#how long has this been sitting in my drafts?
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Life With Spencer
Part Three
Summary: Living life with Spencer, ups, downs, firsts, and hopefully -- lasts.
Pairing: Spencer Reid x fem!reader
Category: fluff, angst, hurt/comfort, smut (18+)
Warnings/Includes: smut (18+), sooo in love, awkward/real-life scenarios, no real timeline - they been dating for like almost three years…, talks of pregnancy, reader feeling insecure -- having a hard time getting ready, boyband spencer yummm, Ethan (warning in itself), spencer's migraines, spencer snaps at reader, fights, being distant
Word count: 21.2k
a/n: hi…. this has been sitting in my drafts since april ahahahah 🫣 please don’t throw tomatoes at me i got a new job and it’s been A LOT!! this is not proof read by the way,, LOVE YOU ALL
main masterlist part one part two
Fuck.
That was the only word in your brain. Not even a full thought. Just that single syllable, echoing over and over like a heartbeat pounding in your ears.
You sat frozen on the edge of the bathtub, phone in hand, the screen still glowing from the period tracker app that now mocked you with its sterile little message: 4 days late.
You hadn’t missed a dose. Not one. You’d been on birth control for years, religiously punctual. You and Spencer were so careful—condoms every time, plan B once, after a minor scare. But it never came to anything. You were careful. Smart. Responsible.
So why the hell were you late?
You weren’t someone with irregular cycles. Since you’d started birth control, your period came like clockwork, so predictable you could plan around it down to the hour. And now?
Nothing. Not a cramp. Not a twinge. Just… a silence in your body that was starting to feel deafening.
You buried your face in your hands, dragging your palms down your cheeks before letting your head fall back against the tiled wall behind you.
Spencer.
You hadn’t told him yet. You hadn’t even tested yet.
Because if you told Spencer, it would be real. And you weren’t ready for real. You were barely holding it together through hypothetical.
You closed your eyes, trying to breathe through the rising panic.
You imagined his face—how he’d blink a few too many times, how he’d tell you about the statistical failure rate of your specific birth control pill, how his hands might tremble just a little. But you also imagined how quickly he’d steady himself. How he’d run every possible calculation in his head and then choose you anyway.
Still. None of that changed the fact that you were four days late. That your stomach had felt vaguely wrong for days, that your breasts were sore in a way they hadn’t been before, that your body felt foreign and too aware of itself.
Fuck.
You stared down at your phone again.
4 days late.
The screen blurred as you blinked too hard.
You were going to have to buy a test. You were going to have to take a test. And maybe you were going to have to tell Spencer something that would change both of your lives.
You exhaled, long and shaky.
Okay.
But you didn’t want to do this alone.
Even though you could have. Could have walked to the pharmacy with your hood up and sunglasses on like you were buying contraband. Could have stared at the tiny pink boxes until your eyes blurred. Could have peed on a stick and stared at the result in solitary silence.
But that wasn’t you. And more importantly—this wasn’t something you wanted to keep from him.
You hated secrets. And Spencer? Spencer was the last person in the world you’d ever want to shut out.
So you called him.
“Hello, darling, what’s up?” he answered in that sweet, soft, distracted tone he always had when he was flipping through files or bent over a book.
“Hi, Spence,” you replied, trying to sound casual. You tried to keep your voice steady like your heart wasn’t in your throat, but he clocked it. Instantly.
“What’s wrong?” he asked, suddenly more alert. “Are you okay? Is it your period? Do you need anything? I can run to the store right now—”
Your heart clenched in your chest at how quickly he switched into action, how tuned in he was to even the slightest variation in your tone. “No, well… not exactly,” you said, voice soft. “But thank you, baby.”
There was a pause. “Okay…” he said cautiously. “What is it then?”
You pressed the heel of your hand to your forehead, taking a deep breath. “Can you promise not to freak out?”
“Well, no,” he replied without hesitation. “I can’t promise that.”
“Okay, fair,” you laughed, the sound small but genuine. “Can you promise to keep an open mind until you get to my apartment and we talk?”
There was a beat of silence. Then: “Yes. Can you promise you aren’t going to break up with me?”
Your heart squeezed. You sat up straighter, gripping the phone tighter. “That sounds an awful lot like a marriage proposal,” you teased, hoping to lighten the sudden weight in his voice.
“Y/N,” Spencer said firmly, “I’m being serious.”
And in that moment, you matched him. Matched his seriousness. Matched his heart.
“I would rather climb aboard the Death Star than ever break up with you, Spencer Reid.”
A breath. Then a groan. “God,” he huffed. “That’s hot and romantic.”
You burst out laughing—loud and unrestrained.
“So, Spence…” you said, once your giggles died down.
“Yes?”
“Can you stop at the store, actually?”
There was a pause, curious. “Yeah, of course. What do you need?”
You hesitated, but only for a second. “A pregnancy test.”
Silence.
Dead silence.
“…Spencer?”
Another second. Then: “I’ll be there in thirty.”
And he hung up.
You stared at your phone, heart thudding, lips parted in something between a gasp and a smile.
Because he didn’t yell. He didn’t ask a thousand questions. He didn’t panic. He was just… coming.
Spencer Reid was on his way. With a pregnancy test.
…
The lock clicked open in that hurried, unmistakable way that told you Spencer wasn’t bothering with social graces today. You barely had time to lift your head before the door creaked open with purpose.
“Y/N?” he called, voice carrying the weight of a man on a mission.
“In here!” you called back, your voice echoing faintly through the hallway as you lay sprawled on your bed, phone held loosely in one hand, eyes glazed over from doom scrolling through every what-if scenario the internet could provide.
A beat passed. Then footsteps—quick, determined, and absolutely not the shuffle of someone easing into a sensitive conversation.
Spencer burst into the doorway like a man with a PowerPoint and a plan. In one hand, he held a crisp brown pharmacy bag. In the other, he held a plastic-wrapped box aloft like a holy artifact.
“I hope you’re hydrated,” he said without preamble, eyes wide and voice tight, “because you need to pee on a stick right now.”
You blinked at him, one brow raised slowly as you lowered your phone. “Well, hello to you, too, Doctor Reid.”
He was already unboxing the test. “Sorry,” he said, breathless. “Hi. Hello. Love you. I panicked. I bought multiple different brands.”
Your lips twitched. “Multiple?”
“Each with varying levels of sensitivity and accuracy across different testing windows,” he muttered, holding out the first one like he was presenting evidence to a jury. “I figured a data set would be more reliable… and I didn’t have time to do proper research.”
You pushed yourself off the bed, taking the box from his hand gently. “Spencer,” you said, trying not to laugh, “you know you can’t cross-compare at-home pregnancy tests like it’s a peer-reviewed study, right?”
He blinked at you. “But I can try.”
You kissed his cheek and whispered, “You're ridiculous,” before making your way toward the bathroom.
And behind you, Spencer followed. Not quietly, not subtly—he trailed you with all the tense energy of a scientist monitoring a volatile experiment.
He wasn’t breathing properly. You could hear it—those tight little inhales and uneven exhales like his brain was juggling statistics and possible outcomes in real time. You opened the bathroom door, turned to shut it, and there he was—standing in the hallway like he absolutely planned on coming in with you.
You raised an eyebrow. “Are you coming?” you asked, somewhere between disbelief and amusement.
Spencer blinked at you. “Yeah?” he replied, wide-eyed and completely earnest, like you’d asked him if he planned on inhaling oxygen today.
“Why?” you asked, stepping back just slightly, toothbrush still sitting in its cup on the counter like it was silently judging both of you.
He blinked again, totally baffled by the question. “Because… we’re doing this together?”
You stared at him.
He stared back.
You crossed your arms. “Spencer, I have to pee.”
“I know,” he said, nodding helpfully. “On the stick.”
“Right,” you deadpanned. “The pee stick. The extremely private, slightly undignified part of the pregnancy test process.”
“But I helped select the variables,” he gestured toward the box like this was a lab study and not your actual bladder. “I should be there to observe.”
“Spencer,” you said, struggling not to smile. “This isn’t a longitudinal field study, this is me trying not to pee on my hand.”
He faltered. You could see the flicker of Oh, right, humans have modesty settle in his eyes. Then his shoulders dropped slightly. “Oh. Right. Sorry. I’ll just… I’ll wait outside.”
You softened immediately, stepping forward to brush your hand down his arm. “Thank you for being here, Spence. Truly.” You kissed his cheek gently. “I just draw the line at having an audience while I hover over a stick.”
“Completely fair,” he nodded, still holding the instruction insert like he was preparing to proctor an exam. “I’ll wait right here. I’ll set a timer.”
“Wait!” you exclaimed, pausing with your hand on the bathroom door.
Spencer jolted, eyes wide, already halfway into what looked like a thousand-yard stare. “What? What happened? Are you cramping? Is your bladder okay? Did the test break—”
“I have an idea,” you cut in quickly, raising a hand to calm his spiraling.
He blinked. “Okay. Hit me.”
“I need a cup.”
Spencer stared at you. “What…?”
You nodded, expression completely serious now. “Can you pretty please go get me one of the disposable cups from the last time we had game night here?”
“The Solo cups?”
“Yes.”
“From under the sink?”
“Yes.”
“For… pee?”
“Yes, Spencer. For pee,” you confirmed with a smirk. “You want repeatable data, right? Control of aim, no user error? Let me pee in the damn cup and dip it like a normal, emotionally stable person.”
He looked utterly stunned. Like you’d just solved a riddle he didn’t know was in play. “Oh my god,” he breathed. “That makes so much sense. Why doesn’t everyone do that?”
You shrugged. “Because not everyone lives with a hyper-rational genius who buys five brands of pregnancy tests and wants to take notes on hormone absorption timing.”
Spencer, already halfway down the hallway, called back, “Six brands actually! I bought a digital one too!”
You laughed, shutting the bathroom door behind you. God, you loved him. Even when you were peeing in a Solo cup.
On the other side of the door, Spencer stood perfectly still—extra Solo cup in hand, timer app open on his phone, a box with its unnecessarily convoluted instructions tucked under his arm—and all he could think about was how ridiculously, profoundly, absurdly in love he was with you.
There were nerves, of course. A thousand little flutters in his chest. A low, persistent hum of what if, what now, what next? But underneath it all, grounding him like bedrock, was you.
You, who asked for a Solo cup like it was part of a science fair project. You, who teased him for his obsession with test variables but still made sure to pee with clean aim for accuracy. You, who could be carrying the most life-altering news either of you had ever received—and were still making him laugh.
He leaned his forehead gently against the cool wall beside the door and exhaled slowly, a quiet little smile spreading across his face.
It should have been terrifying. Statistically, biologically, logistically—it was terrifying.
But it wasn’t. Not really. Not with you.
Because somehow—even now, with urine samples and packaging and potential futures swirling all around him—this was fun. This was you.
And that made it beautiful. Maybe even a little sexy, in that weird, brainy, wildly specific way that only Spencer Reid could feel: That his brilliant, hilarious, grounded, radiant girlfriend was helping him conduct the most emotional, chaotic, messy, real-life experiment of his life.
He adjusted the timer. Straightened the box. And whispered to himself, barely audible—“I’m the luckiest man alive.”
“‘Kay, I’m done peeing in a cup,” you called with a laugh, voice echoing off the bathroom tile. “Start the timer!”
Spencer chuckled from the other side of the door, already reaching for his phone. “Three minutes, starting now.” He heard the water running, the soft clink of soap against the sink, and then the squeak of the door hinges as you opened it and peeked out—eyes bright, hands drying on a towel, entirely casual despite the gravity of the moment.
And that’s when it hit him.
Like a slow, warm wave breaking across his chest, flooding every part of him from his ribcage out.
This was it. This was the rest of his life.
You. In the bathroom. Laughing about pee. And somehow still managing to look like the most radiant, grounding thing in the universe.
And no matter what the test said—no matter what came next—Spencer realized he would be over the moon as long as it was with you. He’d known he wanted forever with you for a long time, but this moment… it carved it into his bones. Into his soul.
He was still staring at you when you tilted your head. “What?” you asked with a grin, towel draped over your shoulder as if this were all normal Tuesday.
Spencer blinked, mouth parting slightly. “Um… can I see the tests?”
You arched a brow. “You mean the tests soaking in my urine?”
He flushed instantly, ears pink, hand flapping in half-hearted defense. “Uh, yup. For science.”
You cackled, tossing the towel at him as you turned back toward the bathroom. “You are so weird, Spencer Reid.”
And he just smiled, deeply, hopelessly, because all he could think was:
God, I hope our kid gets your laugh.
“Wow,” Spencer said, leaning over the sink, peering at the plastic sticks with far too much clinical curiosity.
You stepped in behind him, arms crossed, eyebrow already lifted. “Wow, what?”
He didn’t even look up, still squinting at the control lines. “You’re really hydrated.”
You blinked. “That’s what you’re taking from this moment?”
“Well,” he said, finally glancing at you with the most serious expression imaginable, “the urine is unusually clear. That’s textbook optimal hydration. It’s… honestly kind of impressive.”
You stared at him for a beat before bursting into laughter, covering your face with both hands. “Spencer, I’m possibly pregnant, and you’re out here praising my pee clarity.”
Spencer smiled sheepishly, reaching out to gently touch your elbow. “I’m nervous,” he confessed.
You dropped your hands and leaned into him, letting your forehead rest against his chest. “Me too.”
“Still,” he murmured into your hair, “ten out of ten for urine quality.”
You groaned into his shirt, and he held you closer, both of you laughing—but holding on just a little tighter.
The timer went off with a sharp, chirping beep!—far too loud, far too real—and you screamed. Just a bit. A quick, startled squeak that echoed off the bathroom walls.
Spencer jumped, nearly smacking his elbow on the counter. “Jesus,” he muttered, clutching his chest with wide eyes. “You scared me!”
You blinked rapidly, heart hammering in your ears, and looked at him with a shaky laugh. “You scared me!”
You both froze, still staring at each other, caught in the moment where possibility was still suspended in the air—just for a few seconds longer.
Spencer reached out and steadied the first test with two fingers. “Together?” he asked, voice low, trying to keep it calm, like his pulse wasn’t racing.
You nodded, swallowing hard. “One… two… three.”
You both leaned in. You tilted the test toward the light. Spencer adjusted his glasses. And—
Negative.
You blinked. “Wait. That’s… one line, right?”
“Yeah,” Spencer said, eyes already scanning for the legend on the box. “One line. Definitely one. That’s negative.”
Your stomach fluttered, a weird combination of panic and relief and disbelief. “Okay—okay, next one.”
And like scientists on the verge of a breakthrough, the two of you tore through every single test—all six of them—analyzing, comparing, lining them up like a chemistry exhibit.
Negative.
Negative.
Negative.
Every last one.
You leaned against the bathroom counter, your knees nearly giving out beneath the sheer wave of relief that rolled through you. Not because you didn’t love Spencer. Not because the idea of a family with him wasn’t beautiful in its own right.
But because you weren’t ready. Not financially. Not emotionally. Not physically. Not yet.
You were relieved because you could still breathe.
Spencer looked over at you, brows furrowed, searching your face like he was trying to interpret a result of his own. “Are you okay?” he asked, voice so gentle it made your throat tighten.
You nodded slowly, a hand pressed over your chest. “Yeah. I think so.”
And then—because it needed to be said—you looked up at him and smiled through the haze of adrenaline.
“I want your kids someday, Spencer,” you whispered. “Just… not today.”
He stepped forward, arms wrapping around you instantly, pulling you into his chest. “Not today,” he murmured into your hair, kissing the crown of your head. “But when the day comes… I’ll be ready.”
—
The invitation from Penelope had come a week ago—sparkly, pink, and slightly glittery, even though it had been sent via email. She was pulling out all the stops. A home-cooked, themed dinner for her “favorite humans in the galaxy,” complete with handmade place cards and “mood-boosting cocktails.” The kind of night you knew would be warm, heartfelt, and filled with laughter.
And you wanted to be excited—really. You had been looking forward to it all week, but today? Today was not your day.
You stood in front of the mirror with the fourth outfit of the evening clutched in your hands, your shoulders sagging. Everything you put on felt like a betrayal. Too tight, too loose, too bland, too loud. Your reflection stared back at you with tired eyes, frizzy hair that refused to lay flat no matter how many products you threw at it, and makeup that only seemed to exaggerate every flaw you’d tried to cover.
"Jesus Christ," you muttered, tossing the outfit onto the bed like it had offended you.
You sat down at the edge of your mattress, hands in your lap, heart pounding with frustration.
You (thought you) knew how this looked: dramatic, shallow, selfish. You were already spiraling; now guilt joined the spiral like it paid rent.
Why are you making this about you? Penelope worked so hard. Everyone's going to be in good spirits, and you’re gonna show up like a storm cloud. Maybe don’t go. They’ll understand. You’ll just say you’re sick. Or busy. Or tired. Anything.
But even that idea felt hollow. Because you wanted to be there. You wanted to laugh at Derek’s jokes and listen to JJ’s stories. You wanted to help Penelope in the kitchen and let Spencer go on one of his tangents that no one else would ever interrupt, even if they didn’t fully follow along. You wanted to belong tonight.
You just didn’t feel like you deserved to belong right now.
Your cheeks were flushed, not from blush, but from frustration. You were hot, your eyes glossy with unshed tears, and suddenly everything—your face, your skin, your clothes—felt tight.
You dropped your face into your hands, willing yourself to breathe, to calm down. But your brain wasn’t in logic mode. It wasn’t in anything mode. It was stuck.
You reached for your phone, thumb hovering over Penelope’s name.
Should you cancel?
You stand frozen in the middle of the room, hands gripping the hem of your shirt so tightly that your knuckles have gone white. The soft sound of keys jingling, the gentle creak of the front door, the quiet thud of shoes being taken off—it all hits your ears like warning bells. Spencer is home.
And your heart drops.
You hear him moving around, probably setting down his messenger bag, probably thinking everything is fine. That you’re just down the hall getting ready. That the two of you are going to head to Penelope’s in a few minutes, and everything will go exactly as planned.
But nothing feels okay. You look and feel like a mess. Not in the cute, slightly disheveled way people in rom-coms do, either. No, you feel like some pathetic swamp creature who thought makeup and a curling iron could make her human again and failed spectacularly.
Your stomach churns as you hear him start down the hall, and you backpedal away from the door like he's a ghost, unprepared for a haunting.
"Darling?" his voice is soft, a little curious. "You almost ready?"
You practically shriek the word. “No!”
There’s a pause. Then you hear his footsteps stop right outside the bedroom door. His voice, tentative but calm, filters through. “Is everything okay?”
You want to say yes, pull it together, and say something breezy like, “I just need five more minutes!” But the words won’t come.
So, instead, you crumble.
“No,” you whisper, and suddenly, your knees give way, and you find yourself sitting on the edge of the bed, covering your face with shaking hands as the dam finally breaks. “I look horrible. I feel horrible. I’ve tried on like ten different things, and none of them work. My face looks weird, my hair’s being stupid, and I don’t know why I even care so much, but I do, and now I feel guilty for making it all about me, and I just—” your voice cracks—“I just hate everything right now, and I don’t want you to see me like this, and I feel like a horrible, mean, ugly human being.”
The door opens slowly, and Spencer steps inside with that sort of quiet care he reserves for only the most delicate moments—like you might shatter if he makes too much noise.
You don’t look up.
But you feel the bed dip beside you.
And then his hand is sliding across your back in a soft, slow arc. “Sweetheart,” he murmurs, “we don’t have to go.”
You jerk back slightly, lifting your tear-streaked face with wide, betrayed eyes. “Oh, so you think I look ugly too?”
Spencer blinks, stunned by your sharpness. “What? No, no, that’s not—”
You stand abruptly, pacing like a cornered animal. “Because that’s what it sounds like. Like you looked at me and thought, ‘Yeah, let’s not bring that thing out in public.’”
“Hey!” Spencer rises, hands out like he’s trying to calm a skittish deer. “That is not what I said. That’s not what I meant. You looked upset like you were hurting, and I just—I wanted to give you an out. Not because you look bad. Because I love you, and I don’t want you to feel like you have to perform for anyone tonight.”
You hesitate, arms crossed tightly over your chest, throat tightening.
