Seven Years Gone
Summary: Seven years ago, Aaron Hotchner’s wife disappeared overseas without a trace.
For seven years, Aaron Hotchner lived with a ghost.
Not the kind that haunted old houses or appeared in dark corners. No, his ghost wore a wedding ring, had a laugh he could still hear in his dreams, and a smile he remembered with painful clarity.
His ghost had a name.
His wife.
Seven years ago, she had vanished overseas during what was supposed to be a simple humanitarian assignment. One day there were emails, phone calls, promises that she’d be home soon.
The next day there was silence.
No body.
No ransom demand.
No proof of life.
Nothing.
Just an empty space beside him in bed and a hundred unanswered questions.
The BAU had searched.
Aaron had searched harder.
Governments became involved. International agencies were contacted. Missing persons units spent months chasing dead ends. Every lead eventually crumbled into dust.
Eventually the case went cold.
The world moved on.
Aaron never did.
Because unlike everyone else, he refused to believe she was dead.
The team knew Aaron carried old scars.
They knew he’d lost people.
They knew there were parts of his life he never discussed.
What they didn’t know was that Aaron Hotchner had been married.
Still was, technically.
The ring never left his finger.
Most people simply assumed it was habit.
Nobody ever asked.
And Aaron never told them.
Because talking about her made the loss real.
Because admitting she was gone felt too close to giving up.
So he kept her hidden away like a fragile secret.
Until the day everything changed.
⸻
The call came at 2:17 in the morning.
Aaron had been reviewing reports at his dining room table when his private phone rang.
Almost nobody had that number.
His pulse immediately spiked.
“Aaron Hotchner.”
For several seconds there was only static.
Then a voice.
Male.
Older.
Foreign accent.
“Mr. Hotchner?”
Aaron was already standing.
“Who is this?”
“I believe we have information regarding your wife.”
The world stopped.
Every muscle in his body locked.
His heart slammed painfully against his ribs.
For seven years he’d imagined hearing those words.
For seven years they’d never come.
And now suddenly—
Now they were real.
Aaron gripped the edge of the table.
“What did you say?”
“We believe your wife was seen approximately three weeks ago.”
The phone nearly slipped from his fingers.
“No.”
The word escaped before he could stop it.
Not because he didn’t believe them.
Because he was terrified to.
“Who are you?” he demanded.
The man identified himself as an investigator working with an international organization.
Then he spoke a sentence Aaron would remember for the rest of his life.
“We have photographs.”
⸻
Thirty minutes later Aaron was standing inside the BAU conference room.
Everyone stared.
It wasn’t unusual for Hotch to call meetings.
It was unusual for him to look like this.
Pale.
Shaken.
Desperate.
Morgan was the first to speak.
“Hotch?”
Aaron placed a file onto the table.
Nobody moved.
Nobody spoke.
Then he opened it.
Photographs slid across the polished surface.
Emily picked one up first.
A woman.
Thin.
Exhausted.
Standing outside a marketplace somewhere overseas.
Long hair.
Tired eyes.
Wearing clothes several sizes too large.
But undeniably alive.
Emily frowned.
“Who’s this?”
Aaron’s throat tightened.
For a moment he couldn’t answer.
Then finally—
“My wife.”
Silence.
Absolute silence.
The entire room froze.
Reid blinked.
JJ’s mouth fell open.
Morgan stared.
“What?”
Aaron looked down at the photograph.
The edges had already become worn from how tightly he’d been holding it.
“My wife.”
Nobody knew what to say.
Because in all their years together, Aaron Hotchner had never once mentioned having a wife.
Not once.
“You were married?” Rossi finally asked.
Aaron’s jaw tightened.
“I am married.”
The distinction hit everyone immediately.
Present tense.
Not was.
Am.
Emily slowly lowered the photo.
“What happened?”
And for the first time in seven years, Aaron told the story.
⸻
The room remained silent as Aaron spoke.
He explained how they’d met.
How she’d challenged him from the beginning.
How she’d never cared about his title or position.
How she made him laugh.
How she made difficult days easier.
How she’d become his best friend before she became his wife.
