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Glitch đ || Chapter 2
Fastening myself to you with a stitch...đŞĄ
Pairing: Dean Winchester x witch!reader
Chapter Summary: You think you've tricked the two hunters on your heels, but Dean's already on your tail and catches you in the worst possible moment â with a gun, bad assumptions, and zero goddamn patience.
Warnings: 18+ language, language, canon-divergence, set after 2x02, enemies to friends to lovers, slow burn, mentions of death and DV, angst
Word Count: 13.9k
A/N: Still dealing with sickness around here, but I'll be fully back soon đ Meanwhile, are you ready to finally find out what happens next? Intense bickering ahead. Thank God for Sam being the mediator we all need đ
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Chapter 2: Every Bait and Switch
You did it. You actually fucking did it.Â
That stupid hunter bought your cover hook, line, and sinker. And you? You danced on the edge of a blade and stepped back without a single goddamn scratch.
Youâre still riding the high, sharp and sweet, as you stroll out of the bar and into the cool night air, meeting up with Paige in the alley by your car.Â
âHoly shit,â she says as she catches up with you. âYou demolished that guy.âÂ
âPlease,â you snort, fishing your keys out of your bag. Thereâs a satisfaction in your eyes you donât even bother hiding. âHe practically did it to himself. He was laying it on a little thick in there.âÂ
âA little?â Paige laughs, arching an eyebrow. âHe was two seconds away from offering to carry you home.â
You unlock your Bimini-blue Aveo and climb into the driverâs seat, Paige dropping into the passenger side at the same time, still buzzing with adrenaline. She always gets a little too excited whenever you involve her in your magical extracurricular activities ever since the day you told her you were a witch.Â
You were twelve, and back then, you didnât do it with the intention of involving her in anything, especially in anything dangerous. You did it like a middle-schooler sharing secrets with her best friend â in a treehouse while playing pretend, completely innocent. You definitely never imagined the two of you would trick a hunter one day and build an entire underground network that helps victims of abuse.Â
âHe was cute, though,â she adds as an afterthought, slumping back in the seat.Â
You start the engine and hum. âMm.âÂ
âDonât âmmâ me. He was.âÂ
You shrug your shoulders, pulling away from the curb. âIf you say so.âÂ
Paige narrows her eyes at you. âThat is not an answer.â
âIt is an answer.â
âItâs a dodge.â Paige raises a brow. âItâs the least committal answer Iâve ever heard in my life. I saw you flirting back.âÂ
âI wasnât flirting,â you say, although the corner of your mouth betrays you. âI was gathering information.âÂ
Paige lets out a short laugh. âOh, right. Very professional. Very subtle, too. I especially liked the part where you leaned in toâ, what was it⌠âhear him betterâ?âÂ
âHe was mumbling,â you shoot back, shifting gears smoothly as you merge onto the road, Clancyâs disappearing in your rearview. âNot my fault.â
âMhm.â She watches you with that look she gets whenever she thinks sheâs caught you with your hand in the cookie jar. âAnd the giggling and pushing your boobs out? Also part of the investigation?â
You shrug again, one hand loose on the wheel, the other resting near the gearshift as you hide a smirk. âIt worked, didnât it?â
It did.Â
You replay the whole encounter without really meaning to â the ease and rhythm of it. The way he held eye contact just a smidge longer than necessary, measuring, weighing, and deciding where to push next. The way he wielded the deepness and rough edges of his voice as if he knew exactly what it did to people. And the way heâd leaned in, confident in that effortless and charming way of his, like heâd done this a hundred times before and never once been wrong about the outcome.Â
Till now, till you, that is.
And you? You let him.Â
Let him think he was in control when he really wasnât. Let him steer the conversation just enough that it felt natural when you nudged it somewhere else. A question here, a detail there. Soft enough to pass as curiosity, but harmless enough to ignore. You carefully crafted the version of yourself he wanted to see and neatly stepped into it.
Your high school drama teacher surely wouldâve been proud of you for bringing so much authenticity to the role.Â
Paige then nudges your arm lightly, hauling you from your thoughts. âOkay, but seriously. He was cute.â
You roll your eyes and exhale through your nose. âI have a boyfriend. Remember Cam? You like him.â
Paige, however, doesnât even miss a beat. âYou can have a boyfriend and still have eyes, dude.âÂ
âIâm serious.â
âSo am I.â
You shake your head, laughing a little. âOh, Cam would love this conversation right now.â
âOh please. Itâs just me youâre talking to,â Paige counters, waving it off. âOur sweet Cameronâs halfway across the world right now, not sitting in your passenger seat.â
For a second, your grip tightens just slightly on the wheel, your thoughts wandering to somewhere far beyond Salem â to dry heat and desert dust, to your boyfriend stuck somewhere in the middle of it.
You miss him. God, you do. But the two of you knew what you signed up for with each other when you met three years ago in college.Â
âIâm just saying. You didnât exactly look like someone suffering through that conversation tonight,â Paige teases you.Â
You huff another laugh. âBecause I wasnât. I was handling it.â
âHandling it,â she parrots, lips twitching in amusement. âIs that what weâre calling it now?â
âYes.â
âRight. Tall, green eyes, voice like he drinks whiskey for breakfast and smokes a pack a day, but not flirting. Handling.â
You toss her a grin. âNow youâre catching on.â
Paige grins as well, clearly unconvinced, but lets it go. For now, at least. You know her well enough to anticipate her throwing it back like a boomerang at some point in the near future and hitting you in the face with it at probably the most inappropriate moment possible.Â
You focus on the road then and on the glow of streetlights stretching ahead. âHe tried too hard for my taste.â
Paige shoots you a raised look at that. âOr,â she counters, âyouâre just allergic to fun.â
âIâm not allergic to fun,â you defend, chuckling. âI just donât like being read.â
Paige snorts. âIronic coming from you.â
âFine,â you scoff, rolling your eyes back. âMaybe I just donât like being hunted, then.â
Your mind drifts back to the bar, the slight sting in your gut seeping through the triumph in your veins. You played it perfectly tonight â calm, sweet, a little vulnerable. You gave him just enough truths to make the lies stick. No tells. No slips. Nothing he could latch onto. You watched him carefully the entire time. Every shift, every glance, every subtle change in posture. You waited for the moment something didnât line up, but the other shoe never dropped.
Still.
âYou think he bought it?â
Paige doesnât hesitate with her answer. âOh, 100%,â she assures you. âThe sad backstory? The whole âIâm just a normal girl with a stressful jobâ thing? He was eating out of your hand. Complete goner. You couldâve probably told him the moon was made of cheese, and he wouldâve believed you.âÂ
Your mouth curves, but it doesnât quite reach your eyes. âI donât know,â you muse, biting the inside of your cheek. âAt the end there, something felt⌠off.â
Paige furrows her brow. âOff how?âÂ
You hesitate a beat, trying to pin it down, but it stays on the tip of your tongue. âI donât know. His aura justââ You frown slightly. âIt didnât match. Not completely.âÂ
âMeaning?â
âMeaning he was all smooth and relaxed on the surface, sure,â you say slowly, replaying it in your head, âbut underneath there was this⌠sharpness. A little anger, maybe.âÂ
Paige considers your hunch for a second before brushing it off. âYeah, well, he was probably just annoyed you didnât go home with him. Poor guy put a lot of effort in. I mean, dude spends all night flirting his ass off, thinks heâs closing the sweetest deal of his lifetime, and then you just leave? Iâd be a little off, too.â
A soft laugh escapes you at her unhinged theory. âWhat a devastating loss.â
âYeah, Iâd say,â Paige snorts and shoots you a grin. âTragic, really. My thoughts and prayers go out to him. Rest in peace, G-Man.âÂ
You shake your head at her, but the smile lingers as you turn into the small parking lot beside your apartment building, headlights sweeping over the second car parked next to your spot. Itâs exactly what you expected. Old, beige, and forgettable. Mia never does anything halfway.Â
You pull in beside it and cut the engine, the lightness and banter from the drive slowly fading and being replaced by focus and professionalism.Â
Paige leans forward, peering through the windshield. âWow. Where the hell does Mia always find these cars?â
âNo clue. I think she gets them from the junkyard across town,â you reply, reaching for the door. âWhat matters is that nobodyâs gonna miss it.â
The cracked asphalt scuffs softly under your sneakers as you spot Amy already waiting underneath one of the streetlights at the edge of the courtyard, her young son tucked against her side like he might vanish if she lets go of him. She looks like sheâs holding their whole world together with sheer willpower. But even in the dim glow of the lamp, the fading purple and blue bruise along her cheekbone is impossible to ignore. Itâs the ugly reminder of why sheâs here in the first place.Â
âHey,â you greet them with a warm smile as you approach. âYou made it.âÂ
She nods quickly, relief flickering across her face the moment she sees you. âYeah, uh, Iâm sorry for calling you tonight. I justâ⌠We didnât wanna wait any longer. I couldnât stay another night. Not after today.â
âItâs okay. I told you to call me whenever youâre ready,â you reassure her gently and gesture toward the beige car. âEverythingâs already in there. Papers, IDs, and enough money to get you started somewhere else. Donât worry. Mia made sure it all checks out.â
âI even packed you guys some snacks for the road,â Paige adds with a smile.Â
Amy just stares at you like youâve handed her something impossible. âI donât understand how youââ
âYou donât have to,â you cut in, smiling. âThatâs kind of the whole point.âÂ
Her son Ethan, seven, then peeks out at you behind his motherâs legs, clutching the same worn stuffed fox you saw him with at the hospital earlier. You soften instinctively and drop to one knee in front of him.
