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#sodone one sentence
hotchley · 2 years
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𝕙𝕠𝕥𝕔𝕙𝕝𝕖𝕪'𝕤 𝕓𝕚𝕣𝕥𝕙𝕕𝕒𝕪 𝕔𝕖𝕝𝕖𝕓𝕣𝕒𝕥𝕚𝕠𝕟
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I actually can’t believe we’re here, but my blog has turned two! It’s been two years of ups and downs in my personal life, but two years of fandom love, growth in my writing and only one piece of anon hate!
And lots and lots of love and friends. So thank you all. The celebration is long so I’ll cut to the chase.
It’s running from June 30th-July 20th. Be patient as it may take me some time to get everything done
Everything will be tagged as “happy birthday hotchley” so you can either find it easily/blacklist it
No abusive relationships, keep it SFW and please don’t ask for anything related to food or self harm of any kind
If I follow your side blog and you follow me from your main, that counts as mutuals
Send as many as you want! But my stuff for LS/YR/TM may be less good because I’m less adjusted so just be warned.
It’s split into fandom and my novel just to make things simpler for me and anyone requesting
Everyone (anons welcome!):
fandom: [i'll do: criminal minds (s1-10), 911: lone star (all seasons), young royals, the mentalist (s1-3)]
💐 and a character/ship for a happy headcanon
🌷 and a character/ship for a sad headcanon
🌻 and a character/ship for a song that reminds me of them
🌼 and i’ll hand letter either a word or your url for you
🌹 and i’ll share one sentence from a wip
🪷and a fic idea i'm yet to write but that lives in my head rent free
🌸and i'll give you a directors cut of a fic/scene from a fic
🌺  and cast your mutuals as
novel:
🌲a random piece of information about the character
🌵 scene/line i enjoyed writing
🌳a scene/line i hated writing
🌴director’s cut of scene/chapter
🌱my favourite thing about character(s)/relationship(s)
🌿 my least favourite thing about character(s)/relationship(s)
🍀 a song that reminds me of character(s)/relationship(s)
Mutuals:
🪐 and i will give you a song that reminds me of your blog
☄️and i will give you a picture from one of my pinterest boards that reminds me of you
🚀and i will hand letter you a quote (please tell me if there’s a specific one, or a sort of theme you’d like me to stick to!)
🌕and i’ll write you a little love letter
💫and i will tell you about my favourite fic of yours (or headcanon, depending)
💥and a ship/character and i will shuffle my playlist and create an AU with the first viable song that plays
🌙and i will tell you about a scene or character trait from my novel that reminds me of you
🌏and i will draw you a little something- my art skills are very limited so this is more so we can all have a good time
I don’t have the words to say thank you, but I hope you all know I love you and am so grateful for all of you that have stuck around even as I’ve been absent and only ever complaining. You’re all amazing friends
Tagging some mutuals for signal boosting! @hotchgan @ellyhotchner @eldrai @skeleton-squid-boy @whump-town @masterwords @louisaland @olivinesea @natasha-barton @sodone-withlife @themetaphorgirl @sapphiics @theblackberrygirl
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sodone-withlife · 3 years
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one sentence
i saw sumayyah‘s answer to an anon’s ask (so all credit for this idea goes to them) about that scene in Omnivore where Rossi is offering Hotch his gun and this thing pretty much wrote itself (which is exceedingly rare lmao), so here is something that i thought would be just a few hundred words but ended up being a really long interpretation of the Foyet arc with hurt/minimal comfort with a good amount of pre-Mortch (or you can see them as platonic, i think it’s up for interpretation). 
also, just a quick heads up, i love Papa Rossi, but for the purposes of this fic, it might seem a little bash-y towards him
warnings: quite a bit of suicidal ideation, (almost) attempted suicide, implied/referenced suicide, canon-typical violence, canonical character death
word count: 7.9k words
The highlighted words stared back at Hotch as Shaunessy’s words echoed in his mind.
A deal with the devil.
“Yes, that’s exactly right,” he told Garcia.
“Because I found it, do I get to know what it’s about?” the analyst asked, unrepentantly curious. Hotch sent her a look.
Might as well. Shaunessy’s not going to last much longer, and we’ll be called in…  “The Reaper,” he said simply.
“Like—the Boston Reaper?” Garcia lowered her voice as she named the notorious killer. Hotch nodded. “I didn’t even know the BAU worked on that case,” she remarked. 
“1998,” Hotch informed her, remembering caffeine-fueled sleepless nights and the palpable fear on the streets. “It was my first case for the BAU as lead profiler.”
“Correct me if I’m wrong, but we don’t have a profile for the Reaper in the system, do we?”
Not in the system, no. “That’ll be all Penelope, you can go home now,” Hotch told Garcia, turning to the bottom drawer of the shelf behind his desk as the analyst nodded and left. Pulling out a worn folder bursting with papers and photos, he placed the newspaper clipping and the evidence bag protecting the contract into it. He left it to the side and refocused on the folder in front of him filled with sheets of old handwritten notes filled with annotations and crossed-out sections. 
There will be no sleeping tonight.
Early September, 1998
“You’re sending me?” Hotch was sitting ramrod straight in surprise, blindsided by Gideon’s sudden decision.
“Yeah,” Gideon answered simply, leaning back in his chair as much as he could in the cramped space and looking supremely unperturbed. “Do you not want to go?”
Hotch shook herself out of his shocked state, scrambling to gather his wits. “No—I mean, I’ll go, but—”
“But?”
Hotch carefully evaluated his words. “I’ve only been here a few months, and you’re sending me to Boston—alone—to help with the Reaper case? The case that has been going on for three years, longer than I’ve even been an agent, involving a killer that could probably put the Zodiac to shame?” 
The older agent shrugged. “I have to stay and hold down the fort since we are severely understaffed, but I’ll always be a phone call away, and you’re mainly there just to act as eyes for the both of us. You’re not working on this alone.”
Hotch stiffened as a sudden—but careful—warm touch on his hand pulled him out of the spiral of self-doubt he had been teetering over and grounded him. He brought his eyes back to Gideon and was surprised to see complete openness and no signs of deception or maliciousness that he had been forced to learn long ago at the hands of his father. 