The team listened carefully.
Listening to their stoic unit chief describe someone with so much love felt almost surreal.
Then his voice changed.
The warmth disappeared.
Seven years ago she’d traveled overseas to assist with humanitarian efforts.
Communication remained normal for months.
Then suddenly everything stopped.
Her vehicle was discovered abandoned.
Several people disappeared alongside her.
No witnesses.
No suspects.
Nothing.
Just gone.
Aaron had spent years chasing every lead imaginable.
Every report.
Every sighting.
Every rumor.
And every single one ended the same way.
Failure.
Until now.
When he finished speaking, nobody moved.
Because suddenly so many things made sense.
The loneliness.
The walls.
The grief hidden behind his eyes.
He hadn’t simply been private.
He’d been mourning.
For seven years.
Alone.
“We’re going,” Morgan said.
Aaron looked up.
Morgan leaned forward.
“We’re finding her.”
One by one everyone nodded.
Even before Aaron officially requested assistance.
They were already in.
Because that’s what family did.
⸻
The flight felt endless.
Aaron didn’t sleep.
Couldn’t sleep.
Every time he closed his eyes he imagined arriving too late.
Imagined discovering the photographs were old.
Imagined another dead end.
Another disappointment.
Another seven years.
Beside him, Rossi quietly watched.
Eventually he spoke.
“You okay?”
Aaron laughed once.
A hollow sound.
“No.”
Rossi nodded.
Fair answer.
After a moment he placed a hand on Aaron’s shoulder.
“We’ll find her.”
Aaron wanted to believe that.
God, he wanted to.
But hope had hurt him before.
Hope had shattered him repeatedly.
So instead he stared out the window and waited.
⸻
The investigation moved quickly.
Witnesses confirmed sightings.
Locations were narrowed.
Patterns emerged.
For the first time in years they weren’t chasing rumors.
They were following evidence.
Real evidence.
Every lead brought them closer.
Every confirmation tightened the knot in Aaron’s chest.
Because the possibility was becoming reality.
She was alive.
She had actually survived.
Seven years.
Seven years alone.
Seven years without him.
Without home.
Without anyone looking after her.
The thought made him sick.
And then came the breakthrough.
A witness.
Reliable.
Recent.
Less than forty-eight hours old.
Aaron barely heard the details before he was moving.
The team followed.
Vehicles sped through crowded streets.
Radio chatter filled the air.
Aaron’s heart hammered harder with every passing second.
Please.
Please let it be her.
⸻
The building was old.
Run-down.
Hidden away from the rest of the city.
Officers secured exits.
Agents spread out.
Aaron entered first.
His weapon remained lowered.
His breathing felt impossible.
Every room they cleared was empty.
Every hallway stretched endlessly.
Then—
Movement.
Someone at the far end.
A figure disappearing through a doorway.
Aaron ran.
The team shouted behind him.
He ignored them.
For seven years he’d waited.
He wasn’t waiting another second.
He reached the room.
Stopped.
And forgot how to breathe.
A woman stood near a broken window.
Thin.
Fragile.
Older.
But unmistakably her.
For several seconds neither moved.
Neither spoke.
The world simply ceased to exist.
Aaron felt tears sting his eyes.
She stared at him like she wasn’t sure he was real.
Like he might disappear if she blinked.
“Aaron?”
Her voice cracked.
Seven years vanished instantly.
Aaron crossed the room.
Fast.
Then faster.
And suddenly she was in his arms.
Alive.
Actually alive.
He held her so tightly he was afraid he’d hurt her.
She buried her face against his shoulder and broke.
Years of pain.
Years of fear.
Years of loneliness.
Everything came crashing down at once.
Aaron felt his own tears fall.
Didn’t care.
For the first time in seven years, he allowed himself to stop being strong.
Because she was here.
Because she’d come back.
Because the nightmare was finally ending.
“I found you,” he whispered.
Her hands shook as they gripped his jacket.
“You found me.”
The team quietly stopped in the doorway.
Nobody interrupted.
Nobody spoke.
Because they were witnessing something sacred.
















