omg your theme is so pretty w o w
oh um okay yay
thanks?
but i shouldnt be saying thanks right?
i didnât make the theme? ok
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omg your theme is so pretty w o w
oh um okay yay
thanks?
but i shouldnt be saying thanks right?
i didnât make the theme? ok

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title:Â after a while
fandom:Â supernatural
pairings:Â dean/jo
notes:Â publishing this now before i chicken out. iâll probably regret doing so when i wake up tomorrow, but screw it, iâm too exhausted to care right now and my emotions are kind of a whack.
summary:Â Jo doesnât wait: she doesnât sit by any window, doesnât wait for the phone to ring; never twiddles her thumbs or taps her feet. Life goes on for her like this: on and on and on; in truths and deceptions, in short fragments and broken pauses. Jo doesnât wait, because thereâs no one to wait for: sheâs already one of those whoâve gone ahead.
on ff.net and ao3
disclaimer:Â standard one applies.
Thank you for the awesome submission, Angela! Read on, Chestervelleians! And leave some feedback if you can!
Joâs memories of Dean Winchester are composed of: quiet mornings, sitting next to him at the Roadhouse; serving him his usual order of coffee and booze; car rides with him and Sam; Philadelphia and an almost disastrous mission; pointless conversations revolving around nothing in particularâthey always tended to veer off-topic (thatâs where most of their conversations lead, by the way, when itâs not about anything death-defying); endless bickering; arguments about her choice in music; cheating him at old arcade games and promises of Iâll call you later, okay?
He was annoying even back thenâa jackass too. But he was sweet. Kind of. And she trusted himâ
âand, she didnât exactly know why she did.
Heâs kind of a douchebag, if sheâs being honestâwhich she totally is. Except when heâs not. But really, the times when he is being a douchebag outweigh the times when he isnât. So, she writes him off as an annoying idiot instead.
(heâs got a nice smile though, she thinks. itâs almost some sort of consolation. his eyes are green and pretty; his smile is nice and his ego is too unflattering; unfortunately though, his brain is probably the size of a blackened char that only functions when heâs a) drunk b) holding a gun c) bedding women or some strange, somehow possible combination of all three).
Back in Philadelphia, sheâd been so sure heâd turn her in. But he didnât, which kind of earned him her gratitude. And some of her respect. And maybe even a little bit of her trust. And it annoyed her, just a little bit; because see, she thought she had him figured out, and then he does this-he lies to her mother when she was convinced heâd turn her in.
That bastard.
Except heâs kind of sweet. A little. Okay, a lot, because even though he kept shooting her these half-angry, half-exasperated looks while she was poring over her files in the middle of the night and even though he glared at her from across the hall when they were checking the place out, he never said a word to her mother. He never picked up the phone and dialed Ellenâs number like she expected him to. So yeah, heâs sweet, and he cared, at least a little. If he didnât, he probably would have turned her in the first chance he got.
These are her most romantic memories of him: sarcastic and annoying; cocky and arrogant; swinging in and out of her life, but always coming back in to save her just in time.
(They are not her dearest).
.
.
.
At some point of her residency in Boston, she runs into a couple of old family friends. They bring her food sometimes: meatloaf and freshly baked muffins and they offer to help her tend to her tulips and her lilies. Her plants die a week after that, withering down into the dirt, so she lets Riley uproot them and agrees to buy fake plastic trees instead. It almost reminds her of home, she realizes; so she buys an armful of pots and asks Riley to try again. Itâs too dark, she decides, so she buys colorful throw rugs and arranges them around the house; lets Ever pick out the curtains theyâll use. It doesnât look like the Roadhouse anymore, she observes, wryly.
It rains sometimes and the roof leaks and she thinks about her father living here; wonders if her mother would have liked it. Sometimes, Ever is there, offering to keep her company and Riley, if he has the time, sometimes comes over to go help her fix the leaky roof. Jo smiles at them, even lets them keep an eye on the place when she sets off to hunt. Itâs always a little warmer in the house when she comes back.
.
.
.
Mornings, she learned, were best just as the sun started to rise, just as it started to gild the treetops like molten gold. Her mornings have usually come to compromise of: eyes creaking open to the alto chant of the crow-birds; combing through the bed tangles of her hair; peeking out of her lace-curtained windows to let the sun in and maybe even to greet Riley an offhanded âheyâ if she catches him getting back from his jog; letting the coffee boil as she scouts for maps and her knives; going over everything once again before setting off to hunt; stowing her shotgun at the back of her truck and sometimes even leaving a note at Everâs door to let her know sheâll be gone.
