#but those freaks pissed me off yet again đ
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you are not as nice as the other blogs are to the h*rries, l*rries, 1d*ckrries with their fucking stupid questions and fake concern for louis.
and i THANK YOU for that! đ€â€ïžđđđđđ§Ąđ©”â„ïžđ€
Idk what this is about but you're welcome đ„°â€ïž. Honestly, they make it so easy for me with the way they prove me right everyday đ. Like i personally believe if you are a fan of that man, you don't really love Louis, at least not like louies do and not like he deserves bc with the way that man's fans are so cruel towards Louis and in our business every single day, i could never give that man a single stream that his fans will later use to prove how superior and more successful their fav is even if he wasn't as shitty as he is (don't even get me started on how someone can stan 2 people with opposite ideologies and principles and artistry). Still, i really really tried to tolerate larries who are not as annoying about their ship but everytime i came to the conclusion that they hate Louis and don't care about him (don't let that in Louis' lane in their dn fool you). In the pandemic, i avoided anything related to that man (his actions made me nauseous) and didn't really interact with larries at all but i hoped that they had developed more respect for Louis in those couple of years. Then, the album title and the setlist leak happened and the way those disgusting people were acting and CELEBRATING, saying it was Louis who did it just told me everything i need to know: They'll never change đ. They hate Louis (even when they don't realize it), they have no respect for his art and his hard work. His well being, his career and success will always be secondary to their delusions (the ship, 1d reunion and the fucked up image they have of him that nothing can shake off). In short, they're Louis antis even when they don't realize it so i don't owe them any kindness. These are people who hate on my fav on the daily and have no problem using his late mother/ sister to fuel their delusions, have no shame discussing the paternity of a stranger and declaring how he's not a father everyday (like who are you!!!). When i say i hate them i mean it. And don't even get me started on those miserable hrries đ they use larry as an excuse for their Louis obsession when he was the one between the two who denied the ship and is taking the larrie hate (larries criticize that man's actions sometimes but in the end it's always poor Hzzy J*ff forced him to đ„ș but Louis doesn't have that luxury, to them he's the daddy boss đ). Those anons with those faux concerns aren't fooling anyone btw, i know a h/larrie ask when i see one so don't waste time and energy pretending otherwise đ«¶đœ
#in conclusion Louis antis this blog is not for you#sorry anon that was a long rant#but those freaks pissed me off yet again đ
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Lmao I could not stop thinking about this all day like i absolutely need a oneshot like thisđđđ.
I know Castin most likely not gonna be allowed near his wife during the birth of their child/children, but like if he was allowed he would be hella nervous throughout the process. I feel like he would be those husbands that would act like doctors (with no background or knowledge) telling his wife to push hard, not to stop, push in a certain position, telling them to calm down, lowkey lying saying that they're almost finished when they barely startedđ. Mind you Castin is saying this with only good intentions only wanting to make sure that the baroness/Celica doesn't go through any complications, but boy does he annoy the hell out of her. At one point she stopped screaming and pushing only to silently turn her head to Castin and give him one of the most deadest glares he has ever received in his entire life time of living (in the room filled with nurses or doctors). đđđThis would be the first time Castin has ever heard his wife say something so fowl and full of curses let alone be on the receiving end of it.
I'm sorry that I don't have time to write a oneshot now, but I can give you a scenario, Anon!
-
I imagine everyone who is important to the couple would be there during the birth: Lilia, Rhett, Isolde, Reyes, Dolion, and Rex would be waiting outside of the birthing room. The doctors, nurses and even Ezekiel are right there in the room to help assist the Baroness.
Castin would be pacing around, anxiety literally dripping off of him while the ladies snacked on and the men were trying to calm him down.
Lilia, carefully peeling an apple for them and the Baroness: Castin, sit your ass down before you give everyone a migraine. Oh! Excuse me, Your Majesty.
Queen Isolde: It's cool. I've heard worse from Rhett.
Rhett: Beloved -
Castin: Guys! Hello!? Why aren't y'all freaking out about this!? It's been hours since my wife went into labour!
Dolion: We know. We can read the time, brother.
Rex: Sarcasm won't help the Commander calm down, Dolion. Be more empathetic, please.
