Title: Interregnum VII: Lacerations
Author: Horatio
E-mail: Horatio1013@aol.com
Summary: Scully and Doggett discover that some wounds
require more than stitches to heal.
Rating: PG-13 (for language)
Category: S/D friendship
Spoilers: General season 8 through the beginning of
Deadalive. Takes place about a week after Mulder's funeral.
Archive: Fine with me! Just let me know so I can visit.
Disclaimer: Characters from the X-Files are the property of
Ten-Thirteen Productions and the Fox Television Network. No
infringement is intended, and no money is being made from
this endeavor.
Notes: This story is part of a loosely-knit series of
Doggett/Scully stories that take place in a slightly
altered season 8 emotional landscape. While each stands
alone for the most part, the stories make most sense if
they are read in order, although this one is quite
comprehensible on its own. The other stories can be found
at http://www.oocities.org/horatio_fic/.
Thanks to Meg for her assistance with D.C. landmarks.
INTERREGNUM VII:
LACERATIONS (1/2)
John Doggett applied the razor in one last stroke to the
curve of his chin, then rinsed the lather off and replaced
the razor in the shaving mug. Patting on the aftershave, he
leaned in to examine his reflection.
"You're gettin' old," he accused the man in the mirror, as
he noticed new lines on the forehead and around the mouth.
"Old and tired." Too much death will do that to you, he
thought grimly.
As he dried his hands, he stopped to inspect the cuts that
criss-crossed the back of his left hand. They were healing
well, though there would probably be scarring. Doggett
rubbed the scabs absent-mindedly, remembering his first day
back at work after the funeral, when he was sporting
bandages. He had gone up to the bullpen for coffee, and
Agent Dolan had asked him, to the laughter of his
companions, "What'd you do, John? Dig Spooky's grave with
your bare hands?"
Doggett pinned the other agent with a glare until the smirk
evaporated from the man's face. "No, Jerry," he said
quietly. "I got this from beatin' good manners into
assholes like you."
He snorted at the memory as he knotted his tie.
Downstairs, he pushed the button on the coffee machine and
it began to gurgle softly. After all, he continued the
thought, that incident was only the latest in a long line
of alienating encounters with his old buddies in the
Bureau. While the other agents talked of nabbing serial
killers, he would imagine describing his own work.
"Oh, not much happenin'," he could hear himself saying.
"Several reported alien abductions, a guy with X-ray
vision, a man who was part bat, and a 200-year-old Indian
who ate my death. Just the usual stuff."
No, he hadn't talked to his old pals much since he'd been
assigned to the X-files.
The coffee machine having quieted, he reached up to the
cabinet for a cup. As he opened the cupboard door he
grimaced at the long, splintered gash running up the
middle. Jesus, John, why don't you fix the damn thing? Just
go to Home Depot and get a new fucking door, for crying out
loud.
"Yeah, yeah," Doggett muttered to the voice in his head,
and poured his coffee.
He spread the Post out on the counter and skimmed the day's
headlines. By page 3 his attention had begun to wander from
presidential politics and Mideast bombings to the dawn
light that was brightening the red faux-brick kitchen
floor. The burnished glow reminded him of a certain color
of hair when the sun touched it. . . He sipped his coffee.
I wonder how she's doing at her mother's, he mused. I
wonder when she'll be back.
"If she'll be back," he said aloud. Maybe she would ask
for a less stressful assignment. He wouldn't blame her if
she did.
What will it be like if she does return? Will his presence
in Mulder's office now be a daily affront, a continual
reminder of her loss? Will she resent him, John Doggett,
simply for being alive?
He wouldn't blame her for that either.
Doggett lowered his head to his hands and rubbed his face
wearily. Jesus H. Christ, what a hellhole they had fallen
into.
Then he took a deep breath and, tucking the paper under his
arm, headed out for another day alone in the basement.
* * * *
"I can do this."
