he didn't want to get ahead of himself by saying it aloud, but something about being in the office these days felt wrong.
fitz had had his issues with the bureau before, but there was something about his own mission failure on top of feeling unsatisfied with the work on top of being expected to actively engage with this operation to find their fellow agent who was actively unraveling time & space at this exact moment while fitz is expected to sit behind his desk with the other field agents and pretend like he isn't close to losing his shit any day now. did the development team know what they were doing or even know what to look for? and why wasn't the team getting constant updates from the bureau about —
he swings open the door to the rooftop, and someone's there.
of course. of course.
while his mind sees thoreau and nods in her direction, fresh air fills his lungs and fitz uses that moment to quiet his thoughts for just a moment.
the rooftop's wide enough that they don't need to be actively talking if they don't want to, and for once, fitz just wants a tiny little — thoreau's speaking, but he's just going to ignore her while he — okay, clearly she's being cordial, but now there's a question involved and he's expected to answer.
"I'm here for the free air," and braces himself against the balustrade a few feet away. hands. feet. breath.
after a moment, he sighs and faces the agent. "we can't all be like faulkner, or stein, or even you. the bureau suffocates from time to time. and this afternoon just happened to be one of them."
"and since the bureau hasn't been invested in our social and emotional well-being since ... i don't know when," fitz looks over and takes thoreau in for a moment, "i'm doing what i can to keep all my marbles in the pouch." but no, there's no time or room for that kind of conversation to happen right now.
so, instead fitz scans the grounds below and spots a specific spot where the edge of the lake and path towards the parking lot meet. "you see that spot down there? that's a sunset-watching spot. ...if you're actually into that kind of thing."
starter for: @agtfitzs when: september 5, 1996 / early evening where: rooftop of the building
She'd stood at the edge of the rooftop for almost half an hour, now, watching as the staff members exited the building while eating the last of her sandwich. In this new life she'd built for herself, the rooftop was the closest she had to her namesake's Walden Pond in Concord, a place she had frequented, what with her old home being half an hour away. At this vantage point, Midge could imagine that these people were instead various forms of wildlife. Aquatic invertebrates, fish, frogs, and toads. That one suit rushing past? A crayfish. A man, still donning his lab coat despite it being day's end, was a sunfish. In this light, then, she would be a bird with no net ensnaring her, and whatnot. No, no, that was Bronte.
What did it matter? Even in the absence of water, they were all drowning.
Her analogy was delicate as it is without the further disruption of hearing someone swinging the roof door wide open. In the perfect stillness of the rooftop, the disruption almost echoed, like a stone she'd taken from a gravelly path and thrown across the water. Midge did not make a habit of staying on the rooftop after hours. Curious to find her new companion, she finished her sandwich, folded the parchment paper that came with it, and swung around her position by the balustrade to greet —
Ah. "Agent Fitzgerald." A nod. Midge was not nearly discourteous enough to ignore his presence, however unwelcome. But, as is customary with her fellow field agents, and perhaps even more so with Fitzgerald, she let the proverbial curtains that she'd briefly drawn back to indulge in childhood memory fall back into place. Fitzgerald's presence felt like fate's way of dissuading her from any further attempts at enlightenment. Back again to being Thoreau. Back again to the life she had built for the past decade and a half. Back again to the mask of courtesy and patience and stillness. She leaned against the rooftop's ornate glass balustrades, one-half of her sandwich in hand, and wished that she'd brought her pack of cigarettes.
"I see you had the same idea as I did," she began in an attempt to be genial. It was hard to stay frustrated at someone when the world was burning. Over the past decade, and despite his demeanor, Fitzgerald had become close to unreadable. Still, she figured that he was no exception to the rest of the agents, all of whom were, to some degree, discouraged and clearly exhausted. There was no reason to preserve her disdain, for now. "What, you come here to watch the sunset?" In all of her people staring that day, Thoreau had paid no strict attention to the golden hour. That was a luxury she left to the writers and poets — and anyway, the sun had all but gone now, the sky somewhere between the civil and nautical twilight. "I'm afraid you'll only be catching the tail-end."
I hate small talk. I want to talk about atoms, death, aliens, sex, intellect, the meaning of life, far away galaxies, music that makes you feel different, memories, the lies you’ve told, your flaws, your favourite scents, your childhood, what keeps you up at night, your insecurities and your fears. I like people with depth, who speak with emotion from a twisted mind. I don’t want to know what’s up.