âHey, champ,â you say warmly. âYour fox looks ready for an adventure. Got a name?â
âRusty,â the boy mumbles shyly, the limbs of his stuffy flopping over his fists like heâs trying to hide behind it.Â
âRusty,â you repeat, smiling. âSolid name, buddy. Rustyâs gonna keep you company the whole drive, okay? And when you get to the new place, he gets first pick of the bed.âÂ
A tiny smile flickers across Ethanâs face at that before you rise to your feet again.
âThank you,â Amy says, looking at you and Paige. âBoth of you.â
âYou donât have to thank us. Weâre happy to help. Just take care of yourself, okay?â you tell her. âThe next partâs easy. Trust me.â
Amyâs grip tightens slightly on her son. âHow does it work exactly?âÂ
âItâs like a glamour. It means the wrong people will look right at you but not really see you,â you explain, tilting your head as you search for the right words. âLike their brain just⌠skips over you. You wonât stand out. You wonât stick. Anyone trying to find you will just⌠slide right past. You understand?â
âI call it âweaponized invisibility,ââ Paige chimes in with a grin.Â
âBasically,â you agree, a small smile tugging at your mouth before you glance back at Amy. âYouâre still there. Youâre just not interesting enough to anyone thatâs actively looking for you to ever remember.âÂ
Amy exhales a small breath of relief, some of the tension falling from her shoulders, though it doesnât disappear completely. âAnd is it⌠safe?âÂ
You nod without hesitation. âYeah, itâs completely safe. I promise. Itâll hold as long as you need it to. The only one who can lift it is me. If, at some point, you decide you donât need it any longer, you can give me a call, and I can break the spell again. Until then, it keeps you both off the radar.âÂ
Thereâs a pause as she takes in all the information youâve given her today, weighing and measuring it against everything sheâs trying to leave behind â a home, a husband, a life.Â
And then, Amy gives you one decisive nod. âDo it.â
âDude, we gotta talk,â Dean says as soon as he barrels into the motel room, shoving the door open so hard it slams into the wall and chips the paint.Â
Sam, however, doesnât look up at first or even seem mildly rattled by the entrance. Heâs comfortably spread out on the cheap bed, one knee propped up, a bunch of research papers scattered across the mattress beside him.Â
âYou strike out already?â he asks, distracted, but thereâs a hint of amusement in his voice. âWhat happened to not coming back tonight?â
âYeah,â Dean scoffs humorlessly and doesnât slow down as he crosses the room. Thereâs a restless type of energy surging through his blood that heâs been holding onto the entire drive back from the bar. âThat was before I found out sheâs a freaking witch.â
Samâs attention finally piques, straightening on the bed, brow already knitted when his head snaps up. âWhat?â
Dean lets out a breath, caught somewhere between a laugh and a scoff, still pacing the stained motel carpet.Â
âYeah, you were right, man,â he admits. âHot CSI? Definitely not Little Miss Innocent. I can tell you that much.â He runs a hand through his hair, shaking his head. âHer bag fell open at the bar, and I got a nice, clear look at the full witch starter pack inside. Tarot cards, herbs, spell book⌠Even had the rune thing on the cover.â
Samâs expression morphs from confusion to something more focused and analytical as he rises from the bed. âYou sure?â
âYeah, Iâm sure, man,â Dean confirms. âThe whole thing smelled like a New Age gift shop exploded in there.â
âHuh. Witch,â Sam mumbles to himself, moving over to the small table where more of his research litters the surface. âThat actually makes sense.â
âWhat makes sense?â Dean slows on the carpet, frowning. Why can that kid never finish a damn thought?
Sam drops into the rickety chair, shuffling scattered notes around and flipping pages till he finds what heâs looking for. âI dug more into her background while you were, uh⌠busy,â he says, clearing his throat subtly of judgment as Dean shoots him a little glare. âShe was born on spring equinox 1984, which just so happened to coincide with a full lunar eclipse, also called a blood moon.â
Dean crosses his arms, shooting his little brother a flat look. ââŚSo?â
Sam huffs a chuckle, clearly expecting that reaction. âItâs not just any date, Dean. See, to witches, pagans, and a bunch of old traditions from Europe, the spring equinox is a big deal,â he explains. âItâs basically their New Year. A balance point. Day and night are equal, light and dark are even⌠That dayâs practically all about transitions â winter to spring, death to life, dark to light. Itâs a threshold.â
The creases on Deanâs brow deepen slightly. âA threshold for what?â
âIt means nothingâs fully one thing or the other,â Sam replies rather unhelpfully, because it certainly doesnât make things clearer for Dean. âPoint is, itâs tied to change. Renewal. Cycles resetting. In a lot of folklore, itâs when the wheel turns â old things end, new things start.âÂ
âOkay,â Dean says, lips pursed, nodding along. âStill not seeing why I should care.â
âWell,â Sam continues, leaning forward slightly, âadd a lunar eclipse on top of that, according to the lore, a blood moon causes boundaries between things to get even thinner. Normal rules donât apply the same way anymore. Things get unstable. Stuff thatâs supposed to stay separate doesnât â at least not completely.â
Deanâs brow twitches slightly, but he stays silent, listening. He can already guess where Sam is leading with this and doesnât like it one bit.Â
âAnd get this,â Sam adds, even more eager now. âThereâs this idea out there that eclipses donât just mark change, but they force it. They break patterns. Interrupt cycles that are supposed to keep repeating.â
Dean huffs a breath, unimpressed. âYeah? And?â
Sam glances back up at him. âWell, if you stack those two things together, you get a rare alignment. I mean, itâs practically impossible. Only occurs maybe every couple millennia. And some folks believe that a child born under these circumstances isnât tied to the same rules as everyone else.â
Deanâs expression hardens a smidge. âMeaning what?âÂ
âMeaning they donât fit cleanly on one side,â Sam explains. âNot fully light, not fully dark. More like⌠in between. Boundary-walkers. People who can move across lines that most of us canât.âÂ
Dean exhales through his nose, still rather skeptical. âSo youâre telling me this chick hit the supernatural jackpot.âÂ
âIâm telling you that in a lot of these same stories, these people are tied to breaking things. Not as in destroying everything, but more like ending something thatâs been going on too long. Breaking a cycle that shouldnât keep going.âÂ
Dean doesnât say anything, but his mind automatically fills in the blanks â the things Sam doesnât state outright. Yellow Eyes. Psychic kids. Their fatherâs notes.Â
Anomaly. Asset. Key.
âSo what?â Dean prompts, leaning against the dresser, arms still crossed. âSheâs some kind of cosmic loophole? Is that supposed to make me feel better?â
Sam shakes his head. âNo, itâs supposed to explain why it amplifies things. Power, potential⌠whatever you wanna call it.â
âSo youâre saying sheâs a powerful witch?â Dean checks, then smirks and shrugs it off before Sam can answer. âI mean, guess thatâs helpful when we gank her. Better pack the whole arsenal.â
He pushes off the dresser and moves to the duffel on his bed, beginning to sort through weapons â iron cuffs, guns, knives, maybe even a machete if everything else fails. But Sam grows suspiciously silent behind his back, which can only mean one thing: he doesnât agree with Deanâs assessment.Â
âDean, I donât think we should kill her.â
Dean snorts a chuckle, although he doesnât feel like laughing. âKnew this was comingâŚâ
âJust listen, alright?â Sam pleads.Â
Dean spins around to face him and sighs loud enough for his little brother to hear the annoyance in it. Sam exhales a frustrated breath, too.Â
âLook, if sheâs really a witch, I donât think she got her magic from some demon or even a grimoire,â Sam muses. âAnd Dad didnât think so either. In his notes, he talked about tracing her familyâs lineage and mentioned a historical cooperation. I think her mother and grandmother were witches too, which would mean sheâs a natural. She might not even know how to use her powers fully yet.â
âOh, and you want her to?â Dean cocks a brow. ââCause from what Iâve seen so far, she knows how to use âem enough, Sam. Pretty sure sheâs involved in all those missing women cases. She was the CSI on scene for most of them. Pretty easy access.â
âYeah, but from what youâve been telling me, she never actually killed someone, right? I mean, it even looks like sheâs helping these women,â Sam points out.Â
âWe donât know that yet,â Dean huffs.Â
âWe also donât know yet if itâs not true, which is why we should talk to her first before you pull out the gun,â Sam states all too cleverly. âYou know witches are human, right? And some of them are good and only use white magic, Dean. Not to mention, sheâs also the only person weâve come across in weeks who might have any kind of connection to what weâre actually looking for. You really wanna take her out before finding out why Dad kept her around in the first place?â
Dean rolls his eyes back, letting out another sigh. He absolutely hates when his little brother is being reasonable.