Dana Scully spoke with quiet determination to the face in
the bathroom mirror. As she smoothed a stray hair and
moistened lips lightly glossed, she remembered a similar
morning several months ago. Then, she had faced the mirror
with dripping hair and an unadorned face, suddenly stripped
of her beloved companion, bereft and completely alone in
the world. She had rested her weight on her arms,
momentarily paralyzed.
The person who looked back at her this morning was a
different woman. Now solitude was her permanent state.
Being at her mother's had only served to throw that fact
into sharper relief. Scully closed her eyes, remembering
the claustrophobia that had irrationally pressed in on her
at her mother's house. Yes, she ached with grief, and yes,
she faced a difficult road ahead as a single mother. But
she was strong. She had become used to being alone. These
past three months had taught her how to cope.
Scully had thanked her mother profusely for her help,
packed her bag, and hurried home.
She opened her eyes again and appraised the woman who had
learned to cope, who had become used to living with loss.
I've been grieving for months, she thought. That should
make it easier now.
From the medicine cabinet she took out a vitamin pill and
swallowed it. Closing the door again, Scully gave her
reflection one last look and straightened the collar of her
crisp white blouse. "I can do this," she repeated.
Then she said a silent prayer, picked up her jacket from
the bed and her keys from the dresser, and set forth to
work. His work. Her work now.
* * * *
A short time later she stood before the bulletin board in
the basement office, pleased at her self-control. Her eyes
remained reassuringly dry. I *can* do this, she affirmed
silently.
She had entered the empty office this morning unsure just
what her reactions would be. Her emotions these days,
already unpredictable from the pregnancy hormones, had
become insidious in the manner with which they sometimes
ambushed her. Two days ago, on her first visit to Mulder's
apartment since the funeral--just to survey the task ahead
of her, she had told herself, nothing more--she had been
impressed by her composure as she assessed the contents of
closets, drawers, cupboards. It had been painful, but she
had made it through in one piece.
Until she saw the dead mollie floating in the tank.
The first thought that had rushed into her mind was: Mulder
will be so upset. The next thing she was aware of was the
sound of her own piteous weeping. And it had dragged on for
over an hour, leaving her weak and feeling ill.
But this morning her emotions were little different from
what they had been every morning for the past three months.
She remembered ruefully what she had told Agent Doggett--
oh, so long ago!--that this was her partner's office and
they would just be using it for a little while, thank you
very much.
A little while that was now forever.
Hearing the tell-tale sounds of someone approaching in the
hallway, she composed her features and turned around.
"Agent Scully!" exclaimed Doggett on opening the door. On
his face a smile of delight battled with a frown of
concern, and Scully found herself rooting for the smile.
She had seen so few of them lately, and his always had the
power to warm her sad heart.
The struggle ended in a draw, as his mouth settled into a
serious line while his eyes danced brightly.
Scully said evenly, "Good morning, Agent Doggett."
Her partner took in her appearance. She was dressed in a
dark, slimming suit that gracefully covered any swelling in
her abdomen. Not a hair was out of place, her makeup was
subtle and perfect. Her chin was high and her posture
ruler-straight. She looked, as always, the consummate
professional. . .except for the shadows under her eyes and
a disturbing gauntness in her face.
She hasn't been eating well, Doggett thought. Or sleeping.
"You're back sooner than I expected," was what he said. "I
thought you were at your mother's."
Scully fingered the desktop idly. "I left after a few days.
She was a great help, but a bit too, um. . ."
"Mothering?" he supplied.
She nodded. "Something like that."
Doggett tossed the newspaper onto his desk and sat down.
"But what you've been through. . .Are you sure you're up to
this?"
"I need to do something constructive, Agent Doggett,
something besides stare at the four walls." She paused.
"Something normal."
They looked at each other, suddenly aware of the absurdity
of her last statement.
Doggett chuckled softly. "I don't know about this bein'
normal. . ." He waved his hand around him. Then he went on
more seriously, "But I know what you mean. Sometimes work
is the best, what do you call it?" He chewed his lip,
trying to fetch the word from his memory.
"Analgesic?"
"If that means pain reliever, yeah." He looked at her
somberly. "On the other hand. . ."