“I’m not Dave,” Gideon began seriously, “I wasn’t the one who pulled you over here or the one you started out shadowing under, but I do talk to people. I know about your record in prosecution, in Seattle, and in SWAT, and it is very telling. You never doubted yourself before, and I have no doubt that you can handle yourself, so why are you starting now?” 
He leaned back, clearly done with the impromptu pep talk that Hotch, still frozen, figured happened once in a blue moon based on what Rossi had told him about the unit before he retired. The cramped room was silent as Hotch felt Gideon watching him struggling with internal strife. Slowly, he released some of the tension that was coiled within him, and Gideon turned back to his stack of consults with an air of satisfaction. 
“Start packing, Agent Hotchner. Boston awaits your presence.”
Late November, 1998
“Do you know what the hell is going on?” Hotch immediately asked when the call went through, pacing around his hotel room.
“And a good evening to you too.”
“Gideon.”
“What is it, Hotch?” his tone changed from dry to worried in a heartbeat, hearing the uncharacteristic urgency in his agent’s voice and the lack of nervousness that usually showed his agent’s discomfort towards using the less-formal form of address.
“Shaunessy, the lead detective,” Hotch spat out, throwing the case file that was in his hand on the bed. “He closed the case.”
“And that warrants a phone call at eleven PM, why?”
Hotch bit back a sharp retort, letting out a sharp breath. “You know I’ve been re-interviewing the victims’ friends and family, going through everything they had and lines of investigation that may have been dropped, working the profile along the way, but there have been no viable suspects, even with the accelerated killings,” he said quickly, a mess of emotions swirling inside him. “Gideon, no arrests have been made but he closed the case, just like that.”
“Remind me, when was the last victim?”
“Just over six weeks ago, a month after I got here. I know what you’re thinking,” Hotch said when Gideon didn’t respond, “that the case just went cold, but there were still things I had people following up on. It’s not cold,” he insisted.
“Well, there’s nothing you can do about it, Hotch. I know you don’t like it, but the locals have point on this.”
Hotch sighed, but it did nothing to calm him down. “I know,” he said, annoyed. “I’m catching an early train back to DC, I’ll see you tomorrow afternoon.”
January 2003
“The Reaper?”
Hotch slammed the folder shut and looked up from his desk, startled. He sent Gideon a glare, glad that no one else was there to see his composure slip, but he only looked vaguely concerned. 
“It’s been just over four years,” Gideon commented neutrally. “You’ve had that folder at the bottom of your third drawer, and you’ve pulled it out at least forty different times since ‘98.”
Hotch stared up at him in a challenge. “Is there something wrong with that?”
Gideon shook his head. “Just be careful. Don’t get too drawn into the chase.”
~~~
Sighing as he rubbed the familiar ache on the back of his neck that always appeared during paperwork days and especially stressful cases, Hotch closed his battered folder of notes and opened it back up again. It was almost compulsive at this point, repeating every twenty minutes and each time with the hope something new would catch his attention.
Hotch shifted, the bedsheets suddenly feeling unbearably scratchy and coarse even through his slacks. The case details buzzed around his head incessantly, distracting him from feeling the physical exhaustion and strain caused by the lack of proper sustenance and the stress of a day filled with dead ends.
The sudden ringing shattered the silence of the room, knocking him from his focus. He got up from the bed and warily walked over to the source, picking up the hotel phone and bringing it up to his ear. 
“Hotchner,” he said out of habit, only to freeze as the hairs on the back of his neck stood up in reaction to the sudden, heavy breathing. “Who is this?” he demanded, throwing the folder he was still holding back on the bed with dread rising within him. 
“If you stop hunting me, I’ll stop hunting them.” His question about the caller’s identity went unanswered, though the cursed words of the contract spoken by the same distorted voice that was heard on the 911 calls from ten years ago was confirmation enough.
Anger flared inside him at the audacity, and he snapped back, “You think I’d take that?”
“It’s a good deal,” the Reaper replied flatly.
“I’ve misjudged you,” he said, some distant part of him wondering how Shaunessy felt when he himself got the offer ten years ago. “I thought you were smarter than this,” he was unable to help the derisive tone.
The silence was long enough for him to wonder how much he had caught him unawares with his response. 
“You should take it.” 
“And you’ve misjudged me.”
“This is your last chance,” he warned.
Hotch didn’t hesitate. “I don’t make deals. I’m the woman who hunts guys like you.” That got the reaction he was hoping for.
“There are no guys like me,” the killer growled, anger bleeding into his tone.
He scoffed. “You all think that.”
“You’ll regret this,” he warned.
It was said with such certainty that a chill shot down his spine, but it was overshadowed by his anger. “I’ll see you soon,” he promised, promptly hanging up without another word. He walked back around the bed, feeling a sudden need to put as much distance between him and the phone as possible. It was with some hysterical hilarity that he wondered if the next people to stay in this room would know about what had just happened—that a serial killer tried to threaten an FBI agent into surrendering in this room.
Those feelings faded away when a terrible feeling suddenly came over Hotch as he realized the Reaper knew which hotel—which room—he was staying in.
It wasn’t unusual during their cases for an unsub to contact another person in the midst of their crimes, but the memories of Elle in the hospital bed and Morgan in the interrogation room had been seared into his brain. 
Both times, unsubs directly went after members of the team.
Unable to remain in the room any longer, he went around unceremoniously throwing his things inside his bags before leaving the hotel room. Paranoia quickly crept back into his consciousness as he quickly made his way down to the parking garage with a hand near his gun, intent on heading straight to the field office.
Only half an hour later, Hotch was staring at the glinting gold ring on the bus driver’s hand, feeling oddly detached from the situation as he was confronted with the consequences of that cursed phone call.
“6 bodies, not including the driver,” Rossi said from the back of the bus. “He put them down with a gun—or, more likely, guns—and finished them off with his knife.” 
The call had come straight to the field office, just minutes after Hotch walked into the empty conference room that the team had taken command of. A beat cop had heard a series of gunshots and went to investigate, only to see the macabre painting of blood on the side of the bus with its occupants slumped over inside, unmoving. “Arthur Lanessa’s wedding ring,” Hotch heard himself say for the other agent’s benefit.
“What’d he take?” Rossi made his way down to him in the front. 
He snapped back into the present with a sudden surge of anger. “Does it matter?” he asked bitingly, turning and storming away from the crime scene for the relative privacy of a nearby alley.
