Rating: PG-13
Genre: Gen.
Characters: Sam, Bobby, OC Hunter
Word Count: 9,401
Warnings:
Prompt: Written for this prompt.
Summary: Set during season 6. Sam and Bobby's relationship hasn't repaired itself since Sam was soulless. An unexpected hunter looking to kill Sam might be the thing to put it back together.
On Archive Of Our Own
Dean was gone when Sam woke up.
There was a note on the coffee table in front of Bobby's couch where he'd passed out the night before. His own name, scratched in big dark capital letters SAM was the first thing he saw when he opened his eyes. He didn't need to read more than that.
Dean had gone hunting. Alone.
That maybe wasn't noteworthy under normal circumstances, but Sam knew why it was Dean had left him behind. He knew that Dean was scared of the wall inside his head falling to pieces. Was scared that the next time Sam began seizing on the floor as Hell overtook him, he wouldn't get up after.
Dean didn't feel it. He didn't know it wasn't just some blocked off place in Sam's head that he was blissfully ignorant to anymore. The truth was that--no matter what Death said-- it wasn't even a wall.
It was a dam.
And maybe Sam had been the one to spring the leak by digging too much in Rhode Island, but he was also the one to stick his finger in the hole. Dean didn't know what it was like to use a finger to hold back the flood.
Sam let out a sharp exhalation. He spitefully didn't want to read the note, but he was hardly so angry with Dean that he wouldn't know everything about the hunt that he could.
Going to Boulder CO. Back in a few days.
Real helpful, Dean, Sam thought bitterly.
"See you know your brother's gone," Bobby's voice came from behind him.
As though he wouldn't have known right away.
Sam's glower deepened. It wasn't directed at Bobby, not really, but Dean wasn't there to take it.
Bobby was. He stood in silence and gathered up the rage in Sam's eyes as it spilled out on his living room floor. For just a moment it struck him as walking into a room housing vengeful spirit might have, and his blood ran cold enough to goosebump his skin. He took a breath and shook it off.
"Wanna talk about it?"
"No," Sam answered sullenly.
The way his jaw was working said otherwise. Bobby shifted his feet to get comfortable for the wait.
When it came to spilling their guts to Bobby, the boys gossiped about each other like they were school children and the other had just broken their favorite toy.
It wasn't like he minded. It was just that Bobby was pretty damned sure it was his fault; they'd spent years with John's voice in one ear telling them to squash their petty differences and in the other ear the voice of Uncle Bobby saying 'tell me what's the matter'. It didn't take a shrink for him to toss out a guess or two about these kids' complexes.
Sure enough a moment later Sam shouted, "He doesn't trust me!"
As though it was contagious, Bobby felt a flare of anger all his own. He bought himself a second's silence by adjusting his his hat. "Now, that's not true, Sam."
"He doesn't trust me," Sam repeated without acknowledging Bobby's words. He breathed out a mirthless huff of laughter. The anger had waned only to be replaced by something new. Sam's eyes were as big and sad and open as a child looking for its mother in a supermarket. A third time, said often enough now that it had been stripped raw, he began, "He doesn't trust me to decide what to do with my own brain. My own thoughts. My own memories. He can't hold my own brain hostage from me, Bobby. He can't just give me my soul back and tell me not to use it to fix what I did."
Bobby's second bout of anger took them both by surprise:
"Well can you blame him? Maybe there ain't no fixing what you did!"
They both stood stock-still for seconds that stretched out long.
When Bobby continued it was a strange mix of sincerity and a wild attempt at backpedaling that neither of them could quite pull apart. "What I mean is, not one month ago you had a knife to my neck. Now, you weren't all there, but you really want to go putzing around with the one thing that made you all there?"
Bobby sighed. "Look, Sam, the truth is...." Shook his head. "That thing in your head, whatever it is you got in there, is like a spoilt egg. Whatever comes out is gonna be rotten. And here you are, itchin' to break it."
:-:-:
Two men had watched the Impala drive out that day with no one riding shotgun.
The first man was Bobby himself, standing in front of his house.
"Sam's going to be pissed to hell when he wakes up and you ain't here."
Dean had slapped his palms flat down on the hood.
"Good! Fine! Let him be. I've lost that kid too many times. I'm not doing it again. Not because of this. Not this."
Bobby sighed, throwing his hand up partway. "Awright," he said, and that was that. They'd had this conversation too many times for him to bother with it again at 5 A.M..
