cained: 𝐃𝐍𝐓 (Default)
𝐃𝐄𝐀𝐍 𝐖𝐈𝐍𝐂𝐇𝐄𝐒𝐓𝐄𝐑 ([personal profile] cained) wrote2020-05-21 12:37 pm

👻🎈🤡🥧

family don't end with blood —
CLUB FREE WILL MASTERPOST
— welcome to the losers club, asshole!


CODING BY TESSISAMESS
retraverse: (052)

[personal profile] retraverse 2020-08-14 11:07 am (UTC)(link)
[ Just because they're apart more than they're together doesn't mean they're in the dark about what's happening in each other's lives. They've managed this long, made it this far — farther than either of them could have expected when they fell together like they did — on keeping in touch on the regular. Even when Dean's life demands the most from him, he fills her in whenever he can; and no matter how unbelievable, Beverly listens. Lately, the downs have outweighed the ups (even though they've only grown closer because of them, weathering each storm by holding fast rather than letting go — no matter how he'd tried to convince himself to); it's been a long, hard road since the spring, since losing Mary Winchester to another world and then Jack soon after. Which is why, when Dean had called to say he was bringing them back home, Beverly had been more relieved than anything else. Finally, a big win. Or so she'd thought.

When she hadn't heard back right away, she'd texted and received a curt reply in return. Rather than be stung or deterred by it, she chased after Sam and then Cas. Between the three of them, Beverly got the full story — or, rather, confirmation of the sinking dread in her stomach and the hazy nightmares of a greyed-out world: Dean's alive and so are Jack and Mary, but the rescue had fallen apart. She knows him well enough to know how he's taking it, doesn't need Castiel's input ("not well") to understand. So she gives him space, lets him know she's got more than enough of it for him when he's ready, and lets it be. And be. And be.

Nearly three weeks pass. Quickly, on her end, because of the holiday rush at work. She doesn't chase after Dean, her concern a soft thrumming at the back of her mind as they hurtle towards Christmas. She decorates a little, finalises New Year's Eve plans with the Losers. But then she wakes up one frosty morning to a text from Sam — Have you heard from Dean? — and the concern rushes to the forefront. Even though the grief must be hitting him just as hard, he'd been keeping an eye on his brother while they hunted for monsters and more solutions; but it sounds like the older Winchester had had enough and fucked off. Shit.

Beverly tries calling. She tries to remember any of her dreams, but it figures that when she needs a fucking clue, she gets a good night's rest instead. (The reassurance there is that he isn't in danger. No news is good news and all that.) When she gets home from work that evening, she tells her doorman to let Mr Winchester right up if he shows; it's a thin hope — the country is huge and Dean knows every route and highway like the back of his hand, he could be anywhere — but between the two places he calls home, there's always a chance he could end up at hers.

Turns out she knows him like the back of her hand, too, because much later that night, there he is. Bev, it's me. His voice is like a gunshot, making her heart catch in her throat — she scrambles off her couch, laptop forgotten, and rushes on bare feet to haul open her door and — God, fuck, thank fucking fuck. Bloody, bruised, bearded, exhaustion and the winter air rolling off him in waves, but he's whole and he's here. Whatever admonishment that might have sprung to her lips (how worried they've been, how they've been trying to reach him) — dies. He doesn't need to hear that. He's reckless but he isn't oblivious, as a man so aware of actions and their consequences. He already knows. Hell, he can probably read it in her face: surprise, relief, concern so overwhelming it almost bleeds into a fierceness of her own.

Love, too. God, so much of it, softening every edge, reeling back her own frenetic emotions. Beverly feels breathless, standing there in her pyjamas and staring at him for a heartbeat too long before everything else drains away to a kind of aching tenderness. Jesus, look at him. ]


Oh, honey, [ she says softly. He hasn't looked this wrecked since Chicago. She lifts a hand, grazing her fingertips over his grimy cheek before cupping it gently; a caress, heedless of the blood. She's been covered in more, and worse. So has he. ] You look — [ awful ] — tired.
Edited 2020-08-14 14:32 (UTC)
retraverse: (105)

[personal profile] retraverse 2020-11-25 03:08 am (UTC)(link)
[ Where have you been? When was the last time you slept, ate, showered?The questions rise up in her throat and stay there, caught in the tight squeeze of emotion when she watches him struggle with the same tidal wave — bigger than hers, threatening to swallow him whole. And as the cracks begin to show, she feels her heart fracture in the same way; Beverly's been here before, knows him with her eyes closed, can read the signs and adjust in an instant — when he folds, she's there to catch him as he's always done for her in her worst moments, arms wrapping tightly around his shuddering frame and hands finding their familiar resting spots in his hair, between his shoulder blades, holding fast even as her own eyes sting with tears. God, even though she's grateful he trusts her enough to see him like this, she still hates to see it.

