we remake Harry Potter movies
everything the same
But
house elves are replaced
with sexy Elves
*has no affect on anyone on this site*
bruh finally
The idea of the Batkids doing normal people things while suited up is hilarious to me, you know, like Red Robin and Spoiler making the 9 o'clock news while racing through a grocery store because they totally forgot to get the things Alfred asked them to bring for the family dinner. Or Damian and Dick swinging into the Bludhaven Zoo mid-patrol because Dami really wanted to see the new baby tiger. Red Hood buying lemonade from a kid's stand and then standing there awkwardly messing with his helmet, trying not to hurt the kid's feelings. Black Bat, on a particularly tiring day randomly appeared in the nosebleeds of the ballet hall and started sniping phones out of people's hands. Or Signal and a deeply irritated Batman changing out a blown-out tyre in some back alley, earning amused looks.
The cultural alienation.
Is Danny up to date on Human Memes? Did he see that movie? Hear about that celebrity drama? He lives here, amongst us, WITH us. But? Feels... half out of the loop.
And? He can't SHARE his passions with us.
Is he REALLY gonna show his new lecture buddy that hot new Kryptonian Sci-fi series he picked up from the Zone's nearest mega market bookstore? Invite a neighbor over for some sparkling ectoplasm laced soda and a binge of this cool Alien animated film from a long dead planet's artist guild? They're trying new mediums, apparently! Danny thinks it's pretty cool, he hopes they make more.
Oh, but maybe he can talk about games!
Except he switched to the technologically far more advanced Z-Held, years ago. They have literally billions of billions of options, since every game maker in their region of the Zone designs for it. Has for millennia.
....music?
Ghost speak either creeps people out or actually hurts to hear, if they listen too long. And "normal" music... feels so FLAT. Emotionless. Yeah, he'll LISTEN... smile and agree it sound nice. But it's... it's so bland? Less then bland.
He can't even share his food! It's a one way trip to ER! If not the morgue. Half his spices are FROM the Zone now. And Zone plants? Heeeeeella poisonous to humans. Tasty af to HIM, but... yeah. No sharing.
So like... what does that LEAVE him? Dance? Hobbies? Sam n Tucker he can share his REAL interests with, but... they went to different colleges. And protecting people isn't a hobby. It's more of a Gotta, you know? He ALSO can't join any space related clubs because now he knows WAY too much about Space.
Like "above civilian clearance, no one on this planet should know that" a lot.
He gets distracted. Too excited. He KNOWS himself.
He would totally ramble on about Space.
He's a Fenton, man. It's genetic.
So... he's lonely. Adrift. A sad, sad, semi-feral noodle of a man. And you know who would never let that stand? Who also wants to know what THE FUCK he's listen too, because it's both giving him a headache and creeping him out? Kon.
This dude reminds him of Tim. Complete with the feral energy and fluffy hair. *snaps pick* lol, bro, is you. ANYWAY, this guy? Apparently the source of the Kent family splitting migraines. That sound has been KILLING them. They need to get this guy better headphones. Aliens gotta stick together, you know? Time to go make friends.
*floats over in his shades n leather jacket* Sup~!
Understood đ
Danny possesses one of the many Bats in the Batcave and the Batfam, completely unaware that this bat is actually a whole ass person, just treat Danny as a strangely human acclimated bat that they see as a pet.
Description: FIVE times Spencer thinks he might like you + the ONE time he knows.
Word length: 20k
Trigger Warnings: death, murder, Lauren arc, spencer's addiction mentioned, Diana's schizophrenia mentioned, vomit, alcohol, blood, usual criminal mind warnings. mommy AND daddy issues in the prentiss family.
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âso sweet with a mean streak
nearly brought me to my knees.â
The one where he tries flirting
Emily tutted at her as the girl blindly shoved the Lucky Charms in her mouth, her tongue staining a gross blue-green colour from the additives as she read from a battered copy of Anna Karenina. Bugsy had been living with her for just two weeks now, since her impromptu fleeing from the altar, and Emilyâs certainly had a good insight into the life of the twenty three year old.Â
Yes, it was her birthday next week. No, she didnât act her age anymore than she had at twenty.Â
âBug, slow down.â Emily urged, a rogue orange marshmallow dribbling down her chin as she plunged the spoon in before sheâd even swallowed the last mouthful, âYou get sick when you eat too fast,âÂ
Bugsy waved her off with the utensil, not even ripping her eyes away from the page in front of her, scooping up the marshmallow with the side of her finger and popping it into her mouth.Â
Emily rolled her eyes, downing a few sips of her coffee and heading for the stairs, knowing her ride would be here any moment and she still had yet to change her shirt from the one sheâd spilled toothpaste down not ten minutes earlier.Â
âNiko needs breakfast when youâre done,â The older of the two shouted down to the breakfast table, a streak of tabby grey running under her feet at the sound of food. Bugsy had insisted she bring her new feline friend into Emilyâs apartment, and as much as sheâd hated the way she nearly tripped over the chubby bastard almost every day theyâd been here, she certainly had a fondness for him.Â
Bugsy hummed in acknowledgement, though she scraped the edges of her bowl clean by the time the cat in question hopped up onto the counter in search of her leftover milk.Â
âThis is not for you, you have too much already,â She scolded, shovelling the last few sugary pieces of cereal into her mouth right as the door knocked.Â
She dogeared her page, gulping down a quick sip of Emilyâs coffee, cringing when she caught it was much too strong for her liking, and heading for the door, her sister yelling to her again.Â
âBug, can you get that- wait- are you wearing pants?âÂ
She certainly wasnât, having rolled straight out of bed in a pyjama shirt and underwear, and towards the promise of breakfast, nor as she swung the front door to the apartment open before Emily had a chance to rush down the stairs.
Spencer could have laughed when he saw her, all too reminiscent of the first time heâd met her. The boxers that hugged her legs beneath a large top he was entirely convinced was not hers, though her face lit up in excitement to see him.Â
âGood morning!â He thrust a coffee to-go into her hand, still warm even from where it had been jostled around in his car.
âYouâre my saviour,â She grinned, sipping on the sweet beverage with bright eyes, âCute sweater vest-âÂ
She was quickly manhandled behind the door by two firm hands, Emilyâs face enraged as she glared down at her sister where she was now out of sight from the doctor.Â
âWhat did I tell you about wearing pants? Huh? You nearly gave Mrs Jensen a heart attack last week,â Emily hissed, as Bugsy shrugged, remembering the look of horror the old woman across the hall had given her when sheâd taken the trash out in a hoodie and booty shorts.
âItâs Spencer,â She poked her head around the door, despite Emilyâs shoving, like she was taming a wild animal, âYou donât mind, do you?â
He shook his head, an amused and easy smile on his face as he watched the sisters bicker, not entirely unlike the way he and Emily tended to pick at one another.Â
âNot at all; I agree pants are loathable,â And he wasnât lying. He tried to go for looser fitting trousers or sweat pants, hating the way the tight fabrics restricted his legs, rubbed his skin, making him want to itch and squirm inside his body.Â
âDonât you start,â Emily pointed at him, huffing as she stepped out of the apartment, âYou know she gets all worked up and weird on sugar,âÂ
âHey, Iâm the last person to deny someone a coffee,â He replied, and the two turned to head back to his car, not before he threw the younger woman a look over his shoulder and a wave.Â
âGo save the world, kiddos.â She waved back, sipping her coffee indeed with bare legs that would have a nun blushing, âCurfews at nine, Doctor Reid, I expect both of you home for dinner!â She nudged the door closed with her hip before Niko could run out after Emily, and Spencer chuckled to himself, shaking his head.Â
âSee, told you,â Emily sniggered, rolling her eyes, âWeird,âÂ
Though that wasnât quite the word heâd have used.Â
â
A killer, so far as they had been able to profile from the four bodies, was targeting women he picked up in night clubs in Atlanta. Most of the team, except Derek, had outgrown the clubbing scene, though Spencer didnât quite think heâd ever been in it to start with. They all went to OâKeeffeâs usually once a month or so for a quick drink, but it was not big on his list.Â
Rossi, Reid and Derek stared at the puddle of blood on the sidewalk, wincing as Emily leaned over the balcony, the five story drop making her tug her lip in between her teeth.Â
This woman must have been terrified by something, someone, to see this as a better way out.Â
âMaybe she fought back,â Hotch speculated behind her, drawing her attention back to the cleaning equipment scattered over the floor, entirely different to the last three crime scenes where they had been arranged neatly into a triangle, âAnd when Becky fought back, his routine was compromised, cause he knew the police would respond,â
âOr she could have jumped,â Emily responded gravely, shaking her head at the carpet beneath her boots, âHer nervous system is pumping adrenaline, her fight or flight response kicks in?â Both were equally plausible options, but not ones they had time to entirely pick over.Â
âHeâs struck two Fridays in a row, and if his routineâs been interrupted, it might compel him to strike again,â Hotch said, his arms crossed tightly over his chest, his brow furrowed deeper than it usually was.Â
âItâs Saturday, the clubs will be packed tonight,â Emily replied, her eyes sad, worried.Â
âTake a look at the classes the Unsub might have taken, we need to generate a suspect pool as soon as possible,â Her boss ordered, and she nodded heading for the door before she stopped, looking at him with a grimace he didnât quite understand, âWhat is it?â
âBugs-my sister used to work as a shot girl in a club.â She said after a moment of thought, âShe could smell a rat from a mile away; said most girls who work in bars get this sixth sense about guys with bad intentions, so they know when to cut them off earlier than most,âÂ
Emily looked at him for a moment, and he seemed troubled, hesitant as she was to even tease the idea to him, before he sighed, rubbing a hand over his forehead.Â
âCall her in.â He said through an outbreath, gritting his teeth the way he did when he was in between a rock and a hard place.Â
Rock being another girl murdered by tonight with a huge opportunity to catch the guy in the act missed. Hard place being a twenty-three year old risking her skin for his team for a third time. He hated the paperwork she brought him, hated the look on her face the day Spencer and Derek had dragged her out of that chapel bloodied and shaken even more.Â
âBut she wears a vest under her clothes, and she stays with Reid and Morgan,â He reasoned, âAnd just purely scouting; if the Unsub strikes, she gets out there like any other civilian.â
Emily nodded, her hand routing through her pockets for her phone already, âCouldnât agree more,â She said, hitting the call button with a sigh. She just hoped this time her baby sister wouldnât be making any drastic calls like throwing herself in the Unsubâs way. Though, Emily knew Spencer wouldnât let her take another hit for him ever again. Not after the way heâd seemed so distraught the moment sheâd been dragged from that room, his eyes all but glistening with tears when heâd seen her on the bed, bloodied and beaten for his sake.Â
No, Emily could stake her life on the fact Reid would go down swinging before that ever happened to her again.Â
-
âWhen you think about the nature of serial crimes, itâs amazing there arenât more predators in clubs,â Spencer said, hoping the pretty girls heâd managed to snag into conversation didnât hear the way his voice stuttered. This was so far out of his depth, the entire club atmosphere suffocating him worse than any tight pants ever could. The music was too loud, the heavy bass making him wince, the air was too close, too warm, the bodies that kept shoving past him made him want to shower for two hours straight and then wash his hands as well. Heâd turned down the drink Derek had offered him, knowing the exact amount of bacteria that swarmed the ice behind the bar, on the rims of the glasses, on the taps-Â
Spencer was more than overwhelmed. And talking to beautiful women was not helping his flushed demeanour whatsoever.Â
âI mean, excessive amounts of alcohol, countless opportunities for date rape drugs, not to mention suprisingly risky behaviour being pursued,â He counted off, his satchel strapped tightly to his side, âAll right, so who wants a flyer?â The three women turned their nose up in awkward smiles, the tallest pushing past him with little more than an outright scoff, the other girl following her like lost dogs, âNobody? Okay, all right,â He said, his face crestfallen at their reaction, though he wasnât so unused to it. Girls tended to react that way when he spoke, his entire high school career had been the same. Infact, the only girl other than his co-workers who ever bothered to listen when he spoke was-
âIâll take one,â A voice came from behind him, the same one he had incidentally been thinking of since theyâd left Emilyâs apartment, and he could already tell she was smiling before he whipped around to see her slinking through the crowd.Â
He was ready to retort something clever, but felt his words congeal in his throat. He had thought, that day when heâd stopped the elevator and seen her in a sodden wedding dress, that he had seen her at her most beautiful. Yes, her makeup had been tracking down her face with her tears, her hair sticking to her cheeks, her expression weepy. But she had reminded him of a star, glistening with the rain, the water shimmering off the snow white fabric, it had taken his breath away then, even when sheâd thrown her arms over his shoulders, as if he was the only thing that she could grab on to for safety.Â
But that dress was nothing like the one she wore now.Â
It was nothing extravagant, and truthfully heâd seen at least ten girls in this club alone that had gone way more lavish than she had bothered to on such short notice. But, Spencer couldnât help but take her whole image in as she shoved her way in front of him, an easy smile on her face.Â
âBeats boxers and pyjama shirts, huh?â She twirled cheekily, warming under his gaze that blinked heavily at her. The dress had been an old thing sheâd bought for a frat party, when sheâd felt particularly sorry for herself and was going out looking for a bonehead jock to take home. It fit her nicely, complimented the areas she wanted it to, hid the others. A good fail safe option for a last minute night out like this. Covered the kevlar vest Hotch and Emily had wrangled her into.