Castin: Guys!?
Rhett: Castin! Take a deep breath and sit down already! The Baroness is in good and, more importantly, CAPABLE hands. You panicking won't help -
The doors to the maternity room burst open. A very pissed-off-looking doctor stomps out, effectively silencing everyone.
Doctor: May I remind everyone that the Baroness now requires peace!? If none of you can keep it down, then I am forced to use my authority and banish all of you until further notice.
Castin, now super distressed: But...
That's when a scream broke out. One filled with pain. No one could stop him as Castin after that. Not even Rhett, for he rushes past the doctor and hurried to the Baroness' beside. Startling the nurses.
There, lying in bed with immense pain and sweating profusely is the entire reason why Castin's heart beats.
Castin, panicking now, oh boy: Babe! Babe, are you alright!?
The Baroness is now glaring at him: Yes, husband. I'm having that time of my fucking life!
Everyone in the room, including Castin, winces. But he's determined to help her in any way he can. He snatches a wet cloth from a startled nurse and carefully dabs his wife's face; not realising that he forgot to squeeze the damn thing and now her pillow and face are drenched with water.
The Baroness, furious now: CASTIN -
Castin: You're alright, babe. A-OK! Just try to breathe in more deeply and keep pushing!
An aggravated nurse: Commander, the head isn't even crowning yet! Please leave so we can -
Castin: Nah, nah, the sooner she pushes the better, right!? You're doing great! Hahaha! No need to panic! You want any water? Snacks? I can feed you!
The Baroness: Castin, get the fuck out of my room before I cut your balls out!
Cue the contractions again and this time, she screams louder than before. Rhett, Reyes, Dolion and Rex finally broke into the room to drag Castin away. NSDJKFNKJDSF WHAT A MESS!
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This is a horror story I wrote based off two prompts I found on Pinterest. I can't think of a title đ.
Note that in the story she's supposed to be really good at drawing so imagine it realistic.
I wake up and the sun is shining. it's a perfect day, but I still have to go to school. I get up, dress, eat breakfast, leave the house. then I remember I had to do something before I get to school. I might be a bit late, but never mind, it's important. Just a loose end in my life I have to tie up again, and I can do it in a fun way.
When I arrive at school, I'm 3 minutes late to my first lesson, but it doesn't matter, I did what I needed to. I apologise to the teacher and sit down, the two boys sitting in front of me are whispering about something, glancing at an empty seat beside them, looking concerned. Their friend who hasn't come to school today, oh well, that doesn't cause me any problems.
Later, I sit alone in the corner of the playground, drawing something, one of the boys who was in front of me earlier comes up to me, looking pissed, he grabs my notebook off me, looks at the drawing and lets out a half scoff half laugh, then looks at me.
"I know what you did, freak, I also know what you did to half the people in our year," he jabs my drawing with one finger, "This supposed to be you and him? You absolute sicko, I might not have proof yet, but I will make sure everyone knows what you've done one day, you psychopath." He drops it on the ground and walks away to his friends, stealing glances back at me as I pick my book up and dust the dirt off it.
He's too sensitive and paranoid. He's a problem.
Later again, I walk home satisfied with myself. My life should be better now that I've got rid of some of my problems. My father is sitting in the kitchen, on his phone, looking tired and worried. He looks up at me,
"Another two teenagers have been murdered, they still don't know who did it." I clap my hands over my mouth, hiding my expression.
"My classmates again?"
"Yes, I'm sorry, I really think we should move out of this godforsaken town."
I go upstairs to my room, and flop down onto my bed, they still haven't caught the killer, or found any evidence.
When I wake up, the sun is shining, it's a perfect day. it's the weekend so I'll have plenty of time to bury those remains later, this sun sure will help rot the bodies faster.
Before you call me a psycho, remember, they were just loose ends, or problems in my life I had to get rid of. People who annoyed me, or witnesses.
I pick up my notebook and a pencil and start adding a little more shading around the empty, dead eyes of the corpse of the boy in my class.
