SCULLY: I hope you know what you're getting us into, Mulder.
MULDER: I'm pretty sure of what we're gonna find.
SCULLY: This isn't exactly in my job description.
MULDER: And the next thing you know, they'll be doing it on MTV Sports.
WILLA AMBROSE: Okay. The elephant's cavity is clear. I'm ready for you.(Scully climbs down the scaffold to join her.)
WILLA AMBROSE: The knife's right down there.
SCULLY: Okay.
MULDER: I've been told there's never been a successful pregnancy at the Fairfield Zoo.
WILLA AMBROSE: Sounds like you've been talking to Kyle Lang.
MULDER: Well, is it true?
WILLA AMBROSE: Yes. But I don't think for the reasons Kyle claims - not because Ed Meecham has done anything to these animals.
MULDER: Why then?
WILLA AMBROSE: Because bringing a pregnancy to term in captivity is always difficult.
MULDER: But a perfect failure rate?
WILLA AMBROSE: I know. It's one of the things I was determined to change when I came to the zoo.
MULDER: Was an attempt ever made to mate Ganesha?
WILLA AMBROSE: No. Mating an elephant out of the wild is rarely successful. There have only been six elephants born in captivity over the last ten years.
WILLA AMBROSE: Here's the uterine tissue, but I'm still not clear on what you expect to find.
SCULLY: You're right, Mulder. The signs in the uterus and ovaries are unmistakable.
WILLA AMBROSE: So what did you find?
SCULLY: This animal had been pregnant.
WILLA AMBROSE: What are you talking about?
SCULLY: There's evidence of hyperplasia and the corpus luteum isruptured.
WILLA AMBROSE: That's not possible.
MULDER: Neither is an invisible elephant.