Not her finest moment, being jumped on by her older sister as her boss forced the bullet jacket over her head; the new girl, Jordan, staring in discomfort as sheâd cursed both of them out colourfully for ruining her outfit, but the way Spencer seemed to gulp heavily made her smile wider.Â
âYou lookâŚâ He swallowed again, his fingers digging into the flyers in his hand. Hot. She looked hot. Hot enough that he felt his face flush with the same feeling, he hoped she couldnât see the way he blushed beneath the club lights, âBeautiful,â He settled on, because âhotâ was an entirely Derek word to use.Â
âSo you keep telling me,â Bugsy preened under his gaze, grinning like she knew something he didnât. Grabbing one of the flyers from his sweaty palms gently, she took a look at the general sketch, not noticing the way he had yet to tear his eyes off her, âAlright, this the guy?âÂ
âYeah, we think he has a mark of some sort- like a birthmark or a scar over his left eyebrow,â He informed, corralling her towards where Morgan stood, his own eyes widening at the girlâs attire.Â
They knew she was coming to help scout the scene, they didnât realise sheâd come so ready. Derek immediately felt stupid for doubting her.Â
âWoah, did someone call the fire department, because youâre about to set the damn sprinklers off,â He teased, her face lighting up at the man she knew had a way of making her feel a million bucks every time he saw her.Â
Emily said he had little sisters of his own, and maybe that was how he knew just what to say. He had many years of experience being the best big brother.Â
âOh, please, you guys spoil me,â She snickered, though her eyes scanned the crowd for a general scope of the club. Safe to say she did not miss the eight pm till four am shifts she used to pull, nor did she miss the drunk bodies swaying around her, the men who would get handsy, the girls who would get scrappy, âSo, howâs it going?âÂ
âNot good, I gave the profile to one woman and she asked if I was the unsub,â Spencer sighed, running a hand through his rogue curls, the humidity of the stuffy bar making them tighten around his ears just that bit more. âHow are you doing?âÂ
âWell, I gave out all my flyers,â Derek said smugly, though Spencerâs eyebrows raised, a smile teasing at his lips.Â
âOh yeah? How many phone numbers did you get?â Bugsy snorted at his words, looking between the men with a smirk.Â
âNone, Iâm working the case here, kids,â Derek tutted, to which Spencer and Bugsy looked at eachother with identical doubt, flicking their gaze back to Morgan. He huffed, âOkay, four were offered, but I didnât take any of them.âÂ
Spencerâs jaw dropped, face scrunching in confusion how Morgan was so charismatic with women even when he wasnât trying.Â
âAlright, Iâm gonna go grab more flyers from the van. You,â He clapped a hand on Spencerâs shoulder, âNeed to relax, man. Remind me to teach you the basics on picking up girls. And you,â Derek pointed to where Bugsy nodded patiently, âMake sure wonder boy doesnât get eaten alive. And stay together.âÂ
She nodded again, watching him leave through the crowd; already a woman grabbed on his arm for his attention, where she watched him politely decline with one of those flirty smoulders heâd mastered.Â
âI donât get how he does it. I mean, I get he has the whole body of a God thing going for him,â Spencer sighed, as the two of them went back out into the crowd, scanning for a group of girls who looked particularly sober enough to listen, âBut, he just has this way, you know. Iâll donât think Iâll ever have the way,âÂ
âDonât put yourself down like that,â She chastised, nudging him affectionately with her elbow, âYouâre very beautiful yourself, you know? You donât need some stupid way, you just need to be yourself,âÂ
She said it as if it was nothing, as if it hadnât just hit him in the chest that she thought he was attractive, though he still remembered that first day theyâd met when she assumed he was a stripper.Â
His heart swelled in his chest.Â
âYou really think so?â He asked unsure, waiting for her to laugh in his face and tell him it had just been a tease, she was good at those. But she was never cruel. Never to him. He didnât know why heâd expected it.Â
âAbsolutely! Iâve seen like three girls already giving you goo-goo eyes. Believe me, you got the looks,â She simpers, watching his eyes scan the crowd to look for the supposed culprits.Â
âSo, what, itâs my personality they don't like?â He asked, though he knew that was more than likely the case. Heâd always been told he buzzed in peopleâs ears like a fly, like he was simply background noise the greater population wanted to tune out.Â
He knew that would be it. It didnât stop the small stab of hurt in his stomach however.Â
âIf someone doesnât like your personality, that is a them problem, Spencer, not you,â Bugsy was quick to snap, the joking lessening in her eyes as she caught his dejected expression, âGirls like it when you talk about something you enjoy, something you know what youâre talking about. Which should be easy, since you know everything. What do you feel most comfortable talking about?âÂ
âStatistics,â He said with a nod, to which she looked at him fondly.
âOkay, we have statistics as a backup option. Anything else?â She looked at him, the light bouncing off her eyes in a way that had him pause to think.Â
âMagic?â He offered, and she smiled even wider, if that was even possible.Â
âMagic! Perfect, girls love feeling magical,â She beamed, nudging him again with her elbow, and the two of them walked over to the bar, âShow me then, Gandalf. What moves would you pull on me if I was a girl?â
He blinked at her, âAre you ⌠not a girl?â He asked, pure bewilderment on his face as he stole a few napkins from the counter.Â
She snickered, âOkay, if I wasnât me. If you didnât know me,âÂ
âIf I didnât know you, Iâd be way too nervous to even talk to you. And you definitely wouldnât want to talk to me,â He said as he fiddled with the paper between his obnoxiously long fingers, folding the sheets into miniature shapes.Â
She chuckled at him, shaking her head. It had never been like this with them before. Sure, she teased him, like she always had, but he was teasing back. Complimenting her with a seriousness beyond just being nice.Â
Something was different in him since the day Cyrus dragged her away. And if that hadnât done it, then seeing her every morning for two weeks had changed the boyish anxiety that had lingered even then.Â
âStop stalling and show me these tricks of yours,â She bit playfully, though the grin she gave him was genuine as she saw something mischievous flash in his eyes.Â
âPatience is virtue, patience is virtue-â He murmured, fiddling with the short, plastic straws they kept at the bar, âNow for this to work, Iâm going to need a beautiful assistant. Do you think you could find one for me-âÂ
She smacked his arm, and he snickered. She shook her head, fighting her own laugh overcoming her.Â
Maybe she was right. Talking about something he loved made him feel entirely at ease, like he controlled every angle their conversation took, and the air between them had taken this odd electric turn he wasnât expecting like someone had pumped a thousand volts under his skin.
âIâm kidding, Iâm kidding,â He replied, holding out one of the straws, about as plain and simple as it would be if it were in a drink, âBut I will need some magic words,â
âOfcourse,â She drawled, her cheeks hurting from how tight she was smiling, âWhat are they?â
âMagic words are, âIâll be thereââ He instructed, fiddling with the cuffs of his sleeves as he watched her frown, and he pointed the straw at her mouth like a microphone, âYou got it?âÂ
âYep,â She responded, even though the confusion read clear as day on her face. He tapped the straw on her nose and cleared his throat.Â
â3, 2, 1,â He tapped it to her temple, then to each of her shoulders, âGo on a date with me?âÂ
âIâll be there,â She responded, and in a strobe of light the single instrument became a trio of origami roses, stuffed into the straws as stems.Â
Her brain caught up to her as he gently placed them in her hand, her eyes gazing at him like he had just presented her with a 24 carat diamond, though in reality it was nothing more than a silly trick with napkins and plastic.Â
âSpencer,â She said earnestly, and he could have sworn her voice quivered for a split second, before she shook her head at him, punching him on the hip gently, âYou are the most humble man Iâve ever met. You do that to any other girl and youâre getting laid, Iâm telling you,âÂ
He rubbed his chin bashfully, both of them catching the way the waitress behind the bar watched him with large, blue eyes Bugsy could have bathed in. She was gorgeous, and she stared at Spencer as if sheâd been the one given roses.Â
Attracted. Interested.Â
âTalk to her,â Bugsy whisper-yelled, nodding over to the barmaid who busied herself with another order, though they both saw the way her flicking glances to the two of them as she scooped ice, âShe would have seen if a guy like that frequented somewhere like here, talk to her,â
âWhat- no-â He protested, but his eyes widening as Bugsy leaned over the bar to flag the woman down with that playful charisma of hers, not missing the way a few heads turned as the dress tightened around her ass as she bent forward.Â
He felt his chest flash with anger, glaring at the men, hoping it was enough to ward them off. Her hand enclosed around his wrist, drawing his attention back to the bartender who watched him with a sweet face. He had to admit she was attractive.Â
âThis is my very best friend, Spencer,â Bugsy told the woman, who smiled at him, and the Prentiss girl lifted his hand up to wave at her like he was a ragdoll, âSpencer, wanted to show you something, didnât you, Spence?âÂ
Raising her eyebrows at him, nodding to the flyers in his hand.Â
âIâm gonna go dance,â She fibbed, knowing she was going to go scout out the crowd to see if any guys fit the profile, nudging him a little harder than before, âRemember what we talked about. Iâll be by the DJ,âÂ
Grinning encouragingly, he watched her swoop into the crowd like it was second nature, not missing the collection of guys who watched her every move; she captured the room when she moved, when she smiled, when she politely excused herself past a group of girls that tried to pull her into their circle with friendly cheers.Â
He did another one of his tricks for Austin, heâd come to learn was the name of the girl behind the bar, but it hadnât felt the same, not even when she gave him her number unprompted, even as she flirted, smiled prettily, batted those sea blue eyes at him. It wasnât the same.Â
He worried for a moment that the electricity heâd felt was reserved only for Bugsy, but he squashed it down faster than he could confront the idea.Â
2. The one where he nearly dies
âI donât know how to do this,â JJ confessed, her bluebell eyes filled with tears as she stared out of her bossâ office and into the bullpen full of officers, scientists and even the damn military tearing through pages and pages of resources for answers.Â
Anthrax. A weapon of mass destruction theyâd already had a small dose of, was on the move through the BAUâs own city. And they each had strict instructions to not alert their loved ones.Â
âI canât stop thinking about Henry,â She whimpered through a strong facade as she turned to Hotch, and she saw the same guilt eating him up in those dark eyes of his that rarely let anything slip.Â
He had Jack. He had Haley, even with the divorce papers signed so long ago. He had people at risk too. And yet she couldnât stop seeing her precious little boyâs face as he lay back in his pushchair and enjoyed the sights of the park, the same park that had just been targeted with an airborne disease-
âHe goes for a walk almost every single day at Potomac Park,â She sniffed, the nausea chewing away at her brain as she recounted the lesions on that poor teenage girls skin, that's going to be Henry, thatâs going to be Will, âWhat type of mother am I if I donât atleast call and tell them to stay home?âÂ
âJJ, we canât,â Hotch said, though he felt his own dam start to tear down as he tried not to think of what could possibly happen to his own sweet son.Â
âI know, but-â Her throat bobbed, âIt-itâs not just me- Emilyâs worried about Bugsy. She told me she cuts through the park on the way to her lectures- she has one every day this week- Hotch-â
It was true. She had caught Emily in her own turmoil as the woman sped off to grab a drink seconds after chugging down the dose of Cipro theyâd all been given that morning. Sheâd caught her filling a glass of water until the liquid started leaking down the sides and went over her shaking fingers, and even then sheâd had to tug her friend out of whatever rabbit hole the words âMedia Blackoutâ had sent her down.Â
âI understand you both have people you want to protect,â Hotch was the voice of reason, as he always was, and it stung her to see his face so cold since she knew he was drowning his own sorrows behind it, âBut if we all called home and used this information to give us an advantage other people donât have, is that the right thing to do?âÂ
She bit her lip, knowing he was right. She just prayed on everything she had Will would stay home with Henry today, Haley would have a movie night with Jack, and for whatever she had seen in Emilyâs eyes earlier, a pure, unadulterated self-loathing, that Bugsy at least took the day off teaching.
