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I got inspired by this tweet I saw. Shout out these guys đ
Anyways hereâs a little drabble :3
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Grading was the last thing on Rylands mind. He had stayed late to try and at least achieve some sort of dent in the pile of students lab assignments on his desk, but it seems you had other plans for this late Friday evening.
Rylands hands are gripping tightly on the shelves around you both, panting against the palm of your hand. His hips jerk forward, stuttering and barely able to keep his knees from buckling underneath himself. He lets out a whimper from underneath your hand, eyes rolling back at the pleasure youâre giving him. You shush him softly, feeling the breath from his nostrils on the tops of your fingers.
Behind him, you rest your chin on his shoulder, whispering into his ear, âCâmon Mr. GraceâŚ.you would want anyone to hear you, would you?â
A quick little whine in response is muffled from beneath your hand. The only other sound filling the small, cramped janitors closet you had pulled him into being the slick sound of your other hand jerking him off. His pants were only unzipped far enough for you to pull his cock out, so both of you were still fully clothed.
You both knew that at this time of day at the middle school it would just be you two, as most of the cleaning staff had also gone home at this point. But, the idea of someone catching you seemed to really get Ryland going. You had pulled him in by his tie, tugging him into the janitors closet the moment he walked past.
You pause your motions to run your thumb across the sensitive red tip of his cock, spreading the pre-cum that had continued to spill. This elicits yet another muffled whimper from the man as he tries to buck up into your hand, desperate for you to continue jerking him off.
You tsk at him, leaning your head to the side to whisper into his ear. âYouâre being so good for me RyâŚsuch a good boyâŚâ you say, breathing hot air against his ear. The sensation of it weakens his knees and he lets out another whimper at the sudden increased movement from your hand, slick with pre-cum.
With your chin back on his shoulder, you can see his face. His hair is a mess, sticking up on random spot. Sweat beads along his forehead, daring to drip down onto his flushed cheeks. His glasses sit askew, almost falling off if it werenât for your hand right beneath his nose. His eyes are slightly open and rolled back, relishing in the pleasure youâre providing. He looked absolutely delicious.
His dick throbbed within your grasp, twitching as he got closer and closer to his climax. Additionally, he got more fidgety, hand moving from a death grip on the shelf to hold onto the arm over his mouth. His knees threatened to give out from beneath himself, leaning back into you for support.
His muffled moans and whimpers ramped up, getting louder and more frequent the closer he got.
Finally, he lets out the loudest groan yet, shuffling and twitching beneath you as ropes of white cover the back of the janitor door and your hand. His hips buck up into you at the slight overstimulation as you work him through his orgasm. His chest heaves, out of breath, slowly coming back from his arousal-driven haze.
You finally quit your ministrations the moment he begins to whine from the overstimulation. You take your hand off of his mouth and he pants breathlessly, satisfied to be able to breath properly.
His hands grip onto the shelves once again to hold himself up, and he lets out a long, shaky breath, shoving his limp cock back into his pants.
You look around the closet and find some paper towels to clean off your hand. Once he catches his breath, he turns around and faces you. His mouth covered with drool from when your hand covered his mouth.
ââŚIâŚI might need those tooâŚâ He states softly, motioning towards his mouth and the few drops that spilt onto what were his favorite pants, which hopefully wouldnât stain.
You let out a chuckle, using a paper towel and wiping his face off. He lets out an embarrassed smile and take the paper towel from you once your done and wiping his pants off.
âWe are definitely doing this again, just so you know.â You say reaching around him to wipe down the door.
His dick throbs at the notion, slowly hardening once more as an idea comes to mind.
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(gender neutral reader as much as I could I tried not to specify anatomy so hopefully this is as neutral as possible)
wordcount: 1054
warning(s): SMUT in the beginning though only really, and sexual language.
authors note: Idk what this is I blacked out when writing it. Just kind of a small fic, because I can't write anything else right now. Hope you like it!
My masterlist is linked in my bio and also here
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You were straddling Ryland on his mattress bed on the Hail Mary, Ryland bit his lip, his mouth agape, his glasses slipped down his nose as he came inside of you with the moan of your name as you rocked forward and back. He had been telling you he wasnât going to last from the moment you had kissed him in the lab, making him hard just from that, up until this very moment.
He trailed kisses up your neck, sucking onto that one spot behind your ear. He chuckled as he could feel you getting close.
âHmm, thatâs it. Isnât it?â He asked, thrusting up into you. âI got you, let go for me sweetheart.â He whispered.
You followed shortly, his words making you crumble onto his bare chest as your eyes rolled in pleasure. You caught his lips with yours for a solid second, his stubble rubbing against your face. His arms ran up your bare back, and back down to your hips in a way that made you shiver, he forced you to continue your motions. You whined in overstimulation as you tried to slow your hips to a stop. Ryland groaned and held your hips in place, still inside of you.
âThatâs it. So proud. So good for me.â He spoke, his face now inside the crook of your neck.
âYouâre so good for me.â You argued.
Ryland lifted his head to look you in the eyes, he was practically drooling at the praise, his eyes lit up, you lifted your hand to push his glasses farther up his nose.
âWow, the way you just lit up, leads me to believe I should tell you that more often.âÂ
âDonât use this against me.â He quipped.
âNever.â You smirked, sending him a wink.
You shifted as he pulled out of you, his hands immediately pulling you into his chest, leaning back to lay down in the shipâs dormitory. You both stared up at the ceiling, the ropes crossed over each other to aid in travel when â unlike tonight â the centrifuge is not activated â It was strange, to think about â having sex in a spaceship years away from earth.Â
You turned in his arms to look up at Ryland, who was already looking down at you with those annoying googly eyes.Â
âShould we be doing this?â
âThis?â He asked.
âHaving sex, when we have a planet to save? I mean we are literally on the way back home now.â
Ryland squinted his eyes in thought, before concluding,
âHey, intimacy helps clear our minds, helps us stay focused.â
âRight. Focused.â You imitated.
He gave your lips a peck. You stared at him for a second too long. You had only been sleeping together for a couple days, of course there was built up tension, and of course the logical explanation at the time wasâŚwell sex. But as you looked into his eyes, you couldnât help but think about doing this forever. Being with him forever. Or for however long you could be.
âYou okay?â He asked, catching your shift.
âYeaâŚI just hope Rockyâs okay.â You lied, kind of.
He pressed a kiss to your forehead.
âIâm sure heâs on his way home now.âÂ
âYea, I miss him.â
He twitched his lips in agreement.Â
âNow, let's get you cleaned up.â He said.
He sat up and you shook your head.
âNo, you first.â You said, grabbing his shoulder to stop him.
Ryland rolled his eyes, leaned forward to kiss your cheek, and shook his head.
âSweetheart, just let me take care of you.â
You grumbled, falling back onto your back. He walked over to the lavatory, grabbed a towel with some water from the small rations you both had, and leant down to you. He gently wiped the inside of your thighs, and let you wipe the rest of the area he had missed. Somehow things like that felt too intimate still. You watched him slip on his boxers, and walk back into the lab where the rest of your rations were abandoned.
When you were finished, he had one of his shirts in his hands, some juice he probably found in the rations, and the colorful mission quilt. He leant down again, pulling his shirt over your body, handing you the juice to drink.
âThere we go, how are you feeling?â
âLike this is all not necessary.â
âAre you serious?â
âYea I mean all the other guyâs Iâve slept with would never do this after we were done.â You said as if what Ryland was doing was ridiculous.
Ryland leaned down to sit on the mattress beside you, shaking the quilt out so it covered both of your bodies. You continued drinking your juice.
âThose guys are assholes, you deserve to be taken care of even after weâre done. Plus why wouldnât I take care of you, youâre amazing, I feel so lucky.â He explained.
âI feel so lucky too.â
A beat. You discarded the juice you were drinking, placing the cup on the floor beside the mattress.
"Is there anything else you need right now, sweetheart?"
Ryland scrunched his nose at you, rubbing your back lovingly.
âCan we lay back and cuddle again, like we usually do?â You asked.
"Absolutely. Let's lay back." He pulled you to his chest again, laying down.
He laid on his back as you curled up again on his side, your hand and head attached to his warm chest that rose and fell as he breathed. His heart beat calmed your thoughts.
âDid Iânevermind.â
You tilted your head upward, shifting your position on his chest to look him in the eyes.
âNo, spit it out.â You demanded.
Rylandâs cheeks blushed, and you giggled at his sudden shyness.Â
âDid IâŚyou knowâŚdo a good job?â He asked.
You pretended to think, and he rolled his eyes groaning in embarrassment.Â
âRyland, I think that was the best job youâve ever done since we started sleeping together.â
âYou make it sound so formal.â
You kissed his stubble, then leaned forward and kissed the bridge of his nose.
âYou could make it less formal, if you just asked me to be yours.â
He smiled, placing his hands to cup your face. His comedically intense stare made you laugh, you took the glasses off his face and placed them on the crown of your own head.
âWill you be mine?â He asked.
âYes.â You responded, it was exactly what you had wanted all along.
He leaned forward and captured your lips for a long moment, before you furrowed your eyebrows and remembered where you were. Ryland looked at your perplexed face, and he ran his thumb over your bottom lip.
âWhat?âÂ
âDo you think, when the whole world came together to make this quilt, they thought two unqualified astronauts were going to sleep in it after having sex?â
(i) love hypotheticals.
after stratt hires you on as a documentation specialist for project hail mary, you find yourself being more and more drawn to one dr. ryland grace.
(ii) odd reunions.
you wake up late on the hail mary, and grace doesn't seem to remember anything about youâor, your relationship. you don't know how to break the news to him.