#short story#horror#short horror story#creative writing#writing#writers on tumblr#horror story#murder story#psychopath mc
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âJohn smirked. âItâs a skinwalker.ââ â I used to think that skinwalkers were those creatures that would mimic the sounds of crying babies to lure women outside at night. I donât remember which mythology it comes from or what the actual creature is called, but I for some reason always think of it when I see âskinwalkerâ đ
âDean forced his knee to stop. But that was when he felt itâa growing sense of frustration and anxiety blooming in his chest.â â Omg is home girl gonna be a potential victim??? IS DEAN GONNA UNKNOWINGLY SAVE HER???
âDean was feeling his freaking soulmate, and it was scaring the hell out of him.â â Heâs gonna run from the bond isnât he⊠are you gonna break my heart in this series? Should I get my emotional first aid kit ready? Is Dean gonna try and reject the bond? Oh god Iâm so anxious now! đ
âThat realization made him smirk. Aw, yeah. College girl, huh?â â This horny ass motherfucker đ€Ł but also VERY on brand for him!
âYou were twenty years old, still not old enough to legally drink but old enough to have adult bills and adult stress to go along with it.â â *laughs in Australian* đŠđș honestly though that sucks, imagine having to wait THAT long to get on the piss đ€Ł does America at LEAST have laws where you can drink if your underage as long as itâs on private property?
ââŠOkay, maybe that was a little bit true. But you liked history, and you could easily fall into Momâs footsteps and become a teacher.â â I love history, itâs so fascinating to me! When I chose it as one of my electives in school, people thought I was whack.
âEspecially because you had an insane Calculus final to cram for, and only a few hours to do it.â â Okay so I see âcram forâ a lot in reference to college in fics⊠based off of context, I think I understand it, but what does it mean? Just so I can know if Iâm right or nah.
âRegardless, he was attractive.â â My spidy senses are tingling⊠I know it in my tits that this is the skinwalker!
âHis fingers brushed your hand when you took the to-go cup from him, but he hissed a bit and pulled his hand back.â â THATS RIGHT BECAUSE HER MUMâS RING IS SILVER OOOOOOO!!!
âYou were too deep in your studies and your music to notice.â â You did it again đ„ș
âLook normal, blend in by slinging watery, overpriced coffee.â â I have to admit that Iâve heard terrible things about American coffee, and I only wish that you guys could experience the delicious joys of Australian coffee⊠scrumptious!
âOh fuck. His lips pursed. A persistent feeling of worry (that wasnât his own) prickled in his chest, like fire ants across his skin. He tried his best to shut it out.â â A bit of an inconvenient time for it to strike innit đ€Ł
âFive bucks an hour wasnât worth getting splattered on a dusty pavement.â â IM SORRY WHAT??? Five bucks?? I have to remind myself that thereâs a conversion difference but that still feels way too low!
âSon,â he said again. âUnless youâre prepared to hang up your gun, and stop hunting, donât open that door.â â Well well well, John Winchesterâs A+ parenting strikes once again! What an asshole smh!
ââNobody should be waiting on men like us to come home bloody,â he said.ââ â I mean I know heâs got a point with this sentence, but itâs still stupid (and on brand) that heâd rather his son to get stuck as a hunter than to find happiness.
âSoon enough, the warm tendril of connection in his chest dissipated.â â Ouchie that hurt! That really fucken hurt oh god my heart needs stitches đđ€
They havenât even MET yet and the angst already packs one hell of a punch! The fact that sheâs looking for her soulmate in every guy she meets, and he now knows about her but has decided not to seek her out⊠wow that hurts!
Never Say Goodbye - Part 2
Pairing: Dean x Female Reader
Summary: The first time you and Dean sensed each otherâs thoughts and feelings, you were just kids. It would take years to realize that you both were bonded for life, and even longer to finally meet. [Soulmate AU] (Rated M for eventual scenes â 18+)
AN: Real quick, just want to say Iâm so happy that so many people seem to like this little story so far! Hereâs a longer chapter for ya.~
Word Count: 4,300 Warnings: Mentions of anxiety. Language.
Part 2: Connection
Dean honestly didnât remember that snowy day when he was seventeen with much clarity. Or that sad, anxious feeling in his chest.
Not until six years later, anyway.
It was only a few months after Sam left for college, and left his older brother behind. Well, heâd left John too, but he was the one who gave Sam the ultimatum in the first place.
