From: raenright@aol.com (RaEnright)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Not In Vain 1/2
Date: 4 May 1995 20:16:43 -0400

	All characters and everything else copyright 1995 Chris Carter and
TenThirteen inc or whatever...this story, however, is mine(right, what am
I gonna do, sue someone?) The Winchester Mystery House actually exists,
name and the rest used without permission(free publicity!) the clip Scully
reads is taken from a flyer for the Mystery House, if any of you want to
visit it it's in San Jose, CA...I recommend it if you're in the area, it's
really cool...
	Plot: Investigation of two rather odd murders in a supposedly
haunted house. (it's more interesting than it sounds.)
	I'd like to state here and now before someone says I'm racist that
I mean no slander or racism against any Native American tribe; I don't
want to hurt anyone's feelings(I know how it is; I'm part Cherokee). This
is a *fictional* story. The Sac and Fox tribes, who were generally
regarded as one, were actually slaughtered about fifty years before the
Winchester rifle was invented; I couldn't resist using the name, with Fox
Mulder and all...well...If you don't like it, mail me and I'll change it
to some fictional tribe on a repost. For this reason I'm not posting the
second part yet so if I get in trouble I won't have posted both parts and
doubled my trouble(Pun?). When I post part two, I'll repost one, as well.
	 I apologize.
 
Not In Vain part 1
	"I swear, Mulder, sometimes I think these cases make us a little
too close for comfort." Scully complained, rubbing sleep from her eyes.
Mulder looked up from his sandwich. "Ooreely?" He asked with his mouth
full. He swallowed. "How is that?"
	"My neighbors begin to talk when they see a spooky looking man
skulking around my door at all hours."
	"I wasn't skulking. I was...inspecting. And we couldn't have the
neighbors talking, could we?" He put on a horrified expression. She turned
her best disapproving look on him. "So what's going on?"
	"I got a tip, and I'm leaving on a case *right now*, and I figured
I'd give you a chance to come along. Flight for California leaves in an
hour. Need a few minutes to pack?"
	She was hooked. "Yeah, hang on a minute." She went back into the
bedroom and got out her dufflebag. Mulder slumped into a chair in her
dining room. He gulped the last of his breakfast (Peanut-butter) and
pulled a pamphlet out of his pocket. *Visit the Winchester Mystery House!*
the text read. Scully emerged, dressed, from her bedroom, semi-awake and
ready to go.
	In the car he handed her the flyer. "The Winchester Mystery House?
Mulder, you've got to be kidding."
	"That's just the ad. Read this." Keeping his eyes on the road, he
pulled a file folder out of his bag. She flipped through it. 
	"Two murders in the last week, both security guards. Note the
unusual body positions." he pointed to the crime scene photos. The bodies
were flat on their backs, impaled on what looked to be stakes of some
sort. The each held an antique rifle in their hands. She snorted. "So some
loony took advantage of the local tourist trap to get attention. Why are
we interested?"
	"Because the Winchester Mystery house is more than just a tourist
trap. Read the flyer." Scully skimmed it.
	"In 1884 a wealthy widow named Sarah Winchester began a
construction project of such magnitude...tour 110 of the 160 rooms...look
for the bizarre phenomena that gave the house it's name: A window built
into the floor, staircases leading to nowhere...learn of her obsession
with the number thirteen...It is believed that after the untimely death of
her baby daughter and husband, the inventor of the Winchester rifle(the
gun that won the west) she was convinced by a carnival medium that
continuous building would appease the spirits that haunted her and give
her eternal life...Certainly her 20 million dollar inheritance helped her
to achieve her goal...This is crazy. She was an insane old woman."
	"But the rifles killed all those people..." 
	"So what's your point? That the ghosts that haunted Sarah
Winchester are back after fifty years, and are killing security guards?"
Scully asked, sarcastically.
	"I don't know yet. But the autopsy on Matthew Guston-he's the
first murder-could determine no clear cause of death other than the arrow,
which shouldn't have killed him. Technically, neither of them should be
dead. No excessive blood loss, no drugs or poisons in the toxicological."
	"And these 'arrows'?"