The door to the Impala was on its way to a slam before Dean remembered that the point of leaving so early was for Sam to stay asleep.
It was getting harder to tell which of the boys was angrier these days.
Bobby shook his head and went back inside the moment the car disappeared from view.
But it was the second man who was of interest, blanketed by the dry grass.
Had anyone else seen this man, they would have taken him for a local. A rancher on any of the wide, sprawling pastures across the state of South Dakota. His skin was bronzed and weathered from the sun, with freckles so dark they were nearly black speckling his arms. His build was slim and his muscles long and ropy. Thick veins laid roadmaps over the tops of his hands and stretched over the side of his arm. There was no doubt he was a laborer. It was here he belonged, outside of the city, where it was typical to see a man who worked long hours outdoors.
Even the gear he had on him today were favorites of the townsfolk: While his underclothes were dark, he wore a hooded cammo jacket over the top of it, keeping him cloaked in the brush from those who didn't look too closely. His rifle was a simple .22. It had a strap which he could use to sling it across his back, but at that moment it was instead held close to his side with barrel carefully kept up out of the loose, dry dirt. It was not weighted down with a scope, but that didn't bother him. He had been bringing down game since he was 10 years old and didn't need the aid. He was hoping to use his knife instead, besides; a small stag pocket knife folded up and out of sight.
If anyone saw him on his way here or back, they wouldn't pay this man any mind. He was only there to hunt whitetails, perhaps. To drink some beer and shoot prairie dogs, perhaps. To pop some cans off a stump or fence post, perhaps. To creep into a house and slit a man's throat while he slept, never. He would be able to slip in and out of South Dakota unnoticed.
From a distance it was possible even Bobby would have mistaken the man for a local boy. Up close it would have been clear--his eyes would give him away to those who knew how to read them. They were the eyes of a hunter, but not of the kind who tracked deer or even mountain lion through the Black Hills. They were somber and knowledgeable in a way that those who hunted for sport or food or any reason beyond pure survival could not be.
The man had surveyed the land four times before Dean ever left that morning. He had crouched down low to circle the perimeter at 1 A.M.. At 2 he had crept back and forth across the property. He had sneaked in close, snake-crawled his way through the junkyard, creeping in and out between the cars. Peering in through the windows to see if there were any easily-accessed weapons. It was 4:30 by the time he had finished his search and determined the fastest ways through the maze of junk in the yard, should the fight be taken outside.
He crawled his way back to his lookout spot, where he'd left only his water bottle. He picked it up and took a drink as he settled back down into the grass. The sky was fading from coal to a deep purple, like a bruised but healing black eye, and he did not feel safe in the open any longer.
He wasn't expecting Dean to drive away without Sam in sight that morning, but it heartened him. He wouldn't have minded killing Dean, but fighting three hunters alone was too near a suicide mission for his liking.
He wondered idly how Dean had said goodbye to his brother as the roar of the Impala's engine died away. It was only the last moments with someone that mattered, that would shape how you remembered them.
He hoped Dean's memories would be good ones.
Still, it should be said that the man didn't creep down straight away, and the truth of the matter was he had no intention to. Whether Dean was there or not, he knew the value of stalking his prey. He was a man in his early fifties, and any hunter who had lived to be that age knew the patience truly was a virtue. It was something the young hunters, especially those not born into the business as he had been, never got a chance to learn.
It was even more important to keep in mind now. He'd slain his number of human-like monsters before, but Sam would be the closest he ever got to true murder.
He didn't feel this way because he thought of Sam as a man. He did, he guessed, in an an almost abstract sort of a way. It was the only way to think of it, really. You couldn't get lost in morality with a job like theirs. Besides, it didn't matter now. No, he thought of it as murder only because he knew Sam's death would cause the crippling, revenge-seeking kind of grief that monsters' never seemed to. It would have a tangible impact and he would have to prepare for it. There would be Dean, his family. There would be other hunters, like Bobby. And there would be the typical involvement of the law. And the lawmen would be the only ones who might ask questions first.
That was made it especially important to stay inconspicuous. Particularly as, in a small town like Sioux Falls, even the least shocking murder could get top story coverage in the local news for weeks on end.
