ATX Festival Panel: "Suits" Script Reading (2017)
Source:Â https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etLF49Ete-0
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ATX Festival Panel: "Suits" Script Reading (2017)
Source:Â https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etLF49Ete-0

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âSuitsâ Star Patrick J. Adams Directs The Landmark 100th Episode â Exclusive Photos
Unfinished Symphony
Suits100 prompt #71 - Harvey finds a letter from his father.
(Main) Pairing / Character - Mike Ross/Harvey Specter
Gifset by @loyalty2waystreet
Writing by @novemberhush
Word count - 3,654
Thanks to the amazingly talented, wonderfully supportive and endlessly caring @loyalty2waystreet for surprising me with this gorgeous gifset at a time when my motivation was waning. I absolutely love it! It really inspired me to keep going and Iâm sure you will all agree with me when I say how beautiful it is.
Thanks also to Aqua and Erin for undertaking to organise the Suits100 event in the first place, and to whoever originally submitted this particular prompt. I hope what Iâve done with it doesnât disappoint you too much!
He had first found the letter when heâd went to clear out his fatherâs place in the weeks after his death. It was a rented apartment, the family home having been sold off following the divorce and the proceeds divided between Gordon and Lily. Harvey could easily have kept the place on, but it had never meant anything more to Gordon than a place to hang his hat and rest his head. It had never been âhomeâ to either him or his eldest son and Harvey therefore held no attachment to it. All he cared about were the parts of his father it housed.
The record collection that had inspired Harveyâs own and which was even more extensive. His saxophone and other varied instruments. All the memorabilia commemorating a life soaked in music. Photos, ticket stubs, posters. The hat his father swore had been given to him by Thelonius Monk himself. These were the things Harvey cared about. Not the four walls that surrounded them.
Gordonâs will had been straightforward enough. All his money was split evenly between Harvey and Marcus, except for a few small bequests here and there to a handful of old friends and charities close to his heart. As for everything else, well, there were some items of sentimental value left to Marcus. Their grandfatherâs watch, for example. (Harvey didnât mind in the slightest. It wasnât to his taste and heâd always hated the old buzzard anyway.)
There were a few other things, but the bulk of it, mostly musical in nature, went to Harvey. Marcus raised no objections, never having shared his father and brotherâs love of music.
And so Harvey had found himself spending a weekend packing up his late fatherâs belongings, all his worldly goods, the mementos of a life, tucked away safely in boxes to be transported to Harveyâs condo. Donna had offered to help, Marcus and Jessica too, but this was something Harvey had felt he needed to do alone. Which meant there was no one there to witness him stumbling across the envelope in the desk drawer, addressed to himself in his fatherâs flowing handwriting. No one to hear the way his breath caught in his throat or see how his hand shook. To glimpse the tears he blinked back.
He sat there for a full half hour, just staring at it as if he could divine its contents without actually opening it, but eventually heâd carefully peeled it open and extracted the letter inside. The letter that began:-
To my dear son, Harvey,
Hey, kid. If youâre reading this then youâve either been snooping in my desk or Iâve gone to the great Blue Note CafĂ© in the sky without telling you all the things I should have told you when I still had the chance, all the things Iâve put in this letter. And as you were never much one for snooping Iâm guessing itâs not looking too good for your old man right about nowâŠ
And that was as far as he got before the tears refused to be blinked back any longer and the dam broke. The letter was put back in its envelope, never read beyond the first paragraph, once he was all cried out. Whatever his father wanted to tell him, Harvey wasnât ready to hear. He wasnât ready to hear what he felt sure was his fatherâs final goodbye to him.
Life went on. Harveyâs career flourished even as his personal life became one long string of meaningless encounters with anonymous strangers and the occasional hook-up with Scottie whenever she was in town. The firm was his unit, Jessica his general and Donna his trusted second-in-command. Louis was Forrest Gump. With less gumption. Harvey didnât see what more he could need.
And then one day another anonymous stranger walked into a hotel suite, dropped a briefcase full of weed at his feet and soon Harvey didnât know how heâd survived this long without him.
