Kirjoittaja Aihe: Put a Ring On It (Dean/Cas +Team FW, K-12, in english)  (Luettu 2965 kertaa)

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Fandom: Supernatural
Dean/Castiel
Genre: Romance/adventure/humor = läppää & angstia ala Dean
K–12, perus Supernatural -kamaa, eli kiroilua, jumalanpilkkaa (tällä kertaa ihan konkreettisesti) ja lajienvälisiä tunteita
In english, uu jeah.
Spoilereita pelkän vitoskauden loppuun (&superkevyitä vihjailuja seiskakauden vetisestä käännekohdasta)

Summary: "It’s the End of the World, and Dean Winchester has to teach an angel of the lord how to drive, so they can go and find God." Vitoskauden toiseksi viimeisessä jaksossa (5x21, Two Minutes to Midnight) Dean tapaa Kuoleman ja saa vaivanpalkaksi tämän sormuksen lainaan. Mitä jos kyseinen keskustelu olisikin mennyt vähän toisin ja Kuolemalla olisi ollut sisäpiiritietoa Jumalan olinpaikasta. Tuttu nelikko valjastautuu legendaariksi Hevosmiehiksi, samalla kun Dean yrittää saada jotakin järkeä tunnerintamalleen.

Eli: vanhaa kunnon Team Free Will -meininkiä (Bobbya unohtamatta) lopunaikojen hetkiltä, siekailematonta autopornoanippelitietoa, parisuhdekeskusteluja hobittien inspiroimana ja tietenkin - karaokea.

A/N: Vaikka mun omistautunut shipperin sydän itkeekin onnesta kasikauden äärellä, niin vitoskauden Destielissä vain oli sitä jotakin. Heitin siis samaan soppaan rakkauteni amerikanrautoihin, popkulttuuriläppään ja raamatullisiin hevosmiehiin, lopputuloksena melkein yksitoista tonnia tekstiä. Right. Vaikka arkailenkin heittää tätä englanninkielistä järkälettä tänne, niin menköön nyt ihan vain parituksen kunniaksi ja jos ei muuten, niin vitoskauden tunneummettuneen Deanin. Voi näitä aikoja. Ja mun otsikointikykyä nyt tuskin ihmettelee enää kukaan.



(If you like it then you should) Put a Ring on it


I.


   
Dean just saved three million people by making a deal with Death. Just another day in the office, then.

The storm of the millennium will pass. While the city of Chicago takes a deep breath and leans back from the brick of chaos, Dean is being taught by Death how to operate the Rings.

After giving the instruction manual, Death sighs, making a good impression that he actually cares. “Too bad that it had to come to this. There’s the other way, of course, but I think it’s too late for that.”
Dean blinks. “Wait a second, what? What ‘other way’?”
Death smiles to him humorlessly. Carefully tapping the corners of his crooked mouth with a napkin, he says, “The Divine Interference, of course.”
“If you’re talking about God, then you can forget it. The guy is obviously decided to skip the show.”
“Oh, but He is here.” Death’s dark eyes, empty like bottomless pits, flash. “One must only know where to look.”
Dean’s mouth suddenly feels dry. “Cas already tried that, with the amulet. Joshua said it wouldn’t work – that God didn’t wanna be found.”
Death tilts his head and spares Dean a look one might give to a circus monkey. “Trusting in angels, are we, Dean? After all the good they have done for your sake.“ The sarcasm is almost dripping from his words. “God can be found if you require the specific means for it. And by those, I mean –“
“This.” Dean stares the ring resting on his palm. “The Rings of the Horsemen.”
“Yes. ‘By His command, they were first released and so it shall be that His presence will be known to them for all times.’” Death hums. “Unfortunately, without their rings, the Horsemen - we - are unable to locate Him. To hear the call of God, the vacancies must be filled.”
“Hold on,” Dean chokes, “you’re saying that if you want to find God, you must actually become a Horseman?”

The smile Death gives to him answers enough.

“That’s insane! They – you – whatever -  are beings, not some job at the local supermarket!”
“Look,” Death says and leans forward, his voice telling clearly that his patience is wearing thin, “you put on a ring and you ride a stallion to battle. Sounds simple enough, don’t you think, even for you.”
 Dean cocks a shaky grin.  “Don’t sell yourself short there, buddy. I’m sure they appreciate your work up there in the big office.”

For a moment, Dean thinks he might get his ass reaped there and then; so long for Heaven and their grand plan for him. But then Death only smiles some more and leans back.

Dean clears his throat. “So let’s say we find him and by some miracle, he actually gives a crap enough to put his toys back into the box. Then what – we just carry on riding on his say-so?”
“The Horsemen’s powers are only required when the Apocalypse is upon us. Until that day, you can plug off the ring and do your own bidding, live or die. But on the Final Day – shall it be tomorrow or after an eternity – the pattern is simple: when He calls, they will come and bring judgment on this earth.” With a glimmer in his eye, Death continues, “Which fate shall you choose, Dean Winchester: open the fiery pit that will devour your brother for all eternity; or lift your sword once more next to him, on the Day to end all Days?”

And with that, Death’s gone.

Dean lets his fork hit the plate with a clatter.  “You know, this pizza actually tastes like crap.”

*

“You want us do to what?!”
Sam’s high-pitched, girlish shriek still echoing in his ears, Dean sighs. “To pick a ring. C’mon, Sammy, it’s the End of the World – we don’t have all day.”

It’s Team Free Will’s annual spring picnic and the four of them are standing in Bobby’s cluttered living room. Dean has just explained the whole shebang to them and is now holding out the Horsemen’s rings. So far, the race to snatch the prettiest piece of jewelry hasn’t started.

“I don’t know, Dean,” Sam says, looking like a kicked dog, “it’s just… there seems to be lot at stake here, and we don’t even know if God wants to help.”
Dean huffs an irritated sound of laughter. “So you just wanna let Lucifer walk you down the aisle instead? Really?”
“Sam’s got a point, Dean,“ Bobby grunts. He has a glass of whiskey in his hand and a look in his eyes that tells he has already poured down a few. “The whole ‘finding God’ business just sounds too good to be true. Whatcha gonna do if we find him – smack him on the ear and drag his ass back home?”

Castiel, who has been standing uncharacteristically (okay, maybe not) in the corner, twitches. Like it wasn’t bad enough that he’s been stripped out of angel mojo, now he has to come face to face with the fact that there was always a way to his maker, without him knowing anything about it. Dean feels sorry for the guy, he really does; part of him even feels guilty that it was him finding the solution, not Cas. Talking about rewarding the blind faith and all that.

