They call it vacation for a reason

Jan 09, 2010 12:04

Who: Aaron Hotchner and Sid
What: An interview of the cognitive sort
When: Backdated to January 6th, 2010
Where:Bod's room at The Five Seasons Hotel
Rating: PG/PG-13?
Status: Closed / Incomplete

And this isn't it. )

!closed, sid jenkins, aaron hotchner

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Comments 11

uselessandcrap January 9 2010, 17:55:44 UTC
Pulling on his pair of jeans and t-shirt again, only having had the heart to borrow a pair of Bod's shorts for the time being, Sid pulled his beanie down over his greasy, messy hair and headed down to the lobby of the hotel. He was supposed to meet Agent Hotchner and, for whatever reason, the other man thought that interviewing Sid would help Sid find Cass. Whatever worked, he supposed dully, as he went out of Bod's room, pocketing the key, and getting into the elevator ( ... )

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anchor_on_heart January 9 2010, 18:23:11 UTC
"It's possible." Hotch said with a slight downturn of his lips. He was used to people doubting profiling as a useful skill. "It also might give a clue as to why your own memory has been affected." He motioned towards the elevator. "Is there somewhere we can go that's private?" A part of him couldn't believe the coincidence of being able to see into Bod's apartment at the same time he was interviewing Sid. He was certain that whatever he saw would help understand both young men better ( ... )

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uselessandcrap January 9 2010, 19:41:44 UTC
Sid wasn't quite sure how the agent thought that talking to Sid was going to help find Cass, especially since the other man seemed to think that Sid had some sort of amnesia which Sid knew was not true. Although, the more the man mentioned it, the less Sid was certain it wasn't real. The people on the forums had said that sometimes people left one year and ended up in this one. Sid knew he wasn't crazy...but he was starting to second guess it ( ... )

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anchor_on_heart January 9 2010, 20:20:39 UTC
Hotch had conducted enough interviews to pick on when someone was extremely anxious and hiding it, so Sid's reluctance believe his own (potential) condition was understandable. It would be easier to convince him to see a doctor, but as he technically wasn't on the job and Canada wasn't exactly in his jurisdiction, all Hotch really had to work with was what Sid told him.

He'd like to say he'd worked with less, but aside from the Matloff case, with no surviving witnesses and a suspect who didn't remember anything...this was probably the most unsubstantial case he'd ever taken on. Hotch trusted his instinct though, and they were telling him something was very, very, off ( ... )

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