Maladaptive. Yeah, Spencer can say that again. Frank says nothing for a long time, looking down into his coffee as he processes the other man's answer. Which was predictably thorough for such a bullshit question to begin with.
"I'm not like this because of trauma." He's always been like this. It's how he ended up in the military and how that military ended up betraying him. And then he had had to hunt down every single responsible party because that's who he is. Not who he became, but who he always was. Reid should know that off the bat, even if it isn't necessarily easy to admit.
Reid takes this without batting an eyelash. He's a good listener, attentive, and he doesn't discredit what he's told-- but he isn't bothered by it, either.
"There's extensive theoretical debates about that very question," he answers. "You can think of it as the classic nature versus nurture argument, although it's more refined and nuanced within the realm of violent crime psychology. Our best guess right now is that the end result is due to both. Maybe someone has a predisposition, but--" Spencer slows, for once, tone growing quieter. "We always look for catalysts. People don't do things for no reason. Under the right conditions, I've also killed people."
He isn't really paying attention until Spencer admits to killing. His eyes flash on the younger man's and he wonders if they shouldn't be sitting for such a heavy topic. Deciding to take the initiative, he moves to the rickety little table and sits in the freshly painted black chair by the only window in the whole place, leaving Reid the mismatched chair opposite him in peeling blue paint. He takes a shallow sip as he tries to parse through it all and come up with something to say.
"I don't regret any of what I did. Do you?" Most police officers never even discharge their weapons. He knows a lot of agents who haven't either. Suddenlt he thinks that Spencer Reid would be in good company with Special Agent Dinah Madani. He wonders idly if they know each other.
Reid's whole life is overly serious conversations. He finds room for friends, his mom, stupid TV shows and enjoying books, here and there. But by and large he is at home with topics most people rarely touch upon, including judging the necessity of taking a life. Avoiding the idea isn't really possible, for him.
He sits, drinks some more coffee before answering. "I don't know," he says honestly. This isn't his first year on the job, and with experience he's gained... not clarity, but acceptance. "I'm not saying it doesn't keep me up at night, sometimes. But I know I'd rather live with it than live with failing to save someone I could've saved... Or dying myself," Spencer admits. "So that's the choice I made."
Frank's nod is respectful, he understands that perspective. For certain instances, he can even relate. But it isn't his kills that ever kept him up. It was the people left alive to fuck shit up for him. Which he supposes Reid also touched on. "Good choice." Better than dying at some scumbag's hand. He seems like a good kid, someone who really cares about other people. Frank's never fully been formed that way though, even if he can recognize it easily in others.
"I didn't want to live through it. No one does, right? They all off themselves at the end." He shrugs a shoulder like it's nothing. But it's not nothing, not even to him. At the end, he had a change of heart. Frank Castle wanted to live. And maybe now, he wants to change.
He doesn't take his approval too much to heart-- Spencer's used to distancing himself-- but he appreciates it nonetheless. Before he can answer, though, Frank says that like it's something to be expected, and a frown manifests on his face, denial and concern.
"Not all of them." He has to think quickly, decide where to go with this. He sounds tentative. "And you did. You did live through it. So-- where are you going from here?"
He tips his head to concede the point. The doctor here has obviously done far more research and he's not about to pretend otherwise. He really had wanted to die though, before. Avenge his family and duck out before he had to live with the consequences. Now that he seems to have neatly skipped over the consequence part, though, the rest is just... dead space he has to fill.
"Fuck if I know. End up doing things just to pass the time." But that's not really living, is it?
It's characteristic for long-term violent offenders to be lacking in overarching goals and direction in life, so Spencer isn't surprised by this issue, although he's learned better than to just openly describe him as 'an offender'. Still, someone who commits crimes of such a severe nature either doesn't think they'll be caught, or doesn't care about the consequences-- because they don't see themselves as having a future.
"If you still feel strongly about-- what you were doing," he temporizes, "there's no reason you couldn't consult. Legally."
If he still feels strongly? About murdering everyone who had anything to do with his family's slaughter? Well, except one. Death is too sweet a release for some.
"Consult," he repeats, like it's a word he's never heard before. What... "What are you talking about?"
