Title: Haunted
Fandom: Supernatural
Summary: Following one of Sam’s premonitions, Dean and Sam end up in a town ripe with mystery and fraught with danger. And it has its eyes on Dean. Brotherly angst and Dean whumping ensue ;)
Rating: Um...I'm not 100 percent sure how American ratings work, so I'm going to say 15+ for Dean's potty mouth and some later whumping.
Spoilers: 'Asylum'
Timeline: Set sometime after 'Asylum', which isn't to say it's a PostAsylum story - those issue will arise but they won't dominate.
Disclaimer (which will apply to every fic hereon out): I don't own Supernatural in any way, shape, or form.
Haunted was originally (and still is) posted on fanfiction.net and now too on the Supernatural.tv fanfic forum. Enjoy (hopefully :P).
“We’re lost,” Sam sighed, glancing at his brother. Dean was squinting
trough the windshield, making a show of trying to see the road ahead through
the pouring rain.
They’d been driving for
hours. His legs were cramped and the humidity that the rain had created was
beginning to eat at his nerves. And that music! Metallica blaring from the
speakers over and over again.
Sam had had enough. In the
best act of defiance he could think of, Sam leant forward and, with as much
force as he could muster without actually breaking the damn thing, switched off
the music.
“Hey!” Dean objected.
Slapping away Sam’s hand, he reached to turn it back on. But Sam was too quick.
He grabbed the cassette tape, then lunged for the old cardboard box that Dean
kept all his music in and dumped the whole thing in the backseat. He turned to
Dean, satisfied with the loud clatter Dean’s tapes made as they hit the seat.
Dean just raised an eyebrow,
a smile flickering onto his face. “Panties in a twist, sweetheart?”
Sam shook his head, ignoring
the urge to strangle his brother. He took a few deep breaths, forcing himself
to calm down. “Look, Dean. I’m tired. We’ve been in this car for ages. Forget
your ego for a moment. Lets just turn around and ask for directions at that
diner we past earlier.”
“Why?” Dean asked with the
best innocent look Sam had seen him pull in a while.
“We. Are. Lost.” Sam
reiterated. He glared at Dean in exasperation until Dean dropped his innocent
look and finally admitted to their predicament. Or as close to admitting as Sam
could hope for:
“Well, you’re the one with
the map, college boy.”
Sam raised his eyebrows
disbelievingly. “Yeah, but you refused to follow any of my directions.”
“I was taking a shortcut,”
Dean replied, smiling innocently again.
“A three-hour shortcut isn’t
a shortcut, Dean.”
Dean just frowned, choosing
to ignore that logic. But he couldn’t ignore the desperation that had crept
into his little brother’s voice. He stole a glance at Sam, not liking the dark
circles he found surrounding Sam’s eyes.
“In fact, when you include a
growing number of cow sightings to that three-hour shortcut,” Sam continued,
oblivious to Dean’s concern, “it means we’re going the wrong way.”
“Chill, vision boy. We’ll
help those people in your dream. A few hours later than planned, maybe, but
we’ll still get to them. Just relax. Remember now,” he waggled a finger in
Sam’s direction, “anger leads to the
dark side.”
Sam ignored him, choosing to
stare out the window instead.
Dean instantly felt bad, but
was careful not to let it show. Damn those visions, he thought. Not only
did it have them chasing god-knows-what in some god-forsaken town miles out of
their way, but it was haunting his brother with images of terrified
townspeople. And Dean didn’t know how to handle that. How could he protect Sam
from his own mind? He couldn’t. So he reacted the only other way he knew how –
by joking away the concern. And if that was an unhealthy coping mechanism…well,
Freud wasn’t here to discuss any alternatives with him, so it’d have to do.
After a few moments of
silence, Dean began singing under his breathe. “Ninety nine bottles of beer on
the wall…”
Sam didn’t notice Dean’s
attempt to make Sam return his music. He had retreated back into his latest
premonition, trying again to work out what the threat was that they needed to
defeat.
