#I’m Mary Poppins Y’all
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
bricoshoppetees · 2 months ago
Text
I’m Mary Poppins Y’all, Guardians of the Galaxy Yondu Shirt On Sale
Unleash your inner space outlaw with the “I’m Mary Poppins Y’all” Yondu shirt from Guardians of the Galaxy! This playful and iconic tee captures the unforgettable spirit of Yondu Udonta, featuring his hilarious quote that combines pop culture with a touch of mischief.
Crafted from premium, soft cotton, this shirt promises comfort and durability, perfect for both casual outings and movie marathons. Its eye-catching design showcases vibrant colors and a bold graphic, making it a standout piece in any Marvel fan’s wardrobe. Whether you’re heading to a comic convention or just hanging out with friends, this shirt is sure to spark conversations and smiles.
Why You’ll Love It: Show off your love for the Guardians of the Galaxy while making a statement with this quirky shirt! Whether you're a fan of Yondu’s tough exterior or his surprising sense of humor, this shirt is a must-have addition to your collection.
Don’t miss out on this exclusive deal! Grab your “I’m Mary Poppins Y’all” Guardians of the Galaxy Yondu shirt today from Bricoshoppe and showcase your fandom in style. Perfect for gifts or as a treat for yourself!
More design at Bricoshoppe
0 notes
coconut530 · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
TEACHERS STRIKE BACK
62 notes · View notes
doctorbitchcrxft · 2 months ago
Text
A Very Supernatural Christmas | Supernatural Series Rewrite | Dean Winchester x Fem!Reader
Pairing: Dean Winchester x Fem!Reader
Warnings: discussions of childhood trauma lol, discussions of religious trauma lololol, canon violence, canon gore, talking about Dean's deal sad face
Word Count: 7223
A/N: One of my favorite episodes of all time ever. I am so excited to share this with you guys. Thank you, thank you, thank you for all of the support. I love y’all!
Mobile Supernatural Series Rewrite Masterlist
Supernatural Series Rewrite Masterlist
Supernatural Series Rewrite Playlist
Tumblr media
In the middle of nowhere in Michigan, you and Dean posed as FBI agents investigating a holly jolly potential case. 
“Um, my daughter and I were in our beds,” the woman before you shakily explained.
“Mike was downstairs decorating the tree. I heard a thump on the roof, and then, I heard Mike scream. And now I’m talking to the FBI.”
“And you didn't see any of it?” Dean questioned. 
She shook her head tearfully. “No, he was… he was just gone.”
“The doors were locked? There was no forced entry?” you asked. 
“That’s right,” she replied. 
“Does anybody else have a key?” you suggested. 
“My parents.”
“Where do they live?”
“Florida.”
Sam then walked out of the house. “ Thanks for letting me have a look around, Mrs. Walsh. I think we, uh, got just about everything we need. We’re all set.”
“We’ll be in touch,” Dean told her. 
The three of you started down the steps. 
“Agents?” Mrs. Walsh called.
You turned to face her. 
“The police said my husband might have been kidnapped.”
“Could be,” Dean shrugged. 
“Then… why haven’t the kidnappers called? O-Or demanded a ransom? It’s three days till Christmas. What am I supposed to tell our daughter?” she began to cry.
“We’re very sorry,” you said empathetically. You watched the distressed woman turn to go back inside, and the heavy Christmas wreath on the door clunked against the door when she shut it. 
“Find anything?” Dean asked Sam as the three of you walked away from the house. 
Sam sighed. “Stocking, mistletoe… this.” He took something out of his pocket and dropped it into Dean’s hand. 
You inspected it. “A tooth?” you asked upon seeing the bloody bone. 
“Where was this?” Dean looked up at Sam and away from the tooth. 
“In the chimney,” Sam replied. 
“Chimney? No way a man fits up a chimney. It’s too narrow,” Dean grimaced. 
“At least, not in one piece,” you winced. 
“Alright, so, if dad went up the chimney—”
“We need to find out what dragged him up there,” Sam finished. 
***
Christmas had never been a completely happy time for you. Growing up Catholic, there was always a hint of, perhaps, fear that came with the holiday. The idea that Christ was supposed to come again, and his second coming would mean the end of the world was unsettling to you, even as an incredibly pious child. 
Working jobs around the holidays always managed to recreate that unsettled feeling for you. Something so gruesome like the case you were dealing with now around such a happy holiday always made you nostalgic for a childhood you never had: an innocent one. 
Around your motel room, Sam was pinning pictures of demons up while you researched on your laptop. The door opened, and Dean came inside. 
“So, was I right? Is it the serial-killing chimney sweep?” Dean smirked, carrying a brown paper bag.
Sam mirrored Dean’s expression. “Yep. It's, uh, it’s actually Dick Van Dyke.”
Dean looked confused, but you snickered. 
“Who?” Dean asked. 
“Dude,” you said, “Mary Poppins?”
“Who’s that?” 
“Oh, god, you’re hopeless,” you sighed, shaking your head.
“Well, it turns out that Walsh is the second guy in town grabbed out of his house this month,” Dean explained. 
“The other guy get dragged up the chimney, too?” Sam asked. 
“Don’t know. Witnesses said they heard a thump on the roof,” Dean shrugged. “So, what the hell do you think we're dealing with?”
“Actually, I have an idea,” Sam replied. “Uh, it's gonna sound crazy.”
“What could you possibly say that sounds crazy to me?” Dean deadpanned. 
“How ‘bout evil Santa,” you smirked.
Dean considered a moment before nodding. “Yeah, that’s crazy.”
“Yeah… I mean, I’m just saying that there’s some version of the anti-Claus in every culture,” Sam said while he showed Dean drawings of the creature. “You got Belsnickel, Krampus, Black Peter. Whatever you want to call it, there’s all sorts of lore.”
“Saying what?” Dean looked incredulous. 
“Saying, back in the day, Santa’s brother went rogue and now he shows up around Christmas time, but instead of bringing presents, he punishes the wicked.”
“By hauling their ass up chimneys?” Dean snorted. “So, this is your theory, huh? Santa’s shady brother?”
Sam shrugged. “Well, ah, I’m just saying, that’s what the lore says.”
“Santa doesn’t have a brother. There is no Santa.”
“Yeah, I know. You’re the one who told me that in the first place, remember,” Sam sassed at his brother. 
Dean looked down, seeming to feel a little guilty. 
Finally, Sam sighed. “Yeah, you know what, I could be wrong. I gotta be wrong.”
Dean shrugged. “Maybe, maybe not.”
You and Sam were confused. 
“I did a little digging. Turns out both victims visited the same place before they got snatched,” Dean explained. 
“Where?” Sam asked. 
***
The place Dean was referring to was a cutesy little craft fair called “Santa’s Village.” Children played and people bustled around wearing Christmas costumes. 
“It does kind of lend credence to the theory, don’t it?” Dean remarked, looking around himself. 
“Yeah, but anti-Claus? Couldn’t be,” Sam replied. 
“It’s a Christmas miracle. Hey, speaking of, we should have one this year,” Dean suggested casually. 