(iii) marriage talk.
life on erid is good, aside from the occasionally nagging desire to get married.
exhibit g.
after re-acclimating to earth life for a whole year, grace comes to your museum on a random monday in the middle of april to view the "project hail mary" exhibit.
mayday.
grace can't seem to get the hang of flying the hail maryâand you're definitely the problem
eridian logic!
your heart-to-heart with rocky leads to a lot of unnecessary teasing targeted towards grace. you can't help itâhe just makes it so easy
close quarters.
physical contact on the hail mary is at a premium. you hold yourself a little too highly to ask grace for help.
holland march:
pine and scotch.
you spend the night over at the march house after tasking yourself with babysitting. your feelings, holly's gossip, and holland's drinking are a worrying combination.
colt seavers:
quiet on set.
on your fourth big blockbuster working together, you find yourself scolding hollywoodâs favorite, tom ryder. to much success, it manages to capture coltâs attention.
jack abbot:
picking favorites.
after taking the same shoddy bus from your apartment to the ptmc, youâre shocked to find your attending on the same line. you start commuting together.
benedict bridgerton:
good company.
benedict bridgerton has a twofold plan: to resolve his brother's rake-like reputation and to delay your entry into the marriage mart. very quickly, you realize that the scheme is much less simple than it's made out to be.
johnny storm:
silk and storm.
you're strung between two livesâfreelance journalist and friendly neighborhood vigilante. one night saving johnny storm unintentionally leads to him pining over both versions of you.
steve harrington:
sucker for a good clichĂŠ.
you and steve have to fake-date after an awkward dinner at the wheeler-byers householdâall while you're sure that he still wants nancy.
growing pains, 1989.
you take a drive down to philly to spend some long overdue quality time with your hometown friends; your unresolved issues with steve are just as interruptive as anticipated.
gasoline.
overnight in philly means that you and steve don't have much time alone (you both make do). (nsfw)
jud duplenticy:
only over you.
you come to chimney rock for the winter season, not expecting to become acquainted with the new priest of our lady of perpetual grace (nsfw)
bosco leroy:
mostly chimes.
in which reader has to work through some unresolved feelings towards bosco after landing in antwerp
summary: your heart-to-heart with rocky leads to a lot of unnecessary teasing targeted towards grace. you can't help itâhe just makes it so easy (based on this textpost // @viviennejinx!)
pairing: ryland grace x gn!reader
word count: 4.3k
tags: fluff and humor, not actually unrequited love, mutual pining, bad flirting, basically teasing to death, flustered!grace, developing relationship, platonic!rocky x reader, first kisses, gn!reader
cross-posted to ao3
Grace is off in the crew quarters trying to take a nap. Heâs been all tuckered out, you think, since Rocky decided to start co-habitating with the two of you on the Mary. Though itâs probably the most efficient way to work altogetherâinstead of moving to and from the midpoint of your ship and Rockyâsâitâs clearly driving Grace crazy. Boundaries, he keeps telling Rocky, Thereâs a delicate line thatâs being crossed. More than crossed. Hopped and skipped. And still, Rockyâs insistent on moving in. You donât have any major objections, considering that Rocky is a positive change to your usual routine.
It isnât the most convenient arrangement in the world, but Rocky is having you lug xenonite boxes and panes of glass into the Hail Mary from the connector tunnel. You have to wait a half an hour each for the materials to cool down before you can pick them up, so thereâs a whole lot of get-to-know you time. After the first batch of belongings, Rocky is sure to ask you about the basicsâwhat Earth is like, what humans are like, and your expertise on the project. The second batch is exponentially more personal. Rocky asks about how you came to be on the ship, where on Earth you belong to, and if you miss your loved ones.
And, on the third and last batch, you and Rocky are sitting in the connector tunnel on a pile of empty storage crates, effectively repurposed into seating. Itâll be a short break, now, for you to catch your breath. Youâre trying to get a good stretch out of your arms and legs as you sit on the slanted crate. Youâre certainly expecting to be sore after all the strenuous labor of carrying Rockyâs things. Meanwhile, Rocky is rolling back and forth, back and forthâstill testing out the mobility on his new xenonite ball. He seems pleased with the development. Or, bored. You can never tell what heâs thinking when he gets all roll-y. It only becomes apparent here when he decides to ask you: âIs Grace mate, question?â
âWow. Presumptuous,â you punch out. Itâs a nice shock to your senses, the forwardness of Rockyâs inquiry. Itâs not like you havenât thought about it, but obviously, it seems that Rockyâs confident that heâs got it all figured out. âWhere are you getting that from?â
âGrace make all effort to do bad science jokes. Is baaad.â Rocky says. âBut laugh like Grace mate.â
âThat could just be me being polite,â you test. âItâs really important for morale, you know, laughing.â
Rocky pauses for a moment, stilled in his xenonite casing. Then, he tries again: âIs it same for heart rate too, question?â He chirps in a repetitive manner, something akin to a chuckle. Thereâs not much you can do to disprove the physiological facts. Rockyâs as clever as youâd expectâand it isnât like youâre trying to conceal the nature of your relationship with Grace.
What youâve got with him is neither here nor there. Itâs perfectly middle-ground, and really, you're satisfied with it. Grace is a decent roommate; heâs observantâknows what ticks you off, what pleases you, avoids the former and tries for the latter. You can already tell that heâs a little bit sweet on you, just by the way that he looks at you with soft blue eyesâcorners of his eyes crinkling as he busies his hands with whatever prop he decides to pick up. Glass beakers, microscopes, xenonite models, you name it. Itâs always the same.
And youâre always staring at him with your chin propped up on your palm, at once amused and enamored. Youâd known you would feel a certain way about Grace ever since youâd both woken up on the Hail Mary. Youâre attracted to him, of course, but thereâs also something else. Even without a whole memory, your mind lingers on him longer than need be. Itâs something like love, if not exactly that. âWell, we havenât talked about it, but weâre as good as mates,â you decide to tell Rocky.
âIs unclear,â he mumbles. Aloud, it does sound like very strange terms to be referring to the current circumstances. A very human arrangement, you think. Rocky concurs with a stamp of his arm down on the plated floor.
âWe live together, we eat together. I can tell I want to kiss him and he wants to kiss me,â you list off, counting on one hand. âWe cohabitate in the same space like two mates would, but we havenât had the opportunity to⌠have it out. Itâs mission-first thinking.â
Rocky begins to roll towards a batch of glass propped up on the wall, a wordless sign for you to pick it up for him. Breakâs over. Begrudgingly, you follow along, lifting the trapezoidal glass pane up with both arms. As you swing it into a more secure grip, he seems to speak more softly. âMore Eridian than human.â
âWho? Me?â you say half-heartedly, still very focused toward your grip on the xenonite glass. Itâs more difficult for you than it is for Rocky to carry the whole thing through the hatch door of the Hail Mary. Still, it sounds like a high compliment.
âYes. Is Eridian thinking to view Grace in definite terms. Grace as mate, inevitable. Is beautiful!â Rocky raises a claw up, wiggling his little rugged fingers in a gentle sweep across the empty space in front of him. Itâs reassuring, certainly, that Rocky views you in high regard. Even though youâre breaking a sweat trying to carry this weighted pane for your new shipmate, you still make a concerted effort to give him a wide grin.
âThanks, Rocky.â
â
Thereâs a good mood going between you and Rocky after all the talking. Grace picks up on it quickly after his long nap, when he sees the both of you huddled in the lab working on one of the larger dry-erase boards. Thereâs a bunch of calculations scrawled neatly in black across the whole white surface, alongside a larger diagram of the shipâs engines. While heâs been sleeping, itâs clear the two of you have been wading through the more complex engineering issues. Hearing Graceâs footsteps approach, you turn to face him over your shoulder with a grin, âMorning.â
Grace looks straight out of bed, with his punny tee and his sweatpantsâblonde hair sticking up in random directions. He seems to be stretching his back out as you greet him, eyelids heavy. âIt seems like someone ignored the memo to pack light,â Grace grumbles, nudging his mug towards the corridor behind him. The stack of xenonite crates and glass you two amassed is generous, to say the least.
âHey, Iâm just the mover,â you hum, âYouâre gonna have to take it up with the big guy.â You jut your index finger out towards Rocky, whoâs tapping one side claw against the glass.
He merely buzzes, âRocky need equipment to save Earth Erid stars. Donât mind.â He rolls closer to the center of the room to get a better scan of the corridor, before returning to your side at the white board. âSame volume of mess as before Rocky arrival.â Rude. When you look back over at Grace, he doesnât seem to have any major objections. It is true; the two of you were maybe a little bit slobbish before Rocky came along.
The three of you seem to fall back into routine easily. Grace is still trying to wake himself up with generous gulps of black coffee. You and Rocky continue on with your calculations and diagram. Youâre trying your best to stay focused on the workâbut the two of you have been working on these problems for the past hour and now, Grace is in front of you with his entirely sleep-ridden appearance. He just looks⌠perfect. And, out of the blue, Rocky shoots out an abrupt: âWhy choose Grace for mate, question?â Thereâs a clatter to your left. Graceâs grip loosens on the handle of his mug, a sizable drop of coffee splashing onto the steel counter beside you both. He decides, at once, to place the mug down and away from himself, before wiping the mess up with the sleeve of his navy-blue hoodie.
Grace sputters, âWhat? Mateâwe're notâthat would require at least kind ofâ" Heâs speaking so intermittently that he can barely get a full sentence out. You raise a brow just watching Grace mesh his hands together, fingers interlocking and coming apart. Heâs not making it any better for himself.
The wide-eyed look that you give Rocky isnât nearly as mortified as Graceâs. While itâs accompanied by shock, youâre very intrigued by the nature of Rockyâs question. You have no idea what heâs shooting for, but itâs clearly working. Grace is talking to himself, dazed as he fixates on soaking the coffee up with his sleeve. Rocky stays silent in his xenonite casing. Heâs anticipating an answer out of you, and so youâre going to have to give it to him. With a rather astute tone, analytical in nature, you offer up, âWell, heâs passionate. Thatâs a plus.â
Graceâs brows furrow together. âSorry?â Heâs floored. You canât possibly be talking about him, but Rockyâs asking and youâre answering. Itâs really not adding up. Grace is looking at you over the frame of his glasses, eyes squinted in perplexity.
âThe molecular biology, the teaching,â you note, âGold stars all around.â
âDedication valuable for Earth mate selection,â Rocky nods along. It isnât anything he doesnât already know. While Grace has been asleep and the two of you have gotten to talking, Rocky knows practically all the minute details of why youâve âchosenâ Grace. The point of hashing it out in front of him now is unclearâaside from the potential entertainment value. That makes sense.
âOkay. He learned humor while I was napping. Iâm not offended at all.â Though he tries to laugh it off, Grace doesnât sound at all sure of himself. Heâs very close to pacing back and forth, not sure whether he should try to change out of his now coffee-soaked hoodie or question the two of you further. When you and Rocky turn straight back to work unaffected, you at the front of the board and him tracing his claw across the glass with a sort of contemplative silence, Grace is shell-shocked. Heâs muttering under his breath, âI donât think I get the joke.â Both of your backs are turned to Grace; he canât see the growing smirk thatâs cropping up on your face.
Itâs a quick pivot back to work. âI have a feeling that we should make a few minor adjustments to the rear fuselage. Thereâs going to be a lot of strain on engines when we get to Tau Ceti-E.â You click your tongue, circling the lower right quadrant of the diagram in a red dry-erase ink. Once your little annotation is completed, you tuck the marker in your back pocket.
âAgree, agree, agree,â Rocky tips his body towards the white board. His texture monitor is showing a complex, grayscale copy of the board to a T. Itâs as if neither of you have tried to tease Grace to death just seconds prior. Heâs glued to the ground with a weary kind of expression on his face. Grace is frowning, truly and deeply, with his palm squeezing the back of his neck. You could almost feel bad if you werenât so pleased to see Grace like this; rarely is he speechless.
A few minutes pass. Then, Rocky approaches the same question from a different vantage point. âGrace attractive by human standard, question?â
âWell, he's handsome by my standard, and Iâm pretty sure a lot of humans would agree,â you admit. âHe is a bit dorky, but I like âem that way. Thatâs preference, though. Not all humans are into dorky.â
Rocky returns your statement with a rushed out, âYes, yes, yesâpreference. Understand.â
âOkay. Hello?â Grace speaks outward towards the lab. His voice carries throughout the hull of the ship, and the two of you are still non-reactive. âWeâre doing it again. I am in the room.â His old teacherâs voice is coming out againâone hand shot up in the air, trying to flag your attention.