His dream had shown a neat
little neighborhood. Too quiet to be normal. Houses rowed up evenly, gardens
cut precisely. The houses were large. Old. There was something behind one of
those doors. Something dangerous. But he couldn’t tell from which house he was
sensing that energy. A little girl ran down the empty street, crying for help.
Something was hurting her family. And that’s when the dream became fuzzy. Sam
knew there was something else, and though he had dreamt this same dream for
days now, he was never able to recall what happened next. Something about…a
room, maybe? A dark room. And two figures. Strangers, no brothers. Was it him
and Dean? Dean and somebody else? Two completely different people? It was too
fuzzy for him to make out. All he knew for sure was that they needed to be in a
small town called Point Ardeer. And they had to be there with enough time to
figure out what was going on and stop it before it killed that girl’s family.
Sam was suddenly brought
back to reality with a bump – a literal one – when the car swerved into a
U-turn, knocking Sam’s head against the window.
Sam looked over at Dean, a
small smile overpowering the scowl he tried to give Dean for making him bump
his head. Dean had finally decided to turn back.
Dean pretended to ignore
both.
“You’re asking for
the directions,” he finally said.
Sam chuckled. “That’s fine.”
“And just for the record,
I’m only turning around for the impala’s sake,” Dean continued.
“The impala’s sake?”
“Yeah. This road is covered
in cow shit. Would you like to be walking through that?”
Sam shook his head. “I’m
sure she’ll thank you one day with a bouquet of flowers.”
Dean retaliated to the
sarcasm by continuing to sing where he’d left off. “90 bottles of beer on the
wall…”
“Dean…” Sam warned. Dean
knew Sam hated that song. Always had. Since they were kids. Mainly because Dean
sung it every time he wanted to piss Sam off.
“Hey, you’re the one that
‘confiscated’ my tunes. 90 bottles of beer…”
“Dean!” Sam implored.
“Kill joy,” Dean mumbled,
but he stopped singing.
The boys were so busy annoying each
other, that they didn’t notice the figure standing out in the rain, watching
their car pass with cold, dark eyes.
________________________________________
“You gotta stop doing that,”
Dean said, with a grin that could rival the Cheshire cat’s.
Sam was about to tell Dean
where he could go, when a memory suddenly flashed across his vision. In that
moment, Dean seemed to flicker out and become the stranger in his dream –
streaked in dirt, blood staining his fingers, a wild look in his eyes.
“Sam? Saaaam.” Dean clicked
his fingers in front of Sam’s eyes, shattering the image. Sam blinked a few
times and refocused. Dean became his normal self again. No blood, no dirt. Sam
ran a had across his face, trying to shake the image. Trying to work out what
had happened. What it meant.
“Sammy, what’s wrong?” Dean
was looking at Sam, a frown creasing his brow.
Sam just shook his head,
quickly collecting himself so that Dean would stop staring at him. “Nothing.
I’m fine. I just…My mind just left me for a moment, that’s all.”
“Where’d it go?” Dean asked,
trying to work out what had spooked his brother. And what had caused Sam to
stare at him like that.
“Nowhere. Nothing. Come on.
Lets go get directions before this place closes. And some coffee.” He hopped
out of the car without waiting for Dean’s response. He knew Dean wouldn’t like
being brushed off, but he was too confused to worry about that.
And he was right. Dean
wasn’t happy. But Dean decided not to push it. Sam would tell him what was
going on in his own time. At least, that’s what he tried to tell himself,
ignoring all the times Sam had only revealed certain things because he had no
other choice. Like the fact that he had applied for college, or that he had
dreamt about Jessica’s death, or that he blamed Dean for not having found their
dad yet.
Hell, their whole family
wasn’t exactly the share-all kind.
So instead of letting the
concern linger, Dean quickly caught up with Sam and shoved him aside so that he
could go through the door first.
“You’re 26, not 12,” Sam
snorted, following Dean in, relieved Dean had dropped his inquisition.
