Vampires were the things of stories and legends in Spencer's world. They made up best-selling books and blockbuster movies, not that he understood the fascination with it all, but it was a hit with the younger crowd. He didn't understand it, but then again he wasn't a squealing teenage girl. His only knowledge of vampires came from the books he read in the library, and even then he took that information with a grain of salt.
He blinked at her statement, and would have very quickly corrected it if he didn't suddenly hear Hotch's voice in his head, telling him that's enough or the look Morgan gave when he went off on a nerdy tangent. No, he was going to stop himself before it even got to that point, and laughed at what he assumed was a joke. "Are you sure? I promise it's clean," he added in return when she turned down the offer for his jacket. After a moment he set it down on the table within reach just in case she changed her mind.
Everyone always thought that working for the FBI was exciting, and in many ways it was. Spencer had put his life on the line numerous times while working on cases, but that didn't mean he didn't long for something a little more low key. Sometimes, especially in the beginning, it was a little too much to handle, and he feared that he would be haunted by nightmares of killings and psychopaths. And he still had nightmares, but he had grown used to them. Desensitized to the entire affair of it all.
"Oh nightclub," he said with a nod of his head. "Sounds like fun. But the philanthropy especially." He leaned against the desk, partially sitting on it with his arms folded over his head. "What did you and your sister support mostly? I personally love the arts, classical literature especially. It's a shame that it's being phased out of a lot of schools."
He was waiting for the question of profiling to come about. Everyone always asked, especially if they were unfamiliar with it. And they somehow managed to make it all seem so much simpler than it was. Spencer smiled, and raked his hand through his messy locks of hair. "Well technically I could," he said honestly. "But it's not something that happens in an instant. It takes conversations with the person, observing their mannerisms. Obviously we don't have that luxury when we're trying to find an unsub. We have to look at what they leave behind at the crime scene, and a lot of times we look at victimology. There are a lot of factors that go into it."