Her eyebrows arched in question.
"You should take it easy. Don't try to do too much."
"I'm fine, really," she said. She caught his pointed look
but just as pointedly ignored it. "Well, then," she said
with artificial brightness, "do you want to bring me up to
speed on the current cases?"
Doggett rocked back in his chair and eyed her carefully.
"You're sure about this."
Her words were measured. "Yes. Agent Doggett. I'm sure."
He dropped his eyes to his desk, and Scully immediately
regretted her sharp tone. He was only thinking of her
welfare. What the hell was the matter with her?
Doggett ran his hand through his hair. Shit, she'd just
told him why she'd left her mother's. She didn't need
another hen clucking around her.
"All right," he said, and he began to fill her in on what
he'd been working on the past week. As he talked, she sat
down at Mulder's--now her--desk. She moved slowly and
deliberately, as though having to remind herself how it was
done.
Doggett concluded, "I'm gonna appreciate having your
expertise on a couple of these cases. The forensic data and
chemical analysis have me a bit stumped." He sifted through
the files on his desk and walked them over to Scully. "If
you wouldn't mind looking through these and tellin' me what
you think."
She took them, hefting their bulk in surprise. "You *have*
been busy."
Doggett smiled. "Not me; the labs. I think they ran every
test devised by man--or woman."
He returned to his desk, pleased with himself for finding
the perfect thing to occupy his partner's mind without
overtiring her: lots and lots of scientific data.
* * * *
The morning passed quietly. Papers rustled, Doggett's
keyboard kept up a gentle patter, and occasionally Scully
asked for a clarification, but otherwise little broke the
silence. As he worked, Doggett cast surreptitious glances
across the room, partly to keep an eye on his partner and
partly, he had to admit, just at the pleasure of seeing her
again. He had missed her.
The last time they'd had any contact was on the flight home
from Montana. He had ceded the aisle seat to Scully to
accommodate her numerous trips to the lavatory. Each time
she returned, the deer-caught-in-headlights look on her
face persisted despite apparent efforts to conceal it with
splashes of cold water.
As the flight wore on Doggett fell into a fretful semi-
doze, but he was shortly startled awake by the pressure of
her hand on his. He found Scully staring fixedly at the
seat-back in front of her and gripping his hand fiercely.
He turned his palm upward and returned the pressure, and
they had sat that way until her next trip forward.
She looked in decidedly better shape now, but he feared
what was under the veneer.
Partway through the morning he saw her staring, her mouth
slack, at the picture of Mulder's sister still propped on
the desk. Doggett sighed softly and looked away. Another
time he saw her lower her face and rub her forehead as
though she had a headache. Dammit, he thought, she
shouldn't be here.
Finally, his stomach rumbling, Doggett jumped at the
opportunity for relief. "Wanna grab some lunch, Agent
Scully?"
She looked up, startled. She had been staring at the same
page for a long time without comprehending it. She didn't
seem to be able to concentrate on anything for more than a
couple of minutes. "I'm not very hungry," she said.
He grabbed his jacket off the coat rack. "You gotta eat.
For two, y'know."
She gave him the ghost of a smile.
"C'mon," he urged. "Do us both good to get out of this
dungeon for a little while."
"You're very persistent, Agent Doggett," Scully observed.
He grinned. "I gotta live up to my name."
He was rewarded with a slight chuckle. "Lunch it is, then,"
she said.
* * * *
Scully took a bite of her sandwich and made a face.
"Sandwich no good?" asked Doggett.
"No, it's fine. I'm just getting tired of tuna fish. My
nutritionist seems to have an unreasonable predilection for
the food."
He tossed a bit of crust to the pigeons jostling near their
bench. "It's because of the protein."
She cocked her eyes his direction. Well, yes, she realized;
he'd had a pregnant wife once. As she thought about it, she
discovered that it wasn't difficult to imagine Doggett as a
husband and father. Much less difficult than imagining
Mulder. . . She forced down another bite of her sandwich.