Dean slapped Sam over the
head and grinned. “And you remember that, little brother.”
“Was that meant to be some sort
of threat?” Sam asked, smiling. “Because you do know I’m bigger.”
Dean shrugged, dismissing
his argument. “Fuck off. I can still whoop your ass…” Dean trailed off, looking
around the diner having finally realised how quiet it was. He was startled to find
that everyone in the small diner was staring at him. Not at Sam. Him. But they
quickly averted their eyes when Dean stopped speaking, noise finally entering
the diner again as people resumed their conversations and eating.
Dean turned to raise an eyebrow
at Sam, speaking more quietly than when he had entered. “I’m use to people
staring when I walk into a room, but that was just weird.”
“Very,” Sam nodded, chilled.
“Maybe we should go.”
Dean was tempted to agree,
but looking at Sam again he couldn’t help but notice that the circles under his
eyes had deepened.
“Nah,” Dean said. “I’m not
gonna be run out by group ogling. Lets just get the directions and find a motel
for the night.”
Dean sauntered up to the
counter, more conscious of his movements than usual. Hell, who wouldn’t be? He
quickly scanned the people manning the counter. There was a older man with a
big beer-belly. “Nope,” Dean whispered, moving his eyes over to an older woman
with a deep frown creasing her tired face. “Nope,” he repeated, then checked
out his last option. A young woman, about Sam’s age, with a shy smile and big
blue eyes. “Bingo,” Dean grinned, walking up to her end of the counter. Sam
rolled his eyes and followed.
Dean straddled one of the
stools directly in front of her. “Uh, miss? Excuse me, miss?”
The girl turned to Dean,
removing a pen from her pocket, ready to take his order. Dean flashed her one
of his most charming smiles. “Actually,” he leaned forward on the counter to
read her nametag, “Mary, is it?”
The waitress nodded, a small
blush creeping onto her cheeks.
“Nice name.” Dean continued,
“we’re actually wondering if you could help us out.” Dean looped his arm around
Sam’s shoulders, drawing his weary brother closer to the conversation. “Sam,
here, got us lost.”
Dean tightened his grip on
Sam’s shoulders. Trust Dean to find a way to tell him to shut up without
actually using any words.
“He has a sense of direction
like a flyaway baseball, this guy. It’s just drive with force and end up
wherever the hell we end up. You know how it is.”
“Yeah,” the girl said,
giggling softly.
Sam turned to the girl,
feeling betrayed by this stranger. Then feeling betrayed with himself for
feeling betrayed by a stranger. He finally decided he was too tired to argue
with Dean, and swallowed any retorts, content for now with just glaring.
“Where you guys need to be?”
the girl asked, eager to help.
“We’re heading to Point
Ardeer. Heard of it?”
The girl beamed,
straightening up eagerly. “Well you’re already here, silly!”
“We are?” Dean said,
matching her enthusiasm with his own fake mix. Sam couldn’t help smirking.
The girl didn’t notice
though. “Yeah! Well…sorta.”
“Sorta?” Dean prompted.
“This diner sits at the very
edge of Point Ardeer. To take in the traffic coming in or out. And so people
like you got a place to stop and rest.”
“Uh, that’s…real nice of you
guys,” Dean said when she didn’t continue.
“You just gotta drive a bit
out, then take your first left and it’ll take you to town.”
Dean turned to Sam. “See, I
told you we were close!” he whispered.
“Yeah… we would’ve been
three hours closer if you’d just listened to my directions,” Sam retorted in a
normal voice, not bothering to whisper. “But again, what does a fly-away
baseball know?”
Dean turned back to the
girl, who was frowning at the exchange. But Dean quickly switched back on his
charm and the girl’s quizzical frown dissolved. “So, do you live in Point
Ardeer?”
What? Sam couldn’t believe
it. Was Dean trying to get her number? Now, of all times?
