Date:         Thu, 8 Feb 1996 09:20:44 -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 (7/10) The Duplicity

The Duplicity (7/10) -- 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 7

Richie and Coleen were sipping wine in the corner of the
dance floor, sitting back, and talking about nothing in
particular.   Mostly about "the old ones" now that they were
snoozing at scattered places throughout the Raven.

Coleen traded stories about Axer for stories about Duncan.
Coleen told what she knew -- the guy was over two thousand
years old, swore off scotch after five centuries of
unmatched alcoholism, and had a fascination for every kind
of knowledge.

Richie's stories were much grander -- about the places
Duncan had gone and the things he had done.

"I suppose Duncan did live a more exciting life," admitted
Coleen, "but Axer's lived a long time, and he hasn't told me
yet about everything he's done."

Richie nodded.  "I feel the same way about Duncan."

"For all the times he treats me like I'm some little kid, I
can't help but be amazed at some of the stuff he can do.
I've never seen a man who can do *anything* and do it well.
He can skin a caribou, mend clothes, dig up information
through the computers, hotwire a car -- he's like twenty
dads put together."  She smiled, "He even leaves the seat
down."

Richie laughed at that one.  He was about to say something,
but then Coleen stood up, drawing the sword that Axer forged
for her himself.  A Welsh leaf-blade of a style similar to
that Axer used.  "Do you feel that?"

"Feel what?" asked Richie.  He was totally oblivious to
whatever it was.  "I don't hear anything either."

"It feels like one of us... but it's off somehow.  It's like
it's *changed* somehow."

"It can't be an immortal, or I'd feel it."

>From her own experiences, she knew he was right.  Perhaps
some of Axer's esoteric training is showing some benefits,
she thought.

He entered the Raven in a similar manner as Nick -- except
that the clothes he used to keep his skin from burning were
much more tasteful.  Less smoke rose through the many
layers of clothes than they did from Nick's body as well.

He shut the door with a slight slam and tore off his outer
clothing.  Richie never saw the guy before, but Coleen had.
"Lucius," she came over.  "What happened to you?"  She
hadn't sheathed her sword.

He noticed that, but said nothing.  "I was out."

"I don't think you're answering my question. You're not
Lucius."

He was getting annoyed.  "And why am I not Lucius?"

"Because she senses you, when it should be a total
impossibility," said a new voice.  Axer stepped out of the
shadows.

Richie looked at Axer, "Did YOU sense him?"

"You DIDN'T sense him?"  He looked just as shocked.

"No.  Not a thing."

LaCroix grabbed for a bottle of human blood and drained it
like water.  He didn't even stop to enjoy the taste.  "I met
someone interesting this morning.  He had the rune on his
palm."

"What did you do with him?"

"I left him to decide his own fate."

"How gracious of you," said Axer.

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

The man was still trapped on the floor, and his neck muscles
were bulging out -- individual threads easily discernable.
He was whimpering constantly. His jaw shuddered like he was
eating hamhock and black-eyed peas for the first time.  His
skin was as red as a beet.

The rope slipped out of his mouth and he screamed loudly,
watching in shock as the sledge hammer descended slower and
slower until the scream was abruptly cut off.

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

"Do you want to talk about it?" asked Axer.

"I don't know what you're talking about!"

"That's o.k. -- I do."

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

Assistant Director Skinner was pacing back and forth in his
office.  Not only had Mulder and Scully gone absolutely
AWOL, but disturbing news was coming from all directions...
and all of it was pointing to Toronto.

"Dammit, Mulder!" he pounded the frame around his window.
"What the hell are you trying to do??"

On the top of his desk was a pile of reports that he wasn't
supposed to have access too -- but Skinner didn't really
care about rules any more than Mulder did.  It was the
APPEARANCE of following the rules that was important, and
Mulder never seemed to understand that hint.

He looked through all the photos, memos, and reports again,
pondering all the possible decisions he could make --

"Hello?" asked the voice at the other end of the phone.

"Ms. Hendricks," said Skinner.  "Please give me the next
flight to Toronto -- private plane if you can arrange it."

"Yes, sir."

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

LaCroix and Axer sat in the back.  Axer smoked a thick Cuban
Havana cigar.  LaCroix was deep in thought, then spoke with
a distant look in his eyes, "Did you ever read poetry?"

"Off and on.  Once the poets started getting grand and
mighty, I backed off.  Why do you ask?"

