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#I swear she's emotionally abusive and is purposely not teaching me life skills so-
myheartrevealedocs · 4 years
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Untouchable Ch 15- Help
Warnings: swearing, drugs
Ch 14 | Ch 16
~ ~ ~
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Another few weeks of silence. Lydia got a few calls from the team during the first week, but slowly they thinned out and disappeared.
She dropped herself onto the couch after her shift at a nearby coffee shop. It wasn’t the ideal job, but she needed some form of income to pay rent until she was out of school.
Her professor and her were discussing getting her teaching credentials and getting experience as a student teacher before she retired. The plan was to have her prepared by the upcoming spring semester, still 10 months away.
That was it. She was going to be a teacher. It was a fine career path, especially for someone of her age. And she had time to do something else if it truly didn’t suit her.
Lydia’s eyes grew heavy and she was just thinking about leaving her grad school work for another day, when someone knocked on her door.
Huffing, she picked herself up once more and checked the peephole. Gideon was hovering outside.
“Did Garcia give you my address?” Lydia asked bluntly, not even fully opening up the door,
“Yes.” He looked relieved to see her and Lydia wondered for a moment if Hotch had actually told the team she died. “May I come in?”
She rolled her eyes, but swung the door open, walking back to her couch. “Feel free to sit. I’ve got nowhere to be.”
“Thank you.”
There was a chair beside the couch, which he quickly took advantage of. And then he watched her, closely. He watched her close up her computer, pull her legs underneath her, and wait patiently for him to say something. He watched her for some sort of sign that she was happy, upset, or confused to see him there. But she just looked bored.
“You didn’t tell me that you were leaving,” he began, his voice soft.
Lydia shrugged. “You weren’t my boss. Hotch was.”
“That’s not why I care.” He leaned forward resting his forearms on his knees. “Did you think I was going to try to convince you to stay?”
“Were you?”
“Would you have stayed if I had?”
She looked away, shutting her eyes briefly. “I should hope I know what’s better for me than you do.”
“People love things that aren’t good for them,” he argued. “No one at the BAU enjoys their job. There’s… something else about it that keeps us there.”
“There’s nothing to keep me there anymore. Enough said.”
He paused again, watching her posture. It had tightened, but still she gave up nothing.
“You’re such a good actress. If I didn’t know you so well, I wouldn’t be able to tell that you were scared.”
“Scared?” she demanded, biting back a chuckle. Normally Jason frightened her with how well he did his job. But saying she was scared? No way.
“Of course.” His responses were so nonchalant, that she couldn’t bring herself to argue until she knew what had him so convinced. “Hotch told me that something happened between you and Reid. I’m sorry. I know you two were close. But I also know that the only time you back away from something is when you know you aren’t emotionally ready for it. Not because you’re afraid of anyone else, but because you are scared of yourself. You think you’re a naturally violent person, Lydia. When you and Reid had a fight, you thought you might go too far and someone would get hurt.”
“Amazing job,” she said sarcastically. “Stellar profile. Except that if I was going to quit anyway, why hold back?”
“There’s something more to it. You're not worried about those consequences. There must be other consequences. Does he have something on you?”
Did he? He knew more about her than anyone on the team. Was she actually afraid of anything she told him?
“Sure. He has my trust and I don’t have his. I thought I did, but he made it abundantly clear that I mean nothing to him. So yes... sure… I left because Reid made me feel unwelcome. And yes, I’m afraid that if I become too involved in the team again, he might threaten me or ruin my relationship with the other agents. But maybe, in the end, I quit because I realized that there might be better things out there. Better people.”
“Reid cares about you so much. You probably are the person he trusts the most on the team… That’s why I need your help.”
Help? Was he joking?
Lydia laughed though she was in no way amused by the prospect. “With him? Why? Is he being an asshole to you, too? Maybe everyone on the team should consider leaving him to his own devices. You did say once that if we compared our skills to Reid, he’d run the team on his own. Why not let him?”
“Lydia, Reid’s not an asshole. He’s a genuinely good person. But he’s acting out emotionally because he feels abandoned by the team. Tell me that you can’t understand that.”
Shit. He was right about that. That sounded just like her when her father got arrested. Lashing out, driving others away, demanding justice. Maybe she was the asshole here… But there was no way she could bring herself to admit that.
“I’m not seeking out someone who’s only going to hurt me. Maybe he does need help. But I’m not his mother. I have my own life to lead.”
He sighed, audibly. Knowing him, it was probably all part of his act. Gideon taught her well to manipulate suspects. “I just came here because I thought… I wanted you to understand him a bit better.”