JJ prayed, and prayed, and prayed.Â
â
She shuffled her notes together as she marked papers at her desk. They let her take the office to herself since sheâd been at the University for five months now, gave her free reign of her lectures without having a supervisor like they had the first eight weeks or so. Bugsy enjoyed, surprising as it was to her, the feeling of somewhere that wasnât the laboratory. Emily and Spencer had forced her to apply for jobs when they caught her binge watching real housewives for the sixth time back to back, of course lacking any bottoms.Â
Emily didnât know why she thought twenty-four year old Bugsy would be any different. They had thought at least that Derek holding her hair back on the night of her birthday party as she threw up copious amounts of jello shots on the sidewalk would be an eye opening moment, but it hadnât deterred her in the slightest. She had just chucked a handful of gum in her mouth, patted the man on the back and asked Emily to hit up the drive thru on their way home.Â
It wasnât until she got the job did she feel a little bit more responsible, like what she was doing actually affected the people around her. Teaching first year college students was so very different than sheâd expected, she was the authority figure.Â
She could hear her mother laughing at her now.Â
She almost smudged the little smiley face sheâd drawn beside one of her studentâs B+ as the phone rang on her desk, because she had an office phone believe it or not, and she cleared her throat, trying to sound as grown up as possible whilst also trying not to grin how excited she was to use her new landline.Â
âMiss Prentiss speaking, whoâs calling?â She said, almost not recognising herself as she squeezed her gel pen in delight. She had this grown up thing down to a tea.
âHi, Bug.â Spencerâs voice sounded out of breath, and she heard his converse slapping against a linoleum floor fast, as if he was pacing, âI got a quick hypothetical to run through with you,âÂ
âY-yeah, sure- Where are you?â She asked, her brows furrowing when he gave a wheezy cough, âSpence?â
âIâm not allowed to tell you, but Iâm fine- for now,â He winced as he said the last part, as if it had slipped unintentionally, as if he knew what was coming next. He could practically hear her brain ticking over, âSo, when youâre in the lab-â
âWhat do you mean for now?â She cut him off, standing up from her desk, already collecting her pencils back into their little pink case, âWhereâs Emily? Is she okay? Is anyone hurt?â
âEveryoneâs fine; as I was saying, hypothetically, when youâre in the lab where would you-â He talked over her right back, his slender fingers flicking through the piles of work, hoping he stumbled on a formula, a sticky note, a damn cheat sheet, anything.Â
âDonât avoid my question, Spencer,â She snapped, and she could already feel the worry lines on her forehead.Â
He sighed, hoping she couldnât hear the way his chest rattled and he choked down a cough. It would only make her worry more.Â
âI promise I will tell you whatâs going on if you just answer my question,â Spencer rushed, feeling his face growing sweaty, opening the entire cabinet of drawers. âOkay?â
She nodded, biting her nail, as she sat back down. âOkay fine, shoot,â
âWhere would you put your valuable items if you didnât trust your lab partner while the two of you were working together?â He asked, wiping his brow with his sleeve as he held the phone tight to his ear with his shoulder.Â
She paused for a moment, âWell itâs standard practice that all jewellery comes off before we get scrubbed, so as not to contaminate anything. I usually put my scrunchie through my rings and tied it back into my hair so they wouldnât get stolen. I knew some guys who put their watches around their ankles. Basically anywhere we could feel it on us,âÂ
He cleared his throat again, and she heard him take a few steps, âHowâs grading papers going? Did you get a fax machine yet?âÂ
He was trying to change the subject, trying to take her mind off whatever it was he was doing that required such an urgent and peculiar question.Â
âItâs going good, I miss you bringing me coffee; it was like I had a maid who helped me with my crosswords,â She said, biting her bottom lip squeezing her thumb in the middle of her fist to slow the nerves. He tried to pretend he wasnât smiling hearing that. âNow tell me whatâs wrong. Did you go running without your inhaler again? I told you to leave a spare at ours so I could rescue you if you ever-âÂ
âBugsy, youâre a genius!â He cried, ignoring the way it made his throat burn, âRemind me to tell you every single day how smart you are- I have to go,âÂ
âSpence- Spencer-â She tried to cut in, but he had already put the phone down.Â
So much for not worrying her, she thought, as she got on the phone to Emily within seconds.Â
-
Bugsy all but burst through the hospital doors, apologising when she nearly knocked a stack of files from a nurse's hands, wishing she had an inhaler herself after she had ran all the way from the car park, including the three flights of stairs.Â
After calling in sick the rest of the day, and practically volleying her rucksack into the passenger's seat of her car, she had blindly called Emily four more times until the woman answered with a frightened lilt to her voice.Â
Spencer was headed to the hospital. Spencer was headed there on full blues with lungs full of an even deadlier strain of Anthrax. Last Emily had heard he was getting worse. Bugsy put her foot down on the pedal even harder.Â
She knew the speeding ticket would come any day, and didn't even want to think about the state of her parking. All she cared about the second the lady at the desk had said what room he was in was seeing he was okay, that he wasnât growing lesions or choking on his own blood or having half of his brain boiled alive.Â
Bugsy felt a small spike of panic, if it could even get worse, as she yanked the curtain back to see him asleep, a cannula tucked into his nose, a hospital gown tied over his shoulders.Â
Diving for his file that was attached to the end of his bed, she looked through his information to check what meds heâd been given. He once told her he was allergic to narcotics, said he had been since birth, and while she trusted one of the team to have passed the information on, she had to see it for herself that he was stable.Â
No narcotics given. Only paracetamol for his fever that was rapidly coming down. She could breathe again.Â
She jumped out of her skin when the curtain rail was pulled back a second time, and Derek seemed to startle for a moment too before a tired smile met his handsome face.Â
âWhere have you been, Baby Prentiss?â His breath knocked out of him when she threw herself at him, a sigh of relief coming from her bitten lips.Â
âOh, thank god youâre okay,â She murmured, and his chuckle echoed through his chest into her ear, âYou all worried me half to death,â
âYouâre looking very grown up,â He teased as he patted her on the back. And she was. She had taken to wearing maxi skirts and tights, even throwing on a cute blazer for affect, she was the teacher after all. She shoved him away with a smack to the chest. He laughed, holding up the opened pot of jell-o to her face, âJell-o?â
She gagged, filled with memories of her birthday.Â
He shook his head with a smile as she sat down in the seat next to the bed and he spooned the first mouthful of the fruity dessert into his mouth.Â
âIs everyone else alright?â She asked, wringing her hands together. She fought back the urge to tuck Spencerâs curls behind his ear, knowing he was sleeping peacefully.
âStop worrying. Teamâs fine; we caught the guy and confiscated his supply. Even saved the last few survivors with you telling Reid where to look,â Morgan watched her jaw feather, and she picked under her nails.Â
âI keep telling you guys, I didnât do anything. I just⌠spoke to him. Heâs the genius, not me,â She said solemnly, staring into her lap with a frown.Â
âNot to him. Whole journey back, before the aphasia kicked in, he kept telling paramedics to tell Doctor Kimura it was you whoâd figured it out.â Derek said, but it seemed to make her sulk more.Â
She said nothing, pulling out her book from her bag to continue reading as she waited for him to wake up, and Derek took it as a sign she was in no mood to talk, god forbid even take a compliment, and opened the magazine heâd grabbed from the cafeteria.Â
â
Half an hour and another pot of pudding for Morgan later (she gagged again at the sweet strawberry smell of it), the pair of them sat in silence, reading their own materials when a very sleepy, doe eyed man looked up and frowned.
âAre you eating Jell-O?â Spencer asked, barely noticing the girl on the other side of the bed, who shot up out of her seat as he came around.Â
âHey doc. You have a visitor,â Morgan said with a small smile, Spencerâs face falling into a frown. He looked to the other side of him, just in time to see a worn copy of Middlemarch being flung to the floor and a hand grabbing his clammy ones tightly.Â
âSpencer Iâm- Iâm so mad at you-â She gasped, every soppy feeling of sadness sheâd been stewing in leaving her body when she saw his hazel eyes fall to her, âYou put the phone down on me and next thing I know youâre in the back of an ambulance nearly flatlining- Iâm so-âÂ
She breathed when she saw his eyes soften. He didnât think she knew it but he saw the way her eyes glistened, her voice trembled underneath her anger. He felt the way she had yet to let go of his hand, how nice and warm it felt in his palm.Â
âIâm sor-â He hadnât even finished his apology when she had latched onto him, trying not to hug him too tight but hard enough she could tell herself he was still here. He was okay.Â
And he could understand. Heâd felt the same when theyâd found her in that church, when Cyrus had hauled her away after sheâd practically offered herself up in exchange for him. Heâd known she was braver than she gave herself credit for, but that had stopped his heart right there and then. He had grabbed her in a hug the first chance heâd got even then, even when he barely knew her, when she was Emilyâs sister and not Bugsy. Not the woman heâd spent every morning with for weeks bringing her a coffee just the way she enjoyed it, the woman heâd sat with on Emilyâs couch with her legs across his lap as they did the puzzles in the morning paper together. She tried to do them, and he would finish them when she got too annoyed by the ones she couldnât answer.Â
âIâm sorry,â He said, his arms gently hugging her back and he felt something wet on his shoulder blade before he knew what it was. He felt even worse for worrying her, squeezing her tighter than was even comfortable for him.Â
âDonât do that to me again,â She said through tears as she settled in his arms.Â
He really hoped she couldnât hear the way his heart pounded.Â
3. The one at Haleyâs funeral
She had no idea what to say. Emily had always been the one who knew how to talk to people. She had this horrible habit of saying the first thing that came to her head, probably because a lot of the time it was the most real, and people liked real.Â
But now wasnât the time for what was best for her. Haley Hotchner had been murdered.Â
She hadnât spoken to Hotch yet, sheâd only met the man a handful of times. But heâd invited her anyway, for the team. For Emily, maybe even Spencer; Emily said he liked when she was around. She couldnât imagine any other reason she would be there.Â
Other than, ofcourse, to be Spencerâs crutch. Literally. Since his real one had broken and he was still limping around with one knee weakened by the bullet wound in it.Â
Sheâd nearly had a heart attack when heâd called from the hospital, again, though this time heâd waited until heâd gotten the all clear to tell her so she didnât panic quite as much as last time. Sheâd cursed him out for being so reckless, and requested another week's sick pay to take care of him until he was able to actually walk. It was only a one year contract with the university anyway, she didnât care if she missed a few days to make sure he was okay.Â
âYou look very handsome today,â She whispered to him as she hauled him out of the car, minding that he didn't hit his head on the ceiling. He gave her a small smile and tucked her own hair behind her ear seeing it come loose from its braid when sheâd leaned down to grab him.Â
âJust today?â He asked, and she finally smiled back. Sheâd been stuck in a bubble in the car; her and Emily both had. They had the same thinking face, heâd realised.Â
âJust especially today,â She answered honestly, and he worked on adjusting his black jacket so she could hold onto him comfortably. She was quieter than usual. Feeble, almost.Â
âThankyou, you do too,â He replied, his face scrunching after a moment, âLook pretty I mean,âÂ
He leaned on her arm, looped it around hers as he tried to be the least amount of imposing as possible. That went about as well as youâd expect for a six foot one bag of bones.Â
She gave up after just a few steps, moving his arm to wrap around her shoulder as she walked with him. To anyone else they would easily pass as a couple, especially as she squeezed him tightly to her when the men laid down Hayleyâs coffin, and the service began.Â
âW.S Gilbert wrote âItâs love that makes the world go aroundâ and if thatâs true, then the world spun a little faster with Hayley in it.â Aaron began, his voice strong as his large hands gripped the eulogy like it would give him any comfort. She smiled softly, her eyes glued to the man who stood unmoving for his son, âHaley was my best friend since we were in high school. We certainly had our struggles but if thereâs one thing we agreed on unconditionally, it was our love and our commitment to our son, Jack,âÂ
Bugsy smiled sadly when Jack looked to the floor bashfully. Glancing between the photo on top of the coffin, a beautiful blonde woman grinning back at her with brilliantly happy eyes and a soft face, she saw where he got most of his looks from.Â
âHaleyâs love for Jack was joyous, and fierce. That fierceness is why she isnât here today. A motherâs love is an unrivalled force of nature, and we can all learn much from the way Haley lived her life. Haleyâs death causes each of us to stop and take stock of our lives. To measure who we are and who weâve become.â She felt Spencerâs head knock into hers, felt the sniff run through him, and she searched her pocket for a tissue, âI donât have all those answers for myself, but I know who Haley was. She was the woman who died protecting the child we brought into this world together; and I will make sure Jack grows up knowing who his mother was. And how she loved and protected him. And how much I loved her.âÂ
If Haley were here today she would tell us not to mourn her death. She would tell us-â Aaron cut himself off with a watery voice, his resolve finally melting as he realised this would be some of his final words to his wife. Bugsy felt her bottom lip quiver in remorse, âShe would tell us to love our families unconditionally. And to hold them close because in the end they are all that matter.âÂ
Spencer felt her tug him closer as she hid the lone few tears from the rest of the mourners and wished more than ever he could press a small kiss to her brow.