His voice softens again, his eyes scanning your face with the kind of reverence that makes it almost unbearable to be seen. “I think you’re beautiful. Right now. Right this second. Even if your hair’s not doing what you want it to. Even if your makeup’s a little smudged. Even if you’re crying and blotchy and pacing like you want to throw me out the window.”
That last line earns him a reluctant sniff-laugh.
He takes a cautious step closer.
“I love you when you’re confident and glowing. I love you when you’re a mess in sweatpants. And I love you now when you’re somewhere in between and spiraling a little.” He reaches for your hand, tentative. “Can I love you like this, too?”
You stare at him, eyes glassy, breath trembling in your chest. And somehow—despite everything—you nod.
He tugs you gently into his chest, holding you tightly, anchoring you.
And then, into your hair, he murmurs, “But if you did want to skip the dinner and stay in and eat cereal on the floor with me, I wouldn’t complain.”
You let out a watery giggle, and just like that… something starts to ease.
You might still feel a little like a swamp monster. But at least now, you're his swamp monster.
Your voice is muffled slightly by the fabric of his shirt as you murmur, “I do kind of want to throw you out the window, though.”
Spencer’s chest shakes with laughter, a surprised snort escaping him as he pulls back just enough to look down at you. His mouth curls into that crooked little smile he gets when he’s trying not to laugh too hard, and his eyes crinkle at the corners like they always do when he’s genuinely amused.
“Noted,” he says, pretending to be solemn. “Hostile while emotionally compromised. I’ll avoid standing too close to windows.”
You laugh softly, rolling your eyes as you rest your forehead against his collarbone. “You’re so dramatic.”
“Says the person who just accused me of calling them ugly and compared themselves to a swamp creature.”
You lift your head enough to give him a look. “Still considering the window.”
Spencer leans in, lowering his voice like he’s sharing a secret. “Joke's on you. I’m pretty sure Penelope has enchanted our windows, so I bounce back like a cartoon.”
You snicker, and this time it feels real. The kind of laugh that shakes something loose in your chest and makes the storm clouds shift a little.
He cups your face gently with both hands, thumbs brushing softly along your jaw as he studies you like you’re the answer to a question he’s been searching for his whole life. “You’re still the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen. Even when you want to commit light domestic homicide.”
Your lips twitch upward as you reach up and tug gently on the collar of his shirt. “You’re lucky you’re cute.”
“I’m very aware.”
You sigh, leaning your forehead against his again. “Okay. I’ll get dressed.”
He arches a brow. “You mean re-re-re-dressed?”
“Don’t push it, Reid.”
He grins, kissing the top of your head. “Never.”
—
Spencer stepped quietly into your apartment, shutting the door behind him with a soft click. His bag on the hook in its usual spot, shoes carefully untied and toed off with a bit of weariness in his bones. The case had been long, grueling—the kind that dragged down not just his body but his mind until all he wanted was to slip into the clean silence of your home and wash the world off his skin.
He moved on autopilot, following his usual ritual: drop his satchel, set his badge and keys on the hallway table, roll his shoulders once, twice.
Your office door was closed as he passed it, light leaking from the crack near the floor. No sound filtered out—just the soft glow.
He assumed you were on a Zoom call or deep in focus, so he didn’t knock or call out. Instead, he fished his phone from his pocket and typed out a quick message, thumbs moving with quiet familiarity:
Hello, my love. I just got in—I’m going to shower (& sanitize). I love you.
You didn’t see the message until your meeting ended—your eyes blurry from too many shared screens, your voice tired from too many fake laughs, and professionally polite “mm-hmm”s. But as soon as your gaze landed on your phone and you saw Spencer’s name, everything else faded.
Your heart clenched in the best way. He’s here.
It had been over two weeks since you’d last seen him. Two long weeks of texts, phone calls, voice notes falling asleep to each other, and aching to close the distance. You’d missed him in the quiet ways—like reaching for a second mug without thinking or setting aside the blanket he always stole halfway through the night. The ache had been constant.
And now he was home.
You smiled, heart racing, and quickly wrapped up your last bits of work. You typed your final message, logged off, and pushed away from your desk with a quiet squeal of excitement you didn’t even try to suppress.
You heard the soft click of the shower shutting off from down the hall. You paused for a moment—smiling at the sound—then tiptoed out of your office, not wanting to interrupt.
You knew his process by now. The shower. The sanitizing. The quiet minutes he needed to decompress, to re-enter the world at his own pace after being knee-deep in trauma and adrenaline for days.
So, instead of rushing toward him like you wanted, you turned toward the kitchen, smiling, and began preparing tea—chamomile for him and jasmine for you.
You picked his favorite mug—the one with the periodic table printed in a perfect grid, the lettering slightly faded from years of use—and set it gently on the counter. The kettle purred softly to life beside it, and you stood still for a moment, wrapping your arms around yourself and soaking in the quiet comfort of home.
He was back. Finally, back.
Clean, safe, warm, and about to walk out of the bathroom smelling like cedar and mint and everything that calmed the worst parts of your nervous system.
The second he appeared in the doorway, barefoot and toweling off the ends of his hair, you turned to greet him with a soft smile—
Only for all words to leave your mouth in an offended gasp.
“What the fuck?” you blurted, voice sharp enough to make him pause mid-step.
Spencer froze, eyes wide behind his glasses. “Uh… nice to see you too, my love,” he said, chuckling nervously.
You stared at him, pointing dramatically. “Spencer, what the fuck!”
“What?” he asked, looking down at himself like he’d maybe forgotten to put on pants.
“Your hair!” you cried as if he’d committed a federal offense.
He blinked, then self-consciously reached up to ruffle the back of it. “Oh… yeah,” he said, almost sheepishly. “I got it cut. Since the case was in Vegas, I saw my old barber. Do you—do you like it?”
“Like it?” you repeated, spitting the word like it had personally insulted you. The audacity of this man.
“Yeah…” he hedged, now officially worried. “I know you loved it long, but it was starting to drive me crazy, getting in my eyes all the time, and—”
“Spencer Walter Reid…” you said in a slow, dangerous tone, beginning to cross the kitchen with purpose.
“Yes, darling?” he asked warily, hands raising slightly as you stalked toward him.
You kept walking until he was pressed against the counter, boxed in by your body, your arms on either side of him. His breath hitched as he looked down at you, searching your face.
“I love it so much,” you said slowly, deliberately, eyes raking up and down his freshly shorn frame, “I physically cannot contain myself any longer.”
And with that—before he could stammer out another syllable—you dropped to your knees in one smooth, reverent motion.
Spencer blinked. “Oh.”
His towel slipped out of his hands.
“Ohhh…”
And the kettle shrieked from the stove, but neither of you moved an inch.
Your hands were on him before he could fully register what was happening—gripping the waistband of his lounge pants, tugging them with a kind of desperation that made Spencer's breath hitch audibly.
“W-wait—wait,” he stammered, voice already shaking as he braced his hands on the edge of the counter, staring down at you with wide eyes. “You’re—you’re really doing this right now?”
“Spencer,” you said, voice low and laser-focused as you looked up at him from your knees, “I have been patient. I have been good. I have waited for you to come home. And then you come waltzing in here with this haircut like I wouldn’t lose my mind? I warned you.”
And then, with no more time to waste, you tugged his pants—and boxers—down in one quick motion, leaving them puddled at his ankles. Spencer made a strangled noise in response, already hard, twitching slightly from the abrupt exposure.
His hands gripped the counter tighter. “Jesus—”
But you didn’t give him time to protest, didn’t give him time to retreat into his brain and second-guess your every move. You leaned in, mouth warm and eager, your tongue dragging a slow, purposeful line up his length, just to watch him tremble.
“Oh my god—” he gasped, his head tipping back against the cabinets as you wrapped your lips around him, taking him in with a hungry sort of reverence. He was already panting, already muttering your name under his breath like a prayer, one of his hands reaching down to tangle shakily in your hair.
“You look—” he choked out, voice wrecked, “so pretty like this, you always—God, you always do—”
You moaned softly around him, and the vibration alone nearly made his knees buckle.
Spencer wasn’t composed anymore. He wasn’t calculating or analyzing or trying to keep up appearances. He was flushed and unraveling, his eyes glazed as he looked down at you with a kind of stunned disbelief, his words barely coherent between gasps.
“I—I was just trying to be practical,” he managed. “I didn’t know—you’d like it that much—”
You pulled off him for half a second, stroking him with one hand as you looked up, breathless and grinning.
“I love it, Spence. And I’m gonna show you exactly how much.”
And then you went back down—no teasing this time, just heat and need and your mouth wrapped around him like he was the only thing that could possibly satisfy you.
As Spencer leaned back against the counter, moaning your name, his head tipped up, exposing his throat and making his curls—what was left of them—fall back just slightly. His mouth was slack, his hands gripping the edge of the counter, and his body trembling from the sensation of your mouth on him.
And that was fine. It was good, actually. Great, even. Except—
You couldn’t see his hair.
The whole reason you’d dropped to your knees like a woman possessed, the reason your tea was going cold and the kettle forgotten—the haircut. And now his head was thrown back, and you couldn’t even enjoy the view.
Frustration bubbled up in your chest—hot, petty, and somehow very on brand.
So, mid-suck, with him seconds from completely unraveling, you pulled back just slightly and gently flicked the inside of his thigh.
“Ah!” Spencer jerked, startled, eyes snapping down with a gasp. “W-what—”
You didn’t let him finish. You just grinned wide and smug, then winked at him from your place on the floor like the devil in a t-shirt and sweatpants. He blinked in dazed confusion—still panting, still overwhelmed—until he saw you deliberately lick a slow, noisy stripe up his length, from base to tip, saliva catching the light and your tongue curling with purpose.
“Oh my God,” he whispered, voice cracked and desperate.
And then, before he could say anything else, you wrapped your lips around him again—slow and deep—hollowing your cheeks and drawing a choked moan from his throat.
He watched you now, just as you wanted. Wide-eyed, slack-jawed, completely at your mercy.
You could feel the tension in his thighs, his stomach, the way his hips subtly shifted toward you like he couldn’t help it. Like he needed you more than oxygen.
“You’re so—so good at this,” he babbled helplessly, eyes locked to yours now like they couldn’t stray for even a second.
And you? You were thrilled. Because you had his full attention. You were in control. And Spencer Reid, freshly shorn and entirely wrecked, was yours to ruin.
Still, you couldn’t help yourself.
With him trembling above you, chest heaving, hair slightly damp at the edges from the shower—and now sweat—you reached one hand up and rubbed slow, teasing circles across the lower part of his stomach. Right where you knew it made him twitch. Right where the tension was coiling.
Spencer let out a punched-out whimper—high, breathless, and almost painful. The sound sent a jolt of satisfaction through your body. Poor thing, you thought, smiling around the tip of him still resting against your lips.
“Close, baby?” you asked, lips brushing against him with every syllable, the slight motion making him flinch with overstimulation.
“Hngh,” was all he could manage—his whole body shuddering, jaw slack, his hand barely managing to stay braced against the counter.
You pulled off entirely then, stroking him with your hand, watching him try so hard to keep his focus through the haze.
“Do you want to come once or twice?” you asked lightly like it was a casual question about takeout. Your voice was soft but wicked, your touch relentless.
“Huh?” Spencer blinked down at you, eyes glassy and unfocused, like he’d forgotten what language was.
You tilted your head and grinned. “Do you need me to repeat the question?”
Spencer shook his head, curls bouncing slightly. “N–no, just um—can you elaborate, please?” he asked, voice cracking, and God, he was still trying to be polite. Still trying to keep up, even now.
“So polite, baby,” you purred, pressing a gentle kiss to the space just above his pelvis, your lips soft against the trail of hair leading down. “You’re going to fuck me in front of the mirror.”
Spencer made a soft choking noise.
You smiled. "So, do you want to come now and later?”
You paused, watching his face.
“Or just later?”
His mouth opened, closed, then opened again. “I—”
You gave him a slow stroke right up the base just to ruin whatever he was about to say.
“Baby,” he whispered, completely undone, “I don’t think I can not come right now.”
“Twice it is,” you grinned, smug and devastating, as you took him back into your mouth like the promise you fully intended to keep.
It only took seconds.
Just a few more hollowed strokes of your cheeks, a well-timed swirl of your tongue, and then Spencer's hands—those long, elegant fingers usually reserved for page corners and coffee mugs—suddenly gripped your hair with urgency. Not rough. Just needy. His hips jerked forward, and his breath hitched like something inside him had finally snapped.
“Oh— God, I—I’m coming,” he gasped, voice hoarse and desperate, words tumbling over themselves as his control gave out entirely.
And then he did.
You moaned around him as the first pulse hit the back of your throat, your hands tightening at his hips, not to hold him back but to keep him close. You loved this part—this version of Spencer. The one who lost his polish, who couldn’t form sentences, who whimpered your name as he spilled into your mouth, utterly undone.
His knees nearly buckled, and his head dropped forward, curls swaying slightly as he looked down at you—looked at you, watching the way you swallowed him, the way your mouth didn’t falter once.
He groaned, something incoherent, his grip loosening as you pulled off him slowly, carefully, licking your lips as if you had all the time in the world.
When you stood, Spencer was still breathing hard, chest rising and falling like he’d just run five miles and solved a puzzle at the same time. His hands reached out instinctively, resting on your waist, eyes wide and still dazed.
You leaned in, nose brushing his, and whispered, “One down.”
And with that, you turned toward the bedroom, swaying your hips as you went—leaving him to catch his breath and follow you.
It took Spencer a moment to move—not just because his legs were still wobbly from the most mind-melting orgasm of his life, but because his brain was still trying to reboot. You had left him completely spent in the kitchen, looking like he'd been hit by a truck driven by a succubus.
When he finally managed to walk to the bedroom, half-dazed and barefoot, he paused in the doorway like he’d just walked into another dimension.
You were at the end of the bed, repositioning the mirror—the standing mirror—the one you always joked you only had so he could adjust his ties with mathematical precision. You were angling it with purpose, adjusting the tilt just right, your sweatpants already low on your hips and your shirt riding up as you stretched to fix the frame.
He blinked. “Jesus.”
You glanced back at him over your shoulder, eyes dark and amused. “Took you long enough,” you teased, running a hand down your side. “Starting to think you passed out in the hallway.”
Spencer’s throat worked as he swallowed, trying to form a coherent thought, but you were already stepping toward him, your smile just this side of dangerous.
“You gonna help me out of my clothes, handsome?” you asked sweetly, standing in front of him now, your hands hanging loosely at your sides—open, inviting, already daring him to touch.
Spencer looked down at you like you were a gift he hadn’t done enough to deserve. His hands reached out almost reverently, fingers brushing the hem of your shirt, eyes flickering up to yours.
"Yeah," he said, voice rough, lips parted, finally catching up. "Yeah, I am."
And then he got to work—slow at first, but certain—because if you were going to give him the privilege of watching you come apart in front of that mirror…
He was going to make damn sure you remembered it.
As soon as your clothes hit the floor, Spencer’s breath caught—and something in him shifted.
Whatever had been fogging his mind—the daze, the post-orgasmic haze, the stunned reverence—was gone. Replaced by sharp, focused intent. His eyes raked down your body with a hunger he didn’t even try to mask, and for a second, he just stood there, drinking you in.
Then he tore off his shirt like it was offending him.
And you? You moved like you had choreography in your bones.
You climbed onto the bed, slow and deliberate, the air charged with the promise of what was about to come. You planted your hands firmly at the edge of the mattress, then your knees, shifting until you were arched just right—back curved like a bow, ass up, thighs parted, and your gaze fixed on your reflection in the mirror.
You knew what you looked like. You knew what you were doing to him.
You swayed your hips once—just a little—to emphasize the view, a soft smirk playing at the corners of your mouth. “Well?” you asked, your voice low and teasing, “You just gonna stand there and stare?”
Spencer blinked like you’d pulled him from a trance. His hands flexed at his sides, and he stepped forward like a man possessed, crawling up behind you onto the mattress, his body humming with tension.
“You have no idea,” he murmured, voice low, lips brushing along your spine as he got into position behind you, “how long I’ve wanted to see this.”
His hands slid over your hips, gripping them just tight enough to ground you both, and when you met your own eyes in the mirror and saw his just behind you—dark, intent, full of heat—you knew: This wasn’t going to be soft. It was going to be glorious.
You whined softly, back arching a little more just to urge him closer. To invite him in.
“Gotta start telling me what you want, baby,” you pouted, your voice breathy but coaxing, playful and honest all at once. “I want to give you everything.”
Spencer leaned forward, his chest warm against your back as he wrapped one arm around your middle, his hand splayed across your soft stomach while the other gripped your hip like it was something sacred.
Then he nuzzled his face right behind your ear, his breath hot and steady, his lips brushing your skin as he whispered, “You are everything.”
Your breath hitched, the words hitting deeper than anything else he could’ve said.
Not “you’re giving me everything.” Not “you do everything for me.” Not “you’re mine.”
You are everything.
And the way he said it—like it was fact, like it had always been true, like it would be true in any universe, in any lifetime—made your stomach flutter and your heartache all at once.
“Spencer…” you breathed, trembling just a little, caught somewhere between need and love and complete, delicious surrender.
His grip tightened, adjusting you carefully until he had the perfect angle. You could feel the tension radiating from him—he was holding back, barely, his control hanging by a thread.
“Look in the mirror,” he said lowly, lips pressed to your neck. “I want you to see what everything looks like.”
This time, the sound that escaped you wasn’t a tease—it was a whimper, high and needy, trembling on your breath as your eyes locked with his in the mirror.
There he was—your beautiful, brilliant boyfriend, hair freshly cut, eyes blown wide with want, jaw slack with reverence. So much reverence. You watched the way his hands gripped your hips, possessive but gentle, the way he steadied you, angled you just right like you were something delicate and dangerous.
And then—God—he lined himself up with your entrance, his tip nudging against you, the anticipation thick in the space between your bodies.
“This…” you whispered, your voice hitching as your hips rocked back ever so slightly. “This was one of my best ideas.”
Spencer laughed—soft and wrecked and disbelieving—as he brushed his lips along your shoulder. “I’m not gonna argue with that.”
Because from this angle, you could see everything. The way your back arched so prettily for him. The way his stomach tensed as he held himself there, barely keeping it together. The way his face twisted with wonder when he finally—finally—began to push inside.
You gasped, your mouth falling open, your hands gripping the sheets in front of you as your eyes stayed locked with his in the mirror. He watched you feel him—watched your lips part, your lashes flutter, your shoulders twitch.
“Holy shit,” he breathed, voice shaky like the sensation was pulling the wind out of him. “You look… fuck, baby.”
And then he slid in all the way. Deep. Slow. A brand new angle for both of you.
You both gasped—yours soft and broken, his low and strangled—because it felt like a discovery like something you hadn’t even known was missing.
Your forehead dropped briefly to your arm as your body adjusted, and Spencer stayed perfectly still, just long enough to let you breathe. But his hands never stopped moving—stroking your hips, your waist, your ribs—like he was grounding himself in the feel of you.
“Look at us,” he whispered, voice tight. “Look.”
You did. And what you saw nearly undid you. Him—flush against your back, jaw slack, eyes molten. You—open and trembling and shining with love and desire.
It wasn’t just hot. It was intimate. Deep. Raw.
“Spencer—” you cried out, the word torn from your throat like it was the only one you could remember.
You weren’t just overwhelmed by the feeling of him inside you—it was everything. The mirror, the way he held you, the soft sounds he made behind you, the way his eyes never left yours. You could feel the love radiating from him, threaded through every inch of pressure, every breathy curse under his breath, every reverent touch.
And then—then—he began to move.
His hips pulled back, slow and smooth, only to roll forward again with just enough force to send a jolt straight through your core. It wasn’t frantic. It wasn’t hurried. It was intentional. Controlled. Like he was trying to memorize how you felt around him with every thrust.
And then it happened.
On his second stroke, maybe third—he found it. That spot.
That maddening, impossible-to-reach place inside you that no one else had ever quite managed to touch. Not like this. Not so directly. Not so perfectly.
Your mouth dropped open. Your body jerked forward slightly on the bed. Your eyes snapped to the mirror.