“Hey,” Rossi called in worry, taken aback by the brash response. “What’s going on with you?”
Hotch stopped some way into the alley and took a deep breath, taking his time before turning to Rossi, who had followed closely behind. “He called me tonight at my hotel room and offered me the deal.” 
“What did you say?”
“I hung up on him,” his eyes burned with the sting of tears—whether out of anger at the Reaper or himself, he wasn’t sure. “And then he does this.”
“So you think this is your fault?”
How could it be anything but? He looked away, trying to hide just how shaken he was. “It is.”
The familiar sound of the safety of a gun being released pulled his attention back to the man in front of him. “Well, here, use mine,” Rossi said, holding out his gun to him. “You convinced me. No, no, you hung up on him,” he pushed as he waved him off, pinching the bridge of his nose. “You practically killed them yourself—”
You practically killed them yourself.
You practically killed them yourself.
Killed them yourself.
Killed them. 
Yourself.
You.
You did this.
You should have made the deal
Hotch flinched away from the touch of cold metal against his head only to freeze in his place, ice settling in his bones as he processed what was happening. Barely seeing the horror on Rossi’s face, he stared at the other man’s empty hand before he focused in on the gun that was resting against his own head, tilted at an angle. There were five things he knew:
I have a finger on the trigger. 
My hand is trembling. 
I am still one of the best shots of the agents that are not in a tactical team.
Make one move, fire the gun, only the hearing in my right ear will be gone and the darkness continues to creep towards me.
Make a different move, fire the gun, I’ll leave Jack the legacy of a coward and Haley the knowledge that her efforts back in high school and college were for naught.
You did this, a malicious voice in his head said, sounding oddly like his father. And suddenly, he recalled the memory of the blood droplets hitting him and the ringing in his ears the first time he witnessed a gun go off when he was nine.
Slowly, deliberately, Hotch met Rossi’s horrified and guilt-filled expression and lowered the gun from his head. Carefully measuring his steps, he moved forward and pressed the gun into the older agent’s hand, which dropped down to the side, the weight of the gun now accompanied by something unseen, something much heavier.
Not sparing him another glance, Hotch turned and walked back out of the alley.
This isn’t the time nor place to break. 
But in the end, he didn’t have a choice. 
“Foyet escaped.”
Hotch’s blood ran cold as he processed JJ’s words before he roughly placed his mug onto the desk and stood up from his chair, following JJ outside to the bullpen that was full of noise and movement.
“Guards found him in his cell vomiting blood and convulsing, they rushed him to the prison hospital,” JJ explained quickly as they made their way down the catwalk. Hotch twitched as he heard Rossi’s office door open behind him, the man coming out to see what the commotion was about.
“Get me the US Marshal’s Office,” Hotch ordered, making the executive decision to ignore the older agent in favor of getting down to business. 
“I already called Don Reilly. I offered our assistance, he said they’d call us if they needed it.”
Prentiss rushed to the trio, holding a phone up to her ear. “The Boston field office just identified documents from Foyet’s house,” she reported.
Reid approached the agents gathered in the middle of the room, holding out a printout of what looked to be a set of blueprints. “They’re schematics for the electrical, heating, and water ducts of the East Woburn Correctional Facility.”
Hotch looked at him blankly. “He had the schematics.”
“And not just for Woburn—for every jail, prison, and courthouse in Massachusetts.”
“And ten years to plan,” Rossi added, a heavy silence following as everyone turned to the TV.
Finally, Garcia turned around. “They’re going to find him, right?” she asked worriedly.
Eyes still trained on Foyet's mugshot on the TV, Hotch was completely certain in his answer. “No, they’re not,” he said, just as the memory of Foyet’s words rose to the forefront of his mind, unbidden.
If you know me so well, how come so many had to die to bring you here?
I’m going to be more famous than you realize.
“Excuse me,” he muttered, trying to get a hold of the wave of nausea that suddenly overcame him. He brushed past the team, purposely heading out of the bullpen for one of the bathrooms that was further away for the sake of keeping the team and their concern off his back.
Within minutes he was throwing up bile and the small amount of alcohol he had drank back in his office into the sink, thanking the god he never believed in that the bathroom was rather secluded so there wouldn’t be anyone catching him in this moment of weakness. His eyes burned for the second time in less than twenty-four hours—only this time, a few traitorous tears managed to escape from underneath his eyelids. 
The taste of bile was strong as he turned on the tap and splashed his face with cold water, stiffening when he heard the door swing open and closed. Looking up to the mirror, he was both relieved and unsurprised to see Morgan locking the door behind him. 
“You’ve been avoiding Rossi,” Morgan commented quietly. Hotch huffed a sardonic laugh, straightening up and turning around to face him, leaning against the sink for support. It was a familiar situation, one first started years ago when it was just them and Gideon, and stopped after the team started growing. Then New York happened and Hotch had to de-stress in a gas station they stopped at on the drive back to Quantico, and their secret rendezvous started happening again, when cases hit too close to home for either of them.
Somehow he always knows what the root problem is. “Was I that obvious?”
Morgan shook his head. “You know you hide it well. I’ve just known you far longer than any of the others, besides Rossi, of course.” He didn’t go on, waiting on the other to decide the direction the conversation would go. 
Deciding to go for complete honesty, Hotch swallowed, tilting his head up and avoiding Morgan’s eyes. “He called me at my hotel room and offered me the deal.”
To his credit, Morgan only stepped closer, face creased in concern and a hint of knowing. “I said no, and he shot up a bus,” Hotch continued tonelessly. “I lost it in an alley near the crime scene. Dave had pulled out his gun and was trying to make a point about self-flagellation, but—” he cut himself off and shook his head frustratedly.
“I don’t know what happened. One moment I was just angry, and the next moment I was aiming a gun at my head,” he met Morgan’s eyes desperately, stern facade completely gone. “I don’t know what I wanted to do—I don’t,” his voice cracked as he sagged against the sink and his trembling became more pronounced. He quickly covered his mouth as a sob tried to escape his throat, prompting Morgan to move.
It was surprising to both him and Morgan how willingly he melted into Morgan’s body when the man reached out to stabilize him, but the sensation of the embrace was oddly calming for both of them. Neither spoke as they stood in the bathroom, not even as Morgan felt his shirt getting wet from the tears that Hotch finally let fall, and not even as the crying became more audible. 