Doggett glanced sideways and considered Scully's thin
figure. She needs all the protein she can get, he thought.
A warm gust sent a strand of hair across her mouth, and he
watched as she pulled it away with a perfectly manicured
fingernail. Then her hand went up and fingers raked through
her hair, and she gave her head a little shake. Doggett
realized he was staring, and a warmth was gathering below
his belt. He wrenched his gaze away. God almighty, John!
He concentrated on the dome of the Capitol in the distance,
and to cover his discomposure remarked, "I like to come
here. The mall, the trees. It's restful."
Scully said, "Mulder and I would sometimes come here if we
thought the office was bugged."
Doggett stiffened. Damn! How many other ways was he going
to remind her of what she'd lost? The thought made him
wonder, and not for the first time: What exactly had she
lost? A friend and a lover--this much he knew. The father
of her child? He thought so, but didn't know it for a fact.
Had they planned a future together? He didn't know that
either. What Doggett knew could fit on an aspirin tablet.
But he would never ask her, and he was as certain as he was
of anything on God's earth that she would never tell him.
Scully took a sip from her carton of milk and stared into
the distance. Why did she say that? She sensed Doggett's
discomfort and wanted to say, It's not your fault, you
didn't know. But the words would not come.
The awkward moment passed. Doggett popped the last bit of
ham and Swiss into his mouth and balled up the paper bag,
making a neat ringer in a nearby trash can. Scully's eyes
followed his movements.
"What happened to your hand?" she asked.
He cursed himself for practically waving it under her nose.
"Just a little accident doin' home repairs," he said.
She laid her half-eaten sandwich on the bench. "Let me
see," she said, reaching for his hand.
He began to pull it away, saying, "It's really nothin',"
but she took hold of it anyway.
"I noticed it this morning," she murmured. Examining the
repairs with professional interest, Dr. Scully observed
dryly, "This 'little accident' required stitches, Agent
Doggett."
"Just a few." Doggett watched her while she turned his hand
this way and that. Finally she let it go, and he shoved
both his hands into his pockets.
"You should be more careful," she said gently.
He shifted his eyes to look at her, and felt a different
kind of warmth inside him at the softness he saw in her
face. "Yeah," he agreed, "I should."
Scully wrapped her sandwich carefully and returned it to
the sack. "Shall we go back?"
"You're not finished," Doggett objected.
"I'll finish it later. I'm not very hungry now."
He didn't like it, but he kept silent. They stood, took a
few steps, and Scully stopped.
"Agent Scully?" Doggett said. The color had left her face,
and a sheen of perspiration appeared on her upper lip.
"Agent Scully!" He was alarmed now. "Are you okay?"
She waved a hand. "I just need a minute. I stood up too
fast."
But her pallor persisted, and Doggett said, "You need to
sit down."
"I'm fine, Agent Doggett."
"No, you're not. Sit down."
Scully looked at him in surprise and promptly sat back down
on the bench they had just vacated.
"Put your head down," he softly commanded her, resuming his
seat next to her.
She did as he said, and after a few moments, when she
raised her head again, her color had returned perceptibly.
"Morning sickness?" he asked.
She shook her head. "No. That stopped last month. I feel. .
..strange. Like lead."
"You've tired yourself out. You haven't been sleeping well,
have you?"
She ignored his question. "I think I'll be all right in a
bit."
Doggett considered. "I don't think so. I think you should
go home."
"Really, Agent Doggett, I don't--"
He cut off any further objections. "I'll take you home. Do
you think you can stand now?"
Scully rose unsteadily, supported by his hand on her elbow.
"I don't want to go back to the office," she said in a low
voice. "I don't want anyone to see--"
"We'll go right to the garage," he assured her. Slowly they
returned to the Hoover Building, Doggett holding firmly to
her arm all the way.
Scully was silent on the way home, her eyelids drooping
closed once or twice. At her apartment, Doggett took the
keys from her shaking hand and unlocked the door. He waited
while she stepped inside.