Your reflection was flushed, lips parted, spine arched, eyes blown wide with disbelief and sudden, undeniable need.
“Oh my God—” you gasped, your voice ragged and high-pitched as your hands clawed at the sheets. “Spence—Spencer, I—”
You couldn’t even finish the sentence. Your brain had short-circuited. There were no words.
Because for the first time in your life, you weren’t just getting close. You weren’t trying to chase pleasure or grind your hips to make it happen.
No.
It was happening to you.
This need—violent, urgent, absolute—rushed through you like a tidal wave. Your thighs shook. Your stomach clenched. Your breath came in short, panicked little gasps.
“I’m gonna—” you whimpered, voice breaking as you looked at him in the mirror, wide-eyed and stunned. “I’m gonna cum. Right now. Spencer, I—I can’t—”
His eyes darkened instantly. One hand flew to your stomach, holding you still, while the other grabbed your hip tighter, anchoring you as he pressed in again with that same perfect angle.
But instead of saying anything even remotely helpful to the fact that you were about to explode—that your body was drawing taut like a bowstring about to snap—Spencer, in true Spencer fashion, didn’t react with encouragement or praise or even a filthy promise to make you scream.
No. He launched into a monologue.
“You know,” he began, breath still stuttering as he thrust into you again—deeper—like he wanted to make sure you felt every syllable, “the anterior wall of the vaginal canal—what’s colloquially known as the g-spot—is composed of erectile tissue. It swells when aroused. That’s why this angle—this one—stimulates it so consistently.”
You gasped—because of the thrust. Because of him. But also—because of him.
“Spencer,” you moaned, but there was no protest in it. Only need.
“And,” he went on, so casually, as if he wasn’t currently making your whole body shake, “researchers used to debate whether the g-spot even existed, but current studies support its presence as part of the clitourethrovaginal complex—which explains why internal and external stimulation together can cause—”
“Spence!” you cried, a sob of arousal breaking through your voice as your arms gave out and your face dropped to the sheets.
He moaned at the sight, one hand sliding from your hip up to your back, pressing gently but firmly between your shoulder blades to keep you arched just right. “You’re so close, aren’t you?” he panted, lips right by your ear now. “Your body’s proving the theory.”
You whimpered something unintelligible.
“Every time I hit it—your legs twitch. Your breathing changes. Your walls get tighter.” He thrust again, deep and devastating. “You want me to tell you what’s happening? What I’m doing to you?”
“Yes—yes, please—” you sobbed, eyes locked on your own wrecked reflection in the mirror.
“You’re about to experience an involuntary contraction of the pelvic floor muscles due to the intensity of pressure on your internal nerve endings,” he whispered, sweet and filthy and so proud of himself. “That’s what your orgasm is, baby. And it’s happening now.”
And with one final, perfect thrust—
It did. You shattered.
Your scream tore through the room like lightning—raw, high, unapologetic. It was the kind of sound you couldn’t hold back even if you tried, your body going rigid as the orgasm slammed into you like a freight train. Your hands fisted in the sheets, your thighs shook uncontrollably, and your mouth stayed open in a soundless cry as waves of pleasure crashed through you again and again.
Behind you, Spencer choked on a gasp.
“Darling—OH!” he blurted, his voice ragged and cracking under the force of it. “Oh my god—shit, that’s so—tight—”
You clenched around him like a vice, the spasms of your climax pulling him deeper, keeping him there, and Spencer—bless his heart—was doing everything in his power to keep his composure. But his hips stuttered, his breath coming in desperate, short bursts, and his hands trembled where they gripped your waist.
“I—I’m really—” he tried, blinking rapidly at the mirror, jaw slack, completely wrecked. “That—oh my god—you feel—fuck, I can’t—”
You whined, your hips twitching back against him instinctively, still in the throes of your own release, oversensitive and overwhelmed and barely capable of forming a single thought.
“Please,” he groaned, almost begging now, forehead pressed to your shoulder. “You’re still—Jesus, you’re still clenching—”
You were. You knew you were. Your body was betraying you in the best way, milking him, holding him in place, and you could feel him falling apart.
And still, through the blur of heat and haze, you had the audacity to whisper, “Come for me, baby. Fill me up.”
That was it.
Spencer snapped, burying himself deep with a low, devastated groan as he came hard, his entire body shuddering against you, hands flexing on your hips like he didn’t know where to hold on. He moaned your name into your skin, soft and wrecked, riding out every last wave of it like he had nothing else left to give.
And then you both collapsed—boneless, breathless, completely undone.
You weren’t sure how long you stayed like that—collapsed in a tangle of limbs and overstimulated nerves, your chest pressed to the sheets, and Spencer draped over your back like he’d just been hit by divine intervention.
His breathing was still ragged, warm puffs of air against your shoulder as he let out a small, dazed noise that might’ve been a laugh, a whimper, or possibly both.
“Okay,” he finally managed, voice muffled in your hair. “That was… I don’t even have words.”
You smiled lazily into the pillow. “Do I need to get you a thesaurus?”
Spencer let out a huff of a laugh, collapsing fully to the side and rolling off of you with a very dramatic groan, like his soul was trying to reenter his body.
“Not even that would help,” he muttered, his hand reaching out instinctively to find yours, fingers lacing together on the sheets between you. “I think I need a new language.”
You giggled, turning your face toward him. “You sound wrecked.”
“I am wrecked,” he replied, still blinking up at the ceiling like he was trying to remember how to function.
You laughed harder, your chest shaking as you dragged your fingers lazily over the back of his hand. “You’re welcome.”
He turned his head toward you, eyes soft now, warm and sparkling even through the haze. “Come here,” he murmured, tugging you gently until you rolled into his arms, your leg draped over his and your face tucked into his shoulder.
For a few minutes, it was just that—quiet breathing, tangled sheets, your bodies cooling down slowly, your hearts still beating a little fast. He pressed a kiss to the crown of your head, then one to your forehead, then another to your temple.
“You okay?” he asked softly.
“More than okay,” you whispered, smiling against his skin.
“You were amazing,” he added, voice low and still just a little shaky. “Terrifying. Powerful. A little possessed, maybe.”
“Good possessed or bad possessed?”
“The sexy kind.”
You laughed again, breathless and content. “Your hair looks so good. I had to do something.”
Spencer groaned dramatically. “If this is how you react to my haircut, I’m gonna start getting it trimmed every three weeks.”
You pulled back just enough to look at him, fingers pushing his short, soft curls from his forehead. “Spencer?”
“Yeah?”
“I love you.”
His smile softened completely. “I love you too.”
And then, because of course he did, he added, “And I’m going to need to hydrate. Like… medically.”
You snorted, burying your face in his chest. “I’ll get the water. You stay here and recover.”
“Please,” he sighed, eyes closing, “and maybe a protein bar. And an ice pack. And—”
You kissed his chest once, grinning. “Don’t push your luck, Doctor.”
—
The first thing you felt was wet.
Too wet. Too warm. Not sweat, not a dream, not anything your sleepy brain could dismiss. You were still half-asleep when you shifted slightly in Spencer’s bed, but then—that feeling. The unmistakable gush.
Your eyes flew open. Wide. Alert.
Shit.
You moved quickly—automatically, like muscle memory. Years of this kind of panic had taught you not to waste time. You slipped out of bed with practiced stealth, careful not to jostle Spencer, who remained peacefully asleep on his side, facing away, one hand tucked under the pillow. His breathing was steady, unbothered.
Yours was not.
You rushed into the bathroom, closed the door gently behind you, and sat down on the toilet to assess the damage—and wow.
It was bad.
Blood was everywhere. Deep red smeared along the inside of your thighs, soaked through your underwear and sweatpants. You leaned forward slightly to confirm what you already knew—yep. This wasn’t a small spot. This was a full-on massacre.
Which meant—Spencer’s sheets.
With a soft, muffled groan, you let your head fall into your hands. Of course this would happen here, of all places. In his crisp, perfectly tucked bed. At his place, where everything had its place, and even the disorganized things were carefully thought out.
Panic prickled up your spine. But then, almost on cue—the cramps hit.
Sharp, low, mean. The kind that started in your lower abdomen and twisted cruelly down into your thighs, your back, your entire soul.
You clenched your jaw, willing yourself just to get it together, but it was too late. The frustration, the pain, the embarrassment, the sudden flood of hormones all collapsed onto you at once, and your eyes began to sting.
And then—quietly, shamefully—you started to cry.
Not loud. Not sobbing. Just silent, salty tears sliding down your cheeks as you sat there on the toilet, pants around your ankles, bleeding, cramping, and absolutely done with the universe.
You didn’t want to wake Spencer. You didn’t want him to see this, to see you like this. Not messy and raw and vulnerable, with blood on his sheets and tears in your eyes. You just needed a second to breathe.
To figure out what the hell to do.
But then—behind the door—you heard it.
A soft, sleepy shuffle. And then, “…Baby?”
Double shit.
“Mhm?” you hummed, trying to keep your voice light, unbothered, totally not on the verge of a hormonal breakdown. You blinked furiously, swiping under your eyes with the sleeve of your sweatshirt to catch the tears before they could betray you further.
Luckily, Spencer—sweet, brilliant Spencer—was not much of a profiler when he was sleep-soft and barely conscious. “Are you okay?” he asked, voice thick with drowsiness, muffled by the pillow.
You forced a laugh, the sound catching awkwardly in your throat. “Yeah, Spence, just… peeing.”
There was a pause, “You never pee in the middle of the night.”
You winced. Of course, he noticed.
“What? Ye,s I do,” you countered weakly. “How would you even know that?”
Another pause. A yawn. Then, with a gentle sort of logic only he could muster at 3 a.m., he said, “We’ve been together for almost three years. I’d know if you got up at night for any reason.”
You sighed, shoulders drooping. Damn him and his intimate knowledge of your bladder. “I drank a lot of water.”
“‘Kay…” he mumbled, his voice already fading as he accepted the excuse—sleep claiming him again like it always did. You could picture him now, curled on his side, arm stretched across your empty pillow, eyes closed again.
But the relief didn’t last long.
Because you knew what came next. Either he’d roll over and see the dark stain on the sheets. Or he’d start to wonder why it was taking you ten minutes to pee. Or worse—he’d hear you opening the wrapper of a pad or tampon in the stillness of his quiet apartment, and then he’d know.
There was no getting out of this unnoticed. No clever exit strategy. No plausible deniability.
You looked down at the wreckage between your legs, at the blood smeared on your thighs, and felt the tears spring up again. Not because you were ashamed—not really. Just… overwhelmed. Hormonal. Humiliated, despite yourself.
And so, with a shaky inhale and a wobble in your voice that gave you away immediately, you called out, “Spence…”
You heard the shift of blankets. The weight of him sitting up. “Yeah?” he called back, more awake now, concern threading through the syllable.
You stared at the door like it might disappear if you wished hard enough, heart pounding, cheeks burning hot with embarrassment. You felt small, fragile—not because you were bleeding, not because this had never happened before, but because it had happened here. In his bed. In his perfect little world, and suddenly you were convinced he’d see it as something wrong, something gross, something too much.
You swallowed hard. You didn’t want to cry again, but your throat was already tight. You just… needed him. Needed his eyes. His voice. The quiet steadiness only he could give.
“Can you…” you paused, your voice already cracking. You blinked away fresh tears and tried again, quieter this time. “Can you come in here, please?”
There was a pause—only a second or two—but it felt like a lifetime.
Then the sound of soft shuffling feet across hardwood.
The door creaked open slowly, the warm light from the hallway spilling in and catching Spencer’s sleepy, confused face. His curls were flattened on one side, his t-shirt slightly askew, and his eyes squinted until they landed on you—sitting on the toilet, legs drawn up, eyes wide and glossy.
Immediately, he softened. “Hey,” he said gently, stepping in and closing the door behind him like he could shield you from the rest of the world. “What’s going on?”
You sniffled once, suddenly unsure how to say it now that he was right there. “I, um…”
His eyes dropped to the clothes bunched around your ankles—bloodstained. His expression didn’t change, not in the way you feared. No grimace. No shock. Just a flicker of realization, and then something warm.
You inhaled sharply, trying to get it out. “I think I got blood on your sheets. I—I didn’t mean to. I woke up, and it just—there was so much, and I didn’t notice right away, and I’m so sorry, Spencer, I didn’t mean to make a mess, and I know how clean you like things, and I just—”
Spencer just nodded at first, still waking up, his mind turning over the facts at a slower pace than usual. You watched him, waiting for something—anything—that looked like reassurance. Like relief. Like love. But all you got was that blank, sleepy processing expression, and your chest constricted with a wave of shame so sharp it made your stomach twist.
He wasn't disgusted. But he wasn't saying anything either. And your brain, already loud and hormonal, filled in every awful blank.
You looked away quickly, blinking back tears that had already started to spill. Your lip quivered, and before you could stop it, the sob came. Soft. Gutted. Mortifying.
You turned your face toward the tile, trying to muffle it with your sleeve, but you couldn’t hide it fast enough.
And then—
“Hey.”
His voice cut through your spiral like a lifeline. It was soft, but firm. Awake now. Clear. Anchoring.
“Look at me,” he said again, and this time, it wasn’t a request.
You turned, hesitating, your vision blurry with tears. Spencer was kneeling in front of you now, close and grounded and fully Spencer again, his eyes wide and so full of you that your chest ached.
His hands reached gently for your thighs, grounding you. “I didn’t say anything right away because I’m still waking up,” he said softly, his brows knit with guilt. “Not because I’m mad. Or weirded out. Or upset. I’m just tired. And slow.”
You tried to breathe through your sobs, but one still escaped as you wiped furiously at your cheeks.
Spencer moved closer, cupping your face with both hands now, his thumbs brushing your wet cheeks. “You’re okay,” he murmured. “This doesn’t change anything. You’re okay.”
You sniffled, looking up at him. “I bled on your sheets.”
He nodded solemnly, and then, gently—genuinely—said, “Then we’ll wash them.”
You let out a weak, watery laugh, hiding your face in your hands as more tears slipped out—this time not from shame, but from the slow, warm relief that came with being seen and not judged.
“But they’ll be stained, Spence,” you murmured, peeking at him through your fingers.
“Darling,” he said patiently like he was reminding you the sky was still blue, “I know for a fact you know how to get blood out of cloth. You’ve told me about your victory stories—like, detailed accounts. I’m still haunted by that one involving your white skirt and a hotel bathroom sink.”
You sniffed, lips tugging upward. “That was legendary.”
“Exactly. And,” he added with a tiny shrug, “they’re white sheets. You know I have a concerning amount of bleach.”
“But what about your mattress?” you asked, still curled on the toilet like your shame had taken up permanent residence.
Spencer blinked. “Do you honestly think I wouldn’t have a mattress cover?”
That did it.
You laughed—really laughed. A wet, sniffling, hiccupping sound that bubbled up unexpectedly and made your shoulders shake. And Spencer smiled like the sun had come up in the middle of his bathroom.
“There it is,” he whispered, leaning in and pressing his forehead gently to yours, his hands cupping your face like you might drift away if he didn’t anchor you.
“You are the best thing that has ever happened in this apartment,” he said softly, reverently. “Sheets be damned.”
You exhaled shakily, leaning into his touch, forehead pressed to his, and whispered, “You’re such a dork.”
“And you love me.”
“I do.”
“Even though I own three kinds of bleach?”
You grinned. “Especially because you own three kinds of bleach.”
And with that, you melted into him, his arms wrapping around you, warm and solid and home.
His face was open and soft, with nothing but calm concern in those honey-brown eyes. “It’s okay. You didn’t do anything wrong.”
You bit your lip hard, tears threatening again as you gave a soft, wet laugh. “I feel like a swamp creature.”
He smiled. “You look like my girlfriend, who’s going to stay put while I handle the cleanup.”
You blinked. “Spencer—”
“Nope,” he said, standing and pressing a kiss to the top of your head. “You take a warm shower, get a clean pair of sweats, a heating pad, and some water. I get to boss you around this time.”
“But—” you started, eyes widening as he stood up with purpose, clearly about to tackle the entire linen situation like it was a crime scene.
“No buts,” Spencer said immediately, already halfway to the door, waving a hand over his shoulder like he was shooing your protest away.
“But Spencer, really—!”
“Nuh-uh,” he cut you off, shaking his head. “Can’t hear you, my darling, beautiful girlfriend who deserves to stand in the warm water and not worry about anything right now.”
You groaned softly, watching him grab the corner of the sheet through the crack in the bathroom door. “Wear gloves, please!”
Without missing a beat, he called back, chipper as anything, “Already on it!”
You laughed because, of course, he was. Of course, Spencer Reid had a drawer specifically for latex gloves, a plan for this exact scenario, and the sheer determination to act like this was no big deal when, to you, it had felt like the end of the world.
But somehow, because of him, it didn’t anymore.
After your shower—hot water, fresh sweatpants, clean skin—you felt human again. Spencer had already changed the sheets by the time you stepped out. Now, the two of you were nestled back in bed, the world calm again.
You were curled on your side, your back pressed to Spencer’s chest, his arms warm and secure around your middle. One of his hands rested gently over your lower stomach, fingers stroking soft, slow circles as you breathed through another cramp.
It was one of those quiet, sleepy moments that made you feel impossibly close—like the tears in the bathroom belonged to someone else entirely.
Until Spencer snorted.
You groaned, eyes still closed. “What?”
“I just realized something,” he said, the grin already in his voice.
You didn’t have the strength. “Hmm?”
“This just confirms that you’re not pregnant.”
You turned your head just enough to stare at him over your shoulder with the most unimpressed expression you could manage.
And then, without a word, you leaned back further… and bit him.
“Ow!” he yelped, laughing through it, more startled than hurt. “Did you just—did you bite me?!”
“Shut up,” you muttered, burying your face in your pillow. “You ruin everything.”
“I do not! That was a scientific observation!”
“That was a death wish.”
He kissed the spot just beneath your ear with a chuckle, wrapping his arms around you tighter and whispering into your hair, “Worth it.”
You grumbled something incomprehensible, but you didn’t pull away.
Because he might ruin the moment—but he always stayed for it.
—
You hadn’t expected this errand to be sexy.
You were wearing sneakers, your hair in a claw clip, armed with a reusable water bottle and a list of budget-friendly desktop specs you’d scribbled down on a grocery list sticky pad. It was just supposed to be a quick trip to the electronics store so you could finally finish putting together your in-home office.
You were not prepared for Spencer to unleash his full brainpower in public like that.
It started innocently enough—just you and Spencer walking through the glossy aisles, checking out all the little info cards taped to the front of the monitors. You were squinting at acronyms and numbers you didn’t fully understand when Spencer stepped in behind you and said:
“This one’s solid, but the CPU’s clock speed might throttle under long-term workload if you’re running multiple programs at once—what do you usually keep open?”
You blinked at him. “Um… a few tabs. Zoom. Spotify. Sometimes Canva.”
He hummed. “Then we’ll need something with more RAM. Come here—this one has better ventilation anyway.”
And then it happened.
The tech guru from the store spotted you browsing and walked over. Before you could say a single word, Spencer launched into a ten-minute conversation that melted your brain.
They weren’t arguing, exactly—it was more of a debate but spoken in a language you had no fluency in. They talked about chipsets, thermal paste, GPU acceleration, and workstation stability. Spencer's hands moved when he talked, animated and passionate, and he kept pushing his hair out of his face like he didn’t realize how gorgeous he looked doing it. His eyes lit up like a storm every time he referenced a comparison model or corrected the tech guy with some obscure benchmark test result from a research article he’d read for fun.
And you?
You stood there, one aisle over, pretending to inspect a wireless mouse with your legs crossed and your entire body fighting not to squirm.
Because Jesus Christ.
It wasn’t just the brain. It was the way he used it.
The way his confidence never once turned arrogant. The way he explained things with precision, not to show off, but because he cared. Because he wanted you to have the right computer, the right setup, the right everything.
And God, it was hot. So, ridiculously hot.
By the time he walked back over to you, satisfied and smiling, you were barely holding it together.
“I got him to knock 10% off,” Spencer beamed, completely unaware of the fire he’d lit in your bloodstream. “You okay?”
