summary: you went to the library to escape the solitude of your apartment. but the last thing you were expecting was to spend the afternoon flirting over Foucault with a sweater vest-clad FBI agent who talks philosophy like it’s a love language.
genre: flufffff | w/c: 1.2k
tags/warnings: glasses!reid, some light academic jargon and mentions of philosophical theory but you don’t need background on them for the story to make sense, written with fem!reader in mind but reads as gender neutral :)
a/n: went to the library and got inspired to write a little fluffy fic 🤓 I chose the philosophy angle because I recently rewatched ‘masterpiece’ where spencer mentions working on a philosophy BA (pls excuse any philosophical inaccuracies, i myself do not hold a philosophy BA).
You only came to the library because your apartment is too loud. Or too quiet. One of those paradoxes you could never quite define — either way, you can’t focus, and you need to. So you packed up your laptop and headed for the only place where you could guarantee the atmosphere would match your mood: hushed, academic, and ever-so-slightly tense.
You love libraries. Especially the older buildings — all worn paper, polished floors, and endless mazes of shelves. There’s something sacred about it. But what you didn’t expect was for someone else to reach for the same book at the same time as you.
“Sorry—”
“I’m sorry—”
You freeze. So does he.
Your eyes meet.
He’s tall. Messy-haired. Wearing a sweater vest over a button-down and a pair of browline glasses that make him look like he walked straight out of a graduate seminar. His hand is still suspended halfway toward the spine of the book you’d both reached for — Foucault’s Discipline and Punish, of all things — and his mouth was already parting to apologize again when he seemed to realize you’re both staring at each other.
“You go ahead,” he says quickly, dropping his hand.
“No, really, you can take it,” you say. “Are you also writing an unhinged think piece on carceral theory and state surveillance?”
His mouth quirks at the corner. “Not currently. But now I’m intrigued.”
You tilt your head, feeling a little emboldened. “Do you think Foucault actually believed total surveillance was inevitable?”
He blinks, surprised. “I think he meant it more literally than people like to admit.”
“So, panopticism as a warning?”
“Or a prophecy. Depends on how generous you’re feeling.”
You laugh. “Are you always this philosophical in the library?”
He looks faintly bashful, like maybe he isn’t used to playful interrogation. “It’s, uh, kind of my default setting.”
You laugh again and glance at the book still between you. “So, are we sharing this, or arm-wrestling for it?”
“Actually,” he says, rubbing the back of his neck, “I was just hoping to reread the section on disciplinary power, but it’s not urgent. I can find something else if you—”
“We could share,” you offer, surprising yourself. “There’s a reading table over there. Neutral ground.”
He looks at you for a moment, something curious in his expression. Then he nods. “Alright. Neutral ground.”
You walk side by side to a tucked-away wooden table nestled between shelves, sit down next to each other, and open the book.
The silence is companionable at first. You each pull out notebooks. You reach for your fountain pen. He’d brought a mechanical pencil — you find that endearing.
He turns the book toward you and taps a paragraph. “This part always gets overlooked.”
You read it silently. Nod. Scribble something down.
Then pass it back.
He makes a soft noise of agreement and flips a few pages, skimming with an intensity and speed that makes you wonder how many times he’d read it before and just how many words per minute he could possibly absorb.
You lean over slightly. “That part, where Foucault describes power as diffused rather than centralized. That’s where the whole thing turns, don’t you think?”
He glances at you across the book’s spine. “Yes. That’s where it stops being about prisons.”
You smile. “And starts being about everything.”
He passes the book back and nods towards your padfolio. “You take good notes.”
“Thanks,” you say, warmth blooming behind your ribs.
For the next twenty minutes, you trade the book like it’s a conversation — passing it back and forth with soft commentary and under-the-breath questions. You don’t speak constantly, but there’s no awkwardness. Just the quiet rhythm of two people paying attention to the same thing at the same time.