Now, six years later, that blue-eyed stranger was no longer a stranger, but Harveyâs loyal lieutenant and junior partner in the firm. Mike Ross, ex-con, attorney at law and all-round bleeding heart. Heâd also just taken it upon himself to pack up Harveyâs old office and transfer everything into his new one, recently vacated by Jessica, apparently. Or at least that was the only explanation Harvey could come up with for why he came to be standing in what he could have sworn was still his office, looking around and wondering just what in the hell had happened to it and all his things.
âMike, what the fuc-â
âRelax, Harvey, your stuff is fine. I just moved it all into your new office, seeing as you were never gonna get around to it, so I could take possession of mine.â
âIf thereâs so much as one scratch on any of my records, rookieâŠâ
âI know, I know, youâll feed me to the fishes, yadda yadda yadda,â Mike said, rolling his eyes with a smirk and leaving Harvey nostalgic for the good old days when he could intimidate the kid with a single look.
Before he could try out any more threats, though, Mike reached into his inside jacket pocket and produced an envelope.
âBy the way, I found this when I was packing up your records. It fell out of the sleeve of one of them. Thought it might be important.â
He held the envelope out for Harvey to inspect, but he didnât need to look to know what it was. His fatherâs letter. Hidden away inside one of his favourite records, never forgotten, but pushed to the back of Harveyâs mind along with all the other things he didnât want to deal with. Like his feelings for the man sitting in front of him. The engaged to someone else man sitting in front of him, Harvey reminded himself. But one emotional crisis at a time, right?
âIt is important,â Harvey croaked, voice suddenly thick. When he didnât elaborate further Mike cocked an eyebrow at him as if to say Go on, Iâm listening.
With a sigh, Harvey gingerly took the letter, staring down once again at the familiar handwriting.
âItâs a letter my father left for me,â he murmured. âI found it among his things after he died.â
Mikeâs eyebrows shot up. âJesus. That mustâve ⊠Christ, I mean, I bawled my eyes out when Father Walker gave me one of my old childhood books that my parents had written a message in for me, but this ⊠he left you this, knowing heâd be gone when you read it. That mustâve been pretty intense, finding it like that.â
âYeah,â Harvey agreed.
âYeah.â
Silence fell between them then, but Harvey knew Mike well enough to know that mind of his was far from silent.
âSpit it out, Mike. I know youâre dying to know. Itâs okay, you can ask.â
Mike hesitated for a second, an aborted denial hovering on his lips, before giving in to his innate curiosity.
âWhatâs it say?â
âI donât know. I didnât get beyond the first paragraph,â Harvey replied, a wry smile on his own lips.
âWhat?? Why not? Come on, it canât have been that bad. Loving parents - and by all accounts thatâs what your dad was - donât leave their kids letters telling them how disappointed they were in them or how they never wanted them to begin with. They tell you how much they love you and how proud they are of you. Why wouldnât you want to read that?â
Harvey shrugged. âI didnât always give him reason to be proud of me.â
âBullshit!â The vehemence in Mikeâs voice startled Harvey, causing him to jerk his head up and stare at Mike as intently as heâd been staring at the envelope.
âYou canât seriously think your dad left you a list of all your faults and misdemeanours, Harvey, come on.â
âNo, I know, youâre right, itâs stupid. I guess I ⊠I âŠâ
âYou werenât ready to say goodbye.â
As usual Mike had cut straight to the heart of him in a way only he could.
âYeah.â
âAre you ready now?â
âI donât know. I donât know if Iâll ever be ready. I know itâs a letter, but this feels like the last conversation Iâll ever have with him.â
âMaybe. But Iâd lay odds on it being one youâll feel better for having.â
âYou think so?â
âI do. And you wanna know something else? Iâm jealous of you right now.â
Harveyâs forehead creased in confusion. âJealous? Why the hell would you be jealous?â
âBecause Iâd give almost anything for one more conversation with my mom or my dad or Grammy. This is a gift, Harvey. Open it.â
Nodding, Harvey did just that, but stopped as Mike got up and began to walk away.