The look Reid gets is... weary. But he hasn't misstepped. Frank likes the idea of being useful to people like him, and Agent Madani. He just isn't cut out for it.
"Not a good idea," he says simply, getting up to refill his cup.
Oh, good. So he hasn't offended. Reid doesn't want to wear out his welcome, but moreover, he just doesn't get any satisfaction out of upsetting people.
"What are your objections?" he asks quickly, like he really wants to know them, not like he's gearing up to shoot them down one by one. Reid operates at such a fast pace mentally that sometimes his words try to keep up.
"Other than the fact that I'm not supposed to exist?" It's just a deflection, meant to change the subject. He doesn't think Reid will be so easily swayed though. Homeland Security could easily get around all that and Frank knows they'd jump at the opportunity to own him. He can't afford to be someone's secret weapon again, he'd trusted the government with everything and they'd taken that same everything away.
With coffee #2 already in his hand, Frank reluctantly sits back down. He had agreed to this, he should cooperate. It's just... never been his strong suit. "I'm not cut out to be the neat little vigilante everyone wants, like Daredevil. I can't punch bullies and send them off in handcuffs." He punctuates with a noisy sip. "I put bad guys down. Plain and simple. They put me in the field, none of 'em get back up. Which means you don't get your little case study."
He waits until the real reason is outed, drinking his coffee, but is immediately shaking his head. Reid has no experience being treated as a weapon, and hasn't quite equated his actual experiences of being treated as a computer to it, so he hasn't realized that side of things. But taking things as said...
"I think you have a misconception of the role of CIs, also known as criminal informants. You might have to, um, tone it down a little, but there's no expectation that your hands would be totally clean. I suspect the more prohibitive aspect is that you would have to answer to someone?" His voice tilts up in a question. Spencer anticipates being a little more law-abiding to be less problematic than having to cooperate with a broader organization, for someone used to being a solo, no-holds-barred, no-rules vigilante.
Wow, Spencer, you're really not listening. That's okay, but Frank is narrowing his eyes like this is not what he invited you here for. Because it isn't.
"The last time I answered to someone, my whole family got blown up in front of my face." Is that what he wants to hear? Frank takes a sip of coffee like he made a strong statement about the weather and nothing more.
He's working through it in his head, okay. Spencer sometimes thinks out loud. But he stops that when he sees this reaction, because the next step in his head is a natural, Well, you seem not to mind me too much, excluding the present moment, so why don't I be your contact?
Is he really ready to get into that? Probably he should know what he's signing up for, first. So he meekly takes this rebuttal and allows Frank to re-steer the conversation back on-topic.
"Do you want to... um. Is that something you want to talk about?" Or ignore forever? Spencer thinks it could go either way. He's undoubtedly concealing a lot of emotion beneath that casual coffee sip, but whether he wants to let it out or not is another question.
He isn't sure what Reid is asking about, but it doesn't really matter, does it? The park, his unit... they're all equally as fucked up. He can't talk about this in group, this isn't like things regular fucking veterans go through. This is a Frank Castle problem. So, he justifies, maybe it will help. He tries to ignore the burning suspicion that it's not others he's helping, but himself. He doesn't want to be selfish anymore, he doesn't even want to have regular human needs. Let alone whatever the fuck this is.
Frank sets his coffee cup down, which is a feat unto itself if you know the man. Like whiskey to an alcoholic they're rarely seen apart. He folds his arms at the elbows over the table and leans in, like it's a secret. He doesn't have the luxury of secrets. All of his life was blown out over every TV screen and newspaper headline for months. Now he's mostly in tabloids alongside Jimmy Hoffa and D.B Cooper. He's a legend. He never wanted to be that.
"Do you think they're gonna make a fucking documentary about me? Because that shit..." One corner of his lips twitches up and he shakes his head, leaning back like he wasn't just moving in on Spencer like prey. "Look. Why don't you just ask me what you wanna know about it, because I can't read your mind, doc." And if he starts talking on his own he'll probably never stop. That's the most dangerous thing about this right here.
He does feel a little jolt of nerves when Frank decisively sets his coffee down and leans in, but it's mostly a conditioned response. Reid is very aware of himself as prey in general, not necessarily for Frank Castle but for the multitude of bullies and violent offenders out there in the world. There's a reason he stays behind a desk as much as possible.