And at night when she sits on her porch, knees drawn to her chest, long fingers curling around a warm cup of coffee, (because most nights she canât sleep; thinks about how she left her mother; dreams about her fatherâshe thinks itâs too easy getting lost in the past when it feels so familiar, and sheâd rather not think about what happens next). she thinks of azaleas in the fall and sunshine warm on her face; she thinks of fir trees and silver ornaments; she thinks of open windows and summer rain; she thinks of turkey roasting in the oven and cinders crackling in the fireplaceâ
(she doesnât think about sunshine dappling fallen leaves; doesnât think about rolls baking in the oven; doesnât think about the smell of coffee and gunpowder in the morning; doesnât think about the worn leather jacket hanging behind her motherâs door. there are other things to think about: hunting and her fatherâs memory and making the world a tolerable place to survive in. she thinks of a sword through a demonâs heart. she doesnât think about what she left behind).
âmaybe her father would have liked it here, she thinks.
.
.
.
Sometimes at night, she hunts if she has to, but some nights, Ever invites her over and they go out-flirting, drinking, laughing. The club is hot and sweaty, a mass of tightly packed bodies moving in time to a persistent electronic beat and then someoneâs at her hip, fingers curling around her wrist. Riley holds his hand out; she stares at it for a long moment, but lets him lead her to the dance floor. Strawberries, Riley muses, as he twirls her around and smiles, drukenly sweet. Heâs clumsy with his dopey smile and gentle hands, with his eye for flowers and his stuttering words.
You smell like strawberries, he shouts at her over the loud music, voice unheard, hands lowering to her sides-
(she thinks of another set of hands, grazing her back and setting her skin alight, tugging at her curls, wrenching her away from the fight; of hands cupping her face and curling at her hip; rough and calloused, calm and steadyâ)
âshe closes her eyes.
.
.
.
She remembers, when she left the Roadhouse, and life became difficult and terrible and wonderful all at once. She remembers, when she stumble: waitressing, collecting tips; she remembers, when sets off to hunt, her knife tucked in her boot: getting yelled at, cheating at old arcade games; she remembers, when she curls up in her bed at night: lying in her room, wishing for a vast starry expanse up ahead; she remembers, when she listens to the radio: the curve of Deanâs jaw, the steadiness of her fatherâs hands and she remembers hispromise that heâd be back home as soon as he can and she remembers that he said heâd call her; she remembers and then she thinks: itâs past.
.
.
.
Spring ends and the air changes.
Itâs hotter at night already and her clothes stick to her body, and she realizes, sitting in the empty silence of her house, she realizes that she hasnât thought of Dean as handsome in a long time, hasnât thought much of him lately; but thatâs okay, hunting had won its war against everything else in her mind. She doesnât think about him at all that much anymore.
.
.
.
(she remembers missing him though, rarely, sometimes; remembers his fingers curving at her waist; remembers his hands tugging at her hair. there were the little things that she forgot, like: the freckles that brushed along the bridge of his nose and the smell of mint and gunpowder that stained his sun-bleached clothes. other things though, never failed to remind her of him, like: the soft chords of old rock tunes grousing through dusty radios on some beat-up gas station or some random stranger at a bar with a cocky smirk and an all-too familiar arrogance that made her look twice).
.
.
.
Jo doesnât wait: she doesnât sit by any window, doesnât wait for the phone to ring; never twiddles her thumbs or taps her feet. Life goes on for her like this: on and on and on; in truths and deceptions, in short fragments and broken pauses. Jo doesnât wait, because thereâs no one to wait for: sheâs already one of those whoâve gone ahead. Thereâs no need to look back.
.
.
.
On her way back from Louisiana, she runs into Dean.
It was an accident, really, and thereâs a moment, just for a fraction of an instant, where she just stops in her tracks and he does the same, so she stares at him and he just sort of stares back andâ
(oh, she thinks. of course. of course).
âhe looks tired, is the first thought that enters her mind when she sees him (which is actually kind of stupid because of all the words she associated with himâstupid, annoying asshole, Winchester, guns, Philadelphia, eyes, hunter, jerkâheâs never been that, not once); she eyes sad tilt of his mouth, the dark shadows under his eyes, the tired slump of his shoulders.
âJo,â he says on an exhale and the corner of his lips quirk up for a brief moment before settling back into their sad tilt. âHeyâ.
There are two laughing drunks at the mouth of the alley, passing a bottle back and forth between them. Thereâs a girl standing by the door of a club who looks too young to be wearing that much eyeliner. A door is left open behind them, the light from inside spilling out into the darkened alley and causing shadows to play on his face; there are seven breaths between them before she decides to speak; she inhales, exhales, closes her eyes, and thenâ
âDean,â she breathes, almost smiles and Dean pulls her forward, awkwardly wraps an arm around her slim form, all hard muscle and large broad shoulders. She hesitates for a moment before allowing herself to wrap her own arms around him. He smells like mint and gunpowder. She remembers he smelled that way back then too, and at first she never paid much mind to it, thought maybe it was something he woreâbut no, itâs always been just Dean, mint and gunpowder and death. A summary of all his parts.