âWhere are you going? Arenât you going to stay? Donât you want to know what it says?â
âYeah, and you can tell me when youâre ready. If you want to, that is. But this is a conversation between you and your father and it should be a private one. Iâll be at McGintyâs nursing a whiskey. Thereâll be a glass waiting for you if you want to talk afterwards. Or not. We can just sit and drink. But right now itâs father/son time and I donât want to intrude on that.â He strolled towards the door, turning before he left to add with a smirk, âBesides, Iâm pretty sure your pride canât handle me seeing you cry like Louis after sex.â
Harvey returned the smirk with one of us own. âAnd how do you know Louis cries after sex, rookie?â
âPlease. Itâs Louis. Of course he cries after sex. And before. And durin-â
âOkay, okay,â Harvey interrupted, rolling his eyes. âJust have the scotch ready, wiseass.â
âAye, aye, Captain,â Mike retorted, standing to attention and saluting.
Harvey huffed a laugh before a thought struck him. âHey, not that I donât appreciate it, but itâs late enough as it is. Wonât Rachel mind you dragging me to some faux Irish bar to sit around drinking cheap scotch all night while the patrons get misty-eyed and sing songs about the homeland while you try to get me to spill my guts?â
Mike stilled, the smile faltering on his face before falling away completely.
âNo, Rachel wonât mind. She wonât even know. Sheâs staying at her parentsâ place for a while. We, ah ⊠weâve decided to take some time out from our relationship.â
âWhat?? Since when?â
âSince I suggested we postpone the wedding. Again.â
âMike, I ⊠I donât know what to say.â Well, that wasnât strictly true. His heart had a few suggestions. Like, Please tell me itâs over for good. And, Tell me you donât love her. Or, Am I the reason you keep postponing the wedding? Please say yes. But something stopped him from saying any of that. Harvey told himself it was his honour, because wishing the end of someoneâs relationship was almost as bad as physically interfering in it, but he suspected at least part of it was cowardice. He didnât want to hurt Rachel, true, but he didnât want to risk Mikeâs rejection either.
âYou donât have to say anything, Harvey. Itâs on me. Iâm the one who canât commit to her.â
âWhy not?â Harvey asked, the words out of his mouth before he could stop them. His heart applauded even as the rest of him quivered with fear. The question hung heavy in the air between them and Harvey fell back on his favourite fail-safe to defuse the tension - humour.
âWhat? You get a better offer or something?â
Mike didnât crack a smile. He didnât laugh. He didnât even blink. He just stood there and looked at Harvey, long and hard, a searching, scrutinising look on his face that left Harvey feeling stripped bare.
âNot yet,â he finally replied, voice low and hoarse. And with that he was gone, leaving Harvey with more questions than answers. He suddenly wished he had that drink in his hand already. That thought reminded him that he already had something in his hand. His fatherâs letter. Foregoing the scotch for now, he sank into the nearest chair, took a deep breath, and began reading.
To my dear son, Harvey,
Hey, kid. If youâre reading this then youâve either been snooping in my desk or Iâve gone to the great Blue Note CafĂ© in the sky without telling you all the things I should have told you when I still had the chance, all the things Iâve put in this letter. And as you were never much one for snooping Iâm guessing itâs not looking too good for your old man right about nowâŠ
Iâm sorry to do this to you, son. I should have told you all these things face to face, but somehow I never got around to it, and now the doc is telling me my old ticker ainât doing too good and it feels like thereâs so much to say that I donât know where to begin.
First things first, I suppose, so letâs get the obvious out of the way. At least, I hope itâs obvious. I love you, Harvey. And Iâm proud of you. Iâm so, so proud of you. I think you know that. Jesus, I hope you know that. I hope I told you that enough when I was alive. I hoped it showed in everything I did and said when we were together. I think you know. I think you know.
