Five sentence fic: Sam finds out Lucifer is back and powering up. He doesn’t know who to talk to about what he’s feeling. He calls Rowena.

itsaboutsam:

Sam waits until Dean is in his room, and then double checks that his own door his locked before he dials the number; he knows he could go to Dean and tell him just how awful all this makes him feel, and he knows Dean would listen, but Dean can’t get it– through no fault of Dean’s own– and Sam needs to talk to someone who understands the feeling. 

“Samuel, how lovely to hear from you,” Rowena’s voice travels through the phone, hazy and velvet, and Sam has never been happier to hear her voice. He can’t be bothered to heed Dean’s warning that she isn’t their friend; right now she’s what he’s got, and he believes in her anger as much as he believes in his own.

“Rowena,” he says, “please tell me that spell worked.” 

There is a long pause on the other end of the line, filled with Sam’s hammering heart and the gentle static fuzz, the anticipation, the fear that never goes away, before he practically hears Rowena’s smile along with the words, “Don’t you worry, Sam– I won’t make his death quick.”  

send me a request and i’ll write a 5-sentence fic

Sam was a monster – a broken, gnarled thing – he just didn’t understand how Jess didn’t see it. (Five sentence prompt!)

semirahrose:

But he’d take it—God, he’d take her as long as she’d have him.

Every time she slipped her fingers into his or grinned at him like everything in the world was an inside joke just for them or painted his toenails when they were both stressed out from classes, he started to believe just a little more that he could be something better.

She told him he was kind (not awkward) and smart (not obsessive or avoidant) and perfect (not broken, not monstrous, unclean), and he broke himself open and tried to find words to tell her that she was everything.

Jessica Moore made him feel whole, like happily ever after wasn’t an illusion but a reality just a half-step in front of him.

One day, surely, she’d realize that he wasn’t the kind of person she could love, and she’d leave, but until then, he would give her everything—everything but the scars and chasms… because she made him feel like they didn’t matter anymore.

(five sentence fics)

babybrotherdean:

Sam doesn’t know what leads him to the bathroom while he picks through the ruins of his apartment. There’s almost nothing salvageable left after a demon burned his life to the ground, but something tugs him in that direction and he’s too shell-shocked in its aftermath to try to stop it.

Black ash smeared on white porcelain, a charred hairbrush. It has him feeling ill, and he nearly walks away before a tiny white stick catches his eye and his stomach drops.

He crouches down slowly to pick it out from the debris. It tapers thin at one end and Sam feels like he can’t breathe, wipes soot off its display with numb, shaking fingers.

The tiny plus sign breaks him, and the pregnancy test clatters to the floor, a choked, inhuman noise clawing its way up out of Sam’s throat.

He thinks about the bloodstains on Jessica’s nightgown that could’ve been his child, and he presses his forehead against the floor and screams himself hoarse.

It should’ve been me.

His life has never been fair.

31/365

White Flag (13.11 missing scene)

indigo2831:

Dean allowed himself
to be mesmerized by the glow of the flickering neon blue and gold reflecting on
the ice cubes as they filled the bucket.  He took a piece from the bucket and crunched
on it as he stomped back to the motel room.

He powered through
the door, unsurprised at seeing Sam in the same position he’d been in for
hours, while Donna cried, first hysterically, then just exhaustedly leaking: on
the couch, facing the wall, hands bracing on his knees.  

Neither of them had
let Donna leave while she was so shellshocked by Doug’s near death and then
losing him in an entirely different way, resigned she’d sat on the couch and
cried it out with the brothers flanking her.
Dean had tried to talk her down, but gave up and turned on Real Housewives, providing commentary
between screaming matches and botched dinner parties.  Sam, on the other hand, had angled his body
away from her, but had placed one big hand flat on her back and left it
there.  

Now that she was
gone, the hand was slack on cushion.  

“All right, tough
guy, let’s check you out,” Dean announced as he kicked the door shut with a slam
that caused Sam to jerk and wince.  

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babybrotherdean:

“De! De, come look’t this one!”

Dean’s elbow-deep in the mud at the bottom of a little trickle of a river, glances up at the sound of his brother’s voice. Looking for pretty rocks can wait a moment. “What kind?”

“Hopper!”