If you leave, donât you dare come back.
So Dean struggled to be okay with that while he and John were on another hunt in South Dakota. There was a short but significant string of murders in Vermillion, about an hour away from Sioux Falls.
âToo bad Bobby couldnât make it,â Dean said. He and John were researching the case at the closest libraryâover at the University of South Dakota. This one was huge, with multiple floors and new computers.
I guess this is what nerds like Sammy dream about, Dean thought.
âYeah, couldâve used the manpower. But heâs got his own hunt over in South Carolina somewhere,â John said. His voice was gruff with tiredness. Theyâd driven for about a week straight, slowly but surely getting farther from the west coast.
âSo this thing eats hearts. That could still be a lot of things,â Dean said. He gestured at the small pile of books between them at their table. John had been jotting something down in the autopsy report theyâd stolen. He then turned it Deanâs way and tapped his finger on the puncture wounds.
âThose look canine,â John said.
Deanâs browed crunched. âWerewolf? Itâs not a full moon.â
His dad shook his head. âSimilar, but different. If Iâm right, all we need is a couple silver bullets. After we track this thing down.â
âOkay, Iâll bite.â Dean grinned at his own pun. âWhat is it?â
John smirked. âItâs a skinwalker.â
That rung some kind of bell, but Dean would be hard-pressed to remember what made a skinwalker different from a werewolf. He hadnât encountered one before, but after he killed it, heâd be sure to remember.
John explained how skinwalkers were actually a lot like werewolves: they could infect people with a single bite, they liked their burger meat raw (as in, fresh human hearts), and more importantly, silver could kill them.
Though unlike their lunar-dependent cousins, skinwalkers could shapeshift into their animal form whenever they wanted. And that didnât limit to canines.
âBut in this case,â John said, pointing again at the autopsy pictures, âIâd say we got us a dirty dog.â
Dean nodded. âOkay, so how do we find him?â
âWhat do the vics have in common?â
They started pouring over the police reports of the five victims. John took out a map of the city and made notes on the location where each body was found.
This was the part Sam was hella good at. Dean enjoyed the Magnum P.I. aspect of it, but sitting here in a dusty library for hours was going to be a severe test of his patience.
He tried to focus on the reports, and he actually noticed that one of the victims was a college studentâhere at South Dakota University. Another one was a bartender, and the bar was only a couple of blocks down the road.
Interesting.
He shuffled through the papers to find the third victim and felt something nagging in the back of his mindâan annoying buzz that made his brows knit together. He was already feeling a bit restless sitting here, his knee bouncing in place and rattling the table a bit.
John looked up at him. âWhatâs the matter?â
Dean blinked in confusion. âHuh?â
âYouâre shaking the table.â
Dean forced his knee to stop. But that was when he felt itâa growing sense of frustration and anxiety blooming in his chest.
What the hell? he thought. He was perfectly fine a few minutes ago. Why did it feel like it was getting hard to breathe?
âDean.â John looked at his son a bit harder. âYou okay?â
âYeah,â Dean answered quickly. âFineâŠIâm gonna find a bathroom.â
He tried to be normal as he got up and left the table, but at soon as he was out of eye-shot of his dad, he made swifter strides towards the nearest bathroom. He went to the sink and splashed some water across his face to wake himself up. God, whyâm I so freakinâ tired?
He took slow, deep breaths to calm down. Even though his mind was racing with what the fuck, what the fuck.
He wiped his face with some paper towel and realized his hands were shaking. Was he sick or something? He knew that Taco Bell breakfast burrito was too good to be trueâ
Thatâs it. Wake the hell up. I canât fail this damn final!
That. That was not his thought.
âWhat the fuck?â Dean couldnât help saying it out loud, just to make sure he could still speak normally.
He stared at his own shocked face in the mirror.
Then finally, he knew.  Â
He knew what these symptoms were, because while heâd ignored that chapter of social studies, Sam had always been an avid student. Truth be told, Dean hadnât really wanted to learn that subject. It was the reason he didnât like thinking about their mom. And the reason why their dad barely spoke about her.
But Dean knew what happened when soulmates started getting close to one another for the first time.