Secondly, it wasnât your fault, you know. You know what Iâm talking about. Your motherâs infidelity. I know that as far as the rest of the world is concerned you appear to lay all the blame for the break-up of our marriage at your motherâs door, but you donât fool me. I see the little boy, hiding behind his anger, using it as a shield to deflect attention away from the fact that he wonders if it was his fault, wonders if he did something to drive her to it. You didnât. It. Wasnât. Your. Fault. There was nothing you did to cause it and nothing you could have done to prevent it. You were a child when it started. Hell, for all I know it started before you were even born. But I do know this - it was not your fault. Okay? You didnât make her cheat. Get that through that goddamn head of yours.
And stop beating yourself up about being the one to tell me about it, too. Truth is, I think I always knew, deep down. I just didnât want to admit it. I knew your mother was unhappy and I turned away and pretended not to see. Because I was afraid of losing her. I loved her, and I wanted her to be happy, and she wasnât. And that made me feel like a failure. But instead of letting her go, I clung on. I told myself it would be okay. If we could only make it to Thanksgiving weâd be okay. Or to Christmas. Or your birthday. Or our next anniversary. But I was kidding myself. When you love someone, and they donât love you back, itâs never  okay. Itâs soul destroying. But keeping someone tied to you when you know theyâd rather be free, thatâs killing the person you love, slowly but surely. A little part of your mother died with every passing year and I did nothing to stop it. I did nothing to help her.
I pretended that all she needed was a little space from time to time. So I agreed to tour with anyone who asked me. I told myself that she missed me as much as I missed her when I was on the road. But her voice on the other end of the line was always cold when I called. Except when we talked about you and Marcus. She always loved you two. Her beautiful boys, she called you. You remember that? Her beautiful boys. But you were mine, too. My beautiful, proud, stubborn, hard-headed boys.
But itâs that pride and stubbornness and hard-headedness that has me worried now. (Not about Marcus. I know heâll be all right. He has Katie and your mom and if anything good came from him being sick before it was that it taught him itâs okay to reach out to people when you need them. You, though, Iâm afraid the only thing youâll reach for is the scotch.)
You see, Iâve been talking to your mother. Her and Bobby both. I should have told you that. I should have told you it was all right to forgive her. To love her. But I was scared. Scared youâd think me weak for forgiving her. Scared Iâd lose your respect. But it wasnât fair to either of you. Maybe nothing I said would have made a difference, but I could have tried. So much time youâve lost. Time you could have spent repairing your relationship. And now Iâm gone and youâre going to need someone, Harvey. And if not your mother, who?
I know you wonât lean on Marcus. You take your role of big brother far too seriously to allow you to do that. Thereâs Jessica and Donna, and even Louis, of course. But you wonât open up to them. You wonât let them see you weak, even though theyâd never judge you for it. And you know I like Scottie, but you need someone who does more than just challenge you, Harvey. You need someone you can let yourself be weak around. Someone you donât have to appear strong to all the time. But to do that youâd need to let someone in, and that doesnât come easy to you, kid. I guess you can blame your mother and me for that. You heard me talk about our great love so many times, and you saw the truth of that love, how it only went one way, and now you doubt it could ever be any other way. But it can, Harvey. It can. You just have to be open to it.
And hereâs the thing. If I had it to do all over again, I would. If I could go back in time to that first night we met, I wouldnât change a thing. I would still ask her if I could take her home. I wouldnât walk away. I wouldnât know how to. Because I donât regret your mother, I could never regret her. And not just because she gave me you boys (although, of course, Iâd never give you up for the world). Iâm not good with words, but Iâll try to explain.
Before Lily most people were just ⊠white noise. Thereâd been other women before her, but they were nothing more than background music. Easy listening. Safe, comfortable, predictable. But Lily, oh, she was a blues song and a country ballad. Soul and jazz and gospel. She was rock and roll and she was Beethovenâs Fifth. She was âOde to Joyâ sung by choirs of angels. My lullaby. My national anthem. My requiem. She was it all. She still is.
Some people are their own magnus opus. A great work in and of themselves. I think your mother is one of those people. But most of us are works in progress. Unfinished symphonies just waiting for the right one to come along and complete them. Your mother completed me. Unfortunately, I couldnât return the favour. She didnât need me to.
