Seven Seconds
Summary: when Katie Jacob's gets abducted in a Mall, setting the clock for the BAU, who needs a legal favor, and it's been a year since the A.D.A. has know anything about Spencer Reid. Pairing: Spencer Reid x lawyer!reader Genre: pinning, SLOW BURN, maybe right moment?, angst bc i love angst wc: 4.6k! (i know so small comparing to part 1 bear with me) TW: cm canon typical violence, set in 05x3 "Seven seconds" (obviously lol), sexual violence, implied reader's dark past, glimpses of female rage. A/N: my idea for the serie is be taylor jenkins reid and have you question if lawyer reader exists or not (delusional bitch), english is not my first language and let's pretend it's proofread part I - part II - part III - part IV - masterlist
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ăăă
Spencer sat on the park bench reading a book while playing chess with Ethan, brilliant kid for his age and good opponent, not good enough though because when he cheered âI see checkmate in 5, What do you see?â It took Spencer one glance to calculate all the movements necessary.
âI see it in 3â he answered looking at his book again, the kid turned around the board and moved the pieces
âWe've missed you out hereâ he said, staring at the board amazed.
âThanks. I, uh, I had to take a little breakâ
âHow come?â His hands froze on the book for a second before closing it.
Spencer had been clean for over a year now, it was 14 months and 2 weeks ago that he had freaked out after noticing his stash of Dialud was gone along with his needle. Where could he find more? Who knew about his addiction? Where was his stash? Who the fuck is Dr. Fitzgerald? Did you report him?
His first instinct was confronting you, given that you were the only person who found out his drugs that he knew, the first days he was a complete paranoid, he jumped every time Hotch called his name, or that Gideon looked at him a little too long.
At the end of the week he was thinking where he could find more, and when that thought scared him, he called the number of the card you had left in the same pocket his drugs used to be.
âHello this is Dr. Fitzgeraldâ said a calm voice, it was 10 p.m. so there was a higher chance of going to voicemail, but he got an answer and the tremor of his hands got a little worse. Was it the anxiety or the withdrawal?
âUmm hello.. this is.. Dr.. this is Spencer Reid and someon-""I've been waiting for your call Dr Reidâ the other line interrupted, he froze for a second.
âI used to play with a co-worker friend of mine. He's probably the best mind I ever went up against. One day, he just decided that he didn't want to play anymore.â
Fast forward, she helped him get clean and stay clean after Gideon left, getting tested regularly, and gave him the contact of the help group of FBI addicts. He was better, he was alive.
âSo you gave up, too?â
âJust the opposite. I attempted to play Through every permutation of moves on a chessboard.â
âThat's an infinite number of games.â
âIt's not infinite. It's just- it's exponentially large.â
âYou couldn't have played through them all.â
âThere's an average of 40 moves per chess game, And I'll tell you somethingâ the more I played, The more I realized that every single match every single chess game, Is really just a simple variation on the exact same theme. You know? It's aggressive opening, Patient mid-game, inevitable checkmate, And I realized why my friend quit. He was tired of repeating the same patterns And expecting a different outcome.â
âThat's because you haven't come up on Fridays or Mondays in a whileâ the way his eyebrows went up along his voice tone made him feel like he knew something that he didn't.
His eyebrows furrowed âWhat do you mean?â
âThere's this great player who comes around those days, she even brings the best pastries, and her games is similar to yours, always two or three moves ahead, she always beats everyone here⌠i think her boyfriend called her Buzz or something like that, like the Toy Story characterâ
âBuzz?⌠i don't really remember anyone with that nicknameâ
âItâs probably not that one but you don't know her because she started coming like 8 months ago.. I'm sure you have a lifetime of chess strategy in your head that you're just sitting on, but when you meet her?â He made a dramatic pause âYou'll have to play it.â
He glances at his watch to realize his 15 minute break is coming to an end. âI still use it. I just, uh... I apply it differently. I have to go. It's good seeing you.â
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ăăăăăă
That evening, the BAU was called in for a local caseâa little girl, Katie, had been kidnapped from a busy mall. A week earlier, another girl had been taken from the same location and found dead hours later. Now, they were all racing against the clock.