The idealist (via theslytherinworld)
“It was always the becoming he dreamed of, never the being.” — f̶i̶t̶z̶g̶e̶r̶a̶l̶d̶; an introduction.
skeleton ( briefing. ) / dossier ( basic info. ) / the full report & connections ( history. ) / inspirations ( pinterest. ) / performance reviews ( headcanons, still writing. ) / vinyl collection. ( playlist, still curating. )
when normal people clock out for work at their jobs, they go home. but home is such a funny ( odd ) concept these days.
he thinks of the girl from kansas / schoolteacher from harlem, with her little dog, desperate to get back to her own time & place after being dropped in a foreign place & time. and looking around, he imagines he could be dorothy right about now, thinking of home.
but what is home? as he hears footsteps approaching — cutting through the rare silence of this office — he supposes home could be a physical location, but without the people there, places lose their meaning & their power.
and then baldwin's extending a cup to him & that definitely puts things into perspective. fitz accepts, because he doesn't have the heart to tell baldwin he despises coffee, but he carefully finds the nearest surface to let the hot cup rest, keeping his hand loosely around the rim. this needs a disturbing amount of sugar & cream.
when he looks at baldwin, reminded of their circumstance, fitz recalls two things: maybe a home can be found in other people, across time & space, but most importantly —
in this scenario, he's definitely toto.
"progress? well, i ...", fitz pivots at the last moment, given the company, "haven't made much, to be honest. surprise, surprise. i think i'm just hoping my brain will finally shut off long enough so i can get up and go ...," home isn't the right word, so he finds a replacement, "back to my ... living quarters?" he shrugs at how it sounds, but whatever — words can be hard.
after a beat, he nods to the cup in his fellow agent's hand. "how often are you making full cups of coffee after midnight, anyway?"
who : anyone where : bullpen when : september 4, 1996 @ 01:17 am
two mugs filled to the brim with freshly made coffee sit on the lounge countertop. he stares at the coffee like he's taking personal offence.
muscle memory is a funny little thing. a mission objective slips his mind , but he can absently make a length of surgical knots with his laces until the fog in his head lifts. he would have missed the meeting on the second if it weren't for every agent headed that way , but his hands went through the motion of making two cups of coffee without any input from his brain. the one on the left has an absrud amount of sugar and a generous pour of cream , while the right is undefiled. the person he made this for is no longer here. he wants to pour the coffee down the sink and smash the mug to smithereens.
he takes a breath and manages to hold on to a thread of calm that threatens to leave him at any given moment. agent london always took his coffee bitter , and agent baldwin doesn't think the extra caffeine in his system will do him any good right now. there was a set of footsteps in the bullpen minutes earlier that he follows, carrying both coffees in his hands.
" i made too much. " he holds the extra one out to them , a mockery of a peace offering in this tense environment. it's late. he's pretty sure neither of them are supposed to be here. he doesn't comment on that topic ; there's no reason to pry into the business of other insomniacs. " are you making progress ? "
did the bureau know what was ahead of them by pairing hemingway with fitzgerald? had this been a miscalculation on someone's part, thinking that this would be the solution to setting fitz on a different path? this kind of decision seemed like it had faulkner's influence written all over it, especially with how the agent saw them out tonight.
in theory, sure, hemingway was an exceptional agent; it made sense he took the mentor role to new and wayward agents alike — agreeable, capable, smooth. a good example. and he's all those things in real life too, but as fitz watches him soak up cher in the car ride over and order enough food to turn this diner run into a feast, he remembers that hemingway still holds onto something that most agents lose over their time with the bureau.
vibrancy — the word fills in the blank, and that feels right. fitz grins.
it's his turn to laugh out loud — bark, rather — at the thought of hemingway robbing a bank and fitz realizes it wouldn't take much for him to be convinced. take the stolen cash, hop to another timeline, join that jazz band he's always talking about. they could easily go rogue.
all the cool agents were doing it.
"it is ridiculous, which is exactly why we're gonna have to go with my matching tattoos idea. and while i'm normally on the 'it has to be pretty' train, i'm also a bigger believer in just ... figuring it out when we get there. embrace the fun in the risk, that's all i'm saying. it's never too late to make dumb decisions."
fitz nods and raises his own glass to hemingway's words, "you and i both know i'm the last person who's going to disagree on any of those points for the rest of tonight. i'd argue that i don't talk about any of that enough, which is probably what got you stuck with me in the first place," fitz shrugs.
he had apologized to hemingway before, when he was first told that they'd be partners — again, clearly a miscalculation made on the bureau's end. fitz thought of himself as too far gone to be a truly productive field agent. if things ever got bad in the field, well, he'd only be slowing hemingway down, and — it's just best to move past the point.