Dean wipes his hands semi-dry on his pants and gets up, knees dirtied and feet bare, heads over to where Sammy’s seated among tall grass and wildflowers. He’s got a few of the flowers woven into his hair- Dean’s work from earlier in the afternoon- and he’s smiling as bright as the sun that’s shining over their heads, has his hands cupped together in a protective little bubble. “Is it a big one?”

Sammy just smiles bigger, waits until Dean’s crouched down in front of him before carefully opening his hands. There’s a grasshopper sitting on one of his palms, antennae twitching as it’s exposed to the world again. “Really big!”

Dean grins, leans in a little closer to inspect the bug. “Does he have a name?”

“Robert.” His brother nods solemnly. “He’s got a job ‘n stuff, an’ a wife named Sarah. And two little hoppers, and their names are Jessie and Pete.”

“’Course.” Dean nods too, like it’s all obvious. “You gonna let him go? I bet he’s gotta go back to his job.”

Sammy’s brow furrows as he seems to consider that, but then he’s nodding again. “Bye-bye, Robert,” he sighs before lowering his hand so the grasshopper can escape. Robert jumps out of his hand and disappears into the grass while Sammy stretches and then flops backwards.

“That’s six today,” Dean tells him, smiles at he watches his brother. “Six grasshoppers, and Robert was the biggest. Maria jumped the highest, though.” He keeps careful track of these things because Sammy likes to know. “You wanna keep goin’?”

Sammy hums softly for a moment, stretches his little arms above his head and makes a pleased little sound. “Nap?”

So Dean crawls to the space beside his brother and lies down, curls himself around the small body beside him and closes his eyes. “Nap,” he agrees softly, nosing into Sammy’s hair.

The sun is warm and the breeze is gentle and Sammy is small and soft in his arms. They’ve got bugs to catch and nowhere to be, and Dean doesn’t think he’s been any happier than this.

13/356

semirahrose:

Reciprocity (13.02 Coda)

Sam finds Jack standing in the doorway of the room he’s borrowing, facing away and weaving like he’ll fall over any moment. Sam knows the feeling only too well, so he stops, reaches out a tentative hand to ground and steady the (much, much) younger man. Sam has had a whole lifetime to get used to how brutal the world can be. Jack has had three days. 

He doesn’t deserve this.

“Hey… Jack? I just—”

Jack spins around, and in the moment before he wipes his expression clean, Sam sees anger and sadness and desperation and confusion and disgust.

But then he sees the blood and shredded cloth, and his words die in his throat. All he manages to force out through the sudden tightness is, “Oh, God. Jack.”

Fingers whisper over Jack’s shaking shoulders, over the precise, blood-tinged tears in the cheap t-shirt that can only come from a blade. “Jack, are you—geez, of course you’re not okay. Will you—fuck. Will you sit down?” His fingers find no wounds on Jack, but his whole body is electrified with adrenaline, his own hands shaking now with both the fear and relief of finding the young man unharmed.

Jack sits on his bed, tilting his head up toward Sam. Confusion and hope. 

It almost undoes him, because the gaze is too bare, too honest: it says Jack thinks Sam has answers. Sam tries. He knows all the right words for when he meets people like Magda who have struggled and hurt. He knows their purity and their pain, can say with 100% honesty the words he can never make himself believe.

Jack is too close, though, too new, and the assurances taste foreign and fake on his tongue. Articulation and self-control desert him. “Please, Jack,” he starts.

“Please what?”

“Please don’t hurt yourself. You don’t–you shouldn’t have to hurt. You’re good, Jack. I swear you are. I can see it. You shouldn’t–God, are you okay?”

Jack blinks, frowns down at what must be at least twenty self-inflicted stab wounds. “It healed…immediately. I can’t—I can’t stop myself. I’m…” He looks up to Sam, and his eyes communicate what his mouth doesn’t. Dangerous, ruined, out of control, broken, unwanted, lost.

“Jack, you have amazing power, but you’re the one who gets to decide what to do with it. One of the first things you ever told me was–was that you wanted me to say sorry to someone for you. Dean is confused, Jack, but he’s also wrong. These powers are cruel and unfair–to you more than anyone–because they mean you’re going to have to try a lot harder for a lot of things that come easy to most other people.”