Now, they would stay in the bathroom and soak up the comfort that they offered each other. They would talk about Foyet’s taunts and what Hotch confessed later. 
But later never came, because life never waits, and neither do unsubs.
Soon, they were racing against the clock as Reid got infected with an engineered strain of anthrax
Soon, they were investigating one of the worst, stomach-turning crimes they had seen. 
When they got back from the pig farm, Hotch only asked the team for a bare-bones report of the investigation and let them leave to the comfort of their homes while he stayed behind and dealt with the rest of the paperwork and red tape that was involved because of their foray into Canadian jurisdiction. 
It was past midnight when Hotch finally left the office and entered his apartment with the intent of pulling out a glass of scotch and staying on his couch with a book, knowing there was no way he was going to fall asleep that night.  
But Foyet was waiting, and Hotch was weakened by the exhaustion and stress of two all-nighters in a row.  
That night, as his team was sleeping in their beds, dead to the world while he was slowly bleeding out and floating in and out of consciousness in his own apartment, he could only take comfort in the fact that his death sealed Foyet’s fate. There was no way Morgan the team—hell, even Strauss, or anyone in the bureau—would stop hunting his killer to exact their revenge. 
He faded into unconsciousness with the expectation that that was it.
He slowly regained consciousness to the sharp smell of antiseptic and the unpleasantly familiar beeping of a heart monitor. Fatigue settling heavily over his whole body was the next sensation that registered in his foggy mind, and then the sound of approaching footsteps.
“Where am I?” he forced out through a dry throat, eyes still closed.
“In the hospital,” Rossi, his mind told him. He opened his eyes only to close them again when he was met with blindingly bright lights, letting out a pained breath. 
“How did I get here?”
“Foyet drove you.”
Morgan. He drew in a shaky breath as dull, pulsing pain finally made itself known through the painkillers.
“Can you remember what happened?”
That’s Prentiss.
He vaguely felt his head loll to the side before the memories rushed back into the forefront of his mind. Foyet’s words, the same exact words he remembered thinking back in that alley echoed unpleasantly,
You should have made the deal.
Hotch swallowed again and forced his eyes open through the heavy fatigue. “What did he take?” he asked quietly, unwilling to delve deep into what he remembered and deciding to mentally run through the details about the Reaper case instead.
“What do you mean?” Rossi asked, uncomprehending.
“The Reaper always takes something from his victims.” you’re one of his victims now—shut up and think about that later “Do we know what he took?” 
“There was a page missing from your day planner,” his eyes flew open and he looked over at Prentiss as she continued talking, “in the address section, the Bs.” 
No— “What did he leave?” Hotch asked, eyes slipping shut as a trickle of fear went down his spine and his brain screamed out in denial. 
“I don't know,” Prentiss said, floundering.
“He also leaves something with his victims,” he trailed off in a breathless whisper, unable to sustain the volume he had been speaking at as the throbbing grew stronger.
“I looked over your whole apartment,” Prentiss told him helplessly. “Nothing felt out of place.”
A thought came to him. “Where are my clothes?” Hotch asked, slowly trying to force his eyes open again. He turned his head, watching Prentiss bring a plastic bag over to the hospital bed. Careful to avoid looking directly at his bloodied clothes, Hotch managed to pull the bulging manila envelope closer to him on his chest. 
His hands froze as his credentials slipped out and he noticed a folded paper tucked inside. Slowly, shakily, Hotch pulled them out of the envelope and carefully flipped it open. 
He sank deeper into the bed as the breath he had been holding was almost punched out of him by the sheer terror that pulsed through him, the treasured picture of Haley and Jack staring back at him tauntingly. That’s my blood, he thought blankly, staring at the red streak he knew was deliberately painted over his family’s smiling faces.
“Haley’s maiden name is Brooks,” he finally said, almost numb to the implications. “I always listed her in the Bs in my personal information in case it fell into the wrong hands.” 
Some kind of precaution it turned out to be. 
“He knows where they live.”
And that was that. As Hotch was stuck in flashbacks and lied to Prentiss about what happened, Morgan led the SWAT team in sweeping Hotch’s old house and picked Jack up from his playdate. As Hotch talked with Haley and failed to not think about that night in the alley with the cold metal against his head, Morgan played with Jack outside and failed to not think about Foyet using his credentials so he could continue to torture his friend boss. As Hotch remained confined to the hospital bed, Morgan watched through an upper-story window as Haley and Jack were driven off into the distance to a location unknown to anyone but a select few in the Marshals service. 
Nine stab wounds, thirty minutes down time, and six days in the cursed hospital.
The numbers circled through Hotch’s mind when he stepped back into his apartment and had to work through the panic that rose within as he stared towards the place where he knew Foyet had been hiding. 
In the end, what brought him back from the edge was when his eyes caught the new security panel that had been installed over where he knew the bullet had made a hole and the sticky note with what he recognized as Morgan’s handwriting that was stuck over it, concisely written instructions on how to use it. If he looked around carefully enough for other signs of Morgan’s presence, he could see where the section of bloodstained carpet had been replaced, and that was only because there was the tiniest spot that had been missed. 
The tiniest reminder was enough to send Hotch into a panic, but he knew there was no way he could tell Morgan about it. 
Is this what you felt like, Elle? Unsafe in your own home, having to sweep each room for fear of another one of the monsters we hunt lurking in the shadows?
Slowly, numbly, Hotch worked his way through medical leave and physiotherapy, during which everyone in his team came over at least twice, Prentiss and Morgan the most often to help change his bandages. He knew they worried, but he couldn’t summon the will to care nor the words to thank them for keeping him company and preventing the darkness in his mind from taking over. 
And maybe it was a good thing, because there were things they didn’t know, things that he lied to them about. He lied and he lied, and he knew that if he had the words, they would all come tumbling out, and what little of himself that he had left would be exposed for all to see. 
Even if Morgan had tried to take everything he might be able to use, there was still his mind, and so if he had the words, they would all know how many times he envisioned holding cold metal against his head just as he had back in that alley.
On the thirty-fifth day after he was discharged from the hospital, when they were discussing Darren Call on the plane, they came close to finding out. 
So why hasn’t he killed himself yet? Sprees usually end in suicide. If he's got nothing to live for, why hasn't he ended it?
It was much later, after a day of being on the receiving end of careful, worried glances, and overhearing Morgan’s firm declaration from inside his office that he realized his slip. 
