This movie. Like wow đ„
I hate the way you talk to me, and the way you cut your hair. I hate the way you drive my car. I hate it when you stare. I hate your big dumb combat boots, and the way you read my mind. I hate you so much it makes me sick; it even makes me rhyme. I hate it, I hate the way you're always right. I hate it when you lie. I hate it when you make me laugh, even worse when you make me cry. I hate it when you're not around, and the fact that you didn't call. But mostly I hate the way I don't hate you. Not even close, not even a little bit, not even at all. JULIA STILES & HEATH LEDGER AS KAT STRATFORD AND PATRICK VERONA 10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU (1999) Dir. Gil Junger
I swear these two are the cutest father-daughter duo ever. đŻđ
joel looking at ellie when ellie doesnât know.
one of my favorite genres because we really get to see joelâs emotion when he thinks ellie doesnât notice.
bonus ones of ellie looking at joel and from the show.
God, I loved this movie sm. (It made me cry and my mum was like "I'll go that far to support your dreams") đ
'The Fabelmans' has my heartâ€ïž
The Fabelmans Steven Spielberg. 2022
Cinema 2 45 E High St, Moorpark, CA 93021, USA See in map
See in imdb
My latest Drawing âïž
Joel and Ellie - The last of us
When youâre lost in the darkness look for the light
Digital drawing on procreate
I- Oh no. I hadn't realized until now and I feel shattered. I'm crying, great.
I will never get over the heartbreaking parallel of Ellie saying, "Don't fucking touch me!" after Joel comes to pull her off David before realizing it's him, and they hold each other with so much love and tenderness in their hearts in Part 1.Â
And then, Ellie repeats it 3 years later when Joel's trying to comfort her after coming clean with the truth, and she snaps those same words at him in anger and disappointment in Part 2.
It's so world-shattering, and it breaks my fucking heart.
A/N: being really brave and posting this bc i wasnât sure about it but i hope u like it! a reminder to show love to ur favorite writers/creators :) scheduling this post while im omw to halseyâs opening show tonight BUT we hit 3k and thatâs so insane to me that people want to read my silly little stories thank you thank you thank you
summary: the you that broke up with spencer to follow your dreams in london isnât the same you that returns a year later
cw: spoiler content warning at the end of this post! angst, hurt/comfort, bau!reader, ex!spencer, implications of past trauma, descriptions of torture, medical jargon, cm typical violence, throwing up, spencer is kinda mean but he loves you i promise
wc: 6k
The familiarity strikes you like a knife as you walk through the doors of the BAU. Over a year since youâve been here and it seems nothing has changedâHotch still surveills from his office atop the landing, Emily and Derek sit opposite each other. Even your desk has remained untouched and the way you left it, still next to the desk youâd begged to be next to.
A year since you left it all behind in pursuit of furthering your career, a shiny new position across the pond at Interpol. A year since you left behind the only family you had in D.C., the BAU. A year since you left Spencer, the love of your life.
Before you left, Spencer thought everything was going great between you both. You seemed happy, content with his company and love. Falling in love with a colleague, especially in his line of work, has its risks but heâs found that having you will always outweigh any consequence or worst scenario his mind can think of.
Spencer would never tell you they actually offered the job to him first, but he turned it down so he could stay with you. He still remembers the fight you had the night before you left, how he couldnât understand why you would risk throwing away what you had. You knew he never would, with his multiple degrees and high caliber of success he didnât need that extra validation. To be a mere mortal in the presence of such excellence is humbling and harrowing.
So you left.
You love him, you really didâstill do. Nothing about where you were in the world would ever change that. Making the decision to leave was the hardest but you knew it would be better for your career. Spencer might never comprehend how easily you made that decision to take the job in London when it seemed like the hardest thing for him. How could he, when everything he encountered with his Midasâ touch of knowledge only served to expand his beautiful brain. When you left and parted ways, it was for good.