“Well, thanks.” Lydia stood up from her couch, headed towards the door to not-so-subtly tell him to leave. “Now I can know that he hates my guts and feel like an asshole for not being the first person to try and make up. Goodbye, Gideon.”
When he got up, he just stared at her for a moment, not wanting to leave on such a bad note. “Please… please talk to me soon, okay?”
Not wanting to look like he’d caused her to feel as conflicted as she did, she rolled her eyes and said, “Yeah… Sure I’ll do that,” before walking him out.
~ ~ ~
“-and Beck claims she’s close to committing a murder.”
“She used to find it endearing,” Lydia replied, laughing with Sonia. “Lydie and Becky. She thought the rhyming was cute.”
“That’s because they always said it together. Now they run around the house yelling ‘Becky! Becky!’ and she screams ‘Don’t call me that!’”
Lydia could hear her sister complaining from across the country. She never liked being called Becky until the twins came along. To everyone else it was Beck or Rebecca. That was how Lydia and Sonia knew she liked them. She put up with it for them.
And then, they turned eight.
“She insists they’re doing it on purpose. She says she can just tell by their tone of voice that they’re mocking her.”
“To be honest, who’s to say they’re not?”
Sonia chuckled. “Yeah, they’re kind of a lot. Why did I agree to take in twins?”
“Because you’re a good person,” Lydia said.
It was true. The foster care system wasn’t kind to siblings. Especially older siblings, who struggled to get adopted. Sonia took in her and Rebecca knowing that they would be separated otherwise. And then, she was told about the twins, two toddlers, and her heart just couldn’t let them lose one another.
There was a soft knocking at Lydia’s door. She figured it was Gideon again, here to check up on her, so she decided to say her goodbyes.
“Make sure they know that their gifts are on the way! Sorry I fell so far behind!”
“Take care of yourself, honey. They aren’t even worried about the gifts they were so excited to get to talk to you on the phone.”
“Miss you all loads!”
As she put her phone down, there was another knock, this time, somehow, even more timid.
Standing, she peaked out the peephole and almost shrieked in surprise, throwing the door open before she could think better of it.
“Spencer…?” Lydia did a quick sweep of the hallway for anyone else. “Can I help you?”
His head was hung low, occasionally glancing up at her before dropping it again. “Yeah, I… May I come in?”
That’s what set off the alarms in her mind. His voice was a hoarse mirror of it’s usual self and the fact that he wouldn’t look at her made her think he’d been crying. Whatever caused him to show up here, it wasn’t about their relationship. This was about him.
He needed someone. And although, after everything, she wasn’t sure why he’d come here, she stepped out of the way and let him in.
“Thank you,” he mumbled.
She saw him shuffle over to the couch, then made over to her kitchen to get him some water. She didn’t know what was wrong with him. She doubted he’d be so inclined to tell her. But obviously he’d been through a lot and she knew the basics of how to handle someone in this state: water, blanket, patience, distraction.
He didn’t speak as she handed the glass to him. His mouth moved as if to thank her, but if he did, it wasn’t audible. He was frightened, it seemed.
Maybe something had happened on a case. Someone had gotten hurt. Maybe it was just nightmares from the kidnapping over a month ago. She didn’t even consider the thing he might be scared of was her. Speaking to her.
“Spencer, if you need me to talk you off some ledge, I’ll do it,” she started. “I’ll stand there and hold you up before you step away from the drop willingly. But I’m not sure what to say.”
His eyes were wet. Not full tears yet, but it terrified Lydia to know what he wanted to tell her.
“I’m- I’m not… Lydia, I’ve done-“ He fumbled desperately for the right way to say this to Lydia, but came up empty. There was no way to say this. Frustrated, he reached for his sleeve and ripped it up at high as it would go.
Lydia felt sick as she recognized what was afflicting him. There were red needle markings and bruises inside his elbow.
“Oh my god, Spencer. What is it?”
“You know that I wouldn’t have-“
“No! God no, Spencer! You don’t have to defend yourself!” she cried. “It doesn’t matter to me. I’m here to help you, not judge you. But you have to tell me what it is.”
Her fingers ghosted over the abused skin. He wanted more than anything for there to be another reason he was here. With her. He wished he’d had some other excuse to come see her. For her to hold him.
But he’s gotten himself into this whole fucking mess and there wasn’t another reason. He was here because he needed help and she was only agreeing because that’s the kind of person she was.
“Dilaudid.”