She doesn't say it's okay because it so clearly isn't — but as he buries his face into her shoulder, she turns hers into the crook of his neck and whispers something else: I got you. Another set of three that conveys their particular kind of love, soft and assured and anchored with promise. He's so much bigger and broader than her but she can bear his weight (the weight) when he can't, because there's no world in which she wouldn't. For him, for the Losers. She's always been stronger than she looks and this is no exception. The questions can wait, the explanations can wait. This feels vital, cathartic, and even if she didn't know the full story from Sam, she still wouldn't press until morning — this is more important.

She holds him as long as he needs and not a second less. Beverly can feel the tension bleed away and when he draws back, she's only a breath away. The hand in his hair slips around to swipe the pad of her thumb under his eye, skin smudged with tears and grime, and she nods softly against him. Her voice is as soft as his is rough, careful not to rattle this tenuous peace they've found together. ]


I know. Shower's all yours. [ And his robe is hanging right where it always is. The corners of her lips twitch like she's trying for a reassuring smile, and she leans up to kiss him, fleeting but tender. ] Take your time, okay?

[ While she gets cleaned up herself, and gets some kind of late dinner on the table. ]
retraverse: (037)

[personal profile] retraverse 2021-01-03 04:19 am (UTC)(link)
[ With the distance, Beverly doesn't always have the chance to be there for Dean in all the ways she wants to when the road gets rough — and they've weathered it together in their own ways, barely feeling the divide when times are good but aching with the chasm when they're bad. The past few weeks have been agonising, not knowing how to reach him in the way they both needed, so to have him in her arms (no matter the state he's in) is a relief. They're always stronger together, and when words fail then they find other anchors in the silence with the press of hands and lips — their phone calls can only do so much. This is what they need, both of them, and she holds him until she feels the tension drain from his shoulders, stays close when it gives way to exhaustion. Of course she does.

He kisses her where the old scar of an old promise used to be and her heart swells — maybe because his kisses always feel like promises of their own — and his invitation into the shower has her lips quirking in a helpless little smile, fond more than exasperated. Glad to hear the reflex in their banter after those hollow sobs. (There he is.) Any other time she'd join him in a heartbeat, help scrub the grief and grime from his skin, but she doesn't know the last time he had a hot meal and that need seems more pressing. So she shakes her head and gives him a gentle push in the direction of her bedroom instead. ]


Someone's gotta take care of dinner. [ It's nearly midnight, but that doesn't matter. ] Go on.

[ The second he disappears through the doorway, she digs up her phone in the couch cushions and texts Sam. He's with me. He's okay, just tired. Talk in the morning. She's sure he has a dozen questions because she sure as hell did when the younger Winchester reached out — and she does owe him answers, owes him more than some curt reassurance, but it's late and an interrogation is the last thing anyone needs when everything feels so fragile. And she has a feeling the two brothers didn't part on the best of terms either, which needs careful navigation only after a full night's sleep. (Dean's right. She knows him too well.)

That done, she takes care of the rest: stripping out of her freshly bloodstained shirt for a new one, getting the first aid kit out of the guest bathroom (considerably more well stocked now than at the beginning of their relationship; she's taken classes since the Jersey incident), and whipping up some kind of dinner for one hungry hunter. The quickest is leftovers — quicker even than delivery — and by the time he emerges from the shower, she's got a pot of soup on the stove and a skillet with a pressed sandwich ready to go.

It's his laugh that announces his return and the jolt she feels at the sound is electric. He must be feeling a little better. Bev glances over her shoulder at him, smile as warm as the feeling settling between them, and gestures at the breakfast counter with her spatula. Sit. ]


Chinese food can kill you, [ she says lightly, and they both know she means literally physically attack you rather than some offhand comment about diet. The clown trauma is a gift that keeps on giving. Her smile softens as she adds, ] It's no problem. You cook for me literally all the time. [ A beat; then, with a sheepish smile. ] It's just leftovers, though, so don't get too excited.

[ She checks the soup to see if the rice is done, then ladles a generous serving into a massive bowl before flipping the sandwich onto a cutting board and slicing it on the diagonal. Both dishes get set in front of him: tomato soup (from lunch) and a gooey grilled cheese. Easy. Comforting. ]

I know it's not pizza, [ she says as she pours him a glass of water next, ] but it's pretty much the same ingredients. And you can still eat it one-handed. [ Which is important, because — ] Let me see.

[ She holds out her hand for his right one, all busted knuckles and bruised skin. Yeah, she noticed. ]
Edited 2021-01-03 04:26 (UTC)