The thing is though, youâre back.
No one actually knew you were coming back until a week ago, when Hotch announced your return to the team as soon as you landed. The job offer was a permanent one and the details are unclear as to why you did come back so early. Bunch of sealed, redacted documents. All Spencer knows is that you are home and back here with him. Maybe not with him, but you were here and that counts for something.Â
The desk next to yours is empty but clearly occupied, the satchel slouched over on the ground with a cardigan haphazardly thrown over the back of the chair. You walk up to yours and see it practically untouched, up kept even. You sling your bag off the shoulder and take inventory of your desk, your name plate and tchotchkes aligned.Â
You donât hear the footsteps coming up behind you.
âHey.â
You still at the voice and turn slowly, âHi, Spencer.â
He takes a good look at you, the first one heâs gotten to have of you in over a year. You look the same more or less. Your hair is longer, youâve lost weight, you stopped wearing makeup. Thereâs something else surrounding you unspoken, he canât place his finger on it.
âItâs um, itâs good to see you.â he nods awkwardly, trying not to cringe inwardly as he attempts normality.
âLikewise.â you hum.
Hotch calls your name from the landing, âWelcome back. I need everyone in the conference room in two minutes.â
You both nod, each secretly glad your interaction was cut short.Â
Derek rounds your desk and opens his arms, âGood to see you, pretty girl. Itâs been too quiet without you.â You try not to let your heart squeeze over the term of endearment, a stem of his nickname for Spencer coined specially for you after Derek had figured you both out.
You squeeze him back, âMissed you too, Morgan.âÂ
Emily loops her arm through yours as you pull back from Derek, slowly starting the walk up to the conference room. âHow was London? Was the apartment okay?â Former Interpol agent perks, Emily had her own flat in London she so graciously lent to you.
âAll good, Em,â you say softly, slowly trudging up the steps, âIâll show you pictures later.â
Emily continues talking as you both get further out of earshot from Spencer, whose eyes follow until you disappear into the room. There really is something different about you that he canât quite figure out yet, no way of even proving that something is wrongâjust a sheer feeling of knowing you from the way youâve imprinted on him. He decides itâs probably just jet lag.
âYou alright, kid?â Derek nudges him, âMust be a lot for you,â
He forgot he was even still down here, âYeah, fine. We should go,â
â
The first time Spencer noticed he didnât think anything of it.
Itâs paperwork week after a long few weeks of traveling, to everyoneâs delight. In desperate need for caffeination you grab your mug from your desk and trudge to the break room to make yourself a coffee. You place a pod into the slot and press start, the machine whirring to life as it prepares to brew your lifesaving coffee.Â
Youâre about to bend down to the cupboard under the table when you hear footsteps.Â
Spencer slows as he walks in, not wanting to startle you, âWe moved the sugar by the way, itâs above the sink now.â
âOh, thanks.â you mumble. You reach a hand up to open the cupboard, hiding a wince as you stretch up.
He clocks the change in your face immediately, âAre you okay?â
Your eyes widen as you come back down and school your face back to normal, âYeah, why?â
âYou look like youâre in pain. Did you get hurt or something?â he prods, eyes looking questionably between your face and your waist. Your shirt raises slightly and he can see the tail end of what looks like a nasty scar. He attempts to walk closer but with hypervigilance on your side and great timing by the coffee machine you grab your coffee and side step him towards the door.
âOh did I? Mustâve stretched weird this morning.â you say from the door.
âYou stretch now?â he humorlessly chuckles.
âItâs important to stay limber,â Your hand subconsciously rests over your abdomen, unnaturally to the side as if youâre covering something. âGot to go, bye.â
He watches you duck out of the room, âUm, bye?â
Weird, he thinks. You didnât even end up taking the sugar, the evidence of it still scattered on the counter. You were so quick to leave but Spencer lets himself entertain the idea that you wanted to leave so fast not to get away from him, but because he noticed a crack in your facade.