"but anyway, i'm still waiting on you tell me the secret on how you're able to be so nice to everyone, all the time. people suck, hemingway."
hemingway spends most of the car ride flipping through radio stations, trying to find them some good background music that he can loudly talk over. he eventually settles on the top fifty ... for two songs and then he gets bored with it and starts playing with the radio again. a cher song is on when they arrive and he makes fitz sit in the car with him until it's finished.
once he orders three meals worth of food and gets his drink, hemingway's almost ready to admit that he's done thinking about work and how he's questioning himself and how tired he is of everything even thought it's just the beginning. almost.
thank god for fitz's energy because hemingway really needs it right now.
" — rob a bank as a team-bonding exercise," hemingway says, trying to match whatever outrageous idea the other is gonna serve him with. and yeah, there it is, matching tattoos. worst part is, hemingway's is willing to actually, seriously consider it. unlike the bank robbery because that's never happening.
"you know we could do something less permanent, right?" hemingway says, a comfortable smile on his face as he teases. "i don't know. buy matching ties or something." not that hemingway wears ties very often—twice a month, tops. way too uncomfortable and just very not his style. unless it's a novelty one, like the ones he always gets for christmas. "oh, that would be so ridiculous. we should do it."
"besides, what would we even get? it's a big commitment, i need ideas, something pretty. i'm not about to put just anything on my body. better give me something good," he says and—yeah, he really does sound like he could be convinced.
"i still don't think that's what faulkner had in mind, you know. he probably assumed we were—i don't know. going for a change of scenery to brainstorm." and he wouldn't really blame faulkner, especially with the amount of overtime's hemingway's been doing; it's not completely unusual but there's been a rather noticeable increase. this is not oh, i'll stay behind tonight so i don't have as much to do on friday, this is oh, this case is about to eat me whole. so it's really not that wild of a guess that hemingway would leave work ... to do more working. man, he really needs a break from that.
"but i'm banning the use of words like case, work, files—" he starts listing anything that comes to mind, his fingers keeping the count. "—london, that one's definitely off the table. well, you get it. all of it, banned. until tomorrow morning."
rubykinn:
me: *points to space* !!!!!!
friend: ????
me: *points to space more violently* !!!!!!!!!
someone: we both said some things we didn't mean
me, thinking about how i was right and absolutely meant everything i said: ......... sure did, pal
holding conversation with faulkner was always a bit of a doozy.
not to say that the agent didn't offer an incredibly valuable point-of-view for which fitz would never truly be able to understand, but more of the idea that faulkner was socially & emotionally impenetrable in just about every way. throughout their years together at the bureau, fitz couldn't ever actually think of time when the other agent lost his cool or shown any other emotion besides the ones it seemed like he practiced in the mirror — and there it was, the smile that didn't always quite reach the eyes.
it would be impressive it wasn't just a little terrifying to think about. maybe that's why fitz had talked his ear off those first few months all those years ago and then stuck to it — part-habit, part-trying to understand what made someone like the agent tick.
fitz stops in his tracks at faulkner's jest, not because he had long identified him as a sock puppet the bureau used to spout their rhetoric, or not because it almost felt out-of-character coming from the impassive paladin the bureau loved to parade around as an example of their accomplishments, but rather —
faulkner attempting jokes is a rare occurrence, and that's something significant to acknowledge. even if the delivery was ominous in ways fitz couldn't quite put his finger on yet, maybe there was a human behind the bureau's talking points after all. but, of course fitz doesn't find the words to say any of that in response to faulkner's jest about confessions & his likely very true statement about threat levels. instead, he offers —
"that's just fucked up." his mind detours for a moment and considers london. did he know he was becoming a threat before someone could ring the alarm? he decides to file that away for a day when he's actually in the mood to engage with the operation.
he joins faulkner in step again, bowing his head to hear something that should sound like good news, but fitz isn't sure how to feel about it yet. he's appreciative, replying with a quick "thank you," but something else feels missing. maybe acknowledgement of previous fuck-ups, perhaps?