"A poem runs through my head, and I can't get it out of my
head."

"What happened, Lucius?" asked Axer bluntly.

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

He arrived at Toronto airport, flying his own private jet.
He was dressed elegantly -- in a hand-tailored Italian suit
with all the bells and whistles, but it was obvious that
he felt uncomfortable in the clothes.

"If I had my way," he talked to himself, "I'd be kicking
back with a nice, warm ale -- but no!  I have to be hunting
down some bloody freaks who don't have enough bloody sense
to stay in the woodwork!"

He lit a cigar, oblivious to the looks of hate, annoyance,
and discomfort of the folks around him.  It was a nice
Havana -- thick and illegal.  That didn't matter to him --
laws were made for bureaucrats to follow, not free-thinking
souls.

He got his bearings and went to the scene of the crime,
where the police were still conducting an investigation.
The bloodstains were still on the floor, and the media were
still given only a tidbit to put on the evening news.

"Pinheads!" he swore to himself.  "Do all coppers have to be
so bloody dense?  All this bloody evidence and they don't
have a bloody clue!"

He considered using his "credentials" to achieve his goal
through official channels, but he also considered the
benefits of doing this under the table -- where he could
concentrate on getting the job done, rather than keeping up
appearances.

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

"Something has happened to me," said LaCroix in a faint
voice.  He was still the same arrogant, confident LaCroix,
but he was also filled with an uncharacteristic sense of awe
and incredulity.  "Something I cannot explain."

"Do I have to put you on the rack for you to start making
sense?" demanded Axer.

LaCroix smiled.  "This morning, the cultist stabbed me
through the heart with a wooden stake.  I died.  I  returned
from the dead... and I don't know why."

Axer looked a bit confused.  "I don't understand... you can
get riddled with bullets, strangled, stabbed, poisoned, or
assaulted in any other way imaginable, but you're confused
that you survived getting staked in the heart?"

"You don't understand.  It is one of the ways that we die.
It kills all vampires."

"Nick told me about the time he staked you through the
heart, and you came back."

"It was a close call.  Death takes a few moments, and I had
enough time to pull out the stake before I died."

"So you let him believe that you were invincible."

"As much as you do."

Axer sighed.  "Just the facts.  I can't deal with
commentaries right now.  So you BELIEVE you died.  What
proof do  you have that you actually died?  Maybe you just
blacked out."

"I died," insisted LaCroix, "because I remember what
happened when my heart stopped beating."

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

LaCroix opened up his eyes and looked around, finding that
he was in some unknown territory.

It was a flat, endless grassland -- much like he had seen in
the Great Plains in the last century.  The sun shone here,
and he didn't burn. The sky was overcast, and the shades
of the sky were overwhelmingly beautiful.

Even as a mortal, he had never seen a sight such as this.

"Lucius Rufio Longinus?" asked a voice behind him.

LaCroix spun around, startled.  "Who are you?"

The man was dressed in a tasteful Roman toga and sandals,
but wore no color by which to distinguish himself.  "I have
no need of names."

"What do I call you, then?"

"You may call me the Doorman.  For that is my function."

"Well, Doorman.  What is this place?"

"Call it Heaven, if you will.  For that is the framework you
entered into on your long journey."

"What do YOU call it?"

"I have no need for names."

"What happens to me now?  I had assumed that I would be sent
into the bowels of Hell."

"You believe you are evil, then?"

"I am evil."

The Doorman laughed.  "My friend, it would take a much
darker man than you to be evil.  But we are not here to
judge your evil here, but gauge the good you have
done in your life.

"Tell me, Lucius.  What good have you done in your life?"

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

"Come on," said a skeptical Axer.  "You could have been in a
dream.  I've had a few myself -- it seemed so lifelike that
I actually felt pain and pleasure, smelled things, and
tasted."

"I can feel the difference."

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

"I'm sorry, but you're just not a good man," said the
Doorman.  "You'll have to try at the other gate.  Please
follow the goat paths -- and watch your step!"

LaCroix turned around and found himself at the side of a
rocky cliff.  The granite face was crumbling away, and the
sky was now pitch black, accented by the occasional
lightning flashes.  This was the landscape of some other
world -- the crags, cliffs, and peaks were just too sharp to
be earthly.

Down below -- at the far base of the cliff -- was a lake of
fire and a few buildings. The residents there were odd
beings -- not the pitch-forked devils he imagined.

