of morals."

"I imagine he pulled in immortals from all walks of life."

"You bet he did: princes and paupers, not to mention any
Celtic barbarian he came across."

"So he might have doubled as an academic teacher as well."

"Yes."

Something hit Axer pretty hard.  He smacked his hand against
his temple.  "Ahh!  He might have taught his students some
of his lore!"

LaCroix nodded.

"Let me see..." Axer thought to himself... "Duncan would
most likely be his 'best' student -- or at least the only
one still alive.  Now, all I have to do is find him!  Oh, I
hope this isn't a wild goose chase!"

Axer then had a look of shock in his face, "I just thought
of something: if they know about our kind, then they might
know about yours as well."

Nick and LaCroix looked at one another.  Nick's expression
was skeptical; LaCroix' expression was speculative.

"Excuse me while I make a few calls..."  Axer stood up and
left the room.

"What do you think?" asked Nick.

"I think times have become interesting."

*****************************************

Axer walked through the Raven, feeling as if he had  just
been given a few extra years of life.  He'd come here
without any ideas, and felt stupid that the most obvious
answer had slipped right past him.

"How could I be so stupid?" he demanded of himself.

He reached the chair where he had left Coleen, and found two
predatory young men talking to her.  Axer shook his head --
youth and naivety.  He walked up behind the men and put a
hand on each shoulder.

They spun around pretty quickly and glared at them -- they
must be vampires, he thought, judging by their reaction.

"What do you want?" snarled one of them, barely able to keep
his fangs in.

"I want you to take yourselves elsewhere," smiled Axer in
his best no-nonsense expression.

"Oh yeah, and what are you going to do about it?"

Coleen smiled and leaned back in her chair.

"Is that a threat?"

"Yeah!" laughed the other one, putting a hand on Axer's
shoulder, squeezing pretty hard.

Axer just smiled.  "Friend.  You're beginning to annoy me."
He looked the vampire directly in the eye.

That seemed to worry the vampire.  He let go and backed off
with a suddenly fearful expression.  "I'm sorry!"

"What the hell--" the other vampire started to say, when his
friend grabbed him.

"We didn't know!" said the first one, pulling him back into
the crowd.

Axer looked sternly at Coleen, who had taken a rebellious
expression.  "Did you know what you did, young lady?"

Her eyes flashed, "I was just talking with them!"

"You were talking with two vampires who were intention
either bleeding you dry or making you one of them -- and you
won't like THAT outcome, believe me!  Now that you've seen
the joys of being immortal, I think it's about time that I
introduce you to the harsh realities.

"Come on!  We're going to Vancouver!"

He nearly dragged her out of the Raven in his haste.

*******************************************

Duncan, Richie, and Sharpe were at the airport, heading for
Washington D.C.  The tickets were already bought and paid
for, and everything set at D.C., so they wouldn't have to
wait for a taxi when they got there.

Richie began to feel that something was wrong.  He subtly
tapped Duncan on the side and said, "A lot of folks wearing
suits."

Duncan got the hint, and looked at Sharpe, who nodded.
"Lots of businessmen here.  Let's go  someplace less stuffy.
How about some cold air?"

"Cold air?" Duncan was shocked. "What's so special about
cold air."

"It's clean."

Sharpe made a sharp turn over towards a different terminal,
where the plane was just about to take off. The doors were
just about to close, but he stopped it from shutting.
"Terribly sorry we're late."

He produced three tickets, and the annoyed stewardess
nodded.  "Come on, we can't take all day."

The door shut as three men in suits and sunglasses ran
towards it.  When the plane began to take off, one talked
into a pen he carried in his lapel.

The terminal door said, Toronto/Chicago.

****************************************

Scully wasn't taking this well, for good reason, Mulder
noted.  She was unpredictably switching between cold fury
and absolute hysteria.  She was mad at him, at Axer, and
Krycek/Patrick Morgan.

"I know you're going to hate me for saying this," said
Mulder, "but we need to go to Toronto.  Everything is
pointing in that direction."

"WHAT is pointing in that direction?  Unsubstantiated files?
The mad ravings of your informant?  You tell me what!"

"You know better than that," his voice remained calm and
level.  "You saw a lot more than I did, and what I saw was
enough to prove it to me."  His voice dropped a fraction in
volume, "Don't you want to nail Krycek for killing your
sister?"

She slapped him so hard it nearly cracked his jaw.
"Don't... you... DARE bring my sister into this!  This isn't
about her -- it's about you and your damned obsession!"

"What's wrong with being obsessed with the truth?"  He was
obsessed, he WOULD admit that, but he had a point too.

"It's making you see reality in illusion!  It's making you
come up with fantastic theories for things that have a
simple explanation!"

"You might never have believed me, but you've never proven
me wrong."

"Oh yes!  You're just like some medicine man who says that
the rain came because he danced, and the rain didn't come
because the sun god scared him away!  Of course I can't
prove you wrong!  I also can't prove God doesn't exist, but
nobody can prove that he does!  Where does that leave you?
With nothing!"

Mulder shook his head. "I'm going to Toronto right now.
I've already got the tickets.  I want you to come with me."

"No!"

"What if you're wrong?"

"What?!" she snapped her head towards him.  "What did you
say?"

"What if you're wrong?  What if I find the truth, and you're
not there to see it?"

She snorted.

"Have it your way, then."  Mulder's guts were tied in
knots.  He had never been this harsh to her, no matter how
much she was harsh to him.  It went against everything in
his nature, but deep down, he knew that one thing she needed
was a figurative shaking of the shoulders.  It didn't make
it any easier.

He nearly reached the door when Scully yelled, "Dammit!
Wait a minute!"  She grabbed her 'gotta' leave in a hurry!'
bags and followed him out the door, locking up the place.
"Now I want you to know that I'm doing this against my
better judgement!"

It might have meant a few hours of heated argument along the
way, but Mulder smiled, knowing that things would be a lot
better this way.

********************************************

Stay tuned for chapter 4!
Comments? -- No flames! --
Write to: wyckoff@ag.arizona.edu
To get back issues, check out my homepage at
http://ag.arizona.edu/~wyckoff/fanfic.html
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