Scully stopped at the sofa and braced her hand on it for
support. "Agent Doggett?" she said in a voice so small it
made his heart lurch.
He was beside her in an instant. "Right here, Agent
Scully." His arm went around her waist, and he guided her
down the hallway and into her bedroom, where she
lowered herself in relief onto its softness.
"I don't understand what's happening," Scully murmured.
"You're probably just overtired. Do you want to call your
doctor?"
She shook her head.
Doggett helped her remove her jacket, and laid it on the
foot of the bed. "Here, lie down."
Again, she surprised herself at how willingly she obeyed
his gentle commands as she lay back on the pillows. Doggett
lifted her legs onto the bed and removed her pumps, her
nylon-clad feet warm and soft in his hands. He placed the
shoes neatly under the bed, then reached across and drew
the other half of the comforter over her.
"I didn't do anything to get this tired," came Scully's
puzzled voice.
Doggett tucked the quilt around her shoulders. "The
counselors will tell you it's the grieving process, Agent
Scully."
I knew this, Scully thought. So why did I forget? Is that
part of the grieving process, too? Forgetting everything
you learned?
Doggett was leaning over her, his face close enough that
she could see a scar on the bridge of his nose. Something
he'd said finally penetrated her poorly-functioning brain.
"You went to counseling?" she whispered, as though John
Doggett's doing such a thing was an unimaginable
phenomenon.
He nodded. "Captain's orders."
She shuffled her legs aside, making space. He looked over,
then back at her, then sat down on the edge of the bed.
Scully felt comforted by the pressure against her leg. It
reminded her of the firm pressure of Doggett's hand on the
flight home from Montana. She said, "The counseling was
when your son. . .?" but her voice trailed off.
"Yeah. I didn't want to go at first, but it probably
helped. At least it helps you realize you're not goin'
nuts. That a lot of the reactions are normal. Like the
fatigue."
Her eyes were half closed, so he was surprised when she
spoke again. "But you don't believe them, Agent Doggett?"
He peered at her, confused. "What?"
"That it's the grieving process."
"Oh. Yeah, I'm sure they're right, but I don't think that's
all it is." Her look asked him what more it was. Finally he
said, "It's death."
Scully's eyes bore into him intently. "Go on."
"It saps your energy, it drains your blood like a vampire."
His voice was rough and edged with anger. "It sneaks up on
you when you're not lookin' and whacks you over the head.
Sometimes I could hardly get out of bed in the morning, to
say nothing of puttin' in a full day's work."
She noticed that he had slid from the impersonal second
person to "I".
He went on, "I got to thinkin' of death as a perp out to
get me."
Scully could have smiled at the thought under different
circumstances.
"Somehow," he said, "thinking of it as a something, a
*someone*, made it easier to deal with. Because he just
kept hangin' around like some bully, taunting me. Like he
couldn't get enough. Like taking my son wasn't enough, he
had to sap the life out of me, too." His mouth made a
thin line, and his voice dropped to an almost inaudible
rumble. "Which half the time I wanted him to."
Scully sighed. "I know what you mean."
Doggett regarded the pale face on the pillows. "Anyway,
don't be surprised to get laid low like this."
Her lids were again drifting shut, fatigue pulling her
down, down.
"Sleep, Agent Scully," Doggett said softly, and he rose
from the bed.
"Agent Doggett?"
He turned back to her. "Yes?"
"How long did he hang around? Death."
He blinked, and thought. "I don't remember exactly. I just
remember that one day I woke up and told him to get the
fuck out of my life."
Her lips quivered but didn't quite form a smile. "I can see
you doing that."
Doggett leaned close to her again. "You will, too, I
promise. One day you'll be stronger than him."
"I thought I was strong enough now." She exhaled a breath
that seemed to come from the soles of her feet. "I've been
dealing with this for so long."
"You haven't been dealing with Death. It's a whole new ball
game, Agent Scully," he said sadly, and gave her shoulder a
squeeze.
Scully's eyes fluttered, and as she gave way to her fatigue
she thought, Maybe this isn't going to be easier after all.