People,” Jack scoffs, eyes shadowed. He whips toward Sam, eyes flashing gold, hand reaching out.

Sam flinches, stumbling backward a step, and Jack withdraws and sinks down onto the bed again, pulling his knees up.

“You think I can’t tell that you’re terrified of me? You’re the only person who says I can be good, but you’re more scared than anyone else!”

“That’s not it…” Sam starts, but his throat is dry and sore, and the words come out fragmented and unconvincing.

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sasquatchandleatherjacket:

It’s November, 1999, and they’re in what has to be the smallest of small towns in the Adirondacks of New York. It’s a quiet place, not a mall or movie theater or other classic teenage hangout for miles in all directions. It had the potential to be a real drag, but the cabin they’re staying in is nicer than any interstate motel, and has a really nice view. And they’re alone, on their own without dad, for months.

They’ve been here since September, when John had tracked a trio of werewolves to the woods just outside of town; the cabin had been the only place to stay nearby, and it’s plenty affordable during the months between the Summer tourists and the Winter ones.

Sam had matriculated into the local junior/senior high school (a town like this doesn’t have enough students, or buildings, to separate the two) and when a lead popped up downstate near Albany, Dean convinced John to leave them behind and let Sam get though midterms and Thanksgiving break before moving on. He left them with the cabin paid up through November, an old beat up pick up truck, and a promise to be back before it snows.

There’s a lake, Long Lake, right outside their cabin. Right outside everything, really, most of the town was built up along its expansive banks. Sam and Dean had spent late Summer evenings lounging at the end of a fishing pier with their feet dangling in the cool water before the autumn chill crept down from the mountains. Long Lake was beautiful and calm, but deeper than it looked, and a little dangerous, or so the locals warned. Sam had smiled at that and thought about big brothers and fitting analogies.

Dean works odd jobs here and there for food and spending money; a few resorts peppered the surrounding valley and they all seemed to need a handyman for repairs and small projects during the slow seasons. He spends his week nights home with Sam, drinking Pabst Blue Ribbon and sucking down Marlboro’s, and his weekend nights out, doing things that make Sam’s skin crawl when he stumbles home loose and happy at dawn. Sam’s in the tenth grade, they read Ibsen and the teacher talks about finding yourself and Sam’s skin feels too tight and his muscles restless.

The remoteness of the town makes it really good for a few things. Hunting, for one. The real kind that the locals get up too even when it wasn’t strictly in season. Fishing, too, in the warmer months before the water ices over. And stargazing. The light pollution in town was minimal, and damn near non-existent once you got a half hour’s drive past the town line. That was something Sam and Dean had done a lot of when they were kids. Dean figured out early that it was a good way to keep Sam occupied when there was no library around or the motel television was on the fritz, even when Sam got smart enough to know that all the star names and constellations that Dean had taught him about had been bullshit.

There’s a story on the six o’clock news about a meteor shower, one for the record books, apparently, and it’s a school night but Sam knows Dean’ll let him ditch tomorrow if they stay out all night. A little before midnight they pack up the truck and start driving northeast towards the mountains. Dean pulls off the road after about thirty miles at a place where the shoulder is flat and wide. He leaves the key in the ignition for the radio to play, soft and scratchy in the background. There are two moldy old woolen blankets tucked behind the driver’s seat and Dean spreads one out in the truck bed for them to lay on, Sam pulls the other up over their legs once they’re settled.

They lie there for maybe an hour, maybe two, watching. The meteors are more than abundant, as promised, one every couple of seconds. Some are just thin little streaks high in the sky, others thick and bright yellow that burst like fireworks nearer the horizon, each breathtaking in their own way. It’s quiet save for the low hum of the classic rock station and lazy chirp of crickets.

Sam feels the warmth from Dean’s body bleed into him under the blanket, cozyis the word that comes to mind as his eyelids start to grow heavy. Sam sits up, stretches and pulls his duffel bag onto his lap to retrieve a thermos filled with coffee. Dean sits up as well, fishes a cigarette out of the pack in his front pocket and tucks it in between his teeth. Sam pours the coffee, tries not to notice the way Dean’s eyes drift shut or the soft pucker of his lips when he inhales. He takes a sip and passes it to Dean, who accepts it with a smoke ringed thanks.