â
No, Bugsy was not good with knowing what to say and when. Wasnât good at cheering people up no matter how much Spencer told her she always made him feel better. Didnât really know much about how to make someone understand that she cared other than showing them with her whole body.Â
So by the time it was her turn to offer condolences, she didnât bother shaking his hand. That meant nothing to her. That was a business deal, that was an agreement, a formal way to pretend you cared. But she did, she felt terrible for Hotch, wanted to fix him and his sweet son until Haley was right back there to thank her.Â
She didnât shake his hand like everyone else had. He held his hand out for one, his eyes soft and warm, like he could see she was struggling. She brushed past his hand and just pulled him in for a hug, and he wondered if she was always going to greet him that way.Â
âI guessed that sorry wouldnât make anything better so I brought you the biggest bottle of wine the store had,â She murmured into his chest, and she was gobsmacked to hear him chuckle weakly. She felt his hands pat her on the back gently, and he appreciated her candour. âIâve got some Xanax if youâd really like a treat,âÂ
She was a breath of fresh air. Aaron truthfully had been sick of people saying they were so sorry for his loss, and he felt like shaking them and yelling, screaming that they hadnât been the one to kill Haley, Foyet had.Â
He pushed all of it down, focusing on the way sheâd tucked herself to him like she had the day sheâd become a runaway bride dripping rainwater over his bureau floor.Â
âShe would have really liked you,â Aaron confessed, and they finally parted, and she saw he was smiling like he meant it, not just saying it to make her feel more comfortable being here. âYou would have made her laugh,â
He saw the easy expression on her face fade, and she turned to look at her heels, nodding quietly.Â
âI would have been lucky to have known her,â She said, handing him the gift bag with a very heavy present inside. âI only wish someone would ever love me the way you love her,âÂ
And with that she bid him a smile, and returned to her seat in between Emily and JJ, the pair of them mother henning her all day.
Aaron wished he could have said more to her after that, but before he knew it, someone else was offering him their condolences, and the sadness in her voice was forgotten.
â
The team sat around the table, nursing their beers, or in Spencer and Bugsyâs case a tea. Spencer didnât want to affect his healing process with alcohol, not that heâd ever been big on the stuff, and Bug said she struggled driving even without the help of a beer, so they chatted between sips from two very fancy china cups.Â
Emily and JJ sat to the other side of her talking about how beautiful the flower arrangements were when a small, fawn haired body came wandering over to where Will held a one year old Henry on his knee.Â
âWould he like to play?â Jack asked shyly, trying to peer up onto the adults table to see if there were any other kids his age that would like to do something with him. His dad had been busy talking to all those people, and auntie Jessica had been trying to make it round to every table to thank people for being here. He didnât entirely understand what was happening, in all honesty.
âHeâs still a little too small yet honey. In a year or so, you guys can be best friends,â JJ said sweetly as he pulled his chin up to the tabletop and spied the younger woman sitting next to uncle Spencer.
He tottered over to her, where she sat unaware she had a shadow until Spencer's face softened as he looked behind her, and she swivelled around in her seat.Â
âHello,â Jack said quietly, looking up at where she seemed to buffer, feeling eight pairs of eyes on her as she interacted with the small boy.
She had never been good with children, had never been around them since she was their age, even the kids she taught now were all at least eighteen.Â
The mantra to absolutely not fuck up the next few moments reverberated around her head.Â
She gave him a soft smile, holding out a hand for him to shake, âHi, Jack. Iâm Emilyâs sister. You can call me Bugsy,â
His tiny nose scrunched as he watched her, shaking her hand the way dad had shown him how.Â
âBugsy? Thatâs a weird name,â He said, and she chuckled, âLike the bunny?â
She shrugged, âI guess like the bunny, yeah,â although she had never thought of that before.Â
âWould you like to play with me?â Jack asked, and she felt her chest warm unnaturally. He had such a sweet face. It was just like the woman in the picture.
Smiling at him crookedly, she rooted around her bag for the notebook and pens she kept for her to-do lists. Maybe Spencer was rubbing off on her.Â
âWe could do some drawing if you want?â She offered, showing him the pad with kind eyes. That seemed to satiate him as he grabbed her knee and started pulling himself up to sit in her lap, and she paused.Â
Kids were so funny, she realised, she would never just start grabbing someone she just met and asking to climb on their lap.Â
She got him comfortable on her knee, not noticing the flashing glances Spencer gave her between his conversation with Kevin, Garciaâs beau, as Jack started drawing a bunny with a human face, that was supposedly meant to be her.Â
Spencer watched her giggle as he gave the rabbit a pretty dress, like the one she was wearing, and Spencer had to admit it was a pretty dress sheâd gone for today. Had he not been so mournful earlier he thinks he would have blushed how tight sheâd held him.Â
She showed him how to play noughts and crosses, and she let him win most of them, laughing when he asked to tear out the page from her notebook to show his dad later.Â
That is, until the man himself came over to the table of his work colleagues, only to see the group watching their youngest playing with his sweet son.Â
âBugsy,â Hotch said, and her head shot up to him, a guilty look passing over her face, worried sheâd overstepped, though the fact he hadnât said her real name said otherwise, âCan I talk to you for a moment outside, please?â
She blinked, straightening in her seat âO-ofcourse!â Shuffling Jack off her lap as fast as she could without hurting him, smoothing out her dress down as she followed him to the small balcony the funeral home had. It was a classy manor, but she guessed Hotch would have only had the best for Haley.Â
âIâm sorry if I overstepped, Jack asked to sit on my lap- and- Iâm not good with kids anyway I just didnât want to tell him no, especially not today-â He put his hand on her shoulder to shut her up, a small smile spreading on his face. It was fatherly and calming, something her own father had been much too busy to ever bother with. Â
âNot at all, thatâs not why I called you out here,â He reassured, squeezing her gently as he leaned against the railing, taking a deep breath of the midnight air, and he felt his professional mask begin to slip. âIâve been thinking⌠about how much help you've been to us over the years. Reid would be dead if it wasnât for you.â She opened her mouth to protest, and he flashed her a look that said he was serious. âLet me finish,â
She wrung her hands guiltily, âSorry,âÂ
âYouâre very resilient far beyond your years, youâre incredibly charismatic when you need to be, and youâre by far one of the smartest people your age,â He said, watching her face to see how she felt. He knew she didnât take compliments well, for some other reason they could dig into any other day. But he needed to say it now, needed her to know now for what he was about to ask her.Â
âWhether that is true or not, why are you telling me this?â She asked politely, without the usual bite that went with it when they tried calling her something she wasnât.Â
âI need to take some time off to spend with Jack, try and help himâŚâ He trailed off, unsure as to what he wanted to say. âHelp him understand Haleyâs not coming home,â
She nodded with a glistening lash line, and grabbed onto his arm gently.
âMy team looks to me to be their glue, but I know I canât keep everyone together and look after my son. Emily said your contract at the University was ending,â He cleared his throat, looking at her again with something vulnerable in his sable black eyes, âSo I was wondering if you would reconsider the FBI academy? Itâs only twenty weeks, but Rossi and I can put you forward to do the written exams earlier if youâd like, and then Strauss can have you assigned a trainee position at the BAU-âÂ
âAnything,â She nodded, âAnything you need, Iâll do it,â and he hugged her for once. Maybe it was the way she had said it so willingly, no matter her own reservations about joining the academy, no matter her stubbornness and resistance to her sisters pestering, or even the fact they all talked weekly about how much easier their job would be if she was there. Her and Reidâs brains together were a force to be reckoned with.Â
And he knew, the surprisingly kind girl that clutched at him back, would keep his team together, would be the glue to keep their heads on while he took some time to watch his son.Â
âThankyou,â He murmured into her hair, and she forced herself not to get weepy at the grief in his voice. Of all people here, she was the last person who should be allowed to cry. Least of all to him.Â
He pulled away from her eventually, cursing himself for letting the front slip, but it was as if she had that effect on everyone on the team, like she had this little way of worming her way between that gap in their chests where their hearts once were before theyâd seen the things they had, dealt with the people they had.Â
It was for that reason Aaron knew they would be just fine.Â
âYou know, when I was a kid, mom got letters every day from people with their own agendas against her,â Bugsy said once theyâd taken a gulp of cool night air, âThey all said the same thing; that they were going to take me for ransom unless she left the country. She didnât think much of it until a guy started following the car home from school and she decided to get me trained in self defence,âÂ
Hotch frowned, his chest tightening. He knew how it felt to be a parent on edge for his kidâs safety, but to hear it from the other side cut deeper.Â
âWhich was fine, I got a pretty mean shot if I say so myself, but eventually it progressed into hostage training, in caseâŚâ She swallowed dryly, clearing her throat and picking her nails, âI wet the bed the first time they grabbed me, the whole idea was that I wouldnât know it was coming. They let me go pretty fast, I donât think theyâd expected the eleven year old to reach for the kitchen knife,âÂ
Hotch scoffed, shaking his head in horror, though he didnât doubt her for a second.Â
âI slept with it next to my bed for a year, so that next time they came for me, they would think twice and let me sleep in,â She said with a thoughtful smile.