He tries to school his own face back to normal as he returns to his desk and drops two sugar packets on yours.
â
The second time he notices, it nearly breaks his heart.
Itâs a hot day in the Houston precinct where you and Spencer tackle the geographical profile while the rest of the team works out the victimâs details and witnesses. It was a no brainer to pair you two together, youâd been doing geographical profiles since way before you ever got together. Itâs how you both fell in love, actually. Countless hours hunched over a map, late night conversations getting weirdly philosophical, something about the way you worked together just clicked. Like you completed something he didnât know he didnât have, something he didnât know he craved so subconsciously.
You made sense to him, you always do.
Things are little different post your breakup, your skill sets are still above par for crafting the geographical profile, and therefore it only served to make sense to pair you both again. He knows itâs for the better, youâll always make sense to himâeven in times like this.
Youâre more defensive than he remembers, more meticulous and stubborn than his darling girl who left him. You were always stubborn, but here you were finding faults in everything. The attack sites are too scattered for an accurate comfort zone, youâd argue. The victimology doesnât add up, youâd jab.
Since you left Spencerâs patience has diminished dramatically, even for you now as heâs about to discover. Normally heâd welcome your counterpoints with respectful criticism and counters while you both talk it out. But right now youâre arguing like you simply want to be right, like you need to be right.
âYouâre being ridiculous.â Spencer sighs, âThe unsub clearly is frequenting these places for a reason, and it matches the victimology perfectly. How can you not see it?â
âIt doesnât add up!â you jab, âHeâs kidnapping high risk victims in a high risk environment, that goes against what we think heâs even killing for.â
His voice raises, âWhat heâs killing for doesnât even matter if we canât predict where heâs going to strike next! The next body could surface tonight, we donât have time to be childish like this.â
âChildish? Suddenly my analysis is childish? Fuck you, Spencer.â
âOkay, look I didnât meanââ He reaches his hand above your figure to grab the marker atop the white board.
A normal motion for him.
But you flinch, hard.
Spencer rarely if ever yelled at you when you were together, he certainly and definitively would never lay his hands on you. Any argument you had with him was resolved civilly, safely. Even when you get disciplined at work by Hotch or Strauss they go easy on you, a stern warning and a passing Be Better.
What you did now is stitched from his nightmares. The sharp yelp you let out will ring in his ears for who knows how long. He canât figure it out, heâs not sure if he wants to. Youâre part of a team of profilers, trained to analyze micro expressions and behaviors to predict what happened. Spencer knows what it means for the way you reacted, his training clearly outlines it.
Previous trauma suffered. Reflex response. Learned.
Wherever you learned that response, it cannot be from himâitâs impossible. Itâs offensive. It makes him sick to even think it could come from him, even sicker to think about where it did come from. This wasnât you, not the you that Spencer knew and loved.Â
Yet you flinched, and to his horror youâre now shaking.
He says your name like broken glass, âIâŠI wasnât going to hurt you. Youâre shaking, IâŠâ He tries to move closer again, like he did in the break room, and instead of ducking out you back up and bump into the whiteboard, startling yourself further.
âNâNothing, Iâm fine. Itâs fine. IâŠneed to go get some air.â you stutter, the jitters clearly consuming you.
You run out of the precinct before he can say anything else, evading Emilyâs calls and JJâs brush of your arm as you leave.
Spencer lingers on the ghost of your figure as it haunts the door, and turns to the rest of the team sporting matching confusion. âYou all saw that right?â
Morgan nods slowly, âSomethingâs up with her.â
âI know,â he rasps, âIâve never seen her look so scared.â The look on your face will surely haunt him every time he blinks.