You aren’t sure when your knee started brushing his under the table. Or when your hands began to linger slightly too long during each pass. You tell yourself it’s incidental. The table’s small, and the book is large. But still, you notice.
When your fingers brush his again — knuckles, this time — you hear his breath catch and look up to catch his eyes.
You could look away. Instead, you opt for a conversational angle.
“So what’s your background? You don’t seem like the political theory type.”
He tilts his head. “No?”
“You read too fast. And your notes are in shorthand.” You lean in, smiling. “You’re either a court reporter, an academic, or some sort of federal agent.”
His eyes sparkle with something between amusement and alarm. “I’d argue there are more possibilities than that.”
“You’d probably argue anything,” you say, grinning. “Which is why I’m betting on academic.”
He ducks his head. “I’ve spent a lot of time in academia, but nope. I’m with the FBI.”
You struggle to hide your shock, then study him a little closer. “You? No way.”
“Dr. Spencer Reid,” he says, offering a wave instead of a handshake. “Profiler with the Behavioral Analysis Unit.”
“Wait. I’ve heard of you.”
Spencer blinks. “You have?”
You smile. “It’s hard not to, if you work anywhere near federal law enforcement. You’re the one with, like, a million PhDs and a tendency to quote Enlightenment theorists in case briefings, right?”
His ears flush pink. “My reputation precedes me, I guess. But, uh, just three PhDs. Not a million.”
You laugh softly at his awkwardness and introduce yourself in return. “I work in federal program management. Mostly DOJ-funded prison reform initiatives. Sometimes I write about the surveillance state.”
His brow lifts. “Then you probably know more about this than I do.”
“Somehow I doubt that,” you chuckle.
He ducks his head. “Well, I’ve never done it professionally. I just read a lot.”
You study him for another moment — soft-spoken, serious, a tad awkward, earnest to a fault — and feel something warm pool in your chest.
“I like your brain,” you say casually.
That makes him choke on air.
You grin. “Too forward?”
“No, I just… don’t hear that often.”
You tilt your head, feigning surprise. “That seems criminal.”
He looks at you like he’s mentally thumbing through an index card catalog for the appropriate response. When he doesn’t find one, he does what you imagine he always does: he reaches for something safer. Facts.
“Foucault argued the panopticon wasn’t just architectural,” he says suddenly, voice steadier than his posture. “It was a metaphor for disciplinary power throughout society. He thought it turned surveillance into a subtle form of control.”
You gasp. “Oh no. Now you’re flirting with post-structuralist theory?”
He flushes. “Sorry.”
“Don’t be. That’s my love language.”
For a moment, the air between you shimmers — not quite silent, not quite static. You watch his fingers tap against the pages. He watches your smile soften.
You stand, closing your notebook. “I gotta head out. But would you want to do this again? Same time next week?”
His gaze lifts. “Same book?”
“Same table,” you say, shaking your head as you sling your bag over your shoulder. “Different philosopher. I want to see what you have to say about Nietzsche. I bet you have many opinions on eternal recurrence.”
Spencer huffs a quiet laugh, eyes still on you. “You have no idea.”
As you turn, notebook tucked under your arm, the air in the library seems to shift. The hush of pages and footsteps resumes around you, but it sounds different now. Warmer, maybe. Or maybe it’s just you.
At the end of the row, you glance back.
Spencer’s still watching, lopsided grin on his face. He pushes his glasses up his nose and looks away like a little kid caught peeping at his gifts on Christmas Eve.
You turn the corner smiling.
Library rules: always return what you borrow. But this time, maybe — just maybe — you’re hoping to keep what you’d found.
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masterlist
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Guys. I have this new AU called Master Stark where Tony Stark ends up at Kamar-Taj and becomes a Master and uh, I need some weird rules that Wong only put into place because of Tony.
These are the rules so far:
No licking the books
Time travel is forbidden in the library
No one is allowed to read while standing up and/or walking in the library