His best opportunity to get away with this kill would come at night, when Bobby and Sam (and Dean?) would be curled up in bed, vulnerable. It wasn't much of a plan, but it was enough of one that he could see the end, Sam dead and himself victorious, clear as day behind his eyelids. The thought made his heart thrum with anticipation and filled him with premature adrenaline. His excitement was such that he sat in complete silence staring at Bobby's house for nearly two full hours without moving so much as an inch, never growing tired of the wait.
At 6:54 A.M. he'd finally taken in enough of the house that he thought to take a break.
It always seemed that way, just when your senses dull something happens to catch your attention again.
Sam Winchester burst out the door.
The hunter tipped his head.
Even from this far away, the man could tell Sam looked agitated.
He pulled a set of binoculars from his pocket and lifted them to his eyes. They always, obscurely, made him feel silly when he used them even though they functioned well; they were small and compact, not the kind military specialists used in the movies. They made him feel like a birdwatcher who wore shorts and socks with sandals, or some posh asshole at the opera.
He studied Sam's face, his movements.
It was hard to think of anything but a man when you could read the grief in someone's eyes.
He put his binoculars down and lifted up his gun.
He knew from the get that he wouldn't shoot. His car was a full quarter of a mile away. He'd only brought his gun in case this went sour and turned into a massacre instead of a murder.
But nothing turned a man to a monster faster than putting him in your sights.
His daddy had told him when he was a young boy to aim for the chest. 'Everyone wants to get the head,' he'd said. 'Head shots are impressive, but they aren't practical. Heads are small. Center mass, son. Anywhere here,' he had waved his hands over his chest, his stomach, 'will bring a man down. Never go for the head unless you got the time-- time to get it right, or time to fix your fuck-up if you miss.'
He aimed between Sam's eyes.
He had the time.
He mimed pulling the trigger. "Pow," he whispered to himself.
He kept his gun trained on Sam's head, tracking the movements, until Sam gave a great heaving sigh and went back inside.
Then he lowered his gun and quietly disappeared to get himself a cup of coffee.
:-:-:
The fight with Bobby turned out to be a strange one.
"That thing in your head, whatever it is you got in there, is like a spoilt egg. Whatever comes out is gonna be rotten. And here you are, itchin' to break it," Bobby said.
"What?" His brow furrowed. "I am not."
"Oh, really?" Bobby folded his arms and stared Sam down. "You know if you keep trying to fix this mess, you're sure as hell gonna tear that wall down. So how come you're all riled up, wantin' to go messing with it when everybody's tellin' you to let things lie? I don't just mean Dean," he added sharply before Sam could interject. "I mean me , you numbskull. Remember? One of the guys you want to square things with? Or, at least, one you oughta want to square things with."
Bobby always struck Sam as positively maternal when he looked at him like this. Because while the heated words cut him fast and deep, it truly was that the look alone that shamed him. Truth be told, being grateful that he had one old hunter's stink eye to keep him in check with embarrassment when he didn't have a mother's frown to do the job was one of the high points of his life. "I do, Bobby," he said quietly.
"Yeah? Then listen to me and leave well enough alone! If someone you wanna fix things with is telling you 'don't try 'cause you'll just foul it up worse than before', and you still want a go at it, I'm thinking there's a bit more to it than just you wanting to patch things up." Bobby sighed again, and forestalled another interruption. "I'm not saying you don't want to do that, too," he said, this part gentler. "But there's somethin' else, too, and that's the part that don't set right with me."
Sam shook his head. "There's nothing else."
It made his insides twist up in anxious knots that felt like guilt, but he's been thinking of nothing but setting things straight since he'd found out about what he'd done. It wasn't a lie.
Bobby blinked so slow it seemed he might just leave his eyes shut. "There's something," he said, tired. He was no longer speaking much of anything to Sam himself, instead his words were just dropping out of his mouth and falling to his feet. "I gotta figure out what it is before I know where I stand," he decided. His meaning was clear: he needed to figure out what it was Sam was up to before he deemed him trustworthy or not.
And there wasn't much of anything to say to that, so Sam said nothing at all. He nodded once.
He still found himself waiting almost hopefully, even though he knew the conversation was over. He stood rooted in place until Bobby sighed soft, turned around, and headed off to his bedroom.
Pretty soon the stale, post-fight air got to him, and Sam headed outside to breathe the fresh air in deep.
He stared out over Bobby's property. It was all dry yellowed grass and hard dirt. Most of South Dakota seemed to be, though he hadn't paid much attention to the scenery on the ride here. He thought he'd heard something about it being hit by drought in recent years, the farmers being frustrated, but it hadn't been unusual. It wasn't something weird or supernatural, there wasn't something about to happen. Sometimes the bad things that happened simply were.