You remained quiet, feeling almost sorrowful at his statement given he’d discussed bringing this up to Sam with you.  
“Have one what?”
“A Christmas.”
Sam scoffed. “No, thanks.”
“Aw, c’mon, Sam,” you said, swallowing your emotions. 
“Yeah, we’ll get a tree, a little Boston market, just like when we were little,” Dean continued. 
“Dean, those weren’t exactly Hallmark memories for me, you know,” Sam reminded his brother. 
“What are you talking about? We had some great Christmases.”
“Whose childhood are you talking about?”
Dean rolled his eyes. “Oh, come on, Sam.”
“No! Just… no.”
You and Dean were both surprised by Sam’s petulance. “Alright, Grinch,” Dean snarked. He walked ahead, and you remained by his side. 
“What’s Sam talking about?” you asked quietly. 
“Ah, I don’t know,” he shrugged. “I mean, Dad was out all the time, and Sammy and I fought… a lot… as kids, but I didn’t think it’d scar him.” 
You turned back to Sam who still seemed lost in thought. 
“Hey, Scrooge,” you called, which seemed to shake the younger brother out of his own head, “you comin’?”
“Yeah, yeah, I’m with you.” He caught back up to you and Dean. 
“What are we looking for, again?” Dean asked him. 
“Um…” Sam trailed off, “lore says that the anti-Claus will walk with a limp and smell like sweets.”
“Great. So we’re looking for a pimp Santa,” Dean said dryly. “Why the sweets?” 
“Think about it, Dee,” you replied. “If you smell like candy, the kids will come closer. Which is wrong on just… so many levels.”
Sam chuckled. 
“How does this thing know who’s been naughty and who’s been nice?” Dean questioned. 
Sam shook his head. “I don’t know.”
Dean turned toward a man dressed as Santa taking pictures with a child whose mother stood close by. “Maybe we do,” he noted.
***
Later that night, you and the Winchesters were just about to confront and kill who you thought was your Krampus. Fortunately for the Santa actor from earlier in the day, you realized the man was just a lonely old creep. 
After an uncomfortable rendition of “Silent Night” that Dean led you and Sam in singing in an attempt to explain why you were in the creepy Santa’s house, you slumped down in the backseat of the Impala.
“Well, back to square one, I guess,” you sighed. “Also, Dean, couldn’t you have picked a song you actually knew the words to?”
“Hey, I did know the words,” he replied, beginning to drive off. 
“Yeah, all two of ‘em,” Sam chimed in. 
You giggled. “Hey, Sam?” you asked. 
“Hm?”
“Why do you hate Christmas so much?”
The younger brother sighed. “(Y/N)...”
Dean took the opportunity to jump into the conversation. “I mean, I admit it. Y’know, we had a few bumpy holidays when we were kids.”
“ ‘Bumpy’?” Sam scoffed. 
“That was then. We’ll do it right this year,” Dean tried. 
“Look, Dean. If you and (Y/N) want to have Christmas, knock yourselves out. Just don’t involve me.” Sam shifted in his seat to face the dark night that had fallen outside of the car. 
Dean grumbled, “Oh, yeah, that’d be great. Me and (Y/N) making cranberry molds.”
You knew Dean wasn’t actually opposed to just enjoying Christmas with you, but he wanted to involve his brother.
***
“Wanna smoke?” you asked Dean. 
Sam was still wide awake in his bed, and you and Dean had some things to talk about without the younger Winchester present. 
He nodded and followed you out of the room. 
Despite the lack of snow on the ground, you were bundled in one of Dean’s hoodies to protect you from the slight chill in the air.
“I think you’re turnin’ me into a fiend,” Dean commented as you lit your joint. 
“Well, I’d rather you smoke a plant than drown yourself in booze,” you replied, a slight tremble in your voice from the cold. 
“I meant to tell you earlier,” Dean began, taking the joint from you and looking at the ground, “you’ve got a real beautiful voice.”
You laughed softly and hopped up on the trunk of the Impala. “You’re only sayin’ that ‘cause you and Sam are terrible.”
“I’m serious,” he said, blowing the smoke at you playfully. 
You scrunched up your nose and shut your eyes to avoid the puff. When you reopened them, you found Dean staring at you with that confusing expression again. After all this time, you still couldn’t place what that look meant. 
“What?” you asked, a smile tugging at your lips. 
He shook his head, still admiring you and smirking. “Nothin’.”
“So, do you want me to talk to Sam? About Christmas?” Dean’s intense stare was making you nervous, and you needed to break it up with the conversation you initially wanted to have with him. 
“Nah,” Dean shrugged. “I’m sure he’ll come around.”
You opened your arms to him and gestured for him to come lean against you. He turned his back to the Impala, and you wrapped your arms around him. You kissed his shoulder before placing your chin on top of it. The two of you just sat like that in silence in the cold, enjoying each other’s company while getting lost in thought. 
“What was your Christmas like? As a kid, I mean?” Dean asked, breaking the silence. 
You picked your chin up off his shoulder and stuck your hands in your pockets. “Oh, gosh,” you sighed. “It was always a little less ‘candy canes and Rudolph’ and a little more ‘fear and condemnation’.”
Dean jumped up on the trunk next to you and turned, clearly a little surprised by your answer. “What do you mean?”
You shrugged. “Christmas always kinda felt like a threat to me. Y’know, ‘Jesus is gonna come again’ and all that.”
“That’s… weirdly dirty,” Dean commented. 
You gently nudged his shoulder with yours. “Perv. Meaning Jesus is gonna come back to life and, like… destroy the planet. My mom always said Christmas was a reminder that this is not our true home.”
“This, as in, earth?” he asked, genuine intrigue in his eyes. 
You nodded. “And we’re all gonna end up being judged. And if you don’t believe or follow the commandments, you’re sentenced to Hell.”
“Jesus,” Dean grimaced. “That’s a little dark to be telling a kid.”
“Tell me about it,” you smirked. “But… if that’s the truth, at least we know I’ll be seeing you again.” You turned to him, smiling a little lopsidedly.
He tried to return your smile, but his heart wasn’t in it. “I’m scared, (Y/N).” 
You nodded. “I know. Do you wanna talk about it?”
He shook his head. 
You took a moment to let his mind recover from his anxieties. “What were your Christmases like growing up? You said they were good, but you never told me why they were good.”
“Uh, let’s see,” Dean began, reflecting on something in his memory. “There was this one time when Dad was supposed to make it back from a hunting trip. He’d promised Sammy he’d be home for Christmas. But, uh, Dad never showed.”
You looked at him sadly. 
Dean’s eyes remained focused on his hands in his lap. “I was maybe twelve. Sammy was eight. And on Christmas Eve, while he was asleep, I went out and found this really nice house.”
“You did not!” you scolded playfully, knowing exactly where he was going with this. 
“I did,” Dean chuckled. “Only, I didn’t know they were chick presents. Sam was pissed when he got a Barbie instead of the green army men he’d been asking for.”
“You did the best you could,” you reminded him.