You look at him over your shoulder with a soft âWhat was that, Ry?â Youâre very pleased to see that his cheeks are glowing red underneath the white-gold frames of his glasses. You drag your gaze up and down his raised arm, with a particularly sharp grin hanging off your face. So toned. âDidnât hear you,â you tilt your head. Grace lowers his arm slowly, turning back around to pick up his mug.
âHa-ha,â Grace punches out. Heâs trying to seem unbothered by this whole situation, but it really is bothering him. No matter how hard heâs trying to maintain his composure, Grace is flushed. You can practically see the steam rising off the top of his head. Itâs an illogical conversation playing out in front of him and the effortâs no use. You and Rocky are absolutely impossible. âIâm going to go for a metaphorical breath of fresh air. I will⌠see you both shortly.â Grace is too nervous to push it any further, and it seems like heâs leaving you both to do a cool-off lap around the ship.
You can hear him talking to himself as he leaves the lab, as if possessed by his own confusion. âHandsomeâŚ? Is it April Foolâs? Mary, can you pull up a UTC calendar for me, please? What month is it back home?â Louder, the shipâs computer rings out a staticky, âThe month is: June.â Graceâs muffled groan rings out towards the two of you..
You turn towards Rocky with a slow shake of your head. âYouâre really mean. Did you know that?â you ask Rocky. He pushes closer to you. Like youâre any better.
âGrace not know you are mates when obvious. Grace fault,â Rocky says, with both claws pointed in the air. You think itâs supposed to be a sort of shrug.
â
After Graceâs little cooldown period, heâs back on his feet and wanting to teach you how to sample astrophage. Even though youâll both be out there at the same time, spacewalking side by side, he wants you to be prepared. Itâs best that you both know how to handle the equipment. Youâre not completely convinced that heâs over your little bit with Rocky earlier, but he seems altogether unoffended enough to talk to you. While you and Grace are running through the sampler together, Rockyâs not far away. He sits in the corridor, sifting through his thingsâno doubt listening to the two of you working together.
Grace's fingers trace over the orange lining of the box before he slides it towards you. âYouâre going to have this whole sampler rig attached to your suit. Itâs supposed to be portable, so it shouldnât be too much of a hassle for us to bring it out and set it up on the topside of the deck,â he explains. Youâre nodding along; something tells you that youâve heard this entire lecture beforeâthat Grace is using the words that he mightâve before your launchâbut itâs altogether pointless to point it out now.
Youâre watching as his hands surround either side of the sampler; he pulls out, simultaneously, two metal grated plates. âOkay. These plates are supposed to intake the astrophage going towards Tau Ceti-E.â Grace closes the one set and opens another. âAnd these are supposed to grab the astrophage thatâs leaving. Weâll grab input first. Then, output.â
Mindlessly, Grace grabs the off-white masking tape off the counter beside you, nearly brushing your waist; he tries to ignore the minimal contact, pressing the bar of tape onto the first set of plates. Then, the second. Grace discards the roll on the counter, before picking the dry-erase marker out of your pocket and presses it into the palm of your dominant hand. Grace flinches as his fingertips graze the surface of your palm. Heâs still trying to keep a fair distance after your little debacle with Rocky earlier, but he just canât help it.
âYou want me to label it?â you laugh.
âItâs lab standard,â he insists. âIf we mix them up, weâll have to sample all over againâand that would mean weâd have to clean the plates. And if we do that poorlyâŚâ Grace makes a big show of making a miniature explosion with his hands. Itâs difficult not to scoff at him. You know itâs lab standard, but he could easily label them himself. The apprehension worn on your face makes Grace sigh. Youâre able to read him too easily, and he surrenders over, âAnd I like your handwriting more than I like mine.â
Thereâthe root of the issue. You shake your head, âYouâre a teacher, Grace. Legibility is, like, a job requirement.â
âIf that were true, the staff at Grover Cleveland Middle wouldâve been chopped in half,â he chuckles. As far as youâve seen, his handwriting isnât bad at all. To each their own, you suppose. You lean down to write on the open panels of the sampler, Grace watching carefully over your shoulder.
âSee? This is part of the mating ritual, too, Rock.â It barely comes out as a whisper as youâre writing down âa1. inputâ and âa2. outputâ neatly across the tape for either panel. Itâs sarcasm really, but you realize much too late that Rocky might not interpret it as such. Grace, somehow, is much more occupied at watching over your labeling technique; he murmurs back a distracted âHm?â before furrowing his brows. He stands straight up, eyebrows furrowed. It might have taken a second to register, but Grace is fully aware of what youâve saidâ
And suddenly, Rocky is practically shouting down the corridor with a hurried, âwait, wait wait!â You can hear the successive rapid thunks of him sliding into his xenonite ball, sealing it, and rolling back towards the both of you. The Eridian practically comes barreling in through the doorway, running into the white metal shelves of the Hail Mary with a childlike ardor. âIs initiating kiss, question?â
âAgain?â Grace groans, pulling his glasses off and rubbing his eyes with the back of his hand. When he lowers his hand, you can see the blush spreading across his face, from the tips of his ears to his cheeks. âOkay. Thatâs it,â Grace huffs. âThis has to end now. No more bits.â
âGraaace. Do not be mad,â Rocky whines in a low tone, âIs only kiss. Partial threshold for human relations.â Grace is tugging his hoodie off in a desperate attempt to keep a regular temperature. Thereâs a shelf hook close enough for him to toss up the garment haphazardly. Once itâs out of the way, he turns toward Rocky.
âYou didnât even know that word an hour ago.â Graceâs voice raises in tone and volume all at once, crackling with embarrassment. Itâs unintentionally accusatory. Grace certainly didnât code in <kiss>, and itâs not like Rocky can type into his own vocabulary bank. And Grace canât seem to figure out why youâd code it aside from entertainment value.
âKiss not bad word, Grace. Is normal,â Rocky explains calmly. âNow, do kiss. Please.â The begging tone that Rocky dishes out to Grace only makes him more and more impatient. Meanwhile, youâre simply watching the two of them bicker with one anotherânot interested in the slightest to stop the argument. Shamefully, you do want Grace to be pushed to his limit. And this happens much quicker than you would anticipate. Right about now, Grace has his hands locked together and resting just over his head. His face is still flushed, and heâs got his glasses hanging off his face.
Grace is trying to stay as calm as he can and failing. Every time the word is used, heâs getting deeply distracted by the thought of your lips on his. He canât help the way his mind drifts to that very, very vivid fantasy of your hands balancing flat on his chest. Finally, he breathes out a heavy and burdened sigh: âNo more kiss talk. We arenât together, end of story.â
âI mean, we kind of are,â you say to Grace, who turns sharply mid-speaking to tilt his head at you.
âWhat?â he stammers softly. Youâre not helping his case, especially with that tone.
Hands held behind your back, you repeat for Grace, âWe are.â It's a matter of fact. Any semblance of sternness Grace was attempting prior crumbles at the drop of a dime. Heâs pointing at you with his index finger, then at himself, then you again. âNo, weâre not.â
You grab for Graceâs wrist, just over the red-band of his wristwatch. âOkay. Come on, weâre going up to screens.â Grace, still stunned, lets you drag him out of the lab and towards the corridor. As you look over your shoulder, you can see that Rocky is shooting you a strong thumbs-down.
â
The empty, numbered panels of the projection deck flicker to life into the backdrop of the river Seine. Youâve asked Mary to put on musicâreally, anything would doâand she decides to ring out some folk-rock song that youâve never heard before. Something older, not too much ruckus when played loud. Itâs a decent way to guarantee yourself a bit of privacy with your new, sound-attuned roommate. Youâll be lucky if Rocky canât hear the two of you finally having this talk. Over the sound of the soft strumming guitars, you stretch your shoulders back. âI might have had a bit too fun teasing you. Sorry.â
âWell, I thought you were just⌠doing a bit. Like, ha-ha, âRyland Grace dies alone in space,ââ Grace mumbles. âIs it still a bit? Youâre sending a whole lot of signals, and I donât think Iâm receivingââ Grace seems to quiet down as soon as you plant your hand down on his chest. Heâs tracing his eyes from your hand, down your arm, and straight up to your face with his lips parted. âOr, I am receiving. A little bit.â
âOkay,â you decide, âYouâve thought about it, havenât you? I have. Weâve been living together for the equivalent of⌠what, a few months now? Iâm comfortable with you, and youâre comfortable with me. Itâs been like that ever since we got sent up. Maybe even before. I donât remember. But we like each other.â Your fingers are dancing soft on his chest, and his breath is hitching.
âWe?â Grace echoes. âI was under the impression that you were, you know, kind of uninterested in me. Besides, you know, as a co-habitant. Mission-wise, itâs crucial for us to get along.â Heâs clueless, clearly, because it hasnât been like that at allâfor you, at least.
Youâre trying to stir up another line of reasoning for him. You have to meet Grace at his level. âThereâs the, uh, Einstein quote. I know you know it, just⌠let me think.â You massage your temples with your fingers, trying to wrack your brain for it. Itâs perfect. What is it, again?
Itâs easy for Graceâthe middle-school science teacher that he isâto pick up what youâre putting down. "When you sit with a nice girl for two hours, you think it's only a minute. But when you sit on a hot stove for a minute, you think it's two hours. That's relativity,â Grace nods, âBut thatâs a very crude explanation of the concept, and I donât reallyââ
You shush him with a shake of your head. âRight. Eridians donât have a conception of relativity. It isnât necessary for them, because things are just⌠what they are. Theyâre literal and exact, and there isnât any dancing around the facts.â you explain to Grace hurriedly. âSo⌠youâre my boyfriend. Youâve been my boyfriend.â
It takes a moment for him to process your argument. Itâs very⌠forward. He seems to look past you towards one of the panel-screens. The projected river is still glittering behind you, and youâre not going anywhere. Mary even put in the effort of mixing this ambient watery soundâboats and people, back on Earth whenever agoâwith the music track. Somehow, your traveling abode in space has made the absolute perfect atmosphere for this. You and Grace.
âWell, thatâs justâŚâ Grace nods slowly, âpeachy.â He drops his head down in absolute disappointment of his own incapability to speak. What is he saying?
âPeachy?â you repeat quietly. Youâre astounded that thatâs the choice of word heâs selected for this entire ordeal. Itâs so like him. You can feel yourself shuddering out a breath. Your cheeks are already sore enough as isâand you donât think you can take another hard laugh.
âDonât,â Grace says, âI have had a long and emotionally tumultuous couple of hours.â
âAre you mad about the teasing?â you ask, stepping closer to Grace. Heâs barely paying attention, eyes glazed-over in a dazed fashion. Heâs having trouble focusing on your words. Too occupied with you.
âNo. Never,â he murmurs, eyebrows knitted together. Youâre reaching for Grace next, hands swinging around his neck in an effort to pull him in. Heâs fumbling with his hands, unsure exactly where to place them. Theyâre steady only when they find grounding on your midsection. You give him one peck on the lips. Then, another. He leans into the contact, the rims of your glasses brushing against the surface of your cheeks. Itâs casual, comfortableâas if itâs not the first time. Youâre his, and heâs yours. Itâs effortless. Grace seems to finally ease up.