Katieâs parents were desperate. As any parents would be in this situation, right? But when Hotch asked the father if either of them was having an affairâa routine question in abductionsâthe man took offense. Deep offense. So much so that he refused to let the FBI search their house.
Now, what kind of parent refuses to help the police find their missing child?
In a small surveillance room, Morgan and Reid sat with Garcia, who was visibly frustrated by the mallâs ancient security system. They were surrounded by screens displaying grainy footage from different anglesâwell, almost every angle. They had a single glimpse of Katie in one video, and then, seven seconds later, she was gone.
JJ and Prentiss were with the mother, aunt, and uncle, trying to get a read on the family dynamic. Meanwhile, Morgan and Reid had conducted a cognitive interview with Katieâs cousin. It had led nowhere.
âThe family has refused permission to search the house,â Hotch announced as he stepped into the room.
âWhat do you mean they denied?â Morganâs frustration was evident. âYour only child goes missing, and you refuse to collaborate?â
No one disagreed. They were all thinking the same thing.
âThe cousin didnât say much,â Reid added. âHe was too distracted in the game room to notice anything.â
Hotch exhaled sharply. âIâll speak to the detectives, see if we can get a warrant.â His tone was firm, but they all knew time wasnât on their side.
Garcia adjusted her glasses. âSir, I mean this in the best way possible, but itâs almost 8 p.m. I donât think-â
âIâll handle it,â Morgan interrupted.
All Reid and Garcia turned to him with identical looks. What do you mean you will handle it?
Hotchâs eyebrows furrowed, but after a moment, he gave a small nod and walked away. Morgan was already pulling out his phone.
âI have a contact,â he explained, dialing.
He put the phone on speaker. It rang once. Twice. On the third ring, a voice answeredâsharp, direct, and all business.
âA.D.A. Woodvale.â
Reid went rigid.
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ăăăăăă
It was late in the office; most people had already gone home, including your assistant Molly. All but Austin, who was still there because he had a lead on one of your cases. You knew he was still hanging around because, over a year ago, when someone had snuck into your office to harm you, youâd become a little paranoid. Youâd gotten better, but Austin insisted on keeping you company, especially since your car was in the mechanicâs.
You were reviewing a legal brief, pen in hand, skimming the margins to jot down notes when the desk phone rang. Without looking up, you hit the speaker button with the tip of the pen.
âA.D.A. Woodvale.â
There was a beat of silence before a familiar voice cut inâsmooth, direct, urgent.
Morgan called your name âHey. We need a warrant. Fast.â You blinked, setting the pen down.
Reid and Garcia exchanged glances as Morgan jumped in without hesitation.
âKatie Jacobs. Eight years old. Abducted from a mall earlier tonight,â Morgan started, all business. âAnother girl was taken from the same place a week agoâshe was found dead hours later. Weâre working against the clock.â
You frowned, swirling the pen, going through the multiple scenarios. You had heard about last weekâs case, and how slow the police had moved back then.
âWeâve got mall surveillance footage,â Morgan pressed. âAt first, we thought she just vanished, but Garcia finally pulled something from one of the side corridors. Katie wasnât taken by forceâshe was walking calmly with someone.â
Your fingers tightened slightly around her pen. âSomeone she knows.â
âExactly,â Morgan confirmed. âThat narrows it down to family or close acquaintances.â They all shared a silent thought. Family.
We know theyâre hiding something,â Morgan corrected. âWe just donât have the probable cause to kick the door down.â
Garcia watched as Morgan paced slightly, his tone firm but urgent.
âThatâs thin, Morgan,â Your voice came through the speaker, steady and unyielding.
âWe donât have time for airtight,â Morgan countered.
Your jaw tightened. âYou donât have time for me to get laughed out of a judgeâs office, either. Refusing a search isnât a crime, and suspicion alone doesnât cut it. I need more.â You understood where the suspicious came from, how are you supposed to help them if they had nothing?