“I’m not going to stand by and watch this man kill himself,” Hotch had heard Morgan snap towards Rossi. Moments later, Morgan passed in front of his office window and made eye contact with him, making it clear that his choice of words was deliberate. 
Suddenly Hotch was back in the alleyway with the gun pressed to his head and managed to talk himself off the ledge he didn’t know he was standing on while Rossi stood there, frozen and horrified that his brazen attempt at making a point had backfired so disastrously. His own words on the plane came back to him, then thought about what others would have seen when he walked into that house unarmed, and he understood. 
He hadn’t been thinking at all when he went in to try and talk Darren Call down, but though he didn’t have a background in psychology, there were some things that didn’t need expert opinion to be said, and so he knew exactly his action could be classified as. 
Don’t lie to yourself, you know exactly what that was.
Hotch swallowed convulsively and broke eye contact with Morgan, turning back to stare at paperwork until the other man walked back to his desk in the empty bullpen. As much as he tried, he couldn’t forget Morgan’s impassioned exclamation nor the depth of the worry that was present in his eyes when they made eye contact through the window.
Maybe that was the day when things shifted. It wasn’t a complete change—the team still hovered around Hotch in uncertain worry, his thoughts never completely disappeared, and he nearly broke down in the bathroom the day Jack turned four in witness protection after seeing what footage of his child on a playground Garcia could enhance. 
There was, however, a different air to his and Morgan’s interactions after that case. Perhaps it was a long time coming, stemming from the painful understanding that was formed that day in the secluded bathroom when they found comfort in each other.
It wasn’t news that the higher-ups were watching him again, but then he walked back to his office after helping JJ triage consult requests to see Strauss fixing him with a stern stare. The next few days he spent trying to work through the frustration of recording and justifying every decision while trying and failing not to antagonize Morgan. And so while he waited for Morgan to come into his office, he could only hope that he hadn’t managed to destroy the strange friendship that had been built between them based on their shared knowledge of just how close he was to the ledge sometimes.
I should give him more credit, I don’t know how he puts up with me sometimes, and he has more than enough reason to report me to Strauss.
“Come on, Hotch, nobody's gonna replace you,” Morgan said, incredulous at the notion of Hotch getting replaced. “Fight Strauss. I'll go to the mat for you, so will everybody else. You know that.” 
“Morgan, it won't work,” Hotch spoke over him, trying to get him to understand. “Decisions like this have their own momentum. Unless I step down—”
“Step down? What are you talking about?”
A foreign feeling Hotch recognized with some surprise as amusement wriggled its way into his consciousness as he anticipated Morgan’s reaction to his coming announcement, “I'm resigning as unit chief at the end of the week”
“What? No!” Hotch couldn’t stop his mouth from twitching as his feeling of amusement grew slightly stronger at the visceral reaction. “Hotch, look, yeah, ok, sometimes your actions, I may disagree with them, but it's not enough for you to leave this team.”
“I'm not leaving the team, I'm just no longer in charge,” Hotch corrected, continuing before Morgan could get in a word. “You are.”
He watched as Morgan’s jaw dropped in shock, before finally asking, “Me?” Detecting no deception from Hotch who had nodded, he continued. “Look, I had the chance to be unit chief in New York, and I said no. I turned it down because I like this team. Strauss can't just fire you like this.”
“She can reassign me, and we can avoid that if I promote internally.”
Unable to come up with a counterargument, Morgan was silent for a moment. “This is wrong,” he finally said. 
A strange thrill went through Hotch at the confidence Morgan had in him—their relationship, while slightly different now, ultimately had been built on unstated respect and the ease with which both were able to call each other out on their bullshit; it wasn’t built on such blatant declarations of trust and confidence. Hotch opened his hands, shrugging helplessly. “It's the only way to keep the team together.”
Morgan nodded consideringly before carefully eyeing Hotch. “So all of this,” he gestured between them, bringing up the tension that had built up between them in the last case, “this is why you've been pushing me so hard, huh?”
“I haven't been pushing you that hard,” Hotch denied, only to get a disbelieving look from the other man. He let out a faint smile before regarding the other with a serious look again. “Morgan, I need to know right now. Will you do this?”
He couldn’t articulate the relief he felt when Morgan finally agreed and continued to feel for the rest of the night as he introduced Morgan to the other parts of the job. Just like every other positive emotion he had felt over the past few years, however, it was short-lived, as Hotch had freed up time to dedicate to the hunt, even as he often stayed later to help Morgan get adjusted. Within months, they were called into a family annihilator case and Hotch was confronting Karl Arnold, one of the few unsubs that had continued to haunt him even after the case was closed and they were killed or incarcerated.
Of course, Arnold had to get in the last word, and oh, did he get it in. 
The cursed eye of providence, now drawn over a newspaper article about the attack months ago, never failed to create a surge of anger and fear within him, but never had it created such a storm of emotions before now. One torturous night of waiting as the envelope the taunts were sent in went through the lab, and the whole team was in the throes of the hunt, and in the process, fell victim to tunnel vision.
What if they had slowed down and remembered that Foyet worked with computers? Would they have managed to catch him at the apartment unawares? Would they have been better prepared for what Foyet had planned to do?
But there wasn’t anything Hotch could do except try and talk Foyet out of going through with his plans while trying to maintain as level of a head as possible.
“Your mother tried to protect you from your father, but she wasn’t strong enough, and you hated her for that, didn’t you? So, you decided that all women were weak,” Hotch suddenly brought up, hoping to catch him off guard as he vaguely wondered if the team was on the line, listening. 
“Those are your words, not mine,” came the grating, annoyingly blasé reply.
“What were you, nine when you killed them?
“It was a car accident. And, now that I think about it, our childhoods are eerily similar, don’t you think?” 
Caught unawares, Hotch jerked the steering wheel, barely managing to avoid crashing the car as Foyet continued. “But it was only your father who died, whereas your mother remarried.”
How—? He turned cold at the show of Foyet’s obsession, which was clearly much deeper than he or anyone in the team could have predicted.
“No response?” the killer taunted.
“My father swallowed a bullet because he couldn’t live with his self loathing or the cancer,” Hotch finally snapped, quickly directing the subject back towards Foyet. Even with the pit in his stomach growing as it became clearer that he was being toyed with, he couldn’t help but use every negotiation tactic he knew and taught at the Academy, desperately but futilely trying to dissuade the killer. 