JJ speaks, âDo you think something happened in London?â
It had to, Spencer thinks. You were not like this before you left. Not skittish, not hypervigilant of your surroundingsâfearing a familiar hand.Â
The team looks to Hotch, knowing if someone knew it would be him. âHer records are sealed,â he mumbles, feigning professionalism yet unable to hide his concern for you, âInterpol informed me it was a need to know basis, and we were not cleared for that.â
âBut sheâs not okay, Hotch.â Spencer protests.
Hotch gives him a stern look, but his eyes soften in understanding, âI know, we can figure this out when we get back. For now, let her cool off and letâs focus on the case.â
Everyone exchanges uneasy looks and begrudgingly returns to their tasks.
When you return the team offers you the grace of pretending what happened didnât even exist. Youâre inwardly grateful, you know it doesnât show on the outside. Spencer keeps an eye on you but maintains his distance lest you get triggered at his hands again. He wouldnât survive watching you react to him so viscerally, in a way that couldnât be further from the love he showered you in.
Itâs in this moment Spencer realizes he misses you. When you left he obviously missed you, but in a way in which he knew you would return home eventually. You broke his heart by leaving, but he knew you would come back to the BAU, where you belonged. A you he honestly believes he took for granted, because it looks like that you didnât make it home to him. Right now, heâs missing that you. The you before London.Â
â
The third time he realizes, he acts on his ownâyou didnât even have to do anything.
He knows something happened in London. He just canât figure out what it is, but heâs going to.
Spencer should feel bad asking Penelope to hack into your medical records. He canât find himself to actually care though after seeing that stab wound on your hip, and how quick you were to brush it off like it was nothing. It was massive, and by the position of it had to have required some medical intervention. When he got shot in the knee all they needed to do was stabilize his leg from the outside with a brace, yours looked dangerously close to a lung.
âIs there a reason weâre violating her privacy like this? Sheâs my friend, I feel icky.â
âGarcia, please.â his tone holding something deeper.
She glances at him and returns back to typing, breaking down the many firewalls of the bureau medical records.
âAndâŠdone.â a flurry of documents floods her screens, Spencer leans in closer to read them but she whispers under her breath, âOh my god, my sweet girl.â
âWhat is it?â
Garcia pulls up your medical record from London, and makes the sheet bigger. The glaring title reading Emergency Room Admit. He reads the preliminary injuries of stab wounds, bruises, mild concussion.
Emergency services were called to a warehouse where you were unconscious and bleeding out. You still werenât conscious when you were admitted, and they had to resuscitate you after youâd coded in the ambulance en route. They took you to emergency surgery, your broken ribs causing major arterial damage in your abdomen. Line after line listed another injury, another note where they performed a life saving measure on you. He couldnât believe it, how had all of this happened and no one knew about it? How he didnât know about it?
âShe was attacked.â he mumbles in disbelief, poison hanging on the tip of his words.
Penelope says through watery tears, âHow could they not tell us? This says it was nearly nine months ago.â
âI donât know,â he breathes out shakily, âbut something still feels off.â
Everything he was thinking and felt becomes obsolete as he scrolls further down to see a note that takes the final blow for him.
Miscarriage due to sustained injuries. Pt suffered stab wounds to the lower left quadrant of the abdomen, fetus not viable upon admission.
No.
No, that canât be right.
The nausea builds in the back of his throat as he processes. He looks at the dates of the report again and anxiously does the math in his head. If your assault happened only three months after you left thenâNo.
All the questions begin to swirl in Spencerâs mind. Did you know you were pregnant? You didnât tell anyone it seems, and then you chose to still stay in london for another nine months even after the incident. It made no sense, an event as traumatic as what he read you went through should have sent you right back home. Right back to him.
The nausea catches up to him and takes over his body, hurling into the nearest trash can he can find. Penelope, through sniffled sobs, attempts to rub her friendâs back as soothingly as she can.Â
He wipes his mouth, âI need to talk to her. Is she still at the same address?â
âSpencer, I donât thinkââ
âI donât care what you think, Garcia. Tell me where she is.â he snaps.
