Title: When It's Over Author: spookycc Rating: PG 13 Summary: Scully and Doggett run into trouble in the Pacific Northwest. Told in first-person Scully POV. Classification: V A DSF - ***Warning: Character Death.*** Spoilers: For S8 so far. Nothing specific that I can see, though. Disclaimer: No characters, human or canine, are mine. And the song by Sugar Ray from which this fic takes its name ain't mine, either. Feedback welcomed at spookycc@earthlink.net Dedication: As ever, to Doggett's Bitch (f/k/a "Fox's Vixen" :). My soulmate, always. And for girlassassin, you know why. :) No beta-reader was used. All typos are my own. *** We were only separated for a few minutes. Where the hell could he have gone? My partner and I were pursuing leads on a case in the Pacific Northwest. A true X-Files case, so it was I who bought the plane tickets, but my partner once again accompanied me in body and spirit, if not in like mind. Hours ago, miles from our vehicle and escape, we both had the feeling we were being followed. It wasn't false. Shots were fired, and we barely escaped unscathed. We've been stuck out here since then, with a madman on our heels. My partner said the man was stalking him, not me. I don't know why he thinks that or how he knows the man. Since then, he's insisted that we separate. I' ve insisted we don't. His words come back to me now. "He won't hurt you, Scully. He wants me. It's safer for you if you're not involved." I refused his request then, and I'd refuse it now, if I could *find* him. There are a few situations that simply demand privacy to attend to, and when I emerged from the brushy area, he was gone. The trees seem to close around me, adding to the ominous feeling that clings to me like a shroud. I don't dare dial him on the cell, in case he is in a situation where that could compromise his safety. Instead, I whisper his name loudly into the woods, as I trip blindly over limbs and vines. There is no answer. Damn. A gunshot rings out, breaking the silence surrounding me. I stop dead in my tracks, breathing heavily, and slip my own weapon from its holster. The tension in my muscles is now overshadowed by a fear that grasps my heart with cold fingers. I swallow again, even though my mouth is bone dry. I take a deep, slow, cleansing breath, trying to calm my jangled nerves and quell the bad feeling in my stomach. Up ahead, in a clearing, I see a small campfire. Backlit by the fire stands the man who pursued us into this Godforsaken forest. Though his eyes scan the trees, his gun is pointed down at his feet. My God. There lies my partner, facedown, motionless. My breath catches in my throat, and I muster as forceful a tone of voice as I can right now. "Federal Agent! Drop your weapon!" He doesn't. Instead, he fires in my direction. I hear the round whiz past my ear, before I return three shots of my own. I chance a look around the tree I hide behind. The man is down. Could be a trick. I steady my weapon on his still form, and ease my way slowly to the clearing. I see the blood stain on the man's shirt. He wasn't bluffing. Thank heavens. I dial 911 on my cell - force of habit, of training. My mind is not on that simple task. It is with my partner, who still has not moved. I drop to my knees next to him. Mind racing, heart numb. I almost hesitate before I check for a pulse. Until I've checked, I can still nurture the hope that he'll be ok, even if he's - even if he's not. I rest my fingers gently against his neck, and thank a God I don't often speak to, when I feel a pulse. It's weak, thready, but at least it's there. I see a small entry wound between his shoulder blades. Fear biting into my stomach, I roll him over onto his back. And stifle a gasp. Blood covers his chest - too much blood. Forcing back tears, I take a deep breath, and pull my partner's shirt apart at the buttons. The clinical side of me thankfully takes over for a few moments. I probe his bloodied chest, finding the gaping wound that has pumpe d too much of his life's blood from him. I pull off my coat, balling it up, and press it down, hold it, as hard as I can, against the wound. And then my clinical detachment flees me, like a rat from a sinking ship. I lay my head atop my hands, and sob, quietly at first. I can't lose this man. I can't. I hear a soft noise under my head, and lift my gaze just a bit. The barest slits of smoky gray meet my own eyes, and I hear my name pass from this man's lips. He struggles to return to consciousness. To return to me, I know. I don't know what other concern would drive him this hard. There's no way that he should be able to pull himself from the place he is now. "Doggett." My tears flow more strongly now, mingling with the blood on his chest. His eyes shine with recognition. He's found me, and I can almost feel him latch onto my spirit with his own. God knows that may be the one thing that can save his life. He reaches up weakly, touches a shaking hand to my tear stained cheek, and shakes his head. I hear the weakest of whispers. "Scully - don't-" "Shhhhh," I wrap my hand around his, and it goes limp within mine almost instantly. His eyes are still locked with mine. "Sss'not-" his breath breaks off. "'Ssssnot good, is it?" I swallow a huge sob back within myself. "Please, just rest, ok?" I can't even lie convincingly enough to tell him he's going to be ok. His arm rises weakly once more, his hand reaching toward my face, pulling it gently toward his own. I allow the touch, allow this man I once thought of as an interloper to guide my face to within inches of his own. My heart pounds wildly against my chest, not entirely because we're in the direst of situations. But he stops well before our faces meet, and levels me with as steady a gaze as he can manage. He grimaces against a fresh wave of pain - how he could feel that above the steady pain he endures is beyond me. His eyes turn a bit glassy, before he blinks to clear them, and then they engage mine once more. Steel blue meets blue-green, and I try to smile through my eyes for him, try to tell him it's ok, it'll all be ok. But his eyes tell me the truth: He knows it's not ok at all. The look within his eyes frightens me with its clarity. There is no hope within it. Only sadness - and something else - acceptance? His lips move several times before I hear what he tries to say. "I . I loved you." I hear one soft, very conscious breath, before he fades away beneath me. Fini