âAnd did it work?â He asked, watching her run her hands along the stone wall beneath his elbow.Â
âI dunno, but the one guy left pretty quick when I almost took his eye out,â She giggled, and the sound made him laugh quietly as well, âMy point is, youâve got nothing to worry about with Jack. Kids like us, we get made tougher, resilient. And with parents like you two, Iâd say he had a pretty good head start.â Bugs said, smiling to herself flicking a glance up to his face that said just how touched he was. Deciding he was likely waiting for her to turn around before he let himself cry, she took a step back, heading towards the reception. âI mean look at me, I turned out alright!âÂ
She barely heard his small chuckle that faded into a weep before she shut the door behind her, heading back over to the table where the team sat, Jack now with his auntie Jessica, and their eyes fell on her, waiting to hear whatever it was she had to say.Â
Taking a deep breath, she gave them an awkward smile, âGuess Iâm joining the academy afterall,âÂ
And that was all she got out before Garcia dived on her with an excited cuddle.Â
4. The one with his new hair
He knew he was sweeping his fingers through his hair much more often than usual, his hazel eyes flickering to his reflection in car doors in a way that was almost obsessive. He liked what his barber had done, but that wasnât the point.Â
He was hoping she liked it.Â
Bugsy had passed the academy with flying colours, not that anyone had ever doubted her, and had been part of the team for all of two weeks, though he would argue she was BAU way before that. Hotch had figured out a staggered schedule where he could take care of Jack four days a week and work the rest until Jack settled back in at school.Â
It had been nearly five months since Haley had died, but it hadnât gotten any easier for the boy.Â
Spencer definitely, definitely hadnât spent the last two weeks practically breathing down her neck whenever they went out into the field, nor had he definitely not found himself fighting off the grin that threatened his composure when he caught her scribbling notes down to herself whilst Penelope presented the cases.Â
And he most definitely hadnât gone out to get a new hair cut in the hopes she would find him more attractive.Â
Definitely not.
And yet, her face was the first one he found himself looking at as he stepped into the office, watching as it trailed up from her notebook, her pink gel pen paused mid sentence as the rest of the team went silent, her face spitting into a grin the minute she saw him.Â
âWhat, did you join a boyband?â Hotch asked in a rare moment of teasing, Derek snickering as Emily nudged his arm with her own chuckle.Â
âCan I be your groupie?â Bugsy asked, which made them laugh harder, though she stared at him with a small twinkle in her eye the way she always did when he squirmed under her compliments.Â
He hadnât thought she was being mean, not even when they took a moment to settle down, not even when she smiled wryly at him, her eyes flicking up to his hair twice more before her attention was stolen back by Garcia switching the board.Â
âOkay, so what are we looking at here? Late twenties, early thirties?â Emily asked after they quietened, adjusting her bangs over her brows.Â
âAll single, though two are in committed relationships,â Rossi added, flicking through his own pack of notes. âAll living on their own,âÂ
âLooks like normal suburban houses. Give the Unsub privacy,â Morgan added, his face scrunched in disgust as he looked at the crime scene photos.Â
âThe differences are more striking than the similarities. Different hair colours, different body shapes.â Reid noted, Bugsyâs handwriting scrawling over her notebook as she tried to capture everything they were saying.Â
âWhat do we know about his MO?â Hotch asked JJ, the blonde woman shaking her head with a grimace.Â
âThatâs why we were invited in, the abduction sites are pristine,â She said gravely, looking between her team as they seemed to balk at the information.Â
âNo DNA besides the victims, and thereâs no sign of forced entry or struggle,â Bugsy noted in the pack Garcia had given her that morning, along with a little pat to the head for good luck. Before now, in those two weeks, they had only dealt with one kidnapping and one group homicide that had turned out to be one very stupid teen spiking drinks at a pool party. This case would be the worst one sheâd seen yet.Â
âAnd the victims arenât reported until two or three days after theyâre abducted,â Emily tailed off the end of her sister, her eyes serious as the team came to the same conclusion.Â
He had days to spend as much time with the bodies as he wanted.Â
âTwo or three days? Women like this donât just disappear without somebody noticing,â Rossi chimed in again, as JJ clicked onto the next screen handing the remote to Garcia.Â
âYes, which is why I had Garcia dig into their lives a little,â She said, taking a seat next to Hotch to let penelope lead.Â
âAnd I took a look at their online activity, I could easily see what the Unsub was doing,â Penelope said, clicking onto a screen full of the womenâs profiles.Â
Bugsy couldnât even say she was shocked. Ever since she was in highschool, friendships, or her lack thereof, had been entirely decided on who had the most likes on their status update. Apparently no one found the girl who read Russian Literature for fun cool, nor did they want anything to do with her. Emily didnât know sheâd sat in the school toilets to eat her lunch for three years straight. Turns out kids from every country were bitches.Â
âSocial Media profiles?â Her older sister asked, though the surprise was evident on her face atleast.Â
âYeah, facebook, twitter, you name an online life-sharing time suck, these victims were on it,â Penelope said, enlarging the screen for the team to see the specifics, âAnd if you look at each of their last posts, they say kind of the same thing, âGoing out of town, Going on a business trip, Going on vacation,â but when you look at the time and date stamps on each of these, queue the twilight zone music because they were all posted the morning after each of them went missing,â
âThe unsub posted them?â Hotch concluded, his natural frown deepening. This Unsub had a way to keep all of his victims hidden for much longer than theyâd anticipated. Who knows what he could be doing as they spoke.Â
âYou know, social networks are an easy way for an unsub to target his victims. These women were especially open, they posted everything from what they had for dinner to where they were going on dates,â Spencer said, looking at the print outs Pen had handed to them.Â
âThe unsub âFriendsâ his victim, and then uses it as a cover once he takes them,â Derek said, as Bugsyâs face scrunched in disagreement.Â
âWhat are you thinking, Kiddo?â Rossi asked from her left, as he head shot up to see the team watching her, waiting for her input.Â
Surprising to everyone, she was somewhat nervous when sheâd started at the BAU. The Bugsy Prentiss, the woman who had caught out parts of the Russian Mob when she was just a college student, was nervous to not mess up in front of them.Â
âI understand what Derekâs saying, but nowadays you donât actually have to be friends with someone to follow them.â She said, picking her fingertips in thought, âA lot of people have hundreds of total strangers theyâve never met on their page; some settings mean you donât even need to be âfriendsâ in the first place to see what they're posting. The UnSub probably wouldnât even bother implicating himself in the first place by following them, he could just access their profile and see what they're up to. I think he profiles as patient and organised, and somewhat tech savvy if heâs up to date on the way these medias work,âÂ
The team watched her carefully, Spencer beating down the proud smile he wanted to flash her, knowing he needed to be focused on this case, but she seemed satisfied with her answer when Penelope nodded in agreement.
âSo you donât think heâs an old guy like me, is what youâre saying?â Derek asked with aghast, knowing full well mid thirties wasnât too old. Hadnât stopped his pride hurting.Â
She shook her head, âI just think he wouldnât be as old as you. Mine and Reidâs age maybe. But he seems obsessive, and he also must have a job that affords him the spare time to spend the following few days with the bodies, but it means we should also assume that these women are likely already dead,â
She looked to Hotch hopefully, to see him staring at her unreadably for a moment, before he looked to Rossi with a nod.Â
David slapped her on the shoulder affectionately, âYou just put together your first profile, kid,âÂ
And before long, they were heading for the jet with her deductions in mind to hand over to the cops.Â
â
âCan someone explain to me the appeal of these sites? âEating sushi tonight, yum!â âBoss is keeping me late at work, grr,ââ Rossi stared at the status updates, perplexed, as the team snickered to themselves.Â
âNow, wait a minute. How did you find my profile?â Bugsy asked jokingly, and she drew a fond smile from Aaron her way when Rossi chuckled to himself.Â
He wished she would stop looking so nervous to contribute. She fit right in with the furniture.Â
âWhose life is so important that weâd be interested in this kind of detail?â Rossi asked seriously, though Bugsy supposed even the coffee machine was a new useless piece of technology to the man who liked his espresso fresh.Â
âThatâs just it, no one is. I guess everyone just wanted to believe it to themselves that they all have an audience out there waiting to hear every update of their day. Some of them even have GPS tracking systems in place to make it even easier for people to find out exactly where you are,â Bugsy said, her eyes flicking to Spencer who watched her intently, automatically floating up to take in his new hair again.Â
She couldnât help think he had stopped looking cute, and started looking hot. Heâd always been cute, god knows sheâd always thought he was good looking. But now he looked⌠dreamy. It had made her double take the minute heâd walked through the door, hoping it wasnât too obvious she was staring.Â
âThat explains how heâs finding them, but it doesnât tell us how heâs getting into their houses,â Hotch nodded along with her, eying her carefully as she looked through her own notes sheâd made once sheâd brought herself round to ripping her eyes off Reid.Â
âAt the very least I believe he has copies of their keys,â Spencer said, his finger trailing the information in his file, âDoris Archer had a home security system installed, but the disable code was entered at 1:56am, so he knew that too. He also found a way to deal with her dog, a German Shepard she adopted from the pound last year, it went missing the night she did,âÂ
âDid they find the dog?â Bugsy asked, her face in a frown as Emily looked up to her.
âWhy? What are you thinking?â She asked her little sister who played with the âTRAINEEâ lanyard around her neck.Â
âIf he hurt the dog, it likely meant the dog had been on alert to him as an intruder, since opportunistic violence isnât in his profile of being collected and organised. So if he didnât hurt the dog, and he was found alive and unharmed, it means the dog knew him,â Bugsy explained, and Derek stroked his face in thought.Â
âThis guyâs gotta be in and out of the house well before the night of the disappearance. He comes up with some ruse, talks his way inside, and then once heâs familiar enough with the house he knows he can come back and kidnap them without disturbing anything,â He said, the girl nodding in agreement with him.
âThink of people you let into your home you donât consider a threat. Home repair guys, dog walkers?â Rossi offered, but JJ was quick to flick to her own pack.Â
âDetective Fordham looked into that too. No one came even close to being a killer,â She shut down, not wanting to waste their time running through avenues that had already been explored.Â
âAlright,â Hotch started as he glanced at his watch to see they were landing in around ten minutes, âMorgan and Prentiss, start with the last abduction site, see if anything points to his MO.âÂ
Bugsy raised her hand politely, as if she were still in class, and he nodded in her direction to speak, âDo you mean as in me when you say Prentiss or as in Emily when you say Prentiss?â She asked, and Emily seemed to be having the same issue as she flicked a glance between the two of them.
âI mean Emily, for you I guess Iâll have to say-â But he stopped himself with a frown. What would he say? Bugsy? No, too informal on a case. Baby Prentiss? Absolutely not. He thinks she might just hit him if he said her first name too much. âWeâll workshop it for now. Dave, you, Prentiss, Reid and JJ go back over the womenâs lives. Start with asking around their friends on the sites. If this is how the Unsub is finding them, maybe theyâre connected to him without even realising.âÂ
The team was quiet for a moment, before Spencer pointed to Bugsy with his pen, âSo that time you meant Bug, right?â
Dave wished he could protest but he had also been a bit confused, as Hotch rubbed his head tenderly.Â
He felt the headache coming already.Â
â
âWhat was it about these women that made him choose them as targets?â Bugsy asked as she and Spencer sat in a small room in the Boise precinct, the three victims' profile pictures staring back at them from the board.Â
It was their second day working on the case, and other than Garcia tracking a very disturbing snuff film of the last murder being streamed from the victimâs own IP address using cameraâs heâd set up in the home, they had yet to have a big breakthrough. Hotch had told her to leave the room when theyâd shown the footage, knowing it was one of her first weeks on the case, and despite having a strong stomach, he wanted her to ease into the role rather than drop her in the deep end head first.Â
Even seasoned agents like Morgan and Rossi had both winced, JJ even gagging as they watched it happen. They usually dealt with the aftermath, not have front row seats on the act itself.Â
She had been allowed in once the tape had finished, but Reid had immediately shuffled her into the small office theyâd been permitted to use by the Boise police, his face a little more peaky than usual.
