TITLE: Thaw AUTHOR: Horatio SUMMARY: Scully copes with loss and a new partner. RATING: G SPOILERS: General season 8. This story disregards spoilers for the second half of the season. CLASSIFICATION: Scully, Doggett ARCHIVE: Just let me know. DISCLAIMER: Characters from the X-Files are the property of TenThirteen Productions and the Fox Television Network. No infringement is intended, and no money is being made from this endeavor. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Many thanks to Pamala, Peg, and Ally for their help and support. NOTES: My first fanfic. You've been warned! And if 1013 can ignore Scully's pregnancy, so can I. FEEDBACK: Horatio1013@aol.com THAW by Horatio She watched him. When he was bent over a report at his desk, or standing at the file cabinet, or driving the car, or dozing in the airline seat next to her - she watched him. Quick, slidelong glances, so he wouldn't know. At first Dana Scully watched him for what he might be. A traitor. A spy. Another Krycek. Years of lies and deceit had made suspicion her bedfellow, so she kept a careful eye on him at the beginning, waiting for him to make a misstep, to give away his real agenda. She watched, and waited. But John Doggett revealed no hidden agenda, no ulterior motives. Instead, he held her when she wept. He tracked her to the middle of nowhere, and saved her life. He asked for her help when he needed it, and gave it when she was too proud to ask. He never invaded her privacy. He fought the fight and did the work. All John Doggett revealed was a basic honesty and integrity. It had surprised her. So she stopped watching him for what he might be, and instead watched him for what he wasn't. Feeling a deep, almost primal offense, Scully watched and cataloged all the things he was not. His hair wasn't dark. His eyes weren't hazel. He wasn't lithe and graceful. His lips weren't full. He didn't have an eidetic memory. He had no mole on his cheek. He wore his watch on the wrong hand. The way he stood, the way he sat, the way he walked, the way he talked, the way he breathed for God's sake - all of it, every inch of him, every molecule, wasn't *him*. Wasn't Mulder. She watched his not-Mulderness with an intensity that grew almost obsessive, with a pain that became torment. Sometimes, out of the corner of her eye, Scully would catch the movement of his man's body and for a jarring microsecond she would forget. She would think it was *him*. And then she would focus on the sandy hair, the chiseled features, the blue irises, and her eyes would burn with salty pain. She prayed frequently. *Please, God. Help me endure this. Please.* After more time, the pain that had become torment faded to a dull ache, and Scully stopped watching John Doggett at all. She became accustomed to his differentness, until he merged into the familiar. Like the file cabinet. Just furniture. One didn't watch furniture. Eventually, time stretched into an eternity of despair, and hope receded down the strand of her soul. The dull ache shriveled to a hard, icy nugget deep in her heart, a place that she knew would never feel warm again. And every day Scully rose heavily from her bed, dressed mechanically, and went to work. Walked down that basement corridor. Sat at *his* desk. Wrote reports, performed autopsies, boarded airplanes, rented cars, solved cases. Life goes on, she thought; a truism that alternately infuriated and comforted her. And through it all, through the torment that became an ache that became a wintry core, through the relentless trudge of the earth around the sun, John Doggett was there. And one day Scully found herself watching him again. Not for what he might be. Not for what he wasn't. Now, she watched him for what he was. It was as though one morning she had awakened, walked through the door, and discovered him there: a completely new being, someone she had never noticed before. She watched the flinty planes of his face. She watched the lines deepen on his forehead as he puzzled out a problem, or his jaw tighten when she advanced a paranormal explanation. Watched him blink, slowly, when he processed an unexpected fact. She watched his languid slouch as he leaned against a doorway, and the power of his body as he ran down a suspect. Watched the piercing intensity in the clear, blue depths of his eyes. And watched the compassion there, too, as he met the suffering in hers. She was watching him this morning as he studied case notes at his desk. His hand running through the light-brown hair. His tie loosened, his Adam's apple bobbing as he swallowed. The deep furrows on his brow. The golden hairs on his arms where his sleeves were rolled up. When John Doggett looked up and saw her watching him, he smiled. And to her great surprise, Dana Scully smiled back. End.