She didn't react, didn't speak. She pulled the paper back, turned it around, and skimmed it. Then she put it back into her bag and let her head rest against the chair's high back. Her lips pursed; her eyes followed an unseen trail on the ceiling.
"He's not one of the Council, Mulder. Ciola—"
"Well, welt well, chica," Ciola said from the entrance. "Every time 1 see you, you can't help but speak my name."
TWENTY-ONE
Beyond the cornfield, beyond the last of the water pumps, in the desert, the sand began to stir.
With an exaggerated swagger Ciola crossed the hall, swinging his arms, deliberately cracking his heels against the floor for the gunshot sound. His head was bare, his shirt and jeans looked stiff enough to be new, and his hair had been freed from his ponytail to sway against his back as he moved.
"You like it in here?" he asked, spreading his arms.
Neither Mulder nor Scully answered.
He made a face. "This, you know, is the place where they meet every month. They try to think of a way to banish me, you see?" He laughed and stamped a foot. "I am an embarrassment to them, FBI. I spent a lot of time in the penitentiary, and I think they think this shames them."
He reached the head of the table and dragged the chair back, dropped into it and hooked a leg over the arm.
Scully shifted in her chair to face him, her right arm resting on the table. She said nothing; she only looked.
Ciola gestured toward the entrance. "You're all the talk out there today, Agent Scully, did you know that? It’s the red in your hair, I think. I figured you were here to talk to me, is that right? So here I am. So talk."
Scully gave him a little nod. "Where were you yesterday afternoon, Mr. Ciola?"
He shook his head sadly. "You'll have to do better than that. I was telling my parole officer how wonderful it is to be outside again."
"Then how did you know about Donna Falkner? You were there."
"I have a police scanner in my truck." He grinned. "It comes in handy."
"A scanner?" She sounded doubtful.
The grin snapped off. "I'm an Indian, Agent Scully I'm not a savage."
"You nearly cut a man's head off," Mulder said mildly. "That sounds pretty savage to me."
Ciola only glared at him, a quick glance, before he looked back to Scully. "Anything else?"
"Theft," she said.
The leg slid slowly off the arm. "I kill people, Agent Scully, I don't steal from them. You want a thief, I suggest you have a word with Saint Nick."
"What were you two arguing about? Yesterday. In the street."
"Do you know something, Agent Scully? For the life of me, I can't understand why a woman like you would—"
"Ciola," Mulder said, raising his voice.
The man sighed the sigh of a terribly put-upon man, and looked.
Mulder held up his ID. "Just for the record, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has legal authority on Indian reservations, whether we're asked in or not. That means, Mr. Ciola, that I don't need anyone's permission — not the sheriff's, not your Council's — to bring you in for questioning concerning the murder of Donna Falkner. Or Paulie Deven. Or Matt and Doris Constella." He put the ID back in his pocket. "Why don't you just cut the crap, and answer Agent Scully."
The man looked ready to bolt, and from the corner of her eye, Scully saw Mulder tense for the chase. "He told us it was personal," she said quickly, watching them both relax as if strings had been severed.
"It is."
"How personal?"
"We hate each other, Ms. Scully. I'm an ex-con and he's a saint. I dropped out of high school, he's got degrees up his ass and out his throat." Palms down, he spread his fingers on the table. After a long moment, he said, "How confidential is this? If I tell you something, you put me back in the pen?"
"That depends," Mulder answered.
"On what?"
"On whether I say so," Scully said, holding back a grin at the astonishment on his face.
"Let… let me think about it."
"While you're thinking” Mulder said, "tell me how you managed not to be killed by the Sangre Viento."
Ciola gaped, his left hand moving unconsciously to his cheek to brush over the scars. "How the hell did you know that?"
Mulder didn't answer.
Scully knew, however. Now that she could examine them without fearing a knife in her throat, the pattern across his neck and face was clear; at least, clear enough to anyone who knew about the Wind.
"I had a pony," Ciola said quietly. "When I was very little, a man died, one of the six. During the ceremonial, no one leaves the Mesa, or goes into the desert. It's a foolish chance. Only people like Saint Nick do something dumb like that. I was little, and I was foolish, and I wanted my pony. She had broken out of the corral, and I chased her for nearly an hour.
"I almost had her once, but she bolted. I couldn't figure out why until I turned around, and there it was. Right behind me. I fell over backward into an arroyo, and that’s what saved me."
Scully couldn't help it: "You believe in this Blood Wind?"
Ciola's fingers fluttered across his face. "That’s a stupid question, chica. Do you want a stupid answer?"
"No, just a truthful one."
His eyes widened at her boldness, but one of the front doors opened before he had a chance to say a word. Nick Lanaya walked in, an old man trailing behind, both of them unaware of Ciola until they were halfway across the floor.
Lanaya stopped; the old man didn't. He continued on to the table and took the chair on Scully's right.
"What do you want, Leon?" Nick demanded.
"The FBI calls, I answer." He grinned at Mulder. "It's the law, don't you know that?"
"Get out, Leon. They need you in the warehouse."
"Oh, I don't know. There are many questions left to ask." He looked to Scully for support. "They want to know, for example, about Donna. How we loved, how we fought, how we—"
"Chinga!" Lanaya spat, face darkening with rage. "You kill, you dare to come back here as if nothing ever happened, and now you dare to talk—"
"Enough!" Mulder ordered, thumping the table with his fist. "Excuse me," he said to the old man, and turned back to the others. "Mr. Lanaya, for all our sakes, let me or Agent Scully be the ones to decide when Mr. Ciola has told us enough, okay? Mr. Ciola, I take it you're not planning a vacation or anything like that?"
Ciola laughed as he stood. "Don't leave town, eh, gringo? Don't worry. I won't. I still have to go to Donna's funeral."
Lanaya grabbed the man's arm as he brushed past him and whispered harshly in his ear. Scully couldn't understand what was said, but it made her wonder when Ciola swallowed heavily and left, nearly at a run. Nick made to follow, but a grunted word from the old man brought him to the table, where he sat in the chair Ciola had just used.
"I'm sorry," he said with a sheepish smile. "The man just drives me crazy." His hand waved in front of his face as if clearing the air of a foul odor. Then he introduced Dugan Velador. "He speaks very good English, so—"
"Have I left, Nick?" Velador asked quietly.
Again Lanaya's face darkened, and he lowered his head and didn't move.
Scully raised an eyebrow to Mulder at the control the old man had, then sat back so she could see both of them at once. She wasn't sure what Mulder wanted her to say, and so deferred to him when he cleared his throat, a signal that he wanted to take charge of the interview for a time.
She hoped, though, that when the Sangre Viento came up, as it surely would, Velador wouldn't be insulted. It would be easy for him to think they were mocking him, or being condescending. And although Nick had warned them of the probability, she was somewhat taken aback when the old man said, "I want you to leave the Mesa now, please. There is nothing here to discuss or tell you."