“If we choose to accept these positions and our task ends… unfulfilled, what happens after?” Castiel asks, his voice quiet and thoughtful. “Is Lucifer still trying to take control over Sam?”
“I guess so, yeah,” Dean shrugs. “He may be an ex-angel, but like Yoda said, the force is strong with that one. He might be able to take over a Horseman and Sammy here isn’t exactly known for his rodeo-skills.”
Castiel’s brows furrow. He’s silent for a moment, then, “And what happens if we indeed succeed and God will bring end to this, for now. Someday, the world might still end and if we hold the ownership of these rings, we are expected to fulfill your roles by bringing destruction on earth.”
Dean’s lips quirk up into a hollow smile. “Well, in that case, it’s just once more unto the breach, right?”

Silence fills the room.

Finally, Sam nods. “Okay, let’s do this. If it doesn’t work out, we’re screwed anyway.”
“That’s the spirit, little bro,” Dean muses when Sam steps out to take his pick. Without a pause, he snags the silver ring with a huge black stone. Dean’s eyebrows shot up. “Famine – really, Sammy? I mean, I get the whole saving the starving children - thing, but –“
“Dean”, Sam hisses. There’s a cold impression in his eyes. “Ex-demon blood junkie, remember? If there’s anyone who knows hunger that can’t be fulfilled, it’s me. So shut up.”
“Oh, right. Yeah.” Dean coughs and turns to Bobby. “Your turn to cut the cake, Bobby.”
“Idjit…” Bobby mutters, but comes forward to take his ring. He picks the one with a pale green stone.
“To match your eyes?” Dean winks.

Bobby’s answer is to stick the ring on his middle finger and flip him the bird. They all know that Bobby picked Pestilence because after a year stuck in a wheel-chair, he really knows how It feels when your own body betrays you.

When Dean turns to Castiel, he's looking at him, puzzled. Dean holds out the two remaining rings for him, keeping his mouth shut; it goes without saying, that for him, it’s one of those make it or break it –deals. He, Sam and Bobby – they’re just a bunch of humans who decided to play with big boy’s toys. But Dean thinks he knows that Cas is wondering the same question he is: that if he puts on that ring, he may never be able to go home, even if things do cool down and he somehow gets his angel mojo back.

“I want to find Him,“ Castiel says solemnly, like reassuring himself. Then he takes War’s plain golden ring from Dean’s palm.

Dean is left standing there, holding the remaining ring. In his mind, he already knew how this was going to turn out, because it was clear the second Death dropped the ring on his hand that was meant for him. Shit.

He shoves the ring with a squire white stone on his finger.  Sam and Bobby are already wearing theirs, and when Castiel carefully slips his on, the world around them shifts. Then it’s back to plain old normal, except that now there’s a distant sound in the air. It sounds like a bell chiming, although it feels more like a beacon’s light, calling them home.

“Can you hear that?” Sam whispers, awe in his voice and his eyes huge. “Is that God?”
Dean turns to Castiel and is startled by the look upon his face: with his eyes huge and glowing, he looks like he just stepped into paradise. “I can hear His voice calling for me,” he says, and sounds like a lost child.

Dean has to get this show on the road or he just might start crying like a little girl.

“Time to buckle up, cowboys.”

*

Before they reach the porch, Dean wonders idly what kind of gear they should bring with them to convince God. Fire and brimstone? Guns? Some boy scout cookies and a Thank You For Helping Us Save The World –card?

Seeing the yard, they come to a quick halt.

Next to the Impala, there are now four cars parked, all of them gleaming in the sun except for one. Dean’s bride and joy on wheels is squeezed between a bright red -65 Mustang and a pale Cadillac, the later the size of a small iceberg. There’s another Caddie as well, this one a new SUV with darkened windows. Next to the three of them, the green, dirt covered Hornet wagon looks like it might roll over in fear and die.

“The hell I’m driving this monster, it’s like a frickin’ spaceship,” Dean mutters while peeking inside Death’s Cadillac. White leather seats; classy. “It totally feels like I’m the captain of The Enterprise, here.”

Sam gives a low whistle and runs his hand along the SUV’s hood. It makes Dean snort, because if Sam really gives a crap about a modern piece of junk like that, then apparently Dean was the one who inherited all the good taste in wheels in the Winchester family.

Bobby, on the other hand, is eying his new ride skeptically. “I’d be better off cruising around in a can of tuna,” he says and gives the Hornet’s left front tire a good kick. “How com’ Sneezy here didn’t get himself a decent ride like the other jokers?”
“Maybe he spent all his pennies on health insurance?” Dean suggests helpfully.

While he, Sam and Bobby are circling their new cars like sharks, picking and poking everything, Castiel is locked in a staring match with the red Mustang, like it is a real wild horse waiting to be tamed. The way he looks at it makes Dean wonder if the car actually holds the answer to the universe under its hood. While he watches, Cas places his hand on the windshield and then just stands there.

“Cas, you’re making the glass all smudgy.”
Castiel’s brows furrow. Slowly he removes his hand and eyes from the car, and fixes his stare on Dean instead. “I was under the impression that one was supposed to show respect and affection towards his vehicle.”
“Yeah, you can just feel the love in the air…” Bobby muses under his breath.
Dean decides to ignore him. “With a sweet piece of V8 like that, sure. But you don’t get all gropy on her glass parts – the palm-prints are a bitch to wash off.”
Castiel nods, like he understands, but still doesn’t move. The curtain-call of God is still softly humming away in the air and after a while, the moment – all three of them staring Cas – starts to get a little awkward. Dean clears his throat.
“Look, “ he says, “I understand that the Mustang gives you the tingles – hell, it even does it to me and I don’t even like red if it isn’t the inside of my steak – but we’re under the clock here and God is calling. So, you think you might wrap up this worshipping thing of yours and get behind the wheel?”

Castiel blinks.

And then it hits Dean.

“Please tell me, “he hisses, “that they actually teach you how do drive in the Bible Camp?” Behind him, Sam groans in desperation.
Castiel hangs his head, clearly ashamed. “I’m… somewhat familiar with the concept of driving, although I haven’t experienced it myself. But I have seen you do it countless times. Perhaps it’s not that difficult?”

Dean feels for a moment that he would like to lower his head against the Cadillac’s roof and give it a couple of good slams against the metal there. Teaching an angel of the lord how to press the pedal to the metal wasn’t on his daily schedule. Then again, neither was finding God. Maybe both of those things are still better than agreeing to take Michael to the ball.

Between gritted teeth and his hand on the Impala’s door handle, Dean says, “Okay, we’ll teach you the basics, just so you stay on the road. But we’re taking my baby over here -  I don’t trust Moby Dick to make a left without taking a couple of road signs with it…”

*

After two hours, the words ‘highway to hell’ hold a whole new meaning to Dean.

He thinks his knuckles might be bruised tomorrow from all the seat-gripping he has done during the time Castiel got comfy with the wheel. Before they had hit the road, Sam had given Cas a quick round up of the principle traffic regulations. Now that Cas was actually driving, Dean really could say that the guy wasn’t a natural talent; he maybe be fluent in all the languages of the world, but he certainly didn’t know how to make a U-turn.