One thing both Sam and their father have in common is judging people by their usefulness. Itâs not like Sam actually sees you as some innocent girl or even human. He sees a potential weapon. And Deanâs sure their dad once saw the same damn thing.Â
But Dean? He sees a weapon, too â one neither of them knows how to handle.Â
âLook, if sheâs really hurting innocent people out there, we take care of it. We always do. No questions asked,â Sam adds. âIâm just saying. Maybe hold off till we have some answers.âÂ
âFine, alright,â Dean caves at last, practically forcing the words out. The bile already rises in his mouth. âWe talk to her first. But if this thing goes sideways, Iâm putting a bullet in her.â
âSure. Understood.â Sam nods a little too keenly. âYou know where she went after the bar?â
Dean snorts a chuckle. âTold me there was a lab emergency. But unless someone mislabeled evidence or spilled a vial of blood, I doubt thereâs a reason for a CSI to run to work after midnight.â
The corners of Samâs mouth quirk in amusement. âSo youâre saying you did strike out.â
Dean fixes his little brother with a glare, then scoffs, somewhat defensive. âI wasnât seriously pursuing her, alright? Was just doing my due diligence, man. Working the case. Making sure sheâs really clean before we head out, you know? And turns out she wasnât.â
âSure, yeah,â Sam says, but his wry tone of voice already suggests he doesnât mean it one bit. Thereâs also the annoying smile that gives it away.Â
âShut up,â Dean huffs and shakes it off, but his mind doesnât stay on Sam for long and drifts back to the bar.Â
Back to you.Â
You carried yourself like you werenât hiding anything, although you clearly were. Your smile came so easy, but your eyes never quite followed as if there was always a second layer running underneath the surface. You watched him just as much as he watched you, even when you were pretending not to. The way you held his gaze made it seem like you werenât afraid of anything.
You didnât look like a weapon. Didnât feel like one either. But maybe that just makes you all the more dangerous.
âYou got her home address?â he prompts then, looking at Sam.Â
âYup, right here.â
Dean nods, grabs his keys and jacket, and slings the duffel full of weapons over his shoulder. âAlright, letâs roll.â
Dean knows somethingâs off the second the Impala rolls to a stop and the engine dies a block away from your home. His hunter instincts are already tingling as Sam and him sneak through backyards and side alleys till they land at your apartment building.Â
Itâs one of those old New England brick jobs â a deep red façade that reaches over four stories, adorned with black-framed windows and a white stone trim, cracked and patched in certain places and slightly weathered over the centuries. The entrance is modest, slightly recessed, with a simple arch and a set of worn steps leading up from the cobblestone sidewalk lined with trees, their branches stretching out and partially obscuring the upper floors, leaves eerily brushing the windows as the wind picks up.
Tucked just behind the building is a small parking lot then, the asphalt cracked from weeds breaking through. It only holds a handful of cars, a narrow and quiet courtyard adjoining it that offers a little pocket of green among bricks. The low iron fence along one side of it is almost hidden by overgrown shrubs.Â
The whole scene looks ordinary, but as Deanâs learned a long time ago, ordinary is usually where the worst things hide best. Itâs perfect for conversations no oneâs supposed to overhear.Â
Thatâs probably what you thought as well because, as the brothers round the corner, Dean spots you under a streetlamp in the courtyard chatting with a woman and small boy, probably no older than ten. To his surprise, your friend Paige is with you too, which wasnât exactly the plan.Â
There were only two options when the brothers left the motel: either youâre home and they wouldâve forced themselves inside, or if you werenât home, they wouldâve broken in and ambushed you once you arrived. Finding you outside and in the wide open wasnât exactly on Deanâs bingo card, but heâs luckily excellent at improvising.Â
Your posture is steady and focused, one hand lifted slightly between you and the woman and kid, fingers poised in a way that doesnât belong to anything normal.
And Dean? He doesnât wait for it to make a lick of sense.
He charges forth in quick, decisive strides, gun already in his hand before he even registers reaching for it. Itâs muscle memory, the same senses kicking in that have kept him alive for at least this long.Â
âDonât move.â His deep voice carries across the courtyard like a blade, the barrel of his gun smoothly trained on your back.Â
The familiar click that follows is loud in the quiet night, clean and unmistakable. You spin around so fast it almost makes him flinch, eyes going wide the second you see the weapon in his hands.Â
âItâs not what it looks like!âÂ
Dean huffs out something that mightâve been a laugh in a different situation and steps closer. âYeah? âCause to me, it looks like you found your next victim.â
âDeanââ Sam already hisses behind him, but Dean skillfully ignores the protest.Â
âI got it,â he mutters under his breath and doesnât lower the gun even for a second, dark green eyes fixed on you. âStep away from them. Now.â
But instead of following his order, you do the opposite and step right in front of them, shielding both mother and son behind your back. The woman lets out a startled sound, pulling her son with her as they tuck tighter behind you. The boy whimpers once, muffled against his motherâs thigh as he clutches a stuffed fox to his body. His eyes are wide and fixed on Dean, but heâs not curious or confused. Heâs scared.Â
Scared of him.
For a moment, that throws Dean off his game because thatâs not usually how it goes. Usually, fear is pointed in the right direction. Usually, it tells him exactly who the monster is.Â
Not in this case, though.Â
That same fear also gleams in your eyes, but it doesnât make you fall apart. Instead, you lift your chin bravely despite of whatâs flickering underneath the surface, and Dean can tell youâre already trying to think your way out of this situation.Â
âTheyâre not in danger, alright? Iâm not hurting them,â you offer quickly, hands slightly raised in defense. âIâm helping them leave. Thatâs all.â
His eyes briefly drift back to the woman and child behind you, and Dean recognizes her face from a photo in a police report he read earlier. Amy Reznik, the latest victim from the crime scene the brothers just visited this morning. Heâs here to save her, to stop whatever dark crap youâre doing to her and the kid, but the fear in her eyes still isnât aimed at you.
Itâs aimed at him.Â
His grip tightens on the gun, knuckles whitening, but the barrel instinctively dips half an inch at the realization.Â
âHelping,â he repeats, cocking a brow. âIs that what weâre calling it now?âÂ
âYes, thatâs exactly what Iâm calling it, dickhead,â you snap back and then catch yourself, shoulders pulling in just slightly.Â
Dickhead?
Granted, he hasnât exactly expected that pushback. You seemed so sweet and innocent back at the bar he wasnât even sure you knew a single curse word. He knows because he kept thinking about how heâd draw them out of you later in the night. But whatever fire is roaring inside of you now, you definitely kept those fierce flames burning low at Clancyâs.Â
You really have been playing him the entire time, havenât you?
âThen explain it to me,â Dean prompts, closing the distance, the gun in his hand not wavering. ââCause from where Iâm standing, it looks a hell of a lot like the same crap youâve been pulling all over this town for a year now.â
âI promise Iâm not hurting them,â you insist once more, eyes locked on him, pleading.Â
âDean, just look at them,â Sam chimes in then. âI think sheâs telling the truth. Sheâs not hurting anyone. Theyâre scared of us⌠of you.â
âSee? Listen to your partner. He seems to have his head screwed on right,â you say and raise a brow. âCan you lower the gun now? Please? This is a family-friendly neighborhood.â
But Dean only shakes his head, gaze stern. âNot gonna happen, sweetheart. Sorry.âÂ
Your mouth presses into a thin line at that, irritation threading through the fear. âI told you I donât hurt people. I swear I would neverââÂ
âOh yeah?â Dean cuts in, brows lifting. âThen what about the husbands, huh? If youâre so harmless, how come they all end up in the ER?â
You freeze for a heartbeat, enough for Dean to notice, and shift on your weight. Then you guiltily purse your lips, and Dean knows heâs got you.Â
ââCause itâs⌠funny?â
As soon as those words leave your lips, silence drops like an anvil. Deanâs gaze slowly drifts to Sam, head tilting with a silent You hearing this? I told you so when he meets his little brotherâs eyes. Sam, on the other hand, is trying very hard not to react and presses his lips together, which somehow makes it all the more worse. To his credit, though, at least he doesnât outwardly smile.Â
Dean then looks back at you, arching a brow. âYou think this is funny?âÂ
You wince slightly and bite your lips, but against all better judgment, you give him a small shrug of your shoulders. ââŚKinda?â
Upon Deanâs intensifying glare, however, you immediately backtrack, hands lifting in surrender again.Â
âOkay, look, itâs not like they didnât deserve it, alright? You ever heard of karma?â
âYou broke their dicks,â Dean grits bluntly, jaw flexing.Â
âOh my God,â you groan and roll your eyes, exasperation finally snapping fully through your fear. âGet off that high horse, alright? Theyâre not dead. I didnât kill anyone. They just had an itchy cast for a few weeks. Theyâre fine.âÂ
âFine?â Dean echoes incredulously. âOne guy thinks heâs got permanent damage.âÂ
âOnly because he didnât go to the ER,â you shoot back, throwing your hands up. âNot my fault men notoriously avoid doctors, apparently even when their dicks turn purple,â you mutter before meeting his stare. âCâmon, man, itâs not like it turned black and fell off now, did it?âÂ
Sam makes a quiet choking sound behind him, stifling a snort. Dean frowns but otherwise ignores it.Â
âBesides,â you add, chin lifting defiantly despite the gun still pointed at you, âyou really wanna pick the side of some drunk, abusive loser in a wife-beater? Think about it.âÂ
Son of a bitch.Â
Something inside of Dean drops at that, his guard crumbling the slightest bit. He rolls his shoulders when he feels them slumping, trying not to let it show that you got to him there.Â
And no, obviously, he doesnât want to defend some asshole who takes his anger out on his family. Heâs seen enough of that to know exactly what kind of men youâre talking about. Hell, when he spoke to some of them this morning, even he wanted to dent a few teeth in after the bullshit they were spewing. Admittedly, he thought they deserved what happened to them a little.Â
A little.