Dean shrugged. “And, uh, since he never made it back, Sam gave me the present he was planning on giving to Dad.” He thumbed the amulet around his neck and showed it to you. 
“That’s so sweet,” you smiled, a tinge of nostalgic sadness behind your smile. “My little brother and I always gave each other what we could. Normally, it was just stupid little things from the gas stations around or something.” You smiled, remembering your brother fondly. “When he was seven, Steven gave me a little bracelet. He stole it out of a girl’s backpack pocket when she was waiting for her parents to finish booking a room in the motel lobby. He was a great pickpocket; you guys would’ve gotten along great.”
Dean chuckled. 
“But anyway, uh, it was a little friendship bracelet. I was so upset when I grew out of it,” you said. “Biggest regret of my life is burning it with his body.”
Dean nodded somberly. “Why’d you do it?”
You shrugged. “I kept telling myself, ‘He doesn’t live in the stuff. Keeping his stuff doesn’t keep him alive.’ And I’d grown out of it, so I figured, I’d never have any use for it again. But, uh, I was an angry teenager. I was so angry at him for so long after he killed himself. I definitely threw the bracelet in the fire in a moment of anger.”
Dean just stared at you, and once again, you couldn’t read his expression. 
“You keep giving me that look,” you said, staring deeply into his beautiful eyes. 
“What look?” he asked. Dean clearly knew what you were talking about, as his face hadn’t really changed from the look in question; there was simply a slight tease behind his eyes on top of it. 
“That look,” you said, giggling. “It frustrates me so much ‘cause it’s, like, the only facial expression on the planet I can’t read.” “Then, I’m definitely not telling you what it means now,” Dean taunted, still smirking. 
You rolled your eyes and hopped off the car. Dean grabbed your arm and spun you back around to face him, putting you back on the trunk and standing between your legs. He kissed you deeply, hands eagerly trying to pull you closer despite there being no more room between the two of you. 
“Dean,” you said between kisses. “Dean—”
“What?” Dean pulled back just long enough to ask you and then returned to kissing you. 
“We have to go to bed now, c’mon,” you replied. 
“Aw, c’mon, not yet,” Dean groaned, trailing his lips down your neck. 
You sighed shakily at the feeling of his soft lips against the sensitive skin, and your eyes closed in content. “C’mon,” you whined. “I’m freezing.”
“Fine,” he groaned. 
***
The next day, another poor soul had gone missing. According to the son of the man who was abducted, Santa had dragged his father up the chimney. As you left the house, Sam noticed a wreath on the hearth he’d felt noteworthy enough to ask the grieving wife about. 
“Wreaths, huh?” Dean taunted, sauntering away from the woman’s house. “Sure you didn’t want to ask her about her shoes? I saw some nice handbags in the foyer.”
“We’ve seen that wreath before, Dean,” Sam said, ignoring his brother’s flippance.
“Where?” you and Dean asked in unison. 
“The Walshes’. Yesterday.”
Dean eyed Sam curiously. “I know. I was just testing you.”
You rolled your eyes, ducking down into the Impala. 
***
“I’m an idiot,” you groaned, dropping your head back.
Sam sat up from behind his laptop. “What, why?”
Dean turned to you from his spot on your shared bed as well. 
“That smell,” you said. “Guys, we’re not dealing with Krampus.” You laughed at your own stupidity. “I should’ve known it from the wreath on the door at the Walshes’ house!”
“(Y/N), would you cut to the chase?” Dean asked dryly. 
“It’s meadowsweet,” you revealed. 
Dean whistled mockingly. “Wow! Amazing. What the hell is meadowsweet?”
“It’s pretty rare, and it’s probably the most powerful plant in pagan lore,” Sam replied. 
“Pagan lore?”
“Yeah,” you nodded. “Meadowsweet’s for human sacrifice. It’s kinda like chum for the gods. The gods are drawn to it, and they’d stop by and snack on the nearest human.”
“Why would somebody be using that for Christmas wreaths?” Dean wondered. 
“Almost every Christmas tradition is pagan, Dee,” you replied. 
“Okay, Ms. Catholic, I thought it was Jesus’s birthday,” Dean snarked, a smile playing on his lips.
“No, uh, I had to unlearn that when I left the Church. Jesus’s birthday was probably in the fall. Yule was the winter solstice festival the church stole and renamed ‘Christmas.’ ‘Cause, y’know, eurocentrism. Hooray,” you explained. 
Sam added, “The Yule log, the tree, even Santa’s red suit; that’s all remnants of pagan worship.”
“How do you know that? What are you two freaks gonna tell me next? Easter bunny’s Jewish?” Dean remarked. 
Both of you rolled your eyes. 
“So, you really think we’re gonna be dealing with a pagan god?” The older brother quirked a brow. 
“Yeah, probably Hold Nickar, god of the winter solstice,” Sam noted, crossing his arms over his chest. 
Dean huffed, “And all these Martha Stewart wannabes, buying these fancy wreaths…” 
“Yeah, it’s pretty much like putting a neon sign on your front door saying ‘Come kill us’.”
Dean deadpanned, “Great.”
“Wait, Hold Nickar makes sense, though,” you chimed in, something dawning on you. “Guess what he gives you in return?”
“Lap dances, hopefully,” Dean smirked. 
You gave him a look. “Mild weather.”
Dean looked out of the window. “Like no snow in the middle of December in the middle of Michigan.”
“For instance,” shrugged Sam. 
“Do we know how to kill it yet?” Dean asked. 
“Have you met me? That’s all I’ve been looking for the past hour.”
“While you work on that—” Sam turned to his brother, “we got to figure out where they’re selling those wreaths.”
“You think they’re selling them on purpose?” Dean questioned, sitting up on his bed.
“Feeding the victims to this thing?”
Sam sighed. “Let’s find out.”
“You keep workin’ your pagan-god-killin’ angle, (Y/N),” Dean told you, moving over to you. “Sam and I ’ll be back soon.” He gave you a quick kiss on your forehead, and your cheeks heated at the brief contact.
***
“How ‘re you supposed to kill a god, (Y/N)?” Bobby droned through the phone.
“I don’t know, dude, that’s what I’m asking you,” you sighed. “I mean, I’ve been pouring through this shit online for hours. I’m ready to pull my fucking hair out.”
“Lemme make a few calls, kid, and I’ll see what I can do,” Bobby said. 
“Thanks, Bobby. You’re the best.” You sat back in your chair and clicked your phone off. 
Almost as if on cue, Dean burst through the door with Sam trailing behind him.
“Hey, sweetheart,” the older one drawled. “Got somethin’ for me?”
“I wish. Just sent Bobby lookin’,” you replied. “Got anything for me?”
“Actually, yeah,” Dean said. “That store we went to? Turns out, lady named Madge Carrigan gave ‘em to the store for free. How much do you think a meadowsweet wreath would cost?” 
“A couple hundred dollars, at least,” Sam answered while you clacked away at your computer looking for Madge Carrigan’s home address. 
“Sounds pretty suspicious,” you said absentmindedly. 
“Remember that wreath Dad brought home that one year?” Dean laughed while he took his jacket off.