Penelope widens her eyes in shock at his outburst, knowing she canât blame him for how heâs reacting. âYâYeah, same address.â
He speeds out of the room, stopping by the bathroom to rinse his mouth and splash water on his face. His hands rub harshly down the sides of his face as he stares at himself in the mirror. All the color is drained from his face, nowhere in sight of returning. He doesnât know what to feelâlet alone what to think. Heâs angry, hurt, confused. Heâs not expecting to feel scared, yet heâs not sure what heâs scared of.
In Spencerâs life his role has always been the protector, the parentified child that had to grow up too fast to care for their sick mother. He wouldnât have it any other way, some help would have been nice, but his 187 IQ served him better than others would in his position. Perfection, as his mother fondly called him. All heâs ever known is to protect, joining the FBI helps him continue to actualize this ability heâs honed. Meeting you gave him purpose to protectâa conscious choice he could make that wasnât a result of his circumstance. A choice to protect you, because he loves you.
Yet his choice to let you go, to not follow you, has led him to face this awful consequence at the cost of your safety. Right now, he feels like anything but a protector.
Spencer gets in his car and drives to your apartment complex, parking in the same vacant spot he always did when he came over each time. He climbs the stairs fast and knocks harshly on your door, hearing you shuffle a minute later and opening it. âSpencer? What are you doing here?â
âWe need to talk.â he says urgently, moving past you to get inside.
You furrow your brows at his intrusion and mumble, moving aside passively, âNo please, come in.â
You lock the door and walk towards your living room, where Spencer is pacing back and forth running his hand stressfully through his hair. He makes no effort to speak first, still in his head about everything.
âSo, are you going to tell me why you showed up here?â
âI know what happened.â
You tilt your head, âWhat do you mean?â
âIn London. I know what happened to you.â
Your face drops instantly and suddenly the world stops. All your windows are closed but a sharp and brisk chill runs up your spine, goosebumps erupting all over you as a pathetic defense against what feels like a vocal attack. Trapped. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â you say under your breath.
He stops pacing and faces you, âNo?â he steps closer, âThatâs why all your medical records are sealed shut?â
âYou looked at my medical records?â
âI had to, you werenât telling me anything.â
âMaybe because I didnât want you to know.â you yell, âThose are private documents.â
âI donât know how I didnât notice it at firstâyou were in pain reaching for the sugar in the cupboard, suddenly you donât wear anything shorter than pants and a long sleeve. The big scar on your torso.â
âThat doesnât mean anythingââ
âYou flinched. The other day.â
You falter, âWhat?â
âWe all pretended it didnât happen when you came back, but you know what happened. I raised my hand for something and you flinched.â
âThat doesnât mean anything.â you repeat less convincing this time.
He steps closer, trying to hide his hurt when you take a step back as well, âI think you know exactly what it means, and it scares you that I know now too.â
âYouâre not supposed to know.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause no oneâs supposed to know! I had them sealed for a reason.â
âSo you were just not going to tell any of us you were attacked?â
Your face contorts, âI had to do what was safe for me. You may not understand my choices but I was counseled into believing this was the best option for me.â
âCounseled,â he laughs humorlessly, stepping towards you and staring you down, âDid this counsel inform you that notifying the father of your miscarriage wasnât necessary?â
The bile rises in your throat, the room unhinges upon its axis as it begins to spin. âNâNo, thatâs notââ
âDid you tell anyone?â another step, âWere you ever going to tell me it was mine?â
âSpencer you donât understand.â
He flails his arms in anger, âNo, I fucking donât! First you leave me behind like I meant nothing to you, but then you were pregnant with my child. You didnât even care to tell me! I wanted a life with you, I loved you. And you just left.â
You stare at him in silence, unable to think of anything to say.
âHow could you not tell me?â he whispers brokenly, âI thought you trusted me.â
âI couldnât tell you, you have to know that.â
âYou couldnât or you wouldnât?â he pricks.