It not something that ever appealed to Sam, smoking. At least not until he saw Dean do it. Saw how his eyelashes flutter against his cheeks and his chest expands with the deepness of his breath. Saw the way his pink lips moisten and cradle the tip. Dean makes it look enticing. Lurid. Wanton.

“Can I try?” Sam asks, barely a whisper.

Dean looks at him surprised, hesitant, and Sam’s heart drops in anticipation of the shake of Dean’s head and the “no” he’s sure is coming. But instead Dean shrugs little and turns to sit cross-legged facing Sam.

“C’mere,” he says, and Sam scoots closer, not quite realizing what’s going to happen next. Dean takes another long drag from the cigarette and holds it, leans forward to bring his face close to Sam’s until he’s just inches away. Sam’s unconscious intake of breath seems to be exactly what Dean wanted; he cups his hands around their mouths, slides in until their lips are almost touching, and breathes out, the hot smoke tickling over Sam’s lips and into his mouth.

Sam forgets to breathe for a few seconds, then inhales all at once, taking the smoke into his lungs, his chest tightening around the urge to cough. He closes his eyes and swears he feels the universe shift, feels every second of his life, of existence, converge down to this moment, to the burn in his chest and the warmth of Dean’s breath on his face and The Rolling Stones, tinny and barely audible over the rush of blood in his ears. Just a fraction of a second and it’s over, Dean backs away and Sam breathes the smoke back out in one long shaky exhale, opening his eyes to a world that’s fundamentally changed from what it was before he closed them.

Dean’s looking back up at the sky, feigning some renewed interest in the meteor storm, but Sam can see through his overly controlled breathing and stiff posture and he wonders (hopes) if the world has changed for Dean, too. Maybe it’s the flood of nicotine to his system, maybe it’s the way Dean’s lips glisten just so in the starlight, maybe it’s Mick Jagger singing about those wild, wild horses, but Sam’s emboldened. He sits up a bit taller til his mouth is level with Dean’s ear.

“More,” he says, breathy and urgent, “can I have more?”

Dean shoots him a stern look, a warning, but Sam’s never been one to back down, and he’s sure whatever the consequences are to ignoring Dean’s admonishment will be worth it.

“C’mon Dean,” he almost begs, whines in the bratty little brother voice he still hasn’t grown out of. He turns bodily to face Dean, straddling his legs so that his thighs rest over Dean’s bent knees.

Dean stiffens for a moment, then forces himself to relax, his eyes lock onto Sam’s and neither of them can look away as Dean brings the cigarette back to his lips and breathes in. Sam leans closer, so close the red glow of ash almost burns his cheek but he stops just short of making any contact. Dean tilts his head, considering, and lifts his hand to slowly take Sam’s chin between his thumb and forefinger. He doesn’t grip, but guides, tilting Sam’s chin up and angling his head just slightly to the other side, and then closes the distance between them, sealing his mouth around Sam’s parted lips.

Sam’s ready this time, sucks in greedily the flavor of tar and stale coffee and spit, breathing in and savoring all that Dean is giving him He holds it for as long as he can and when he breathes it back out Dean inhales in sync with Sam’s exhale. They continue like that, breathing in tandem until eventually the smoke dissipates, their mouths still together but passing nothing but breath back and forth.

But Sam wants more than breath. His tongue darts out, tentative, seeking, until it finds Dean’s, and just like that, they’re kissing. It’s light at first, just gentle little flicks and soft parted lips, but it’s everything. Everything Sam never admitted to wanting until right now.

Sam pulls himself forward, one arm around Dean’s waist, to deepen the kiss. Part of him waits for Dean to panic, to push back and put an end to it and deny deny deny, but he doesn’t, just threads his hand up into Sam’s hair and holds him tight, hauls him closer until Sam’s sitting on Dean’s lap, til they’re rutting together, pressed tight up against the constricting denim fabric of their jeans. It’s uncomfortable, hell maybe even a little painful but Sam couldn’t stop if he tried, couldn’t leave the tight confines of his brother’s arms or the wet heat of his mouth for anything in the world. Sam comes, just like that, rough and sticky and embarrassingly fast, into the worn out waistband of his boxers.