“Haven't you gotten what you wanted?” Hotch tried, somehow having regained his composure after the unpleasant bombshell. “You've set yourself apart from anybody we've ever dealt with. You're not just a famous serial killer, you're the Reaper. We're going to study you and your methods for years and years.”
“You know what I've been thinking?” Foyet finally asked after a few moments of silence, his next words sending his heart pounding in fear. “Haley looks really good with dark hair. She’s lost some weight. Must be all the stress you caused her. Where's the little man?” No, don’t you dare— “Oh. There he is. Does he like Captain America because of you?” 
Hotch gripped his phone tightly as he heard the ringing of another phone. “That's your wife. Hold, please—Mrs. Hotchner,” Foyet took on an accent, tone turning jovial. “Open the gate and I'll drive in.”
Open the gate? That son of a—of course.
“Aaron?” the malicious glee was back, cutting right to Hotch’s core. “I really gotta go.”
Almost frozen with fear, he pushed the car faster, heading straight towards the old house and praying to whatever deity he could think of that he could get there in time. He wasn’t sure how long had passed when he got Morgan’s call, which was confirmation that the team had indeed been listening. He didn’t dwell on it and only continued to push the car, disregarding speed limits and almost hysterically glad that it was the middle of the day and the streets were relatively empty. 
When his phone rang, it was with numb, mechanical movements that he answered, fully prepared to beg and bargain for his family’s life if he had to, only to sharply inhale at Haley’s dearly missed voice, which turned shaky with fear when she realized the danger she was in. As Foyet undercut their exchange with his maliciously satisfied taunts, telling Haley all that he could never bring himself to confess about the case, Hotch could only think about how he was just too far away, Haley, I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry for lying to you about everything, I’ll never forgive myself—
But then Jack was on the phone, and the pure innocence and eagerness with which his son greeted him after months of no contact was enough to send a fresh wave of tears coursing down his face.
“Is George a bad guy?”
“Yes, he is,” Hotch answered, wanting to scream at him to just run away, get as far away from him as you can when an old memory was suddenly brought forth from his subconscious. “Jack, I need you on this case with me. Do you understand?” he tried to keep his voice steady, hoping with his whole being that his son would remember. “I need you to work the case with me.”
“Ok, Daddy.”
“Jack, hug your mom for me,” he requested, voice cracking and desperately trying to contain the sobs that were steadily building. He could only imagine the warmth his son was feeling from his mother now, potentially the last memory he would ever have of her. Hearing his son’s too-inquisitive question about his mother’s mood left him viciously biting down on his bottom lip, trying to maintain some modicum of control over himself.
“Is he gone?” Hotch finally asked, nausea joining the storm of emotions within him at the nickname Foyet had given his son.
“Yes,” Haley confirmed, letting her fear shine through now that Jack wasn’t there to see it. 
Each shaking breath was a stab straight to his core.“You’re so strong, Haley, you’re stronger than I ever was.”
Her response nearly sent him shattering into the pieces she had so carefully helped him put back together back in high school after his stepfather died.
“You’ll hurry, right?”
I can’t lie, I’m so sorry, Haley. I can’t lie to you. Not after everything I’ve already done, “I know you didn’t sign on for this.”
“Neither did you.”
Why does it have to be now that we finally talk about what caused the divorce?
“I’m sorry for everything.”
There was a short pause as Haley inhaled sharply, before leveling out into shaky breaths. “Promise me that you will tell him how we met and how you used to make me laugh.”
No, please— “Haley,” Hotch trailed off, unable to continue and almost paralyzed at the knowledge that these might be her last words because he’s too far away, I’m not going to—
“He needs to know that you weren't always so serious, Aaron. He needs to believe in love, because it is the most important thing, but you need to show him. Promise me,” she ordered him forcefully.
“I promise.”
The sound of three gunshots tore straight into his soul. 
And then he was finding Haley’s body, trying not to let the seams break when renewed rage roared to life within him at the extinguishing of the light that had been inside her and lit up every room she walked in. Minutes later, he was straddling the demon that had haunted him for over a decade, the demon that he finally caught up to but at a terrible cost and then he was punching—
I’m going to kill that bastard son of yours and I’m going to tell him it was all your fault— 
and punching—
You practically killed them yourself—
and punching—
You should have made the deal—
someone yelled his name—
Promise me.
“—dead. He’s dead,” someone was shouting as Hotch tried to lunge forward away from the person pulling him back and towards the man who killed my wife HE KILLED HALEY—
But all the fight that had been inside him suddenly disappeared, and he was left staggering backward, mouth open in a silent, rage-filled scream as someone—it’s Derek—kept a careful grip on his body, holding his shattered pieces together just long enough for him to gather his tattered seams close to his chest and fling himself away towards the stairs. 
Hotch collapsed to his knees in front of the chest, seeing no indication of any taunting messages and daring to hope that his son was—
And the sight of his son, unharmed and blinking at the sudden change in brightness, nearly sent him into a mess of relieved tears that were also tears of unadulterated grief because I got his mother killed—
He held himself together and lifted his son out of the chest, seeing all the features he got from Haley—her his hair, her his eyes, her his inquisitiveness—and struggling to maintain his weakening control as he told Jack to go to Ms. Jareau, who was waiting with open arms in the doorway to the room that had once been his office. 
Hearing their footsteps fade away and shaking with suppressed sobs, he slowly stood up, injuries that he sustained in the fight finally making themselves known as he made his way across the hall to the room he knew Haley was lying in—
He saw Morgan taking her pulse and for a moment he couldn’t help but hope that she was still—
But Morgan was pulling back and he was gently placing Haley’s right arm back on the ground and he wasn’t yelling for medics and—
“I’m so sorry, Aaron,” Morgan said softly as Hotch knelt down, his trembling becoming more palpable by the moment. 
If he looked past the unseeing eyes and the blood that pooled everywhere and her lying on the floor and—
He could almost convince himself that she was sleeping. For a moment, he was almost afraid to touch her, afraid to disturb her in her sleep, but in the next moment—
He was pulling her cooling body close to his chest and burying his face into the crook of her neck, gut wrenching sobs escaping his lips as a wave of grief shattered the flimsy show of control he had put up for Jack’s sake, his son who just lost his mother because his father was addicted to the chase and I broke my promise, Haley, I’m so sorry—
She’s gone. 