	"Made to resemble The Sac-Fox Native American design." He grinned
at the look on her face. "Not a word, Scully."
	"Who me? Am *I* the one who found this case?"
	"I see that look. Anyway, they're one of the tribes that were all
but wiped out using *Winchester* rifles-the kind the dead men are
holding."
	"I still say it's a local kook who's using this as an excuse to
kill people." The car pulled into the parking lot and up to the elevator
as Mulder cut the power. Scully took her bag and climbed out. The airport
was quiet in the early morning; they were catching the redeye four am
flight. She sat down on the bench near the gate, Mulder next to her. He'd
traded in his usual suit and black overcoat for jeans and a tee, and a
short leather jacket. He looked great.
	*It's too early in the morning to be thinking about that.* She
went back to the paperwork in the folder. They were working on identifying
the serial numbers on the rifles; they hadn't even found them yet. It was
like they just appeared out of nowhere. *Now who sounds crazy?* Scully
wondered. 
	The plane pulled up and boarding began. Mulder took the aisle
seat-he'd need to get up more than Scully. She smiled at him, he already
looked so pale. He pulled out a walkman and put on the headphones,
pressing the play button.
	"Agh!" 'Shades Of Gray' pounded in his ears, leaving them ringing.
He ripped off the headphones, reminding himself to check the volume
control next time. Scully was trying not to laugh next to him. He was just
like a little kid. *A little kid who chases ghosties and packs a gun.*
Sobering thought.
	The plane began takeoff and he leaned back, concentrating on
keeping that sandwich where it belonged.
******************************************************************
	Mulder was sure he'd never been more lost in his life, and he
suspected Scully felt the same way. After renting a car at San Jose
airport, they set out for the House. It was only Seven am, California
time, but the manager was waiting for them at the door. After being led
through a back door, around endless twists and turns, through three trick
doors, and up stairs that doubled back on themselves three or four times,
they arrived at the sight of the first murder-appropriately called the
Seance Room by the tour guides. The manager seemed eager to answer their
questions; No, the guards had no history of mental problems-well yes, just
about all the guards had seen something at one time or another, that was
part of the Mystery house; No, no intruders had been seen on that night;
They had no security cameras, they weren't a jewelry shop, after all.
Here, here was a map of the house so they could find the other murder
sight, she had to be going, if there was any trouble just pick up an
intercom and call.
	She showed them the locked cabinets in the room, the only way in
or out was through the door in and the secret trap door, for which she
personally had the key; very well, here was the only spare, but they
mustn't lose it.
	She left, finally, climbing out the trick door she had just shown
them. Mulder bent down to examine the lock on one of the shelf doors.
"Scully, take a look at this." He tugged outward at the lock and one side,
carefully filed through, opened up. “It seems as if security is a little
softer than they'd like us to believe.” He yanked the lock off the door
and it swung outwards.
	"Looks like *your* closet, Mulder." Scully cracked.
	"Thanks." He viewed the pile of candles, bags of home rolled
cigarettes, and Playboy magazines with grim amusement. He used his shirt
to pick up one of the magazines, slipping it into an evidence folder to be
tested for fingerprints. "I suspect that someone's been using this as a
rec room. Maybe your local kook, Scully." The light went out of his eyes;
Scully was probably right, but still...
	"Anther theory shot down by reality, Mulder?"
	"Why be a realist? Fantasy is so much more fun." He grinned.
******************************************************************
	They examined the other room, Sarah Winchester's bedroom, still
furnished for display. No secret caches in there, not even a single
candle, although Mulder commented on the delicious-looking wax fruit on
her bed tray. He was starving. It took them twenty minutes to find a way
out; Scully thought she'd go insane if they had to stay there much longer,
wandering around without a clue. It didn't help that half the time Mulder
had the map upside down.
	He really was trying to make amends. As the car pulled out onto
the street he asked her, "Where to?"
	She looked out the window for a few minutes, watching three
perfectly good greasy-spoons go by. Finally she pointed. "There." The
restaurant had a large painted salad hanging over he door. "Come on,
Scully. Veggies?"
	"Yeah, Mr. Nutrition. Got a problem?"