Dean was feeling his freaking soulmate, and it was scaring the hell out of him.
Suddenly he could feel the bond. It was like a humming thread in his mind, an itch he wanted to scratch. If he just reached out the slightest bit, he could touch it. He could connect with whoever it was on the other line.
He couldâŠor he could just leave it for a while until he figured out what he was even going to say, let alone do if someone answered him back.
So he did what most twenty-three year old men would do when faced with a potentially life-changing bond of commitment andâŠfeelings.
He shoved it down and ran.
Well, not literally ran, but he was quick to leave the bathroom and return to his dad.
âFinally. What the hell took you so long?â John asked. He was already gathering their stuff together to leave.
Dean felt pinned by his dadâs gaze, but he did his best to play it smooth.
âUh, sorry. Breakfast burrito hit me sideways. Then there was no toilet paper in the stall and I had to climb under andââ
John grimaced and held up a hand to stop him. âAll right. Letâs just go.â
Dean let out a relieved breath. He hefted his backpack onto his shoulder and followed his dad out of the library, back to the Impala. He climbed into the passenger seat and took a swig of an old soda to steady himself.
He still felt her anxiety in his chest (at least, he hoped it was a her). Maybe she was having a rough dayâŠbut once he remembered what sheâd said in his head, he wanted to slap a hand to his forehead.
You idiot. Sheâs studying for a test, he thought. Sheâs probably a student here.
That realization made him smirk. Aw, yeah. College girl, huh?
Though that thought was followed by a dousing shower of reality.
Oh shit. The thing weâre hunting just ate a college freshman.
âDean, whatâs the matter with you? You lost in space over there?â John asked. It punctured the bubble of Deanâs internal world and made him sharpen to attention.
âNah, Iâm fine. Whereâre we headed?â
John scrutinized him a bit longer, but at Deanâs stubbornness, he seemed to let it go for now.
âTo find this thing,â he said. âI narrowed down its hunting grounds and called the local animal control. Theyâve been getting reports of people hearing a stray dog barking, but no oneâs seen him.â
Dean nodded and settled back into his seat. Just focus on the hunt, he told himself. Deal with the rest after.
You were having a phenomenally shitty day.
Well, you supposed that was nothing new. You were twenty years old, still not old enough to legally drink but old enough to have adult bills and adult stress to go along with it. So you were also broke.
And you were halfway through a degree in history. A degree that your father repeatedly told you was âimpracticalâ to earn a decent living with. Which wasnât even true.
âŠOkay, maybe that was a little bit true. But you liked history, and you could easily fall into Momâs footsteps and become a teacher.
You could work for a museum. You could become a world-renowned historian, or write an award-winning historical fantasy like Game of Thrones and make millions off the TV deal!
âŠOkay, most likely it was probably going to the teacher thing, but at least you still had dreams.
Your dad only believed in what he could see right in front of his narrow-minded face.
Your dad was a dream killer.
Maybe you shouldnât have told him that on the phone just now, but you were fuming, damn it. This wasnât what you needed on finals week. Especially because you had an insane Calculus final to cram for, and only a few hours to do it. You needed to get back to your part-time job at the coffee shop by three. Unfortunately, you were closing tonight.
First, you needed a pick-me-up before you headed to the library.
Sighing, you rubbed the silver ring on your right hand absently as you waited in line at the universityâs cafĂ©. The ring had been your momâs, and now it was yours. On most days, it gave you comfort; just that little bit of extra support to get you through. Â
Eventually, you got to the front of the line and rattled off your coffee order while still looking up at the menu board: extra-large black coffee with a turbo shot, four sugars. When your gaze slid down and met the guy ringing you up, your brain stuttered to a halt.
âOkay, got it. One âTurbo Cram Sessionâ coming up,â he said. He gave you a charming, friendly grin. With his hazel eyes and tan skin, he was a rare find in a midwestern town like this. His brown hair was long, brushing past his shoulders. He almost reminded you of a character from the cheesy vampire book your teen cousin Lily was obsessed with.
Regardless, he was attractive.
A nervous flutter in your stomach made you smile back. âThanks.â
You paid the overly expensive bill and watched him make your coffee.
âFinals week, right?â he commiserated.