“God, Sammy. Sammy,” Dean says absently, awestruck. He watches, rapt, as Sam comes down from his orgasm and goes boneless and weak in his arms. He supports Sam, holds him close, still, with one arm and tucks his other hand down the front of his jeans, fumbling to undo the buttons and get his hand around himself. Sam locks his arms around Dean’s neck, dazed and floaty with his forehead slipping against Dean’s, watching the deep purple head of Dean’s cock disappear into his fist.

They share another cigarette, after, lying on their backs again. Sam doesn’t think he likes smoking very much, not for its own sake, anyway, but pressing the little wet filter between his lips, licking the taste of Dean’s mouth off of it before inhaling, feeling Dean’s fingers brush against his as they pass it back and forth? Fuck nicotine, those are the things he’s already shamelessly, eternally addicted to.

No matter how many years pass, how many firsts and lasts and highs and lows they go through together; no matter how bad it gets, (and god, does it get bad) or how good it becomes again, the smell of cigarette smoke in cold air, or the muffled sound of Wild Horses playing from another room, will always bring Sam back to this night. Nothing can ever make him regret it.

sasquatchandleatherjacket:

babybrotherdean:

What if little tiny Sammy died of SIDS, and little toddler Dean made up a story about fires and demons to explain why his baby brother wasn’t around anymore?

ok. but what about. 

dean gets hurt on a hunt and wakes up in a mental institution. john is there. and mary. they tell him this is the first time he’s been lucid in years. dean’s shouting about getting back to sammy, to protect him, there’s demons after him. and john and mary just look real tired. and sad. and mary crouches down next to him all gentle and says sammy- sammy died dean. as a baby. you don’t- don’t you remember? we had a funeral. you were only four… try and remember for me baby. 

and god it feels so real, and his mom and dad, they’re there. mary touched him and it’s everything he remembers, down to the smell of her hand cream. but it can’t be real, can it? so he lashes out, rushes for the door, and john has to hold him back him until a nurse comes in with a sedative and knocks him out. 

he wakes up in a different hospital, sam but his side, smiling at him as soon as he opens his eyes dude, you took a pretty good bang to the head. they say you’ll be fine, though. be outta here in a few days. dean tells sam about his dream and sam shrugs it off, concussions, man. 

a few weeks later he goes to sleep in his motel bed, sam snoring a few feet away, and wakes up in a hospital bed, arms restrained, belted to the bed. mary’s there again, sitting beside him, rubbing his hand. and he opens his eyes but he feels so tired. mom? she whispers when she talks to him, shh baby. we’re going for a little field trip today. you feel up for that?

and he doesn’t realize where she’s taking him until it’s too late. it’s sunny out, brighter than it has any right to be as she leads him to it. the tiny headstone fashioned in the shape of a teddy bear, engravings weathered and rounded with age. 

Hush my dear, be still and slumber,
Jolly angels guard your bed

Samuel Winchester
5/2/1983-11/2/1983

and it’s real. the stone is solid under his fingertips and the grass beneath his knees is damp and seeps through his jeans and he can almost remember it, standing here over twenty five years ago, holding his father’s hand, not really understanding but trying to be brave, be a brave little soldier for daddy ok? he remembers, and it’s real. 

on the ride back mary explains as best she can. he’d had a psychotic break, twenty two years to the day after sam’s death, no one really knows why. he’s been institutionalized for years, semi-catatonic until a new experimental treatment became available. after the third treatment he began having these moments of lucidity. but we need you to fight for it baby, we need you to fight your way back to us. the doctors had explained, the treatment is only the first step, but if dean doesn’t fight to stay in the real world, he’ll revert right back into those delusions. 

mary signs him back in and dean pulls her into a tight hug before she leaves. i love you mom. i’m so sorry. tell dad i lo- his voice catches- i love him too. she pecks his cheek, tells him it’s ok, that she loves him too, that she’ll see him tomorrow. 

but she won’t. it’s his choice, right? the life he remembers may be nothing but a paranoid delusion, but he’ll take delusions any day over a world without his brother in it. when dean wakes up the next morning, it’s to the smell of convenience store coffee and the sound of sam turning on the motel shower. 

Prompt? Sastiel, gravitation + the bright light of Sam’s soul

waterbird13:

Cas can feel it, more than anything, the strong, pulsing, raw energy of Sam’s soul. But it’s bright, too, physically bright, and it does a thorough job of capturing his attention.