She wished he wouldnât worry so much about her, wished he would hide it better when he fretted over her. She was sure he would burst a vessel if he kept flicking his head to look at her, though she just sat staring at the women as if the answer would jump out at her.Â
âTheyâre all pretty, arenât they?â Bugsy said, swinging her legs beneath the table, her eyes roving over the three faces, âThough unconventionally, theyâre still pretty.â
They werenât his type, Spencer thought, they looked almost nothing like her. She had removed the last of the pink hair dye sheâd managed to keep on top of for a year or so before sheâd started at the university. Her nose piercing had progressed to a little thin silver hoop, though her earrings had been dialled down for safety reasons in the field, and she kept her hair tied back away from her face most days. She looked older, which was a dumb thing to think, since of course she was older. But she had grown into her face, and Spencer was entirely convinced she took after her father since the only thing she shared with Emily was the same pout when she thought too hard.Â
Heâd watched her grow for all of three years into the twenty five year old that sat before him, and yet her face had never really changed shape. She still had those pretty eyes that seemed to glint up at him, those soft lips that pursed when she tried not to giggle at him, that perfect nose he would trace the edge of using just his gaze when she had come over to his apartment to study for the academy. She was still as beautiful as the day heâd met her, he thinks part of him had always thought of her in that way. He had just put it down to a pretty girl giving him attention. But girls gave him attention all the time, he had realised since that stakeout at the club, when heâd given her those napkin roses. He just didnât care for them.Â
He only cared about what she thought of him.Â
Only cared what her face looked like-
âWait,â He stopped his thoughts that could go on for days, weeks, about her. They already had, it was difficult to pull himself out of it sometimes. He stared at the photos of the victims, his mind revelling in her own face that he didnât doubt had guys swooning and falling over their own feet, as he zeroed in on their eyes, cheekbones, septums, âTheir faces are all an identical structure,âÂ
âHow did you figure that out?â She asked, wide eyed and he ripped down the photos before she could catch him blushing.Â
He thought he might take it to the grave what heâd been thinking about.Â
â
âHeâs going live,â Hotch seethed, clicking a button on the remote and the whiteboard in the centre of the room lit up with video footage, a small red dot flashing slowly in the corner telling them they were watching it being streamed.Â
Bugsy stood behind Spencer, her eyes glued to the small computer at the desk that played the same screen, her heart rate spiking when she saw a small body camera pointing at a house, the UnSub cutting across a lawn in a near sprint.Â
Heâd lost control completely, and he had another victim set in his sights.Â
âHeâs not slow, deliberate. This guyâs pissed.â Rossi said, his jaw hung open in horror as the streamer headed straight for the front door.Â
âAll right, what do we see? Determining markers?â Hotch snapped the groups focus back from the gut wrenching panic that everyone felt, and it was like a switch flipped.
âA one story cottage,â Spencer noted, his eyes glued to the screen so tight he missed the way Bugsyâs face changed colour, and she looked like she was swaying on her feet.Â
âThat could be anywhere,â Detective Fordham commented back, his face grimacing.Â
âIs there a number on the house?â Morgan asked, and everyone leaned in closer to the footage.Â
âNo, heâs already at the door,â JJ said, running a hand through her long blonde hair.Â
Bugsy thought she might be sick.Â
âGarcia,âÂ
âHeâs using twice as many proxy servers,â Her shaky voice came through the speaker, furious typing in the background.
âWait, this window in the background, is that the chat room?â Emily asked, pointing to the small screen at the bottom that flooded with comments from at least forty different users, and more began entering the stream.Â
Get that bitch.Â
Show her a good time.Â
Teach the pigs a lesson for sticking their nose in.Â
Bugsy wished she hadnât been so fast at reading, as she felt her skin go cold at the sight of the comments.Â
âPeople are getting off on it,â She said quietly, but no one heard her, too focused on finding out where the UnSub was.Â
âUh Huh,â Garcia confirmed, as the footage flicked to show a kitchen view, a pretty fair haired woman stood chopping peppers none the wiser to the sick people watching her life before it was about to be ended.Â
âHeâs in the house, guys,â Reid ran clammy hands over his trousers, his stomach churning as the video went on.
âHeâs completely changed his MO,â Derek added, and the team could do nothing but watch in terror, âThereâs too much light, what happened?â
âSomeone asked the wrong question at the press conference,â JJ explained from beside Reid, her nails bitten to hell.Â
âOh my god, turn around. Just turn around,â Emily begged, and part of her little sister thought she might have been talking about her.Â
âMaybe she can fend him off,â Derek said, though even his tone of voice wasnât convinced.Â
âNew kitchen appliances, maybe we could check the work order?â Spencer was grasping at straws he knew that, but he couldnât sit back with that big brain of his working overtime and not try to help at all.
âHeâll be gone by then,â Rossi said, and he wasnât entirely wrong.
âGarcia, can you give me anything?â Hotch asked, and the sound of typing got even faster if that was possible.
âIâm stateside now, Iâm almost to Idaho, I just need more time,â but Garcia was cut of by the man in the video lurching at the innocent woman, his hands wrapping around her neck with a venomous grip, her every moment of pain and terror captured on his body cam for his audience to see.Â
His audience including the team.Â
Bug felt the bile rise then, felt her eyes burn as she watched the womanâs face freeze in fear, a yelp of âNo!â leaving her oesophagus, her small hands coming up to his wrists to try pry him away from her, anything to gasp for another breath of air.Â
She wasnât listening as Hotch barked orders at Garcia, her eyes were stuck on the woman that writhed in pain, pleading with the masked man to spare her. But her rebuttals got weaker, her whimpers began to grow quieter, and soon heâd tackled her to the ground in a blood curdling scream, his whole body weight crushing her throat.Â
Her own hand came up to cover her mouth that dropped open in shock, her eyes burning with tears that she couldn't let fall. It was this woman who was suffering, not her.Â
There was a bit more struggling from the woman, her eyes bulging from her skull, lips turning blue, until she slumped beneath his hands, and he released her.Â
She took a step back, bumping into a chair she hadnât even known was there as her eyes fixed to the screen, and Spencerâs head shot around to see her shaking on the spot, her eyes haunted.Â
Emily followed suit, but Spencer was already out of his seat, rushing forward to grab her arms and lead her outside.Â
âIâm gonna get her some air,â He called behind him to the team that watched her go with forlorn glances, and he hated how he felt her trembling beneath his grip, grabbing onto his jacket just as tight.Â
They made it halfway down the stairs before she bolted for the bathroom, and he heard her retching as he dipped into the room after her, not caring that the sign clearly stated it was for women.Â
âIâm fine, Em, just give me a minute,â She said, and he heard the sniffles between her words.Â
âItâs me,â He said, finding the one stall on the end that had itâs door engaged, pulling a cup from out of the dispenser and filling it at the water fountain, âYou should drink some water, the cold helps reset your bodyâs instinct to fight or flight,âÂ
âOr in my case, make a complete fool of myself and take time away from a time sensitive investigation because Iâm such a wuss,â She said cynically, coughing chestily and he heard the toilet flush.Â
His forehead creased as he frowned. The door unlocked and she stepped out, her eyes red and teary as she gently took the water from his hands, and he rooted around his pocket for a stick of gum to give her. She chucked it in her mouth, letting the peppermint clear the vile taste from her mouth, hoping she didnât look too gross.Â
âYou shouldnât stand so close to me, toilet bowls are like full of germs and my heads just been in there, I know it makes you feel funny to be around germs-â He pushed her hair behind her ear as if to tell her to stop thinking so loud, and she couldnât help smile sheepishly at him. âDo you think Hotch will be mad?âÂ
He shook his head instantly.Â
âMad? No. Worried? Incredibly.â Spencer replied, stroking her hair a little the way his mom used to when he felt sick.Â
Bugsy shook her head, sniffing to herself a little more.Â
She couldnât stop seeing that womanâs face as the life slipped from her, the hands around her neck. The yelps and pleads and begs and she fought with everything in her.
âHow long was it until you started feeling like this?â She asked earnestly, running a sleeve under her nose, âYouâre so brave, I always knew you were but, since I started, itâs like I realised nothing really touches any of you anymore.â
He fought the incredulous laugh, him; brave? The man scared of the dark and elevators brave?Â
âWe all take things home with us at the end of the day,â He said, wiping under her eyes for her with his own cardigan cuff, âIf you didnât feel anything for the victims we help, you wouldnât be human, Bug,â
She nodded, âI know. I just donât want to let anyone down. Not you guys and especially not the people weâre helping,âÂ
âItâs for that reason I know youâre going to do great,â He said, giving her one of those small Spencer smiles he reserved for when he wanted to see one of hers.Â
Her forehead thumped onto his chest as he pulled her a little closer, and his cheek fell on top of her hair as he ran gentle hands over the sides of her arms, calming her until her breath started evening out.Â
âYou never said,â She pointed out, âHow long it took for you to start getting cold feet. Bet I beat some kind of record, two weeks is absolute dog shit,â She chuckled to herself, not noticing how his face evened out in sadness.Â
It was Tobias Hankel that had done it. It was getting tied up and injected that had made him feel like a failure, like he wasnât cut out for anything let alone the force. Like his life was taking a huge spiral downwards.Â
But he wouldnât tell her that, not yet at least.Â
âCome on, letâs get you back,â He brushed off, and she figured it was a sore spot for him. She cursed herself for asking in the first place.Â
Nodding, she downed the rest of the water and got herself a refill, following him out of the bathroom, looking back up at him for a moment.
âI forgot to say,â Bug said, nudging against his side with her whole body, knocking into him lovingly, âYour new hair is very⌠dashing. I really like it.â
He swore his face went crimson in a single second.
5. The one with his migraines
âLet me pay for your fuel at least,â
âSpence, just shut up and get in the car,â
That was around about how the past eight months had gone. Every day, she would drive by his apartment, Emily in the passenger seat of her little sisters beat up Renault Zoe, affectionately named after its model, the back seat reserved for Spencerâs lanky legs and satchel bag as she drove the three of them through through roads of Virginia, to work and back again.Â
Sometimes he surprised her with coffee, sometimes Emily brought them donuts. Either way, they all enjoyed their morning routine that had stood the test of time about as much as Bugsy had as part of the BAU.Â
It had gotten easier after that first case; she still had her moments, but her skin had thickened to a point she barely remembered what her life had been like before that day Hotch asked her to join the academy.Â
Things were going well, she felt settled, even with the new girl Seaver replacing JJ while Jareau was away on business in the pentagon. She couldnât say she was the girlâs best friend, but they got along. And that was good enough for her. Her team was a well oiled machine.Â
That was, except for Spencer. Spencer she worried for every day.Â
She hated the way he twitched in the passenger seat, now his since sheâd forced Emily to get the subway to work today, bitching eachother out in the way sisters did until the older woman left in a huff but without asking questions, and she left to take Spencer to the hospital.Â
The sunglasses did little to stop his eyes hurting, his brain quite literally feeling as though it was pressing against his skull. He even turned down coffee this morning, and her stomach had dropped when she realised just how serious it was.Â
He didnât even question her when she held his hand tightly in hers as she walked him into the office, knowing he would hate every second of having this MRI done.Â
âEverythingâs going to be absolutely fine, theyâre going to find what it is and weâre going to get you fixed right up to your perky self again,â She said, as they sat together outside the doctorâs office, keeping her voice calm and quiet as not to upset his delicate head even more.Â
He nodded, appreciating her gentle touches on his hand, and he jumped in his seat when the door opened, his name being called through and he wished she could come with him.Â
âYou got this,â Bugsy smiled at him reassuringly when he looked hesitant, and nodded again, squeezing her hand once before he let go, following the nurse into the MRI room, wondering how he got so lucky to have a best friend like her.Â
â
Spencer sighed, leaning back in his seat. The flight had not helped the building pressure in his head in the slightest. He looked up to the ceiling, closing his eyes as the harsh office lights beat against his face mercilessly.Â
Two bodies found sacrificed to a 'higher being', their tongues and fingers cut off, shells put over their eyes and mouths. They had seen worse, perhaps not as odd, but they had seen worse. And yet this was the case that made him feel like his brain was about to explode right out his ears.