Thereâs a few loud thuds down the hallâpresumably, your Eridian counterpart. The folk-rock is no use. Rocky has obviously been listening through the entirety of your back-and-forth. âFinally, Grace act like real mate. Congratulate, congratulate, congratulate.â His voice rings out loudly towards the projection deck. Grace is muttering under his breath again, something about those boundaries. At least now, youâre both on the same page.
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summary: all your life, youâve been second-best. Even now that youâve been chosen to be an agent of the BAU, youâre just a replacement for Spencer Reid. What could change now thatâs heâs out?
cw: there is a bit of an age gap, i imagined reader in her early to mid 20âs, nevermind how it isnât accurate for working at FBI. this is a criminal minds fic, so there are graphic depictions of violence, as well as implied/referenced child neglect/abuse in readers childhood, reader is somewhat a genius
tropes/tags: slowburn on readers end, Spencer is flirting from the beginning, HURT/COMFORT, angst, bit of a sick fic in one scene, bit of soft dom! spencer as a treat
a/n : this came to me in a prophecy. full disclosure i havenât actually seen the prison arc yet so if thereâs any inaccuracies shhhhhh look at the fluff
also !! this is a LOOOOONG one. strap yourselves in. grab snacks and drinks
slipped in some very slight father figure Hotch bc thatâs my crack
title taken from Mirrorball by Taylor Swift
ââââ ââ â ââââ
Spencer Reid is absolutely nothing like youâd thought heâd be.
From how the team talked about him, youâd been expecting a short, slight man. Someone quiet and meek and non-threatening.
And Dr. (Agent?) Reid was quiet. But not in the donât-notice-me way, but in the I-know-what-Iâm-doing-and-donât-need-to-say-it way. He quietly commanded attention and respect. One look at the man told you he was not somebody to fuck with.
He was also really, really, really hot.
It was unfortunate and difficult, truly, because heâs your senior agent, someone whoâs got more than a few years on you in both field experience and general age. Heâs a genius- insanely good at what he does and thereâs no refuting that.
But most of all, heâs kind and respectful and just genuinely a good person. And also good looking. Did you mention that yet?
He clicks seamlessly into place with the team in a way youâve never managed to do in the time youâve been with him. And after all, why would you? Youâre just the rookie transfer with a bit higher than average IQ. Nothing to brag about. Nothing like Spencer.
You were a data analyst with the FBI before your boss told you: âThe BAU is looking for a temporary genius. I put your name in the ring. Hotchner mustâve been impressed with something, cause he picked you. I know youâve completed the training courses for their team, so pack your desk. Youâve got a new assignment.â
And just like that, every single one of your dreams came true. And then promptly burst into flames and burned to ashes when you realized what exactly your position on the team was: Temporary and replacing.
It makes sense, you guess. The team grew to rely on Reidâs quick wit and intellect. And beyond that, theyâre an agent short. And you fit the bill well enough: swift and intelligent. Nothing more, nothing less. It became clear during the first few weeks that no one on the team had any intention of liking or particularly getting to know you beyond a professional capacity. And you get it, you really do. You donât name the dog youâre gonna get rid of.
With the exception of Penelope. But you donât think she has the ability to ignore someone without a clear reason.
So you did your job and you were good at it. Held the team at armâs length even when they warmed up to you. Kept your head down, stuck to yourself. This way, itâs easier to stop yourself from leaning into JJ and Prentissâs jokes, or to stamp down the glow in your chest from Hotchâs approval.
All of this hard work goes sailing straight out the window and spattering on the concrete below when Reid comes back. Because all it took was one case together- one. And then youâre hopelessly in love with the guy you replaced.
And itâs all kinds of terrible, because itâs Reid. Heâs not only your coworker âsoon to be ex, because now that heâs back youâll be out of a jobâ but heâs also so incredibly out of your league itâs not even funny. But he keeps smiling at you and including you in conversations and saying hi to you and asking your opinion on things during cases as if you would have more to add than he does.
Itâs very hard to keep him at arms length. And because Reid is Reid he drags everybody else over with him and then youâre bonding with a team you have a week left with, maybe two.
Spencer Reid has weaseled his way into your life one stupid smile at a time.
â
The case is going terribly.
What started as a run-of-the-mill serial killer case in some nowhere town turned into huge investigation because Speâ Reid figured out its relation to a cold case from a neighboring town decades prior. And then, to top everything off, just so happens to be near enough to your hometown that your mom saw you on the news when JJ was giving a statement.
And now she wonât stop calling.
Prior to this, you havenât talked to your mom in about seven months. Now? Sheâs calling upwards of twelve times a day.
âMom,â You say, tucked in one of the police stations back rooms, pinching the bridge of your nose, âIâm working, I canât just come out to see youââ
âBut youâve never visited! And your finally in town, andââ
âIâm not in town, Iâm a four hour drive away from town.â
A sigh crackles through the line, her voice tinny. âYou know, your brother always made time to visit family, and your younger brothersââ
âAre younger than me and more successful, yes mom, Iâve heard it all before. Now if youâll excuse me, Iâm trying to catch a serial killer.â
You snap the phone shut before she can protest, effectively ending the call. You sag against the wall, sighing deep and weary. Exhaustion clings to your bones. Itâs not just your mom. This case, being physically close to your hometown, everythingâ itâs weighing you down. You spend more time in the hotel bed tossing and turning than sleeping.
Even Emâ Prentiss had shot you look when youâd came in this morning- though juryâs still out about whether or not it was an are-you-okay look or a you-better-be-good-for-the-case look. Youâre hoping itâs the former.
The room youâre in is empty- the precinct that called for the team went under renovation and remodeling last year, so some of the rooms have fallen into disuse, apparently. Itâs dusty, and filled with boxes and papers and weirdly, one or two condom wrappers. You wish you were surprised.
Your phone has been put strongly on silent, and youâre not expecting anyone to find you for at least twenty minutes. Of course, you donât need twenty minutes. You just need five.
You just need to collect yourself for a moment. A few minutes to breathe, to get your momâs words and the unpleasant memories they bring out of your head; to will the shake out of your hands and the cold creeping in your lungs.
So when the door opens, you nearly jump out of your skin.
Spencer walks in, phone clasped in one hand and a worried expression on his face.
âWeâre getting ready to give the profile.â
âOh,â You peel yourself off the wall, discreetly wiping at your face. You hadnât noticed the frustrated tears carving lines down your face, âSorry, Iâm coming.â
He frowns as you come closer, and panic begins to beat like a drum in your chest.
âIs Hotch upset? I just had to take a call, I thought it wouldââ
âSlow down,â He says, raising his hands. âHotch isnât upset. Is something wrong?â
âNo,â You say quickly, too quickly, because his frown deepens.
âYouâve been taking a lot more calls recently and youâre always upset after theyâre over. Is someone bothering you?â
You sigh, rubbing at your face. âMy mom. Weâre a four hour drive away from my hometown. She saw me on the news when JJ gave her statement.â
Something flashes in his eyes when you say your mother, but itâs gone before you can decipher it.
âYou donât want to see her.â
He says it flat-toned and blank. Like itâs a fact.
It is a fact.
âNo,â You confess, âIâve never been close with my parents. I havenât spoken to her beyond a text in years, and I havenât texted her in months. Then she sees me on the news and Iâm back on her radar again.â
You chuckle, but thereâs no humor in it. âOh, the folly of the disappointing daughter.â
He tilts his head, questioning. âYouâve made something of yourself. Youâre a special agent. Thatâs not nothing.â
âYeah, well. Itâs not Doctor or Lawyer or C.E.O or anything else my brothers or cousins have made of themselves, so,â You shrug. âDisappointing.â
âWell thatâs stupid,â Spencer says, a small curl to his lips, âYou keep all of those stupid people safe by catching serial killers.â
âYouâre a doctor. Did you just call yourself stupid?â
He shrugs, mimicking your earlier action. âIâm not that kind of doctor.â
You look down to hide the smile on your face but he ducks down, catching it anyway.
âHey,â He says, eyes catching yours, âIf you want to talk, you know where to find me.â
You (hesitantly) look up to meet his gaze. âThanks, Reid.â
His face does something weird. Contorts at the words, just for a second. Like he just bit into something sour.
And then itâs gone.
âOf course.â
â
For the rest of the case, everytime your phone rings, Spencer looks at you. Youâre getting close to just throwing the damn thing off a roof, if itâll convince him to stop looking at you like that. You donât know what to do with it. The look he gives you tastes like worry, and you donât know what to do about Spencer Reid worrying about you.
You never meet his gaze. You know heâs looking, but you never look back.
Finally, the case comes to an end. Actually, it goes out in a literal blaze of gloryâ the unsub lights his kill shed on fire.
All of it would have burned to ash if you hadnât run into the structure and and snatched the murder weapon and the most damning pieces of evidence: the printed photographs the unsub took with the victims.
Itâs a win because you saved the evidence.
Itâs a loss because Hotch looks pissed while the paramedics check you over.
Well. You assume he looks pissed. Youâre staring resolutely at your shoes.
Finally, the paramedic gives you the all clear âjust some minor burns here and there, you got luckyâ and you no longer have a human buffer and excuse to avoid talking.
The silence stretches out between you two. Eventually, you cave.
âHotch, Iâm sorryââ
He holds a hand up and you clamp your jaw shut.
âDid you not hear me give the order to stay back?â
âI just thoughtââ
âWe are a team, agent. I need to be able to trust not only that youâre going to follow my orders but be able to work together with the team. Now, youâre not doing either of those things.â
You frown. âI do follow your orders.â
He sighs. âYou didnât today. And more importantly, youâre not acting like a member of this team. You donât call for backup. You donât ask for help. You do good profiling work, agent. But if you canât work with this team then we might need to reconsider your position here.â
That⌠doesnât make any sense.
Hotch catches the confusion on your face. âSomething wrong, agent?â
âI justâ I was under the impression that I would only be working with the team for a few more weeksâŚ?â
Now itâs his turn to look confused. âYou may have been hired at an inopportune time, and until the first year is over it is a probationary basis, but pending review, you are and always have been a permanent member of this unit.â
You blink. âOh.â
Heâs quiet for a moment. âYou didnât think youâd be staying for long.â
You shake your head, your world turned on its head.
He hums. âYou should buy earplugs. Rossi snores.â
You drop your head into your hands.
âAnd agent?â
You look up.
âYou did good work today. You have a team. Learn to use them.â
He walks away, leaving you to process this crisis-inducing information.
So. Youâre not leaving the team. Youâre a profiler. Forever. This is your job now.
So does that mean you werenât replacing Spencer? So why were you hired? Anything you can do multiple people on the team can do better. Why would Hotch pick you?
You stare at the pavement, which gives you a perfect view to watch Spencerâs shoes walk into view and hear him settle next to you.