You cleared your throat, trying not to stare at his hands, the curve of his neck where his collar dipped, or how he was breathing just slightly heavier from the excitement. “Mhm. Yep. Totally fine.”
“You sure?” he tilted his head, concerned. “You’re red.”
“Just… warm in here,” you lied, nodding quickly as you reached for your water bottle and took the biggest sip of your life.
And Spencer, bless him, just smiled and looped an arm around your waist like nothing had happened.
Meanwhile, you were already making plans to thank him properly the second you got home.
And you tried. You really did.
You tried to be patient, to make it home, to let the moment pass. You even rolled the window down a little, hoping the breeze would cool your face, your thoughts, or at least the burning in your stomach that had started the moment Spencer said “liquid cooling system” with that tone.
But then he put the car in reverse.
And when he reached back—long fingers braced on the headrest, torso twisting as he craned his neck to back out of the parking spot—his sweater pulled tight across his chest, exposing just a sliver of pale skin above his waistband, and that was it.
Your rational mind just… left the building.
You reached across the console, hand sliding deliberately—dangerously—up his thigh. Not his knee. Not the middle. High up. Just shy of making him stall entirely.
“Y/N…” Spencer’s voice dropped into a whisper, already laced with alarm and heat. “What are you doing??”
You gave him a wide-eyed, perfectly innocent look. “I don’t know what you mean.”
He turned his head to look at you fully now, jaw clenched, cheeks flushed, eyes already darkening like storm clouds.
“You can’t do that while I’m driving,” he said, sounding like he was trying to be stern but failing miserably. His voice cracked slightly, betraying how badly he was losing the upper hand.
You leaned in, fingers curling a little tighter where they rested. “Then maybe you shouldn’t reverse like a goddamn movie star.”
Spencer groaned—actually groaned—and his hand on the gearshift visibly tightened. “You are going to be the death of me.”
You just smiled, smug and a little breathless, and whispered, “Then maybe you should pull over.”
And for one heart-stopping second, Spencer looked like he was seriously considering it.
Spencer’s eyes darted to you like he couldn’t believe what you’d just said, like the words "Then maybe you should pull over" had knocked loose the last shred of his reason. He gawked at you, scandalized in the most Spencer Reid way possible—mouth parted, voice caught in his throat, one hand still clenched on the gearshift like it was the only tether holding him to the physical realm.
“W-we’re in public,” he stammered, blinking hard like maybe he’d hallucinated the look in your eyes. “In a parking lot. In a daylight-hour parking lot. W-with pedestrians. And children, probably—”
“Then drive,” you said lowly, your voice dipped in honey and need, all but panting as you slid your hand another inch higher on his thigh. “But hurry.”
Spencer practically squeaked. “Y/N—this isn’t rational. You’re—this is a stress response. You’re likely experiencing elevated hormones from the pregnancy scare—your body is reacting, not thinking—”
“I don’t want to think,” you growled, leaning closer, your breath brushing the shell of his ear. “I want to feel. And I want you.”
His knuckles whitened around the steering wheel as he blindly pulled the car out of the parking spot, jerking a little too hard in reverse before shifting into drive. “I’m not—not saying no,” he breathed quickly, blinking down the road, “I’m just saying—I’m not sure I can survive this drive.”
And then, as he finally got the car moving forward, you did it. Your hand left his thigh and slipped under his sweater.
You slid your palm slowly, deliberately, up the soft skin of his stomach. It was warm, smooth, and just a bit tense from how tightly he was holding himself together. Your fingers traced the curve just above his waistband, dragging lightly up to the center of his abdomen and rubbing in slow, tender circles.
Spencer heaved. Actually, visibly gasped. His breath punched out of him like someone had knocked the wind from his lungs.
“Oh my God,” he whispered, chest rising and falling fast. “You’re so mean.”
You smiled, wicked and wanting, your palm never stopping its soft, devastating rhythm. “I’m just in love,” you whispered, kissing his shoulder. “And so fucking turned on.”
Spencer swallowed audibly. And then—his voice wrecked, his eyes laser-focused on the road like it was the only thing keeping him from combusting—he muttered:
“We’re going to my place. It’s closer.”
And you just giggled, victorious. Because you had broken Spencer Reid. And he was loving every second of it.
…
You weren’t even pretending to behave anymore.
The desktop—the whole reason you went out in the first place—was long forgotten in the trunk of Spencer’s car, left to fend for itself like some abandoned prop in a scene that had taken a very different turn. Spencer had practically skidded into the parking spot outside his building, the car still humming as he put it in park with the kind of frantic energy that suggested he was one heavy breath away from losing it completely.
And now? Now you were following him up the stairs. Teasing him.
Relentlessly.
You stayed one step behind him, close enough to keep your hand on his back as he climbed. Occasionally you'd let your fingers slip just under the hem of his sweater, brushing along the warm, smooth skin of his lower back. The first time you did it, he stumbled. Just slightly. You giggled.
“Are you okay?” you asked sweetly, breathless with amusement.
“No,” he muttered, not even pretending otherwise, gripping the railing like it might protect him from you. “This is… so wildly unsafe for public decency standards.”
“I haven’t even touched anything inappropriate yet,” you whispered near his ear, letting your fingers skate higher this time, grazing the small dip in his spine.
Spencer made a noise halfway between a gasp and a whimper. “Yet.”
By the second flight, he was walking faster—clearly trying to outpace your hand, your mouth, your teasing. But it only made you more determined. You bumped your chest into his back at the landing, pressing close.
“You’re really gonna make me wait until we get inside?” you purred, resting your chin on his shoulder.
Spencer turned his head just enough to glance at you. His face was completely flushed, and curls started to stick to his forehead from the effort of moving quickly and not losing it right there on the stairs.
“I am this close to dragging you back down the stairs and into the passenger seat,” he said, his voice hoarse. “But there are cameras in the parking lot.”
You grinned. “And in the hallway?”
Spencer groaned. “You need to stop talking.”
But the key was already in his hand, and the front door was just ahead.
One more hallway. One more breath. And then you'd both stop pretending to be patient.
By the time you reached his front door, you couldn’t take it anymore.
Whatever self-control you had left—what little scraps remained after his parking lot heroics and that breathless spiral up the stairs—snapped.
As soon as Spencer fumbled with the key, you reached for him. Not gently. Not cautiously. Desperately.
You grabbed the fabric of his sweater, yanked him back against you, and smushed your mouth against his before he could even turn the lock. It was all heat and need, wild and unrestrained. Spencer gasped against you, his hands flailing for a moment before settling on your waist, trying to ground himself.
Your hands cupped his jaw, your fingers curling behind his neck, dragging him down into it as if you couldn’t get close enough. And he gave in completely, the key still awkwardly wedged between his fingers as he let you take the lead.
God, his mouth.
The same lips that could rattle off facts about deep-sea bioluminescence and ancient numeral systems and crash test safety ratings were now parted and panting and helpless beneath yours. The same mouth that had once shyly asked if you liked milk in your tea, that whispered book quotes into your skin, that lectured you on the proper way to hold a scalpel if you ever “theoretically needed to perform battlefield surgery”—was now moaning softly as your tongue brushed his.
You pulled back just a fraction, just enough to breathe against his lips. “Spencer…” you whispered, voice thick and shaking. “God, your mouth—do you even know what it does to me?”
He blinked, dazed, eyes unfocused and lips swollen. “I—uh—statistically I should’ve figured it out by now, but—”
You cut him off with another kiss, this one slower, deeper.
“Inside,” you breathed, biting his lower lip just enough to make him groan again.
He fumbled with the key, his hands shaking, his breath wrecked—and the second the door opened, you both stumbled inside, tangled and kissing and already forgetting where the rest of the world ended.
Your hand had just curled around him through his pants—finally, after all that teasing, all that build-up, all that delicious, unbearable tension—and Spencer let out a ragged, unfiltered moan, like the sound had been stuck in his chest for the last twenty minutes and could finally escape.
His knees buckled slightly. His hands gripped your hips like he was drowning. “Oh my God, Y/N—”
And then—
Knock knock.
Both of you froze.
Not just stillness—statue still. Like someone had pressed pause on the entire universe.
A beat.
Then again.
Knock knock.
Slightly louder this time.
Spencer looked at you, eyes wild, chest heaving, completely wrecked, and not even remotely recovered from your hand on him. His voice cracked as he whispered, “Who the hell knocks like that?”
You blinked, trying to reattach your soul to your body. “I don’t know,” you whispered back, breathless, fingers still resting where they definitely shouldn’t be when someone was at the door.
He swallowed, his Adam’s apple bobbing in his throat. “I—I can’t answer the door like this.”
“No shit,” you hissed, already stumbling backward, trying to straighten your shirt and wipe your mouth, feeling the flush crawling all the way down your chest.
Spencer scrambled—actually scrambled—across the apartment like a startled deer, grabbing the nearest throw pillow and covering his lap like it was his only hope.
“Act natural,” he whispered frantically.
“You are holding a pillow to your dick, Spencer.”
“I am trying!”
Another knock.
You took a deep breath, moved toward the door, paused just before unlocking it, and turned back to shoot him a look. “If this is Derek or Penelope, I’m actually going to murder someone.”
Spencer just mouthed, “Same.” And from where he stood, behind the couch, breathless and undone, he looked like he meant it.
“Reid, I saw your car. Are you here?” a muffled voice said from the hallway.
Spencer paled instantly, eyes wide as saucers. “Oh my God,” he panted, dragging a shaky hand through his hair. “Oh my God.”
Your stomach clenched, throat tightening. “What? Who is it?” you repeated in a harsh whisper, nerves crawling up your spine. “Spencer?”
He turned toward you slowly, like each step of his thought process was physically painful. He looked pale; lips parted, the pillow now forgotten in his grip. “Um… remember when I told you about Ethan?”
You blinked. “No? Who’s Ethan?”
Spencer let out a sharp exhale through his nose, shoulders slumping. “Right. I didn’t. Uh, well, hold on.”
You watched in stunned silence as he set the pillow down like it weighed twenty pounds, the moment having drained every ounce of blood from his body. The flustered, flushed man from just minutes ago was gone—replaced by the serious, awkward, deeply anxious version of Spencer Reid that emerged only in the wake of ghosts.
He walked stiffly to the door, unlocked it, and opened it to reveal a tall man with soft brown curls, tired eyes, and a familiar, cautious kind of warmth.
“…Ethan,” Spencer said, voice small. “Hi.”
Ethan stepped into the apartment like it was a place he used to live like he was returning to something still his. His bag was slung over one shoulder, frayed at the edges. He looked thinner than Spencer remembered—drawn in the face, shoulders sloped as though he’d been carrying something too heavy for too long.
“Got kicked out,” Ethan said quickly, almost like he was reciting a line he’d had to repeat too many times already. “Landlord said I’d broken the lease. Technically true, I guess. And then work… well. You can’t show up drunk and keep a steady gig teaching music theory to kids, apparently.”
Spencer’s face softened, even as his fingers twitched nervously at his sides. “Ethan, I—I wish you’d called.”
Ethan waved that off like it didn’t matter. “Didn’t want to burden you. Just need somewhere to land. Somewhere to get my head on straight.” His eyes scanned the apartment. “I won’t be here long. I just need someone in my corner again.”
Spencer glanced at you, and something unreadable flickered across his face—some combination of guilt and concern. He stepped slightly to the side and motioned toward you, voice gentle. “This is Y/N. My girlfriend.”
Ethan’s eyes barely flicked toward you. No handshake, no nod, not even a polite smile. He glanced—glanced—and then looked back to Spencer like the words had been noise, not introduction. “You still got that foldout futon in the guest room?”
You blinked, stunned by the complete lack of acknowledgment. Spencer hesitated, his jaw ticking slightly as he registered it too.
You looked at Spencer, brows raised. “Okay… hi to you too, I guess,” you muttered under your breath.
Spencer offered you a helpless look, one that said this is complicated, and please don’t hate me, and I didn’t expect this either, all at once.
And just like that, the warmth of your earlier moments evaporated, replaced by a chill that had nothing to do with the open door.
Ethan had already dropped his bag by the wall and started toward the hallway like he owned it, like the last five years hadn’t passed, like Spencer hadn’t built a life outside the hazy, fragile world they once shared.
Spencer stepped forward, voice stammering slightly, trying to patch over the growing awkwardness like it was a leaky pipe.
“Uh no, Ethan… this is a one-bedroom,” he said, clearing his throat. “It always has been.”
Ethan paused mid-step, turning with a furrowed brow. “What? No, you had that place with the foldout futon—”
“That was my old apartment,” Spencer interrupted, awkwardness tinged with discomfort now. “In Georgetown. This is… this is a different place. You’ve, um… you’ve never been here.”
Ethan blinked at him like the math wasn’t adding up. Like the timeline of Spencer’s life hadn’t continued after him.
You stood a few feet behind Spencer, arms crossed, lips pressed into a line, watching this strange tension unfold. The air was heavy like a thunderstorm was pressing against the windows, waiting to get in.
Ethan nodded slowly, his gaze trailing away from Spencer again—still not toward you. “Right. Guess I forgot.”
But you didn’t miss it. The way Spencer stepped subtly in front of you. The way Ethan kept talking like you weren’t even here.
Spencer stood frozen for a moment, one hand twitching nervously at his side, the other hovering near the seam of his pants like he couldn’t decide whether to fidget or brace for impact. He shifted his weight, looking like he wanted to disappear into the floor.
“Ethan,” he started, his voice gentle, careful, like he was talking someone down from a ledge, “I want to help—I do. But this… this isn’t really a good time. I—I live here. With Y/N. It’s not just my space anymore.”
“Ethan,” he started, his voice gentle, careful, like he was talking someone down from a ledge, “I want to help—I do. But this… this isn’t really a good time. I—I live here. With Y/N. It’s not just my space anymore.”
You heard the lie. Spencer never lied.
But you didn’t jump in to correct him.
Because while the technical truth was that you both had your own apartments, Spencer’s space had slowly become yours too. Your books on the shelves, your fuzzy socks under his bed, your favorite mug drying on the rack beside his. He called it home when you were there. And that had to count for something.
So you let the lie sit. Because it wasn’t really one. Not where it mattered.
Still, Ethan didn’t look at you. Didn’t even glance. He just tilted his head, eyes narrowing slightly. “I said it wouldn’t be for long. I just need a few nights. You used to let me crash for weeks.”
Spencer winced. “That was different. That was… years ago. Things are different now.”
“You mean she’s here now?” Ethan said flatly, voice dipped in something that wasn’t quite bitterness but knew how to get there fast. “That’s what’s different?”
Spencer’s jaw twitched. He inhaled slowly through his nose, trying to hold his ground. “No. What’s different is I’ve built something stable. Something I want to protect.”
Ethan let out a soft, humorless laugh. “Stable. Right. That’s rich coming from you.”
Spencer flinched at that but said nothing.
Ethan’s eyes finally flicked to you—just for a second—before shifting back to Spencer like the look itself had been an inconvenience. “You told me once that I was the only person who really got you. That no one else could make sense of your head. Remember that?”
Spencer closed his eyes for half a second. “Don’t do this.”
Ethan stepped forward, voice low, pointed. “We were more than friends, Spencer. You don’t get to act like I’m just some old college buddy who needs a couch.”
You felt your chest tighten. Spencer’s shoulders tensed, and you could practically see him swallowing everything he wanted to say—needed to say—and trying to replace it with something gentle, something palatable, something that wouldn’t make Ethan shatter.
But the weight of it was written all over his face. Regret. Guilt. Boundaries.
“I’m not that person anymore,” Spencer said softly. “And you’re not either. And I’m sorry, but I can’t be your safety net this time. Not like that. Not here.”
Ethan scoffed, throwing his words like stones. “You’re not that person anymore? Meaning you found yourself a nice little trophy wife to buy a white picket fence someday?”
“Ethan,” Spencer warned, voice still even, but with an edge that trembled beneath it.
“What?” Ethan shot back, eyes hard. “Are you too scared to be who you really are? So scared you’re hiding behind a beard?”
And that was it.
“That’s enough!”
The words cracked through the apartment like a thunderclap.
Silence slammed down in their wake.
Spencer’s chest was heaving, shoulders locked, his fists clenched at his sides like he was still holding onto the echo of the yell that had just torn out of him. It wasn’t just loud—it was jarring.
Spencer Reid didn’t yell. He didn’t need to yell.
But this—whatever Ethan had just ripped open—had pushed him too far.
Even Ethan looked stunned like the sharpness in Spencer’s voice had knocked the fight clean out of him.
And you? You just stared, wide-eyed, heart pounding, watching the man you loved stand up not just for you—but for himself.
Ethan stood frozen for a breath, maybe two, eyes wide like he couldn’t believe Spencer had actually raised his voice. His mouth opened—then closed. He looked down at the floor, jaw working like he was chewing on words too bitter to swallow.
Then, quietly but sharp enough to cut glass, he muttered, “Second time breaking a heart.”
The words landed heavy—aimed like a dagger but dulled by pity.
Spencer didn’t respond. Not right away. His jaw was tight, his posture rigid, but something in his expression fractured. You saw it. The flicker of pain. Of guilt. Of something mournful—but not regret.
Ethan gave a soft, bitter laugh and shook his head. “Guess the first time wasn’t final enough.”
Then he grabbed his bag, slung it over his shoulder, and walked out the door without another word. No slamming. No dramatics.
Just a final wound on his way out.
And then it was quiet. So quiet it felt like the air had changed.
Spencer stood still, eyes locked on the door long after it had closed. And you, standing behind him, finally took a step forward, reaching gently for his hand.
He let you take it.
Gratefully.
Desperately.
…
You hadn’t meant to break the peaceful rhythm of dinner. Spencer had cooked for you tonight—something simple and grounding, pasta tossed with garlic and herbs, the kind of thing he could make with his hands while his mind drifted. He was quiet, sure, but he had smiled once or twice. You thought maybe he was pulling out of the fog of earlier.
But curiosity had been tugging at you since the name slipped from his lips when Ethan appeared like a ghost from a past you hadn’t known existed.
So now, here you were. Asking carefully, gently. Like you might scare the memory back into hiding.
“Spencer?”
He looked up from his plate, blinking slowly as if being pulled from somewhere far away. “Yeah?” he murmured, a little distracted still but present enough to meet your eyes.
You hesitated. Then, quietly, “Who, um… who was Ethan?” A pause. You swallowed. “Who was he to you?”
The question settled between you and Spencer like a feather—and yet, somehow, it hit the table with the weight of stone.
Spencer stilled.
The silence that followed wasn’t uncomfortable—just delicate. He set his fork down slowly, resting his hands in his lap like he needed them to be still while he spoke.
“He was…” Spencer exhaled through his nose, searching for the words. “He was my friend. In college.”
You nodded slightly, waiting.
“We met in a seminar,” he continued, his tone even measured. “He was one of the only people who didn’t look at me like I was a curiosity. He didn’t care that I was a genius or a little weird. He… treated me like a peer. Like a person.”
You could hear the fondness there, buried beneath the ache. But there was more, and you knew it. He saw it in your eyes before you asked.
Spencer offered it willingly, if slowly.
“There was a time I thought maybe it could become more. I wasn’t sure what I wanted. Or what he wanted. There was… one kiss. Maybe two. But it didn’t go further than that. Not really.” He ran a hand through his hair, eyes falling back to his plate. “We lost touch. He had his demons. And I had mine.”
You reached out, sliding your fingers gently across the table, brushing his knuckles.
“And now?” you asked softly.
Spencer looked up again, eyes tired but sincere. “Now I just feel sad. For him. And for who we both were then. I think I wanted to save him. I think he wanted me to. But we were just kids trying to feel less alone.”
You nodded, squeezing his hand.
“Thank you,” you said quietly. “For telling me.”
He gave you a small, fragile smile.
“Can I ask you something… really personal?” you said softly, your voice hesitant but honest.
Spencer’s eyes flicked up to yours, and for a moment, he looked slightly startled—maybe even nervous—but he nodded anyway. “Yeah. Of course.”
You took a breath, steadying yourself.
“Do you ever wish… you’d had more time to figure out your sexuality? To explore it… without so much pressure, or expectation?”
Spencer blinked at you, his fork pausing midair.