He hadnât felt like this since he had been on Dilaudid, since heâd be on a come down and his whole body would sweat cold, and his head would rattle with every movement. And even that almost paled in comparison to how bad his head hurt right now.Â
Spencer had wondered if that was what had done this to him, if it was a long term side effect of its use. He knew it wouldnât be, but the self punishing part of him couldnât help but fill his head with it.Â
He just wanted answers. He just wanted it to stop. He just wanted to crawl into bed with an ice pack over his face and never surface again until this thing had subsided.Â
Spencer felt hands in his hairline, fingernails weaving and massaging until he almost moaned, the touches releasing some of the metaphorical knots like magic at their fingertips, and he knew who it was, because that was how she always made him feel.Â
He opened his eyes to see her very upside down as she looked down at him, their eyes inline with one another as she continued running her fingers against his temples gently.Â
âYou okay, handsome?â That was somewhat new, not that he was complaining. Part of him said she just felt bad for him and his weird brain, and maybe that was how it had always been, but ever since he had started getting these migraines she was impossibly even softer with him now. Like she was his comfort blanket he cuddled to when he was feeling particularly sorry for himself, and she knew it too. They were rarely not stuck together like velcro, where he moved, she moved. Where he sat, she was pressed against him like the concept of personal space had never been such a huge deal for him.Â
And when his pain struck him down into the embodiment of a wounded doe, she was right there fluffing his pillows, grabbing him aspirin, massaging his head like she could grab the bastard migraine right out of his skull and say leave my precious boy alone.Â
She was too sweet on him recently, but then he never wanted it to stop. It felt like a relationship without the kissing and especially without the sex. The thought of it made him want to moan again.Â
âThis oneâs a stubborn one,â It had lingered around for three days straight, and the Miami heat wasnât helping as he looked up at her inverted face, and he could tell she was smiling gently at him.Â
She ran her thumbs over his eyebrows, smoothing them out and he sighed in delight as he felt the muscle begin to relax beneath her touch.Â
âYou make things better,â He confessed, her fingers tracing down his pretty nose, and he closed his eyes as she went over the bags beneath them. âYou always do,âÂ
He felt her kiss his forehead for good luck, and he knew she hated seeing him in so much pain. He could have whined when she pulled away, letting go of him gently as Rossi stepped into the room, hoping he hadnât seen the affection before too much teasing could come.Â
But he said nothing, even if he had seen, just raised his eyebrows and grabbed the file off the desk for his own thorough look through.Â
He sure as hell missed the way she interlaced their fingers under the desk though.Â
â
Spencer twisted the bracelet around his wrist as they sat together outside the doctor's office. Orulaâs ide. That was what Julio had called it. Said it would protect him from the bad spirits that clouded his head.Â
Spencer was a man of science, a man of logic. But even he couldnât quite explain how Julio had managed to figure out he was having migraines despite him not letting any infliction of pain cross his face, even more confused when Julio had said his body had been a conduit for a higher spirit who wanted to help him.Â
He was glad to be back in Virginia where everything made sense to him. Where she could hold onto his knee at the doctor's office to stop it from bouncing and his team couldnât tease or ask him what was wrong or make her stop touching him so much.Â
âI say we get some ice on your head and put on whichever Doctor Who episode you want, donât even care if weâve seen it before,â She offered, smiling over at him and hoping he couldnât see the worry in her eyes.Â
He could. He just nudged her shoulder with his forehead to say thankyou without ruining the solace the quiet brought him.Â
That is until his name was called, just as it was the last time he was here, and he stood to enter the office, not letting go of her hand as this time heâd made sure she could come.Â
âThat doesnât make any sense,â He said as he sat on the bed, his doctor showing him the clear brain scans that hadnât flagged a single neuron out of place.Â
âIâm not sure what you want me to say,â His doctor replied, watching the way his female accomplice frowned, squeezing his hand tightly.Â
âIsn't there any tests that would look for a specific prognosis we could try?â She asked, and the man shook his head.Â
âNot unless weâve ruled out every other option, and in this case Iâd like to suggest that Dr. Reidâs condition might be psychosomatic in nature,â The doctor explained, wary of the way the two agents screwed their expressions up, almost identically, hearing his explanation of Spencerâs headaches.Â
âPsychosomaticâŚâ Spencer echoed softly, in near disbelief.Â
That couldnât be it. It had to be the Dilauded. Or a tumour. Or a long standing concussion. Something physical and tangible he could point out and get fixed. Â
âIt just means a mental or emotional cause-â The doctor explained, only to have Spencer cut him off.Â
âNo I know what âpsychosomaticâ means Doctor, but it's not that,â He said, his voice tired; the idea he was making up his problem in his own head bothered him.Â
âWell, I think itâs something we should consider.â
âListen, Iâm not crazy,â Spencer insisted, and he felt her tugging his hand closer to hers, her own way of comforting him when she couldnât grab at his hair or face or jaw.Â
âDr Reid, Iâm not saying-â But he was stopped by Spencerâs voice that was slowly growing more irate.Â
âNo, listen, I have headaches. I have increased sensitivity to light, because thereâs something wrong with me physically. Not mentally. Itâs not that,â He corrected the doctor, his sweet face pulled into a grumpy pout, almost offended that the professional was willing to write his pain off as a hallucinations.Â
âThat?â The doctor asked, a frown on his face as Spencer continued.
âListen, doctor, my motherâs a paranoid schizophrenic whoâs been institutionalised. So I know very well what mental illness looks like, maybe even better than you. Itâs not that, itâs not.â Spencer said in a huff, standing from the bed and grabbing his satchel, all but pulling her from the room as she sped walked after him, her hand still tightly in his.Â
She was gobsmacked. She didnât know how she hadnât seen it before, and suddenly every single instance of her whining about her mother to him entered her head and she felt a pit growing in her stomach that only had room for guilt.Â
They sat in the car in silence, her hands at ten and two as she tried not to stare at him.Â
She couldnât stand the quiet in which he stewed, murmuring to himself every now and then about how that most certainly wasnât what was causing his state to decline.Â
âYou never told me that before,â She said after a while, and it was quiet, whether to satiate his headache or because she didnât know if she was allowed to say it he wasnât sure.Â
âIt never came up,â He said in a way that left little question. He didnât want to talk about it.Â
They sat in the quiet some more, the only sound being the way her engine hummed beneath the bonnet, the music turned low for his pounding head, and he saw the way she chewed her lip and flicked glances at him from the driver's side.
He sighed, not wanting to snap at her the way he had the doctor, âBug, would you please stop looking at me like that, like you pity me-â
âNo, itâs not that it'sâŚâ She started carefully, her gaze flicking ot him for a moment as they stopped at a red light, âEvery time I forget youâre the strongest person I know, you just seem to remind me,âÂ
And just like that his heart swelled all over again, and he felt like maybe his head wasn't an entire failure to him.
+1 The one with the eulogy.
This was hell on earth.Â
She sat around the table at the funeral home with her mother to her left, her father and Stephanie to her right.Â
She could feel the teamâs eyes on her; she hadnât spoken in days, her face shallow and off colour, sick looking. Speaking to her mother and father was difficult for her on a good day, let alone when she was all alone.Â
Because that was how she looked, as if she were half a person now, her face bitter and angry as she tried to take up the least amount of space at the table as possible, her mother inspecting her finger beds as if theyâd scorned her.Â
âSit up straight,â She chided, nudging her daughter's knee, but Bugsy made no move to adjust her posture. She just stared blankly at the ugly floral tablecloth, waiting for the other mourners to arrive, to give their sorrows, before they could move to the church.Â
Emily was right next door. Cold. In a box. Her entire body was likely in rigour mortis now, her face was probably white as snow with the blood pooling away - pallor mortis Reid had called it - her hands were probably twisted and ugly like a raven's foot-
She couldnât keep doing this to herself. And yet the thoughts wouldnât stop, not even as Stephanie, step mother from heaven as she was, began to chime in to try lighten the mood.Â
Her dad hadnât said a word to her yet, just patted her on the head the way he hadnât done since she was five.Â
âItâs a lovely day for a funeral, donât you think?â She commented, but her voice was too sweet, too soft, too normal to have the charm sheâd intended.Â
Stephanie wasnât a bad person. Not evil or horrible like Bugsy had always thought a step mother would be. But she was the person her father had left little Bugsy for, and though she knew almost all of her anger had been displaced onto the poor woman when heâd told her he had a new wife, Stephanie had never exactly bothered to remedy their relationship.Â
Emily and Bugsy had been someone elseâs kids. Had been Richard Prentissâ problems, not hers. And no amount of kindness she bothered to overcompensate with today would change the past twenty years her father had been too preoccupied to even call for her birthdays.Â
Bugsy scoffed, ignoring the warning look from her father. He knew very well how his youngest felt about his wife.Â
âMr and Mrs Prentiss,â Hotch came over, as if sensing the girlâs annoyance at the womanâs words, and she mentally could have planted a kiss right on Aaronâs lips when he made the effort to exclude Stephanie in his condolences, âIâm so sorry for your loss. Losing a child is a devastation I never would wish on anyone,âÂ
âThank you for your kind words, Mr Hotchner,â The step mother piped up again, before either of them could say anything, and Bugsy shot her a look so full of hatred, Aaron thought she might have slapped her right then and there.Â
Richard cleared his throat, moving to put an arm around Stephâs chair, one that sheâd pulled up to the table herself.Â
If there was one thing Elizabeth and Bugsy would ever agree on it was that Stephanie was intolerable.Â
Her mother looked empty as she nodded at Hotch, crossing her legs properly and pursing her lip, not saying anything. Sheâd never seen her mother cry, and she doubted that would start today. Elizabeth was much too of a proud woman to weep in front of the masses.Â
âThanks, Hotch,â Bugsy said the first words she had in days, the only time sheâd gotten out of bed was to feel Niko and Sergio or to use the bathroom. Her voice was raspy, ghost like, and it scared the crap out of him.Â
He couldnât see her getting through this alive.Â
With Haley, heâd had Jack to get him through it, keep him going, if not to put on a front for his little boy that was the spitting image of his wife. But Bug had nothing left of her sister, nothing but herself and two parents that couldnât stand to look at one another without screaming curses.Â
The otherâs had already given their condolences, had already bombarded her with enough letters, flowers, stuffed teddies to fill a house, and she knew she wasnât being fair ignoring them when they were grieving too. If not just as much as she was.Â
But she couldnât do anything, couldnât be anything except this shell of a woman once called Bugsy. Her sister gave her that name, she didnât think she deserved it anymore.Â
Spencer just wished she would cry. He had been sobbing non stop, even where his eyes were puffy and red as Garciaâs as they stood in the funeral home, the smell of incense too strong, the sounds of wails too loud. But she looked⌠he hated to say it, she looked dead.
âThat poor little lamb,â Penelope sniffled, tears already streaking down her cheeks as Derek tucked her under his arm, pulling her close into his smart black suit, âI wished she would let us in,â
âThat girl is a carbon copy of Emily, of course sheâs going to take herself off to lick her wounds,â Rossi said, his own fancy blazer stuffed with tissues in case his dark eyes welled up with tears again. Heâd already managed to save himself once this morning before leaving the house, but he didnât trust himself anymore than that.Â
Spencer missed her smile more than anything, though he himself was struggling to muster anything past a grimace.Â
âThe Spring flowers are all in bloom, isnât that lovely?â Stephanie continued, an easy grin on her face as she looked out of the window to the graveyard, as if she was entirely unaware of the grief lingering in the room, âI think she'll like it here,â
That was it.Â
That was what pushed Bugsy over the edge, even Elizabeth broke her cold facade to look at the other women in shock, her daughterâs eye twitching as her head snapped to Stephanie, a rage encompassing her entire face.