Still, he canât just let some witch run around town doing vigilante shit. Itâs not about right or wrong, fair or unfair, karma or justice. Itâs about fucking principle.Â
âThatâs not the point,â Dean snaps.
âThen what is the point? Enlighten me,â you challenge. Deanâs at a loss for words, not really able to come up with a good enough argument, and when he doesnât respond, you continue, âLook, I donât force anyone. I just give the wives the option. They make the decision, not me. Itâs hardly my fault their husbands were such big dicks, every single woman Iâve helped so far has made that choice.â
âI did,â Amy suddenly pipes up behind you and positions herself slightly beside you, braver now than before.Â
Deanâs bewildered momentarily but reins it in quickly. He doesnât move, doesnât lower the gun, and doesnât give you the satisfaction of shifting his focus. Even Sam shuffles behind him, his presence a reminder of the conversation they had back at the motel. Talk first. But Deanâs not ready to budge quite yet. To be fair, though, he is talking to you and hasnât pulled the trigger so far.
âLook, I donât care about your twisted little moral code,â Dean huffs, raising his gun an inch higher again, aiming straight for your heart. âAll this crap stops now, or Iâm putting a bullet in your head. Understand?â
Honestly, itâs the best he can offer. Heâs giving you a clear out, a fair warning shot, and thatâs way more than he usually grants people.Â
âNo, please, you canât do this,â Amy throws in, her voice breaking as she steps forward, pulling her son with her.
Up close, the bruising on her cheek looks worse than from a distance. Itâs too fresh, too angry, and a little too real for Deanâs taste. Her eyes are pleading as she looks at him.Â
âYou have to let her do the spell,â she continues, desperation bleeding into every syllable. âYou donât know what my husbandâs like, okay? We canât go back there. If we stay, heâs going toâ⌠heâs going to kill me. Or him.â She swallows harshly, her hand tightening around her sonâs shoulder. âThis is our only chance.âÂ
The kid glances at Dean again, and the fearâs still palpable in his eyes. Not of you but still of him, though. Nothing lines up the way itâs supposed to. You donât look like a monster. They donât look like victims. And heâs standing here with a gun pointed at the only person they trust, which makes this entire situation a little more complicated than he likes.Â
Dean finds himself in a moral deadlock, unable to give the woman a satisfying answer, and thatâs when Sam steps forward and provides one, hazel eyes locking on you.Â
âHow exactly does it work?âÂ
You seem to be grateful for the attempt to understand, exhaling a small breath of relief. âItâs like a glamour,â you reply. âIt doesnât make them invisible or change their appearance. It just makes them harder to notice. Harder to find.â
Dean glances back at Amy and her son, thinks back to the seemingly innocent home he visited this morning and the bad feeling he got when he walked through it that manifested in a prickle down his spine. She looks at him now like heâs the guy that stands between her freedom and her prison. And she looks at you like youâre her savior.Â
Whatever happened to things being fucking black and white, huh? Amy and her son certainly arenât siding with him. Your friend obviously doesnât either. And even Sam seems to crumble and fall for your little act. Is Dean the only one who still sees things clearly here?
He knows when things are good. Knows when theyâre evil. Thereâs no in-between. But you seem to be one giant ass gray zone.Â
Then he remembers what Sam told him back at the motel â boundary-walker.Â
Dean thinks that surely fits you. If nothingâs really one thing or the other, then you certainly donât fall cleanly on either side. Most importantly, you break cycles that shouldnât keep going.Â
So far, the lore seems to check out. But Deanâs getting the feeling you wouldnât even know what that means yet.Â
He tilts his head at you, studies you a little closer. His brow is creased so hard he feels the migraine coming on. The entire time that heâs been pointing a gun at you, you havenât even tried to defend yourself once with something other than words. No spells. No hex bags thrown his way. No lift of a finger that would fling him into the next car.Â
Dean takes that into account.Â
âAlright, fine,â he relents and lets out small sigh. âGo ahead. Do it.â
âFor real?â Your brow pinches â surprised, confused, maybe even shocked. âYou⌠sure? This isnât some trick where I turn around and you shoot me in the back, is it?â
Dean stares at you without blinking, sighs once more internally, and then removes the magazine from his gun. He holds it up for proof (or as a sign of good faith or whatever) and then pockets it in his leather jacket.Â
âHappy now?â
You hesitate a moment, then toss him a glare of all things before turning to your friend, clearly unconvinced.Â
Well, he tried.Â
âPaige, watch him.âÂ
She nods, crosses her arms, and then stares daggers at him, too. Even Amy still looks at him disapprovingly.Â
What the hell do these women want from him? Heâs given them everything they wanted, and they still ask for fucking more.Â
You turn to Amy and her son, shooting him one last little glare over your shoulder before crouching down to the kidâs level. The boy actually smiles at you, which irks Dean slightly. Where was his smile when he came to save everyone?
âYou and Rusty ready?â you ask the boy.Â
He nods, then bites his lip, looking at you with big eyes. âDoes it hurt?â
You shake your head softly. âNot even a little. Pinky swear,â you assure him and offer him your little finger. He takes you up on the offer with a shy smile.Â
âIs it like the Cloak of Invisibility?âÂ
You smile at that. âAlready reading Harry Potter, huh?âÂ
The boy nods eagerly.Â
You laugh softly. âWell, itâs kinda like that. But youâre always gonna be visible to your mom, so no playing pranks on her like Fred and George, okay? But bad people wonât be able to see you.â
The boy looks up from his stuffy at that. âLike my dad?â
You exhale a small breath. âYeah, like your dad.â
âGood.â The boy gives another decisive nod. âHe hurts my mommy.â
âI know,â you say quietly as Amyâs grip tightens the tiniest bit on her sonâs shoulder. Dean can see it. âBut he wonât be able to anymore from now on, okay?â You then hold out both your palms. âJust gotta take my hand. Your mom, too,â you explain and glance up at Amy.Â
Both of them then place a hand in yours. Dean watches carefully, ready to reach for any weapon at his disposal if things turn sour. But you only close your eyes, take a deep inhale, and then mumble something incoherent under your breath.Â
A few seconds later, you let go of them again and rise to your feet. âAlright, you guys are good to go.â
âThatâs it?â Dean cocks an eyebrow.Â
You glance back over your shoulder at him, amused. âDid you expect fireworks?â
Honestly, he doesnât know what he expected. Maybe showmanship. Maybe theatrics. Maybe even a blinding light like an alien abduction. But this felt calmer than any of that. Not like a spell but like a blessing. Protection. Maternal, even.Â
Thatâs what the rune said too, isnât it?
âYouâre like Hermione,â the little boy tells you with a big smile.Â
You match his expression. âI guess I am,â you say with enough pride to make your chest swell and then toss Dean a smug grin. âYou heard that?â
âI have no idea what the hell that even means,â he retorts, which earns him not only a frown from you but from Sam as well. Dean can see the bitchface in his periphery.Â
And just for the record, he knows exactly what that meant. Still doesnât care all that much, however.Â
âNo more breaking things of husbands, though. We clear on that?â he adds sternly and feels like a father scolding a child. He sounds a million years old. What the fuck is happening to him?
You roll your eyes back like a teenager and sigh loudly. âFine.â
Paige then timidly raises her hand.
Dean snaps his attention to her. âYeah?â
âCan I still slash his tires?â
He scowls, exhaling a deep sigh. âIs there magic involved?â
She shakes her head vividly.Â
âThen fine.â
âWhat?!â you gasp in disbelief. âOh, so thatâs allowed? What if I break a guyâs dick manually? Still gonna shoot me then?â
He scratches the back of his neck, then gives a shrug. âDonât see a problem with that.â
âUnbelievable,â you scoff. âSo this is just about you not liking magic.â
He smirks slightly. âGuilty as charged.â
That earns him another glare from you.Â
âGo for the car,â Amy tells you then with a newfound casualness. âGod knows he always loved that stupid thing more than us.â
âUgh,â Paige groans and rolls her eyes. âGuys who are obsessed with their cars are always a red flag.â
You and Amy hum in agreement.
âWhat? Thatâs notââ Dean starts to argue, but as the first words tumble out of his mouth, the three women are already staring at him with judgmental looks.Â
Sam snorts audibly behind him while Paige and Amy only look slightly amused. You, on the other hand, are enjoying this a little too much, judging by your knowing grin, and Dean tries to think hard how you could even possibly know that about him before he remembers that he told you about Baby back at the bar.Â
Dammit.Â
You then bid your goodbyes to Amy and her son, watching them drive off into the literal sunset, and Deanâs chest oddly fills with warmth as he watches them take off into a hopefully better life. A mother and her son are finally safe. This is a good thing, right?Â
But itâs not over yet.Â
While youâre still busy, Dean busies himself as well, mostly with putting the magazine back where it belongs. And as soon as Amy is out of sight and you turn back around, the familiar click of his gun echoes through the nightly silence once more.Â
âSeriously?â You gape incredulously as you stare down the barrel again.