It wasn’t that the question offended him—it didn’t. You knew him well enough by now to tread with care. He could see that you weren’t asking to pry. You were asking because you loved him. Because you wanted to know him.
Still, it took him a second. He set his fork down gently, eyes flicking down to the plate before returning to yours.
“I, um…” he started, then stopped, folding his hands together as he leaned forward slightly. “That’s… a very good question.”
You smiled a little, encouraging but quiet, giving him room to think.
Spencer’s brows furrowed, not with discomfort but with the weight of consideration. “I think… yes. In some ways, I do.”
He exhaled slowly, eyes flickering toward the candlelight dancing on the table. “I didn’t have what most people would call a normal adolescence. I wasn’t allowed the space to explore anything—romance, intimacy, identity—without being either fetishized or ridiculed. I was always the youngest in the room. Always the anomaly.”
You nodded softly, your hand resting atop his on the table.
“I think there are parts of myself I didn’t even let myself question,” he continued, voice low. “Not because I didn’t want to. But because it didn’t feel… safe. There were rules I made for myself. Stay small. Stay quiet. Don’t make things harder than they already are.”
His eyes met yours again—braver this time, vulnerable but steady.
“But you’ve made me think about it more. Not in a pressured way. Just… being with you, and how safe I feel. I think maybe I’m still discovering who I am in that way. And I don’t feel late to it. I just feel—grateful. That I get to figure it out now. With you.”
Your throat tightened, tears burning just a little at the edges.
You reached out and cupped his cheek, thumb brushing gently along the curve of it.
“I’m grateful, too,” you whispered. “For you. All of you. Every part you’re still uncovering.”
Spencer turned his head slightly, pressing a kiss to your palm.
You hesitated, watching him absorb the weight of his own answer, his fingers absently smoothing over the tablecloth like his thoughts were trying to find a soft place to land.
But his honesty had opened a door. And quietly, gently, you stepped through it.
“Can I… ask one more thing?” you said, voice barely above a whisper. “And please, please don’t feel like you have to answer. You don’t have to protect my feelings, I just— I want to understand.”
Spencer looked up, eyes meeting yours, already bracing but open.
You took a slow breath. “Do you… want to explore? With men, I mean?”
For a moment, he didn’t speak. Not because he didn’t want to answer—but because he was thinking, the way only Spencer could: carefully, thoughtfully, measuring not just his words, but the honesty they carried.
“I don’t know,” he said finally, quietly. “Sometimes I wonder. Not because I’m unhappy with you—I’m not, not even a little. Being with you feels… right in a way nothing else ever has.”
You nodded, encouraging him to go on, not flinching.
“But I also never really gave myself the chance to ask. Or try. I was so focused on staying safe, fitting in, surviving academia, and then the BAU… it never felt like there was room.”
He looked at you again, his expression soft and a little scared. “But I don’t want that to come between us. I don’t want to lose us because of something I might never even need to act on.”
You reached for his hand.
“You’re not going to lose me,” you said firmly, lacing your fingers through his. “Wanting to understand yourself more doesn’t mean you love me any less.”
He swallowed hard, blinking fast. “How do you always know exactly what to say?”
“Because I love you,” you said simply. “And I want all of you—even the parts you’re still figuring out.”
Spencer still couldn’t believe it. No matter how deeply he loved you, no matter how safe you already made him feel, you always found new ways to surprise him with your openness, your trust, and your devotion.
“I love you too,” he breathed, voice trembling slightly as he tried to hold your gaze, to make sure you knew how much this meant to him. “But… what are you saying, exactly?”
You sighed, not out of frustration, but from the sheer weight of trying to express something so delicate. You took a moment, collecting your thoughts, your words.
“I think,” you said slowly, carefully, “if you ever met a man—someone you were attracted to, someone you felt curious about—I’d want you to feel comfortable telling me. And then maybe, if we’d talked about it and if we’d set boundaries… maybe you could explore it. If that’s what you needed.”
Spencer blinked at you, stunned into silence for a few seconds. “Isn’t that… cheating?” he asked, genuinely confused.
“Not if we talk about it first,” you said gently. “Not if we understand each other and agree on what’s okay. Not if it’s something that helps you grow, and we stay honest with each other through it.”
He stared at you like you were a miracle. Because, to him, you kind of were.
“Thank you,” he said finally, voice rough with sincerity. “I appreciate you more than I’ll ever be able to express. But I think I’d need to… do some research. I mean—a lot of research. Before I could give a firm answer.”
You reached out, brushing your fingers along his arm. “I understand, baby. Take all the time you need.”
He nodded, chewing on the inside of his cheek for a beat, and then—tentative, awkward—he added, “And what if… what if I wanted to just experiment… with you?”
You tilted your head, your voice still soft. “Can you elaborate, my love?”
Spencer chuckled nervously, rubbing the back of his neck. “Uh… I guess I mean… I wouldn’t mind if we tried some… new things.”
Your lips curled into a smirk, affection lighting up your face. “Like what?”
He was bright red now, staring at a spot just past your shoulder like it might save him. “Like… like anal.”
You blinked, curiosity in your tone but no judgment. “You want to have anal sex with me?”
Spencer nodded quickly—shyly, but without looking away. “I do. But… I would, um… be on the bottom.”
Tilting your head with a curious, thoughtful expression, you asked, “Do you want to add strap-ons to your research? I’d want to get the best one in that case. And we’d need to know proper preparation, and materials, and—”
Spencer laughed, interrupting gently but with a real smile, the tension in his shoulders finally loosening. “I get it,” he said, eyes crinkling at the corners. “I’ll look into it all. Thoroughly.”
You beamed at him, proud and warm and deeply endeared, before reaching for his hand and threading your fingers through his.
“Thank you for telling me, baby,” you said sincerely, giving his hand a loving squeeze.
He nodded again, his cheeks still flushed, but there was a glow in him now—something almost giddy beneath the vulnerability. Visibly relieved. And maybe even a little bit excited.
Because at that moment, he understood something unshakeable, something that filled every quiet space between your words:
There was nothing he couldn’t say to you. Nothing too strange. Nothing too personal. Nothing too tender.
He had you—and you made him feel safe enough to explore who he was, and loved enough to never question if that exploration would change how you looked at him.
It wouldn’t. Not even a little.
—
The headaches didn’t just start.
But you didn’t know that.
Not really. Not until Hotch called you himself and said Spencer was being sent home early after nearly collapsing during a case consult. Not fainting exactly—just… swaying, disoriented, like the world was too loud, too bright, too much all at once.
You had dropped everything. Your keys were barely off the hook before you were in the car. And by the time you got him home, your entire body was one humming line of worry.
Now, Spencer was curled on the couch, his head resting in your lap, skin pale and clammy with exhaustion. The only light came from a single shaded lamp across the room. Everything else was silent. Still.
You laid the cool towel across his forehead as gently as you could and stroked your fingers through his hair, watching as he exhaled softly under your touch.
“Baby…” you murmured, keeping your voice low, like even sound might hurt him. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
He didn’t answer right away. Just gave the smallest shrug, his temple shifting against your thigh.
You frowned, brushing a curl off his forehead. “Spencer.”
“I didn’t want to worry you,” he said finally, voice quiet and hoarse. “I figured it would pass.”
“Have you seen a doctor?” you asked, already knowing the answer and hoping you were wrong.
He shifted his head slightly. Just enough for a soft, unmistakable no.
You closed your eyes for a second, steadying yourself. Not to snap. Not to scold. But to keep your worry from rising into panic.
“Spencer,” you said again, softly but firmly this time. “This has been happening for how long?”
Another pause. Then: “A couple weeks.”
You were silent for a moment, pressing your lips into a thin line as your hand slowed through his hair. “You’ve been getting headaches for weeks. And didn’t think that was worth mentioning?”
He didn’t move, but his voice went even softer like he was trying to shrink away without actually moving. “They weren’t this bad at first. And I thought maybe it was just stress or dehydration. Or—”
You stopped him with your palm against his cheek, not forcefully, just enough to make him look at you.
“Spencer,” you whispered, “if something hurts you—especially your head—you tell me. I don’t care how small it seems. I don’t care if you think it’s nothing.”
His eyes flickered with guilt and something else: shame, fear, and the quiet helplessness of someone who’s used to powering through because stopping means looking at the thing directly.
You kissed his forehead gently, letting the towel fall to the side for a moment.
“We’re going to the doctor as soon as they can get you in,” you said, no room for argument but full of care. “And tonight, we’re resting. Nothing else. Just this. Just me and you and quiet.”
Spencer nodded slowly, eyes fluttering shut again as your fingers moved back into his hair.
He didn’t argue.
Because, for once, it felt good to let someone else take the weight.
…
But the migraines… they didn’t pass.
They didn’t lessen. Didn’t become manageable with water, sleep, and hope.
Instead, they began to chip away at him. Slowly, steadily, like waves against the foundation of a house that had weathered more storms than it ever should have.
Your Spencer—the man you knew and loved in full color—started to fade into a version of himself that felt… hollow.
Still brilliant. Still kind. But dimmed. Distant.
He smiled less. Laughed less. Barely touched the books that once lived in his hands like extensions of his body. He started carrying sunglasses even when it was overcast. Kept earplugs in his coat pocket. You’d come to his apartment to find him sitting on the floor in the dark, palms pressed to his temples, jaw clenched against the sound of his own breath.
And you’d heard of this version before.
You knew him only through fragments—through stories whispered by people who had been there then.
The Spencer who had used.
The one who would do anything, take anything, to quiet the pain.
The man who lived in the aftermath of loss, crawling his way out of the kind of darkness that doesn’t leave easily.
And you knew he was clean. You knew it.
He had told you. The team had told you. He went to meetings. He journaled. He did the work.
But watching him now—watching the way his hands shook when you tried to touch him, the way he flinched when the light from the fridge hit his face, the way he refused to meet your eyes some nights—it terrified you.
Because he wasn’t just in pain. He was shutting down. And he wasn’t letting you in.
You’d wake in the middle of the night and find him sitting at the edge of the bed, head in his hands, so quiet it broke your heart.
You wanted to scream. You wanted to shake him. You wanted to say Please don’t go away. Please tell me what to do. Please don’t become that ghost again.
But instead, you sat behind him and wrapped your arms around his waist, pressing your cheek to the warmth of his back, whispering, “I’m still here.”
Even when he said nothing. Even when his silence felt like a wall taller than anything you’d ever climbed.
You stayed.
Because you remembered the way he looked at you when he was whole. And you would wait—for as long as it took—to see that look again.
But it took so long.
So long.
Long enough that the days started to feel indistinguishable from one another—an endless loop of dimmed lights, soft steps, whispered concern. You adjusted everything around him. At first, it was natural. A kindness. A compromise.
But over time, it became suffocating.
You stopped going over. Not because you didn’t want to, but because you were scared that the sound of the door clicking shut behind you might wake him—and God forbid you be the one to trigger another migraine.
You didn’t call or text anymore. Not even to say I love you, not even to say I miss you, because the brightness of your phone might hurt him. Because he wouldn’t check it anyway. You told yourself that over and over, he wouldn’t check it anyway.
So you stopped reaching out.
Even when you would go over, you didn’t play music. You didn’t turn on any lights. You started wearing socks around his apartment so your steps wouldn’t echo off the hardwood. You learned the rhythm of his medication alarms better than your own sleep schedule. You brought food and left it untouched on the counter. You came to check in, to switch out towels, to refill water bottles.
And somewhere in the middle of it all…
You forgot how to be his girlfriend.
Because that’s not what it felt like anymore. You were a nurse. A shadow.
An afterthought orbiting quietly around someone you loved more than anything, who couldn’t seem to see you anymore.
And the worst part—the most devastating, gutting part—was that you didn’t even know if he noticed.
If he saw the way your shoulders slumped when he didn’t respond. If he noticed how your voice had grown quieter, your touches more hesitant. If he could feel how hard you were fighting not to break.
Because you were still fighting. Every day.
But the silence between you was deafening, and love—no matter how deep, no matter how patient—cannot live forever in the dark without being fed.
You didn’t want to leave. But you didn’t know how to stay like this either.
And you were beginning to wonder— If maybe he was already gone.
…
Your fingers slipped off the keyboard the moment you heard the lock click.
You froze. Heart stopped. Because no one—no one—used that lock. No one should be using that lock. You hadn't had someone walk into your apartment unannounced in... weeks. Maybe longer. You lived alone. You lived quietly. That sound—unexpected and metallic and out of place—sent a cold jolt of adrenaline through your chest.
You were halfway out of your chair, breath caught and heart thudding when you heard the door shut gently. No crash. No hurried footsteps. Just soft movement, deliberate. Familiar.
Still, your voice was shaky as you called from your office, “Spencer?”
There was a pause. A long one. Then footsteps padded across your floor with hesitant slowness. And then—he appeared.
He looked... wrecked.
Not bloody or bruised. Not in any visible way. But hollow. Sunken. His curls were tangled. There was stubble on his jaw. His coat was barely buttoned, satchel slipping from one shoulder. And his eyes—those big, expressive, vulnerable eyes—looked up at you with the kind of ache that reached straight into your chest.
“Are you mad at me?” he whispered like the question itself was too heavy to speak out loud.
And your heart just about shattered.
You swallowed hard, stepping into the doorway, grounding yourself. “No.” The word came out as a breath, too light, too soft, but true. Completely and utterly true.
He looked like he didn’t believe you.
So you pushed off the doorframe and crossed the space between you, slow and measured like he was a wounded animal like you were afraid any sudden movement might send him bolting.
“I was…” your throat tightened, but you pushed forward. “I was scared you stopped needing me.”
Spencer didn’t speak. Just shook his head—hard, like he was trying to dislodge the very idea—and his voice broke on the edges when he finally looked at you again.
“I was scared I stopped being someone you could love.”
That hit hard. Because those weren’t just words. That was Spencer. That was the man who overthought everything, who felt deeper than he admitted, who retreated when the world became too much because he doesn’t want to be a burden to anyone he loves. Especially you.
You didn’t say anything. There wasn’t anything to say.
You just closed the last few feet between you and reached for him, and he met you in the middle—hands finding your waist, your arms looping around his shoulders, your fingers twisting into the fabric of his coat like you needed to physically hold him together.
There, in your entryway, with his bag slipping to the floor and your heart pounding in time with his, you stood wrapped in each other.
Not speaking. Not rushing. Just holding on.
Letting the silence breathe between you. Letting the ache be acknowledged. Letting your hands say everything your voices couldn’t.
And that—right there—was where the repair began. Not with an apology. Not with a solution. But with the simple act of staying.
…
Spencer stays the night.
He doesn’t ask. You don’t offer. He just... doesn’t leave.
After the kind of reunion that left both of you too full and too fragile to say anything else, it didn’t need to be discussed. He dropped his coat onto the rack like muscle memory. He put his satchel on the same hook he always did, though it sagged heavier than usual like it knew too.
And then he went into the bathroom to brush his teeth, just like he used to.
You followed a few minutes later with your own toothbrush in hand, standing beside him at the sink, pretending—trying—to pretend that nothing felt different.
But it did.
Because Spencer was here, in your space, but it didn’t feel like your Spencer. Not completely. His presence carried a weight you weren’t used to. Not uncomfortable, not unwanted—but heavier, older, a little weathered at the seams. Like he’d been through something he still hadn’t told you. Like you were brushing your teeth next to someone who looked like your boyfriend but who hadn’t touched your hand in nine days.
Your palm hovered for a moment before you rested it on his back, just lightly. You felt the subtle tension there—his body registering your touch before his mind did. He didn’t lean in the way he usually would. But he didn’t move away, either.
It was enough.
Later, he sat on his usual side of your bed; the covers pulled up neatly over his legs, a worn paperback in his hands. The lamplight was dim, golden, soft—just the way you always kept it when winding down for the night. And you curled up beside him, face half-hidden against your pillow, listening as he read aloud from the page in that soothing cadence of his.
It felt familiar. It looked familiar. But it didn’t feel quite right.
Because there was too much air between you. Too much left unsaid.
But still, you closed your eyes and listened to his voice like a lullaby, like its rhythm might stitch something back together.
In the morning, it was… normal.
Almost eerily so.
You sat on the kitchen counter, legs swinging gently as you sip your coffee, and Spencer stood between your knees, his forehead resting softly against your chest. Your arms loosely circled his neck, and his hands settled on your thighs. It was tender, quiet, and domestic.
Everything about it screamed routine, but your heart still beat too fast.
Because this wasn’t casual. This wasn’t easy. This was two people pretending they hadn’t been drifting.
Trying to return to something soft. Trying not to acknowledge that it felt just a hair too tight.
But you held him anyway. Pressed your cheek against his hair. And tried not to think about how long it would take to feel normal again.
Or if it ever would.
…
Spencer doesn't say it all at once. He doesn’t sit you down and unfold his guilt into a perfectly formed apology with bullet points and clear, linear thought. That’s not how this lives inside him.
It spills out in pieces—fragments—little revelations that tumble out when his voice is already low, the night is already quiet, and the space between you is already stretched thin with everything left unspoken.
You're sitting on the couch, legs tangled under a blanket that doesn’t quite reach the edges anymore, and his head is resting on your shoulder, a book forgotten in his lap. You don’t know what triggers it—maybe the way your hand idly combs through his curls or the way you haven’t said anything in minutes, and the silence has grown too tender to ignore—but suddenly, Spencer shifts.
“I didn’t know how to let you in,” he says quietly, voice hoarse, like it’s been caught in his throat for too long. “Not without making you carry it for me.”
You don’t speak. You don’t move. You just listen. Because you know he needs to say it.
“I was scared,” he continues. “Scared that if I leaned on you too hard, you’d… break. Or get tired. Or realize I’m too much.” He laughs, but it’s dry and hollow. “I thought keeping it in would protect you.”
And there it is.
The heartbreaking, twisted logic of someone who loves too hard and hurts too quietly.
You tilt your head, rest your lips in his hair, and whisper, “You don’t have to protect me from loving you.”
Spencer doesn’t respond at first. But his hand finds yours beneath the blanket. Clumsy. Seeking. He laces his fingers through yours like he’s making a new promise. Maybe he is.
From then on, he tries.
In the smallest ways.
He texts first—even if it’s just a simple thinking of you or a blurry photo of something he saw that reminded him of a joke you once made. You reply warmly every time, no matter what you’re doing. Because you know what that little message cost him. And what it means.
He starts saying, “Want to come over?” again. Not every day. Not even every week. But it starts. And when he does, you go. Even if he’s tired. Even if all you do is sit silently, eat soup, and read on opposite ends of the couch, you go. Because he’s asking. Because he wants you there again.
And one night, while you’re brushing your teeth in his bathroom and trying not to get toothpaste on your shirt, he walks past and lightly rests his hand on your back. Just a press of fingers. No words. No performance.
It makes you tear up.
Because that little touch says: I missed you. I’m trying. I’m still here.
And you let him try.
You show him you want him—not just when he’s dazzling and fast-talking and quoting obscure facts to fill the silence—but when he’s slow. When he stumbles. When he forgets how to let love feel easy.
You hold space for all of it.
Because you’re not just here for the version of him that’s easy to love.
You’re here for all of him. Even the parts that still don’t know how to stay. Especially those.
This part isn’t easy either.
Because silence had become your way of coping—of making space for him, of shrinking yourself so his pain didn’t have to make room. You thought you were being kind. And maybe you were. But kindness without communication turns into quiet resentment. And now it’s time to speak.
Your voice wavers when you begin. Because you're not angry. You're hurt. And that kind of honesty is terrifying when you've spent so long treading carefully around someone else's fragility.
But you do it anyway.
You look at him—really look—and say:
“I don’t need you to be perfect; I just need you to let me in again.”
You see it hit. Right there in his eyes, the way his breath catches like he’s just now realizing how far he pulled away.
So you keep going. Gently. But honestly.
“I missed you,” you whisper, softer this time, “and I need to know you missed me too.”
His hand twitches, like it wants to reach for yours but doesn’t know if it has permission yet. You give it to him, not with words, but with your eyes.
Then, because this is the hardest truth and the one that’s been buried deepest, you let it out:
“I want to feel like your girlfriend again. Not just your support system.”