“Yeah! I live –“
Sam cut her off. “Hey, Dean.
Didn’t you say you’d call your girlfriend about now, to check in?”
Mary frowned, clearly
disappointed. Dean slowly turned and shot daggers at Sam, his smile twitching
with the effort to remain intact and not turn into a growl.
“I need to go take some more
orders.” Mary quickly moved down the counter. Dean watched her go helplessly.
“Fucker,” Dean muttered once
Mary was out of earshot, cuffing Sam across the ear. Sam just chuckled, picking up the menu, suddenly hungry. Which
had nothing to do with how amusing it would be to watch Dean awkwardly avoid
Mary’s gaze. Really.
Dean was about to complain
some more, when he again noticed how quiet it’d become. He instantly forgot
about his sabotaged chance with the waitress as he looked around to find most
of the diner’s patrons staring at him. Again! Only this time they were trying
to veil their attention by relegating it to sidelong looks and quick glances.
It wasn’t working. A chill ran down Dean’s spine. And given all the shit he was
used to dealing with, Dean didn’t get chilled easily.
Dean grabbed the back of
Sam’s jacket and yanked him from his chair, quickly dragging him out. “Lets stop
at the diner,” Dean muttered along the way, imitating Sam’s voice. “What’s the
harm in asking for directions?” Once outside he quickly jumped into the car,
unnerved by the looks he could feel following him through the windows.
“The harm is encountering my own little group of stalkers, that’s what.”
Sam followed Dean’s gaze
back to the diner’s windows, frowning at the sea of faces turned towards them.
Towards Dean, more accurately. Sam shot a glance at his brother as Dean
fumbled for the keys. Did this have anything to do with that…vision, he guess
he’d call it…he’d had of Dean earlier? Sam couldn’t just ignore the
coincidence.
He doubted the patrons in
the diner could see much in the dark, but Sam was still relieved when Dean sped
out of the parking lot. The further away they got from that place, the less his
skin tingled. Sam turned to gauge out Dean’s reaction to the whole thing –
Dean’s hands were gripping the wheel and he kept shooting disgusted looks into
the review mirror. “I hate townies,” Sam heard him mutter.
Sam asked the obvious
question. “But why are they so interested in you of all people?”
“Hey!” Dean answered
automatically.
“Dean,” Sam said. He was
being serious.
Dean threw his hands up in
the air, taking them off the wheel for a moment to do so. “I dunno! My good
looks? I don’t know why, Sammy.”
“Okay,” Sam said gently,
seeing that Dean was unnerved. “I guess we just - ” Sam’s sentence was cut
short as he gasped, an image ripping across his vision: Someone – someone
familiar – stood over a broken and battered body, a gun hanging from his
stained red fingers, dirt smeared across his face. And then, as abruptly as it
appeared, the image was gone and Sam was staring at the inside of the car
again.
They’d stopped moving. Dean
had pulled over the instant he heard Sam gasp. “You guess we just – gasp? What
the hell, Sammy?”
Sam just stared at Dean,
shocked by what he’d just seen. And shaken. Could that really have been his
brother? Sam knew he should tell Dean what he saw…but… not yet. Not until he
could work out what it all meant. His brother wasn’t a killer. Not when it came
to other humans, at least.
“It’s nothing,” he
whispered, suddenly realizing how tired he was. “Lets just go find a motel.”
“It’s nothing?” Dean looked
incredulous.
“Yeah.”
“Really? Another nothing,
huh? Gee, those nothings really pack a wallop.” Dean frowned. “Why do you keep
looking at me like that? Don’t you start doing that weird staring shit too.”
When Sam didn’t offer any further explanation, Dean twisted the review mirror
around so he could look at his reflection. “Do I have an antler growing out of
my head or something?”
Sam cracked a smile. “It
would be an improvement.”
Dean, smirking, responded by swerving back onto the road, making Sam grab onto the glove box to avoid bumping his head for the third time that day.