Maybe I *can't* do this.
Doggett again smoothed the covers around her. "Rest today.
Your baby needs you to rest, too."
Scully's hand rustled under the quilt, and he had a strong
suspicion where it had alighted. "Thanks. . .Agent
Doggett," she said sleepily.
Her eyes drifted closed, and as Doggett watched her, a
weight pulled his shoulders down. Why her? Why the fuck did
fate have to pick on her?
He waited until her breathing settled into a regular
rhythm, then he silently let himself out.
* * * *
Two days later
"You're upset by what happened the other day, Dana. Why is
that?"
Scully pondered Karen Kosseff's question. The counselor had
been a refuge of guidance during other crises, and Scully
badly needed her help now. Her near-collapse had unnerved
her greatly, and after seeing her doctor and being declared
physically fit, she had made an appointment with the
therapist.
Scully said, "I lost my partner three months ago. I thought
I'd mourned long enough, that I was prepared for this
eventuality."
"You were very close to Agent Mulder." It wasn't a
question.
Scully dropped her eyes. Her voice was barely above a
whisper. "Yes."
Kosseff said, "There's no way to prepare for the death of a
loved one."
Scully felt her eyes filling, and willed the tears to
subside. "I just thought I would be able to cope better."
"You're a strong person," said Karen, "and feelings of
weakness are difficult to reconcile. The loss you've
suffered has made you feel extremely vulnerable."
Kosseff paused. "You mentioned that you were uncomfortable
at your mother's. Why do you think that is?"
Scully thought for a moment. "Because being there made me
feel like a child?"
"You felt weak?"
"Yes. My mother wanted to take care of me. She only wanted
to help, and I was grateful to her, but I needed to feel
like I could handle this on my own."
"Why do you think that is?"
Scully's brows drew together. It was a question she hadn't
asked herself. "Maybe I was afraid," she said, her voice
wavering. "Afraid that I would never be able to stand on my
own."
"Feelings of powerlessness following a death are very
common. Talking about your loss is a way to confront these
feelings. Have you been able to talk with your mother? Or
perhaps a friend?"
"The nature of the events surrounding Agent Mulder's death
were so unusual, and--" Scully's voice caught, but she
quickly recovered. "And violent, that it was hard for me to
talk about it with my mother. And my work hasn't left much
time for friendships." She looked down at her hands. Alone,
alone, alone.
Karen nodded. "Solitude can make the grieving process more
difficult to navigate. In your case it might be helpful to
share your stories with someone who was at the scene. Or
perhaps someone who has experienced a similar loss." The
woman waited a moment, then asked in her soft voice, "Do
you know anyone like that, Dana?"
Scully raised her head and just stared. Then she huffed
lightly.
* * * *
The weatherman on the 11 o'clock news pointed at a storm
system over the Atlantic, his mouth moving soundlessly on
the screen. Doggett put his book down on the sofa and
rubbed his eyes tiredly. He'd be needing glasses soon. He
recalled Agent Scully wearing glasses that morning as she
typed at the computer. He paused at that thought for a
moment, then heaved himself roughly off the sofa and headed
toward the kitchen. A soft knock arrested him.
The words tumbled out of his visitor's mouth before he even
got the door all the way open. "I'm sorry to bother you,
Agent Doggett. I hope I didn't wake you."
For a second he gaped at the coincidence of his thought and
Scully's appearance on his doorstep. "Agent Scully. No, I
was just reading, hopin' it would put me to sleep." Then he
remembered his manners. "Come on in. What are you doin' out
here this late?"
"I was driving," she answered distractedly. "And thinking.
I just needed to get out."
"Yeah, I understand that," he said. He understood how Death
could drive a person out of the house and into the night.
He motioned her to sit down. "Can I get you anything? Some
juice?"
She declined his offer, but he waved it away, saying, "I
was just gonna have a nightcap myself, so it's no bother.
Orange juice okay? I assume you don't want any alcohol."
"Orange juice is fine, Agent Doggett. And you assume
correctly."