He wished the Impala was still parked out front.
He wanted to go for a drive. Not far, not running away. He wanted to go to the nearest diner and go inside. He wanted to talk to people who didn't know about him or about demons, whose belief in angels was founded in faith instead of fact. He wanted to go for just a minute, without Dean, without Bobby, just take a second and peer in on the world that was still in the dark.
You really think that saying yes, you would like fries with that will help you sort out your life? a voice in his head asked.
He didn't know whose it was. It sounded half like his own internal monologue. The other half, twisted up with his own voice, sounded evil. Like the demons he'd sent back screaming, like Yellow Eyes, like Lucifer himself.
He didn't know who it was. He didn't even know if it belonged to anyone in particular.
It had started after he fell to the ground in Rhode Island and returned nearly without notice, and nearly without care, every few days.
A few drips off a leaky faucet.
He didn't mind.
In fact, the residual effects of Hell, the tiny drips that wept through the crack he'd made, almost put him at ease. The wall held back the horrifying secrets of the two lives he'd lived for over a year, one in his soulless body and one in his bodiless soul. And while he suspected Dean and Cas and Bobby and even Death were all right that it would cripple him to have it all laid bare, he liked knowing as much as he could handle. He liked to remember the flash of pain of his sandpapered-raw soul that had overtaken him in Rhode Island. And he liked the little whispers of what had transpired echoing in his ears, even if he couldn't place the words they spoke.
He wondered if that's what Bobby saw in him now. That he didn't just need to know, he liked knowing it, too.
It didn't matter. His problem with Bobby wasn't about his motivations behind tearing down his mind's wall, not really. It was just a symptom of a disease.
Sam pulled out his phone and into his contacts. He had a million phones with names listed a million ways, but in this one, the name he wanted was at the top: *ICE- Dean .
He looked down at it considerately, but frowned and pocketed his phone without pressing send.
He'd doubted he'd make the call, but he thought it would be because of a flash of annoyance and (an objectively probably petty) decision that Dean didn't deserve to have him call first.
Instead he put it away because of an unidentifiable sense of growing unease. A creep-crawly feeling that was like ants parading across his neck and arms.
His gave it a minute, but couldn't place it. It was almost the feeling of being watched, but not quite. There was something very familiar to it all that was just out of his grasp, that he was missing just one step to figuring out.
No matter what this nameless feeling was, being out in the open had become even more uncomfortable than being inside with only Bobby for company. He headed inside with a glance tossed over his shoulder and no idea what he was looking back for.
After a full half hour of being nervous about whatever had happened outside, a new fear struck him.
Bobby had been inside his room, noiseless, since Sam had stepped out nearly forty minutes before.
With the same mindless fear of a child whose parent had been gone too long, Sam was struck by the sudden gut-tearing and heart-rending feeling that Bobby was dead.
It was so sudden and so obscure that it killed the idea that there'd been anything to be afraid of to start with. He laughed at himself and shook his head. He did check-- he went to Bobby's closed door just long enough to hear the sound of life within, just because if something had happened he'd feel worse later than he would for indulging his silly paranoia now.
With little else to keep his mind off things, Sam quietly decided to pore over the old books that were scattered around the living room.
It felt like it had been ages since he'd read a book like this. Reasonless reading that wasn't borne out of having a time limit and hitting a brick wall with local newspapers, databases, and Google. He wondered idly if that was Hell, too. If a small far-away part of him was aware of the sheer amount of time that had passed. If deep down he recognized the length of the hundred years he'd gone without ever picking up a book even if the pain that had made up every day of every one of those years still escaped him.
But he also knew he was over thinking it. He was looking for clues where they weren't.
The very simple answer was just that he'd favored the internet to flipping through books for years now.
He realized then that it had been so long that he'd read not just mythos when there wasn't a case on hand, but read a book at all for the sheer joy of it. He'd tried a few times to read while on the toilet, but flipping pages on the john wasn't the same as reading. You couldn't get engrossed in anything when you were taking a crap and half-planning what you'd do if some monster bust the door down just then.
Reading had to be done right, he thought.
And he was completely right about this, too, even if Dean had given him a look like he was both stupid and pretentious when he'd complained about it once.
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Date: 2013-09-23 12:07 am (UTC)