Every time the motor howled, a small part of Dean died. He ran his hand over the glove box in a silent apology. Meanwhile Castiel finally manage to put the car on gear; given the fact that the Impala was an automatic, it wasn’t such a grant achievement.

“It is oddly relaxing, this driving business. I can see why you like it so much.” Castiel’s voice was thoughtful. A squirrel ran over the road and he nearly hit it.
“Glad one of us is feeling the effect…” Dean mutters and sinks lower on his seat.

Like driving shotgun in an angel mobile wasn’t humiliating enough, Castiel just has to stumble upon the radio. Soon, the evergreen sounds of Fool’s Garden fill the car and Dean groans in agony. He’s about to pop in a tape of AC/DC, when Cas’ hand stops him.
“Sam told me that it is accustomed for the driver to choose the music,“ he says, ignoring Dean’s frantic shouts of ‘hands on the wheel, you suicidal winged freak’. “I seem to like this song, although I can’t really recall why the lemon tree is yellow - is it a metaphor of a sort?”
Dean makes a mental note to strangle Sam when they got back. “No. They’re just a bunch of colorblind pansies.”
 
They drive in silence for a while. When an empty intersection comes up, Castiel waits for a whole minute before turning left.

“I think you’re good now,“ Dean says after Castiel has managed to take them through a nearby city without killing anyone, including them. “Takes us back to Bobby’s so we can finally go and find God.”

Castiel stops to wait when a group of young mothers with strollers cross the road. So far, they have played the good Samaritan for everyone closer than thirty feet from the crosswalk. Naturally, it made the journey rather slow. And by slow, Dean meant the infernal torture kind of slow.

Finally, Castiel broke the silence. “I find myself conflicted about our upcoming task.”
“Meaning?”
“I’m worried, Dean.” Castiel turns his baby blue eyes to him and pang, there it is again; the instant guilt of bringing an angel like him into this mess. Dean is pretty sure that Cas and Sam could take over the world with their puppy eyes of doom. “I’ve questioned His judgment many times over the course of recent events. I’ve even cursed His name. What if He doesn’t feel obliged to give me an audience?”
Dean cocks his head. “You’re actually worried that God doesn’t like you? Jeez, Cas, talking about a low self-esteem. If you ask me, he’s the one who should be hiding his dirty laundry. You’ve got nothing to be ashamed of.”

The speed limit says fifty and they are actually driving forty. While Castiel mulls over his words, Dean tries to ignore the sound of car horns blasting away behind them.

Finally Cas lifts his chin and actually smiles a little. “Your unwavering trust in my abilities is endearing, Dean. Thank you.”

Dean actually considers opening the door and throwing himself out on full speed. The Apocalypse is upon them, Castiel sucks at driving and on top of it all, they are having a goddamn moment. “Could you just hit the gas and take us to Bobby, bronto?”

Castiel lifts the speed to a mind-shattering fifty-five. In the radio, all the Beatlesses are living in a submarine. Dean wants to sink that sucker like no else.

*


Poissa comatosecombat

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Vs: Put a Ring On It (Dean/Cas +Team FW, K-12, in english)
« Vastaus #1 : 04-01-2013, 05:11:04 »

II.

“Is he ready?” Sam asks when they’re back at Bobby’s kitchen.
“Let’s just say that the training wheels are off, but I wouldn’t go as far as sign him up in Tour de France just yet.” Dean opens the fridge and peers in. “Any idea how far we’re driving?”
Sam shrugs. “No way to tell. I guess we just keep going, following this voice of his or whatever. Let’s just hope it doesn’t take us all the way to Alaska.”
“I’ll be surprised if Bobby’s ride will take him as far as the next junk yard. It would be easier for him to just carry the piece of crap there…”
“This coming from the idiot who’s drivin’ around in a huge freezer,” Bobby snarls in return, walking past the kitchen.

Dean flashes him his best smile and pops open a beer, sitting in a nearby chair. Death’s Caddie might be an iceberg on wheels, but the Hornet was a fucking death trap – and a health hazard, too. They had found a huge beehive inside of an empty take-away box that was lying on the backseat; Bobby had only huffed at it, but judging by the odor he had been reeking since, he was bathing in pure pesticide.

Meanwhile, Sam was staring at the insides of a kitchen cabin, clearly trying to decide whether to pack some canned goods. Or maybe he was also wondering if biscuits would make God more approachable, Dean wasn’t sure. When it came to food, Dean had made the same call as Bobby, stashing his duffel bag with only liquor. At least dehydration wasn’t going to be the end of him, and if God turned out to be a major jerk (which was likely), he could get totally hammered right there and then.

Dean is still congratulating himself on that particular plan of action, when Sam decides it’s time to burst his bubble. Clearly addressing a can of tuna on the shelf, he says, “Y’know, you really should talk to him.”
Dean decides not to disturb Sam’s heart to heart with the tin-can and remains silent, drinking his beer. Sam’s nose wrinkles in annoyance and he moves on to stare a bottle of something murky that once might have been olive oil. To it, he continues, “I know that we have a lot going on here, but it’s got to be hard for him, not being able to use his powers and all that. It’s the End of the World –“
“- and I promised Cas that before that, we would take a little time off to go on a family holiday and maybe pop in to say hi to his old man along the way.” Dean lets his beer hit the table with force, so much that it sloshes over a little. “You’re about to agree as Lucifer’s date, while Michael is waiting for me to waltz with him, and still, I’m riding on the Little Miss Sunshine wagon here. Tell me, Sammy, how could I make more of an effort?”

Sam turns around, surprised, and for a moment Dean’s afraid that he’s about to hug him; his ridiculous face is showing a look people usually only reserve for puppies and babies. Thankfully, that’s the exact moment Bobby decides to walk into the kitchen, muttering, “If you boys are done with the Oprah moment here, I suggest you go and get your stuff. We leave in five.” To Dean, he offhandedly adds, “I gave Giggles some other clothes: in case you didn’t notice, idjit, he was covered in my predecessor’s blood. He can’t exactly get rid of it without his mojo and the last thing we need right now is some copper getting suspicious...”
Dean rolls his eyes, annoyed, but okay; Bobby made a good call there. Maybe he was getting a bit too accustomed for Cas to be always covered in blood of some sort to take notice anymore. “And where’s he now?”
Bobby huffs. “How should I know? Do I look like some kind of angel watch to you, son?”

Sam’s gaze is speaking volumes, making Dean feel like he should be running towards the nearest flower shop and come back crawling. However, before he manages to go and give his little brother a good beating, Castiel appears in the doorway. “I’m here.”

Dean spits out a mouthful of beer.