âSorry, but we ainât done yet,â he tells you without meaning the apology in it. âLetâs take this inside. Have a chat.â He slightly waves the gun in the direction of your apartment building and then looks at Paige still standing there. âYou too, sweetheart.â
But as soon as his weapon only remotely aims at your friend, you bristle and charge forward.Â
âDo not point that gun at her,â you growl warningly. âIf you so much as hurt a single hair on her head, I swear to God I will break your dick next. Permanently.âÂ
Dean snorts a chuckle, his gun coming up a fraction higher, aim sharpening at you. âOh, youâre dead before you can even pull out the hex bag, bitch.â
You grimace, face twisting with immediate disgust. âEw, I donât do hex bags,â you scoff. âItâs a spell, idiot. And I donât even have to say it out loud. I can do it in my head.â
Dean huffs a laugh. âYouâre bluffing.â
But you donât budge, crossing your arms. âTry me.â
His eyes narrow at you, weighing the threat. Admittedly, even if you are bluffing, youâve got a damn good pokerface.Â
âJust let her go, please,â you add, more sincere and pleading to the goodness in him this time. âItâs not a coven thing or whatever youâre thinking. Sheâs not a witch. Your beefâs with me, alright?â
Dean scratches his temple with the handle of his gun, hoping the stupid headache will pass soon, and then shares a look with Sam, who only shrugs his broad shoulders in response.
Awesome.Â
He licks his lips, contemplates for another second, and then gives a nod. âAlright, go. Donât make me regret it,â he caves, jerking his head toward Paige.Â
She doesnât wait for a second invitation. âOkay, yep, great, love that for meââ she babbles, already backing toward your car.
You toss her the keys and give her a nod that signals youâre okay. She returns it, swallows hard, and then starts the car, peeling out of the parking lot.Â
Dean then steps forward slowly, closing the distance between you, the gun never wavering. Whatever this is, whatever you are, heâs far from done yet.Â
âAlright, funâs over, sweetheart,â he announces and doesnât leave room for argument. âInside. Now. Weâre gonna have a nice, long talk.â
The key in your hand jitters as you try to fumble it into the small hole of your front door, the click of the lock ringing too loudly in the silent death of night.
Thatâs the first thing youâve learned ever since youâve been confronted with the wrong end of a gun about an hour ago â everything just feels awfully louder when thereâs a bullet carved with your name in it involved. Â
You can feel him behind you without turning. Heâs close enough that the heat of his presence bleeds through your shirt, close enough that if you moved back even an inch, youâd probably bump right into him. The awareness of it sits under your skin. Itâs a constant, buzzing feeling thatâs impossible to ignore.
Donât think about it. Donât think about the gun. Donât think about how fast this could go wrong.Â
Donât think about how you almost died ten minutes ago on your own doorstep like some kind of cosmic joke.Â
The weight of the gun feels almost physical even when youâre not looking at it. Your body just knows where it is, where itâs pointed, and what it can do. It presses between your shoulder blades as you push the door open. Itâs a phantom touch that makes your breath come just a little too shallow and your pulse just a little too loud in your ears.
Your apartment then greets you in familiar chaos, and for one stupid, disorienting second, it feels like stepping into a different life entirely. All of it â the gun at your back, the two strange men in your home â fades away for a second, and it grounds you enough to catch your breath momentarily.Â
For a heartbeat, itâs just warm light and hanging plants swaying gently from the ceiling. The smell of rosemary, sage, and lavender drifts in from the kitchen windowsill where your little herb garden thrives in mismatched pots. The crystals and trinkets scattered across your shelves are decorative clutter and not anything meaningful or even dangerous.Â
Itâs all carefully curated in a way that makes Paige roll her eyes every time and label it witchcore as if itâs solely an aesthetic and not your entire personality.Â
It looks like a twenty-two-year-old girl lives here. It looks like you.
Not a witch. Not a threat. Not a weapon. Not whatever the hell he thinks you are.
âInside. Move,â Metallica orders behind you, the sharpness of his baritone voice cutting cleanly through the air.
You tentatively step forward because survival instinct overrides pride. After all, youâre pretty sure the alternative would be a bullet.Â
You barely make it three steps in before you feel him push past you. Heâs all sharp edges and efficiency as he sweeps your place with a precision that makes your stomach twist. His boots are heavy against your wooden floorboards as he checks corners, sightlines, and shadows as if he expects something to jump out at him. Itâs clear heâs done this exact same thing probably a million times before in his life.Â
Bon Jovi, on the other hand, stays near the door. Heâs quieter, watching everything and everyone at once, his presence softer but no less aware. His aura flickers in your periphery when you dare to steal a sideways glimpse at him â blue and yellow and that unmistakable thread of violet woven through it like a secret he doesnât fully understand himself.
You hover near the entryway for half a second beforeâ
âSit,â Metallica orders, gesturing his chin toward your old couch without ever taking his eyes off the metaphorical dragon in the room.Â
God, you wish there was a spell for turning yourself into an actual dragon. Thatâd be kind of neat right now.Â
His aura is spewing fire as well and feels almost overwhelming, swallowing everything in the room in a ball of flames. Itâs coiled tightly like a spring ready to snap, which doesnât really soothe your worries in the slightest.Â
Yeah, heâs definitely the knight with a sword.Â
You slowly and carefully lower yourself into the soft cushions, the plush underground only bringing you little comfort for once. Every step and every breath you take feels like youâre walking a tightrope strung between cooperating and getting shot. Every sudden movement might get you killed.Â
Which, truthfully, doesnât feel that far off from reality. Itâs a pretty solid assumption at this point.
You keep your hands instinctively visible, gripping the edge of the couch just enough to ground you, but you want to stay as non-threatening and harmless as possible.
Very harmless. So harmless. The most harmless.
Metallica, however, still doesnât lower the gun. Doesnât even seem to consider it. Of course he doesnât.
Stupid knight.
Your bag barely leaves your shoulder before Metallica snatches it from you, fingers brushing yours for half a heartbeat. The touch is so brief and accidental it barely registers or even counts as contact, but it still sends a strange little jolt up your arm, something electric and unwelcome that you shove down immediately.
Focus.
He tosses the bag to Bon Jovi. âCheck it. Sheâs had it at the bar. Got her little spell book in there.â
So that was your downfall, the reason he caught your scent and hunted you down â he peeked inside your bag back at Clancyâs.Â
Shit.Â
You knew he was off at the end there before you left. You shouldâve caught onto it. You shouldâve trusted your gut and made a run for it as soon as you were in the clear. You could already be at the damn border to Canada if youâd done that instead of being held at gunpoint in your own home now. Â
His partner catches your bag, but thereâs more hesitation and less aggression gleaming in his hazel eyes. He drops it on the coffee table instead of dumping it out, fingers lingering on the zipper for a second like heâs aware this is still⌠you.Â
Your stuff. Your home. Your life.Â
You can tell heâs trying to preserve some illusion of normalcy for your sake, even though thatâs already long gone. But you admittedly like him. He feels like someone who thinks before he acts.
Metallica, on the other hand, feels like someone who acts and deals with the thinking later.Â
If at all.
Which, granted, is super unfortunate for you, considering heâs the one holding the gun.
As Bon Jovi then reaches into your bag and pulls out your notebook, your stomach dips the slightest bit. Not because itâs dangerous or cursed or whatever other nonsense they might think. God, no. But because itâs soft-edged and worn and cute. Thereâs a literal pressed daisy peeking out from the back pages like youâre about to write poetry in it instead of spells that occasionally ruin menâs lives.Â
Speaking of, youâre also pretty sure thereâs still the I <3 Jared & Heath inscription on the back cover you scribbled in tenth grade. Leto and Ledger, that is.Â
But as Metallica steps closer and takes a look at it, itâs the symbol on the cover that catches both their attention.
á
You catch the look that passes between them â recognition. Itâs your family rune, really only meaningful to you, so you wonder what it is to them. How the hell do they know about it? And most importantly, why are they interested in it?
Your heart hammers a little faster when Bon Jovi flips the notebook open. Then he pauses before a full frown forms.
âUh⌠Dean?â
Metallica doesnât even look up at first, eyes sternly locked on you the entire time, except for when they still occasionally scan the room like he expects to find a damn demon hiding behind your Swiss cheese plant.Â
âWhat?â he snaps, agitation rolling off him in feet-high tidal waves.
Bon Jovi tilts the notebook slightly, like maybe the angle will change what heâs seeing. He glances down at the pages again, brows knitting together. âThis is written in, uh⌠glitter gel pens.â
Thereâs a beat of silence. Metallicaâs head lifts.
And then, he turns and marches over, yanking the notebook out of his partnerâs hands like he doesnât quite believe Bon Jovi. He begins to flip through it himself with all the subtlety of a goddamn hurricane. Fast. Rough. The deeper he gets, the more his expression shifts from certainty to⌠confusion. His brows crease more and more with every page â color-coded sections, little stars and stickers in the margins, and the occasional doodle you did while bored.Â
Your heart pounds harder with every second that passes, your mind racing through possibilities, escape routes, spells you could cast if you had to, but you donât move a single muscle. Because for now, youâre still alive â and youâd like to keep it that way.