The tears well up in your eyes, âThatâs not fair.â
âNo? You donât think so?â He knows heâs being mean, he canât help itâhe was supposed to protect you, even if you wouldnât let him. His guilt is rearing its head in an ugly manner. âWas the baby even mine? Or is there something else youâre also not telling me?â
The hurt splays on your face clear as day, âWhy are you being like this?â you mumble.
âI just want answers,â he exasperates, carding a stressed hand through his hair, âI want to know why you felt like you couldnât tell me, or any of us, that you almost died nine months ago and kept living in London until now.â
Your mouth is entirely dried up, your eyes burning deeply. How long youâd been running and carrying this weight alone on your shoulders starts to reveal itself when your exhaustion finally catches up to you, begging you to wave the white flag and surrender.
You take a deep and shaky breath, âMy records were sealed because it was an Interpol agent that attacked me.â
Spencer is stunned into silence. Interpol agent?Â
Someone turned on the bureauâturned on you, and decided you would be the scapegoat for the brassâ wrongdoings. Someone you trusted laid their hands on you, and caused you such irreparable damage you felt compelled to carry it alone if the agencies had anything to do with it.
Heâs nearly shaking with anger, âWe need to report it.â
âI canât.â
âHe hurt you!â, he looks at you with disbelief, âWe have to make sure theyâre held responsible for it.â
âSpencer,â
âI donât know why youâre so against it, you should know how important it is to make sure people like him donât get away with thisââ
âSpencer,â you plead.
He stops, finally meeting your eyes and faltering when he sees the tears welling and red rims forming. He takes a sharp breath, âYou did report itâŠdidnât you?â
You canât help the way your face drops, âI did, yeah.â
Spencer couldnât believe it. Actually he could, he knows very well the statistics of women getting justice for assault crimes against them and how the odds are rarely stacked in their favor. Still, he feels appalled to think that the same system that he works to upholdâthe same one you work forâhas failed you so terribly.
If you reported it, then that means you knew your attacker.
âThey didnât know Mark was working both sides until he took me.â you whisper shakily.
Mark, the one whoâd been your mentor when you were offered the job. Spencer remembers conversing with him when he was still in talks for the job too,
Spencer knows it shouldâve been him instead of you. If he had just taken the job, maybe you wouldnât have gotten hurt. If he didnât love you as much as he did to not leave you, maybe youâd be hereâsafeâwhile he worried about you from over there. The light that guides him home every night would still be shining in your eyes, and he wouldnât be stranded in the middle of the dark ocean wondering what you would look like with the swell of his child.
How you looked, with the swell of his child.
At first Spencer is angryâat himself, at you, at the bureau for letting this happen. Then heâs just sad, over what couldâve been, what might be. Spencer would always joke that your stubbornness would lead to your downfall if he couldnât help it. But you shut him out entirely, left him in the dark wondering if you even still loved him. Repetitively thinking about how easy it was for you to leave him alone back in Quantico. You were always too independent for your own good. Itâs then another cold guttural realization stuns himâyou were all alone when this happened.
âOh, angel.â his voice cracks.
At this point, youâre just trying hard to keep it together. You werenât expecting to have to reopen this wound again, although you should be considered a fool for thinking you could hide it from the very person you sealed it up for. Youâre stubborn to a fault, constantly desperate for complete and total control over your life. Paining yourself is a valiant effort you invoke to protect others from the torturous reality youâve spun for yourself. It seemed like the best option.
After all, a self inflicted wound is enough control for youâif youâve already hurt yourself another cut canât cause worse damage. Most people would show mercy at some point, not willing to cross the lines of depravity to wound you so badly.Â
But you? Crossing the line leads you right back to yourself, a circle even. Boundless to the restraints of humanity and unfiltered to the consequences of shame and guilt.Â
Itâs why not telling Spencer was doable. Keeping it from him hurt you more than anyone could ever begin to comprehend.Â
If nothing in this world can be created or destroyed then the pain you feel must be arbitrary, a remanifestation of your own being returning back to where it came from. Angry to be disturbed in the first place, entitled to return home.