	"No, ma'am. None at all." *Never with you...*
	"All right, then, let's eat."
	After lunch they stopped at the police station to drop off the
magazine for analysis. The officer on duty chuckled. "This might take the
lab boys some time. Not every day they get to work on something like
this."
	"Call us when you know." Scully cut him off. Mulder winked at his
partner's stiffness as they left the station. Scully turned to him.
"Mulder, you know that there's a huge chance that the prints won't be on
record."
	"Yup, which is why we take the next logical step."
	"And that is?"
	He pulled a sideways smile at her. "Stakeout."
******************************************************************
	His neck ached; he tried not to think about what he could be doing
right now, at home, in his apartment...He was tucked in the shadows of the
Seance room, knees under his chin. It was nine o'clock, and he wondered if
Scully was trying as hard as he was to stay awake.
	*Scully* ooh, not a good topic to be on. He didn't know what it
was; but he wished she knew the chaos she was making of his love life. His
last three dates had all been redheads...
	A click at the door pulled him back to reality. He stood silently
and picked up his gun.
	"Dude, man, that was great!"
	"Thanks. The guy's on a trip. I'm getting better with the picks,
too." Three or four teenage kids entered the room, laughing and joking.
Mulder inched towards the door as they set up the candles in the circle
drawn on the floor.
	He slammed the door, bringing his gun up. "Freeze! Federal Agent.
Hands against the wall! Now!" They stared at him openmouthed. He motioned
for them to do what he ordered. They complied, still shocked. One of them
started swearing as Mulder reached for an intercom to call Scully.
*****************************************************************
	The guard on duty had been drugged, a sleeping pill or four put in
his soup before he ate it. The kids were sneaky, but not sneaky enough.
They never considered that since the murders security might have tightened
a bit...The prints of the kids matched those on the magazine; what a
surprise, but no prints of any kind could be matched to the guns or those
damn arrows...
	Mulder didn't believe the kids did it; he didn't think they had
the guts or the desire to kill a man, however morally lacking they were
otherwise. They would interrogate them later this morning.
	A strong smell caught him; he looked down just in time to save the
bacon from burning. Swearing to himself, he took the pan off the heat and
began to pick out the rapidly blackening strips of meat. Scully, wrapped
in a huge robe, stood in the doorway, blinking.
	"I thought I smelled something. What happened?"
	"I stocked up while you were setting up the stakeout. You might
say I brought home the bacon." Scully groaned. "I might, but the pun
patrol might arrest me. I don't suppose you got anything halfway healthy?"
She began to snoop around the kitchenette that connected the two motel
rooms. 
	"Dr. Scully, I am insulted! I cooked some scrambled eggs for you.
I even used those low fat egg imitation things." His tone went from
injured to wheedling. She dropped her stern pose. "Oh, uh...thanks,
Mulder. I guess I've finally got you trained." 
	He chuckled inwardly, happy to have gotten a rise out of her.
******************************************************************
	Scully rubbed her forehead and stood up. "Thank you, Mr. Sym.
We'll call you if we need to ask your son anything else." Mulder stood
too, taking her silent cue.
	They'd spent the day interrogating the kids who had been involved
in the break-in. They had to visit their houses; the kids were under house
arrest. Most of the time they had to deal with hysterical parents who
didn't know how their son/daughter had been involved in such a thing, and
why was the FBI interested, their child certainly hadn't *killed* anyone.
It was a royal pain.
	"One more to go." she muttered as they climbed into the car.
	"And no evidence they killed anyone. They weren't even there on
the night those men were killed."
	"So they say, but there's this thing, it's called a lie-"
	"Funny, Scully. Who's the last one on the list?"
	"Kit Jordan. She was the one who picked the lock and let them in."
	At the Jordan household they encountered another frightened teen,
who twisted a tissue nervously as she sat next to her parents. 
	"We'd just like to ask a few questions. If you can help us,
there's a possibility that the worst you'll get is a fine for what you
did." Scully gave her a sympathetic smile.
	The girl gulped and nodded.
	"Were you in the Winchester Mansion on May 5th, the night Matthew
Guston, the first security guard, was killed?"
	"No."