The solemn silence weighed heavily on the team as they waited for Hotch to finish testifying before Strauss and the brass. They had all expressed their outrage when they got the orders to come in for their statements, only two days after their leader nearly lost everything, but there was nothing they could do.
It had been painful to watch the man who had been a protector for so long, since childhood through his teenage years and into adulthood, try to maintain the post, disregarding his own health in favor of being the earliest in the office and last to leave, spending every free moment trying to get rid of the threat to his family. It was worse having to listen over the phone as his control started to slip while he tried so desperately to save his family from a madman. 
With the sight of him savagely beating Foyet’s dead body into the ground, all vestiges of the infamous controlled facade gone, they all hoped for Hotch’s sake that Jack had found safety and were beyond relieved to see him in JJ’s arms. Reality caught up to them, however, when they watched as Morgan had to physically wrestle Hotch away from Haley’s body so she could be transported to the ME’s office.
When they got the full autopsy, they could only be glad that Hotch wasn’t there to find out all that Foyet did to his first love.
And within a year, Hotch’s family had been ruthlessly snatched from his desperate, flailing grip and torn into broken pieces before being shoved back at him, misshapen with pieces missing. 
The faint sound of a door swinging closed had them all straightening up in their seats, turning to look into the bullpen where Hotch was walking up the stairs in front of his office, only to freeze right in front of the door with his hand just in front of the door knob. 
They watched worriedly as he let his outstretched hand fall back to his side and slowly backed up from the door, almost as if he were in a trance and startled when Morgan suddenly jumped up and ran out of the room and through the bullpen towards the man.
Their confusion cleared up when they realized that Hotch wasn’t stopping as he backed up, somehow unaware that the stairs were right behind him and stumbled, only barely catching himself on the railing. For Jack’s sake, they forced themselves to stay seated but watched out of the corner of their eyes as he tried to stand back up, only for his knees to buckle underneath him. 
Before he could hit the ground, Morgan quickly grabbed onto his arms, almost collapsing himself under his dead weight but managing to lower them both onto the ground, holding onto him in a way eerily reminiscent of what he had done when he pulled Hotch off of the barely-recognizable body of George Foyet. 
Hotch was still staring at his office door as if he had seen a ghost, and it was with heartbreak that Morgan realized what it represented to him—it was the source of so much passion and temptation that had gotten the love of his life killed. Looking back at the conference room and seeing the eyes focused on the two men, Morgan carefully pulled Hotch up from the ground and slowly guided him out of the bullpen, knowing that the team had Jack taken care of.
They walked through the winding hallways and into the bathroom that he followed Hotch into the night it all started to go horribly wrong. This time, it was different and yet the exact same, and after Morgan locked the door behind them, he pulled Hotch towards him, mindful of his bruised ribs. 
Surrounded by the four walls that heard so many of their small talks and witnessed their vulnerabilities, it wasn’t long before Hotch’s eyes began to burn as he finally melted into Morgan’s protective hold when the dam finally broke, letting out a wave of pain and anguish that was only made the slightest bit more bearable by the warmth of Morgan’s his friend’s care.
But even that couldn’t make that one sentence disappear.
You practically killed them yourself.
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hotchley · 3 years
Text
happy anniversary to the blog!
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usual pinned post
The sleepover will run from 30/06/21 to 15/06/21 (30th June- which marks the anniversary, to the 15th July, because that’s just over two weeks)
Everything will be tagged with #ylh’s first anniversary for your viewing pleasure/blocking purposes. Ships, as always will also be tagged for filtering.
Onto the actual celebration!
Everyone (anons welcome!):
💐 and a character/ship for a happy headcanon
🌷 and a character/ship for a sad headcanon
🌻 and a character/ship for a song that reminds me of them
🌼 and i’ll hand letter either a word or your url for you
🌹 and i’ll share one sentence from a wip
🌺  and cast your mutuals as (i have always wanted to do this)
Mutuals:
☘️ and i will give you a song that reminds me of your blog
🍃 and i will give you a picture from one of my pinterest boards that reminds me of you
🌿 and i will hand letter you a quote (please tell me if there’s a specific one, or a sort of theme you’d like me to stick to!)
🪴 and i’ll write you a little love letter
🌱and i will tell you about my favourite fic of yours (or headcanon, depending)
🎍 and a ship and i will shuffle my playlist and create an AU with the first viable song that plays
There’s a little love letter, some disclaimers, and some mutuals are tagged below the cut, because this was starting to get too long and I didn’t want to cut  anything out. I love you all so much!
Disclaimers:
You can send any characters/ships in because I essentially know via diffusion what happens throughout all the seasons, but as I am still on season 10, anything from season 11 and beyond may sound OOC, and for that I apologise.
The usual disclaimers of: nothing nsfw and no abusive relationships, apply.
You can send as many or as few asks as you would like! So if you want one thing and then go: oh but this thing, that's fine!
Also, if you follow me from your main and I follow your side blog, that counts as mutuals, which may seem like common sense to most peopple, but it didn’t to me so yeah
The Love Letter:
So... I wanted to do a sleepover, but I’m nowhere near a milestone so I thought I would celebrate the first anniversary of this blog! It’s the longest I’ve been on any sort of fandom-related social media since my EAH/RWBY wattpad days from when I was twelve, so it’s a really big thing for me!
I started the blog as a joke. Then as a way of telling people I had published a fic. And then it just became a part of my life. I have made so many friends, seen so many incredible people branch out and flourish, and I just wanted to celebrate that.
I don’t think any of you realise how much I love you. Your comments and asks are sometimes the highlight of my day. I find myself writing the same way you would. Something happens and I think of one of you. I tell my friends about the sweet things you do, and the achievements you share with me.
When I started the blog, I had no idea how much things were going to change. And sure, there have been times where I’ve wanted to delete everything and deactivate, but I stuck it out, and I’m glad I did. I have found friends and people that understand me. I have grown as a writer and in confidence, and as a person.
I hope that even if I leave the fandom, I keep my blog here, to show that: yes. I did this. And I hope my legacy is as the pioneer of Aaron Hotchner’s Strawberry Allergy.