She bit down on her bottom lip. Fuck. “Okay. And Spencer? Are you here to get help or because you need to get it off your chest? I’m glad you told me, I really am, but if you aren’t planning to stop, I think you should find comfort elsewhere.”
It felt so harsh that she regretted it the instant the words left her mouth. But it was true. If Spencer wasn’t committed to getting clean, he wouldn’t be able to. And she wasn’t going to waste her energy on someone who wasn’t trying to be better.
“I need help. I thought I could figure this out by myself, but I… I don’t know anymore. I lose my will and I feel helpless and I thought you might… I thought you might understand. I know that’s horrible to assume, but with your family history I thought-”
“You aren’t assuming anything, Spencer,” she informed him. “You’re right. I know a lot about addiction and drugs and your brain chemistry right now. So, I’m going to be completely honest with you. I will help you, no questions asked. I won’t tell anyone unless absolutely necessary. And you don’t need to apologize or explain yourself. But if I feel you stop caring about getting clean or if I find out you’re using me for sympathy, that all goes away. I can’t help someone without… determination.”
He grabbed her hand suddenly. “I promise I’m determined. So determined. Please… Please fix me.”
Her heart tore to shreds. He was begging. Desperate. He truly felt alone.
But at least she was sure he’d get through this.
“You’re going to stay here for the next few days, at least,” she ordered. “The nights are going to be the most difficult right after going sober. If you can call in sick with Hotch, do that. Because the next few days are going to be hell if you don’t have any time to yourself.”
He nodded. “Yeah, I’ll, uh… I’ll tell Hotch that I can’t come in for the next few days.”
“Good.” She sighed. “Once you’re sober, we can work through how to deal with the cravings. But for now, I want you to keep track of your symptoms and let me know what’s going on so I can help. Even if it’s just a hot flash in the middle of the night, I want you to tell me immediately.”
“Lydia, I…”
She paused her rambling, waiting for him to tell her she was overwhelming him. She felt overwhelmed herself, but then again, this was not how she expected her night to go.
“...thank you.”
Her heart missed a beat, but she pulled herself back onto track, rolling her eyes. “What did you think? I was going to send you away because you were mean to me? We aren’t children, Reid. I’m willing to-”
“I was on it then, too,” he whispered. “The dilaudid. Tobias gave it to me to help me deal with the torture. That’s why I got mad at you… It wasn’t because I thought you had abandoned me. Or because I thought you didn’t care. I was just… I knew I was messed up. That I wasn’t going to get over this. And I wanted to keep it away from you. I know that it doesn’t work like that, but I wanted you to know now that none of that anger stemmed from something you had done. It was on me. All me.”
“It wasn’t… totally your fault.” Lydia started to categorize her thoughts. What had really happened that night?
She had felt guilty for leaving him and going back to California. She was terrified after hearing he’d been taken hostage by a dangerous unsub. And the stress of leaving Sonia, if only for a few days, had her stomach in knots.
And from Spencer’s perspective, he was overcome by guilt. He’d felt indebted to Tobias, who went against his father (or the version of his father that he inhabited)’s wishes in order to save his life. And in return, Spencer had to kill him. Throw into the mix an intense craving for heroin and he wasn’t exactly in the mood for calm debate.
“I’m so sorry that I was insensitive to your feelings,” Lydia apologized. “At the time I wasn’t prepared to hear what you had to say and I reacted harshly… We’re too stubborn, you and I.”
“Yeah,” he sighed, more than said. “Either way, I can’t believe what I said to you. And I don’t deserve your forgiveness or help. I just… I couldn’t tell the team and you were the only other person I trusted with this stuff.”
“You’re already forgiven, Spencer. Don’t worry. I know what these… things do to people. I’ve said worse to my sister and my father and my foster mom. Believe me, you get a pass for this one.”
She smiled at him and he hesitantly returned it.
“So… I think we should start by having you grab some stuff from your place, because I wasn’t kidding. While we get you sober, I want you to stay here.”
“Okay… Yeah, let’s do that.”
“And you’re going to call Hotch?’
“Yeah. I’ll tell him I’ve got the flu.”
The trip was quick and before she knew it, Lydia was back in her own apartment. Her and Spencer spent the rest of the evening talking about the cases he worked while she was gone and what she was up to in California. Lydia was glad they could fall back into being comfortable with one another. Friendly, even.
She still avoided her conversation with her father, not sure how to bring up his imprisonment to Spencer, especially now that Spencer had his own problems.
It was growing later, the two of them having drifted off into their own minds on the couch.
“You were too good for me, Lydia,” he said out of the blue. “I couldn’t stand not feeling worthy of you anymore.”