âWhat the fuck would you know what she liked or didnât like, Stephanie? She barely even fucking liked you,â Bugsy hissed, drawing the attention of a few of the mourners with her vitriol anger.Â
That wiped the smile off the womanâs face harder than any slap could have.Â
âYou watch your mouth, young lady,â Richard snapped, his face a blazen rage as Stephanie cowered behind him.Â
Bugsy scoffed, and Hotch knew by the sound of it alone, something had been lit inside her that was about to go off like a hand grenade.Â
He couldnât say he blamed her.Â
âI donât know why you even bothered showing up, Dad. Youâve not seen either one of us since Emily left college,â She spat back, her eyes wild like a cat ready to claw its way out of a fight, âSurprised you even remember my name now you have your shiny new family and your million honeymoons to keep you busy,â
Richard stood from his chair, his black three piece creasing as he pointed in her face, his hand shaking with rage, and she saw the tears well in his eyes that looked too much like her own for her comfort.Â
âYou are turning out to be just like your mother, pushing away anyone who ever cared about you.â He barked, not caring that a few mourners turned to look at him in shock, âDonât come crying back to me when you end up alone, little lady,âÂ
And with that he took Stephanieâs hand, who was the patron saint of guilt as of now, a face like a scolded child, too naive for the grown woman she really as. At least she had finally shut up, Bugsy thought darkly as her father stormed out of the home, ignoring the way faces watched hers carefully, knowing every word heâd said had been true.Â
She thinks for a minute if Emily was here sheâd poke fun at the way Stephâs face had been hilarious when her smile had dropped, or that her dad still had the worst temper out of them all, Bug included. She thinks that if Emily were here, sheâd tell her heâd said all that stuff out of anger, and that she wonât end up alone, and that sheâd always be with her.
She thinks that if Emily were here, she wouldnât feel the empty nothingness where shame and sadness would be after having that entire thing play out infront of so many onlookers.Â
But Emily wasnât there. And she couldnât even say she was shocked when her mother stood from her seat besides her too.Â
âWhere are you going?â Bugsy snarled, the Ambassador looking somewhat concerned before the expression fell and she went back to an equally lost look of her own.Â
âI refuse to be made a spectacle of today,â Elizabeth said detachedly, collecting her purse over her black midi dress, her painted nails skimming the handle gently, âI can say my own goodbyes to your sister later, when everyone has left,âÂ
Coward. Coward. Coward. Bugsy wanted to scream after her, wanted to tear her hair out, wanted to grab the two of them by the neck and make them feel the way her words trapped inside her and clawed at her throat, sitting inside like a moth bouncing against a window trying to escape.Â
But she said nothing. Did nothing, as her mother left the home, left her sitting there alone, until the officiant came over to her not even a momentâs later and told her it was time to start the funeral.Â
And then she truly felt as if she would never be whole again.Â
â
Her hands shook as she got to the podium. Sheâd always hated public speaking, which Spencer thought was odd since she seemed to grab the attention of every room she walked into like it was second nature. She didnât even bat an eyelid at chasing down a criminal or being shot at or evening chewing out a detective that wasnât pulling his weight, but speaking to a handful of decorated officers that watched her with grieving eyes was too much.Â
Adjusting the mic to a more appropriate height, they watched her eyes scan the room, her brows scrunched, her mouth dry. Trying to find Emily, Hotch realised with a crack in his chest. The way she always did when she was nervous. The way she did when she was looking for Emily to come save her.Â
âH-hi, um,â Her voice shook, her fingers fiddling with the chord for something to do, âMom- Ambassador Prentiss got called out on business so I guess Iâll be giving the eulogy,âÂ
No one spoke, not even the ones who knew it was a lie, her eyes falling to where Spencer gave her a sad smile, some sort of encouragement for her to keep going, though his eyes were red and bloodshot, and he was sure the burn in his throat was rising again.Â
She hadnât cried yet. Penelope had cried four times today alone.Â
âI- um, I wasnât really prepared for a speech, so Iâm, um, Iâm just going to read the letter I wrote to her if thatâs okay?â Her head shot to the priest who had handed the spotlight over to her, the warm spring breeze pulling at his robes as he nodded, his hand gesturing for her to continue.Â
She cleared her throat, tearing the envelope open, and the paper rattled in her fingertips with her shaking hands as she pulled out the double sided A4 that had been written on in neat blue ink.Â
Unfolding it, she let her gaze rip off the crowd of people who stared at her, waiting for whatever it was she had to say, the final words her sisterâs body would hear before she was put in the ground forever. The last goodbye. The only one that had ever mattered.Â
âDear Emily,â Bugsy read, her voice finding footing as she was able to look away from the hundreds of eyes that watched her tearfully. But it was the wrong move. Because the minute sheâd prepared herself to say the words out loud she felt her eyes well up.Â
This was it. The last chance she would ever get to tell Emily how she felt. How sorry she was. How she was so damn sorry for being such a shitty person for so many years, for never saying thank you enough, for never hugging her when she really ought to have, for never appreciating how lucky she was to have a sister like her.Â
Her throat clogged, and she sucked in a deep breath, releasing a trembling sigh. Her bottom lip quivered.Â
âSorry-â She apologised to the watchers, rubbing her mouth nervously, hoping no one could see just how deeply she had broken, just how harsh the wound had gaped open, âDear Emily,â She started again;
âEveryone thinks they know what a sister is; it's the woman you share fifty percent of your DNA with who youâre put on this earth to annoy the shit out of,â A small wet laugh reverberated around the crowd, and she flashed a small smile at her own words. âBut the truth is you can actually share up to sixty-one percent of your genes with one of your siblings. Which is crazy to me, because I know no matter how hard I try, I will never be even one percent of the woman you are,âÂ
She swallowed heavily, and she heard Penny burst out crying again, her head buried in Morganâs neck.Â
âIf I was as gracious as you, Iâd probably say youâre in a better place now, and if I was as brave, we probably wouldnât even be here, because I would have been able to save you that day instead of just watching like a fly on the wall.â The first tear fell then, her face crumpling in pain. âIf I was as considerate as you, I would be able to look every one of your friends in the eyes and tell them it would all be okay in the end. And if I was even the tiniest bit as kind as you, then I would have told you all of this to your face when it actually mattered.â
She sniffed heavily, and Derek did the same, his own throat burning, picking the thread on his nice trousers as Penelopeâs tears wet his shirt through.Â
âEveryone thinks that true love is finding someone you want to marry and have children with, but I know now thatâs not the entirety of it. Love is a person you want to spend every day making happy, and make them proud to say they love you too.â Her chin wobbled some more as she read the next few sentences with something darker than remorse in her glassy eyes, âI sometimes think, if we were given a second chance, if we could try again, I would be able to tell you that I truly love you, Emily, and that youâre the only person I ever cared about loving me too,â
Her voice cracked, and she regarded the paper with misty eyes, her cheeks soaked as she quickly wiped them with the back of her white, lace gloves.Â
âI think maybe next time I wouldnât be so spoiled and bratty, and you could have been more relaxed and maybe less like my mom at times, but I think if we could do it over, we could have done it right, the way sisters are supposed to,â She sniffed, missing the way Spencerâs face dripped with tears of his own, her words tearing him inside and out with the guilt in every line. âBut I guess itâs too late for that now. I only got one chance to be your sister and I failed, no matter how many times you pulled through for me. And thatâs a debt Iâll never be able to repay.â
She braved a look at the closed casket, imagining her big sister, the only person she ever truly loved laying in there with fair, snow skin, her noir hair sitting perfectly like a princess in the fairytales she used to read to her before bed. Only this one had no happy ending. This one ended with her heart torn from her chest, bleeding for the rest of her days until her own body was buried and everyone could mourn the girl who was barely half the woman her sister was, no matter what the statistics say.
âIâm sorry, Emilyâ It was the first time sheâd said the two words that had been playing in her head on a loop for weeks, the two words that sang to her like a mantra, every morning, noon and evening. Even in her sleep she had dreams where she could do nothing but scream into a void of darkness, Iâm sorry. Iâm sorry. It should have been me, Iâm sorry. âI hope you can forgive me,â She whimpered through a sob, ignoring the way her cheeks gushed with fat tears now, as she wept freely at the podium, her hands no longer shaking.Â
âLots of love, your shitty baby sister, Bugsy.â She finished with a small whine, her expression broken as she folded the letter back up and placed it in the envelope, the cursive lettering of her big sisterâs name staring back at her. Finishing where sheâd started.Â
Tucking the letter underneath a tulip wreath atop the coffin, she stepped back down off the podium, ignoring the way the eyes followed her back to her seat, ignoring the way Derek rubbed her shoulder affectionately, or the way JJ handed her a packet of tissues, even though her own face was flooded, and showed no signs of stopping. She felt Spencer grab her hand in his delicately, entwining their fingers together, and squeezing lightly.Â
The priest continued with a hymn, though she didnât bother singing it. She just stared at her shoes, as if her entire soul had been sucked from her the minute sheâd ended the eulogy.Â
Which it had, because that had been Emilyâs last goodbye.Â
She didnât speak in the car on the way back to Spencerâs, not as Hotch pulled her in for a wide hug, rare and warm, even going so far as to stroke the back of her head with more affection than theyâd ever seen him give her.Â
âCall me if you need anything,â Heâd murmured into the side of her head as he held her close, feeling two hands hesitantly wrap around his waist, as if she wasnât entirely switched on which, going by the vacant look on her face she wasnât.Â
Spencer made her tea the moment they got in. She didnât ask for it, she just sat on the sofa and stared at the beat up, old TV he kept only for the occasional documentary, and for the shows she liked to watch too of course. But she hadnât even switched it on, just stared at the inky black glass like it would jump to life itself and tell her how to feel.Â
He took a seat next to her, on the other end of the couch, flicking the screen on for something to stop it from being so silent in his home; the silence meant they were alone with their thoughts, and for once he and his thoughts couldnât stand being together. He didnât want to interrupt her, or be the first to break the quiet. Not even when he watched her tea go cold in front of her, or as she barely acknowledged the cartoon on the TV, or when he pulled out his copy of The Brothers Karamazov that heâd been re-reading for the third time.Â
âWould you like me to read to you? Would that be better?â He asked tentatively, and she didnât even blink, as if she were some sort of zombie or corpse sitting next to him programmed for instruction on acting human.Â
She said nothing, but she did move, the act of it making him jump slightly, and it was then he realised she had been perfectly still for the past half an hour, barely even showing signs of breath. A puppet with no master.Â
She leaned over, her body dropping onto the sofa softly as if she was taking a nap, only for her head to rest on his thigh, and his hand flew to pull the claw clip out of her hair like he read her mind. Her knees nestled to her chest, in foetal position, her pretty black dress, the same one sheâd worn for Haleyâs funeral riding up past her knees.Â
He gently tucked his long fingers into her roots, stroking her hair like she were a tame cat curled in his lap, clearing his voice as he continued where heâd left off, making sure he wasnât reading too fast the way he would if it was just him.Â
His head still whirled around the eulogy sheâd read. How watching her crack beneath the weight of her own words had hurt him more than his own grief, had made him bury whatever it was he felt and just need to put her back together again.Â
Because he didnât need an eidetic memory to have ingrained what sheâd said into his head, not even as they went to bed, and she burrowed into his side in one of his sweatshirts he usually saved for his own bad days.Â
âBug,â He braved to say, watching her eyes force themselves open from where they were on the very lip of sleeping, âYouâre my very best friend, did you know that?âÂ
She hummed, her nose digging into his arm that he wound under her head, pulling her close enough he could feel her heartbeat against his own where she was in the crook of his neck.Â
âI love you,â She said, like those three words didnât rip the air from his lungs.Â
Not even as her breathing finally evened out, and he felt himself heave a sigh of relief; the bags under her eyes had been more noticeable today than ever. Not even when he dared a kiss to her forehead as she slept, the smell of her shampoo completely taking over his pillow as he allowed his own heart to hurt for just a few moments, missing his friend dearly as he looked after the woman.
Love is a person you want to spend every day making them happy, and make them proud to say they love you too.Â
He knew then.
â
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i hate it when i cant even write a poem about something because its too obvious. like in the airbnb i was at i guess it used to be a kids room cause you could see the imprint of one little glow in the dark star that had been missed and painted over in landlord white. like that's a poem already what's the point
Herg