There was a pause. A beat of silence. Then, another voiceâone you hadnât heard in over a year.
â99% of abducted children who are killed due within the first 24 hoursâ He cleared his throat, willing his voice to stay even. Spencer Reid. â75% within the first 3 hours, and what only law enforcement knows is Jessica Davis joined the 44% of children who are abducted and killed within the first hour. Weâre already past the three-hour mark. If we donât act now, statistically speakingââ
âThe likelihood of recovery drops exponentially,â You sighed, already standing up, ignoring how his voice sounded. So different. So⌠clean.
Your gaze flicked to the clock. 8:06 p.m. Damn it.
You grabbed a blank warrant form from her drawer and reached for a pen. âSend me the address and everything else you have. Give me 20 minutes.â
Click. You didnât have time for goodbyes.
Austin raised an eyebrow from his seat. âGuess youâre not going home anytime soon.â
You didnât look up as you started writing. âI never was.â
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ă
The courthouse was mostly deserted at this hour. The fluorescent lights hummed quietly, and the stillness of the evening was only interrupted by the sharp click of your heels on the polished floors followed by Austinâs boots toward the judgeâs chambers.
âYou sure you donât want me to take this one? Sweet-talk her maybe?â he teased.
You shot him a look. âYou think Judge Holloway is the type to be charmed? Plus, youâre a private investigator, not a lawyer.â Â
âSheâs not gonna like you showing up this late.â Â
You didnât miss a beat. âIf sheâs still up, sheâll make time for this.â Â
Taking a steadying breath as you stopped in front of the door, you quickly ran through your notes, making sure you had every detail in order. Then, without hesitation, you pushed through the heavy wooden doors of Judge Evelyn Hollowayâs chambers. Â
Inside, the judge barely glanced up from her paperwork. âYou have two minutes, Woodvale.â
Stepping forward, you set the warrant request on the desk. âYour Honor, I apologize for the late hour, but we have a child abduction case weâre working against the clock. A young girl, Katie Jacobs, was taken from a mall over three hours ago. Weâve obtained surveillance footage showing her walking with an individualâsomeone she likely knows. We believe the family is withholding information, and theyâve refused to allow us to search the residence.â
The judge narrowed his eyes, folding her hands on the desk. âAnd what do you propose I do about it? What evidence do you have to warrant a search?â
You kept your voice steady. âWe have footage of the girl with someone who wasnât a stranger, Your Honor. The parents are refusing cooperation, and the father was evasive when asked about possible affairs, which raises red flags about his involvement.â
Holloway sighed, leaning back in her chair. âThatâs thin.â You were ready for that.
âI have the full footage from the mall security, including a timestamp showing the precise time the girl went missing. She is last seen walking calmly with someone she knows, most likely family.â
There was a brief pause, and for a second, you thought you were about to lose her. So you pulled Reidâs words from memory, adjusting them just enough to make them your own.
âTime is working against us. Statistics show that 99% of abducted children who are murdered lose their lives within the first 24 hours 75% within just the first three. And only law enforcement-â
She cut you off with a raised hand, signaling you to stop.
The judge exhaled through her nose, it was late and you were rambling about statistics and you knew she wanted you out as soon as possible when you started citing numbers. So pushing himself out of her chair with a slight groan. âFine. Get me the paperwork. Iâll sign itâbut you better have your ducks in a row.â
You nodded, her demeanor unflinching. âThank you, Your Honor.â
As you turned to leave, you couldnât help but feel the weight of the hours ahead of you. But you were used to thisâfighting against the clock.
âLetâs move,â motioning to Austin. He gave you a small nod. âYou got it.â
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .
Exactly 15 minutes after the call, 5 minutes earlier than promised, Morganâs phone rang. He answered it without even looking.Â
"You got your warrant. I'll meet you there," your voice came through, crisp and businesslike, just as expected.
Morgan exhaled, his relief barely hidden. "Thank you, Woody."