	"All right. Were you in the Mansion on the night of May 10th, when
Aaron Jackson, the second security guard, was killed?"
	"No."
	"So you were not present in or around the Mansion at the time of
either murder?"
	"No. I was at the movies..."
	"Yes, we've talked to the others in you group, they all provide an
alibi. Is there anything you can tell us about the murders? Did you see
anything unusual?"
	"Um...no."
	"You're sure? Very well then." Mulder was tired of this; he stood
to leave.
	"Uh, wait...there is something." She looked down reluctantly.
	Scully jumped on the lead. "Yes?"
	The girl squirmed. "I'm not supposed to tell you...but the night
before the first murder...we were in the Mansion, and we decided to have a
seance..."
	Mulder sat down again. "A seance?"
	"Well, Alex suggested it-it was the seance *room*, so we set up
some candles and..." she trailed off. Scully leaned forward. "And..."
	"Something-happened. We saw something, just for a minute..."
	"What did you see?"
	"We saw an Indian."
******************************************************************
	"Isn't it proof enough for you? Their seance must have called back
the ghosts, of whatever they are, and they started killing people. Just
like Mrs. Winchester believed-when building on the house stopped, the
spirits came back and started killing."
	"Mulder, that is the most ridiculous idea...so one of them got
hysterical and said they saw an Indian, and from there you jump to ghosts.
Really, you're losing it." 
	"I'm going back there tonight and I'm going to wait for whatever
it is. You can come with me, or you can stay here and watch pay-per-view.
It's your choice."
	"You know damn well I'm not going to let you go in there alone
with a psychotic killer on the loose." Scully cursed herself for going
along with his crazy plan, but what could it hurt? Maybe they'd catch this
guy...
	"Great. I'm going to stakeout the seance room again. You want to
take the bedroom?"
	"Why not. But what about the security guard?"
	"What about him?"


===========================================================================
From: raenright@aol.com (RaEnright)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Not In Vain 2/2
Date: 7 May 1995 15:28:43 -0400

  
	All characters and everything else copyright 1995 Chris Carter and
TenThirteen inc or whatever...this story, however, is mine(right, what am
I gonna do, sue someone?) The Winchester Mystery House actually exists,
name and the rest used without permission(free publicity!)if any of you
want to visit it it's in San Jose, CA...I recommend it, it's really
cool...
	Plot: Investigation of two rather odd murders in a supposedly
haunted house. (it's more interesting than it sounds.)so far they've
encountered a gang of teens breaking in but they aren't *really* suspect.
You kinda need to have some knowledge of the Winchester Mystery house, or
have read the first part.
	I put this disclaimer on the first part but I'm not gonna take any
chances...
	I'd like to state here and now before someone says I'm racist that
I mean no slander or racism against any native american tribe; I don't
want to hurt anyone's feelings. This is a fictional story! If you don't
like it, mail me and I'll change it to some fictional tribe on a repost.

Not In Vain part 2
	Mulder had no fear of the unknown. He had looked death in the face
hundreds of times and managed to stay sane. So sitting on the floor of a
seance room where four witnesses testified to seeing a Native American
spirit, and where a man had been killed, didn't frighten him as much as it
should have. 
	Scully didn't believe in spirits-but she did believe in flesh and
blood killers, one of whom she suspected was prowling around right now.
She crouched in the corner of a crazy old woman's bedroom and watched the
shadow on the walls shift. 
	Neither of them considered themselves in as much danger as they
should have.
*****************************************************************
 	It was ten o'clock and Mulder was asleep. He hadn't meant to fall
asleep; but he was so tired...he jerked himself awake for the fourth time,
and wondered about the logic of what he was doing.
	Something creaked outside...and there was a whoosh as something
passed his door. He stood up and opened the door, looking out to see if it
was Scully. Light footsteps retreated into the distance. He took his gun
out of it's holster and followed the slight sound.
	Scully looked up. One of the shadows had started to move in a very
defined pattern. She could see *something* slipping past her. She waited
until the door had opened and slowly crept after it. It was leading
towards a study...furnished like the cabin of a ship, complete with
circular windows and plush walls. One of the oddities of the house. Her
gun in her hand, she lingered in the doorway, inspecting the room.