There’s a pause. A long, heavy one where the silence could crack either way. Where he could shut down or shut you out.
But Spencer doesn’t.
Because he listens.
He always listens.
And more importantly—he responds.
His hand finds yours, finally. His fingers squeeze, just once, but it says everything. And when he speaks, it’s quiet and raw, his voice hoarse from emotion.
“I didn’t know how much I was asking you to carry,” he says. “And I didn’t know how to say I missed you without breaking apart.”
You nod, already tearing up. But you don’t drop his hand. You hold tighter.
Because now it’s out. The words are real. The air between you isn’t full of what-ifs and almosts anymore—it’s full of truth.
And from here, you can finally start again.
…
Rossi notices it first.
The way Spencer walks a little lighter into the bullpen, his satchel slung across one shoulder and a barely concealed smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. The way he lingers longer in conversations again and doesn’t just nod and disappear into the nearest file. The way his eyes brighten when his phone buzzes, and your name lights up the screen.
He’s back.
Not just showing up. Not just surviving. But present.
And for a team that’s seen him hollowed out by pain—grief, migraines, trauma, silence—it’s everything.
So Rossi, in his infinite paternal wisdom and subtle Italian flair, throws out the idea over coffee one morning like it’s nothing.
“Team night at my place this Friday,” he says, handing Hotch his espresso. “The usual—music, wine, enough pasta to drown a horse. Partners invited.”
Hotch raises a brow. “That sounds dangerous.”
“It always is,” Rossi grins. “And that’s the point.”
The word spreads quickly—Penelope is already planning outfits and playlists, JJ starts texting around to see who’s bringing what, and Spencer?
~
It’s a quiet afternoon when your phone buzzes.
You’re in the middle of some mundane work task, one of those peaceful moments where your brain is finally unoccupied just enough to hum again. You glance down at your phone, expecting some spam notification or a reminder you forgot to cancel.
But it’s him.
Spencer.
Spencer Reid — who still, despite everything you’ve been through together, texts like he’s composing a letter with a fountain pen. The preview on the lock screen reads:
Would you maybe want to come with me to something?
You smile before you’ve even unlocked the phone.
You can practically hear the cadence of his voice in the phrasing. See the way he’d glance away when saying it in person, fingers tugging at the corner of a folder or the hem of his sleeve, his mouth twitching with nerves and hope.
You type back:
Yes. Absolutely. What is it?
There’s a pause—a longer one this time—and then:
Rossi is hosting a team dinner. Just something casual. Partners invited. Everyone will be there. I’d like you to be there too. With me.
Your heart swells. Not because it’s a party, or because you get to be in a mansion, or even because it’s a rare invitation into his work life—but because it’s him.
Of course.
You send it immediately, no second thoughts, no edits. And almost instantly, the three little dots appear. Then a single message comes through:
Thank you. You have no idea how much that means to me.
But you do. You really do.
You put your phone down, and for a moment, just sit in the warmth of it all.
Because even through the screen, you can feel it—that tiny shift in Spencer’s world. That quiet loosening of his shoulders. That sweet, boyish, barely-there smile you love so much.
~
He asked. You said yes. And something inside him—tight and long-held—finally lets go.
Because he’s not just inviting you to dinner—he’s inviting you into something. Back into his world, where you belong.
The week flies by, and by Friday night, you're practically bouncing in your seat as Spencer drives you through winding roads and tree-lined driveways. He’s wearing that soft sweater you love, the one that clings to his arms just right, and his hair is freshly washed, curls soft and neat, like he tried extra hard.
When you arrive at Rossi’s mansion—stone archways, glowing windows, and the smell of garlic and rosemary floating through the open door—you’re met with warmth. Laughter. Familiar faces.
Penelope squeals when she sees you, immediately wrapping you in a glittery hug. JJ hands you a glass of wine before you’ve even made it past the foyer. Derek grins, claps Spencer on the back, and says, “There’s the man of the hour.”
But the best part— The best part is how natural it feels.
You and Spencer move through the house like you’ve always been a pair. Like the distance, the silence, the months of aching and not knowing how to reach each other are finally, finally behind you.
He keeps a hand on the small of your back as you walk into the kitchen. He leans in to tell you little jokes while you nibble from the charcuterie board. When someone teases him—probably Morgan—you rest a hand on his knee and feel him exhale with laughter instead of flinching like he might have weeks ago.
And later, when the group settles into the living room with glasses of wine and soft music playing in the background, you find yourselves tucked into the corner of Rossi’s oversized sectional, Spencer’s arm around your shoulders, your head against his chest.
You’re back in your groove.
You feel it in the way he laughs again without hesitation. You see it in how he looks at you—like the storm has passed, and you were his shelter the whole time. You feel it in yourself, too—in the quiet calm beneath your ribs, the safety of this, whatever this is becoming again.
And as the team jokes, reminisces, and bickers affectionately around you, you can’t help but close your eyes for a moment, smile into his sweater, and think—
We’re okay. We made it. We’re home.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The Life of Racing Pt. 1



Lando Norris x fem!reader
Summary: through it all, the racing, the media, the meetings. What matters to Lando the most is you. His home life is just as important as track life. Some days, he doesn't balance it easily. But through it all, the both of you try. Going through some challenges, but always coming out together, hand in hand again.
Second Person POV
Notes: my first F1 series! Requests are open!
01 02 03 04 05

You were a well know journalist in the F1 community. You were known more for what your write. Articles on driving life, as well as interviewing drivers about their F1 experience as a whole.
To say the least, you were well respected in the community, and by the public, you were known as an influencer to. You showed up at multiple events and races, surly not as big of a base as the drivers, but people knew you.
You were hired by f1 around a year ago. Climbing your way up the ladder in the workforce.
You were grateful to be working there. And you weren't alone in it either. Your best friend, Lewis, has been by you for what feels like forever, seeing how your families did know each other too.
Article after article. Late night after late night. You got so well ahead that some of the drivers started talking to you and hanging out with you on paddock. Which tells the story itself, seeing how you were an interviewer.
Your main focus was on the McLaren team. Zak, your boss, knew you were a 'hard worker' from the moment he saw you, he said.
Now you were at the Canadian GP. You were walking out of the paddock and into the McLaren garage, sitting down at a desk they watched the races from.
You got out your laptop, notebook, and pen. Cliking it quickly on the desk, out of anxiousness.
"Y/n, did you get those interviews recorded today?" Zak asked, walking by you in a hurry.
"Yeah. I'm working on it." You say tiredly.
It was a long day to say the least. A long week. You look over to your right, seeing Lando sit down next to you.
He smiled slightly before logging into a computer.
"Looks like someone can't keep up with this job." And engineer said from the back.
"Will you shut the hell up?" You say, slamming your pen down and looking at the person. He just put his hands up in defense and turned around.
"Fucking Christ." You mumble, turning back around to your laptop.
"Y/n, do you need to go home? It's been a long day-." Zak said quietly, walking up behind you.
"No. I need to get this done." You say. He takes a deep breath before walking away.
You were working silently for a couple of minutes, writing down notes from today's interview.
"What are you working on?" Lando asked quietly, leaning over and looking at your screen.
"Just... today's interview." You say. He nodded his head silently.
"You know. Don't listen to Gerard. He's always and asshole." He says, a slight grin forming on his face.
"Thanks." You say, smiling slightly.
You continue working on different article drafts for Zak, hoping to get them published this week.
Next to you, you hear Lando sigh deeply, rubbing his hands on his temples slowly. He had the replay paused on his crash.
"You shouldn't let one crash define who you are." You say quietly.
"What do you mean?" He asked, looking at you with a straight face.
"Within the short time I've been here. I can tell your the type to beat yourself up about one mistake. You just... shouldn't." You say.
"You know, you definitely have some great opinions." He says, smirking.
"It's called... being open minded." You say, letting out a huffed laugh.
You continued to work on your drafts, while also looking at the interviews from today. You were deeply focused on what you were working on, signaling out Lando's voice.
"Do you want to hang out tonight?" That came clear to you.
"We can. But I'm just going to be reviewing the race. Nothing special." You say.
"That's fine. We can work, or do whatever." He smiled.
"Yeah, okay meet me at my hotel room around five." You say. You write down the floor and room number and give it to him.
"Fancy." He said slyly.
"Please, I bet you have a full house out there." You joke.
"Maybe. Maybe not. But..." He holds up the paper. "I'll meet you there." He says.
It get's closer to evening time, and people start to leave. You begin to pack up your things and leave the garage, walking down the paddock strip.
The crowds were dying down. There was a long line to get out of the gates. You walk around to the back entrance, mainly for workers.
You walk up to the gates, security guarding the entrance.
"Ms. Y/n, right this way." One of the guards say. He walks right next to you, leading you to your car.
You look at him slightly confused along the way.
"It's a new protocol. Anyone who works here, or who is known to the public eye, unfortunately needs escort." He says.
"Right, okay."
You walk down to your car, the guard opens your door for you.
"Thank you." You say, he nods and shuts it when you get in.
You slowly drive out of the parking lot, making your way out of the circuit and into downtown.
You made your way through the heavy evening traffic and to the hotel. You quickly walk through the lobby, and to the elevators.
It took a minute before the doors finally opened. You stepped inside, clicking the 30th floor button. The elevator slowly rose to the top.
You got off and walked down the hallway, entering your room at the end.
It was big to say the least. A little foyer at the front. Straight in is a small living room, to the left was a kitchen and small island, and to the right was a small hallway leading to the bedroom and bathroom.
It was spacious, which you were grateful for seeing how you were spending over a week here.
You kick off your shoes, putting them under the bench near the door, and dropping your keys down on the table.
You walk into the living area, quickly turning on the TV, putting on the race to review for work.
You walk over to the kitchen, grabbing a wine glass and a bottle of Barolo wine.
Your pour some into the glass and go sit int he living room, watching the TV and taking down notes.
You continue the notes that you need to when you hear a light knock on the room door. You walk over to it, and open it slightly. Lando stood there.
"Hey, come on in." You say, moving over. He walks in slowly, standing across from you as you close the door.
"I'm just finishing his up." You say, lazily pointing to the TV as you sit on the couch.
"It's alright, I don't mind watching me be a brilliant racer." He teased. Sitting down to the left of you.
"Yeah, I mean, you totally didn't crash or anything." You smile. You press play on the race, grabbing your notebook.
"You've got a lot of notes." He says.
"Got a lot of writing to do." You say.
You keep you eyes on the TV, writing down details of different laps. You are mid sentence when Lando reaches over and takes your book and pen, setting it down on the table.
"Hey, what are you-" You cut yourself off when he put's his hands around your waist, effortlessly pulling you onto his lap, gently kissing you on the forehead.
"I hate hiding us." He sighs. You reach your hand to the back of his head gently.
"I know. But you knew this when we started going out." You say.
"Is it wrong to want to brag about my beautiful girlfriend all over social media? Or tell people that your mine when walking around the paddock?" He whines.
"No, but you can't. It might get us in trouble." You say.
"By who?"
"By our boss. Who does, might I add, have a very, very high temper some days."
"We could find a new job."
"Your really willing to let go of a Formula One career for a relationship?"
"If it means I get to stay with you, then yes." He said, putting his head into the crook of your neck.
"You'll be fine. At least we get to be together after work."
"But it's to short of time." He mumbles into your neck. There was a pause, a deep silence.
"Do you know why I crashed today?" He asked, looking up at you.
"Why?"
"Because you weren't there to hold my hand, or kiss me before getting into the car or I couldn't post you on Instagram the night before." He said, slowly, and sadly.
"So am I just your good luck charm?"
"No- no, no I'm just saying. I missed you, that's why I crashed." He said, backing up his answer.
"Hmm, I think you crashed because you thought you could get through a gap that wasn't big enough." You say, looking him in the eyes.
"Because I wanted to impress you." He said, smirking.
"Impress me?"
"Yeah. Like how you impress me."
"How do I impress you?" You ask curiously.
"Because, some people might think your just another journalist, but your good at what you do. And you even need a security escort to your car at work." He said.
"Yeah, and he told me it's for every worker on the circuit."
"He just said that to make you feel not special." He said, pausing. "He downgraded my girlfriend."
"Downgraded? Lan I don't think-"
"Yes he did." He interrupted.
"Okay... whatever you want to believe." You say, smiling. He leans to the table, grabbing your book and pen.
"You can write again." He smiles.
"Thanks." You say. You flip open the notebook to an empty page, and start writing something.
Lando tried to peer over to your book, but you turned it away, closer to you. You finish writing your sentence, and give it to him.
"Lando Norris, states privately that he crashed into Oscar in Canadian GP due to his secret girlfriend, journalist y/n, y/l/n, not giving him a kiss before getting in the car." He mumbles.
"Y/n." He gasps. "You can't write this!" He said, scrambling the notebook back into your hands.
"Oh I'm sorry. Weren't you the one who wanted to brag about e everywhere?" You ask.
"Yes but that's different. That is my love. This." He said, tapping on the page. "Is just calling me out."
"I thought." You pause, working up fake tears. "I really thought you loved me." You say.
"Awe come on, don't be sad. I do love you." He says, cradling you in his arms like a kid.
"It's a joke."
"Not a very funny joke." He says sternly. You stay like that for a couple of minutes in silence. The race playing in the background.
"Can I spend the night tonight?" Lando asks.
"You really want to risk that?" You ask, pulling your head away fro hi.
"What do you mean?"
"What I mean is that you and Oscar are only a couple floors above us. He's staying right next to you. And he's suspicious of like... well everything." You say.
"So, I can just leave early."
"Right. Did you forget he has early training tomorrow?"
"Wait- how do you know that?"
"Because there's a calendar in the team garage."
"Okay, then I will leave extra, extra early." He says, smirking.
"Whatever you say." You smile.

Hey loves! Pt. 1 of 'The Life of Racing' is here! Hope you like it, any more chapters to come! Comment ot be added to the F1 tag list! Requests are open!
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Hi everyone, here’s a WIP that fell out of my brain tonight.
4.5k words | Robby x Original Female Character
Seasoned ER nurse Iris had been treated to the best sex of her life almost exactly a month ago - from the attending she’s been low-key in love with for longer than she’d like to admit. Now, she’s sitting in her bathroom staring at three separate positive pregnancy tests. Unfortunately for her, Robby had dipped before she woke and has all but ghosted her since.
Title TBD? Pls suggest Taylor Swift themed titles if you have any.
This is the second fic I’ve ever posted anywhere and my first time posting to tumblr so pls be kind to me (but still tell me if you hate it), It’s also very much a first draft with minimal editing so keep that in mind
Well, shit.
That is most definitely two pink lines.
On three different tests. Iris Elizabeth McDowell, you fucking idiot.
Just my fucking luck, that getting tipsy and fucking the very hot and vey emotionally unavailable attending would result in a god damn pregnancy. I’d been blissfully ignorant the last 6 weeks, my periods have never been all that regular but as soon as the nausea and the sore boobs hit I knew it was time to face the music. And sure enough, the music was telling me that I was pregnant. With Michael Robinavitch’s baby.
Robby, who has barely made eye contact with me past what was required for patient care since it happened. Robby, who let it slip at the bar that he had been interested in me for months now. Robby, who I was unfortunately in love with. Had been for an embarrassingly long time now, so him up and leaving the morning after the best sex of my life triggered a full blown crisis. Almost a decade of pining, all for one (admittedly spectacular) night. He briefly had me considering switching jobs, but decided I wouldn’t let a man dictate my life. Even if it was that man.
Do I want to keep it? I think so. Should I want to keep it? Probably not.
It’s not like I’m some young new grad nurse who doesn’t have a career. I’ve been an ER nurse for 10 years now, working at the Pitt for all but the first two. I occasionally fill in for the charge nurses, I’m damn good at my job, and I have a great support system. But the thought of having to tell Robby that I’m carrying his child? Genuinely makes me want to puke. Again.
I have money, a 2 bedroom condo, a regular enough schedule that daycare wouldn’t be an issue. But do I really want to be a single mom? Put my body through the fucking wild ride that is pregnancy? Oh god. Pregnancy scrubs? The absolute worst. Not to mention actually giving birth.
Thankfully, the universe has seen fit to give me a single win in all this, and I have the next 4 days off to figure out how to be normal at work again. First order of business - call my OB. A brief phone call later, I have an appointment for 9:45. Just over two hours from now.
Fuck, I could really use my mom right now. Not like we were ever super close, with her living on the west coast and me getting the fuck out of my tiny ass hometown right after high school, but I’d like the option to call her and freak out. Both her and my dad were killed in a car accident just over three years ago, and somehow this scenario had never crossed my mind. Cue the tears - but they feel cathartic. A release I desperately need right now.
My therapist is going to lose her ever-loving mind. A quick look on her patient portal reveals that she has an opening this afternoon, so I guess that makes 2 wins from the universe for me today. I’ll take what I can get.
***
I am very picky about my medical providers. Working in the field myself means I have seen some shit doctors, and I just flat out refuse to put my care in the hands of someone I don’t trust. My OB is the best of the best, and she’s really earning her copay right now.
The transvaginal ultrasound was quick, confirming that I definitely have something cooking in there. The tech asked if I wanted to hear the heartbeat - but I said no. I’m right at the six week mark so a heartbeat can be heard at this point but I am not ready for that just yet. Not until I decide what I want to do. My OB, bless her, ran me through all of my options. She knows I know them, I’m an ER nurse after all, but it’s like all my schooling and experience fell out of my brain the second the stick(s) turned pink.
She encouraged me to take my time in making a decision. I have a few weeks to make a choice either way. We went through what it would look like to keep, terminate, and adopt. Having all the information laid out in front of me makes me feel both better and far worse.
She also tells me that no matter what the father wants, this is my choice. That I should lean on my people, and find someone I trust to tell. That if I do decide to terminate, I need to have someone with me after I take the medications to make sure everything progresses as it should.
I leave the appointment armed with 4 different pamphlets and 3 sonogram images that I have yet to look at.
Therapy is significantly harder. Erica, bless her, has been my therapist since I moved to Pittsburgh for college almost 15 years ago. She knows me far too well. Immediately clocks that it must be hard to be dealing with all of this without my mom’s support, which triggers a crying spell. Once I’ve recovered from that, we move on to how I’m going to tell Robby.
“I don’t know, Erica. He has barely looked at me since we slept together, I can count the non-patient related words he’s said to me since then on one hand and none of them were particularly nice.” That man needs therapy more than anyone I’ve ever met. He’s an incredible doctor and great to his friends, but ever since he fucked up his relationship with Collins so badly that she left the state he’s been especially moody.
“How do you think he’s going to react to this?”
“Not particularly well. He’ll freak out, not speak to me for a few days, and then inevitably come back around and say that he’ll help me with whatever I choose. I know that if I decide to keep it that he would help, but that it would be out of obligation and that is not what I want. I would never keep him away from his kid, but I can almost guarantee that I would be eternally fucked up over it.” Erica nods thoughtfully, taking a pause to formulate a reply that won’t send me over the edge.
“Maybe you should start by telling someone else, then. Maybe Samira, or Dana? Someone who will support you unconditionally without any emotional baggage taking up space in the back seat. They could help you decide what to say when you tell him, and support you if it goes as poorly as you think it will.” She gives me a very pointed look before continuing. “Also, and really think about this before brushing it off, maybe this conversation between you and Robby will help you both. A push that requires communication where there is a gap right now.”
“I - I, ugh. I just really, really don’t want to have to do this with him. He really hurt me when he just up and fucking ghosted me. Especially because he spent the whole night prior telling me that he’s been wanting to kiss me for months, and a whole bunch of other shit that he clearly didn’t mean.” He doesn’t seem like the type to spout bullshit to get a woman into bed with him, but I really cannot come up with another reason for him to be acting this way.
“It’s fair and reasonable for you to be scared. And if he screws this up, you have my blessing to tell him to fuck off. But no matter what you choose, you will be okay. It might suck for a while, but you will come out the other side.” The unspoken words are loud - that I will be okay but that it’s going to take a while for me to get there.
“I know you’re right but it’s hard to see right now.” Pretty much impossible, actually.
“That’s okay, I’m here to remind you. Your homework this week is to tell someone you trust.” Sad that I don’t consider the father someone I trust, but he definitely is not making that list right now.