âYouâre a little young to be having a mid-life crisis.â
It takes you an embarrassingly long time to respond, partly because youâre not sure what to say, but also, the length of his thigh is pressed against yours and itâs hard to think when heâs emanating warmth and you canât stop yourself from thinking about how it would feel to touch, skin to skin.
âWell,â You croak, âI did just get some pretty big news.â
He leans back on his hands, raising an eyebrow. âOh?â
Looking up at him was a mistake. Bathed in the glow of the ambulance and the light from the moon, you can see just how long his eyelashes are, and how his lips move when he says your name.
Oh shit.
âSorry, what?â
His face twitches in a smile. âI asked if you were okay. You were staring.â
You flush from your neck to the tips of your ears. âSorry. Itâs been a long day. Iâm fine. I was just thinking.â
âAbout?â
See, he always does this. Most people would end the conversation there and move on. And thatâs fine. Itâs normal. But Spencer asks. Like heâs interested.
You shrug. âI thought⌠I thought I was leaving the team in a few weeks. Turns out iâm staying.â
He starts swinging his legs on the edge of the ambulance, though where his almost brush the ground, yours swing several inches above it. âWhy did you think you were leaving?â
You laugh softly. âMy boss told me the position was temporary. And in my excitement of getting it I may or may not have⌠not read the paperwork?â
He clicks his tongue. âOh, honey.â
The tips of your ears burn. âI was excited!â
âTo get a job staring at gruesome crime photos?â
âTo help people.â
âWhat? Data analysis not helping people enough?â
âDo I even have to answer that?â
He snorts, his body shaking against yours. âYouâre a consulting analyst. Thatâs the big leagues.â
Now itâs your turn to huff. âIs there a big leagues for data analysis?â
He leans his head down to look at you. âWell, maybe miss smarty-pants over here made a league of her own.â
The shade of red you turn must be visible, dark and bad lighting aside. âYou have an IQ of 187. Can you really call me a smarty-pants?â
He tilts his head, giving you an assessing look. You recognize it. He gives case files the same look.
A faint shudder runs down the length of your spine at that precise, clinical gaze.
It should concern you, unnerve you.
It doesnât.
âNo, Iâm positive. Youâre a smarty-pants.â
You look away, unable to hold the intensity of his gaze.
âHey, no. Come on, you gotta own up to being a smarty-pants. Otherwise you ruin the effect.â
âAm I supposed to start wearing sweaters and Converse, then?â
âWell, that wouldnât be owning the smarty-pants look.â
âDo we have to keep the smarty-pants thing going?â
âTook your mind off the burns, didnât it?â
You blink, realizing that you havenât noticed the dull sting of the minor burns littering your body for a few minutes now.
But that has less to do with Spencer speaking and more to do with the fact that heâs here. Touching you. If you focus really hard, you can feel the chords of muscle lining his arm.
âUh,â You stutter, momentarily flabbergasted by the way heâs looking at you. Like itâs important to himâ you not being in pain. âYeah, yeah, I guess. Well. I feel them now.â
âOh, shame. I guess weâll just have to keep talking.â
You furrow your brows. âDonât you have somewhere else to be? Shouldnât you be helping finish wrapping up the case?â
He shrugs. âIâm right where I want to be.â
Thatâs a decidedly very loaded statement that are not going to unpack.
Youâre not going to unpack to jolt of pure electricity you feel from it, either.
â
You may or may not have lied about just how sick you were, exactly.
âYou know,â Rossi says after you hack a cough into your elbow for what has to be the fiftieth time in as many minutes, âThatâs starting to sound less like the plague and more like desperation.â
You sniff harshly, taking a swig of cough syrup and praying this isnât the king with codeine in it. You didnât read the label very well. âWhat do you mean?â
Prentiss raises an eyebrow. âHeâs saying that most people on their veritable death/bed opt to sleep comfortably in their own beds in their own homes rather than on a plane to hunt down a violent killer.â
You think if your apartmentâ itâs cozy, at least, but still a glaring reminder of the reason you told Hotch you were fine to come in- loneliness.
You have heated blankets and warm lighting and books and tea âboxes and boxes of teaâ and all manner of things that make you happy. But no amount of things can replace, tangible human connection.
You knew the ache of spending the day in your apartment would sting worse than the cold. Fever, Whatever you have.
âIâm thinking of a word,â JJ says, mock tapping her chin thoughtfully, âStarts with work, ends with holic.â
âI am not a workaholic,â you wheeze. âI am fine.â
âYes,â Prentiss says, raising her other eyebrow. Oh no. Not the double eyebrow raise. âBecause this is exactly what the picture of health looks like.â
To avoid answering, you take another swig of cough medicine.
âJust do you know,â Spencer says, âYouâre about one tiny sip of that away from overdosing. Iâd cool it on the cough syrup.â
âBut Iâm still coughing.â
âHave you given it any time to work?â
âItâs been thirty-ish minutes since I took the first dose.â
He levels you with a look at your usage of dose. âWhy donât you wait a little longer before committing suicide via shallow breathing and seizures.â
You wave a hand. âItâs fine. I know how to take care of myself when Iâm sick.â
âIs your version of taking care of yourself just continuously taking medicine until the symptoms become bearable?â
âYouâre un-bearable.â You snort at your play on words, but grow quiet because when you look up, the entire team is looking at you. âWhat?â
âYou never joke.â JJ says.
âAnd I think Iâve heard you laugh exactly two times, and Iâm pretty sure one of them was a sneeze.â Rossi says, a look of vague disbelief on his face.
You squirm in place. âItâs not that big of a deal.â
âUh, yeah it is. Youâre definitely too sick to be on a case if youâre laughing.â
âCome on, it was barely a chuckleââ
Spencer looks around. âYeah, whatâs the big deal? Iâve heard her laugh before.â
JJ and Prentiss snap their heads to him in tandem. âWhat?â
Now he looks vaguely uncomfortable. âI just donât get why itâs such a big deal.â
âThatâs cause you showed up late to the party,â Em- Prentiss says, âYou didnât meet her when she first came. She was all genius consulting data analyst.â
âI wouldnât call myself a geniusââ
âYeah,â JJ chimes in, âI only ever saw her smile to be polite.â
âWait,â Prentiss says, brows pinched, âYou heard her laugh and you didnât tell us? You knew we were trying to see who would make her break first.â
âYou guys were trying to make me laugh? Is that what was happening all that time? I almost called Hotch like, thirty times because I was concerned for you guyâs mental wellbeing. I thought youâd had a nervous breakdown.â
JJ snorts. âNope. Just tried to see if the rumors were true about all data analysts being robots.â
You cough into your elbow. âYou guys make it seem like I was some sort of frigid bitch.â
âFrigid, yes. Bitch, no.â
âHey!â You retort, then wince as the volume of your own voice makes your head pound harder and makes your throat sting worse, âI wasnât that bad. Also, I was nervous! Iâm the youngest person here by like, a long shot. I wanted to be professional.â
âI for one enjoyed it,â Rossi cuts in, âIt was all blunt business. Straight to the point. No beating around the bush or gossiping. A few people here could learn a thing or two.â
âSee?â You gesture. âRossi agrees with me.â
Just about everyone on the plane gives you the exact same look. Hotch especially, whoâs stayed silent during the entire exchange, looks troubled.
Once you land (an ordeal that normally doesnât bother you, but today, had you worshipping the porcelain altar) Hotch pulls you aside.
âAgent,â He says before you climb into the car thatâll take you to the police precinct, âI canât have an agent not at peak performance on this case.â
You frown. âWhat are you saying?â
âIâm saying youâre too sick to work this caseââ
âNo, no, I can work, I can do itââ
ââIn the field. Youâre working from the station until we wrap up. Understood?â
You sigh, knowing when youâre beat. âUnderstood.â
He gazes at you for a second. âYou might want to call out of work entirely the next time youâre sick, you know. The less time you spend resting the longer itâll take to get better. I expect to see you taking care of yourself at the precinct.â
You blink. âAre you⌠dad-ing me?â
He almost smiles. âWell, I am a father. Itâs bound to come out sometimes.â
The joke soothes your concerns of him being upset with you (again.) You suppose it wouldâve been warranted âHotch never gets upset without a reasonâ but still. Heâs the only one you occasionally struggle to read.
The good news is by the time you make it to the station, your medicine has kicked in.
The bad news is when you get to the station your medicine has kicked in.
âSpencer,â You say, spinning in a spinny chair and staring at his blurry face. âDid you know that elephants have prehensileââ
âDo not finish that sentence.â He says, glancing back at the team, all in various stages of concern, disgust, amusement, and annoyance. âDid you take non-drowsy cough medicine?â
âYes! I didnât want to be tired.â
He scrubs a tired hand down his face, then nudges a sealed water bottle across the table to you. âDrink that.â
You wrinkle your nose. âBut my throat hurts.â
âDrink it anyway.â
You snatch the water bottle, grumbling the whole time as you crack the seal and gulp down the water, not realizing how thirsty you were until this very second.
You lean your forehead on the table head still pounding from the pressure in your sinuses. You feel a prickle in the back of your neck, signifying that the team is still staring at you.
With great effort, you lift your head, tilting your chin up and trying to summon all the self confidence you donât actually have.
âI am making a fool of myself. Please disregard my actions until I am no longer ill. This wonât happen again.â
Words are hard. Speaking is hard. With a groan, you drop your head back on your arm.
âAh, there she is.â
âKnew that laugh had to be a fluke.â
âCold medicine must be working.â
There are other mutterings about stubborn geniuses and workaholics and data analysis and Spencer staying at the station andâ
You snap your head up. âIâm fine. I donât need a baby-sitter. Spencer would be most useful in the field. Heâs one of the best shotâs on the team.â
âAnd when it comes to needing a marksman I wonât hesitate to get him,â Hotch says, âBut for now, I need my two geniuses to put their heads together to solve this case.â
Feeling cowed, you avoid Spencerâs gaze as the team files out of the room youâve all set up in, instead grabbing a file from the center of the table. You really are being stupid. You shouldâve stayed home, now youâre a liability, not to mention a walking biohazard. Fuck, why couldnât you just think before youâ
âI can hear you spiraling from over here.â
You lift your gaze, eyeing Spencer who hasnât even put down the case file heâs reading.
You look back down. âI wasnât spiraling.â
âYouâre really going to lie to a profiler?â
âWeâre both profilers.â
âYeah, well, you have an obvious tell when youâre worrying about something.â
âI do not!â
You hear the quiet shuffling of papers.
A sigh leaves your lips, and you press the heels of your hands to your eyes. âIâm really sorry, Speâ Reid. I didnât mean to drag you here with me.â
If he notices your slip up, he doesnât give any indication of it.
âWho said anything about dragging?â
âI know youâre a germaphobe, and Iâm a walking biohazard, and now youâre stuck here going over case files and, and Iâm a liability right nowââ
âSlow down,â He says, interrupting your slew of word vomit. His voice has dropped an octave, gaining a richer note. You should stop thinking about his voice. âIâm fine. Youâre fine. The team is more worried than upset. Youâre not the first person to come to work sick. And you wonât be the last.â
âThey keep staring at me.â
âBecause your current state and manner of behavior are disrupting their pre-conceived notions and set opinions of your character.â
You scrunch your nose. âDonât get all clinical on me,â
You hear a small huff of laughter across the table. âIâve come to work far worse than hopped up on cold medicine, believe me. Donât worry about it. Just focus on working the case.â
Slowly, the itching under your skin settles, and you manage to swallow the lump in your throat. Eventually, you peel your hands away from your face and do what he says.