Doggett switched off the TV on the way into the kitchen.
Scully watched him from the sofa as anxiety poked needles
in her stomach. She had sat in the dark in her car for the
past ten minutes, staring at the house across the street. A
light glowing behind the downstairs blinds gave evidence
that the occupant was still up, but despite that
reassurance, her resolve had wavered. Several times she had
turned the key partway in the ignition, only to turn it off
again.
Doggett returned shortly with their drinks. Scully took the
tumbler he held out to her, while he set a glass of amber
liquor on the table before himself. Settling onto the other
end of the sofa he asked quietly, "What can I do for you,
Agent Scully?"
She swallowed. What the hell was she doing here? This man
had feelings for her, and her coming here was probably
inappropriate. She should have called, at least. Scully
felt herself losing her grip, and it frightened her.
Finally she muttered, "I shouldn't have bothered you," and
moved to rise.
"Whoa!" Doggett reached over and put a hand lightly on her
arm. "You just got here. And you're not botherin' me."
Scully leaned back against the cushions and breathed in
deeply. She heard Doggett saying, "Is there something on
your mind?" and the gentleness in his gravelly voice calmed
the turbulence within her. She turned her head to look at
him. There was nothing in his look to betray any feelings
other than simple friendship and concern. His honest face
invited honesty in return, and gave her a measure of
courage.
She nodded. "Would you mind if we talked about that night?"
* * * *
The clock over the fireplace read one-fifty. That's a whole
lotta talking, Doggett thought. He stretched out his legs
under the coffee table and leaned his head back. He had
long ago abandoned his perch on the sofa and moved to the
chair catty-corner to Scully's end of the couch. He was
closer to her there.
They had relived everything they could remember about that
night. The cold body on the cold ground. A Jeremiah Smith
found and lost. A mysterious craft and a blinding light.
(Shock, thought Doggett. She probably mistook a helicopter
for something else.) The startling flashes of the crime
photographer's camera, leaves rustling under boots, the
snap of the gurney's legs as it was raised with its burden,
the long trudge up the hill to the coroner's wagon. The
trip to the ER, the vigil at the morgue, the interminable
wait for morning and the flight home.
And the inevitable what-if's and should-have's.
"If we hadn't raided the compound, Mulder might be alive."
Doggett remembered how her words had made him start, and
sit forward. He'd clasped his hands tightly between his
knees. "Agent Scully, no."
"Jeremiah Smith was a healer, he was trying to help Mulder
when we stormed in." She was leaning forward too, her eyes
bright with pain.
He swallowed. He didn't want to say the things he had to
say. "Agent Mulder was quite dead when I found him. I know
death. . .and so do you."
She met his look but said nothing.
He went on softly. "He wasn't like Teresa Hoese, he wasn't
hangin' by a thread. He'd been dead for some time. Maybe
days. His flesh. . ."
Scully closed her eyes.
Doggett remembered the feel of that cold, sloughing skin as
his fingers pressed against it, searching in vain for a
pulse. He remembered too the whiff of decay, and his
stomach gave a little lurch. God, give me a hand here, he
begged.
He continued, "And even if you believe that Jeremiah Smith
could make a dead man stand up and walk-–even if you
really believe that, Agent Scully, we still couldn't have
done anything differently than we did."
Her eyes flew open. "Couldn't we?" she challenged.
"No!" Doggett knew the road she was heading down; it was a
road to hell, and she didn't need to go there. "We got a
lead on a man with a criminal record, we had a dead victim,
Gary Cory, we had to move quickly to protect others." He
drew a breath. "We did everything by the book based on the
information available. We're law enforcement officers," he
concluded in his quiet rumble, "not fortune-tellers."
The defiance was fading from her face. "I don't know," she
murmured. "I just. . ."
He nodded his understanding. "I know, but you can't torture
yourself. We did everything we could to find Mulder. We did
everything we could to *save* him." Doggett was leaning
into her space, his knee almost touching hers, the muscles
of his neck taut with strain. "We were just. . .too late."