You pretend youâre one of the ones who truly donât need anyone else to come along and help them compose their lifeâs song, Harvey, and maybe you even believe it. But I know better. I know you. Youâre the sweetest tune I ever produced, kid, but youâre an unfinished symphony. And somewhere out there thereâs someone with all the right notes. You just gotta find them, and when you do - let them in.
Maybe itâll be love at first sight, like me with your mother. Maybe itâll take a little longer. But youâll know itâs them when you find yourself breaking every rule you ever made for yourself. I swore Iâd never fall for a groupie, but five minutes with your mother and I was already planning the proposal.
I would have went anywhere with her, put her above everyone Iâd ever known, given up my life for her. Hell, Iâd have even given up music for her if sheâd asked me to. When you find someone youâd give it all up for, youâll know. And youâll understand why I never stopped loving your mother. It was beyond my power to do so. But even if I couldâve, I wouldnât. Because your mother was the most beautiful song I ever heard and no matter how it ended I wouldnât have missed a single note for anything.
Youâve never been afraid of anything in your life, son. Donât start now. Donât be afraid of loving someone. Lifeâs too short, take it from me.
I love you, Harvey. Never doubt it.
All my love,
Dad
Harvey let the letter drop to the desk in front of him as the silent tears that had been threatening to fall all through his reading of it finally found release. For maybe the first time in his life he understood what people meant when they said crying could be cathartic.
When he had pulled himself together enough to talk he didnât even hesitate as he reached for his phone and hit Mikeâs number. His dad was right. He was Harvey goddamn Specter and heâd never been afraid of anything in his life. He wasnât going to start now.
âMike? Hey, listen - how soon can you get to my place? The scotch is better there and I have an offer Iâd like to run by youâŠâ
Guilty (Of Love in the First Degree)
Suits100 prompt #98 ~ Written by Loyalty2WayStreet
- Donna goes all lawyer on Mike or Harvey and puts her case forward, proving that they love each other.
Rated M.
Harvey doesnât do sentimental. Â He enjoys trophies, yes. Â Objects that show off who he knows or what heâs achieved. Â He doesnât exactly parade around advertising that heâs wealthy, that would be crass, but you can tell by looking at him that he indulges in the finer things in life. Birthday and Christmas cards, love letters from Scottie when they were at Harvard, old tickets to Yankeesâ games, itâs all clutter to Harvey. Â He likes his life organised and free of all the crap. Harvey also preaches that caring only makes you weak and that he himself is all business. Â He knows itâs not entirely true. Â He does care about his family, about Jessica, Donna and Louis. Â He cared about Mike too; he liked the kid, he felt like Mike just got him. Â Well, that was until he went and betrayed him and sided with Jessica. Now all he felt was pissed at him. Admittedly, Mike had tried everything short of grovelling on his knees to get back into Harveyâs good books, even bribing the likes of Benjamin and Jessica. Â But what Mike had done cut him deep, and although he didnât understand why he wanted to punish him, he knew that he did, and Harvey could be colder than the Arctic Circle when he wanted to be.
Read more on AO3 here.
they're really making it look like donna is the only one that has feelings for harvey, and that it's not reciprocated lol it doesn't make any sense i'm so mad

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Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
lemon drops - harvey/mike
Two business rivals who despise each other in real life unwittingly fall in love over social media...
"You've Got Mail"-AU
Where Mike works for the Chelsea Law Clinic and has to go up against Harvey on a case. Where they've been exchanging messages on Instagram for months without knowing who the other person is. Where Harvey finds out he's been talking to Mike all along and has to convince him that he is not a bad person after all.
read lemon drops @ AO3
The cast of Suits celebrates the 100th episode on set.
Two Days Left Till @suits100 Closes
Suitors -
there are two days left for you to post your @suits100â contributions!
So roll up your sleeves and have fun finishing your fills! :D
And please have a look at all the wonderful fanworks that have already been posted and check out our masterlist! ISNâT THAT AMAZING???