Hours pass by in a blur of text and you and Spencer occasionally either bouncing ideas off each other or making small breakthroughs. Spencer handles the relay of information because you canât really go more than three full sentences without hacking up a lung. Seriously, what is cough syrup good for?
Sometime past midday, you start flagging. The words start blending and smushing together and your head gets harder and harder to hold up. Youâre jolting yourself back awake every five minutes, forcing your body to just bear through the illness for the sake of productivity. You got yourself into this mess, you deal with the consequences.
Youâre just⌠so tired. Maybe youâll close your eyes, just for a few minutes. To get energy. And then you can get back to the case.
Just for a few minutes.
â
âShe out?â
âLike a light. Powered through for a lot longer than I expected. But dextromethorphan gets us all in the end.â
A low whistle. âPoor kid. The âproving yourself to the teamâ phase is rough.â
A hum. âI think itâs more than that.â
A beat passes.
âYou got her?â
âYeah,â Something soft and good smelling, like pine and coffee and something almost rich settles over your shoulders, âYeah, I got her.â
â
When you wake, your neck is sore but youâre not cold, which is strange considering you remember falling asleep in a table.
Oh god you fell asleep on the table.
You jackrabbit up in place, knees knocking against the underside of the table. Hissing in pain, you tug the warm thing further around your shoulders which isâ
Holy fucking shit itâs Spencerâs sweater.
Said man is nowhere to be found, and the conference/briefing room youâre in is dark. Not only did someone turn the lights off (youâre pretty sure you can guess who) but itâs dark outside. Meaning you didnât just take a short nap.
You slept the entire day away.
Cold dread seeps into your shoulders. âOh my god Iâm so fired. Oh shit. Fuck, Hotch is going to be so pissedââ
The door opens and you stand, whirling around to face the doorway and then instantly regretting it when spots dance across your vision and your head swims.
You stumble, grabbing the edge of the chair for support and squinting at the figure in the doorway.
âHotch?â
âNope,â Spencerâs voice rings out in the room, âGuess again.â
You groan, sinking down into the chair. âAm I fired?â
He snorts. âSeeing as Hotch bet that youâd fall asleep before dark, Iâd say no.â
âHe bet against me?â
âActually, everyone else thought youâd only last an hour. He bet for four.â
âHow long did you bet for?â
He sets a mug in front of you, steaming tea wafting up and warming your face. âThree hours. You metabolize cough syrup better than I thought.â
You take the mug in your hands, warming your fingers but not actually taking a sip. âMmm. Told you Iâve done this before.â
âI donât think thatâs the brag you think it is.â
You chuckle, which quickly turns into a cough.
âDrink your tea,â He commands softly from across the table, sleeves pushed up around his elbows and papers spread about him.
You dutifully take a sip, something restless growing calm in the back of your skull.
You eye is forearms, hoping the look-over youâre giving them is subtle. (It probably isnât, but come on. A button down with the sleeves rolled up while youâre wearing his sweater is practically sinful.)
âDo you⌠want the lights turned back on? Iâm awake now, so.â
He flips over a piece of paper, then scribbles something on a sticky note. âYou were sleeping. And you have a headache. I can see just fine.â
âMy headache isnât that bad, really, Iâm fiââ
He levels you with a look, and you sink a little lower in your chair. âDo you at least want your sweater back?â
âNo. Keep it.â
âCareful, maybe Iâll just keep it forever,â You joke.
âIâd be fine with that.â
What. The. Fuck.
You stand, pushing out the chair with a loud screech. âIâm just gonnaâ bathroom,â You splutter, your face blazing and stomach doing a gymnastics routine, âIâm gonna use the bathroom. Bye.â
Youâre screaming internally the entire way to the bathroom, and once you get there, open-mouthed silent screaming in the privacy of a stall.
Because. He said. He didnât even look up. He just. And he. Maybe heâ
No, no, no. You are not about to entertain that notion. Not again. He was just being nice. Thatâs all. Thatâs all.
Collecting yourself takes about five more minutes, and then youâre walking back to the conference/briefing room when you realize you never took the damn sweater off. He watched you scramble out of that room to the bathroom he has to know you werenât using, with his sweater on.
This is the end for you, then. Thatâs it. Itâs over.
You mentally slap yourself. Get it together. Itâs fine. Itâs fine. Everything is fine.
You re-enter the room marginally calmer than you left it. You slide into your seat, sip your tea (that he made you!) and keep working on the case.
You pretend you canât see him smirking from across the table.
â
The case doesnât last too long. The team catches the guy in the act of beating his next victim. Thankfully, you manage to save the poor woman before he finishes his plan, and with being caught red-handed, itâs fairly open and shut. Case closed. Which is great, because you really arenât sure how many more nights you can suffer through trying to sleep in the hotel bed.
You have this thing, when youâre sick. You canât sleep anywhere but the couch. Your couch. You figured (apparently foolishly) that it wouldnât be too bad, since the crux of the issue is that you hate sleeping in your bed when youâre sick, but no. Youâd spent every night of the case tossing and turning and coughing yourself out. Your lungs were tired. Your body was tired. You were tired.
Spencer raises an eyebrow at you when you board the jet. âYou havenât been near-overdosing on cough syrup again have you?â
âNo,â You grouse, rubbing your face with your hand. âIâm like, not even sick anymore. I just didnât sleep well.â For several nights in a row.
âMmm,â He hums, non-committal.
You practically collapse into your usual seat on the jet, hunching in yourself and attempting to make yourself comfortable in the seat.
You blink your eyes open when you feel the seat jostle next to you. âReid?â
Heâs already pulling out a book. âWhat?â
âThis isnât your seat.â
âWe donât have assigned seats.â
âNo, but you always sit over there.â
âAnd now Iâm sitting here.â
You narrow your eyes at him, trying to decide if you want to argue him on the point or not. You decide against it, because arguing will draw attention to the fact that youâre sitting next to each other having this conversation at all.
You settle back into your seat. âWhatever. Hope youâre not a loud page-turner.â
âIs that even a thing?â
You shrug, eyes falling shut again.
After a few minutes, you shiver, unconsciously scooting closer to the warmth of the person next to you, your sleep-addled brain barely processing the fact that itâs Spencer youâre pressing your shoulder into.
He repositions next to you, shoulder jostling you. You grumble, dropping your head to his arm. Now much closer, your nose fills with the smooth, all encompassing smell that is Spencer.
The dull chatter that fills the plane, the warm body next to yours, and, despite your earlier complaints, the quiet, gentle page-turning lull you into an easy sleep.
â
âAre you drugging her or something? Iâve seen her sleep more this week than I have in her entire time on the team.â
âThe only drugging sheâs done was voluntary.â
âHer neck is going to be so sore when she wakes up.â
âSore? Mine would be broken if I did that.â
âAh, the joys of youth.â
A beat passes. Then another.
âSheâs a bit young, donât you think?â
âEmily donât startââ
âJust saying, Spence. HR would get a kick out of this.â
âNot like it never happens. Weâve all walked into supply closet B at the wrong time.â
âThis isnât meaningless sex though.â
ââŚNo.â
Silence.
âAre you sure youâre alright?â
A deft hand re-adjusts your head to a more comfortable angle. âI will be.â
â
Landing jolts you into wakefulness and off Spencerâs shoulder. Itâs not embarrassing. Itâs not. Itâs only weird if you make it weird.
When youâre all back at HQ, you pull Hotch aside.
âCan I talk to you for a minute?â
He nods. âIn my office.â
You stalk up the stairs, aware of the eyes following your back. You step into the office, shutting the door behind you and pretending it doesnât feel like sealing your doom.
He sits, gesturing for you to do so too, but you shake your head.
âI wonât be long. I just wanted to apologize.â
He blinks. âFor?â
âI shouldnât have come in. I was a liability, and it was unprofessional. Next time Iâll act with more discretion.â
Selfish, Your motherâs words echo in your head, your fatherâs words following suit: Try harder.
He laces his fingers together, resting him on his desk.
âDo you know why I chose you?â
âBecause Reid was gone, and you needed a geâ someone smart.â
âEvery member of my team is intelligent. Thatâs not why I chose you.â
He reaches down, opening a desk drawer and pulling out a newspaper clipping.
Your breath hitches when you read the words on it.
âGarcia found it,â He says, scanning the piece of paper. ââProfessorâs Assistant saves college class from school shooterâ. You were sixteen.â
You look down at your shoes. âIt was the scariest moment of my life. I didnâtâ he came in, and I was behind the door getting paper, and he didnât see me. He⌠I knew people would die if I didnât do something. I tackled him. He shot me twice before I managed to kick the gun away. I almost bled out.â
He nods, putting the clipping down. âThatâs who I chose. Not the genius. Not the consulting data analyst. Someone who wants to help people.â
He puts the clipping back in his drawer. âIâm not going to write you up for not having a healthy work-life balance. No one in this bureau does, and if they say they do, theyâre lying.â
You sigh, rubbing at your face. âNow I look stupid for asking to talk.â
âItâs not an imposition. Youâre a member of my team. That makes your wellbeing when youâre on the job my responsibility.â
Unable to form a response to that, you manage to stutter out a thank you, and then flee from his office, collapsing into your chair at your desk with a sigh.
A mug is set in front of you. Different mug, same tea, same hand.
âI think you need to reevaluate your opinion of Hotch and what kind of person you think he is.â
You take the mug with a glare. âI was reasonably concerned.â
âYou thought you were going to get written up for coming to work sick?â
âIt was a logical conclusion to draw,â You pause, taking a sip of the tea, which is just as good as it was last time. Actually, itâs slightly sweeter, and it soothes your throat more. âAnd stop profiling me. Whatâd you put in this?â
âStop being so easy to profile,â Spencer says, crossing his arms. âHoney. They didnât have any at the station.â
Itâs quiet for a few moments: him staring at you, you pretending heâs not staring and sipping your tea.
âYou should go home.â
âWhy?â
âBecause youâre still sick. Donât tell me you just canât wait to write all this paperwork.â
âMaybe I am.â
âNo youâre not,â He picks up your jacket from where itâs hanging off the side of your cubicle and plops it in your lap. âGo home. Iâll sick Hotch on you.â
You stand, shrugging your jacket on and pointing an accusing finger at him. âYouâre a cruel man.â
âMhm. Sure. Go home.â
You grumble all the way to the door, but quiet when you look back to see him watching you fondly. He gives you a little two finger wave, and with the sheer amount of heat that rushes to your cheeks, you have no choice but leave immediately.
Stupid genius co-workers.
â
The next week brings wellness and a lull in cases.
Unfortunately, that also means you donât have an excuse to put off your paperwork any longer.