His nerves settle the second they get back to his comfort zone: talking. "I have no idea if they'll make a documentary," he says honestly. "A book is probably more likely. But I promise that nothing you tell me will be part of it. Studying something is different from generic public interest." Which he evidently has some distaste for. Reid is not a fan of glorifying crimes, or mental illness, and the two are often intricately linked.
"As for me asking-- that is, I can, if you're sure." Reid looks more tentative, sliding one finger around the rim of his mug over and over. "... We could just start from the beginning." Frank refusing to answer whether he wants to talk about it makes it seem like he does, in fact, want to talk about it, at least to Spencer.
A book. That's better. He knows Reid wouldn't be a part of that, which is another layer to why he's trusting him now, but it still helps to hear the words. This can be safe, the same way group at the VA is. He can spill out his heart right here on this table, and no one has to know.
He's just never been very good at it. The sharing, the trusting. Talking about himself is like an exercise in torture and he only does it once a week, and only in theory really since he has to change the details in order to keep his anonymity. Frank swallows, leaning further back in his chair and crossing his arms across his chest. His body language keeps changing up, from open to completely closed off, like he can't decide whether to go on the offense or defense here. Like he can't fully decide which side of the table he wants to be on.
His eyes focus on Reid's hand, the repetitive motion. People in his line of work were predicated to that sort of behavior, he thinks. He's not the analyst here, but it reminds him of Micro all the same. Nervous and too damn smart for his own good. "The beginning," he repeats, and it gets a gritty smile. He's not even sure what the beginning is, anymore. "You want to hear about my childhood, doc? That I was never good at making friends, fitting in. Always rearing for a fight. Because you'd be right. I like to fulfill a stereotype every now and then just like the next asshole."
Reid has spent his time in Narcotics Anonymous-- is still going-- and it's similarly painful and difficult for him to wrench these truths out of himself, to talk about the things he keeps deepest buried. He's always had that propensity, for keeping pain to himself, had been taught it in a childhood where he was the caretaker and had no one to depend on. Half the reason he became such a teacher's pet was for the assurance and attention.
He gets it. He still fidgets, because he's not great at being totally still, but Reid listens closely, attentive without being pressuring. "Sounds like me without the fighting back," he shoots back without a hint of embarrassment. "You're not the only walking stereotype. If you think your childhood is the beginning, we can start there. If you think it's somewhere else--" Spencer shrugs. "I'm here to listen to what you think."
He snorts, though it's completely devoid of humor. No, Spencer doesn't seem like he's the fighting type, or ever was. Whereas Frank looks like he was made for war, all hard edges and brute force. "The beginning was the Marines." That's always been the beginning. He can pretend to be obtuse all he wants, but at least some things are still simple. "And I fucking loved--being a Marine." Nothing else compared to that brotherhood. To serving his country putting his inherent darkness to good use at last. The Marines offered him a safe harbor where he could be completely himself. He's never had that anywhere else, except maybe with Micro. When they were putting down the very people he thought he could trust.
Now that seems like they're getting somewhere. Spencer makes a quiet, listening noise to encourage him, eye contact cutting in and out so he doesn't seem too intent, using his mostly-empty coffee mug as an excuse.
"So what happened?" he asks, a simple leading statement. Letting him take that anywhere he wants.
Frank's expression resembles that of a puppy whose worn himself down after a long day of playing. He looks about to crash any second and his voice sounds just as tired. "You know what happened. Everyone does." He shakes his head, leaning over the table again but this time like he might need it to catch his fall, arms still wrapped tightly around himself. "I was a weapon for the kind of dickbag I was supposed to be going after. How do you think that feels?" A hiss, fuck. Spencer's going to ask him how that feels now, isn't he?
Actually... Reid takes the question literally. It's a good listening tactic, anyway, to check his understanding and his interpretation. It shows that he's paying attention, and wants to be corrected-- which he does.
"Awful," he says bluntly. "Dehumanizing. And I would guess..." More thoughtfully, as he turns it over, "Like a crisis of faith? If being in the Marines grounded you, losing that would be a betrayal." Spencer can liken it to the sense of abandonment he still carries from his father leaving. Something you thought you could depend on to support you, that you knew where you stood, suddenly gone.