Everything will always go back to the way it was.Â
Even Spencer.Â
Even you.
âItâs not that I didnât want to tell you,â you sniffle, sitting down on the couch âI really wanted to.â
âSo why didnât you?â
You whisper, âI was so embarrassed.â
He dares to step closer, âWhy embarrassed?â
âIâI know they offered you the position before me,â his eyes widen as you continue, âI was so mad at you at first because you didnât tell me, and then I realized why you didnât take it and I felt so shitty about it. But I needed it, you know? It was supposed to be good for my career! I donât have fancy degrees and publications and the reputation you have. You know how hard Iâve worked to get to this point? But I kept feeling like I couldnât measure up, wouldnât measure up no matter how hard I tried.â
âMeasure up to what, baby?â
âYou!â you wail, âI wanted to prove that I could do it, on my own.â
âYou donât have to prove anything to me or anyone. You never did, you know that.â he says tearfully, finally taking a spot next to you.
You sniffle, âWell, I didnât think I could. I felt so out of my element when I got there, Spence. But then Mark started watching me, helping me out where he could. He told me he saw potential in me, and made himself my mentor while I was there.â
His blood boils at the mention of Mark but lets you continue. âIâŠI trusted him. He said he wanted to help me, that he understood what it was like coming fresh from the States.â
âBut then,â your face crumples, Spencerâs hands itch at his side to reach out for you, âI was walking to my car one night. I stayed late, because I was finishing a case study. Next thing I knew, there was a bag over my head and I couldnât breathe.â
Spencer subconsciously inches closer, his hand ghosting the expanse of your body. âThen what happened?â
âWhen I woke up I was in a warehouse, they tied my hands to the chair I was sitting in. And I waited for someone to come in. Then I saw Mark.â you whisper.
His hand moves to bravely rests on yours, knowing you need all the courage you can get right now. âWas Mark the one who hurt you?â
You nod erratically, âHe thought I knew something about the Silk Road, that trafficking network.â
Spencer remembers investigating the Silk Road affairs, they were slowly but surely getting every single person involved in it. You were a big help when you were here, able to pinpoint when and where these people might be hiding.
âI was telling him the truth, there wasnât anything I knew about active Silk Road members,â you strain, âHe didnât believe me, and it wasnât what he wanted from me anyway.â
His other hand rests on the couch ledge behind you, âWhat did he want, baby?â
You let out a soft whine, âI had a contact in London who knew the password to the Silk Road database. I met with him before my first day, and he told me.â
His fingers ghost your shoulder and you donât move to his relief, letting his touch be more intentional. âBut Mark knew you met him.â
You nod, âHe knew I knew the password. Thatâs what he wanted. IâI wouldnât give it to him, it was too dangerous to let him have it.â A sob breaks through your voice, âEverytime I said no, heâd hurt me.â
You gently pull your shirt up to reveal the scar he saw in the break room that day, but you pull it further up to reveal a few more scars and bruising that still hadnât faded.
His breath catches like a fish on a hook. âOh my god,â Each scar is meticulously placed, intentional. The scars have mostly healed, but the remnants of the marks are so expansive it physically pains him to think about what you suffered when they were inflicted. This wasnât supposed to happen to you.
The guilt settles in him like a rock when he thinks about how strong you had to be to survive this. All alone in a new country with no one you could trust anymore. Youâve always been a different breed of strength, something he marveled at about you. But youâre still in the fight or flight mode of standing strong in your surroundings. A prey who knows the predator routine all too well, knowing the second you falter is when they strike.
He tucks your head into the crevice of his neckâyou donât need to be strong anymore, heâs here now.