“You mean, the one he stole from, like, a liquor store?” Sam responded, an unimpressed expression crossing his features. 
“Yeah, it was a bunch of empty beer cans. That thing was great. I bet if I looked around hard enough, I could probably find one just like it.” He sat on the bed closest to you and went to lean over and look at your computer. 
Despite the fact that you were still on the phone, Sam asked Dean, “Alright, dude… What’s going on with you?”
You stopped typing, and both you and Dean sat up to face Sam. 
“I mean, since when are you Bing Crosby all of a sudden?” continued the brunet. “Why do you want Christmas so bad?”
“Why are you so against it?” Dean challenged. “I mean, were your childhood memories that traumatic?”
Sam’s voice became heavy with emotion. “No, that has nothing to do with it. I-I mean, I-I just… I don’t get it. You haven’t talked about Christmas in years.”
“Well, yeah.” Dean’s voice had less of an edge. “This is my last year.”
Sam huffed out a quick breath. “I know. That’s why I can’t.”
“What do you mean?” 
“I mean, I can’t just sit around, drinking eggnog, pretending everything’s okay, when I know next Christmas, you’ll be dead.” The near-casualness Sam spoke about Dean’s almost-five-month-out deadline with made your breath catch in your throat. “I just can’t,” Sam finished, voice almost too quiet for you to hear. 
The three of you went silent. To distract yourself from the heaviness in the room, you went back to typing on your laptop to find Madge Carrigan’s address and any information on her that suggested she really was your bad guy. 
You could feel Dean staring at you, though, and you knew he needed you at that moment. So you shut your laptop and got into bed with him. He laid against your chest, and you kept your arms around him tightly. Soon, you drifted off to a dreamless sleep. 
***
The next day, you and Dean headed to the Carrigan’s home. Sam stayed behind to research and see if you had missed anything in your search the night before. The house you arrived at was decorated with cutesy Christmas decorations and screamed the 1950s “American dream.”
“This is where Mrs. Wreath lives, huh?” Dean remarked, looking around. “Can’t you just feel the evil pagan vibe?” He rapped his knuckles against the door. 
A blonde, middle-aged woman in a sweater opened it. “Yes?” she answered sweetly. 
“Please tell me you’re the Madge Carrigan who makes the meadowsweet wreaths,” Dean said. 
“Why, yes I am,” she smiled widely. 
“Ha! Bingo.” Dean turned to you with a grin. 
“We just moved into the neighborhood,” you lied, gesturing between yourself and Dean, “and we were mingling with the Sylars the other day. They had one of your beautiful wreaths on their fireplace. He and I were immediately in love with it.”
“You were? Well, isn't that meadowsweet just the finest-smelling thing you ever smelled?” Mrs. Carrigan’s smile had not lessened since she opened the front door; it was creeping you out. 
“It is; it sure is,” you replied. “But the problem is that all your wreaths had sold out before we got the chance to buy one.”
“Oh, fudge!” she pouted. 
“You wouldn’t have another one that we could buy from you, would you?” Dean questioned.
“Oh, no, I’m afraid those were the only ones I had for this season.”
“Aww…” you whined, deflating. 
“Tell me something, why did you decide to make them out of meadowsweet?” your partner asked. 
A man who you assumed was Mr. Carrigan came down the staircase behind the woman as she answered, “Why, the smell, of course! I don’t think I’ve ever smelled anything finer.”
‘She… already said that,’ you thought, but you kept the smile plastered on your face.
“What's going on, honey?” Mr. Carrigan asked his wife. You noticed his outfit of choice was a cardigan and slacks, and he held an old-fashioned pipe. The two reminded you very much of “Leave it to Beaver.”
“Well, just this nice couple asking about my wreaths, dear.”
“Oh, the wreaths are fine,” Mr. Carrigan affirmed. “Fine wreaths. Oh, care for some peanut brittle?” He held out a tin, and Dean took a piece. 
You gave him a harsh glare, preventing him from raising the brittle to his lips. Politely, you bid the couple goodbye and kept Dean from snacking while he started to drive.
As soon as you got out of the line of the Carrigans’ sights, you took the peanut brittle and chucked it out of the window. 
“What was that for? I’m hungry,” Dean whined. 
“Evil pagans, Dean,” you reminded him. “I don’t want you to get magical food poisoning.” You kissed his cheek and sat back in your chair.
He considered for a moment but finally seemed to admit defeat when he hung his head, a small smile and a blush rising to his cheeks. 
***
That night, you and the Winchesters headed back to the Carrigan’s home. “ ‘O Come All Ye Faithful” played from somewhere down the street, and the soft glow of Christmas lights on strings shining through the dark night almost made you feel like a child again; falling asleep in the back of your family’s station wagon while your mother hummed along to the Christmas tunes on the radio. 
An evergreen stake was hidden in your jacket’s inside pocket; Bobby was becoming your favorite person with his seemingly endless amounts of contacts and information. Sam had informed you and his brother that the last place the Carrigans had lived, three people disappeared, too. 
You followed Dean into the living room of the dark home after he picked the lock. He turned around and whispered, “See? Plastic.” He gestured to the couch and other furniture  still covered in sheets of it.
You headed down the hallway where ornaments and snow globes rested on shelves on the wall. You made your way into the kitchen where Sam and Dean were looking at a lock on the basement door. Dean picked it, and you followed him down the stairs. You did your best to avoid making the stairs creak as you did so. 
You shined your flashlight around and realized the basement was less of a storage room and more of Hannibal Lector’s playroom; a bowl of blood and bone sat at the end of a bloodstained wooden table just big enough to fit a human on that had shackles outfitted to each of its corners. You backed up along the wall, only to bump into something that moved. You yelped in surprise and wheeled around to see a leather bag wriggling around, as if a person was inside it. 
Suddenly, you felt a hand on the back of your shirt, lifting you up, and you screamed. 
“(Y/N)!” Dean yelled. 
You wriggled and kicked with all your might, but Mr. Carrigan was too strong. He turned you around and held you to the wall by your throat, and you clawed at his hand to get away from him. However, slowly losing air, you were unsure whether the best strategy was to fight or to conserve your oxygen. 
“Gosh, I wish you kids hadn’t come down here,” Madge smiled sweetly.
***
Slowly, your mind began to awaken. Your limbs and head felt heavy, and the light seeping in through your closed eyes felt painful. You blinked a few times, soon able to fully open your eyes and look around. 
You jerked a little in your seat but soon realized your hands were bound to the chair. You turned your head to the left to see Dean tied up shoulders slumped, and on the right, Sam. You supposed the two boys were tied back to back and your chair was tied sort of in between the two. However, you couldn’t see anything going on behind you. 
“Dean? You okay?” you asked frantically when you heard him groan. 
“Yeah, I think so,” he grumbled. 
“How ‘bout you, Sam?” 
Sam just hummed in response. “So, I guess we’re dealing with Mr. and Mrs. God. Nice to know.”
“Yeah,” Dean murmured, breathing deeply. 
You heard approaching footsteps coming from behind you. 