He isn't sure if it's better or worse, that Reid can read him like a book. On the one hand, it's sweet validation to have the words come from someone else's lips. On the other... it feels like crap. Frank unbinds his arms to scrub a hand over his face. This is not anything like how he thought this would be, or how he thought it would feel to rehash.
"I killed a man in cold blood because my commander told me he was colluding with Al Quaida. He wasn't. He was just a dad, a business owner, trying to make his way like any-fucking-one else. This-this guy. Agent Orange, that's the only thing we knew to call him. Fucking piece of work from the minute I laid eyes on him. He said to all of us, he said we were the gun. The means to his end. He said, 'I point, you shoot.' And then he laughed." Frank swallows back his disgust, still hunched over the table, it's too hard to look at Spencer for this. "You're right, okay? You're right. I never thought the Marines could steer me wrong. Even when I felt-- even when I knew it didn't feel right, that didn't matter. All my trust was already with the unit. We were family."
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"I'm not like this because of trauma." He's always been like this. It's how he ended up in the military and how that military ended up betraying him. And then he had had to hunt down every single responsible party because that's who he is. Not who he became, but who he always was. Reid should know that off the bat, even if it isn't necessarily easy to admit.
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"There's extensive theoretical debates about that very question," he answers. "You can think of it as the classic nature versus nurture argument, although it's more refined and nuanced within the realm of violent crime psychology. Our best guess right now is that the end result is due to both. Maybe someone has a predisposition, but--" Spencer slows, for once, tone growing quieter. "We always look for catalysts. People don't do things for no reason. Under the right conditions, I've also killed people."
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"I don't regret any of what I did. Do you?" Most police officers never even discharge their weapons. He knows a lot of agents who haven't either. Suddenlt he thinks that Spencer Reid would be in good company with Special Agent Dinah Madani. He wonders idly if they know each other.
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He sits, drinks some more coffee before answering. "I don't know," he says honestly. This isn't his first year on the job, and with experience he's gained... not clarity, but acceptance. "I'm not saying it doesn't keep me up at night, sometimes. But I know I'd rather live with it than live with failing to save someone I could've saved... Or dying myself," Spencer admits. "So that's the choice I made."
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"I didn't want to live through it. No one does, right? They all off themselves at the end." He shrugs a shoulder like it's nothing. But it's not nothing, not even to him. At the end, he had a change of heart. Frank Castle wanted to live. And maybe now, he wants to change.
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"Not all of them." He has to think quickly, decide where to go with this. He sounds tentative. "And you did. You did live through it. So-- where are you going from here?"
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"Fuck if I know. End up doing things just to pass the time." But that's not really living, is it?
sorry, vacation happened!
"If you still feel strongly about-- what you were doing," he temporizes, "there's no reason you couldn't consult. Legally."
i hope you had fun c:
"Consult," he repeats, like it's a word he's never heard before. What... "What are you talking about?"
I DID it was tres relaxing
"Being a confidential informant?"
yessss excellent
"Not a good idea," he says simply, getting up to refill his cup.
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"What are your objections?" he asks quickly, like he really wants to know them, not like he's gearing up to shoot them down one by one. Reid operates at such a fast pace mentally that sometimes his words try to keep up.
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With coffee #2 already in his hand, Frank reluctantly sits back down. He had agreed to this, he should cooperate. It's just... never been his strong suit. "I'm not cut out to be the neat little vigilante everyone wants, like Daredevil. I can't punch bullies and send them off in handcuffs." He punctuates with a noisy sip. "I put bad guys down. Plain and simple. They put me in the field, none of 'em get back up. Which means you don't get your little case study."
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"I think you have a misconception of the role of CIs, also known as criminal informants. You might have to, um, tone it down a little, but there's no expectation that your hands would be totally clean. I suspect the more prohibitive aspect is that you would have to answer to someone?" His voice tilts up in a question. Spencer anticipates being a little more law-abiding to be less problematic than having to cooperate with a broader organization, for someone used to being a solo, no-holds-barred, no-rules vigilante.