Something came at her-she let off one round from her gun, then another. A
face, dark hair and a bare chest, with a large wooden bow in his hand, she
lashed out with her gun, using it as a club of sorts- but she wasn't
holding a handgun anymore, she was holding an antique rifle-
	Mulder followed the footsteps, down the stairs to the den that had
been furnished as a cabin. He swore later that he never heard gunshots,
never saw Scully in the room. Something jumped out at him from behind a
desk, he never noticed it until...the room faded, and he was standing in a
field, surrounded by smoke. He held a gun in his hands, an antique rifle.
He was dressed in some sort of uniform, military, maybe...and he was
seated on a horse? On instinct he spurred it to a run, following others on
foot, dressed the same, like a flood pouring down onto a beach made out of
sun-darkened bodies, all who carried quivers of arrows on their backs, a
few who carried guns...a man fell next to him, clutching an arrow embedded
in his side. He urged his mount on, trying to clear his head-this was a
battle, and those were Indians, and he was a soldier, and he hated
them...but who was he? No more Mulder, he was a captain, under General
Custer, responsible for these men, Jake Armstrong, and if he fell, they
would be lost.
	A sharp pain in his leg, he looked down to see a large arrow
embedded in his thigh. He hit the dirt, his mount running in terror.
	"Captain Armstrong! Are you all right? Captain!" a man in faded
blue yelled. He gritted his teeth against the pain.
	"I'm fine, lieutenant. Keep moving! I'll survive."
	The man ran up to him...a woman? Since when did women wear blues
and fight the Indians? But he knew her, she was...
	"Scully?"
	Her eyes unfocused for a minute. He remembered something... "And
I'm...Mulder. Jesus, what's going on?"
	Scully busied herself with his wound. "Sir, you're delirious.
I'm...I'm a lieutenant. George Mitchell, right?" He could see the
uncertainty in her eyes. Then a loud crack, and a shock to her lower
shoulder, blood oozing out- she collapsed on him in pain-no, she couldn't
die...*This is not my reality, this was not my doing. You cannot blame me
or her for the injustice done to your race...* Injustice! That was it, the
keyword. 
	A man appeared from nowhere, next to him. This man wore the blood
streaking down his bare chest like a medal. He spoke calmly, distinctly.
	"You are a warrior, and for that I cannot blame you."
Mulder/Armstrong stared up at him, as the gunshots snapped around him.
Screams of men, and women and children too, rang in his ears. He lay on
the blood soaked field, cradling an unconscious soldier in his arms. The
man continued. "Injustice is done, and even if you are the only ones who
have realized it, then our efforts have not been in vain." He gestured to
the wound in Scully/Mitchell's chest."The woman is a warrior! I have never
seen her strength in one like her before. You are two who will fight until
you die, as we have done to protect ourselves and our freedom; It has not
been in vain. Not in vain." The scene began to fade, and darken, and then
to disappear entirely. Mulder held tight to Scully as the world went dark.
****************************************************************
	He was lying on soft carpet-his leg wouldn't move. Scully was
cradled in his arms, her back on his stomach. The blood was staining her
blouse...but the memory of the vision was fading-he held onto it, and the
memory of the man...
	Scully stirred, and cried softly in pain. Mulder sat up, gently
shifting her to the floor. "No, don't move. You're hurt. Stay there." He
pulled himself up with the desk next to him, biting his lip in pain. The
intercom was just a few feet away...he managed to lift it and call the
guard on duty before he slumped back down to the floor next to her,
holding the stump of broken wood that was all that was left from the arrow
in his leg. His pants were torn and bloody; Scully's shoulder was only
punctured in one place, which he hoped was a good sign. She had to
survive-
	The pain claimed him and he passed out.
	Waking in a hospital room, he lifted his head, trying to remember
what he'd done *this* time, and what Scully had to tease him about now.
But she was in the bed next to him, still asleep. He closed his eyes again
for a minute, and the memory came back, his leg still wouldn't move, but
at least he knew it was there. 
	A nurse came in, checking his chart before she realized he was
awake.
	"Good morning, Mr. Mulder. Feeling better?"