“Ooh, and here we thought you two lazybones were gonna sleep straight through all the fun stuff,” you heard Madge giggle. 
“Miss all this? Nah, we’re partiers,” Dean snarked. 
You heard Mr. Carrigan take a puff from his pipe. “Isn’t he a kick in the pants, honey? You’re hunters, is what you are.”
“And you’re pagan gods. So, why don't we just call it even, and go our separate ways?” the older brother suggested. 
“What, so you can bring more hunters and kill us?” Madge laughed, voice still sugary sweet. “I don’t think so.”
“Maybe you should have thought about that before you went snacking on humans, now, huh?” Sam shot back.
“Oh now, don’t get all wet,” Mr. Carrigan scolded gently. 
“Oh, why, we used to take over a hundred tributes a year and that’s a fact.” You turned to the left to see Madge put a napkin on Dean’s lap. “Now what do we take?” She did the same to you. “What, two? Three?” And then did the same to Sam.
“Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew here make six.” Mr. Carrigan took another drag from his pipe. Funnily enough, you hadn’t seen him light the thing once yet. 
“Now, that’s not so bad, is it?” Madge crooned. 
“Well, you say it like that,” Dean sassed, “I guess you guys are the Cunninghams.”
“You, mister, better show us a little respect,” Madge instructed, and you could see her leaning down to try and intimidate Dean.
“Or what?” you remarked, trying to crane your neck around to look at the Carrigans. “You gonna eat us?”
“Not so fast,” Mr. Carrigan responded. “There’s rituals to be followed first.”
You turned to Madge, who looked excited. “Oh, we’re just sticklers for ritual.”
“And you know what kicks off the whole shebang?” Mr. Carrigan taunted, walking around in front of you.
“Let me guess.” The glare you delivered was challenging. “Meadowsweet.”
Mr. Carrigan nodded. 
“Oh shucks,” you mockingly pouted, “you’re all out of wreaths. I guess we’ll just have to cancel the sacrifice, huh?”
“Oh, don’t be such a gloomy Gus.” You could hear Madge rustling around as she spoke. Suddenly, a wreath was put around your neck. You attempted to bite Mrs. Carrigan’s fingers to no avail, and she just tapped your nose in response. “There. Oh, don’t they just look darling?
Mr. Carrigan smacked his lips. “Good enough to eat. Alrighty-roo. Step number two.” You heard the sound of a knife being released from its sheath. 
Sam started mumbling, “No, no—” to which you and Dean cried his name. 
“D-Don’t!” Sam wailed. 
“Leave him alone, you son of a bitch!” Dean shouted. 
You struggled even harder against your binds.
“Hear how they talk to us?” Mr. Carrigan tsked. “To gods? Listen, pal, back in the day, we were worshiped by millions.”
Mr. Carrigan walked around to you holding the bowl, and you started to panic just a little. 
“Times have changed!” Dean growled. 
“Tell me about it. All of a sudden, this Jesus character is the hot new thing in town. All of a sudden, our– our altars are being burned down, and we’re being hunted down like common monsters.” Mr. Carrigan walked back behind what you assumed was the kitchen counter.
“But did we say a peep? Oh ho ho, no, no, no, we did not. Two millennia,” Madge continued for her husband. “We kept a low profile; we got jobs, a mortgage. Wh- What was that word, dear?”
“We assimilated.”
“Yeah, we assimilated. Why, we play bridge on Tuesday and Fridays.” The woman walked over to you holding the bowl with Sam’s blood in it. “We’re just like everybody else.”
“You’re not blending in as smooth as you think, lady,” Dean snarked. Madge ignored your partner’s comment. “This might pinch a bit, dear.” With that, she sliced into your arm deeply. 
“F-Fuck!” you screamed. 
“(Y/N)!” Dean yelled. “Get your hands off her!”
“Oh, my goodness me! Somebody owes a nickel to the swear jar. Oh, do you know what I say when I feel like swearing?” Madge waved the knife around in your face as you panted in pain. “ ‘Fudge’.”
“I’ll try to remember that,” you sassed. 
“Oh, god, you son of a bitch!” Dean howled, and you assumed Madge had cut him up, too. 
“Get away from him!” you yelled, creating brush burns on your arms from how hard you were pulling on your binds.
“You kids have no idea how lucky you are,” Mr. Carrigan said. “There was a time when kids came from miles around, just to be sitting where you are.” He came to a stop in front of you holding a pair of pliers.
“What do you think you’re doing with those?” you asked, chest heaving in panic. 
All he did was smile in response. 
“You fudging touch her again, and I’ll fudging kill you!” Dean growled. 
“Very good!” Madge praised just before you heard your love groan in pain again. 
You had no time to focus on Dean because Mr. Carrigan grabbed your hand. 
“No, no, don’t!” Sam begged from beside you. 
“Get off me!” you cried, and your cry soon turned into a scream as the god painfully pulled your index fingernail off. 
“Oh, we got a winner!” Mr. Carrigan exclaimed happily. He disappeared from your line of sight again, and you dropped your head back on your chair. Your finger and arm were throbbing, and you couldn’t help but cry. 
“I swear to god, (Y/N), I’ll fucking kill them,” you heard Dean mutter through the white hot pain roaring in your ears.
“What else, dear?” Madge cooed. 
“Well, let’s see. Uh, fingernails, blood. Oh! Sweet Peter on a popsicle stick,” the man laughed. “I forgot the tooth.”
“Oh, dear!”
“Merry Christmas, guys,” Dean said, out of breath. 
You turned your head to see Madge and Mr. Carrigan advancing on Dean. The man held the pliers up and grabbed Dean’s chin harshly. “Open wide… and say, ‘Aah’.”
Suddenly, the doorbell rang. 
“Somebody gonna get that?” Dean asked around the tool in his mouth. “You should get that.”
“Come on,” Mr. Carrigan finally said. 
You knew you had to act fast, and you started working the knife out of your sleeve as soon as the doors shut behind the Carrigans. Silently, all three of you got out of your binds. You hid with Dean behind one of the kitchen doors. 
“Now, where were we?” you heard Madge say. 
You pulled a drawer out to hold the door closed and trapped the Carrigans in the kitchen. Almost immediately, the couple was attempting to open them. 
You made your way over to Sam at the other end of the kitchen and leaned on the door beside him.
“What do we do now? The evergreen stakes are in the basement!” Dean whispered. 
“Well, we need more evergreen, Dean!” Sam replied. 
You looked over at the tree in the corner of the living room. “Guys. Bingo.”
Dean smirked excitedly. “Sam, help me get this.” He had his brother assist him in moving the large cabinet next to the door in front of it.
While the boys worked, you pushed the Christmas tree over and broke three large branches off it. You tossed one to both boys who caught them with ease. 
Gripping your stake tightly, you waited with bated breath as the house went silent. Suddenly, Mr. Carrigan tackled Dean to the ground. Madge grabbed your shoulder before you could help Dean and wheeled you around. “You little thing,” she chastised. “I loved that tree.”