He paused for a moment before adding, "I owe you one," then hung up, turning to Reid.
âTell Hotch weâre heading to the Jacobsâ house,â he instructed, already moving toward the door.
Spencer had been timing her. It wasnât the first time he'd gotten caught up in the tense waiting game of law and order, but the pressure of it had a different weight today. The memory of your voice, clear and resolute, echoed in his mind, sharper than before.
For Reid, part of getting clean wasn't just the physical withdrawalâit was the emotional weight of confronting his mistakes. The memory of how he'd lashed out at you a year ago still haunted him. How could he have been so cruel? The hurt in your eyes, the way he dismissed you, the way it all spiraled⌠it wasnât just the drugs that had made him say those things. And the fury he saw when you looked at him, Dialuid in hand, how you looked like a timing bomb when he was trying to see if he could talk to you, the tension in your shoulders, the lock in your jaw, the grip on the file. Heâd been battling so much more since then, in his mind, you saved his life by doing what he couldn't do.
Heâd rather die than relive that moment again, than say those things. And yet, here he was, standing in the middle of another chaotic case, still carrying that guilt with him. He stayed behind Morgan for just a beat before pushing down his feelings and moving quickly.Â
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ăăăă
The engine of Austin's bike rumbled to a stop as they pulled up in front of the house, where Morgan and Reid were standing in front of the black SUV. You slid off the back with practiced ease, taking off the helmet and letting your hair fall loose.
Austin followed your lead, taking his helmet off with a groan. âSo, what exactly are we looking for?â
You shot him a quick, sidelong glance, handing him the helmet, keeping your expression flat knowing heâs about to be a drama queen. âYouâre not coming inside. The warrantâs for FBI and police only. Not P.I.s includedâ
Austin paused, a mock pout crossing his face. âExcuse me? I just got you here, through all that traffic, risking myself to get a speeding ticket and now I donât get to search? This is the second time in the night that you P.I. shaming me. Do you hate me?â
âIf I hated you I wouldnât have bailed your ass out of jail⌠twiceâ you remark the last part. He had a talent for sticking his foot where he shouldnât be, maybe thatâs what makes him good at his job.
âYou act like you wouldnât do it a third timeâ he was mocking, but he was right, something you would never admit to him.Â
You start walking to the house âMhm.â you hum rolling your eyes, heading towards where Morgan and Reid were.Â
You didn't expect him to be there, or maybe you did, maybe you wanted to see him and know what had happened to him since the last time you saw him. They were looking at you, Morgan with a curious already-profiling-you stare, while Reid expression was more⌠cautious. He looked so different, his cheekbones were prominent in an attractive way and not sickly, he had put on some healthy weight and was not fidgety. You were not mad anymore, because of course at the moment the hurt had turned into rage like it always does for you, but it was more because of phantoms than anything else.Â
âGot your golden ticketâ you said, avoiding Reidâs gaze as you pulled the warrant from the inner pocket of your gray coat and swung it toward them.
Morgan nodded âYou staying?â He gestured with his head to Austin who was leaving.
âI have to make sure you find something, otherwise the judge will have my head for this,â you said dryly, shrugging as though the threat didnât bother you, but there was a flicker of seriousness behind your words. You were only talking to him, which felt rude because Reidâs stare was locked in your profile.Â
Reid was thinking how pretty you looked, how the black vest suited you, and he couldnât ignore the fact you had changed your brown bag to a black one that looked nothing like his. Your white shirt and gray coat gave you an older, wiser look, but as Reid analyzed your features, he realized he didnât even know how old you were. You couldnât be older than him. Serious, sharp, and young... How was it possible for someone that young to be the A.D.A.?
Reidâs mind couldnât let go of the numbers. The average age of an Assistant District Attorney in the U.S. is 36. You couldnât be older than 25, and yet you were already in that position.
You glanced at him for a moment before stepping inside the house, feeling the weight of his stare. The look made him snap out of his trance-like state, and of course, his eidetic memory hated him, because for that brief second, he remembered how you had looked at him a year ago.