Castiel is wearing a hippie-like, pale blue linen shirt and worn-out jean. He looks like a stoner straight from the fields of Woodstock, and if this was the first time Dean saw him dressed like that, he would actually laugh. But given the fact that it isn’t so, and the Cas standing in front of him now – in this ridiculous get-up and supporting heavier stubble on his jaw – is the one he hoped never to see again. Suddenly, it’s August 2014 in Camp Chitaqua again, and Dean feels sick.

Sam, who completely and horribly misinterprets the situation, hurries to assure Cas, “You look great, man, you do!” Then he gives Dean a murderous glare, like he just right out laughed at his date’s choice of evening wear. The nauseous feeling in his gut becomes stronger.
Luckily, unlike Sam, Castiel apparently didn’t grow up watching chick flicks. He cocks his head and holds Dean’s gaze, asking, “What’s wrong, Dean?”
“Nuthin’.” He swallows, hard. His little trip playing the time traveler’s wife was something he had only shared with Bobby – who is, at the moment, looking at him like he at least had some clue what is going on. That, or he’s thinking if it is too late to give Dean the speech about the birds and the bees.

When it comes to the decision between explaining the dressing choices of years to (presumably) come and the circumstances surrounding them, or lying and making him appear as the biggest whimp of all time, the choice is easy. “Didn’t think of you as an ex-flower child, Bobby, that’s all.”
“Don’t get cute,” Bobby sniggers. “They were your dad’s.”

And that, Dean thinks, about sums it. His life is officially the prime time show on the What The Actual Fuck, Didn’t Need That Mental Image As Well –channel. Even Sam seems to agree with that statement, while Castiel continues looking blissfully blank.

“I’m seriously having trouble to maintain the urge to drink myself to death,” Dean hisses. “Can we please get going?”

*

Because of the unexpected driving lesson, they’re able to hit the road at sunset. Then it’s only open road and their merry little caravan of doom. Dean drives first, then Castiel – always visible in his rear-view mirror, his red car hard to miss – and then Sam, while Bobby keeps the tail. Dean has no idea where they’re going, but it doesn’t matter: it feels like God is driving shotgun and calling the turns he makes.

While Dean is sure that he, Sam and Bobby could go on driving all night, he isn’t so sure about Cas. At this point, it would be pretty embarrassing to be killed by a pile-up, so when the darkness falls, he starts scanning for a motel.

When they reach the parking lot, there seems to be a silent agreement that Castiel should take the nearest free slot. He carefully inches the Mustang into it, no matter that there’s at least five feet of space left on both sides.

Sam proves that he’s the one and only for Lucifer by cramming his black monster of a car into the handicap parking space. When Dean meets his eyes through the windshield, Sam grins and holds out something. Dean curses; goddamn Famine with his goddamn wheelchair and his goddamn handicap parking permit.

It takes Dean ages to find a parking space for his jumbo jet. When he finally gets to the lobby, he finds only Castiel waiting for him. He’s reading one of the tourist pamphlets with great interest.
Looking up, he says, “Sam and Bobby already went to their room.”
Their room. Dean curses silently. He knew that inside, Sam was a fourteen-year-old girl, but Bobby? “Great. C’mon, then.”

Their room is… special. There is absolutely no other word for it. The pillows, bed covers, curtains – everything is covered in tiny flower print, except for the walls: they are crimson red. It looks like some sweet old lady had furnished the place and then went all Redrum when it was time to do the paint-job.

God’s siren call is like a song he can’t get out of his head and together with the room, it’s giving Dean the headache of a lifetime.
Castiel had sat down on his bed and looked around, clueless of what to do next. The over-all fluffiness of the room, the awkwardness of the situation and the ring in Cas’ finger suddenly screamed ‘wedding night’, so Dean did what any sensible human being in his position would: he full on panicked and fled the scene to go and find food.

One McDonald’s and one nervous breakdown later, he comes back and finds Castiel watching the third part of the Lord of the Rings with great interest.

Dean’s just about to sink his teeth in the cheeseburger, when Castiel says, “I find myself being a big supporter of this Frodo Baggins. For such a small and insignificant being, he has the courage of many men worth his size.”
“Dude,” Dean snorts with disgust, “Curly there wouldn’t even find his way to Mordor without Samwais. That guy does all the real work – I mean, he literally has to drag Frodo’s ass up that mountain in the end.”

Dean had seen the movie – movies, actually – a few years back, in a motel in Topeka; Sam had made him watch the marathon. Of course, he had made a huge number about how stupid and nerdy the films were, but okay, even he had to admit that Aragorn had a mean swing. And The Rohirrim were pretty cool too, like cowboys in helmets.

Castiel is eying him with a leveling look. Then he says slowly, “But Frodo manages to resist The Ring’s attempt to take control over him. He succeeds in something that kings before him have failed.”
“Yeah, until they’re standing on the edge of the pit and its Frodo’s time to show what he’s really made of. And then the little shit just puts on The Ring and tries to make a run for it.”

Long silence fills the room. If Dean’s appetite was flailing to begin with, now it’s completely gone. For once in his life, he has enough sense to realize that they weren’t actually talking about hobbits. Few days back, Dean said yes to Michael and then backpedalled just in time, and this is what he got for thanks – one praising phone-call from a hospital and now an awkward conversation about his good virtue over a nerd flick.

Castiel is now refusing to meet his eyes and stares at the remote control like it was the one who actually pushed Frodo off the cliff. Watching him, Dean comes to the painful realization that Cas’ attempts of praise – however crappy they may be – are still better than what he has ever given him.  Good times.

He sighs and rubs a hand over his face. “Look, Cas.” And wow, wasn’t that just a creative start. For a moment, Dean doesn’t have any idea how to go on from there. Then, given the fact that it really couldn’t get any sappier than this and hey, it truly is the end of the world, he says, “I’m not saying that Frodo doesn’t deserve any credit. Heavy cross to bear and all that jazz. But he had help – someone who truly believed in him. I mean, he says it himself, that he couldn’t have done it without Sam. You get what I’m saying here?”
Castiel slowly lifts his gaze to meet Dean’s. On the screen, Gandalf is riding his kick-ass horse to war and the light from his staff reflects in Cas’ eyes.  “You mean to say that I’m your S –“
“Okay, yes! Yes! Just – fuck. Don’t say stuff like that out loud, okay? Jeez…” Dean reaches for the remote control and changes the channel: Master Chef seems safe enough. “If someone comes knocking on the door and wants to donate us his Dungeons and Dragons card collection or his Elton John cds, I’m blaming you.”

They watch how some guy almost chops his thump off while cutting tomatoes. Dean manages to pretend they never had the previous conversation, until Castiel makes a humming noise.

“What?” Dean keeps his eyes on the screen. One of the contestants is crying now because his onions were ‘ugly’.
“I was just wondering: does that make Zachariah Gollum?”