âYep.â You sighed and nodded. âThree exams tomorrow, one at eight-in-the-damn-morning.â
He whistled sympathetically. âYeah, itâs a killer.â
He put the lid on your steaming coffee and handed it to you. His fingers brushed your hand when you took the to-go cup from him, but he hissed a bit and pulled his hand back.
âYou okay?â you asked in concern. He glanced at your hand. You toyed with your ring in a nervous habit.
âYeah, some coffee spilled. No worries,â he said. He flashed you a smile. âIf you need to pull an all-nighter, just come back. I can help you mainline the espresso machine.â
He tapped the inside of your wrist and you laughed, playing along. âYouâd do that for me?â
âJust for you,â he said with a nod. He pressed a finger to his lips conspiringly. âKeep it quiet, though, or the whole school will be cramming in here like stray cats.â
You laughed again. His nametag read, James.
âGot it. Thanks, James.â
âCall me Jimmy,â he said, giving you a more flirtatious smile.
You left the cafĂ© with a full-on blush warming your face. When your hands hand brushed, you felt tingles on your skinâŠbut you hadnât heard his thoughts.
Heâs not the one.
Disappointing.
You continued on your path to the library.
You were a bit introverted, mostly keeping to yourself. Your friends were back home in Sioux Falls, so you didnât really have anyone here, and you didnât put yourself out there as much as you could. But even when guys did notice you (however few and far between that was), you just couldnât bring yourself to entertain them. Not if you couldnât feel them.
Maybe that was a lonely way to go through life. Your friends had certainly told you so. They encouraged you to have fun and explore in college, and part of you wanted to. Another partâthe more sensitive partâthought that was just setting yourself up for disappointment.
You wanted something real. Something that would last. Like what your parents had, beforeâŠ
Whatever. Enough of that. You shook your head to clear your thoughts as you approached the library, but it was hard.
Juggling a full-time college schedule, two part-time jobs, and commuting over an hour every day to school was hard. And your dad wasnât making it any easier.
All right, stop it. Anxiety was starting to well up in your chest, and you couldnât afford to battle with it right now.
You went into the library and found your usual spot, practically buried behind the reference books. Finding your favorite work desk, you settled your things there and sipped your coffee. You willed yourself to calm downâto power through that voice in your head that wanted to focus on your problems instead of solutions.
You only had a few hours to plug several complex math equations into your head.
Thatâs it. Wake the hell up, you thought sternly. I canât fail this damn final!
With a shaky breath, you cracked open your Calculus book, put on your headphones and some music, and started studying.
A few minutes later, the menâs bathroom door opened with a loud crack and someone quickly walked out of itâright past your table.
You were too deep in your studies and your music to notice.Â
Father and son were on the hunt.
John was pretty sure theyâd found the skinwalker (in a coffee shop of all places). They just had to wait until the bastard came out.
He and Dean waited in the Impala with Reuben sandwiches to tide them over for the stakeout. John discreetly shot his son a glance.
The boy had been off his game all day, but he couldnât put his finger on whyâŠ
âHey Dad, whereâs Zeppelin IV?â he asked, around a mouthful of Reuben. A smile twitched at Johnâs lips. He wordlessly retrieved the cassette from the compartment on the driverâs side door and held it up in his hand.
âHey, why dâyou keep it on your side?â Dean asked. âYou donât trust me with your tunes by now? Just like you never let me drive?âÂ
He was mostly teasing, but maybe there was a thread of truth underneath. John scoffed.
âI donât let you drive the Impala âcause youâre a punk,â he said. He offered Dean the cassette, but just as he was about to grab it, John took it back and popped it into the cassette player himself. He smirked. âDriver picks the music.â
Dean gave him a look, like he wanted to snipe a comeback, but thought better of it. He sat back into his seat.
John took a satisfied bite out of his sandwich.
Oh shit!
You sprung up from your desk in the library, wiping drool from the side of your cheek.
Tell me I didnât fucking fall asleep!
Sure enough, your Calculus book was cracked open, your half-drunk coffee was cold, and you had all but missed your shift at work. No, no, no!