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"The last time I answered to someone, my whole family got blown up in front of my face." Is that what he wants to hear? Frank takes a sip of coffee like he made a strong statement about the weather and nothing more.
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Is he really ready to get into that? Probably he should know what he's signing up for, first. So he meekly takes this rebuttal and allows Frank to re-steer the conversation back on-topic.
"Do you want to... um. Is that something you want to talk about?" Or ignore forever? Spencer thinks it could go either way. He's undoubtedly concealing a lot of emotion beneath that casual coffee sip, but whether he wants to let it out or not is another question.
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Frank sets his coffee cup down, which is a feat unto itself if you know the man. Like whiskey to an alcoholic they're rarely seen apart. He folds his arms at the elbows over the table and leans in, like it's a secret. He doesn't have the luxury of secrets. All of his life was blown out over every TV screen and newspaper headline for months. Now he's mostly in tabloids alongside Jimmy Hoffa and D.B Cooper. He's a legend. He never wanted to be that.
"Do you think they're gonna make a fucking documentary about me? Because that shit..." One corner of his lips twitches up and he shakes his head, leaning back like he wasn't just moving in on Spencer like prey. "Look. Why don't you just ask me what you wanna know about it, because I can't read your mind, doc." And if he starts talking on his own he'll probably never stop. That's the most dangerous thing about this right here.
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His nerves settle the second they get back to his comfort zone: talking. "I have no idea if they'll make a documentary," he says honestly. "A book is probably more likely. But I promise that nothing you tell me will be part of it. Studying something is different from generic public interest." Which he evidently has some distaste for. Reid is not a fan of glorifying crimes, or mental illness, and the two are often intricately linked.
"As for me asking-- that is, I can, if you're sure." Reid looks more tentative, sliding one finger around the rim of his mug over and over. "... We could just start from the beginning." Frank refusing to answer whether he wants to talk about it makes it seem like he does, in fact, want to talk about it, at least to Spencer.
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He's just never been very good at it. The sharing, the trusting. Talking about himself is like an exercise in torture and he only does it once a week, and only in theory really since he has to change the details in order to keep his anonymity. Frank swallows, leaning further back in his chair and crossing his arms across his chest. His body language keeps changing up, from open to completely closed off, like he can't decide whether to go on the offense or defense here. Like he can't fully decide which side of the table he wants to be on.
His eyes focus on Reid's hand, the repetitive motion. People in his line of work were predicated to that sort of behavior, he thinks. He's not the analyst here, but it reminds him of Micro all the same. Nervous and too damn smart for his own good. "The beginning," he repeats, and it gets a gritty smile. He's not even sure what the beginning is, anymore. "You want to hear about my childhood, doc? That I was never good at making friends, fitting in. Always rearing for a fight. Because you'd be right. I like to fulfill a stereotype every now and then just like the next asshole."
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He gets it. He still fidgets, because he's not great at being totally still, but Reid listens closely, attentive without being pressuring. "Sounds like me without the fighting back," he shoots back without a hint of embarrassment. "You're not the only walking stereotype. If you think your childhood is the beginning, we can start there. If you think it's somewhere else--" Spencer shrugs. "I'm here to listen to what you think."
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"So what happened?" he asks, a simple leading statement. Letting him take that anywhere he wants.
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"Awful," he says bluntly. "Dehumanizing. And I would guess..." More thoughtfully, as he turns it over, "Like a crisis of faith? If being in the Marines grounded you, losing that would be a betrayal." Spencer can liken it to the sense of abandonment he still carries from his father leaving. Something you thought you could depend on to support you, that you knew where you stood, suddenly gone.
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"I killed a man in cold blood because my commander told me he was colluding with Al Quaida. He wasn't. He was just a dad, a business owner, trying to make his way like any-fucking-one else. This-this guy. Agent Orange, that's the only thing we knew to call him. Fucking piece of work from the minute I laid eyes on him. He said to all of us, he said we were the gun. The means to his end. He said, 'I point, you shoot.' And then he laughed." Frank swallows back his disgust, still hunched over the table, it's too hard to look at Spencer for this. "You're right, okay? You're right. I never thought the Marines could steer me wrong. Even when I felt-- even when I knew it didn't feel right, that didn't matter. All my trust was already with the unit. We were family."
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