When Dean turns to look at Castiel, he sees that he’s actually smiling.

*

Things start to go wrong the next day.

They’re having pie for breakfast at the local diner. Sam – being the poster boy of health food that he is – had tried to argue against the idea, but Dean had played the Apocalypse, now –card.  He had finished with saying, “And besides, Cas has never tasted pie in his life. Are you gonna deny man’s – I mean, angel’s – right to his first and probably last piece of pie? Really, Sammy?”

For once, Castiel had been on board at the plan (or just hungry for some pie, Dean wasn’t sure) and had given Sam the mother of all puppy eyes. “I’ve heard that the one with lemon flavor is exquisite.” It was a miracle itself that his lower lip hadn’t been shaking; Dean thought that the look upon his face could have made Hitler himself cry. “I guess I will never know.”

Sam had thrown his hands in the air in frustration and voilà: pie all around.

Cas had been right – the lemon flavored was good.

Dean is making his way through the fourth plateful, when he starts noticing that someone else is enjoying their breakfast as well. The only other people in the diner are a young couple, sitting in the booth behind Sam and Bobby’s backs. Something is making them hungry and Dean guesses it ain’t love: the guy’s face is covered in grill sauce and mustard, pieces of an omelets dripping from his moustache; the girl, she’s chewing something that looks like her fifteenth chicken wing. Her mouth is seared with grease and it gleams like the black stone in Sam’s ring.

Dean ushers the others out and pays the check as quickly as he can.

When he goes out, Castiel is standing in the parking lot with two random guys, who apparently got into a fight over the parking space; when one of them shoves Cas aside to punch the other, Dean grabs him by the arm. The next second, the guy is lying on the ground, dead as a doornail.

Dean lets out a long line of curses.  Death’s ring feels hot against his hand when he starts to walk Cas to his car, as quickly as possible. “Where’s Mount Doom when you need it...”

They make a quick exit and at the next rest stop, Dean pulls their caravan to a halt. After a corporate meeting of sort, it becomes clear that their new fashion items aren’t just that: both Sam and Castiel confess that they were indeed absentmindedly scratching their rings, while Dean thinks he must’ve rubbed his own when grapping the now-dead guy’s jacket.

“So we just what – stuck our hands into our pockets and hope that nothing goes wrong?” Sam asks. “I mean, it’s not like we can just take them off.”
Dean shrugs. “We’re still practicing this stuff, so I think until we get it right, playing ‘spin the ring’ is banned.”

Meanwhile, an older couple has wandered closer from their car and when Dean turns, he sees that they are talking to Castiel. Dean stalks closer, ready to slap Cas’ hand away from his ring, if Mr and Mrs Matching Tennis Socks start to get violent.

“Can I help you with something?” Dean asks the couple, still keeping his eyes on Cas.
Castiel is positively beaming. “These are Margaret and Peter. They asked if we were in need of assistance, but I assured them that everything was under control.”
“Right.” Dean says, starting to turn. “We better be going then.”
But then the little old lady opens her mouth. Almost squeaking with joy, she rambles, “Is it true what this nice young man said? That you are looking for The Lord?”
When Dean’s attention rabidly snaps back to her, Peter hums amusedly and puts his hand on his wife’s shoulder. “Margaret, don’t pester the boys.” To Dean, he apologizes, his voice heavy with southern accent, “I’m sorry for my wife’s sake. It’s just that we don’t usually meet young people who are so open about their faith. I find your pilgrimage very inspiring.”
“That’s us,” Dean says between gritted teeth, “the Holy Riders.”

Margaret, on the other hand, is still looking at Castiel like he’s the Second Coming. Dean lets his eyes wander and suddenly they land on the couple’s bumper-sticker. To Dean’s opinion, ‘God hates fags’ is an interesting take on the whole ‘care about your fellow man’ –business. So much for the love and tolerance Jesus praised about.

“Is your wife traveling with you as well?” It takes Dean a moment to realize, that Margaret has spotted the golden ring in Castiel’s finger. In his left ring-finger. Great. He thinks he should have guessed that if anyone went with the whole promise ring thing, it would be Cas.

But now it’s clear that Margaret has already planned a steady flow of dinner parties and Bible reading sessions, the guest list consisting Castiel and his yet-faceless wife. Dean really can’t blame her: if he had to choose between watching Peter’s ugly, sunburned mug and Cas’ features, no matter that they were borrowed from Jimmy Novac, it wouldn’t be such a hard decision to make.

And okay, Dean thinks himself as an pretty open-minded person. There were few people he wouldn’t mind pushing under the bus given the chance, but when it came to saving folks from demos and possessed spirits, he didn’t care whether or not they choose to vote, or who they decided to shag. But Margaret is staring Cas with such false sincerity, her every skin pour oozing hypocriticism, that it makes Dean feel violently ill.

Castiel is clearly unsure about her meaning and staggers to answer. “I’m not –“
Dean then decides to let him out of his misery and steps forward, looping his hand around Castiel’s waist. Avoiding Cas’ gaze that snaps to him, he keeps his eyes on Margaret and Peter. Giving them his best shit-eating grin, he says, “Oh no, we’re traveling together. Figured we could have some fun while cruising the holy road, before be hit it off with the G-man, if you catch my drift.” He tops it all with a wink.

The smile on Margaret’s face disappears so fast that it’s a miracle of sort. While she chokes on her tongue, Peter looks like he’s about to sprinkle them with holy water and throw on some prayers as well. Doing his best not to crack up, Dean steers Castiel safely away. After that reaction, the urge to touch his or Cas’ ring and give the couple something else to chew on, is much smaller.

Sam and Bobby appear to have witnessed the whole show. When they walk back to them, Sam tilts his head and smiles. “What was that all about?”
“Just setting some records straight, doing social justice.” He lets his hand fall away from Castiel’s side. “Ready to roll?”
Sam, being the little sister he is, keeps looking him like he just saved a puppy from a burning building. Dean turns to Bobby for help, but even he has a soft expression behind his beard. If those two look like that, Dean doesn’t even begin to wonder what Cas might be thinking after his little stunt.

“If you’re done braiding each other’s hair, can we get back on the road?”

*

Poissa comatosecombat

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Vs: Put a Ring On It (Dean/Cas +Team FW, K-12, in english)
« Vastaus #2 : 04-01-2013, 05:23:05 »

III.

Sun is already setting when they stop to get snacks and fuel. Dean sits on the hood of Death’s – his – Caddy and watches how Sam is teaching Castiel how to fill up the Mustang’s tank. Dean snorts; like he’s ever going to need that skill again in his – presumably short – life. Still, it is almost heartwarming, watching a guy who literally has seen it all, being so clueless with something so simple.
Dean stretched to lay on his back against the still-warm hood, thinking how he and Cas seemed to have that thing in common. Jay for them.