________________________________________
Dean and Sam trudged into
what had just become their home for the length of their stay. They’d easily
found an affordable motel right in the heart of Point Ardeer. “Jackpot,” Dean
had cheered when he saw the many food outlets surrounding the place. But Dean
had something to take care of before he began scouring for the greasiest burger
this town had to offer. He watched as Sam slowly removed his jacket, his eyes
staring at something only he could see.
“Earth to Sammy,” Dean joked
in an effort to get his brother’s attention.
“Huh?” Sam responded after a
beat.
“You going to tell me about
your latest Love-Hewitt moment, or what?”
That got Sam’s attention.
His head whipped towards Dean and he gaped a little, startled. How did Dean
know?
“You look like a fish,” Dean
said dryly. He was a bit miffed by how shocked Sam looked all of a sudden. Did
Sam really think his half-assed assurances would keep Dean from guessing what
was going on?
“You…but…how…you knew?” Sam
spluttered, taken off guard.
Dean grew more annoyed.
“Well, yeah, I’m not stupid. You don’t need a college education to tell when
your brother’s having another case of the shining.” He looked at Sam sternly.
“Or when he’s trying to hide it.”
Sam sunk onto one of the
beds. The growing feeling of dread in his stomach making it impossible for him
to remain standing. He hadn’t wanted to tell Dean about his visions. Not yet.
Not until he knew more. Hell, no one wants to tell their brother he might
become a killer in the near future.
Sam heard Dean sit down on
the bed opposite.
“Tell me what you saw, Sam,”
Dean said, confused and slightly worried by Sam’s reaction.
Sam looked up at Dean. At
those eyes that always shone with so much concern for him. How could they ever
become the wild, cold eyes he saw in his ‘dream’?
“No,” Sam said.
“What?” Dean was taken
aback.
“Not yet, anyway,” Sam
quickly corrected, seeing Dean’s concern give way to daggers.
“Why the hell not?”
“Just…trust me, okay?” Sam
implored.
Dean contemplated the
request for a moment. “No,” he finally said in the same tone Sam had used
earlier.
It was Sam’s turn to look
taken back.
“Look Sammy, whatever it is,
we can deal with it. We can stop it. But only if I know what we’re up against
here.”
When Sam still looked
unsure, Dean continued, opting for a different tactic. “And we’re not moving
from this room until you tell me.” He took his keys and clipped them onto his
belt, leaning back on the bed with a content sigh, eyeing Sam the whole time.
Sam ran a hand through his
hair, getting a bit annoyed himself. Why couldn’t Dean just let it be? Just
this once? “You’re serious.” It wasn’t a question.
“Like a bald spot.”
So Sam told him. He probably
shouldn’t have, and most likely wouldn’t have if Dean wasn’t being so stubborn.
But as it is with brothers, sometimes better
judgment isn’t an option. So Sam told him. About what he’d seen. About the
figure leaning over the battered body. About…and here he faltered, but was
somehow able to eventually dreg out the words…about believing the figure was
Dean. And about the shotgun in his hand.
Sam looked up when Dean
didn’t say anything. Dean was staring at him with an odd expression. Sam
couldn’t work out what it meant.
“So you’re sure it was me.
You saw my face and it was, without a single doubt, my face? My hand holding
the gun. Mine. Not some good looking fool who just looked like me?”
“Well…not exactly,” Sam admitted.
He hadn’t actually seen the figure holding the gun so much as felt it.
The flashes had been too quick to get a good look.
Sam was looking down at his
feet, so he didn’t see the flash of hurt that crossed Dean’s face. When he
looked up, he only saw the anger than remained.
“So you just assumed
it’ was me?” Dean asked, tight-lipped.
Sam didn’t know how to
respond. And Dean could tell; Sam was doing the fish thing again.
“I just…it just felt
like you. I don’t know how else to explain it.”
Dean shrugged, trying to
keep his hurt and anger at bay. “Then it must have been evil. That thing ‘I’
shot.”