To everyone that read my fics, or my drabbles, or little headcanons, or who interacted with my content: thank you for giving me a chance and letting me be a part of your life, no matter how little or how long it was for. I love you.
Tagging some of the moots: @hotchgan​ @willlemonheadsupremacy​ @masterwords​ @olivinesea @anastasiahotchner @sodone-withlife @whoreforthebauteam @eprcntiss @84hotpockets @kamiamaya @garcias-bitch @ellyhotchner @hqtchner @temily @lumosemily @whump-town @moreidstrobed @bus-kids @willowrose99 @jetaime-jespere @pyrrhichotchniss @caitlinnann​ @suckerforhotchniss @cmhotchniss-blog​ ​
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hotchley · 3 years
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I just watched Omnivore (4x18) for the first time (I skipped it that first watch through) and I am so enraged by that one scene: it is so poorly written (to the point I can’t figure out what he’s getting at by handing Hotch the gun) and just screams one big giant f*ck you to Hotch.
tw: suicide references
That whole scene PISSES ME OFF SO MUCH!!
The first time I watched it, I didn't understand. I don't know how many times I have rewatched it since then, but I still just do not, for the life of me, understand what the point was.
It's... Rossi has never had a good response to Hotch's trauma. He doesn't respect his boundaries in season 3, essentially tells him to fucking kill himself in season 4, makes annoying comments throughout season 5 and I just don't understand.
It felt like he was trying to show Hotch that he wasn't thinking straight and that blaming himself was not going to do anything to help, but the actual way he did that was horrible and should never have happened. It was a shit response.
He claims to know Hotch so well, yet he tells him to shoot himself?? Hotch is self-destructive at the best of times. He blames himself for everything. Revelations: blames himself. Emily getting hurt: blames himself. JJ: fine, hadn't happened, but he blamed himself.
What was Rossi going to do if he had taken the gun? Maybe he was trying to show Hotch that he was spiralling, but the response was disgusting. You don't do things like that. If someone I knew said that to me or someone I was close to, I would tell them the get the fuck out because you can't speak to people like that.
It takes a lot for Hotch to open up. He only does it in the most private of moments with someone he trusts, so for Rossi to respond like that... he's essentially saying that Hotch can't trust him to be there for him anymore. And it felt like he was making the situation about him with all those dramatics.
And then saying that voice in your head is your ego not your conscience?? What the fuck was that about? If anyone has an ego, it's Rossi. He was the one going behind people's backs and making stupid comments. Hotch got told what his worst flaws were and just took it. Where is his ego??
It was a terrible moment. Really made absolutely no sense and I hated it. Why you would tell a man who blames himself for the deaths of so many people, who is close to tears, and who is stressed, overwhelmed, spiralling before you, to take your gun is beyond me. A non-profiler wouldn't say that.
@sodone-withlife wrote this really good Mortch vibes fic where Hotch did in fact, take the gun called "one sentence" and OH MY GOD please, you should totally read it!
But yeah. I still don't understand. Will probably reference it for angst purposes.
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hotchley · 3 years
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🌷🌸🌼🌺🌻🌹💐Is that the right thing to do? I’m not sure! I think you’re cool, though :)
I have done these... horrifically out of order. And the ones that were for characters/ships are all over the place for a bit of variety
🌺and cast your mutuals as (i have always wanted to do this)
I'm doing it with songs that I have liked! Also please do not hate on me, I know my taste is all over the place
@louisaland as The Beautiful Dream- George Ezra
@hotchsbabygirl as brutal- Olivia Rodrigo
@bus-kids as Four- Sleeping At Last
@whump-town as my tears ricochet- Taylor Swift
@lumosemily as Saturn- Sleeping At Last
@temily as Power and Control- MARINA
@hqtchner as Ophelia- The Lumineers
@ellyhotchner as Setting Sun- Lord HUron
@sodone-withlife as Are You Satisfied- MARINA
@anastasiahotchner as epiphany- Taylor Swift
💐and a character/ship for a happy headcanon
Fuck it. I'm doing Gotchgan
Hotch never feels more loved than when Garcia and Morgan meet his eyes at the dinner table, including him in their not quite appropriate for a meal time flirting, without forcing him to say something that may sound... nice coming from them, but would sound horrific coming from him.
Morgan never feels more loved than when Hotch or Garcia (sometimes both) takes a seat next to him and lets him rest his head on their shoulder. Whether they're at home, or on the jet home, the close and natural contact that allows him to tease Hotch about the length of his hair, or compliment Garcia about her shampoo means so much to him.
Garcia never feels more loved than when the two of them come down to her office, usually with a sweet treat and new sort of decoration for her desk. Not because she gets something material from it, but because they always like slightly nervous, as though she could ever hate something they got. And they always smile when she takes it from them, and that smile is the most beautiful thing she's ever seen.
The three of them never feel more at home than when they're laying in bed, listening to the heartbeats of the people they love the most, but never thought could have in their lives.
🌷and a character/ship for a sad headcanon
Returning to my roots and doing Hotch.
He didn't go to Pakistan to abandon the team or because he wanted to force Morgan into another leadership role. He didn't go to be cruel, or because he hated them. He definitely did not go to get away with Jack, no matter what anyone said.
He went because he needed to try and earn forgiveness for what he had done to the team. What he had done to Emily. He went because they were going to find Ian Doyle at some point, and when they did, the team would hate him, and he needed a back-up. He did it because he was scared, and he was terrified that if he had to keep looking at the team, he would tell them everything and then nobody would have a job.
He never explained this though. Because the team needed someone to be angry at for what had happened, and if it wasn't him, then it would be Emily or JJ and there was no way he was going to allow that to happen. So he pretended it had been selfish, no matter how much it hurt.
remaining three are below the cut x
🌻and a character/ship for a song that reminds me of them
Have one for Gotch (because I want to), one for Hotchgan (because I hardly did any) and for Hotchley (in honour of my url!)
Gotch: Never Seen Anything "Quite Like You"- The Script
Hotchgan: maybe, i'm afraid- lovelytheband
Hotchley: All You Had To Do Was Stay- Taylor Swift
🌹and i’ll share one sentence from a wip
Emily flinches, and that is the final nail in the coffin.
- crying in the shower
🌼 and i’ll hand letter either a word or your url for you
I chose beautiful because... if I'm being completely honest, I had no other ideas lol. Picture and scanned version, as always are both there x
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