âWhat the hell is this?â Metallica demands to know at last, holding up your spell book like itâs a personal betrayal in his rigid belief system.Â
âI like to color-code my spells.â You shrug, because honestly, what else are you supposed to say?Â
It doesnât feel like heâs still judging you based on witchcraft anymore. Now you suddenly have to justify your choices in stationary. Of all the ways you thought this night could go, that certainly wasnât high on the list.
And who is he to judge your pen choices anyway? You started that book when you were seven. What were you supposed to do? Change to normal pens midway through? Who does that? Youâre not a psycho.
Bon Jovi blinks at you, curiosity bleeding through the tension for a second. âYou wrote these yourself?â
âMy grandma gave me that book. I write all of my spells myself,â you confirm. Thereâs a flicker of pride there despite the gun pointed at your face. You fucking worked for those. Trial and error â with emphasis on lots of error.Â
Metallica narrows his eyes at you â unamused, unimpressed, and completely unfazed. âOh, so if I have a look around here, I wonât find any ancient spell books, grimoires, maybe a cat skull or twoâŚ?â he asks, the rasp in his voice dripping skepticism.
You gesture loosely around the apartment. âGo on and look, but you wonât find anything here,â you tell him. He might find a lot of embarrassing stuff, especially under your bed, but if that means you get to live, you donât really care. âLook, yes, occasionally I use my magic to teach someone a lesson. I once made my high school bully puke for twenty-four hours straight,â you admit, because honesty seems like the safer route when thereâs a gun involved. âBut I mostly just try to help people, okay? I never seriously harmed someone. I wouldnât do that.â
âItâs okay,â Bon Jovi says gently. âWe believe you.â
âNo, we donât!â Metallica snaps immediately, the betrayal in his green eyes landing on his partner now.
âYes, we do,â Bon Jovi counters, firmer this time, and then turns back to you with a newfound softness in his eyes. âWe just need some answers, alright?â
But Metallica cuts in again with the bluntness of a hammer before you can respond. âYou get your powers from demons?â
âWhat? No!â Your brow furrows wildly, affronted. âI donât use dark magic or hoodoo or voodoo or any other crap you come across. Hell, Iâm not even Wiccan. My grandma always said these bitches stole from us.â
Bon Jovi huffs a chuckle under his breath. Heâs clearly trying to redirect before his hothead partner escalates again. âYouâre a natural witch, right?â
âYeah, Iâve had my powers since I was seven. Thatâs usually when they unlock in my family.â
Metallicaâs gaze only sharpens. âSo your mom and grandma were witches, too?â
âEvery woman in my family was as far as I know. Probably going back centuries,â you reply. âBut my grandma always taught me to help people. Hunters specifically.â
That causes Metallica to pause his nervous pacing for a moment.Â
His head tilts slightly. âWhat dâyou mean?â
You huff softly, running a hand through your hair. âHonestly? I donât really know myself.â Your shoulders lift in a small shrug. âLook, I can tell you what you want to know, but I didnât lie back at the lab. I was eleven when they died. I really donât remember all that much. I remember the house and the fire, and I remember some of the stuff they taught me, bedtime stories⌠But thatâs it. Iâve never gone back there since then.â
Metallica studies you intensely. âSo you do remember the fire? Wasnât really faulty wiring, was it?â
âNo,â you say quietly. âIt was a demon.â
âA demon?â he repeats, putting emphasis on the singularity.
âWhat color were his eyes?â his partner asks immediately.
âBlack?â Metallica throws in.
âNo.â You shake your head and look at them. âYellow.â
The word drops like you just threw a grenade into the room and then ran away.
You donât need to read auras to feel the shift in them. Bon Joviâs yellow is flaring, the blue tightening, and the mulberry purple pulses harder. In contrast, Metallicaâs red spikes, the hunter green goes razor-sharp, and the gray thickens like storm clouds rolling in.
Yeah, that most definitely meant something to them.
âAnd you said you had your powers since you were seven?â Bon Jovi continues carefully. âIt didnât start in the last year or so?â
âNo, Iâm pretty sure,â you huff a small laugh, not following his line of questioning. âMagicâs always been a part of me.â
Thereâs another look between them.
âMeans sheâs not one of them,â Bon Jovi murmurs under his breath, leaning closer to his partner.
âDoesnât fit the pattern,â the other mutters back.
You frown, leaning forward, eyes flicking between them. âWhat pattern?â
The tall one hesitates. You can even see it in his aura as it pulls in two directions â logic versus instinct.
âLook, uhmââ
âSam, donât tell her anything,â Metallica warns.
âDean, she might be able to help.â
âYou heard her. She doesnât know anything.â
âShe might know enough.â
âHelp with what?â you press. At this point, you are deeply fucking invested in not being the only confused person in this room. Youâre either getting answers, or youâll die trying.
Bon Jovi exhales a long breath and then seems to come to a decision. He drops into the armchair opposite you. âIâ, uh, I haveââ
âSam!â
ââI have abilities, too,â he finishes, undeterred by his partnerâs protests.Â
âWhat kinda abilities?â you ask, genuinely curious now.
âI get these, uh⌠premonitions,â he explains. âI can see how people die. At least most times.â
You grimace slightly. âThat sucks.â
âYeah,â he huffs a quiet laugh. âYeah, it does.â
You tilt your head, studying him. âExplains the purple.â
âPurple?â Metallicaâs head snaps up, unfortunately giving you his undivided attention again.
âHis aura,â you explain. âYellow, blue, and purple. Violet shades usually point to psychic abilities â or at least strong intuition. Mineâs purple, too. Lupine, actually.â
But your little grin is only met with more of Metallicaâs stoicism.Â
âWhat?â
âYou know, like the flower?â you clarify, but he just keeps staring at you till you sigh in defeat. âNever mind.â
âYou can read auras?â Bon Jovi asks then.
You nod softly.
Metallica crosses his arms at that, observing you like youâre a puzzle he canât solve and itâs starting to annoy him. âWhat else can you do?â
You decide not to answer with words. Seeing is believing after all, right?Â
So, you donât move. You donât speak. You just let them see.
The candles on your shelves then ignite one by one, filling the room with soft flames and a warm glow. The fireplace then follows and catches next, a low and soothing crackle filling the space. And then, every one of your plants begin to bloom and blossom all around them.
âMy abilities are mostly tied to the natural elements â fire, water, earthâŚâ you say. âI read tarot and auras. My grandma taught me when I was a kid. Otherwise, I guess Iâm just⌠winging it.â You shrug lightly. âAfter they died, I never had anyone to teach me any of this stuff. And Mia didnât want me to use my abilities for a long time.â
Bon Jovi turns to his partner. âDean, we should just tell her. Maybe she knows what Dad did there that night.â
âNo, weâre not gonna share all our secrets with some witch, Sam,â Metallica shoots back. âWe canât trust her, man. You know that.â
Bon Jovi lets out a frustrated sigh, his gaze flicking between you and his partner. He stares at you for a second longer and then decides to take a chance and go for it, ignoring Metallicaâs warnings. âLook, our names are Sam and Dean Winchester, alright?â
âDude.â Metallica throws his arms up and starts to pace again.
But you canât really focus on him. Your attention stays with Bon Jovi â Sam.
Brothers. Sons.
âWinchester?â you repeat slowly. âAs in⌠John Winchester?â
Dean spins around at that, brow raised. âOh, so you do know him. Guess that was another lie, huh?â
âHeâs our dad⌠was our dad,â Sam adds.
âHe was your dad?â You swallow lightly. âAnd he died?â
âDemon killed him,â Dean says without an ounce of emotion in his voice. He presents it as a simple fact, but his aura is on the fritz, so you know heâs got tons of ugly stuff buried deep down there.Â
âThe same one?â you ask quietly.
âYeah, couple weeks ago. Thatâs why weâre here,â Sam explains. âHe had some notes on your family. On you, specifically. Weâre just trying to find answers so we can finally kill this thing.â
You swallow, gaze drifting back and forth between them. âWhat kinda answers?â
Dean takes a step closer, shoulders squared. The weapon is lowered in his hand, but itâs by far forgotten. âWhat was he doing there that night?â
âHe was there for a visit,â you reply. âI think the demon surprised them.â
âVisit?â The word seems to rub him the wrong way.
âThis wasnât the first time he was there?â Sam asks then.
âNo.â You shake your head. âHeâs been to Sugar Hill a few times. Earliest I remember was before I even had my powers.â
They share another look.
âWhat was he doing there?â Dean asks.
âSeeing my mom and grandma.â
âFor what?â
âHe wanted their help with the demon.â
âDo you know what they maybe talked about?â Sam asks this time.
âI really donât know.â You shrug helplessly. âI was just a kid. They would send me to my room or outside to play. I only ever overheard bits and pieces.â
âAnything specific you can remember?â
âNo, sorry. All I remember is that he said he needed help with a demon, and then they would whisper a lot and go up to the attic.â
âThe attic?â Dean echoes, cocking a brow.