âIt looks worse than it feels, I swear.â you tug your shirt back down, âI really didnât know I was pregnant until I woke up in the hospital, Spencer. Iâm so sorry.â
âHey no,â he shushes, closing the distance between you to gather you in his arms, âdonât even think about that okay, Iâm not mad.â
âI shouldâve told you.â you cry.
âI know why you didnât, itâs okay. You were just trying to protect yourself.â Spencer hushes, âIâm so sorry I wasnât there.â
âI wouldnât let you,â you lament, âI shut you out.â
His hand gently runs up and down your spine, âIâm not mad at you, angel.â
âYou should be.â
Another question burns his tongue, âWhy didnât you come home?â
âI wanted to, butâŠwhen I tried to report it they acted like they already knew. And I told them what happened to me, what he did, and all they said was that theyâd look into it. I saw him at work the next day. I transferred to a different building the day after.â you recount, âI think thereâs more Interpol agents working both sides, Spencer.â
âDoes Mark still work there?â
âYeah, I think soâŠWhat are you doing?â
He grabs his phone and opens his message thread with Penelope, drafting a text about calling the team and booking flights, âIâm telling Garcia to find flights to London.â
Your eyes widen, âWhy would you do that?â
âBecause Iâm going to kill him.â
âSpencer,â you chide.
âAnd once the rest of the team finds out what happened Iâm sure theyâll be on board with it too.â
âPlease donât do anything. I donât want to cause any more trouble. It was nearly a year ago now, itâs okay. â you mutter.
He pauses typing and sets his phone back down, scooching back to you and holding your face to his, unable to break eye contact with him, âNo itâs not,â he says sternly, âwhat happened to you was not okay. Do you understand?â
âButââ
âNo. You canât do that. You wonât. This isnât some sort of inconvenience we move past. You were taken advantage of, and someone hurt you. You did not deserve that at all.â
You pause and look at him, the tears spilling over down your cheeks. Youâd spent the last year in solitude convincing yourself that it was all your fault. Your ambition was too strong, you were too eager, you shouldâve been tougher. You lived a truth in which you were the problem. Spencer wasnât there to remind you otherwise, but heâs ready to spend forever making up for lost time. âIâŠI didnât deserve that.â
His eyes soften and his thumbs move under your eyes, swiping gently, âNo, you didnât.â A few more quiet sobs leave you, âSo why did it happen to me?â you ask meekly.
âI donât know, angel. I really donât.â he smooths your hair back, âIâm going to make it better, though. Itâs going to be okay, I promise.â
You nod and hug him tighter, letting a few more tears fall and stain his shirt. âI should be the one to tell the team, I know theyâre probably wondering too.â
âThey were really worried about you.â
âIâm sorry for worryinââ
âShh,â he presses a kiss to your forehead, âNo more sorrys, okay?â
âOkay.â you curl into him.
âFor the record,â he hesitates before he speaks, âIâll always worry about you. Even if weâre not together, in different universes, or whatever. Iâll always take care of you, and Iâll always love you.â
âI thought you hated me.â you whisper.
âImpossible.â he kisses another part of your face he can reach.
âI love you too, thank you.â
For being here. For saving me. For still loving me.
âHeâs going to pay for this, I promise.â You open your mouth to protest and Spencer continues, âHe will get whatâs coming to him. Weâre going to make sure of it.â
You nod softly and listen to his heartbeat. âCan I ask you something?â
âAnything, baby.â
âYou know I did die in the ambulance for a few seconds.â you whisper quietly.
He swallows, âI saw that in the report. Iâm so sorry, sweet girl, that must have been so scary. I know what that feels like.â
âDid youâŠsee anything, when you died?â
From when he almost succumbed to the hands of Tobias Hankel and his father. âI saw a light, it felt warm. Enveloping. Why, did you see something?â
âYeah,â you tuck in closer to his chest, âI saw you.â
spoiler cw: pregnancy, miscarriage, reader is tortured, reader sustains injuries