“No, Dean,” Sam responded
quietly. “He was human.”
Dean abruptly stood up and
began pacing. He couldn’t look at Sam anymore. “You think I could just kill
someone in cold blood? Just like that.”
“No! Of course not. There’s
got to be an explanation for why you’d shoot that person. I know that.
We just need to work out what it is.”
Sam was looking at Dean with sympathy. Or was it pity? Dean couldn’t
tell and he didn’t care; he wanted Sam to knock it off. So it went for the low
blow: “Because if I recall correctly, you’re the trigger happy one.”
Sam looked like he’d had the
wind knocked out of him. But he quickly recovered and gave a hollow laugh.
“Fuck you, Dean. I’ve apologized a thousand times for that. If you don’t want
to talk about what happened at the asylum, then you can’t bring it up as fuel
against me.”
“Careful now, Sam. Don’t
want to get too annoyed at me. Never know when there’ll be a spirit around
giving you an excuse to go ape-shit on my ass.”
Sam sprang up and yanked his
jacket from the chair it was on. “I’m going to get us dinner.” And he was out
the door, strangely proud that he’d resisted his juvenile urge to slam it
behind him.
Sam stuffed his hands in his
pockets and strode to the furthest food store on their block, needing the time
away from his brother. And not to mention the sudden cold that had enveloped
the dark street was refreshing compared to the earlier humidity.
Sam knew he shouldn’t
have told Dean what he saw. Knew it would upset him. Stupid! Sam berated
himself. Why did he always cave to his brother’s demands? Whatever rift had
opened between them after the incident at the asylum was obviously still in
need of patching, and telling Dean that he believed he was going to end up
killing someone in the near future sure wasn’t the first step to closure. He
just wished Dean would let them talk through what had happened. Wished he
wasn’t so hot-headed all the time.
Sam was brought out of his
thoughts by a sudden chill. It had just become incredibly cold. Icy, even. He
could see his own breath! He hugged his body tightly and jogged into the
nearest food outlet.
There was only one other
person in the shop (it was getting pretty late) – an older man who lent
casually on the counter, chatting with the clerk. The clerk smiled at Sam – an
automatic reaction to hearing the tinkering bells above the entrance - while the older man just eyed him. Not
unfriendly, just curious.
Checking out his options,
Sam settled on two packaged hamburgers, two bottles of root beer and a pack of
M&Ms. He paid and was on his way out, when the older man addressed him.
What he said stopped Sam in his tracks.
“Your brother isn’t welcome here.”
Sam slowly turned around, the chill
returning. And this time it had nothing to do with the mysterious weather.
“What did you say?”
The man walked up closer. He
stopped a few paces away, though, and stared Sam in the eye. Not menacing, just
grave.
“I saw him at the diner.
He’s loud and swears and hits on our innocent girls. That kind ain’t welcome
here.”
Sam frowned, that’s why Dean
was being singled out? His lack of manners? Sam was caught between wanting to
laugh in relief and wanting to get him and Dean the hell away from here.
Something didn’t feel right.
“Um, I’ll make sure to wash
his mouth out.” Sam waited for the man to respond angrily, to grab him by the
arm and demand they leave his town. Hell, Sam had seen enough small-town horror
flicks to expect the clichés.
But the angry retort didn’t
come. The man didn’t so much as glare. He just looked at Sam with…was that
sadness in his eyes?
Sam broke the gaze first and quickly ran out of the store, the store
bells ringing ominously behind him. His spider senses were tingling; he had to
get back to his brother. Now.
TBC
Go to Chapter Two
February 8 2006, 17:49:25 UTC 6 years ago
Can't wait to read the next chapter.
February 8 2006, 23:38:43 UTC 6 years ago
Anonymous
June 28 2006, 22:56:49 UTC 5 years ago
Good
Awsume dude, the real show should hire you :P lol rck on... x.o.xJune 29 2006, 04:51:23 UTC 5 years ago
Re: Good
Thank you! =D