The warmth of the setting sun and the heated hood against his back have almost lulled him to sleep, when he hears someone approaching. Dean cracks open one eye to see Castiel standing there, holding out a bag of nachos. “Sam said you might like these.”

“Thanks.” Dean takes the bag and slides over to make room, but Castiel doesn’t seem to notice the gesture. He stands there, next to the car, looking at the sunset. Somewhere, crickets are beginning to chirp. The whole situation is like a postcard straight from Cheesyville and for a brief moment, Dean lets himself imagine that he’s some Average Joe, enjoying a well-earned holiday trip, and that Judgement Day is something that only happens in the movies. It’s a pretty picture, but lacking a certain charm, so he turns and asks, “Watcha thinking there, Cas?”
“About finding my Father.” His answer is honest, yet somehow a little iffy, as if he’s questioning his right to have such trust in the positive outcome of their task. He tears his gaze away from the sunset and back to Dean. He looks like he’s about to say something more about the subject, but then changes his mind. “What about you? You seem to be more at ease with this mission that I presumed.  Is it because you don’t expect us to find Him, or because you think that if we will, it doesn’t change anything?”
Dean can’t help it: he flinches. He tries to pass it of as a shrug. “Call me skeptic, but he last time I drove around the country hunting a missing father, it ended bloody.” A hard tone creeps its way into his voice. “Back then, I kept thinking that it would all be alright when we’d find him, but as it always turns out, I was wrong. So I’m sorry if I don’t share your enthusiasm.”
Castiel takes a step closer, his hand coming to rest on Dean’s shoulder. “You are wrong to think that I don’t have doubts about this – about Him. A short time ago, I lost my faith in Him. But He did bring me back, and He did save you and Sam by placing you on that plane.” While his voice bears years, his eyes are bright - childlike. “He is my father and I can never truly question His motives. You of all people should understand what that means, Dean.”

Cujo, thinks Dean, he would have named his dog Cujo. If he truly were the Average Joe next-door, cleaning after his pooch and cutting his lawn would be the biggest problems in his life. He would call his father on every holiday and once a year, they would go fishing together. Maybe after, Sam and Jess could come too, and they would all have a nice barbecue together.

In that world, only yuppies and church-goers would wear trench coats; in that world, open roads were for someone else to fill.

“I hear you, Cas,” Dean says, his voice coming out little raspy. “I hear you,” he says, and grips the Cadillac’s hood hard, to make sure it’s real under his touch.

The moment is over when Sam jogs over, his face all wrecked up. “We gotta go, I think Bobby just accidentally gave the clerk the yellow fever.”

Dean sighs. So much for Cujo.   

Well, after being ripped apart by hellhounds, he hasn’t been much of a dog person, anyway.

*

When agreeing on this whack job of a road trip, Dean guessed that some sort of weird crab was about to go down. His actions having a body count – fine, it sucked, but it was nothing he hadn’t seen before. Same thing applied to Cas; he had the history of provoking fights easier than Tyler Durden. Bobby being a walking cholera case and Sam making people hungry for more – well, that was something to chew on for a while, but he wasn’t going to lose his sleep over it.

Karaoke really, really wasn’t in the cards.

Dean had made the epic mistake of leaving Castiel with Bobby, while he went with Sam to a local supermarket. Not only was it a total waste of time because the shop was already closed, but he had to endure Sam, dancing around the subject they were definitely not going to discuss. By the time they call Bobby and he says to meet them up at some bar, Dean’s ready to think that it’s the best idea in the history of ideas.

Apparently, Bobby and Castiel have a friend in common, and it’s called alcohol. Judging by the empty glasses on the table, Cas is down at least four beers and Bobby isn’t much behind. Cas is raging on about something that appears to be the industrial revolution, and when Dean gives Bobby the good old ‘what the fuck is going on here’ –look, he actually looks apologetic. He nods towards the small stage placed in the corner of the room. “Couldn’t stand it sober. Right before you got here, it was Cher.”

Well, at least the noice outplays God.

Right now, the plumb dude on the stage is holding a microphone and howling along something that’s supposedly Kiss. It’s karaoke night and the place is packed. Dean crams himself in the chair next to Castiel and flags down a passing waitress, making it his goal to reach oblivion before the next song begins.

Maybe his piling drinks are the reason why it takes Dean so long to realize that Sam and Bobby have disappeared somewhere along the way. When Castiel turns his gaze to him, he’s already down one shot of whiskey and starting on his second beer. Cas’ eyes are burning, and just like on cue, some chick starts meowing that Manson dude’s version of ‘Personal Jesus’ like it was the dirtiest track in the history of humankind.

“Dean,” Castiel says, slurring just a bit. There’s a tone is his voice.
“Toilet,” says Dean, and escapes that way.

After keeping his head under cold water for a good while and talking sense to his mirror-image like any normal crazy person, he comes back to find Sam and Bobby instead of Castiel. They support matching looks of enigmatic that gives Dean the chills.

“Where’s Cas?” he asks.
Sam makes a good impression of a sphinx, yet there’s something tugging the corners of his mouth. “He wanted to – how did he put it?” He turns to Bobby, then back to Dean. “’Have the full human experience’.”
Bobby, on the other hand, doesn’t say anything; he just thugs his thump towards the corner of the room. Dean is still looking into his eyes, when he hears the familiar voice, amplified by the sound system.

“Um. Is thing on?”

Slowly, Bobby’s starting to smile. No – the son of a bitch is smirking.

“I have never done this before. I was told that it is accustomed to dedicate one’s song to someone, so, um, this goes to my friends Dean, Sam and Robert. Thank you.” Castiel’s announcement is followed by a series of wolf-whistles and some clapping. Before Dean manages to kick his brain back into gear, the first sounds of the song start to roll.

When Cas actually starts to sing, Sam’s brows shoot up and stay there for the next two minutes. For once, even Bobby looks speechless. Dean, on the other hand, knows exactly what to think, and that’s the quickest way to stop existing.

Finally, Sam coughs. “Dean, that’s your –“
“- favorite song. Yeah, thanks for sharing that with the class, Sam.”

When Robert Plant sings ‘Ramble On’, it sounds like deserted high-ways and lone nights in the Impala. When Cas sings it, it sounds like…well, it sounds like Cas. And when an angel starts singing your favorite rock ‘n roll track instead of hymns, even he isn’t stupid enough to think that it just some heavenly goods.

Then someone slips onto the seat left from him and he tears his eyes away from Cas.

“For an angel, he actually ain’t that bad,” Chuck Shurley says sympathetically. “But then again, you do spend a lot of time singing this when you think you’re alone. Maybe he learned it from you while, y’ know, driving the shot-gun invisible.”