He leaped off the cliff, and made to fly down, but he
realized in a moment of utter horror that his powers had
left him.  He was now falling -- rather than flying -- down
the hundred-foot cliff.

He fell faster and faster, until his body slammed onto the
rocky flats below.  For many minutes, he lay with a broken
body on the rocks, until his bones began to snap back into
place.  That process was more painful than hitting the
ground -- much more painful and drawn out.

He stood up after what seemed like a few days and looked
around.  The odd beings approached him. He called them clay
men, because they seemed to be molded out of clay -- their
shapes resembling the popular image of what alien beings are
supposed to look like.

"I suppose you are the Gatemen of Hell," said LaCroix.

"They are elementals," said a voice behind him.

Dammit, thought LaCroix.  Why do they always have to sneak
up on me?  He turned around and saw none other than
Nicholas, wearing some pretty awful clothes from the 1970s,
sunglasses, and a gold medallion hanging over a
half-buttoned shirt.

"Nicholas?" asked a shocked LaCroix.  Even during the 1970s,
Nicholas had good fashion sense -- but this... this was
almost as bad as Janette wearing pants!

"I am not your Nicholas," smiled Disco man -- that's the
name LaCroix gave to him, since he would probably deny
having a name as well.

Thank God!  he breathed a sigh of relief.  I don't know how
much more of this I can take!  "Are you the Gatekeeper?"

"As you wish.  I'm here to assess your measure of evil.
What have you done in your life to earn entrance to the Lake
of Fire?"

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

"You can feel the difference!" scoffed Axer.  "The next
thing you'll be telling me that the earth is flat just
because you can't see the curving of the land."

"If we didn't have space travel, would knowledge of a round
earth be necessary?"

"You forget the last six centuries!"

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

"I'm sorry," Disco man shook his head.  "But your ideas of
evil just don't meet ours.  I'm afraid we'll have to boot
you out."

"What do I do now?"

"I guess you'll have to move that body of yours before the
sun burns you to death."

The next thing that LaCroix felt was the sun warming his
body a bit too painfully, and the man who killed him walking
in the other direction.

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

"Lucius," Axer shook his head.  "You've got it all wrong."

"Whether dream or reality, it's the experience that counts,
does it not?"

"Only if you recognize a dream and reality for what they
are."

"What is the reality and dream, then?"

"I think you were trying to tell yourself something."

"What?"

"You're not as evil as you think you are -- I'll tell you up
front: you vampires are so damned melodramatic you make me
want to vomit.  You think you're evil?  Nick thinks he was
so evil that he feels the need to atone?  Give me a few
hours and some scotch to warm me up, and I'll TELL you about
evil."

Mulder sat back against the door, his head spinning.  He
didn't know what to make of what he had been hearing.  He
needed more information to work with.

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

Tracy was talking to the Captain.  "I can't find Nick
anywhere!  He's not at home, his car is there too.  I think
we should report him as a missing person."

"Look.  We have to wait 48 hours until we can file a
report."

"But we know he's not going to be here in 48 hours!"

"Get back to work, Tracy.  AND DON'T SLAM THE DOOR!!!"

Grumbling to herself under her breath, she slammed the door
anyway.  Everyone in the room looked sharply in her
direction, silence descending -- then everyone went back to
their work.

She had been Nick's partner for a few months, and while he
would play the cowboy and do a lot of stunts on his own, he
never vanished without a trace -- for more than a few hours
at least.

There was nothing to do here, so she walked over to the
parking garage.

"Something has to be wrong!" she told herself as she
approached her car.

"I'd say," smiled the man who had suddenly appeared at her
side, holding a knife to her throat.  "Something is
dreadfully wrong.  Do as I say, and it won't get any worse."
His accent was something like a Cockney accent, but not
quite.  Her next guess was Australian, but it wasn't that
either.

"What do you want?"

"I want you to tell me what you know about your partner,
Nick Knight."

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

Stay tuned for chapter 8!
***********************************************************************
**    e-mail:   wyckoff@ag.arizona.edu
**    homepage: http://ag.arizona.edu/~wyckoff
**    My fanfics are now archived in pkzip format on my fanfic page
**       at http://ag.arizona/edu/~wyckoff/fanfic.html
**    Also: check out the X-files creative archive at Gossamer
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**   ERROR: You just deleted 6 years of work -- MERCY KILL <Y/N>?
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