“‘We accept the love we think we deserve,’” she quoted.
“That was profound,” he muttered.
“It’s Stephen Chbosky,” she explained. “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.”
“I don’t know it.”
She gasped loudly. “You don’t know The Perks of Being a Wallflower? But Reid, it’s a classic!” She held up a hand quickly. “-And I don’t want to argue about the definition of ‘classic’ right now. Just trust me, it’s good… I think I brought my copy with me.”
Lydia got up, wandering into her room to look for the small novel. It sat in the middle of a stack of books on her bedside table. Smiling, she slipped it out, flipping through the pages fondly.
A thought struck her and she walked back to the door of her room to speak with him again.
“Get in the bed.”
Spencer blinked up at her, looking shocked. “Are you trying to seduce me?”
“No,” she chuckled. “I’m going to read you to sleep, doctor. Get into bed.”
He opened and closed his mouth like a fish, his cheeks tinted pink. “I was going to sleep on the couch…”
“Have you seen your legs?” she demanded. “You wouldn’t fit on the couch with your knees touching your chin. Just sleep in my bed and stop whining. You asked for my help and now you can’t escape me.”
“Clearly,” he replied, but there was amusement in his eyes.
He grabbed his things and went to get changed into something more comfortable for sleep. Then, he slowly crawled underneath the covers beside her.
At first, he sat up against the headboard with her, but Lydia shook her head. “You aren’t going to sleep like that.”
“This feels wrong, Lydia. We aren’t dating.”
“Do you think I’m going to take advantage of you,” she joked. “If it makes you uncomfortable, I’ll sleep on the couch, but you are sleeping here, and that’s final. Now then, lay down.”
He did as she asked, sliding down so that he was fully horizontal. “I won’t be able to sleep,” he complained. “When I’m listening to something I give it all of my focus. I’ve never been able to sleep when my mom read to me.”
“Alright. We’ll read a little bit. A few pages, that’s all. And then we can both try to get some sleep. Will you finally stop your whining so I can begin?”
He looked a little startled by her insistence, but finally nodded for her to continue.
“‘August 25, 1991,’” she read. “‘Dear friend, I am writing to you because she said you listen and understand and didn’t try to sleep with that person at that party even though you could have. Please don’t try and figure out who she is because then you might figure out who I am, and I really don’t want you to do that…’”
~ ~ ~
The first two days were the hardest. Spencer didn’t get any sleep the first night, shaking and sweating fitfully. It had just hit the afternoon the next day when the nausea started. He stayed in the bathroom for most of the day. Lydia wrapped a blanket around him and brought him cold glasses of water and warm tea to help relax him.
At one point, she found him crying from the stomach cramps, his arms wrapped around himself protectively.
But after another day, his withdrawal symptoms had peaked and the rest was just cravings and an underlying uncomfortable feeling. Every night, she read him a few of the letters in The Perks of Being a Wallflower.
He didn’t understand it. Not really. The main character, Charlie, contradicted himself a lot and danced around explaining hard topics, but Spencer still listened to her intently. She read it the same way she talked about her family. Her eyes glazed over slightly, her voice hesitant, fitting for the character.
After the first two days, he had to go back into work. Lydia sent him with a ton of painkillers to get him through the day without his brain exploding. And once he was done for the day, he’d end up right back at her door.
“Now that you’re sober,” Lydia had told him, “the biggest challenge will be the cravings. It’s really common for people to relapse. If you feel like relapsing, no matter the place or time, I want you to call me. And even if you do relapse, don’t be afraid to tell me. I’m here to help, remember?”
And she was. She was helping so much.
...and he was starting to reach a point where he wished she wasn’t.
He missed her. He missed her like hell. He missed walking around the park with her. He missed her ordering ice cream for them so that he didn’t have to interact with the cashiers. He missed the way she tousled his hair after kissing him. He even missed working with her.
“I didn’t just leave for you,” she had tried to assure him. “When I went back home, I realized that working for the FBI caused me to miss a lot. I didn’t mind at the time, missing a Christmas or birthday with them. But they deserve more from me.”
“I wish you would come back,” he admitted.
She just laughed. “You told me to pursue this opportunity to become a professor. It’s a good job. I’m excited for it.”
Every moment he was with her, he missed her more.
Asking her out now wasn’t fair to her. She might feel compelled to agree because of the fragile state he was in.
After coming back from his first case since getting sober, he went to stay with her again, excusing it as the stress of the job making him want company just in case. But he was simply in denial about the fact that he still loved her.