"you think they'd actually go for that? i haven't been getting gold stars on my performance, lately. i've been sidelined, given a babysitter — poor hemingway — and no real direction from my superiors. then there's the operation, but ... i don't know, my heart hasn't been in it. it's almost like," fitz shrugs, and realizes he's been doing that a lot, recently.
"what's even the point?"
By the edge of the lakeside, Agent Faulkner considers his conversational partner’s take while he scatters a bit of duck feed onto the lawns. “Due to privacy measures, I cannot inquire about the subject matter and the method of how you presented those subjects during last month’s interviews, Agent Fitzgerald. However, since you did not receive a formal reprimand, I believe your assessment is factual,” he says and then pauses, closing up the snack bag and placing it in his pocket as a band of waterfowl moseys toward the food.
“But it shouldn’t be against our office’s private policy to ask what facial features Dr. Benson expressed in response to your interview?” Faulkner’s lips, usually a barely-there curve, slope gently up that one could characterize as an authorized smile.
To the casual observer working at the Temporal Bureau, they would’ve had a double take at seeing Agent Faulkner not at his office during his oft-stated “Official Office Hours” (9 am - 9 pm) but also walking and engaging with Agent Fitzgerald (of all agents!) on Bureau grounds. They make quite the odd couple; Agent Fitzgerald has charm in spades, and Agent Faulkner could make a birthday party feel like a funeral. They’re the flashy and the fatal. Oil and water.
However, Agent Faulkner would say they’ve had a cordial and honest tête-à-tête throughout the years. Though Faulkner does not entertain the more outlandish theories springing from Agent Fitzgerald’s brilliant and indecipherable mind, he has done his part to support his fellow agent, his fellow trainee, since their graduation in ‘81. Agent Fitzgerald has Faulkner’s trust that he will choose to do what’s right.
“I’m afraid I cannot reveal my confidential proceedings, Agent Fitzgerald. Unless, is this a roundabout confession that it is no longer the case?” Faulkner threads his hands behind his back and slowly steps through the cool, barren earth. He looks back with a tilted head and adds, “I am merely jesting, Agent. If anyone were to be escalated to a higher threat level, they would never know until the time comes.”
Faulkner waits for the other Agent to catch up. When Fitzgerald is close, Faulkner says in his muted undertone, “In unofficial avenues, I have said your services would shine brighter among the specialists of R&D, as we should have more minds on the case of how a disconnected and older model of the USFF can stably time travel. I hope the Science Team will request your assistance and provide stimulation, Agent.”
i am extremely analytical and everything needs to be explained… hate living in the unknown bitch i have to know everything or i will fall into a coma
timestamp — october 14th, 3 pm sharp. location — bureau grounds. description — most agents have improvement plans, don't they? ...don't they? ( closed starter for agt. faulkner. )
" — i mean, looking back on it, i didn't think anything i said was that scandalous. i haven't heard much since we all got questioned, but that doesn't mean i still don't think about the look on dr benton's face when i was excused from the room."
as much as the bureau had emphasized the importance of staying mentally, emotionally, and physically healthy while doing this work, fitzgerald had never been one to take them up on their amenities. the workout plans, the meals, the licensed mental health professionals — it was all so clinical.
and fitz was a bit allergic to structure, if it wasn't used to solve quadratic equations. structure in just about every other facet of his life? completely unnecessary.
instead, he had leaned on his working relationship with one of the people he worked with admired for the longest time, probably the one who would be their official leader any day now — agent faulkner.
fitz couldn't place where his chats with faulkner started, somewhere within those first three or four years for sure, but they had started to become a regular thing for him. sometimes every week, but mostly every two or three, depending on their schedules. his therapy sessions mandatory by the bureau paled in comparison to kinds of things he and faulkner discussed.
mostly because, well, faulker got it. besides being the bureau's gold star that shined almost too brightly for anyone that stood close enough for too long, at least faulkner knew what their work felt like. he could recognize when fitz was ( mentally, at least ) on a downward spiral.
"but i'm sure you've assured them i'm not a threat, right? i'm just ... y'know ... in need of more stimulating work." fitz thinks aloud, as they walk along the bureau's grounds around the lake. he'd been needing fresh air a lot more lately.
archimedes, his mind just previously been blown by his own brilliance, runs naked down the streets of syracuse, shouting: "eureka!" ( fitz. forty. sax. )
15 posts