Morgan nodded and thanked you again before he and Reid walked into the house. You left the warrant on the hall table with a deliberate touch, your fingers lingering for just a momentâas if to remind yourself that you werenât entirely done with this.
âSomebody lit a fire last night,â you heard Reid say.
âWell, there are dirty dishes for three in the kitchen, so they eat together as a family.â Morganâs voice carried from the other room as they moved through the house, taking in the details.
If Katie was in danger, the signs wouldnât be in plain sight. You had to look where they hidâwhere children kept their secrets. Their bedrooms.
âHey, my favorite movie from when I was a kid.â Reid held up a DVD, turning it in his hands before pulling it from the player just as you passed by him, tugging on latex gloves before heading upstairs, you did feel a little guilty for not even looking or talking to him, but it was something you did unconsciously.Â
âSo they watch movies together, too,â Morgan mused. They were starting to build a picture of the familyâs dynamic.
âBy a fireplace in a house thatâs straight out of a catalog,â Reid added. âNorman Rockwell couldnât have painted this any cozier.â
âThatâs what worries me.â There was weight in Morganâs voice. A tension that sat between them.
Upstairs, you searched through the rooms with careful precision.
When you first became a lawyer, you made a promiseânever ignore a sign. Since then, you have gone further. You didnât just refuse to ignore them; you searched for them. Hollow eyes. Unexplained bruises. Small bloodstains. You looked for them in teenagers, in young adults, in the elderly. But nothingânothingâwas more painful than a child who couldnât speak up.
Because they were small. Because someone older, someone stronger, was hurting them. There's nothing more hurtful than not being able to speak out, to say something and stand up for yourself. Except when someone didâsomeone saw the bruises, the fear, the signsâand they looked away deliberately. Because a childâs pain was inconvenient. Because it came with a mountain of paperwork no one wanted to touch.
You had spent your whole life making sure you never looked away.
Thatâs why you were hunched over the small desk in Katieâs bedroom, flipping through her drawings when Morgan and Reid entered the room. They started searching, their movements efficient and methodical.
âKatieâs been wetting her bed,â Reid said as he lifted the duvet, inspecting the mattress beneath it.
âA lot of six-year-olds do. Could be bad dreams,â Morgan replied, crouching beside you as he sifted through a pile of toys.
You considered that possibilityâit was perfectly logical. In a perfect world.
âSome kids wonât get up at night because theyâre afraid of the dark,â Reid added, his tone careful. Almost knowing.
âOr it could be a lot more complex than that.â
Morgan had found a doll. Not a Barbie missing a shoe or one that had simply been played with too much. Noâthis doll was different.
Its hair had been hacked off, jagged strands sticking out unevenly. Red marker smeared across its face like smeared blood. Its clothes were yanked askew, twisted, and wrong.
âMost girls covet their dolls like an extension of themselves.â He took the doll in his hands like it was made of fine glass.Â
âReid, I know these signs-â acting out on her toys, wetting the bed. She's obviously covering up something about that necklace.â
âAnd her cousin might be holding something back.â
âWell, this looks more like a man than a boy to me,â you said, holding up a drawing of a tall, shadowy figure towering over a small, crying child.
Morgan took it from your hands, his expression hardening as he analyzed the image.
âPsychology says drawing is a childâs way of channeling their inner world. Look at the strokesâhow harsh they are,â you pointed to the dark, jagged lines forming the tall figure, then traced your finger over the smaller one. âAnd this looks like Katie to me. She forgot to draw the hands, which means she feels powerless⌠helpless.âÂ
Morgan took his phone out, dialing up âHotch, we think Katieâs being molested,â Morgan said, his voice clipped. âAnd we both know the odds.â
A brief silence. Then Hotchâs response, firm and certain. âMost likely by someone under the same roof.â
He hung up, and both men started toward the door, their movements brisk with purpose. But you stayed behind for a moment, rooted in place, taking in the scene. Trying to quiet the distant sirens that echoed in your mind, the same ones always shouting when you were face to face with these situations. A loud pauseâmaybe out of respect for Katie and her pain, for everything she had been forced to endure.