Spencer taps the top of it with a slender finger. âDid it get bigger since the last time I saw it?â
Heâs hanging around your desk for⌠some reason. He came to drop off paperwork from your last case, and then stuck around for some unknown purpose.
âNo,â You groan, setting your mug of coffee aside and grabbing the first paper off the stack. âStill the same pile Iâm procrastinating on.â
âGood luck,â He huffs, finally turning and walking back to his own desk. Itâs still in your eyeline, if you crane your neck a little.
You sigh, grabbing your earbuds from your desk, knowing you canât put the paperwork off any longer. Youâre pretty sure Records is going to start sending you death threats soon.
Making your way through the pile is slow going. Itâs terrible. The only part of working with the BAU you hate is the paperwork. Itâs tedious and never-ending and it always gives you a headache.
The only times you get up are to use the bathroom and get more coffee. JJ kindly tells you that you should probably leave your mug in the break room after your sixth or so trip. Spencer, somehow, appears in the room, and rattles off the symptoms of caffeine overdose.
You leave the mug there.
You continue working well after everyone else leaves. It gets dark, people go home, office lights go off, and while the pile has largely decreased in size, itâs still not finished.
You have to finish. Hotch had made an offhand comment about turning in your paperwork on time and now you have to finish it. To show him youâre not lazy.
Youâve only got a little bit of paperwork left when a hand taps you on your shoulder.
You yank your earbuds out, blinking blearily. âWha?â
Spencerâs face swims into view. âCome on, time to go home.â
âWhat are you doing here?â
âMaking sure you didnât fall asleep and forget to go home. They do lock the doors at a certain point. Ask me how I know.â
Your brain is moving like sludge, and it takes you several minutes to process what he says. He continues standing in front of you, patiently waiting for you to respond.
âBut⌠the paperwork.â
âWill be here tomorrow. Come on, up we go.â
You whine as he takes your hands, hauling you to your feet. You attempt to scrub the sleep out of your eyes while messily moving papers about so your desk doesnât look like a copy machine threw up all over it.
He pushes your jacket into your hands and you shrug it on, grumbling all the way through the doors and out to the parking lot, Spencer in tow. He follows dutifully behind you, and everytime you look back at him to voice your complaints all he does is smile.
âItâs cold.â
âThat does tend to happen in winter.â
When you get to your car, he reaches out, tugging on your wrist.
âHey,â He says, looking down at you, eyes deep pools of some emotion you canât identify, âDrive safe, okay? Itâs icy.â
âMy commute isnât that bad. And Iâm,â You break off with a huge yawn. âNot even that tired.â
âThat doesnât inspire much confidence, smarty-pants.â
âOh, so weâre locked into the smarty-pants thing, huh?â
âYep.â He says, shoving his hands in his jacket pockets and popping the P.
âWell then what am I supposed to call you? Robot-Reid?â
âHow about Spencer?â
His words hang in the night air, mingling in the puffs of air from both of your mouths.
ââŚWhat rhymes with Spencer?â
âSensor, denser, dispenserââ
âDis-Spencer,â You say, smiling to yourself. âI like the sound of that one.â
âYou know dis comes fromââ
âThe latin word dis, and the prefix is used to denote a reversal of absence of an action, expressing negation, or expressing completeness or intensification of an unpleasant or unattractive action.â
He chuckles, smiling down at his shoes. âThatâs why youâre the smarty-pants.â
âOh please. You know all of that and then some.â
He shrugs. âMaybe, maybe not.â
You both stand in the cold of the parking lot, neither willing to leave yet.
Before you can think better of it, you dart forward, throwing your arms around Spencerâs neck and mumbling âGoodnight, Dis-Spencer.â
You step away quickly, awkwardly giving him a small wave before hurrying into your car and driving away.
Smooth.
â
The next case is⌠really rough.
Two spree killers, working as a team. A father and a son; the son was groomed into the lower position.
Not anything you havenât seen before. Trained for. Studied.
No amount of studying could have prepared you for the cold grip of dread that gripped your throat like a vice when you finally confronted the unsubs, and heard eerily familiar words uttered from the father:
âYouâre a good for nothing son! I wouldnât have had to do this if you werenât such a disappointment of a child! Why couldnât you have just been more like your siblings?â
The son was killed before anyone could intervene.
Wrapping up the case left you shakenâ youâd watched with hollow eyes as the boyâs body was zipped in a body bag.
A hand landing roughly on your shoulder shoves awareness back into your body and you flinch, hard, whirling around with your shoulders raised to meet the oncoming threat.
Only itâs not a threat. Itâs Hotch. And he looks concerned.
You force your body to relax. âIâm sorry, Iâll go help question the rest of the familyââ
âAre you okay?â
You blink. âWhat?â
âAre you alright?â He asks again.
âYeah, Iâm, Iâm okay. It just⌠reminded me of something.â
Hotch purses his lips but doesnât say anything. He looks heâs going to say something, but then decides against it.
âHelp Reid get the last of the evidence. Once you two are finished head back to the station. Weâll meet you there.â
You nod, inwardly relieved about not having to deal with the family members. You might start actually crying.
You sidle up to Spencer whoâs tagging blood splatters on the carpet. He wordlessly hands you a pair of gloves. He doesnât ask. You donât tell.
You work side by side for the better part of two hours, occasionally conversing with the local police or helping the crime scene investigators tag evidence.
If he knows whatâs bothering you, he doesnât say. You wouldnât have an answer anyway. Youâre far too gone in your own head.
You follow Spencer to the break room back at the station, watching him quietly make two mugs of tea. He presses one into your hands with a gentle command to let it cool for a few minutes. The mug is warm in your hands. Spencer is standing next to you, a mug of his own in his hands. Your parents arenât here. Youâre fine.
You chant this mantra in your head while you wait for the rest of the team to come back.
Your parents arenât here. Youâre fine.
Spencer doesnât ask before sitting next to you on the jet. He just does. He hands you a book, then opens his own.
You donât read a single page. He must know. Still, he says nothing, just presses a little closer to you when he sees your hands shaking.
The team gives the two of you space when you finally land. You stumble off the jet, trip backpack slung over your shoulder, legs wobbly and breath uneven.
Youâre not sure why the case upset you this much. Your parents donât upset you this much. They justâ they make the same kind of comments, and so did that father, except now his son is dead because he killed himâ
âHey,â Hotch approaches you slowly, makes sure you can see him. You hate that he feels the need to do so. âTake tomorrow off. Stay home. Recuperate.â
âIâm fiââ
âWe all have tough missions and I would do the same for any agent,â He says, clasping you gently on the shoulder. âBesides. We both know you havenât been sleeping well.â
Your lips twitch. âIsnât there a rule against profiling each other?â
âThat rule is for all of you. Not me.â
He gives your shoulder one last squeeze before departing.
You manage to haul yourself into HQ and out to the parking lot, cursing as your cold fingers fumble with your keys. Frustrated tears begin to well in your eyes and you press the heels of your hands to your face, sucking in a shuddering breath and begging it all to just stop.
Someone gently pries your hands open, pulling your keys out of your clenched grip. Your shoulders shake as you heave, gasping for cold night air that burns on the way down.
A hand finds its way to the back of your head, pressing it forward into something warm and solid. Another arm wraps around your waist, keeping you close, while the hand on your head drifts down to your neck, squeezing and rubbing intermittently.
âIâm sorry,â You cry, rubbing your face and smearing your tears across your hands, âI donât know why, it justââ
âYou donât need a reason,â Spencer says, spreading his hand out wide so it covers the entire nape of your neck, âSometimes it all just gets to you.â
You nod into his chest, lowering your hands from his face to wrap around his torso, clutching it like a lifeline.
âI donât want to go home tonight,â You whisper, ashamed. âIâll dream of it. And them. And itâll be cold and aloneââ
âCome home with me,â He says, voice a little breathless while he holds you closer, âCome home with me.â
He says the last part a little desperate.
You sniff. âOkay.â
You hesitantly pull away from the hug, but not before Spencerâs hand moves from your neck to your face, his thumb brushing away the tear tracks on your face. He drops his head down, and you feel the gentlest brush of lips against the skin in between your eyebrows.
âLetâs go home.â
He tugs you along by the hand, helping you into his little old car, tucking your bags into the backseat. He lets the radio play softly while he drives, loud enough to quiet your thoughts a bit but not so loud as to overwhelm you.
He helps you out of the car when you arrive to the apartment building, carrying one of your bags up the stairs- youâd insisted on carrying the rest of your stuff.
He unlocks the apartment door, ushering you into the warmth and comfort that is Spencerâs home.
Itâs exactly like you pictured, if not tidier. A bit more modern than youâd imagined. Books are everywhere of course, but so are knick-knacks and trinkets and other little bits of things that are so decidedly Spencer. Thereâs even a quilt on the couch.
He sets your bag down by the door. âThe shower is down that hall to the left. Use whatever products you need to. Do you have any clothes to change into?â
You chew on the inside of your lip. âIn my luggage, yeah, but they need to be washed.â
âI can put them in the wash while you shower. In the meantime, you can borrow something of mine.â
You shuffle in place. âI donât wanna imposeââ
âPlease let me do this for you.â
The raw, rough edge to his tone makes you pause. You nod in acquiescence.
He takes your hand in his again, tugging you into his bedroom. With one hand, he opens drawers, handing you his smallest pair of sweatpants, and a large, worn, and incredibly soft Caltech sweatshirt.
âIâll have to cuff these,â You mumble when he hands you the sweatpants, âMy legs are half the length of yours.â
âYouâll make it work, Iâm sure. Now shoo. Iâll have laundry and food finished when you get out of the shower.â
The bathroom, like the rest of the house, is clean and neat, and to your relief, houses more than just a five-in-one in the shower. Spencer actually owns multiple products for you to choose from and it hits you while youâre lathering the body wash you chose because of how good it smelled that youâre in Spencerâs shower, showering with his body wash, about to put on his clothes.
Youâre going to smell like him. His clothes will smell like him. Everywhere in the apartment smells like him.
You decide to blame the near permanent flush on your cheeks on the heat from the shower.
When you exit the shower, fresh and drowning in Spencerâs clothes, heâs standing at his kitchen island, putting the final touches on two bowls of soup.
You almost tear up again. âYou made me soup?â
âItâs widely regarded as a comfort food for people who are ill or otherwise sad, and is most commonly made in the wintertime.â
He gives you a little jazz hand, gesturing to the soup as if saying ta-da!
You really do tear up then.
Heâs in front of you in an instant, hands poised to help. âHey, hey, whatâs wrong? Do you not like soup? I can make something else, or we can order in, orââ
You scrub at your face with the sleeve of his sweatshirt. âYouâre just, youâre just really sweet.â
His face softens. âOh, honey.â
He envelops you in the second hug of the night, except this time youâre crying in earnest now. Your crying about your parents, about the nights you went to bed hungry because your Dad told that you were smart, and to figure something out, but you were too young to work any of the kitchen appliances. Youâre crying about your first best friend, who ditched you the second your brother asked her out. Youâre crying about all the classes and friendships you missed out on while you were in the hospital with gunshot wounds. Youâre crying about how your parents didnât visit you once. Not even when you were in the ICU.