Scully searched his face in desperation for a long time.
She must have finally found a particle of truth there-–
enough to get her through another day, anyway--because she
sighed and fell back against the cushions.
Doggett looked at her now. Her eyes had drifted closed, and
her legs were splayed unashamedly, her fingers entwined
over her belly. Warmth stirred inside him again, and again
he forced it down.
Behind her closed lids Scully felt weariness tug at her,
but it was the normal weariness that follows a long day. As
she and Doggett had talked, grief had risen in a wave,
then had subsided to a gentle lapping at her soul. Telling
her stories and hearing his words had quieted the surging
tide of sorrow, at least for tonight. And in the deeps
below the tide she sensed, for the first time since *that*
night, a strength waiting to return.
She exhaled and opened her eyes. Doggett's warm gaze was
resting on her.
"You okay?" he asked.
"Yeah." They sat there in stillness for a moment. "This was
a great help, Agent Doggett. Thank you."
He nodded. "I think it helped both of us."
Scully wondered at that, but the late hour and her fatigue
drove the question from her mind. She glanced at her watch.
"God, I've kept you up long enough." She rose and, picking
up the empty glasses, took them into the kitchen. Doggett
stood too and watched her.
She set the glasses in the sink, and when she looked up she
was facing the broken cabinet door. She stared at the
splintered wood, her brows knitting together as her mind
worked. She turned to look at the man in a Marines tee-
shirt and jeans, whose gaze was fixed intently on her.
Scully's eyes dropped to his hand, to the cuts, then
returned to his face.
He looked down and away from her.
She turned once more to the broken cupboard, fingered the
jagged edges. Suddenly her throat tightened.
Scully crossed the room and stood before him, and he raised
troubled eyes to her, waiting for her to question him. But
she said nothing.
He felt the need to explain. "It happened the night I got
back from the funeral." It was all the explanation he could
muster. He wouldn't tell her any more.
Wouldn't tell her how, on returning from the airport, he
had downed several shots of scotch in quick succession. How
he'd stared at his reflection in the windows and had seen
only an impotent, useless bastard staring back at him. How
he'd suddenly erupted, his fist connecting with the
cabinet, the blows and his curses sounding in unison. How
he'd hoped the pain would drive out the swirling images of
Mulder's gray corpse, Luke's little body, and Scully
weeping over a fresh grave.
And how it hadn't.
He wouldn't tell her any of these things. He didn't need
to, because he saw in her eyes that she understood it all.
Doggett lowered his gaze again and rubbed his hand
unconsciously. He was ashamed she knew this about him. "I
haven't lost it like that in a long time," he said. "Not
since. . ."
A simple inclination of her head told him she understood
since what, and she exhaled a soft sigh. The perp had come
back into his life through her, and had taken up his
taunting again. Scully could imagine Doggett raging at
Death, and at his own powerlessness to help her.
The moment lengthened as they regarded one another. Then
Doggett put his hand up to her cheek, and with his thumb
wiped away a tear. It was the only tear she had shed all
night.
* * * *
The neighborhood slumbered around them as they walked to
her car. Doggett had offered his spare room, and wasn't
surprised when Scully declined it.
He shut the door after her, and she stared at his chest
framed in the car window, and the "USMC" emblazoned on it.
He'll soldier on, she thought. We'll soldier on together.
Two survivors. . .with a third on the way.
She lowered the window, and Doggett brought his face down
to it. "Try and get some rest this weekend, okay?" he said.
"I will." But there was something she had to do. "I
think I'll pay a visit to my mother, though."
"That's a good idea," he said. "People should always go
visit their mothers."
Scully smiled at that. "See you Monday, then. . .Agent
Doggett," she said softly.
"Monday," he repeated, his eyes bright in the darkness.
As she drove away, Scully glanced at the rear-view mirror.
Next to her own reflection was Doggett's, standing in the
circle of the streetlight, watching her.
"We can do this," she said to the pair in the mirror.
End
My other Interregnum stories at:
http://www.oocities.org/horatio_fic/.