You raised your stake, but she hit you hard and threw you back onto the plastic-covered couch. The woman stalked toward you, and you whacked her to the ground with the branches of your stake. You scrambled to your feet before she could recover and stabbed her through the chest with your stake.
“Madge!” Mr. Carrigan screamed just before Sam stabbed him with his own makeshift stake.
You moved to stand beside the two boys, chest heaving from the effort. “Merry Christmas, ya filthy animals,” you breathed out at the dead bodies at your feet. The two boys huffed out labored laughs before Dean slung his arm around your shoulder and began leading you out of the house. 
***
“How’d you keep Dean from finding this stuff?” Sam asked.
You pulled a few plastic bags out from under the bed you shared with the older Winchester. “He doesn’t look under here unless it’s for his shoes. I’ve been making sure they’re next to mine by the door every night,” you explained with a smile. You handed one of the bags to Sam. “It’s not much, but I found a crappy dollar store down the road. I was hoping you’d change your mind.”
Sam looked down sheepishly. “You do get why I was… hesitant, though, right?”
You stood up and nodded. “Absolutely, I do.”
He gave you a lopsided smile. 
“C’mon,” you said. “Oh! I almost forgot!”
“What?”
You stooped to pull out the little plastic Christmas tree from under Sam’s bed and held it up with a wide grin.
***
Dean returned almost an hour later holding a six pack. “What’s all this?” he asked, almost in a sort of daze as he looked around the decorated room.
You continued to busy yourself with making eggnog while the brothers talked.
“What do you think it is? It’s– it’s Christmas,” Sam replied.
You walked over to Sam with a cup of your concoction.
“What made you change your mind?” Dean asked him.
“Oh, thanks,” Sam told you without answering his brother.
“Lemme know if it needs more of a kick,” you said. 
Sam took a swig and coughed. “Nope, all good.”
“Yeah?” you grinned.
Sam nodded and smiled. 
Dean came up behind you and slipped an arm around your waist, his hand landing just above your ass. He smirked down at you and took the other cup of eggnog from your left hand. He gulped almost half of it down, unfazed by the strong whiskey taste. 
“Well, uh, have a seat. Let’s do… Christmas stuff, or whatever,” Sam awkwardly said. 
You sat beside Dean on the couch next to the small Christmas tree decorated with car air fresheners. Sam pulled up a chair across from you. 
“All right, first things first,” Dean nodded, and you handed him the two packages he’d wrapped shoddily in brown paper bags. “Merry Christmas, Sam.” Dean handed him one of the two bags.
Sam smiled widely. “Where’d you get these?”
“Someplace special,” Dean smirked. At Sam’s deadpan expression, Dean continued, “The gas mart down the street. Open them up.”
“Well, great minds think alike, Dean.” Sam brought out two packages wrapped in newspaper. He gave the first to Dean. 
“Really?” Dean asked, eyes shining with surprise. 
You left Dean’s arms momentarily to reach under the couch and brought out two packages daintily wrapped in brown paper. You handed one to each of the boys, and they handed their gifts to you. “You didn’t have to get me anything, guys,” you said. 
“Yeah, we did. Shuddup,” Dean remarked, smirking. 
You relaxed back against him while Sam opened his gift from Dean. “Skin mags!” he laughed. “And shaving cream.”
“You like?” Dean questioned.
Sam smiled and nodded. He then opened the gift from you. “Oh, no way!” He held up the Staind cassette tapes you’d gotten for him to add to Dean’s collection for long drives; especially for when Dean was gone. 
You grinned widely as he admired the tapes. “Okay, Dee, your turn,” you told him. 
He chuckled and unwrapped Sam’s gift to him. “Look at this! Fuel for me and fuel for my baby.” He held up a candy bar and a bottle of oil, and you laughed. “These are awesome,” the older brother said. “Thanks, Sammy.” 
“Okay, now mine,” you beamed. 
“Oh, holy shit,” Dean breathed out while he opened the Bowie knife you’d gotten engraved for him. On the hilt of the blade were his initials, and the handle was engraved to look just like the side of his prized Taurus pistol. “Jesus, (Y/N), this is—” he couldn’t seem to find the words, instead opting to place a long kiss on the side of your forehead. 
At last, you opened yours. Sam gave you the second book in a series you’d been reading on Greek myths, for which you were eternally grateful, but Dean’s gift truly floored you.
“Where’d you get this?” you asked, fingering the small beaded bracelet Dean had given you. 
“Off some kid in the lobby,” he smirked.
Tears filled your eyes at how close of attention he paid to you and your stories. 
“There’s something else in there, too.” 
You looked up to Dean with complete admiration before rummaging around in the bag once more. You pulled out a ripped piece of paper from the notepad at a motel you’d recently stayed at with the words, “Redeem on Dean’s expiration date.” You looked up to him in confusion.
“It’s, uh, for this,” Dean revealed, thumbing the amulet around his neck. “I want you to have it.” 
You threw your arms around his neck and hugged him tightly. He returned your fierce embrace, pulling you impossibly closer across his lap. 
“Merry Christmas, Deano,” you whispered into his shoulder.
Dean pulled away from you and kissed your forehead. He then held his eggnog up to cheers you and Sam. “Merry Christmas, guys.”
The three of you sat in silence sipping your drinks before Sam broke the quiet. 
He looked quite sad as he began, “Hey, Dean, y—” but Sam cut himself off, sighing and shaking his head. “Do you feel like watching the game?” he finally asked.
Dean grinned in relief. “Absolutely.”
You clicked on the television before settling into Dean’s side. He lazily thumbed your hip and sighed in content. Sam turned his chair to face the television.
***
Later that night, long after Dean and Sam had gone to bed, you were still wide awake. Snow had begun softly falling outside the motel room window, and the moonlight reflected off the white blanket over the Impala beautifully. Wrapped in a blanket, you made your way over to your duffel bag. You hadn’t taken the bracelet that Dean gave you off, and you were still holding the piece of paper to “redeem” when Dean was gone. 
You took your wallet out and slipped the piece of paper into the see-through pocket where your ID sat, and there it would stay until this was all over. 
Series Rewrite Taglist: @polireader @brightlilith @atcamillanorrman @jrizzelle @insomnia-bookworm @procrastination20 @mrs-liebgott @djs8891 @tiggytaylor @staple-your-mouth @jesstherebel @rach5ive @strawberrykiwisdogog @bruhidkjustwannaread @mxltifxnd0m @sunshine-on-marz @big-ol-boat @mgchaser @capncrankle @chervbs @simpingdeadcharacters @nesnejwritings @stillhere197 @tearsforhan @take-it-on-the-run @iloveyou2mia @maxinehufflepuffprincess @ohgeehowdigethere @seninjakitey @berarenado @s0urw00lf @princessleahorgana @quarterhorse19 @isla-finke-blog @silverdoragon @karacaroldanvers @gayandfairycore @examishbookwyrm @star-yawnznn @real-sharena-h @fandomloverrr @metalmonki @onlyangel-444 @yu-winchester @benniwiththefanni @daisychaingirl @immagods @missmieux @yoongi-holland @littledebbieinabigworld
127 notes · View notes
arkus-rhapsode · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Enjin: I’m Mary Poppins, Y’all!