You dashed around like a mad person trying to collect your books, pens, your phoneâeverything into your backpack. You had walked here from your dorm, so you were just going to have to run to the coffee shop on foot. You were too broke to take a taxi and the bus would take too damn long.
It was only, what, a mile or two?
Lord help me.
You didnât have a choice. You just had to run.
âCoffee boyâs clocking out,â Dean observed. He and John climbed out of the Impala. By then it was evening, almost night. The sun dipped behind the clouds and the streetlights were about to come on. Rush hour traffic was heavy here at a four-way intersection.
Dean focused on their target. The guy looked normalâdark hair, tan skin. I guess thatâs the idea, Dean thought. Look normal, blend in by slinging watery, overpriced coffee, get your filet oâ human hearts on the side.
When the guy came out of the cafĂ©, he didnât walk to a car parked on the street. Instead, he dipped between the cafĂ© and the university library and went through a back alley.
âLetâs go,â John said, and with their guns loaded up with silver (hidden in their jackets), they hurried across the street and ducked into the alley.
But they didnât see any trace of the guy. Both retrieved and cocked their guns, moving through the alley slowly.
Dean was usually good at this part. His ex-marine dad had trained him well, and he was focused. Alert.
Until something nagged at the back of his mind. A low hum as that connection flared to life.Â
Oh fuck. His lips pursed. A persistent feeling of worry (that wasnât his own) prickled in his chest, like fire ants across his skin. He tried his best to shut it out.
Not now.
You rushed out the library doors and inwardly bemoaned that it was practically nighttime. You were lucky if you still had a job by the time you got to work.
Damn it! Frustration and worry warred for dominance, but you couldnât focus on that.
Not now.
You hesitated a moment. A weird feeling fluttered in your chest just thenâŠ
Ugh, whatever, you dismissed, shaking your head. Iâm insane, itâs fine.
You ran to the street intersection and waited impatiently for the walking light to turn green.Â
You looked both ways on the street. It was still red, but there was a window of opportunity in a short lull of cars. You could make it if you hurried.
So you did. You took your chance and ran halfway down the street, making it past the first wave of oncoming traffic. You just didnât account for the truck that was turning the cornerâfrom the opposite direction.
You had time to utter a scream before you dove for the sidewalk. A woman walking her dog helped you up, asking if you were okay.
You were and you werenât, really. You were shaking, but you thanked the woman with a trembling smile. At this point, you didnât care if you were fired. Five bucks an hour wasnât worth getting splattered on a dusty pavement.Â
Damn. Guess Iâll have to apply at Starbucks.
It was intense.
Your fear was like a searing hot knife ripping through Deanâs heart, and it tore a ragged sound from his throat as his knee buckled.
Johnâs head swiveled to him with wide eyes. âDeanââ
That was the opening their prey was waiting for. Or rather, the creature that was hunting them.
A large dog leapt from the roof of the cafĂ©âbehind and above them. It went for Dean first, biting into his arm through his jacket. Both of them went down as Dean struggled and the animal growled and tried to shred his arm. Dean almost didnât feel the pain, but he felt panic of his own as he tried to pry the creature off by his canine ears.Â
âDean!â
He looked up at his dad, who stood with his gun aloft. Dean trusted him. He helped give an opening and moved his face away.
Three shots rang out.
The first two killed the skinwalker. The third was just for insurance, and maybe vengeance.
John helped Dean out from under the creatureâs body, and they watched it transform back into its natural form. Coffee shop boy.
James, Dean read on his nametag.
âRest in peace, Cujo,â he quipped, but by now the pain was finally registering. His arm wept with blood through his jacket, and he hissed in pain when his dad put firm pressure on the wound.
âWhat the fuck happened, Dean?â John demanded. âYou got shit between your ears, or a working brain? Because whateverâs got you distracted, thatâs how you get killed.â
His fatherâs anger wasnât pleasant, but his disappointment was crushing.
Dean swallowed the pain, both physical andâŠand the rest. He just nodded and apologized.
âSorry, Dad.â
John shook his head, but he continued leading Dean back to the car.
Back at the motel, John was able to stitch Dean up and wrap his arm. They had planned to leave after the hunt to save money on another motel nightâŠbut John agreed to give it one more day to let Dean rest on a real bed.