From the doorway, Spencer glanced back. The dim light from the hallway cast your figure in stark contrast, outlining you in shadowâyour form dark against the soft glow of the room. He couldnât see your expression, couldnât read your face. He focused on the way your hands curled into fists at your sides, the tight set of your shoulders.
And he wishedâjust for a secondâthat he could see more.
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ăăă
You stood outside, leaning against the wall, arms crossed tightly over your chest. By your side were Morgan, Jeremy, Katieâs cousin, and Reid.
Turns out, Katieâs uncle, Richard, was her abuser. A disgusting son of a bitch who deserved to rot in hell. And you were going to make sure he did. He had destroyed Katieâs childhood, probably more than just hers, shattering an entire family in the process. His own son, standing right next to you, was collateral damage he clearly hadnât spared a thought for. And then there was his wife. The woman who had chosen to look away. Who had taken Katie and nearly gotten her killed, all for the pathetic, desperate hope that it would somehow stop her husband from creeping into little bedrooms at night. She deserved the same hell he did.
A stretcher rolled past, Katieâs small frame barely visible beneath the blankets as the paramedics guided her into the ambulance. Her mother clutched her tiny hand, whispering somethingâwords meant to soothe, to promise safety.
A young voice cut through the air. âI heard her call my momâs name. Thatâs what I remembered before.â
You closed your eyes, your mind already racing ahead. Your attorney brain was piecing it together, sketching out the battle that was coming. If the kid had heard it, that made him a witness to the abduction. His own mother had committed the crime against her niece. And God only knew what else he had seenâwhat else had been happening in that houseâwithout fully understanding it.
âWe get it, kid. Thatâs your mom,â Morgan said, his voice steady. But you knew the truth: if Jeremy could barely say those words to them, getting him to the stand in front of a jury would be another fight entirely.
The boy shifted on his feet, staring at the ambulance. âWhatâs gonna happen to me now?â
If God existed, He had already been too cruel. He had let all of this happen. And you knew how these things workedâknew there was a very real chance that Katieâs parents, burdened with their own grief, would resent Jeremy by association. That they wouldnât take him in. That he would be swallowed by the foster system.
You wouldnât let that happen.
The sirens blared outside the mall, cutting through the air with urgency, but it was the ones inside your mind that were louderâscreaming in the same rhythm, as if they were one and the same. Distant and deafening, they filled every corner of your head, drowning out everything but the grim reality unfolding before you.
âI donât know, Jeremy,â Reid answered, his voice gentle. âBut weâre gonna make sure youâre alright, okay?â
Jeremy didnât look at him. His eyes stayed fixed on the ambulance. âIs Katie gonna be all right?â
You wishedâdesperately, violentlyâthat you could tell him yes. That you could say it with certainty and make it true. But how could you give him something you didnât have?
âShe will, eventually,â Morgan said, his voice firm.
You exhaled sharply. The words made your skin crawl.
âIs she?â The question slipped from your lips before you could stop itâlow, bitter, nearly spat out under your breath. Just quiet enough that the kid wouldnât hear. Just loud enough that Morgan did.
Before he could respond, you were already moving.
Your feet carried you toward the police car, toward the sick, selfish bastard they were shoving into the backseat. Your hand shot out, slamming the door closedâharder than necessary, just enough that it cracked against Richardâs face.
Morgan watched. So did Spencer.
And for the first time, he realized just how much of a puzzle you really were.
Partially because, throughout all of this, you hadnât looked at him once. Not when he entered the room, not when he spoke, not even now, standing just a few feet away.
Partially because your eyes, when he finally caught a glimpse of them, were full of something he rarely saw outside of a case like this. Pure, undiluted rage.
Not just anger. Not just frustration. Something deeper. Something personal.
ăăăă ăăă .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹â .˳˳.â ŕĽąË Ë༹á§.˳˳.â .ă
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