Spencer holds you through it all, a steady rock against the battering waves crashing in your head.
After a few minutes, you wear yourself out, quieting down to sniffling, your shoulders hitching.
He pulls back, studying your face. âAre you ready to eat some soup now?â
You nod, blinking the final tears out of your eyes. âI got snot on your shirt.â
âThatâs why we invented washing machines.â
He keeps up a stream of idle chatter while you eat, explaining all the different major soups in the world and where they came from. Itâs a balm against your weary mind, lulls you into peace and safety.
Or maybe thatâs just the effect Spencer has on you.
When you finish your food, he takes your bowl, deposits it in the sink, and then takes your hand and leads you to his bedroom.
âI donât have a guest room, so you can take the bed,â He says, voice soft. âThereâs extra blankets in the closet next to the bathroom if you get cold.â
He turns to leave, but a stab of panic slices down your chest, and your hand is reaching out and grabbing his wrist before you can stop yourself.
He pauses, turning back around. âYou want me to stay?â
You take your lip between your teeth. âI donât want to be alone.â
He studies you in the dark of the roomâ clad in his clothes, face puffy from crying.
The muscles in his jaw work.
âI canât do this platonically. If we do thisââ
You surge up on your toes, grabbing his face and smashing your lips together so quickly your teeth clack.
He goes rigid, then kisses your right back, hands coming up to cup your face, squeeze your neck, smooth over your shoulders.
You pull away first, looking at him through your lashes with hazy eyes. âI canât do this platonically either.â
He traces the planes of your face with his thumb. âYou have no idea how long and how much Iâve wanted to have you right here, just like this.â
âCrying and sad?â
âDressed in my clothes, in my apartment, in my bed.â
You pause. âYou know, tonight, I canât, Iâm not going to haveââ
âIâm not interested in sex with you tonight,â He says, reading your mind, âI just want to get that empty look in your eyes gone.â
âJust?â
âWell,â He says, tugging you down onto the bed with him, crawling under the covers and covering you both, âThere are other things. A lot of other things, Like this,â
He presses a kiss to your forehead.
âAnd this,â
He pulls you flush against him under the covers, tucking your head under his chin.
âBut mostly this.â
He presses one last kiss to the crown of your head.
âReally?â
âReally.â
Itâs quiet for a moment before his voice breaks the silence.
âAfter I got out, all I wanted was something soft and gentle. Having something, someone soft and lovely to hold was all I looked forward to. And then I came back and I met you, with your polite introductions and the way you care so deeply about so much and I knew. I knew who I wanted to hold.â
âWow,â You breathe, âYours sounds so poetic. Mine is much less so.â
âMmm,â He hums, âAnd what might that be?â
You press your face against his chest and mumble so quietly youâre wondering if he can ever hear you:
âI just wanted you to choose me. I wanted to be someoneâs first choice.â
Heâs so quiet after that you think he must not have heard you.
Youâre on the verge of sleep when you hear his whisper:
âThere couldnât be anyone else for me.â
ŕŞââ´
EDIT: if you want to be tagged in the sequel when itâs posted, please comment âtag me please!â or some variation of THE POST LINKED HERE !! if you comment asking for a tag on this post, you will not be added to the tag list. tag lists are hard to keep track of, so please keep them all in one place !! :)
EDIT TWO: THE SEQUEL IS UP !! It is linked at the top of this post under ânextâ :)
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an// YOU GUYS! Yâall crushed Showtime so much, I had to write a lil extra of the team figuring it all out! Truly thank you to everyone who enjoyed it, I cannot remember the last time I had a fic get so much support! TYÂ đ
-
It was hard for you and Aaron to go back to being at odds after being undercover. It's been weeks, but itâs taking some time for that mask to go completely back on at work. The team kicked it all back off again with a joke the second you sit down for a briefing.Â
âThanks for joining us, Mrs. Hayes.â Morgan smirks, turning in his chair back and forth.Â
You roll your eyes while Emily sits down next to you and asks him, âYouâre still stuck on that?â
âWe watched them kiss how many times? Youâve moved on?â
You flip open your file, âYouâre welcome for the obsession.â
Hotch doesnât look up, âFocus, please.â
You look up and glance around at everyone in the room. Rossiâs eyes are already studying you with a small smile.Â
He taps his fingers on the table before speaking, âLetâs profile a hypothetical.â
This cannot be good.Â
Morgan perks up instantly, âOh, this I like.âÂ
The team begins looking between you and Aaron in a curious way.
Emily laughs, âNo way. Not with this unit. Impossible.â
âIs it?â Rossi questions.Â
Hotch doesnât look up from his file, and you take a sip of your coffee. No reaction.Â
JJ leans forward, joining their hypothetical, âOkay, so what was the trigger event?â
âUndercover assignment that required intimacy.â Rossi gestures between you two.Â
Morgan grins, âAnd boom, theyâre both suddenly very convincing.â
âWeâre right here.â You finally set down your file.
âYes,â Garcia grins, âThatâs what makes this fun!â
âThat level of physical ease doesnât come overnight.â
You donât dare cut a look to Aaron, that would not go unnoticed right now. They go back and forth continuing to debate if Hotch was faking uncomfortability the first day undercover or if he was just uncomfortable under their eyes.Â
âAt the risk of my job,â Garcia meekly raises her hand, âAfter the Flagstaff case I did look into their schedules-â
âGarcia!â Hotch warns.Â
She unsurprisingly barrels on anyway, âTheir access badges have had the same arrival time since Halloween.âÂ
âLots of people arrive at the same time.â
âY/n and Hotch also leave within three minutes of each other on non-field days.â Spencer states.Â
Hotch finally exhales one through his nose. You look up to the ceiling and fight the urge to just close your eyes.Â
âAnd they have the same gym sessions blocked out every Tuesday and Thursday, but their badges are never scanned in.â
âOh my god!â JJ gasps.
Rossi squints, âWhy are you so calm right now?â
âBecause,â You keep your voice even, âthis is entertaining.â
Emilyâs eyes widen and she smacks your shoulder, âOh my god.â
You look over to Aaron finally, the corner of his mouth twitching up barely.Â
âHotch.â Morgan notices it too and calls him out.Â
No denial. Just silence.
Morgan leans back slowly, âYouâve gotta be kidding me.âÂ
The realization sinks in over the rest of the team. They no longer shout their ideas and evidence over each other, instead they look between you two eagerly. Chomping at the bit for any and every detail.Â
âYou arenât denying it.â Emily is practically shaking your shoulders now.Â
You laugh while shrugging her away, âYouâre profilers. Profile.âÂ
âOh, that is so confirmation!â Garcia squeals.Â
Morgan suddenly stands from his chair, âMonths! This has been going on for months?â
Rossi smiles, still just looking between you at Hotch, âMinimum.â
âI feel betrayed,â Emily groans, âHow many girls nights out have we had?â
âYou let me make undercover kiss jokes for weeks.â Morgan chuckles, shaking his head in pure disbelief.
You canât help but grin, âYou seemed happy.âÂ
âThis is the most controlled long-con relationship in BAU history.â Spencer points out.Â
Hotch meets their eyes. No apology. Just a quiet and quick acknowledgement.Â
âYes.âÂ
Rossi claps one, âWell done. Both of you.âÂ
âYou realize that weâre never letting this go, right?âÂ
You smile softly now, âWe never never expected you would.â
âHuman resources have been aware since the relationship started.â Hotch states.Â
âWhich was when exactly?â JJ raises her brows.
You know that Hotch has a lot he wants to reassure the team about. The power imbalance. The age-gap. All of them are completely valid concerns.Â
Hotch finally closes his file and sets it back on the table. Itâs clear they arenât going to start this briefing anytime soon.
-
Towards the end of the day everyone is reviewing their reports at their desks, trying to get their work done to head home for the weekend. The bullpen is still riding the high of the new revelation, the energy still bouncing off of everyone. You contemplated working in the lair to get away from everyoneâs teasing comments, but you know being trapped one on one with Garcia is far more dangerous than everyone else.
The elevator dings.Â
JJ looks up first, âHey, Jackâs here.â
Hotch looks up immediately, coming to stand at the top of the stairs by the door to his office. His whole expression softens when Jack trots in with his backpack on and a paper in hand. He makes a beeline for his dad, but detours halfway. Straight to you.Â
You roll back from your desk in time for a big hug.Â
âHi.â
You smile down at him and instinctively brush his hair back, âHey, you.â
Morgan freezes mid sip and Emilyâs brows raise a couple degrees.Â
JJ whispers, âOh this is going to be good.â
Hotch clears his throat lightly, âJack.â
He turns to look up at his dad, âWhat?â
âYou wanna show me what you brought?â Hotch nods down to the piece of paper he has protectively in his hand.Â
âIn a second,â He turns back to you, âAre you still coming over tonight?â
The bullpen goes totally silent.Â
You donât miss a beat, âThat depends. Did you do your chores already?â
âYeah, Dad said we should do it before you came over this weekend.â
âJackâŚâ Hotch warns.Â
You can tell heâs just getting started.Â
âLook!â He finally presents the piece of paper he had been holding. Itâs a drawing of three stick figures all standing together holding hands. It isnât labeled with names, but the details make itâs clear who he drew. Jack, Aaron, and you. One of many drawings.
âThis is a good one!â You smile softly and lean down to press a kiss to the top of his head, âGo show your dad.â
He launches off of you to chase up the stairs to his dad.
âWe built a full behavioral timeline and Garcia hacked into numerous FBI databases when we couldâve just asked the witness.â Rossi shakes his head.Â
âAlways ask the child.â JJ nods.Â
âThanks, buddy.â Hotch takes the drawing from him and bends down to scoop him up in a hug.Â
âI know you said weâre not supposed to tell people at work-â
âItâs okay, buddy.â Aaron reassures.Â
âWeeks of deduction.â Morgan shakes his head.Â
âHell, you should hire him.â Rossi chuckles, âHeâs a natural.âÂ
Jack looks confused, âY/n said that honesty matters.â
You laugh, âYes, I did. It does matter.âÂ
You hear Emily huff an âmhmâ somewhere behind you. Youâre sure the whole team just rolled their eyes.Â
Morgan walks up to Jack and offers him a fist bump, âYou closed the case faster than all of us.â
Jack beams, âDoes that mean I get a badge?â
âOkay,â Emily leans against the edge of her desk and asks, âDetails, Agent.â
Jack nods seriously, âShe sleeps over a lot.â
âJack.âÂ
Hotchâs warning to his son does nothing to stop the red that takes over your face. Your elbows are resting on your desk when you put your head down in your hands.
âWhat? Honesty matters.â
âDefine âa lotâ.â Morgan continues.Â
You look up and make eye contact with Aaron. Wordlessly, still holding each otherâs gaze while letting them continue asking Jack a plethora of questions. You smile, quiet teasing with a shake of your head, âRookie mistake.â
Aaron gives you a look. Warm and unguarded. His smile is real, full of life and tender. The expression that is totally foreign to the team on his face, but they now know it belongs to you.Â