Together with Sam and Bobby, Dean stares at Chuck, who seems very nonchalant about the situation. He looks a bit more scrubbed up than the last time they saw him, in the convention in Ohio, dressed up in a clean white shirt and drinking cola.

Sam decides to be the one who breaks to tension. “Let me guess: you had a vision we might be here?”
“Bingo.” Chuck is now looking at Castiel, wrinkling his nose. “And let me tell you: when you dream about a drunken angel singing Led Zeppelin, it makes you wonder whether you accidentally smoked some crack.”
“So you’re the famous prophet?” Bobby cuts in. His disbelief is showing miles away. “The one who wrote the books?”
“Yes. And you are Robert Singer – sorry, Bobby.” Chuck is smiling now, like a proud father. “You know, as a writer, I really like your character: dutiful, yet compassionate father figure.  After listening to these two,“ -  he points between Dean and Sam -  “it’s nice to have someone in the story who doesn’t waste his time biggering over his feelings in the Impala.”

While Chuck and Bobby share a bonding moment over sniggering like douchebags and Sam looks like he just got his knickers in a twist, Dean gets to shift his attention back to Castiel. While they were chatting, he has managed to finish the song and is now navigating his way back through the crowd, earning a few pats on the back along the way.

Reaching their table, he slumps on the right side of Dean and almost stoops over him while addressing Chuck. “The Prophet. What is your purpose here?”
“Good question. Why are you here, Chuck?” Dean finds out it hard to swing it like you mean it, when you have a lap-full of drunken angel.
Chuck shrugs, looking apologetic. “I had a vision about this and the Rings, and since I was in the neighborhood, I decided to swing by.”
“So you didn’t see anything else, like, us finding God?” Sam asks. “Only this?”
Chuck keeps shaking his head. “Look guys, I’m really sorry I can’t help, but it’s not like I’m controlling these things.”
“So you only got a free encore of Cas’ little solo number there. Bona fide prophesy stuff.” Dean turns to Castiel, who’s still hovering near his side. Lowering his voice, he says, “Nice pipes you got there. Did you used to sing in the heavenly choir or something?”
Surprisingly, Cas gives him a look of pure annoyance. “There is no singing in Heaven. Our time is reserved for more important purposes.”
Woah, touchy. Dean is now back-pedaling fast because annoyed really wasn’t the reaction he was aiming for. Instead, he decides to light up the mood and goes with a self-mocking smile. “Like what? Watching over our asses?”
Castiel’s solemn stare doesn’t waver one bit. “Yes.”

Well, Dean thinks, when you put it like that, it kinda makes sense.

This night is turning out to be a disaster: Cas is drunk as a skunk and on top of that, somehow pissed at him; Bobby and Chuck are bonding over movie-talk and cheap beer, and Sam takes part, when he’s not too busy kicking Dean’s leg under the table. Sam keeps shooting glances in Castiel’s direction and Dean’s about to climb the walls or snaps someone’s neck.

As luck would have it, Castiel apparently decides it time for a good-old bar fight by managing to rub War’s ring. It takes ten seconds for the passing-by waiter to get into a fist-fight with a customer, and since the said customer is built like a bulldozer, they have no choice but to take part. As far as plans go, it would be great, if it wasn’t for the fact that everybody else in the bar is thinking the same thing. Soon, the two men quarrel has escalated into a full blown brawl with at least twenty participants, and the five of them are caught in the middle of it.

By the time Bobby has the sense to spin his ring and give everyone in the room a bad case of narcolepsy, the front of his shirt in covered in beer. Sam has a broken lip and Castiel had taken an elbow in the nose. As Dean watches, he takes a seat on the sleeping giant’s back and follows Sam’s instructions to tip his head back. There’s still a drunken haze in his eyes and all in all, it looks like he’s about to pass out any minute.

Chuck, who had made a quick escape when the fight had broken, comes back. “I think we should go. Apparently someone called the police.”
Dean and Sam exchange a look. ”You take Cas,” Sam says. “Me and Bobby will sort this out. You can come back and get us after.”
“And how am I supposed to drag his drunken ass back to the base?”
“Um,” Chuck says, “I have a car?”

So fifteen minutes later Dean is hauling Castiel out of the backseat of Chuck’s car. Luckily they checked in earlier, so all he has to do is to get him inside the motel. During all that time, Cas says nothing; Dean isn’t sure if he’s awake or not. And as long as his feet keep on working, he doesn’t care.

He manages to dip Cas onto his bed and peel his shoes off. After that, Dean just sits there next to him, unsure what to do. The booze is still cruising through his system and making everything seem luminous at the edges. The gravity of the moment weighs heavily on him:  tomorrow, it’ll just be more miles and one step closer to the End.

Screw destiny, he thinks. Screw Michael and Lucy’s grant race to be the prettiest princess in the ball.

Dean takes a deep breath and lets it out, slowly. “Look, being Mr Comatose once more, you probably won’t remember any of this in the morning. But I got to tell you, that…” He runs his hand through his hair in frustration. Screw this, too. “Okay: remember when I said I couldn’t do this; that this was too big, that you would have to find someone else? Wasn’t entirely talking about the big picture there. You – me – this – it’s way over my head. I’m the kinda guy who picks up chicks from the bar and is gone the next morning. And now, now I have the goddamn apocalypse in my hands and on top of all that, this. I’m not designed for epic shit like this.” He lets his hands fall on his knees. “A let me tell you, Cas – epic shit is all you are.”

Silence falls. In the dark, the only noise Dean can hear is his own heartbeat stammering is his ears like he just run the marathon. He waits some more, the panic slowly releasing its grip on his throat when he begins to grasp the fact that Cas isn’t going to answer him – and yeah, of course he isn’t, the guy’s as awake as a rock. Right. Better this way, Dean thinks, stupid things said should stay in the cover of darkness and be forgotten. So he pats Castiel’s shoulder and gets up to leave.

Dean.” Castiel’s hand snaps up so fast that it’s like a cobra launching an attack on its prey. His finger wrap around the front of Dean’s jacket and haul him closer, so that Dean has to stagger to stay on his feet. Cas’ eyes, only moments ago fuzzed with the alcohol, are now burning bright in the red light of the neon sign behind the window. “Dean,” he repeats, and in his still slightly drunken mind, Dean thinks that it’s a plea and it’s a question; it’s the ship’s foghorn on a misty sea and it’s the sound of the trumpet when all the days on Earth finally end. In total, it’s the sound of the most stupid ass decision he has ever made.

Well, to be fair, the sense of making the right choices in life never really was his strongest asset.

*

Poissa comatosecombat

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Vs: Put a Ring On It (Dean/Cas +Team FW, K-12, in english)
« Vastaus #3 : 04-01-2013, 05:32:38 »

IV.