âThatâs where my grandma kept all her spell books and would perform rituals,â you share. You can still remember that place, how the sunlight slanted through the stained-glass windows across the creaking floorboards.Â
Dean glances at his brother. âMaybe weâll find something there?â Then his pine green eyes swerve back to you. âWhat else is up there?â
âLike I said, I donât know,â you reiterate, gritting your teeth slightly. âIâve never been back there since, and I donât plan on going back ever again,â you state firmly. âLook, I like my life and Iâve been trying to stay away from all this crap for as long as possible. No demons, no ghosts, no monsters. All itâs ever done is kill everyone in my family. Iâm not gonna be next on that list.â
âDonât you wanna find out what happened to them?â Sam asks softly.
âNot really, no,â you reply bluntly. âIâve made peace with what I know. I donât need the nitty-gritty details.â
âHate to break it to you, but this thing might still be after you,â Dean throws in.
âThereâs a reason our dad hid you and faked your death. That was him, right?â Sam adds.
You give them a nod. âHe told Mia to get me out and make sure I stay hidden. Never saw him again after that. But I remember he was nice.â
âNice?â Dean scoffs. âWe talking about the same guy?â
âI remember once sitting in the backseat of that car you drive,â you state and smile weakly, which seems to catch him by surprise. You finally realized where youâd seen it before. You shouldâve recognized it sooner, but youâd shoved all those memories down deep a long time ago. âIt was on the night of the fire, actually. But thatâs it. Iâm sorry I canât be of more help.â
âDid you know you were born during a blood moon?â Sam asks then, stumping you this time for a second.
âUhm⌠no?â You blink a few times, tilting your head. âDidnât exactly check the sky when I was born. But I do find it creepy you know that.â
Dean snorts. âSheâs got you there, man.â
Sam looks up at his brother. âShe still might be a target if they find out sheâs alive.â
âSo? Howâs that our problem?â Dean shoots back.
You quirk a brow at that. âYou wanna share that with the class maybe?â
Somehow, youâre getting the feeling your life might be in danger, and itâs not just because of the maniac with a loaded gun in your living room.Â
âLook,â Dean snaps, weapon aiming for you again, âmaybe my brother here buys your little act of innocence, but I donât, alright? Thereâs no way our dad wouldâve worked with freaking witches. Youâre clearly lying to save your ass, and Iâve had enough of it.â
The click of the gun is deafening.
But his aura? The brick-red is becoming unstable and exploding, ready to burn down everything in its way. Youâve never witnessed someone going nuclear before, but your body reacts instantly. You push off the couch, backing up step by step until your spine hits the cold wall behind you. Thereâs nowhere else to go. Nowhere to run.
âIâm not lying,â you say, forcing the words out past the fear clawing up your throat.
âDeanââ
âNo, Iâm done, alright?â he cuts Sam off, but his eyes stay fixed on you. âShe doesnât know anything, and even if she does, we canât trust her, man. Safer to kill her now than wait for her to strike a deal with a demon and sell us out down the road.â
âYou wanna kill me so badly? Fine. Go ahead, big guy,â you grit and straighten your shoulders. Your voice feels unsteady, but it doesnât waver, which surprises even you, considering how hard your heart is pounding, feeling each beat in your ears. âBut it wonât change anything. And it for sure as hell wonât make you feel better about yourself.â
You push off the wall and take a step forward. Then another. He doesnât back up, but he doesnât lower the weapon either.
âYou really think Iâm the monster here?â you scoff and lock eyes with him. âBecause Iâm not the one pointing a gun at someone. You are.â
The barrel presses to your forehead, cold, unforgiving, and final. But you donât even see the gun anymore. All you see is him, and all he sees is you.
Thatâs the breaking point.
His fingers tighten imperceptibly around the weapon. His breath hitches. Thereâs a tick in his tense jaw that feels like a countdown. Every emotion he keeps chained up inside of him collides right then and there.Â
You can see the cracks clearly now in his armor. All you have to do right now is get in there and rip them wide open till the wounds are bleeding.Â
âThe sad part is youâre so broken you canât even see it,â you say. âBut I can. You barge in here all righteous and wave a gun around, but you never look in the mirror, do you? So, go on. Do it. Kill me if you think it makes you feel any better. Prove youâre just like the things you claim to hunt. But I promise you it wonât work. Youâre just gonna feel like a bigger monster after.â
For a moment, everything stills. But his aura is flickering, the red dimming just enough for something human to break through the cracks.
He exhales sharply, breaths ragged and uneven. The hand with the gun drops to his side, shaking slightly. And then, he just storms off.
The door slams behind him with a force that causes the walls to thunder.
In his wake, thereâs only silence. You donât move. You donât even breathe. Every nerve in your body is trembling.Â
âIâm sorry,â Samâs voice rips you out of your daze.
You flinch, having forgotten for a second that he was still there. As you dare to glance at him, he looks at you with apology written all over his face.
âHeâsâ, uhm⌠heâs going through some stuff,â he offers as an excuse â or maybe itâs just an explanation.
Either way, you donât really give a shit.
âGet out,â you snap, the terror in your veins finally spilling over into anger.
âI justââŚâ His mouth opens and closes a few times, hesitating. âLook, if you ever remember anything, or change your mindââ He scribbles something down on a note and places it carefully on the coffee table in front of you, mindful of keeping his distance. âCall me, alright?â
âOut.â
âYeah, okay, alright.â He nods quickly, palms raised in surrender as he backs away. âIâm really sorry. Again.â
And then heâs finally gone, too.
The door clicks shut softly this time, but the silence that follows is anything but.Â
Then, your legs give out.
You slide down the wall, hands shaking, breath coming in sharp, labored bursts as the adrenaline finally crashes fully and rushes out of your blood.
Youâre alive. Somehow. Barely.
And as you sit there on your floor, staring at nothing, all the things they said and unloaded on you tonight still swirling through your mind, you only hold onto one thing:
If you never have to see those two again in your life, you surely know it will be a good one.
Dean doesnât slow down. Doesnât look back. Doesnât want to. Because if he does, he might see your face again. Might hear your voice again. Might start thinking.
And thatâs the last thing he fucking needs right now.
The cold night air burns his lungs on the way in and does nothing to cool the heat simmering under his skin. His boots carry him forward on instinct alone, gravel crunching too loudly beneath each step, and it feels like the worldâs turned the volume up solely to piss him off.
By the time he reaches Baby, his pulse is still hammering, breath coming fast and uneven as if he just ran a mile instead of a couple dozen yards. His hands feel unsteady as he yanks the door open, the metal groaning in protest. He drops into the driverâs seat and slams the door shut behind him with more force than necessary, the sound reverberating down the quiet street.
For a long moment, he just sits there. Hands on the wheel. Jaw clenched. Chest rising and falling too damn fast.
The familiar smell of leather and gun oil wraps around him and grounds him a little in a way nothing else ever can.Â
This â this he understands. This makes sense. The car, the hunt, the rules. Monsters are bad. He kills them. End of story.
Simple.
Except nothingâs fucking simple anymore, is it?
Dean exhales sharply through his nose, rubbing a hand down his face as he leans back against the seat, eyes squeezing shut for half a second.
Prove youâre just like the things you claim to hunt.
His jaw tightens. He shakes his head as if he can physically dislodge the echo of your voice.
But this ainât how it works â not how any of it fucking works. You donât get to flip it on him just like that. You donât get to stand there with your soft voice and your shaking hands and look like you belong anywhere but in the middle of this goddamn mess, acting like heâs the fucking problem all of a sudden.
Youâre a witch. That should be enough. Itâs always been enough.
Exceptâ
Deanâs grip tightens on the wheel, knuckles whitening as he tries to push the thought down. But the memory replays whether he wants it to or not.
You, standing in front of that woman and her kid like a damn shield. The boy looking at him like heâs the thing to be afraid of.
But it doesnât mean anything, right? Doesnât prove jack. Because heâs seen monsters play nice before. Seen them smile, talk, pretend. Thatâs how they fucking get you.
Thatâs how they win.
And you? Youâre just better at it than most. He gives you that. But thatâs all there is to it.
Dean exhales again, slower this time, forcing the oxygen out of his lungs like heâs trying to push every doubt out with it. His headâs pounding at this point. It started back at the apartment. Itâs a dull but persistent ache, sitting right behind his eyes and building with every thought he doesnât want to think.
Witches.
His dad worked with freaking witches. The idea alone sits wrong in his gut and tastes sour on his tongue. John Winchester surely didnât work with things like that. Didnât make deals, didnât play nice, didnât fucking trust anything that wasnât human. And even then, that was pushing it most times.
Except, apparently, thatâs not the whole damn story now, is it? It never seems to be these days. Because, apparently, thereâs a whole list of things John Winchester did that Dean never fucking knew about.
His grip tightens again.
First, it was the hospital, the last conversation they shared seared into his goddamn brain like his father personally carved it there with his hunting knife.
Then came Ellen â a whole damn network of hunters. Family once, according to her. And somehow, the brothers still never heard a damn word about any of them growing up.
And now this â you. Another secret.Â
New Hampshire. Witches. Visits Dean doesnât remember. Conversations he was never part of.
Secrets on top of secrets on top of more fucking secrets, stacking higher the longer he goddamn sits here. Theyâre threatening to bury him under the weight of all the things his father never said.Â
When the hell does it ever goddamn end?