He can’t look away, most days. In the car, in diners, in motel rooms, on jobs, he always finds himself fascinated with the man’s blindingly-bright soul.

Sam keeps giving him odd looks, but Cas doesn’t say anything. Sam will ask, if he wants to know.

Finally, Sam says something. They’re lounging around a motel, Sam on his laptop, half-focused on looking for a case, and Cas watching the weather channel with half an eye and Sam with the rest. “What?” Sam asks, agitated. “Do I have something on my face or something?”

Cas frowns. “Not that I see,” he says.

“Then why won’t you stop staring?” Sam snaps.

“Your soul,” Cas says. “It’s very distracting.”

“You can see it?” Sam asks, squirming a bit at the thoughts.

Cas shrugs. “Not for most people. Not just by looking at them, anyways. But yours…it’s very bright. Like a supernova. It’s intense. Magnetic. Beautiful.”

Sam snorts at the last word.

“It is,” Cas defends hotly. “I may say that I have never seen one more beautiful, and resilient. It’s wonderful to look at.”

Sam looks away.

“Does that bother you?” Cas wonders.

Sam shrugs. “Never exactly heard good things about my soul before.”

“I wish I could show it to you,” Cas says. “I wish I could show you how beautiful it is. But I suppose you shall have to take my word for it.”

Sam still looks like he doubts him, so Cas resolves to tell him as often as possible, until it starts to sink in.

Concept: Sam grows a beard (as per your tags on that J2 set) and suddenly becomes the guy that all the women look at first. Dean Is Shook.

zmediaoutlet:

Okay. What? This is the–fourth time, at least, by Dean’s count, and just–

“What the hell,” he mutters, under his breath, and Sam barely glances up from his book.

“What,” he says, absently, turning back to the history of–whatever, Goats Through the Ages, Dean doesn’t even care at this point. He’s too distracted by yet another chick pausing by their table in the library, pretending to look at something in the stacks while clearly just sizing up Sam, and not even giving Dean a second glance. He sits back from the table and just stares at the girl–cute, even if she’s way too young for either of them at this point, but. Come on.

“Hey, I think I got something,” Sam says, and the girl jerks her eyes away, and catches Dean staring, and gives him the what, creepo? face and turns away all offended, and–really? Really? “Dude, hello? Research, for the case?”

When Dean focuses back on Sam, he finds himself the recipient of a very similar version of the creepo face. “Come on, man, you could literally be her dad,” Sam says, and holy crap that is not the point.

“What is going on?” Dean says, and Sam shakes his head, brow furrowed like what, but he also reaches up to scratch the scruff and–oh, no. Really? “Oh my god,” Dean says, a little too loud, and Sam shushes him, but this is just ridiculous. “You’re lumberjack chic. I can’t believe this.”

Sam stares at him, but–there’s another little group of coeds down in the mythology and folklore section, and they’re actually whispering and pointing, a little giggle floating down through the shelves, and they’re all focused right on Sam. Sam, who caught a nasty slash on the jaw from a tree branch during a hunt two weeks ago–and yeah, Dean made fun of him for losing a fight with a tree, especially since Dean had almost broken a rib from a tussle with the actual ghost, but whatever, he’d put in a few stitches for Sammy too, and made sure it didn’t get infected. Sam hadn’t been able to shave, and there was a minute there where his beard was patchy and hilarious, but now–it’s pretty even, and he’s been trimming it so it looks… vaguely good, if Dean’s going to be honest. But this–another girl passes by, while Dean’s still having this weird hot revelation, and what the hell, are they having a voyeur library convention?

Sam sits there with his beard and his hair tucked behind his ears in his red plaid, tan and huge and ridiculous, and says, “Dude, what the hell are you talking about,” and Dean shoves up from the table and glares at this latest girl, who blinks at him all shocked and scuttles off into the stacks.

“We’re leaving,” Dean says, while Sam raises his eyebrows. “And then we’re gonna take those stitches out, and you’re going to shave.”

“Oh,” Sam says, and scratches at his jaw again. “Okay, good call. Not really FBI regs, I guess.”

“Yeah,” Dean says, slamming the book closed. “That’s why.”