When he couple of minutes later walks back to the parking lot, his lips swollen and his jaw scraped slightly red by stubble burn, Chuck is leaning against his car. The total lack of surprise on his face makes Dean want to kick himself mentally, because, well.

Opening the rear-side door, he coldly asks, “I guess you saw that coming as well, huh?”
Chuck rolls his eyes. “Prophet here, hello.” Getting in as well, he says, “Glad you could finally wrap your thick head around that idea – I’ve already told my publisher moths ago that the next book will include ‘a heavenly romance’ and I would hate to disappoint her.”
“You do realize that if you weren’t the one driving just now, I would push out onto the freeway?”

Chuck’s only answer is to hum amusedly. He seems to be in a good spirits given the fact that the world is about to end, and Dean is trying hard not to think about anything right now, so they drive along in silence.

In silence.

Something that has been bothering Dean the whole evening clicks into place. He lifts his right hand to see Death’s ring there: it looks the same as always, as if there’s nothing wrong with it. But it can’t be so, because the last time he checked, it came with a sound system.

So it’s either broken or – apparently – God has stopped calling.

Chuck gives him a sideway glance. “What’s wrong?”
“My ring,” Dean says, his voice hollow, “it think it stopped working.”
Chuck smacks his mouth. “Oh.”

And then he gives the heaviest sigh in the history of sighs, and with that, Dean frozes when it dawns on him.

“You son of a bitch.” His voice is just a hoarse whisper. He feels like gravity just stopped to exist.

Chuck calmfully slows down and stops on the side of the road. He puts the car on park, and when he turns to Dean, there’s nothing left of Chuck Shurley in his eyes.


“You have questions,” God says, His voice not like judgment but like a release.

Dean kicks the door open and all but crawls out into the night.

*

He finds Dean kneeling on the field, some hundred yards away from the car. Dean can hear Him coming, the crop parting in His wake. Besides that, it’s completely silent. There is no wind, and the star-filled sky above him seems to hang so close that it’s almost suffocating.

The soft steps come to a halt behind him.

“Is this a dream?” Dean asks.
“No.” His voice sounds sympathetic; calm. “Nothing has changed.”
“The hell it isn’t,” Dean hears himself snarl. Strictly addressing the field, he asks, “You’re God? Really? REALLY?!

He pads around Dean and kneels before him in the corn. When Dean refuses to meet His eyes, He lifts one hand and places it on Dean’s shoulder. Being under His touch, there’s electricity running through him, like when Cas heals him, yet now somehow different. Suddenly, he feels the overwhelming sense of anger lifting away; he’s left being bone-tired and completely sober. “Look at me,” He says, and this time, Dean lifts his gaze to meet His.

“I’m sorry,” He says, and behind His eyes, stars are dying and life is being born out of dust. “I know you seek my assistance, but I can’t give it. I know: I have tried.”
“Detroit,” Dean says, and it comes out as a mere whisper.
He sighs, endless sorrow lining His borrowed features. “Yes. What Zachariah showed you was my doing. If I interfere, it will come to pass and in five short years, The Morning Star will confront you and that will be the end of humankind, for you shall not survive that battle.”
“But you are – you.
“And in my infinitive wisdom, I created you,” He says. He places His hand on Dean’s cheek, and now, He is smiling to him. “And you will find a way, as you always have.”

He lets His hands fall back to Dean’s shoulders and gripping them tight, He lifts him up from the ground without an effort.

“Your and your brother’s path is to be filled with sorrow and suffering, that I cannot help. If you shall succeed in this task, I am sorry to say there is more to come.” Then the graveness in His voice gives away and He beams at Dean. “But behold, for I have granted you with a great gift, to help you guide through that valley of shadows. Hear me when I promise you this: I will always restore that gift, whether it is from perdition or from the deepest depths of ancient rivers.”
It feels like there is no air left in Dean’s lungs. It sounds nothing like a threat, when he pleas, “He needs to find You.”
“And he will.” He smiles, pressing his hand over Dean’s heart. “In here, for I have given the same gift and promise to him, as I did to you.”

There’s a small breeze now, running through the field. The crop around them dances in the wind and Dean thinks, that if this is a miracle of sort, he doesn’t count himself blessed.

“But how?” he asks, his voice broken. “How will I stop it?”

He tips His head, the movement so familiar and yet so alien, and suddenly Dean feels it -  the endless weariness radiating from His form; the sadness and joy on all life concealed behind those eyes.

And then – in one blink of an eye - He’s back to being just Chuck. The corners of his eyes wrinkling with amusement, he leans in. Voice heavy with confidentiality, he says, “You just gonna have to wait for the next book.”

And then he snaps his fingers.

*

It’s Chicago and it’s the day Dean just saved three million people by making a deal with Death.

After giving him the instruction manual, Death leans back and sighs. “Too bad it had to come to this.”
Dean shrugs. “No other way, right?”

Death opens his mouth like he’s about to say something more. But then there’s a flash in his dark eyes and he snaps his mouth shut.

“No,” he stretches, his mouth curving into a humorless smile. “I guess there really isn’t.”

*

Lucifer was partly right: Sam might have said ‘yes’ in Detroit, but really it all ends in Lawrence.

Kneeling in the grass of Stull Cemetery, his face beaten to a pulp, Dean is about to pass out. His broken ribs ache from Lucifer’s punches, and he’s pretty sure he’s got internal bleeding. He listens to the hiss of blood filling his ears, and with his one remaining open eye, he watches how darkness slowly spills over the valley around him. His head clear of all thought, he’s about to close his eye for good and just stop.

And then something bright, like a supernova in flesh, fills his vision.

Castiel touches his forehead and the physical pain leaves him.

“Cas,” Dean whispers hoarsely, “are you God?”
And Castiel smiles, blessed and out of reach of Dean’s sorrow. “That’s a nice compliment. But no. Although, I do believe He brought me back. New and improved.”

And it’s anything but a happy moment. In fact, it’s the crappiest, saddest, most heartbreaking fucking moment in Dean’s life, and if things were different, he would fight Cas to let him die there and then. But he remembers that he made a promise – no, scratch that, two promises: one for Sam and one for Cas. To Sam, it was to go and live a normal life; to Cas, it was given when he searched the Heaven for Joshua – for God. Dean promised Cas to help him find Him, and now he apparently has, in his heart at least.

So it’s broken and it’s fucked up, but at least there is a moment to be had.

Gift-horse’s mouth and all that.



fin.


Poissa Beelsebutt

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Vs: Put a Ring On It (Dean/Cas +Team FW, K-12, in english)
« Vastaus #4 : 05-06-2013, 22:06:46 »
Mä en ehdi nyt (lue: jaksa) lukee tätä, mut merkkaan, koska WOW! Ja herranjee, miten en oo huomannu! O.O

Aill bee bäk.
Fifi-ficitLJAO3