68 notes · View notes
clonedchaos · 2 months ago
Text
The Ink Demon holding an umbrella over Audrey’s head: 😐 ☂️
Audrey: 🤭🤭🤭
Ink Demon: “What?” 🤨
Audrey: “You look like Mary Poppins.” 😌
Ink Demon:
Ink Demon uncertainly: “…Is he cool?” 🧐🥺
Audrey: 😐 “… Hell yeah he’s cool.” 😉 🔥
Ink Demon: *laughs maniacally and screams out to the entire studio* “I’M MARY POPPINS Y’ALL!!!!” 🗣️🗣️🗣️
49 notes · View notes
dcafanzine · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Hi everyone! We’re super excited to start introducing our contributors! Let’s let them introduce themselves!
————————————————————————
Hi y’all! I’m Plum (@pure-plum) and I’m joining G&GG as a spot artist, and I will be in the Backstage Pass as both a page artist and spot artist! It feels pretty ambitious for my first step into the zine scene but I’m very excited to be working with so many talented artists and writers all sharing stories and ideas about the DCA. The DCA and the community around them pulled me out of some intense burnout, and they reminded me how much fun it can be to create and to enjoy being as silly or as serious about it as you want! How lucky to find so many wonderful stories and adaptations of Sun and Moon, and so many cool folks to share them with!
Tumblr
————————————————————————
Howdy! I'm YourFriendlyDCA (@/yourfriendlydca everywhere!) I'm a page artist for both the main and bonus zines. I've done zines in the past, and I always have a blast on projects like these. Security breach pulled me into FNAF as an interest first. I couldn't tell you when my brain started fixating on the DCA, but once I realized, I was in too deep. I love sympathetic characters in horror games. So when I saw a robot character doomed to be in a franchise about killer bots while trying his best to be Mary Poppins and failing miserably, I was hooked. Yes please. And throw in his murder gremlin alter.
I'm everywhere people are posting art, and I do cosplay too! Hope to see you around!
Carrd
————————————————————————
Howdy hey, yall can call me Lemon! I'm a page artist and spot artist for the G&GG Backstage Pass. I've previously made a comic spread for Welcome Again an Omori Black Space fanzine, and I'm so excited to partake in my first ever Fnaf fanzine! I knew from the first Security Breach trailer that I'd be head over heels for these silly celestial jesters, and low-n-behold here we are still, nearly 3 years later <3
Fnaf Tumblr | Main Art Tumblr
23 notes · View notes
flowerbarrel-art · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
What?
Tumblr media
You look like Mary Poppins!
Tumblr media
Is he cool?
Tumblr media
Heck yeah, he’s cool.
Tumblr media
I’m Mary Poppins, y’all!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
starrysnowdrop · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
I’m Mary Poppins Y’all! ☔️
Since I got some extra cash for my birthday, I was able to get Hali the Magicked Umbrella mount for her nameday!! The raindrop sounds, bubbles, and blue flowers all fit Hali so well. The black umbrella also is perfect for anyone who is looking to do a Mary Poppins cosplay glam!
52 notes · View notes
beckybarnes · 11 months ago
Text
Alrighty I’m goin to the Mary Poppins sing along can y’all watch my dog while I’m gone thanx
Tumblr media
13 notes · View notes
dancing-heart-pony · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
August Art Prompts, Day 20: Parasol ⛱️
I’m Mary Poppins y’all!
18 notes · View notes
madam-murder · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
You all have to agree that Yando is badass with his arrow !! Like damn if I can whistle and make lots of bodies drop … that would be epic 😍 and scream “ I’m Mary poppins y’all “ 🤣🤣🤣
7 notes · View notes
shallowstories · 2 years ago
Text
Dean vs 8PackMommy
From November 2022, reposting for compilation and editing purposes.
(En media res) Dean is attending an influencer event, attempting to butter up the socialite otherwise known as 8PackMommy. Cas arrives:
///
When 8PackMommy meets Cas, Dean doesn’t know what he’d been expecting from her, but it certainly wasn’t this blasé,who-cares attitude.
She’s not, like, moved by him at all. Worse, she thinks he’s shabby. Washed up. definitely not influencer material. She doesn’t say it outright, but Dean gets the message loud and clear.
And it’s not like they’re angling to get Cas an in or anything. (He’s here as a journalist.) But bare minimum, objectively, she should view Cas as a diamond in the rough.
Sure, he’s not a good dresser, and maybe he forgets to brush his hair sometimes, but the fact that he doesn’t care about all that (for the most part) is kind of appealing, too. An influencer who specializes in recruitment should be able to recognize baseline appeal.
Dean’s used to Cas impressing people. His mom, Charlie, rando hunters, Men-of-Letter agents, minimum-wage waitresses—you know—people. It sends an unpleasant jolt up his spine that she’s so…lukewarm.
///
When Cas shuffles over to mock-interview him, Dean wants to reach up and mess with his hair. Dean had finally trained him how to style it after all these years, and he doesn’t bother on the one day he really should. He sticks out like a sore thumb against all these plastic zoomers with airbrushed muscles.
Cas has an oversized bag full of something Dean isn’t in the know about.
“I thought you were here as a journalist.”
Cas whispers, “Rowena thought this was better. It’s…artisan coffee. She even had it, uhm, branded.”
Dean reaches forward and twines his fingers around the gift bag handle, his knuckles brushing against Cas’s fingers. “No shit? Hey, it’s heavy…what do you have in here, rocks?”
“No, Dean. It’s three different blends. “Sam told me ‘home’ was the brand look and feel.”
Sure enough, there are about 12 bundles of carefully designed packages.
“I told Sam to figure something out, but man. Anyone here look homey to you? These kids are hokey voodoo woodoo. We’d be better off pretending to sell kale chips.”
Cas’s eyes grow warmer, and he flicks his eyes down to Dean’s shirt. “You do.”
Whatever words Dean’d been thinking of die on his tongue.
“The idea,” Cas whispers leaning far too close, “is to intrigue 8PackMommy. She sells the concept of ‘being a mom,’ but her social media looks, as you said, very Stepford. This will ‘niggle at her brain,’ according to Rowena.”
“Tch. Well, good luck making that bitch-perfect little Mary Poppins feel insecure.”
Cas pulls out a spreadsheet that Sam had prepared for him. It’s got a listing of all the coffees and some estimates for…travel expenses?
“The pitch isn’t just to give out products, Dean. It’s to fly the family to a company-paid, week-long vacation to use the product and create ‘homey’ content,” he rumbles confidently.
Sounds pretty damn nice. And a sure-fire way to get her isolated to see how she’s connected to her missing husband.
“That near Donna’s place?”
“That’s the idea. There are three cabins for pretense, yes. You’ll be in one of them, of course.”
Cas raises his voice suddenly and pulls out a black book. “I think you’ll be a perfect fit, Mr. Singer. Of course we can talk travel details later.”
8Pack is hovering nearby, like the whiff of money is a homing beacon.
