the-last-hair-bender:featherquillpen:pagerunner:peroxidepirate:See, this kills me because it’s a pre
the-last-hair-bender:featherquillpen:pagerunner:peroxidepirate:See, this kills me because it’s a pretty fucking fundamental driving force in Eliot Spencer’s character - “you can’t make that promise to more than one person.” And yet he ends the series doing exactly that.The evil writerly part of my brain wants to know what happens when he can’t be there for Parker and Hardison both at the same moment. Whether it’s a heist gone wrong and he has to choose who to protect, or they’re in conflict with each other and he can’t avoid taking sides - what happens? Hardison. (At least for the job gone wrong, and assuming nothing in the job fundamentally supercedes it by putting other’s lives in danger.) Parker would tell him to get Hardison out and he’d do it, because that’s what makes them…them. And when Hardison demands why, Eliot tells him, “she said to say, there’s never a plan M.”i feel personally attacked by this headcanon*staggers back clutching chest* -- source link
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