His son wasnât just in pain. He was melancholy.
It was unusual for Dean, who normally kept up a decent attitude. And it wasnât like him to slip up like that on a hunt. John could admit, things were different now without Sam. John was different.
Not that heâd been a picnic before. He knew that much. But maybe Sam leaving was harder than John cared to admit.
After he and Dean were showered up, John brought them back some takeout and beers. He gave Dean one, but before he turned on the TV, he hesitated. A twinge of sorry was at the tip of his tongue.
Instead, he asked, âWhatâs wrong, Dean?â
His son opened his mouth, a denial ready to fire.
âDonât lie to me, son,â John said. âJustâŠtell me what happened today.â
It took a while to pry it out of him. He was resistant, and John expected that.
Dean, for his part, was trying to figure out what to say. How to say it.
Just then, he also remembered something Sam told him when he was only in sixth grade.
âDean, did you know this? Human souls are really complex, and theyâre unique too. We learned about it today in school.â
âGood for you, Super Geek.âÂ
âThey found out that connected souls subconsciously try to find each other. So when you start hearing someoneâs thoughts, itâs because the souls are trying to bond together, like molecules.â
Like molecules, huh?
Speaking of, Dean hadnât heard your thoughts since that terrifying moment when he felt youïżœïżœ
For a moment, heâd thought youâdâŠ.
Though deep down, he knew you werenât gone. He knew the bond was there, like an idle TV. Either you lived really close to this motel, or this HBO connection was getting a wider bandwidth.
âDean?â John pressed.
Dean looked up, breaking from his thoughts. John didnât often ask him to open up. But Dean figured if anyone would understand, it would probably be his dad.
He was forced to contemplate the question that had been scaring him all day.
Did he want the same soul bond his parents had, even if it nearly killed John after she died?
ââŠDad, how did you and Mom meet?â
The question took John by surpriseâŠbut maybe it shouldnât have. His perceptive gaze washed over Dean.
âIt was after I came back from Vietnam,â John said eventually. âWe ran into each other by the old movie theater.â
Dean smiled. âAw, both of you were in line for Jaws?â
A resigned smile quirked at Johnâs lips. âThat was â75, genius. And no, weâŠliterally ran into each other. Full speed. I went to help her up, but she was already doing it herself. Plus picking up everything that fell outta her bag. All I could do was stare at her like an idiot, âcauseâŠI heard her say, God damn it.â
John had been lost in the memory for a moment, but here he looked at Dean.
âBut she didnât say it. She thought it,â he said. âAnd I knew it was her. She was it for me.â
âAnd she did too?â Dean asked, somewhat hesitantly.
âNo,â John laughed a little. âShe took some convincing, if I remember right.â
âWhat, she couldnât hear your thoughts?â
âNo, she could. But thatâŠconnection. Itâs different in the beginning,â John said, with a heavy sigh. This was harder to talk about than he thought. For Dean, he would do it. But just this once.
âYou donât have so much control over it. It just kindaâŠhappens.â
âAndâŠhow did that work, exactly?â Dean asked.
âWhy do you want to know?â John returned. Dean quieted, looking down at his beer.
That was all the confirmation he needed to finally know what was going on. He sighed again.
âSon,â he started, then hesitated. He knew what he was about to say wasnât completely right, but it was the truth. One day, Dean would understand.
âSon,â he said again. âUnless youâre prepared to hang up your gun, and stop hunting, donât open that door.â
Deanïżœïżœïżœs brows knit together, a silent question that he almost didnât want to ask. John answered it anyway.
âNobody should be waiting on men like us to come home bloody,â he said.
Dean took those words to heart. He reminded himself that his dad had seen blood and war long before he met Mary. Maybe his dad had more regrets than just not being able to save her.
So the next morning, Dean slid into the Impalaâs passenger seat. John drove them away from the college town, out of Vermillion, South Dakota.
Dean felt relieved, and also guilty. Then, the farther they got, he just felt wrong.
Soon enough, the warm tendril of connection in his chest dissipated.
AN: Phew! Okay, one major step closer to you and Dean finally meeting. I definitely drew on some of my own experiences at college here lol.
Read on to: Part 3.
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