“I’m going to call Dana literally as soon as we hang up - Samira’s working right now.” She nods in response, flashes me what I’m sure is supposed to be a reassuring smile but it just doesn’t land. We schedule an appointment for next week and then we hang up. I give myself 10 minutes to spiral before I pick up the phone and call Dana.
***
Dana picks up her phone on the third ring.
“Hey, kid! Where are ya?” I can hear the sounds of what is likely a bar or restaurant in the background and belatedly realize that there’s ER social plans today - most of day shift is gathered at the sports bar near the hospital to watch the first Penguins game of the regular season. Hockey is one of the few sports I will watch voluntarily, and I definitely told Dana I would try and make it out tonight.
“Shit, Dana. I totally spaced, had a bit of a personal crisis. Can I call you later? When you aren’t surrounded by our coworkers?” I hear a booming laugh in the background and immediately place it as Robby’s. Just my fucking luck. “Can you just, uh - text me when you leave the bar?”
“No, Iris, wait. Are you okay?” Her voice changes, drops lower and sounds muffled. Like she’s covering her mouth while she speaks in an effort to afford me some privacy. She knows something happened between Robby and I, and has had a front row seat to whatever the fuck is going on right now so she’s sensitive to the fact that I might not want him knowing about said personal crisis.
“I mean, okay is not really the word I would use but I’m safe and not currently in any physical danger.” Very much not okay, but I don’t want to make her change her plans for me. It’s so rare that we’re all able to see each other outside the Pitt and I know she values this time with her friends.
“Iris, honey. What’s wrong?” I don’t answer, but I do start to cry. My best efforts at keeping my sobs quiet are unsuccessful. “You know what, never mind, I’m just gonna come over. Hang tight, okay?” I hear the screech of a chair as she scoots back and presumably stands up. Her voice is quieter as she speaks next, having moved the phone so she can talk to whoever else is at the table. “Change of plans, guys. I have to go. Enjoy the game and I’ll see you all tomorrow.”
The crying has not slowed in the thirty seconds it takes her to get outside.
“Dana, really, I appreciate it but you can stay and finish the game. I can wait.” I must not convince her, because she laughs at me. Fairly so, given that my words are very much broken up by sobs.
“Absolutely not. I’m on my way, I’ll see you in ten minutes.”
She arrives in eight.
I’m waiting by the door, and open it before she has a chance to knock. I’m still crying - no longer sobbing, but a pretty steady stream of tears track their way down my cheeks. I see the question forming on her lips but I beat her to it and hold out my three positive tests for her to see.
“Are we happy? Shopping? Making an appointment at the clinic?” Classic Dana - no big reaction, just thoughtful statements of action. Unfortunately I don’t know what I want.
“I don’t know yet. Took the tests early this morning and was able to get in last minute to see OB this morning to confirm it. I’m just about 6 weeks along and I have no fucking clue what I want to do.” She closes the door behind her and immediately pulls me into a tight hug. Rubs my back with one hand and runs the other through my hair, tells me that it’s okay to not know what I want and that she’s here for me no matter what. Does not ask me who the father is. Unfortunately that is the biggest piece to this puzzle and I know I need to tell her.
We move to my couch and she makes me drink some water before continuing to fill her in. I decide it’s best to just fucking do it - no preamble and no backstory.
“Robby’s the father.” That stops her in her tracks for a second. Her eyes go wide and I can tell she’s working extremely hard to keep her own emotions under wraps.
“Well, shit. So that ‘thing’ that happened between you guys in August was sex?” I nod. “And, let me hazard a guess here, he freaked the fuck out and now he’s unable to act normal around you.” I nod again.
“That about sums it up. He left before I woke up and any effort I made to talk to him about it ended with him getting snippy and walking away from me. My texts went unanswered so I just stopped trying.”
“What an asshole - I’m so sorry, Iris.” She leans over to pull me into another hug. “Are you going to tell him?”
“I mean I kinda have to, don’t I? Would be a real dick move of me to not tell him about this. Even if he doesn’t deserve me speaking to him ever again.”
“I think that depends on what you decide you want to do. If you want to keep it, then yeah you’re gonna have to tell him. But if you don’t, then we go to the clinic this week and he remains none the wiser. Either choice is okay, whatever you decide to do will be the right decision for you.” I take a deep breath, enjoying having her here to support me.
“See that’s the thing, my first instinct is that I want to keep it. I’ve always thought that I could go either way on having kids, but now that it’s staring me in the face I can’t imagine not going through with it.” Saying it out loud all but confirms my decision - this is happening. I’m going to have a baby. And I’m going to have to tell Robby.
“Then that’s what will happen. I’ve got your back through all of it, and if you want me to hide upstairs while you tell Robby I can do that. I’ll even chase him out if he acts a fool.” She’s serious, and I love her for that.
“Might not be a terrible idea. The last thing I want is for him to be involved purely out of obligation.” I debate stopping there, not divulging the depths of my (unadvised) feelings for him, but I’ve already gone this far so what’s the harm. “I’m like, stupidly in love with that man. Have been for a long time, and I was happy to have it kinda live in the background of my life up until recently. He approached me at that party we had for Jesse and we hit it off, and he was really sweet. Told me that he’s been wanting to kiss me for months and that he hasn’t been able to get me out of his head. We each had a few drinks, but I wasn’t drunk. A little tipsy for sure, but sober enough to consent and be smart about it. Then he was gone when I woke up and you’ve seen how he’s been since then.” She grimaces a little before responding.
“Yeah, he’s been in rare Robby form. Very broody. But, Iris, I really think he meant what he told you. Handled it terribly for sure, but he’s so thoroughly fucked up in the past that his ex literally left the state. He’s probably just trying to protect you in his own, very fucked up way.” I laugh and try to wipe away the tears staining my face, but they just keep coming.
“Well he’s doing a terrible job. Is it crazy of me to make him go to therapy before I let him really be involved? Is that, like, blackmailing?” The last thing I want out of all this is for my kid to be hurt in the same way - their dad hot and cold, unable to really make a commitment to be present in their life.
“Maybe a bit, but I fully support you in that. I actually think that’s plenty reasonable, and if he gives you pushback then he’ll hear about it from me.” So quick to jump in and support me, even when the problem is one of her best and longest friends. “If it makes you feel any better, the second I said your name at the bar earlier he looked like he was two seconds away from taking my phone and checking on you himself.” A mirthful laugh escapes me at that, it does not make me feel better.
“Then blackmail it is. Now, how the fuck am I supposed to have this conversation with him when I can’t even get him to say three consecutive words to me that aren’t directly work related?”
We spend the next hour brainstorming, and by the time she leaves I feel better. I have a loose plan, my tear ducts have long since run dry, and I no longer feel like I’m about to fuck my whole life up.
I make myself a list before I go to sleep - things I need to buy for first trimester health, food I should avoid, and symptoms I’ve been experiencing so I can be as informed as possible.
My list exhausts me (that, and the tiny human I’m currently cooking) and I fall into a blissful, dreamless sleep as soon as my head hits the pillow.
***
I spend the next three days making more lists. Baby names, furniture, birth plans. If there’s a relevant list to be made - it’s currently up on my fridge.
My first day back at work since The Event (TM) is fine, I guess. Dana greets me with a hug and a quiet check in, and while this isn’t that out of the ordinary it is unusual that she pulls me off the floor to do it. I feel Robby’s eyes track us as we walk back in from the ambulance bay, especially when we get closer and Dana does not smell like she’s just come back from a smoke break.
I treat Robby to his own taste of the silent treatment. No niceties, no attempts at small talk. Strictly patient care and work related conversations, and honestly conversations is a generous word. Terse exchanges is more accurate. I don’t let it get in the way of my job, and if I do say so myself I really knock it out of the park nursing wise.
Three shifts pass in this manner, three shifts where I can feel him fucking watching me like he knows something is up. Thirty-six hours of me sitting on the biggest fucking secret I’ve ever kept when all I really want to do is yell “Hey, fuckface! You ghosted me and it sucked, and I’m fucking angry about. By the way, I’m pregnant with your child. Get some god damn therapy if you’d like to be involved!” And then walk out, leaving him to stand with the aftermath of his actions.
But, unfortunately, I am professional adult so I don’t do that. I do heavily fantasize about it though.
Samira notices that something is up right away, but she is also on a long stretch of shifts so we agree to hang out when our work weeks are both done. We meet for breakfast at the closest Denny’s and she spits her coffee out when I tell her that not only did I sleep with Robby, but that there’s going to be literal life long consequences for it come early June.
“Oh my god. I would ask if you’re okay, but I think I can answer that myself. When are you going to tell him?” I shrug as I finish my bite of French toast.
“Great question. He’s been fucking frosty towards me lately and it doesn’t have me feeling very generous towards him. I know he deserves to know but god the thought of that conversation makes me want to punch a wall.” Another bite of toast. “I know that a few weeks after we slept together was the anniversary of Pitt Fest and Adamson’s death, but the way he’s been treating me does not make me want to tell him. It makes me want to be spiteful and keep it from him until the last possible second, so he can be as blindsided as I feel right now. Very immature of me, and I won’t do that but it’s nice to entertain it for a bit.”
“He’s clearly fumbling the bag pretty hard right now, but you and I both know he’s going to do the right thing.”
“I know, and that’s almost worse. If he’s going to be all emotionally constipated while attempting to be present I am going to lose my shit. Dana said she thinks I am well within my rights to threaten him with therapy, so I think that’s my game plan.”
“That’s - that’s actually a great idea. If anything will get that man into therapy it’s the threat of potentially fucking up his child’s life.” She chuckles a bit. “Can I tell Jack? I will obviously swear him to secrecy but it might be nice to have him in your corner.”
“Please do - but if he tells Robby before I do I will kill him.”
“And I will help you hide the body. Also, he’s picking me up from this meal so if you’d like to fill him in yourself you’re about to have your window.” Like she summoned him, Jack Abbot walks in the door. He immediately finds Samira and she waves him over.
I decide that I do not have another long, emotional story in me and just spit it out.
“Hi, Jack.” He looks at me a little weird, we’re friendly at work but I don’t think I’ve ever called him by his first name before. “Welcome to the party, you’re about to hear some very classified information so prepare yourself.” He stares at me, a little stunned, but I just keep on talking. “I’m pregnant and keeping it. Robby’s the father, but I haven’t told him yet.” His jaw drops open, and he has to open and close it a few times before actual words come out.
“Uhhh, wow. Fuck. Are you, uhm, are you going to tell him?”
“I mean, yeah. Not sure when or how, but yeah. What’s your opinion on me using this as an opportunity to threaten him into therapy?” This gets a loud, genuine laugh from him.
“I think that’s a wonderful idea. You want my therapists number? I’ve given it to him multiple times but he’s clearly never used it.” Abbot doesn’t wait for me to answer, just pulls a card out of his wallet and hands it to me. “Are you doing okay? Managing symptoms alright?”
“Yeah, I’m okay. Thanks. Freaking the fuck out, but okay.” With that, I decide I’ve had enough social interaction for the day. “Now that all that’s out of the way, I’m going to head home. Samira, love you, thanks for the support, and Jack I’m a little sorry to drag you into all this but thankful that you’re here anyway.” I leave them at that, dropping enough cash to cover my meal and all but running to my car so I can have my next meltdown in peace.
***
I’m a little embarrassed to admit that I let another two full weeks pass before I even consider telling Robby. Erica, Dana, and Samira are all on my case a little bit but ultimately don’t push me too hard.
It takes an extra long session with Erica, complete with roll play and multiple outcomes of the conversation for me to feel even slightly ready to broach the subject with him. We decide that I’ll attempt to talk to him after our next shift together, a rare night where neither of us have to be in the next morning.
Dana knows, and as she leaves out the ambulance bay doors she shoots me a very encouraging thumbs up and a ‘call me!’ While I wait for him to leave. I don’t have to wait much longer. 10 minutes pass before I see him walk out, backpack slung over his shoulders and thick winter jacket thrown on like it’s armor. He doesn’t turn his head to look at me as he passes.
I parked at the very end of the lot today, hoping to use my car as an excuse to follow him for a bit. As we approach my green Honda CRV, I know it’s time to bite the bullet.
“Hey, uh, Robby? Can we talk for a sec?” He pauses, takes an AirPod out, and turns to face me. He looks like shit. Tired, like he hasn’t had a good sleep in weeks. I feel mean for thinking it, but I’m glad he’s getting just as much (little?) rest as I am.
“I’ve got somewhere to be, Iris. Now’s not a good time.” He maybe facing me, but he’s not really looking at me. Fucking infuriating.
“It won’t take long, please. It’s kinda important.” Fuck him for making me plead to have a conversation - this is starting to feel a little humiliating. I can feel the tears forming and threatening to spill out, but he isn’t looking at me so he doesn’t see them.
“Not now. There isn’t really anything for us to talk about. I have to go, I’ll see you later.” And with that, he’s got his AirPod back in and is walking away. Fucking dick. The hot sting of rejection sits heavy in my chest, and I have to take a few minutes before I feel steady enough to drive home.
I work myself up pretty well on the way home, moving from shame to anger. I kick my shoes off in the entry way and slam my bag down, feeling like I need to scream. I decide a run will suffice and quickly change into my running gear. As I slip on my shoes and grab my running belt I decide there’s something I need to do first, and pull my phone out to send the riskiest text I’ve ever sent.
Iris (7:58pm)
Hi, asshole. I have been working up the nerve to talk to you for weeks, but since I apparently don’t deserve even five minutes of your time I guess this is how you’re going to find out.
I attach a picture of the tests and hit send, and then immediately send a follow up.
Iris (7:59pm)
Before you have the fucking audacity to ask, yes it’s yours and I’ll be keeping it.
I immediately put my phone on do not disturb and start my watch so I can track my run. I hit the pavement with a vengeance. My feet feel heavy beneath me, and it takes me longer than usual to feel warmed up enough to really run. I play my angriest playlist, and run until I no longer feel like murdering the father of my unborn child.
I hit my favorite smoothie place on my way home, and as I walk and warm down I call Dana.
“So I told him.” She gasps. “But, uh, over text. I tried to talk to him as he left but he blew me off and I was just so fucking angry and maybe jumped the gun a little, but it’s done now.”
“How are you feeling about it, hon?”
“Terrified. Have not checked to see if he’s responded. A little elated? But like, in a manic way so maybe that’s not a good thing.” Dana laughs and reassures me.
“It’s alright, kid. That’s a big step you just took and you tried to do it in person, so fuck it. You want me to come over?” She asks, just as I turn the corner onto my street. My heart all but stops as I see an unfortunately familiar suburban parked in front of my house, and my breathing stops with it when I see that the man himself is sitting on my front steps.
“Ah fuck.”
“He’s at your house, isn’t he?” She’s far too smart for her own good, or maybe she just knows him too well.
“Yup.” God dammit, past Iris. Did you really have to send those texts?
“I can still come over if you want.” Seriously considering taking her up on that.
“No, I’ll handle him. But, maybe later? If and when I need to cry about this?”
“I’ll be waiting by the phone. You’ve got this, kid. Give him hell.”
#the Pitt#the pitt fanfiction#Robby x original female character#michael robby robinavitch#dr robby#dana evans#samira mohan#jack abbot#Robby x therapy#we stan therapy in this house#rough draft#wip
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overthinker gf that struggles to communicate x art donaldson :")
– angsty ig, no resolution because i'm like that :3 i've had this in my drafts for the longest time and i wanted to finish it so i did yay
your roommate sighed for the hundredth time as she watched you roll over your bed once more, a frown evident on your face as you threw your phone somewhere beside you. "no text?"
you shook your head, blinking away the anxious tears springing in your eyes. "he's probably still at practice" you sigh, looking over your bedside clock. 10:40 pm, tennis practice usually ends at 9.
"did you two fight or something?" your roommate spoke from her bed, typing away at her laptop. "no, i mean– i don't know, nothing happened. it was just, for the past few weeks we were like, inseparable, you know? but not in an unhealthy way, we just enjoyed each other's company but now the vibe is weird. he isn't texting as much, the other night he hung up in the middle of the call then just forgot about it"
"how long has this been happening?"
you give her a lazy, sheepish smile. "three days?"
"jesus, (y/n)."
you sit up, ready to defend yourself. "it's not just that! it's–, he introduced me to his friends, tashi and patrick. they're dating and tashi is really nice to me but they're ... close"
"so what? she's dating someone else and he's dating you"
you stared down onto your lap, fiddling your fingers anxiously. "yeah, i know. i guess i just feel, left out? they all have something only they have in common, y'know?"
your roommate sighed, shutting her laptop closed and leaning back onto her bed. "have you atleast talked to him about it?" you shook your head.
"i don't know, he's got a lot on his plate and i don't want to bother him. maybe it'll pass" you respond with a sigh, falling back onto your bed. you prayed it will.
the next few days had been weird, you weren't having problems with art but it wasn't perfect either— you were floating in between. and for an anxiously attached girlfriend like you, that was enough to make you spiral.
you chewed on your bottom lip, your laptop situated on your lap long forgotten. it was half an hour past midnight and you haven't received a single text from him since this noon. you tried your best to calm yourself, he is a student athlete after all, his schedule probably sucks and he's exhausted. you shook your head with a sigh, returning to face the screen and attempt to finish your paper.
your phone buzzed beside you and you scrambled to grab it from under the covers. it was him, art, video calling.
your previous thoughts forgotten as you clicked on answer. "hey" you smile, "where are you?"
the video was blurry but clear enough to show that he was in a diner booth. "i'm just grabbing something to eat with tashi and patrick, there wasn't much to eat at the party"
"party?"
"oh yeah, i didn't tell you? the seniors on the tennis team threw sort of a farewell party. here, say hi to tashi" the brunette appeared beside him, waving at the camera with a big smile— clearly intoxicated.
you tried to ignore the jealousy bubbling in the pit of your stomach, watching as she rests her chin on art's shoulder. "hey tashi" you greet back, "where's your other half?" you didn't mean for it to come out that way, in a sort of back off warning tone.
"he's out in the parking lot having a smoke" she giggled before pushing herself off art, "i gotta go pee" you hear her say. and when she leaves, you're silent.
art furrows his eyebrows as he brings the camera back to face him, "baby, you okay?"
you swallowed the lump in your throat, nodding stiffly. "yeah, yeah i'm just tired. been working on my paper for hours now and i still haven't finished."
"maybe you should sleep first and do it tomorrow?" the blonde says.
you lowered your eyes, "yeah, maybe." you wanted to say what was bothering you, ask if the two of you are okay but for some reason, it wouldn't come out.
"you know i miss you, right?" his voice coarse through the line, "i've just been really busy lately and i'm tired. i'm sorry"
you shook your head, your voice small. "it's okay, i miss you too" maybe you were so deep in overthinking things that you made it all about you, he's just exhausted. that's it.
"go sleep, i love you"
"g'night, art." you dropped the call.
#saintzweig writes ⋅˚₊‧ ୨୧ ‧₊˚ ⋅#art donaldson x reader#challengers#art donaldson#challengers x reader
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11 • 06 • 25 11:55 pm

Wednesday recap
Note: I want to add that i actually wrote this the day the exam went on, but for some reason i forgot to update it and has been sitting on my drafts all this time and i noticed it just now 😭
I can feel this will be a long update again, i'm sorry
Today was my final exam of Clinical Practice and hopefully my last academic exam from the career 🥹. Again there is a lot of mixed feelings about that because ofc there is this relieve of finally ending this but at the same time nostalgic because wow i can't believe that all this years of curricular worries somehow end here?! I still don't completely process the idea and maybe later this will feel like a bruise
About the test... well, we had pretty much time to prepare for it (a little bit more than a week) and for that reason i felt like this sense of responsability to have to do well on it. I would love to say that said time i got under lockdown and studied, but the reality is that i started just this weekend
I wish i had administrated better my time because still this morning i was rushing trying to fit more concepts in my mind
About the dinamic of the test... it goes like this: the professors who teached and supervised us in this subject/headquarter (5) are divided in four different módulos (for visual purposes, all of this was in a big room with with smaller rooms inside, all of them conected by a station in the center) in each we had to do different procedures, first when we enter the room the teacher hands us a paper with the record of our patient and at the bottom the instructions of what they need us to do, the patients in each station are real people but they're actors so they're ready to answer questions and fake pains and complains 😭; in this occasion i have to say, the professors were pretty generous with the time, the gave us 12 minutes per module and we had to enter in groups of four and just rotate the stations everytime the alarm went off.