Dean scoffs, playing along. “A week in the friggin’ mountains? Sweet! Y’all aren’t greedy with the amenities!”
Dean sees her flip her hair and smooth her Bohemian skirt before sauntering over. “Well, hello,” she greets, practically elbowing Dean out of the way.
“Hello, Cas says blankly. “We met earlier.”
She looks vaguely embarrassed. “Oh. I’m sorry if I was rude. I tend to get a little frazzled at these events, even with all my experience.”
Sure. Frazzled.
“I’m Carl Karamatov,” Cas says. “Not easy to remember.”
She sways closer to him, then swivels her eyes curiously to the bag Dean is holding. “Artisan coffee? Better be beans.”
“Nothin’ wrong with ground,” Dean says gruffly.
“And who’re you again?” she lilts, bringing a perfectly manicured hand up to a jutting hip.
Dean bristles. He’s already introduced himself to her six times. Without waiting for a response, she wrenches the bag from his hand and shrewdly inspects the merchandise.
“Not to tell you how to run your brand,” her eyes fall judgmentally on Dean before going back to Cas, “But scouting for talent is actually my specialty when I’m not promoting my own brand. You’ve probably heard of it: 8PackMommy? I specialize in cheating The Life so moms everywhere can have it all and look good doing it.”
Cas feints looking surprised. “Your instagram photos don’t do you justice,” he says.
A smile bleeds across her face. “Th-thank you.”
Now, she looks more affected. Ha, Dean thinks triumphantly.
“Anyway, your brand…it looks more upscale than hick, if you catch my drift.” She cuts her eyes at Dean.
Dean grits his teeth.
Hick?
///
When she finally leaves, it’s with a promise to reach out to Sam or Carl “early next week to discuss the sponsorship opportunity.”
She honestly hadn’t thought Family Coffee Co. was a great fit for her frou-frou (and in Dean’s opinion uppity, sterile, n’ fake) personal brand. But the week-long vacay opportunity had wooed her. And she’d heard of Donna, the unofficial face of their little operation, which had helped lend a lil’ credibility.
“I hope she calls Sam. She’s exhausting to talk to.”
Something about that makes Dean’s guts writhe in triumph.
“Know what? She is. She’s like a bridezilla without the wedding.”
Cas nods but looks like he hasn’t the slightest idea what Dean means. Whatever. He’s always wanted to show Cas Say Yes to The Dress, and there’s definitely some bridezilla episodes that Dean can queue up.
“So. Donna really have 10K followers?”
“It’s over twelve thousand according to Claire and Alex.”
“Jesus. For her posing with donuts.”
“Donuts in a variety of different locales.”
6 notes · View notes
ratwhowrites · 2 years ago
Text
Goodbyes are Hard
Alright, posting this again. Hope y’all enjoy it. Next one I post will be the Iris Remi fic.
60 seconds
Ren’s eye was focused on the clock in front of him, impatiently tapping his foot in time with the second hand of the clock. The teacher droned on, his words going in one ear and out the other. Ren gave up trying to understand the class work, tuning out the remainder of the lesson.
40 seconds
“C’mon, c’mon..” Ren mumbled. He became more restless, his fidgeting became harder to control. His foot was tapping a lot faster as his fingers drummed aggressively on the desk.
20 seconds
The eyepatch clad teenager was already reaching for his backpack, despite the teacher’s instructions to wait until he dismisses them. He always hated that rule. He slipped one strap over his shoulder, ready to jump from his seat and take off. If only the clock would move faster.
5 seconds
The teacher was still talking. Ren already began to stand up, gripping his notebook tightly so as to not drop it. The bell had already rung but the teacher continued to talk. As soon as he dismissed the class, Ren bolted out the door, heading to the theatre building where his older brother stood waiting.
“Come on! We gotta run!” Nathan joked, speed walking away. Ren jogged to keep up, already panting from previously running. They hurried to Nathan’s car, Ren quickly tossing his things in the trunk before hopping into the passenger seat.
“And now we’re trapped.” Nathan remarked, gesturing to the line of cars trying to exit the school parking lot.
“I’m sorry! Anderson held us back just to squeeze in one last example! Can you believe that? It’s bullshit!” Nathan chuckled at Ren’s angry rant.
“Oh by the way, here’s your fidget cube thingy. You left it in my car again,” Ren takes the cube and fiddles with it, which made a satisfying click with each movement.
“But yeah, that guy always went on tangents. Makes me glad I don’t have him anymore,” He handed his younger brother his phone. “What do you want to listen to?” Ren bore a mischievous smile on his face as he typed something in. It wasn’t until the car’s speakers were blaring the Mary Poppins musical soundtrack did Nathan realize why. He feigned a groan of annoyance.
“Haven’t you had enough of Mary Poppins? We just finished the show!” Ren giggled, nodding his head to Practically Perfect.
“Never! The songs are too good! Favorite song from the show, go!” Nathan paused to think for a moment before responding.
“Definitely Precision and Order.” Nathan hummed as they drove, enjoying each song that came on. Ren felt content, just sitting there. His brother was always fun to hang out with. He dreaded when the ride would stop.
“How on earth did these kids get their licenses?” Nathan sighed as another car cut off the car in front of him. Ren raised an eyebrow and turned to his brother, chuckling.
“You sounded like mom just then.” Nathan’s face contorted into an expression of disgust.
“Ew, how could you?”
Neither boy were very fond of their mother. And for a moment they drove in silence, the cheerful music no longer provided a distraction from their destination. Ren skimmed over his notebook, trying to find something else to think about. Before they knew it, they had arrived at the familiar building. The salon appeared to be busy at the moment as all the seats in the waiting area were taken. Ren sighed and unbuckled his seat belt.
“Are you gonna come in and say hi?” Nathan scoffs at that.
“And spoil my good mood? I think not. I’d rather go to work in a good mood thank you.”
“…. She talks about you a lot. I think she misses you.” Ren mumbles, hugging his notebook. He wanted to stay in the car as long as he could.
“Not likely but that’s a nice thought I guess,” Nathan sighs. He unlocks the doors and ruffles Ren’s hair. “I’ll pick you up tomorrow ok? I did promise I’d take you to the bookshop. See you tomorrow kiddo.” Ren smiles as he exits the car and grabs his bag.
“Bye! See you tomorrow!” Ren walks into the salon, greeted by the ladies working. His mother walks out from the back room, not even glancing at him.
“You’re late.”
“I know.”
Ren wishes that he could’ve stayed in the car. He would rather be hanging out with Nathan than sitting in the back of the salon, waiting for his mother to finish work.
He didn’t realize that would be the last time he ever saw his brother.
3 notes · View notes
the-whatcherof-89 · 3 days ago
Text
Nerd: I’M MARY POPPINS Y’ALL!
Tumblr media
Nerd and Jock Ep 273
Twitter   Instagram   Patreon
631 notes · View notes
cemetery-dr1ven · 2 years ago
Text
I’M MARY POPPINS Y’ALL
1 note · View note
box5intern · 3 years ago
Text
Can’t get enough of it really just moves me
86 notes · View notes