	"Compared to what?" he asked, grimacing.
	"Compared to having your leg impaled with a stone arrowhead and
fractured in two places?"
	"Then yes, I fell better now. Will Agent Scully be all right?"
	"Prognosis is good. She was injured considerably more seriously
than you. The doctors say if it had been one inch closer to her
lungs...well, it wasn't. What happened to you, anyway? I mean, if it's not
private..."
	"I'm not sure I know yet. Why can't I move my leg?"
	"It's splinted. You'll be strictly limited for a while, but it
should heal up as good as new in a few months."
	Mulder sighed and sank back down onto his pillow.
******************************************************************
	Scully sat in the hospital bed, working on her laptop. Mulder was
trying to sleep in the bed next to her; she had a feeling the clicking
from the keyboard was keeping him awake. Finally he rolled over and glared
at her.
	"Can't sleep?" She asked innocently.
	"Not that you'd notice or anything. What's so important it can't
wait?"
	"I'm just closing up the case." She smiled. He slid out of the bed
and carefully hobbled over on crutches to stand next to her, hands on
hips, glaring down. She shut down the program and closed the machine.
	"Much better. Now I won't have to hurt you."
	"What would you do, beat me with your cane?"
	"Haven't got one. It's crutches for me, I guess."
	She smiled, ready to surprise him. "Oh, that reminds me...I got
you something."
	He grimaced. "If it's an arrowhead I'm going to use it to kill
you."
	"No, better." She reached down the other side of the bed and
pulled out a long package wrapped in tissue paper. "To help you get out
more."
	The paper fell away as Mulder picked up the intricately carved
walking stick. It came up to his hip...perfect as a cane. 
	 "Scully...It's great! And here I thought you didn't care." He
grinned, testing it out. It was carved all over with intricate symbols,
and pictures of men fighting. 
	"I got it from a friend. But I'm glad you like it." She grinned.
The little boy was back, happy to have gotten a new toy. His eyes lit up.
"And I only got you something small." He reached under his pillow. Scully
hadn't expected him to get her anything; it wasn't as if this case was
anything special. He must have caught on that she was going to get him
something...
	He pulled out a flat box, about the size of a book. "The nurses
told me that you'd ordered something, so I decided to get even." He handed
her the box gently. She pulled the lid off, expecting some outrageous gag
gift. Instead a dream-catcher lay on the tissue, sparkling in the light
from the hospital lamp.
	"Oh..."
	"To help with your nightmares." He smiled and swing the stick,
chaplin style. She hung the small circle up on the wall extension, between
the two beds.
	"G'night, Scully." He switched off the light.
	"'Night, Mulder."
******************************************************************
May 18, 1995
	<<There have been no new murders at the Winchester Mystery house
since the last murder, that of the man Aaron Jackson. The house has been
opened to the public again and is doing a thriving business.
	The four teenagers involved in the case have been cleared of any
wrongdoing involving the murders; they have been fined and received a
citation for breaking and entering.
	The events on the night of May 14 remain a mystery to both myself
and Agent Mulder. Though we both claim to have experienced some sort of
hallucination, there is no logical way to explain the arrow embedded in
his thigh and the antique bullet in my shoulder, or the multiple fractures
to his right leg. Agent Mulder claims to have conversed with the man in
charge of the killings, but this cannot be confirmed. It is still to be
seen if the spirits he claims to have encountered are, in fact, real. The
two rifles found next to us on the floor of the den confirm Agent Mulder's
beliefs-I have no rationalization for them.
	 Though I do not believe that we were attacked by Sac-Fox tribal
warriors and fought in a battle that took place over a hundred years ago,
I have no explanation for the wounds we received, or the lingering and
almost overpowering smell of gunpowder in the den of the mansion, that
could not possibly have been caused by two rounds fired from a standard
issue FBI handgun. The case remains open.>>
			end report
End
____________________________________________________________
-We are all connected in a web...what we do to the web we do to
ourselves.-
			Chief Seattle(Um...used without permission?)

So, whatcha think? I hope I didn't offend anyone out there(bite lip, smile
tentatively). Mail me with comments!