In past semesters i have to confess we had the opportunity to cheat a little because once someone finished the exam and went out of the room we interrogated them to know how was the exam, what we had to do, what did the professors ask etc etc, but of course the teachers knew this happened outside so this time they decided to do some changes and made us stay in a waiting room outside the place of the exam, the ones who finished leaved for another door and we didn't get to interact again because we also had to leave our phones inside our backpacks in another room 🫠
For me, the first station was a patient with a transfemoral amputation, (it was a rag doll 😭) i had to do it's physiotherapy diagnosis and then explain precautions i must have before giving them a treatment according with their record, then demostrate the procedure to do a correct bandage on the amputatėd member, and finally explain a treatment i would do to increase strength on the member. For this station i felt my diagnosis was a disaster because i was so nervous i forgot to mention a lot of things and some of the terms i had to use plus i'm not sure if i got to finish explaining my treatment because the alarm indicating the time went off
Second station, this one had a real person as a patient, i had again to do her physioterapy diagnosis after reading her record, i had to ask her a few questions in order to finish my diagnosis (i felt like i did better this time) and then do a treatment to help her gain core strength and stability, she was in a wheel chair and my creativity on the spot only lasted me enough to indicate two excercises 🥹 so at the end i had so much time left; but i felt the girl who was playing the rol of the patient was so kind with me
Third station was with a pediatric patient, for this one the actress was the mom and the patient was a doll, after reading her record i had to do the anamnesis for the perinatal history, then demostrate with the baby how to value two reflexes, for me it was moro and babinski and mention until which age it's normal for them to be present, i said the age of one of them wrong 🥲, also answer the random questions the mom had about the baby, the valoration and her worries and again i felt like i had too much time left at the end
Finally for the last station it was with the Dra. (i always adress her because she has been one of my teachers since the first semester of the career, and she actually also was the coordinator of the career at the time, she's a person that imposes me a lot but with the time i have learn that she is actually pretty gentle and that she just acts like she does because she really want us to become the best professional version of ourselves) in this one was with a neurological patient in the ICU after reading his record i had to explain what one of his patologies was: hemopneumothorax i explained it wrong because i said air insteand of blōod but i just noticed it as i'm writing this 😭; then mention again the parameters i must be cautious about to do an intervention according with his state (which i'm also just remembering i forgot to mention the most important one, the intracraneal pressure screamssssss 😭) and finally do his valoration. For the simulation there was a sound of the hospital monitor in background (you know the typical beep beep beep that indicates the heart rate .-.) so in the middle of my valoration it started going much faster and i had to call a "doctor" (another actor) who was outside the room to help stabilize it (i knew the drill because they did the exact same thing for the exam last semester 😮💨) after he helps with it the doctor introduced himself and asked me if i could help administrate certain treatment for the patient and i told him that just let me finish my intervention and i would see what i could do about it, but when he left the room i explained to the Dra. that i couldn't do what he asked me for because the administration of what he asked me to do was contraindicated for his case for all of the other several injuries the patient had on the place he indicated me, and the Dra. told me 'of course, thank you!' ; the actor patient was unconcious for his rol, but after i said that to the Dra. i saw him giving me a little tumbs up without her noticing it (he was so cute for that 🥹 and i felt so relieved and sincerely that helped me gain so much confidence to continue) still i didn't get to do much after it, and i didn't finish my valoration because the alarm went off. Again i didn't do perfect on this module but at the same time i didn't feel like a lost case
In general i'm aware i didn't do perfect in this exam and i had several mistakes which i have to improve but eventough i feel so much more confident now than how i felt for the last semester's final exam
I have hope things will going to be alright :)
If you reached this far i'm sorry it was too long or boring, but thank you so much for reading 𖹭
Good night everyone, sleep tight and rest well! ✨
#journal#journaling#journey#life journey#life#life blog#life blogging#lifeblogging#lifeblr#college life#college student#college blog#college motivation#college#student blog#student life#study blog#study motivation#studyblr#studyspo#student#study#university#university student#university studyblr#university stuff#physiotherapy#physical therapy#physiotherapy student#girlblog
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Francis: which state do you live in?
Hawthorne: denial
Poe: constant anxiety
Twain: Florida
#bsd incorrect quotes#bsd francis fitzgerald#bsd francis#bsd hawthorne#bsd poe#bsd twain#how long has this been sitting in my drafts?#I don’t even know
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I’m interested in how both Charles and Edwin treat the whole idea of being “detectives.” Obviously, they are detectives. They have formed a detective agency, they run cases, it’s their whole thing; it’s how they spend their afterlives. But it’s more than just that.
They both take the detective work very seriously. Edwin comes off, generally, as more serious than Charles about it, with his little asides about being a “proper” detective and the methodical ways he likes to do things, but Charles is clearly into it, too. And sometimes it feels so clearly like they’re playing at the idea of being detectives that it’s almost like a game or a roleplay for them. They want to be (and are) detectives, but they are two teenage boys who have styled themselves after the idea of being detectives. Then there are moments where this “performance” of detective work begins to break down.
For Edwin, this happens earlier in the season. In the first episode, he admits that the detective work matters because he needs it, emotionally, to matter. His and Charles’s cases didn’t get solved, no one cared. He needs someone to care. That’s his investment in being a detective; its more than just a game for him. When the Cat King casts his truth spell, this is only built upon. He says he does the detective work, too, because he wants to stay out of hell. For a while, though, I was trying to find Charles’s investment. Yeah, his case was also written off when he died, but didn’t seem as upset about that as Edwin. On the first watchthrough, I wondered if Charles’s investment in the detective work was simply because Edwin was invested.
Then there’s episode 4, when Charles beats the Night Nurse, and part of the speech he yells at her is about being a detective. I think that’s when it started to click for me that there was something deeper going on with him, too, about the detective work specifically. Charles is upset he died, he never came to terms with it. I wonder if part of the reason he’s so invested in being a detective is because it gives him a sense of purpose and impact that he misses from being alive. He could never stop the things he wanted to stop, never protect the people he wanted to protect, but at least he has this, with Edwin. At least they are detectives, and Charles can feel needed, feel like his life didn’t end so early for no reason at all.
I think a lot about the concept of ghosts having unfinished business and how that might apply to both Charles and Edwin, and I think that the detective agency, despite how it sometimes comes off as playacting, is deeply tied to both of their psyches. Edwin needs the detective agency to feel like there was a point to everything that happened to him. That maybe no one cared he disappeared, and maybe he ended up in hell, but it wasn’t for nothing. They can try to keep it from happening to anyone again. And Charles? Well, he needs the detective agency because there was no point to what happened to him. He shouldn’t have died, and he’s not ready to move on to an afterlife. He needs to feel like he’s needed, like there’s something he can do. If it hadn’t been a detective agency these two formed, it would have been something else because they had too many deep-rooted issues that have been sublimated into the agency itself.
#something about the agency itself fascinates me#and how both boys are so unserious about it sometimes#but also so serious about it#it’s a game but it’s not. it’s an attempt to do something about the traumas that haunt them but it’s not#schroedinger’s agency#dbda#dead boy detectives#edwin payne#charles rowland#meta#eposts#waffled for a while over whether I would ever actually post this#and I keep feeling like I could eventually make it cleaner/more concise#but this has been sitting in my drafts long enough that I needed to just get it out there
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Male characters don’t seem to inspire this kind of public venting and vitriol.
Mythal (& Solas) // Anna Gunn's I Have a Character Issue
#i love you Problematic Wife Characters#mythal#evanuris#solythal#dragon age the veilguard#datv#fandom critical#i see over and over how women who commit the same crimes as men get called all sorts of misogynistic insults.#or i have to see post after post about violent misogynistic fantasies of putting a woman in her place.#solas and mythal are a package deal. they are redeemed together. or they are punished together. because again. they did the same crime.#mythal has been tortured for centuries. was that enough? solas has been suffering for centuries.#is that enough too? those are the questions.#EDIT: wow this was sitting in my drafts for so long because i’ve been scared to post#but im so tired of going through the mythal tags and it's just the most unhinged shit i've ever seen.
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Oh, Lala...
#atla#avatar the last airbender#atla fanart#atla art#atla azula#princess azula#atla ursa#suki#atla suki#kyoshi warriors au#kyoshi warriors#Kyoshi Warrior Ursa AU#wip#I felt like sharing a little snippet of a two-page comic I've been working on for AGES#Literally you have no idea for how long this has been sitting on my drafts#Mainly because I keep getting sidetracked by new AUs and sketches and projects. But that's nothing new so#This one is a deep-ish dive into the basic character dynamics between the Fire Siblings as well as Ursa and Suki#Or should I say#Between the siblings Ruolan and Jian Li regarding their mother Noriko and each other.#I know the names can get rather confusing. I'd love to explain the reasoning behind them if anyone would like to know tho#Moving on#There's a lot to unpack in that scene#The characters are different from how we know them due to their circumstances in this AU. But they have things in common with the og series#Of course that remains for you to see#I'm so excited to finish this and share it with you guys!#Some of you have been asking about Azula/Ruolan and Ursa/Noriko in this AU and I am here to deliver#I love the dynamic between this little family SO much it's driving me insane#That being said#What do you get from this panel alone? What do you think it's happening?#I'd love to hear your thoughts on this
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Haleth & Caranthir.
#this has been sitting on my drafts for so long...#haleth#caranthir#i did try something so different here#idk idk#silmarillion art#silmarillion#how do you tag things anymore my god#feanorians#my silm
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OUR BOY IS BACK!!!!!!!!!!!!
#WE FUCKING MADE IT GUYS#WE SURVIVED#I’VE BEEN WAITING FOR SO LONG#HE’S FINALLY HERE#LITERALLY I'M CRYING RIGHT NO#MY BOY HAS COME BACK TO ME#I WANNA THROW MYSELF INTO THE SUN#don’t ask how long this post has been sitting in my drafts btw#star wars#ahsoka show#isezrahomeyet#star wars rebels#ezra bridger#ahsoka series#ahsoka spoilers#sabine wren#ahsoka tano
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Some headcanons about Snotlout's appeance:
• He's 5"3, his legs are especially short
• Soft muscles, he's proud of his arms and chest in particular (hence the v neck)
• Lots of moles ! Mainly on his torso
• Also freckles, but they’re rather faint
• Even tho he's naturally pale he's got a slight tan, moreso than the other riders
• His hair is dark brown but in the winter months it looks almost black
• As a teen his skin was pretty bad so now he has a rigorous beauty routine that he ties in with rubbing gel into Hookfangs scales every evening
• He lotions his hands to avoid callouses/dry skin and people are frequently suprised by how soft his hands are
• He has many burn marks from years of riding a nightmare, when they're alone together Hookfang likes to lick them in a soothing fashion, he feels a little bad since he tends to forget how fragile his little rider is and Snotlout loves the pampering
• Lots of little scars as well, especially around his hands from handling weapons since a young age
• His hair is very thick but it gets greasy easily so he washes it often
• If he doesn’t get to do his routine for some reason (for example after the riders got captured) he gets cranky
• He plucks his eyebrows to keep them neat
• He's has long thick eyelashes :)
• He's got a bit of a front tooth gap
• In a mondern setting the gang would 100% have to talk Snotlout out of getting veneers ( his teeth aren't even bad someone just made a comment to spite him and he hasn’t been able to stop thinking about it for weeks)
• He's extremely expressive and moves his hands constantly while speaking to the point of just flailing his arms around
• He can wiggle his ears
• He's aware that his voice becomes high when agitated but he can’t really control it and when u point it out it gets even worse
• He doesn’t have much body hair and is terribly insecure about not being able to grow a proper beard
• Very ticklish, especially around the neck and at his sides
• Blushes very easily, doesn’t matter whether he's feeling bashful or upset
#httyd#how to train your dragon#rtte#race to the edge#snotlout#snotlout jorgenson#my baby#i love him#tiihiihii#this has been sitting in my drafts for too long
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Grey
Steve Harrington x fem!reader
Synopsis: Steve gets a wake up call from yall's daughter
Contents: talks of aging, kids being kids, references to smut but nothing explicit
Steve groans as his consciousness comes to. Something is hitting his face. Someone. Repeatedly.
Steve squints his bleary eyes open as a hand smacks him in the jaw again. A small smile appears on his face even though his jaw stings from the impact. "Morning," Steve's voice is still thick with sleep as he turns to look into brown eyes barely peeking over the edge of the bed.
A quiet voice repeats back ,"Morning," to Steve before arms reach up over the edge of the bed to try and grasp something. Small hands grab the blanket and tug it off of him slightly as the child attempts to climb up. At two and half, Amelia Joy Harrington can barely see above the edge of her parents' bed, let alone get on it.
Steve hoists Amelia up and sits her on his stomach. Steve winces as Amelia scrambles, a stray foot hitting his thigh precariously close to his crotch. Arms are thrown around his neck in a hug as Amelia lays her head against her dad's chest.
Steve feels like his heart could burst out of his chest from the joy he is feeling. A hug from his baby? The best way to wake up in the morning. Who cares if his jaw is still stinging and probably red, his little girl loves him.
Steve sighs in contentment. Steve holds his daughter close until she starts to fidget and wiggle. Amelia sits up and throws her hands in the air. "Happy Birthday!" She whispers excitedly, except she has no concept of how quiet a whisper should actually be and says it in a much too loud voice.
"What?" Steve asks, hand hovering near Amelia's side in case she slips. Amelia's eyebrows furrow as she pouts at him, a look that is an exact copy of you. Her arms slowly lower as she stares at Steve. "Happy Birthday. You old." Amelia pouts at him.
Steve blinks at Amelia in confusion but nods his head. First off, rude, he isn't that old. Steve isn't sure where she gets her unfiltered, blunt commentary (it absolutely isn't him). Second, it absolutely isn't his birthday. Not even close.
"Why uh...why is it my birthday?" Steve asks, unsure if Amelia fully understands the concept. Not sure if he can explain the idea of a birthday to a two (and a half) year old. "Grey." Amelia declares giving Steve whiplash. Before Steve can speak, Amelia points at the comforter," Blue." Steve smiles," Yes, blue."
Amelia points to her shirt," Green." Steve nods. Amelia taps under Steve's eye, lashes brushing against her finger causing him to close it. Steve hopes she doesn't attempt to actually poke his eye.
"Brown." Amelia declares. "Thats right." Steve grins, his girl is so smart. Amelia points to his temple," Grey." "That's ri- what?! No!" Steve's mouth drops open as Amelia giggles. "Uncle Dustbin says grey is old. Birthday makes old. Happy Birthday!"
The creak of the loose floorboard in the hall notifies Steve of your approach. You peek into the doorway of the room, seeing your two favorite people. One looking aghast and the other giggling at her father's reaction.
"What's going on in here?" You ask, leaning against the doorway. "Grey. Birthday." Amelia announces, like it explains everything. And it does in her little mind.
You hum in response, looking at your husband who seems lost for words. Amelia slides off of Steve and off the bed, Steve guiding her so her feet land on the ground absent-mindedly. He would never let her fall or get hurt. Or you.
Amelia half walks half dances in your direction. A prance in her step, she stops in front of you and grabs your hands. "It's daddy's birthday," She says before headbutting your leg. You chuckle and pat her head as she dances out of the room, in her own little world.
"You lying to my kid again?" You ask once Amelia is gone. Steve sputters as he sits up," I did not- our kid- did not lie." "Uh-huh, sure," you say sarcastically. Steve rolls his eyes at you as he gets up out of bed.
Steve stretches as he rocks on his feet, back cracking, before strolling over to you. "Good morning," Steve mumbles, hand landing on your hip. You hum back as he leans in and kisses you. Soft. Slow. Sweet. Leaving you longing for more as he pulls back.
"Love you," Steve says, fingers running along the waistband of your pants. "I love you too," you want to melt into him. Curl up in his arms and stay in this moment. Let the love and adoration fill the air around you.
"Do I look old?" Steve is the first to break the silence. Your brow furrows in confusion," huh?" "Amelia she," Steve huffs out a laugh," said I have grey hair." You chuckle as you bring a hand up, fingers threading through his hair," You have some but its nice." "Its nice huh?" "Makes you look distinguished. Handsome." You bite your lip and look up at him.
Steve knows that look. Knows it well. It's the look you gave him the first time you moved past just making out. The same look you gave him on your first anniversary. The same look you wore on your wedding night. The same look you gave before Amelia was conceived.
Steve can't help the smirk that spreads across his face. If getting old gives him that look, well, he won't complain.
"What about me?" You ask, batting your lashes. "Beautiful," Steve kisses your cheek," Gorgeous," he kisses the corner of your lips. He continues to alternate between kissing all over your face and praising you.
"My love," Steve whispers before kissing you softly on the lips. You sigh into the kiss, one hand tangling in his hair, the other trying to pull him closer.
A loud crash from the living room has you two pulling back from the sweet moment you stole. "What was that?" You call down the hall. "Nothing!" Amelia yells back, making you sigh but smile. Steve can't help but grin too. His life was a little hectic dealing with a rambunctious child, but he wouldn't trade it for the world. And he thinks, if life is like this, he can manage getting old with you. He wouldn't want it any other way.
#Steve whines to Robin later who just sits there laughing until she cries#Until he points out she's aged too because she has laugh lines from smiling and then she spirals just a bit#He has to hold her hand and tell her its a good thing and she goes on a rant about anti-aging and its harder for women then men#How there's all this extra pressure and Steve is aghast like he isnt dumb he knew there was but he never heard it all verbalized#He comes home and kisses you and gets on his knees and tells you he loves you#He then begs you to let him show you how much he loves you wanting nothing more then to use his tongue on you#I mean why would you not let him#And when you lay in bed cuddling after he thinks again he doesn't mind aging if he's doing it with you#You wake up abruptly in the middle of the night and startle him awake#“Oh my God Amelia is going to go to high school and get a boyfriend” you whine#Steve just mutters an oh God and immediately starts thinking if it would be TOO much to have the nail bat when he speaks to said boyfriend#You both think about it for a long time meanwhile Amelia is asleep in her room with drool running out of her mouth hugging a stuffed animal#Anyways Steve nation we up??? This has been drafted for awhile but not posted but I am inspired#And I saw this and went oh yeah post that#So here it is...for u...on this fine Friday early morning#Jade is talking#steve harrington x reader#Steve harrington x you#Steve Harrington x y/n#Steve Harrington/you#Steve Harrington/reader#steve harrington x female!reader
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#AY YO LISTEN UP 🗣️🗣️🗣️#happy pride month !!!!!! (imagine i posted this in pride month)#this has been sitting in my drafts for an absurdly long time#this is for mark#have yall seen the mark lookalike contest ????/#actually so embarrassing how neos mobbed him im so sorry for mark#i wish he couldve enjoyed it but no fans had to ruin it for him#kpop#nct#nct 127#nct dream#wayv#nct u#kpop memes#nct memes#nct wish#riize#mark#mark lee#nct 127 mark#mark nct#nct dream mark#mark imagines#nct smau#nctzen#nct imagines#nct fanfic#nct dream x reader#nct dream smau#nct x reader
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'A Rich Girl With Issues... Lots of Issues' title animation!
This animation is my tribute for @inkedroplets brilliant fic to celebrate its completion!
If you haven't already, please do yourself a favour and go read this amazing fic!
You can click here to start it
This fic has such a special place in my heart, and I hope you all enjoy it as much as I do.❤️
#so remember when you told me you nearly done with the chapter and i asked how long do you think till you publish it?#thats why#i really hope you like it darling#and yes it has been sitting in my draft waiting to be publish ever since#and it was worth it#supercorp#supergirl#kara danvers#lena luthor#my art#my animation#supercorp fic#rich girl#inkedroplets#this is the only sentence written today. im not gonna say when the rest of it was written🤣
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Do it.... share more goblin lore 👀
They have a queen. (ᅌᴗᅌ✿) (Only other goblins have ever seen her without a mask though.)
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