Or perhaps denial wasn’t the right word.
Lydia was reading to him that evening, the two of them almost done with the novel, when she realized how tired he was. She wanted to finish up on some grad school work before she went to sleep, so she told him to get some rest and started to go when he called her back.
“Yes?”
“I just… I love you, Lydia,” he mumbled sleepily.
Her whole body froze, her stomach tightening uncomfortably. “Spencer?”
He smiled, his eyes still shut. “Yeah?”
Maybe she’d misheard him? He was far too tired to be thinking sensibly. She shook her head and started to leave, but he peeked an eye open.
“Aren’t you going to say it back?” he asked.
Fuck… was he actually on something? He was acting drunk, but she didn’t think so. He hadn’t been acting weird when he got there so he’d probably just gotten… really, really tired.
“Say what?”
“That you love me? Don’t you… love me?”
It was actually sort of pathetic to hear from him in his distant state. But something possessed her to respond honestly.
“Spencer, I love you so much,” she told him, walking over to where he lay and kneeling beside him. “But you aren’t thinking straight and I don’t want you to say something you regret.”
He shook his head childishly. “I could never regret telling you how I feel unless you don’t love me back.”
Lydia gave him her softest smile and kissed him on the forehead. “We can talk about your feelings tomorrow, all right? Go to bed.”
He hadn’t meant to do it. His exhaustion had won over his common sense. And there was no way to take it back.
But did she mean it?
~ ~ ~
Lydia smiled, hearing Spencer leave the bedroom the next morning. She’d been anxious all night about having this conversation with him, but now that the time was there, a part of her felt relieved to be able to put it all out on the table.
“Do you ever feel like we got together too fast?” she inquired, not looking at him, instead relaxing on the couch.
She could hear him clear his throat awkwardly, probably far more afraid to speak with her than she was.
“No…?” he responded, shyly. “We’d known each other for almost a year when I asked you out. I’ve known people to get married in less time.”
“Not what I meant… Also, can we really call what you did ‘asking me out’?”
“I was the one to ask if you wanted food,” he argued.
“Yeah, and when I asked if it was a date, you got all awkward and said no. I think I asked you, more than you asked me.”
“That’s not fair!” he cried, walking around the couch to face her. “All you did was insist that it was a date!”
She laughed, seeing him all flustered. “Alright, alright. I call it a team effort. How about you?”
He rolled his eyes. “Sure, whatever.”
“Anyways, I don’t mean that we didn’t know each other long enough. I just… were we ready? You spent the whole time fretting about me being in the field and I was so worried about keeping your secret that I didn’t tell my family-- who live in California-- about you! A healthy relationship isn’t built on fear and that’s all we made ours. Fear.”
“I didn’t mean to make you scared,” he worried. “I just couldn’t stand the whole… the whole conversation. The whole ‘we’re dating: Here’s a look into our personal lives’ thing.”
“I respect that!” she said, quickly. “I didn’t need the team to know. But after we broke up, all I could think about was how much wanting to make you happy affected me. I know better now. If you weren’t happy around me being myself, it wouldn’t be a good relationship. Haven’t you learned anything?”
“Don’t yell at your girlfriend?” he tried. “Don’t tell me that worrying about you was wrong, because I’m always going to worry. It’s who I am.”
“I guess my point is, if we were together, would you let me keep working in the field? Would you be comfortable with that? Because when we got together, I thought that was part of the deal. I wouldn’t expect you to risk or stop yourself from doing your job for me and I expected the same. And yet, every time I got back from something dangerous, you would act as if I was being stupid and I should never do it again-”
“No! No, no.” He began repeating himself, his fingers tugging at his hair by the roots. “I never wanted you to- It’s just that this job is… I’m sorry. I’ll do better.”
She smiled at him, standing up to meet him at… well almost at eye level.
“That’s all I want, Spencer. I want us to be happy. Not afraid of our relationship. I want to be me and not worry about how to make you happy, because you already are. I mean, I’m so happy with you. You just being you.”
“Does this mean… you’re serious? You actually want to get back together?”
“Unless you have a compelling reason not to,” she teased.
Lydia was so distracted by the look of excitement in his eyes, she barely even noticed him getting closer until his lips were pressed against hers.
“Woah,” she mumbled, barely pulling away an inch. “Right to it, then?”
“I’ve wanted to do that for two months,” he admitted. “I really missed you.”
She gave him another peck. “I missed you, too, dumbass.”
~ ~ ~
Tags: @kris-stuff​, @wooya1224, @spencerelds​, @anotherr-fine-mess​
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