Scully: I will continue here as long as I can, as long as you're bisset by the haunting illness which I saw consume your beautiful mind.
The Sixth Extinction
Dr. Barnes: This craft that come ashore, its extraterrestrial origins.
Scully: You don't even believe in that.
Dr. Barnes: Nor do you, and here we are.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: The work here is painstaking a slow and tedious piecing together. It appears to be a craft. It's skin covered in the intricate symbols you and I both saw, but which I now understand are part of a complex communication.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Dr. Barnes has broken some of the symbols into letters using an ancient Navajo alphabet. Though it has helped to uncover some of what's here, it has also made for greater confusion.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: What are the elusive meanings I cannot see, that are hidden here?
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: If I could understand it, know how it affected you, learn how to use its power to save you.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Efforts to read the bottom of the craft have been harder. Our workers were scared away by phemonena, I admit I can't explain, a sea of blood, a swarm of insects.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: I feel you slipping away from me with every minute I fail here.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: On the top surface of the craft, I'm finding words describing human genetics.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Twenty-four panels, one for each human chromosome, a map of their make up, maybe a map of our entire genetic make-up, a complete human genome. I mean, it's like, it's the most beautiful intricate work of art.
Amina Ngebe: It is the word of God.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Many of the things I have seen have challenged my faith and my belief in an ordered universe, but this uncertainty has only strengthened my need to know, to understand, to apply reason to those things which seem to defy it.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: But what little we've found has been staggering, passages from the Christian Bible, from Pagan religions, from ancient Sumaria. Science and mysticism conjoined. But more than words, they are somehow imbued with power. I've ignored warnings to quit this work, remaining committed to finding answers, afraid only that our secret here won't last and that I might be too late.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Science and mysticism conjoined.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: I'm here only to help my partner.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: I'm only here to help my friend
Dr. Barnes: You can't help him. You're wasting your time reading it.
Scully: It has power.
Dr. Barnes: It is power, the ultimate power. Your friend just got too close.
The Sixth Extinction
::voices with Scully's voice breaking through::
Scully: I need to see him.
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Mulder, it's me. I know that you can hear me. If you can just give me some sign. I want you to know where I've been, what I've found. I think that if you know, that you can find a way to hold on. I need you to hold on. I've found a key, the key, to every question that has ever been asked. It's a puzzle, but the pieces are there for us to put together. And I know that they can save you if you can just hold on. Mulder...please...hold on...
The Sixth Extinction
Scully: Mulder...please...hold on...
The Sixth Extinction
Kritschgau: What are you hiding?
Scully: It doesn't matter.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: Bum a cigarette, Agent Fowley?
Fowley: I don't smoke
Scully: Really? I could swear I smell cigarette smoke on you.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: I just want you to think. Think of Mulder when you met him. Think of the promise and the life in front of him. Think of him now and then try to stand there in front of me, look me in the eye and tell me that Mulder wouldn't bust his ass trying to save you.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Albert Hosteen: You are running out of time.
Scully: Why do you come to me like this? Why when I can't find him?
Albert Hosteen: You don't look in the right place.
Scully: I don't think you're hearing me.
Albert Hosteen: You don't know where he is?
Scully: Even if I did I wouldn' t know how to save him. This science makes no sense to me.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Albert Hosteen: Have you looked for him here?
Scully: Are you asking me to pray?
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: Get up, Mulder. Get up and fight the fight.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: Mulder, you've got to get up.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: Mulder, help me. Please, Mulder.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: I don't know what to believe anymore. Mulder, I was so determined to find a cure to save you that I could deny what it was that I saw. And now I don't even know. I don't know what the truth is. I don't know who to listen to. I don't know who to trust.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: I don't what the truth is. I don't know who to listen to. I don't know who to trust.
The Sixth Extinction II-Amor Fati
Scully: Year 2000 is just their artificial deadline, and besides 2001 is actually the start of the new millennium.
Millennium
Scully: Single-minded? Sounds like someone I know.
Millennium
Skinner: How are you feeling?
Scully: All things considered?
Millennium
Scully: He was dead, and then somehow he wasn't. He attacked me.
Millennium
Scully: Mulder, tell me you've got more than SAT scores to show that this Tony Reed didn't commit this crime.
Rush
Scully: Rather than spirits, can we atleast start with Tony's friends? Please, just for me.
Rush
Scully: So basically, what if we were looking for Wile E. Coyote?
The Goldberg Variation
Scully: You ok, Mulder!?
The Goldberg Variation
Scully: So here's the plan as I see it. We inform the Chicago Field Office about Weems, leaving it to them to secure his testimony. You change your clothes. We fly back to D.C. by sunset and all is right with the world.
The Goldberg Variation