He leans forward, elbows braced on his knees, staring down at the floorboard like it might have answers written into the worn metal.
He tries to think back, really think, and dig deep.
Motels. Highways. Cheap diners and long drives and nights spent waiting for his dad to come back from a hunt.
New Hampshire â it still doesnât ring a single bell.
But that doesnât necessarily mean anything. There were a ton of places and a lot of nights where their dad would drop them somewhere âsafeâ and disappear for days at a time, coming back with blood on his knuckles and a stupid story that never quite added up.
Dean always figured that was just the job. But now? Heâs not so damn sure anymore.
A sharp sting then suddenly cuts through the dull ache in his head, quick and sudden enough to make him hiss under his breath. His hand comes up instinctively, pressing against his temple as the pain spikes before it subsides again.
Dean blinks, frowning slightly as he straightens in his seat. He leans back, brow creased, and thatâs when he remembers it.
The symbol. Your family rune.
He suddenly knows where heâs seen it before. He shifts in his seat and pulls out his wallet from the back pocket of his jeans. Thereâs a faint indentation in the worn leather. His thumb brushes over it till he feels the shape beneath it â small, round, and familiar in a way he canât quite place.Â
Dean frowns deeper and flips it open, fingers sliding into the slot and pulling out a small bronze charm about the size of a coin. It catches the dim glow of the streetlight filtering through the windshield, the dulled metal still glinting as he turns it between his fingers. And then, he sees the symbol etched into it.
á
For a second, everything just⌠clicks. Heâs seen this before. Not just tonight, not just on that torn page from his dadâs journal, and not just on the cover of your little glitter-pen notebook.
Before that â way before that.
A vague memory resurfaces, hazy and blurry around the edges. He can barely hang onto it and shape it into focus. He might have been nine, maybe ten, and he was sitting in the passenger seat of the Impala. His dad then handed him something small and cold, telling him to keep it close.
âFor protection,â his father had said.
And Dean? He never questioned it. He just shoved it into his wallet and moved on â like he always did. And then, he just⌠forgot about it. For more than a decade, that thing sat in his back pocket like it didnât mean a damn thing.
But now it does, doesnât it?
Dean turns the charm over in his fingers again, staring at the rune like it might explain itself if he looks hard enough.
What if you were telling the truth? What if his dad really did work with your family? What if this, this little piece of harmless metal sitting in his palm, came from them?
Dean lets out a frustrated breath, shaking his head as if that alone can knock the stupid idea loose.
God, he fucking hates that it makes sense.Â
The sound of the passenger door creaking open then snaps him out of his convoluted thoughts.
Deanâs head jerks up, and in one smooth motion, the charm disappears into his jacket pocket, fingers curling around it for half a second before he lets it go again.
Sam slides into the seat beside him, the door shutting with a quieter, more controlled thud than Deanâs earlier, but the peace doesnât last for too long.Â
âDean, what the hell was that?â
Dean doesnât look at his little brother. He just stares straight ahead out the windshield, expression hardening back into solid walls of steel.
âWhat did it look like, Sam? I handled it,â he scoffs flatly.
Sam lets out a disbelieving huff at that. âHandled it? You call that handling it?â He runs a hand through his hair, frustration lacing his voice. âDean, you almost shot her.â
âYeah, well, she gave me a reason.â
âNo, she didnât!â Sam shoots back, turning toward him fully now. âShe was helping those people. You saw that.â
Deanâs jaw locks. âI saw a witch messing with peopleâs lives, Sammy.â
âShe was saving them.â
âShe was lying to us the whole time, man. Open your eyes,â Dean insists, sharper this time. If he says it enough, itâll stick, right?
Sam stares at him for another second, trying to figure out if Dean actually believes that or if heâs just being stubborn for the hell of it.
âShe couldâve helped us,â Sam says finally, quieter but no less firm. âYou heard her. She knew Dad. Her family knew Dad. Thatâs not nothing.â
Deanâs grip on the wheel tightens again. âWe donât need her help.â
âDeanââ
âI said we donât need it,â he snaps, cutting him off. His voice is low and controlled, but thereâs an edge to it that makes it clear this conversationâs already halfway to being over.
Sam exhales an irritated breath, leaning back in his seat, shaking his head. âYouâre being an idiot.â
âWouldnât be the first time.â
âIâm serious,â Sam says, glancing out the windshield before looking back at him. âSheâs not what you think she is.â
Dean scoffs a short, humorless laugh. âYeah? So what? You got that from the whole five minutes you spent playing nice upstairs?â
âI got that from actually paying attention,â Sam fires back. âFrom watching her. From listening. Sheâs not hurting anyone, Dean. She might be the key Dad talked about.â
âShe can light candles and let flowers bloom,â Dean counters. âWouldnât exactly classify those as demon-slaying powers, Sam.â
âYeah, but you heard her. She might not even know what sheâs capable of. No one ever taught her,â Sam argues.Â
âI donât care,â Dean barks, fixing Sam with a deadly look. âWeâre done with her.â
âDeanââ
âI mean it, Sam,â he warns. âWe donât call her. We donât come back here. Am I making myself clear?â
Before Sam can argue again â because Dean can already see that his little brother wants to â he reaches over and cranks up the music, the sound blasting through the car, filling every inch of space until thereâs no room left for words. He turns the key, and the engine roars to life, familiar and steady and thankfully loud enough to fucking drown out everything else.
Sam slumps back in his seat with a frustrated sigh, but he doesnât try again. He knows better than that, just as Dean knows he bought himself a few hours of silence now.Â
He keeps his eyes on the road as he pulls away from the curb, one hand on the wheel, the other resting near his jacket pocket where the small metal charm sits hidden.
He doesnât take it out again. Doesnât look at it. Doesnât even think about what it might mean. Nevertheless, he feels its presence there with a heaviness he canât quite shake.
Sam believes Dean wants nothing to do with you because you singlehandedly stand for everything heâs ever hated in his life. Because he canât understand you. Because he canât trust you.
But thatâs not entirely true.Â
Sure, thereâs all of that crap, but Deanâs also heard you loud and crystal fucking clear upstairs:Â
You donât want to be a part of this.Â
And Dean? He actually gets that. Hell, heâs not sure heâd give up a sweet life like that either.Â
Itâs not that youâre too witchy. Youâre too goddamn normal. Thatâs the real problem.
You donât belong in this world full of monsters, demons, and blood. Youâre not like the rest of it. Your place smelled like warmth and home instead of death and rot.Â
You looked at him like he was the bad guy. And hell, for a second there, he didnât even have a good argument against it.
You have a life here. A stupidly normal one â as normal as it damn well gets for a witch, anyways. And this thing with demons and death and his dadâs secrets?
It always ruins everything it fucking touches.
âśď¸ Chapter 3: All of Those Best Laid Plans â June 12
Phew, looks like we survived our first not-so-friendly meeting with the Winchesters, especially Dean đŽâđ¨đ Something tells me she won't get over Dean pulling a gun on her anytime soon lol. Where will all three of them go from here, and will reader dig deeper into her own family before Sam does? đ
I'm so curious to read all your guesses, especially concerning Dean's little memory blurbs and strange feelings. There might be a little more to it than meets the eye đ
đŽ Series Masterlist
Coming Up:
You need answers.Â
Your hands are shaking as you reach for your purse and pull out your phone. You hesitate as your thumb hovers over the contact â a name you never thought youâd call. But then, you dial the number.Â
Sam picks up on the third ring. âHello?â
You press your lips together for a second before speaking. âIs this Sam Winchester?â you check. âItâsâ, uhm, itâs me. Salem witch you tried to kill?â
Thereâs a brief pause before he speaks again, his voice more alert than before. âHey, uh, Iâm surprised you called. Honestly didnât expect it after the way we left.â
âMakes two of us,â you sigh. You still canât believe you actually called him. It feels like youâre only following the white rabbit even deeper into the hole.Â
âYeah, uhm, I canât blame you,â he chuckles lightly. âBut Iâm glad you called. Sorry again how things went down. That wasnât our intention.â
âYeah? Does your brother share that sentiment?â you retort.Â
Samâs silent for a moment, which is an answer in itself.Â
âDeanâs, uhâ⌠Itâs complicated,â is all Sam says. âYouâ, uh, you okay?âÂ
âDefine okay,â you huff under your breath, staring down at the letter in your lap again.Â
âDid something happen?â
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Dean | 15.06
Supernatural
5.09 "The Real Ghostbusters"
SUPERNATURAL | S02E02 "Everybody Loves a Clown"
This strong, silent thing of yours? It's crap. I'm over it. Oh, God. This isn't just anyone we're talking about. This is Dad. I know how you felt about the man. You know what? Back off, all right? Just because I'm not caring and sharing like you want me to-- No, no, that's not what this is about, Dean.
JENSEN ACKLES as DEAN WINCHESTER SUPERNATURAL 10.07 âGirls Girls Girlsâ

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Handmaiden? He was suspicious. I panicked.
Dean | SPN 11.02 | Dedicated to @justjensenanddean
The Spear | SPN 14.09

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SAM & DEAN WINCHESTER
Supernatural | S1 EP18 : Something Wicked
DEAN WINCHESTER in one random episode per day ⸠033 /364 03.07 FRESH BLOOD