âCâmon,â she gestures, when he finally draws back; offers him a hand. Thereâs a spark in his eye, warm and quick and bright. âLetâs go get a drinkâ.
.
.
.
The first twenty-six years of Dean Winchesterâs life is one of those soap-opera worthy tales of betrayal and revenge and high adventure, melodramatics which neatly conclude themselves one night after a gunfight conducted in the old tradition (except that itâs never gunfights, whenever the Winchesters are concerned. itâs always always something more dangerous like: vampires and werewolves; vengeful spirits and shape shifters; their circumstance always involving something supernatural and that their story has never actually reached a particular conclusion. soâ) The real tragedy, Jo thinks, starts after that.
Yet: Dean, is still Dean. Dean, who still hunts, and whoâs still rude and sarcastic, and who still canât use a a decent pick-up line to save his life, and who still reads reports about strange occurrences from old journals. Whoâs still cocky; arrogant and who still listens to old rock tunes. Dean, whoâs smiles are marked by a distinct sense of sadness and anger, though not exactly bitterness; Dean, whose smiles are like icicles on a branch in midwinter; like the rough scraping of autumn leaves on concrete; who smiles like hurts.
And the corollary to this: Sheâs still Jo.
Some things never stay the same, winter skies and autumn leaves; old scars and womenâs hearts. Other things thoughâ
âthereâs no need to say goodbye.
.
.
.
Midwinter snow gathers on the windowsills of the small diner, tinged blue in the early-setting evening. The diner they sit in is dimly lit, the deep blue walls stiff and undecorated, the stools and booths clean and rigid. And yet, thereâs a certain warmth that envelopes them, a deep sense of home she hasnât allowed herself to feel ever since she left. They catch up: he asks her about Ellen and sheâs curious about Sam. They skirt around the topic of Hell, but in the end, she doesnât bring it up and he doesnât say anything.
âJo,â he says, after a while and smiles, rusty and sharp-edged; his fingers curl around wrist, âyou look goodâ. Her eyes dart to his face for second, and then to his fingers; she knows that itâs the closest sheâs getting to an I missed you from Dean Winchester.
âToo bad I canât say the same for you, huh Deano?â She teases, and smiles, a little tiredly, a little sadly and he grins, sharp and cutting and boyish. They fall silent after that; neither of them speak for while: Dean finishes his coffee and starts drinking from a bottle he produced from somewhere within his jacket and she picks quietly at her muffin.
(will you call? she always wanted to ask, but itâs been months, and she wonât be the first to make a move. would you pick up if i did? do you remember what you promised me? deanâ)
âDid you know,â she begins lightly, âI used to reallyââ
âI knew,â Dean says, turns to look at her, eyes serious, but a smile in his voice, bottle of booze resting between his solid hands, already half gone. He cocks his head to the side, and after a long beat, he tells her, abruptly sincere, âthank youâ.
(thereâs a lot of things she wants to say, a lot of things he wouldnât want to hearâthings like: you knew, and yet you never said anything, and: why didnât you ever say anything, and: why didnât you ever call, and: look at me dammit, iâve grown up, and: you jerk, i hate you).
Oh, she thinks instead, and then: âDonât worry about it,â she shrugs and hopes that he doesnât notice how the uplifted corners of her mouth donât quite fit. âItâs no big dealâ.
Sheâs not lyingâreally, she isnât. Jo has never lied for Deanânever had toâbut there are lesser truths and greater truths; this just happens to be a lesser truth.
(other lesser truths: jo really does hate dean sometimes; hates him for not calling, hates him for showing up now. and the thing is, heâs always been oblivious whenever it came to her, like that guy in that old clichĂ©d movie she and daddy used to watch. he calls her, âkiddo,â and ruffles her hair like sheâs his annoying, adorable kid sister. jo thinks heâs an asshole, a fuck up; heâs emotionally retarded, emotionally scarred; she thinks heâs a coward, thinks heâs not strong enough. sometimes, she wonders if sheâs better off if she never knew him, and sometimes, she wishes she never had.
the greater truth: heâs worth all that).
âSo,â she says, after a while, flicking at a piece of her muffin and watching as it lands lightly on Deanâs hand. âWill I see you again?â
His lip curls up and itâs not quite a smile, but itâs close to one. She finds it endearing all the same. She waits and he asks her, finally,âDo you want to?â
She smirks back. âI wouldnât hate itâ.






