1x22 -- Devil's Trap
Bobby Singer looks out the window, past the hubcaps nailed to the black boards on the outside of the house like encroaching barnacles, and raises his eyebrows the proverbial six feet.
Anybody approaching the salvage yard that fast has business with him -- and not the kind where he's supposed to be a legitimate businessman, either. Bobby's got himself a nice-looking elephant graveyard: this is where cars go to die, and rust, and -- sometimes -- lie in wait to be dismantled for other purposes. Any way you want to look at it, there's a fair amount of metal lying around. Lots of places to hide. Lots of cover.
(And Rumsfeld the rottweiler to set up a ruckus.)
Bobby knows cars (among other things), and there's only one hunter he knows of driving a car like that. Hunters, now. Plural. It's still Team Winchester in the black Impala, but the lineup's changed. Not John and Dean, not any more: Dean and Sam. The college boy.
Ten minutes later he's got the Winchester boys inside and set up in his living room -- Sam at Bobby's desk, with a stack of books to hand and one open in front of him (and that short stack didn't even make a dent in his collection, piles twenty deep in some places spread over every flat surface and some surfaces that aren't so flat), Dean at the walls, feasting his eyes on the collection of pinned-up symbols and maps (the hunter's wallpaper, Bobby sometimes thinks to himself, without much humor) to see if there's anything familiar-looking -- while he goes looking for fortifying materials. Ammunition.
They come in two silver flasks, the first of which he passes off to Dean. "Here you go."
Anybody approaching the salvage yard that fast has business with him -- and not the kind where he's supposed to be a legitimate businessman, either. Bobby's got himself a nice-looking elephant graveyard: this is where cars go to die, and rust, and -- sometimes -- lie in wait to be dismantled for other purposes. Any way you want to look at it, there's a fair amount of metal lying around. Lots of places to hide. Lots of cover.
(And Rumsfeld the rottweiler to set up a ruckus.)
Bobby knows cars (among other things), and there's only one hunter he knows of driving a car like that. Hunters, now. Plural. It's still Team Winchester in the black Impala, but the lineup's changed. Not John and Dean, not any more: Dean and Sam. The college boy.
Ten minutes later he's got the Winchester boys inside and set up in his living room -- Sam at Bobby's desk, with a stack of books to hand and one open in front of him (and that short stack didn't even make a dent in his collection, piles twenty deep in some places spread over every flat surface and some surfaces that aren't so flat), Dean at the walls, feasting his eyes on the collection of pinned-up symbols and maps (the hunter's wallpaper, Bobby sometimes thinks to himself, without much humor) to see if there's anything familiar-looking -- while he goes looking for fortifying materials. Ammunition.
They come in two silver flasks, the first of which he passes off to Dean. "Here you go."
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Rumsfeld isn't sleeping on the hood of the truck any more.
Bobby turns from the window, letting the blinds slip from his fingers, and says, low, "Something's wrong -- "
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"No more crap, okay?"
Fuck.
Dean readies the little flask of holy water, darting toward Meg in an attempt to catch her by surprise.
That fails pretty spectacularly, and with a wave of her arm she sends him flying across the room.
Yeah, that one's gonna leave a mark.
Dammit.
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Sam moves fast, instinctively stepping in front of Bobby and putting himself between the older man and the furious demon.
"I want the Colt, Sam." She's advancing as they retreat, one slow step at a time. "The real Colt. Right now."
Sam grimaces a little, but he doesn't let his glance waver from her. He's afraid of what it might show if he does.
"We don’t have it on us. We buried it."
Meg glares at him. "Didn’t I say 'no more crap'? I swear – after everything I heard about you Winchesters, I have to tell you, I’m a little underwhelmed."
Another step, and then another, as she snarls, "First Johnny tries to pawn off a fake gun, and then he leaves the real gun with you two chuckleheads. Lackluster, men. I mean, did you really think I wouldn’t find you?"
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If this weren't so freaking important, Dean would be smirking about now.
Aw, hell. He is smirking, especially when he catches Meg's eye with his and looks up at the ceiling.
That Devil's Trap up there is real pretty, ain't it?
"Gotcha."
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A few minutes later, Dean and Sam are watching Meg, who's smirking at them from where she sits tied to a chair in the middle of the room.
"You know, if you wanted to tie me up, all you had to do was ask." She looks them up and down. "Betcha we could have a lot of fun that way."
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It's the wrong kind of salt for preserving what you hunt; it's the great kind of salt for preserving you from what you hunt.
"I salted the door and windows." There's always been something a little comforting about a heavy tin with a rust-spotted handle. Blunt object, if it has to be. "If there are any demons out there -- they ain't getting in."
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Dean almost jumps out of his skin when Bobby talks, but covers it with a quick nod.
Okay, here goes nothin'.
"Where's our father, Meg?"
Like it's gonna be that easy.
He's almost expecting the slow, poisonously sweet smile. "You didn't ask very nice."
Yeah, that just nets her a quick, hard, smirk.
"Where's our father, bitch?"
Meg--whatever Meg is--widens her eyes, looking shocked. "Jeez, you kiss your mother with that mouth?"
Beat.
"Oh, wait. I forgot. You don't."
Okay. That's it. Fucking bitch.
"You think this is a freakin' game?"
He lunges toward her, arms on the chair, bracketing her in. A real girl would've been pissing her pants right now. He feels sick to his stomach.
"Where is he? What'd you do to him?"
She's all oily charm when she answers back. "He died screaming." Satisfaction oozes from her smile. "I killed him myself."
Dean pauses for half a second, face gone stiff and cold.
Then he backhands her across the face.
No one says shit about his Dad.
No one.
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Dean-- come on, man-- don't--
Meg's head rocks back with the force of the blow, but then she looks right back at Dean and smiles.
"That’s kind of a turn on – you hitting a girl."
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But--
"You're no girl."
He's sure of that, at the very least.
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From his vantage point, Bobby stands.
"Dean."
And moves into the other room. Meg's still in sight.
Not like she's going anywhere, though.
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But he doesn't.
Instead, after one last cold-eyed look at Meg he turns, heading into the next room.
This better be good.
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"You okay?"
Sam's searching his brother's face, carefully.
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"She's lying. He's not dead."
He's not.
Dean would--
He's just not.
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Because that's kinda how it sounds.
"Her? Why?"
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He's starting to get a bad notion -- one that doesn't surprise him much, but a bad one all the same -- and that's that the Winchester boys don't know shit about demons besides how to get rid of them.
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"What are you talking about?"
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At least they're not slackjawed. Could be worse. A little.
"That's a human possessed by a demon, can't you tell?"
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Dean can feel the bottom drop out of his stomach. For a second he feels like he's gonna be sick. But then--
He turns to look back at Meg again.
Huh.
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And if they've stepped in the middle of something -- and Bobby's willing to bet a hell of a lot that they have -- then here's hoping they can learn quick.
He nods.
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In Indiana, in Chicago-- what if some of it was really her, and not the demon? Oh God, does she know what's happening to her?
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The nausea he can deal with later.
"You know, I'm kinda thinking that's actually good news."
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A few seconds later, Sam's standing at Dean's side, journal in hand.
I really hope you're right about this.
He glances down at the page to double-check his place, then looks up and gives Dean a nod.
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She looks up at their approach, smile arsenic-sweet.
"Are you boys gonna read me a story?"
Dean doesn't smile back, just watches her with cold eyes.
"Something like that."
Now he does give her the barest hint of smirk, shifting to give his brother more room.
"Hit it, Sam."
Christ, this had better work.
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"Regna terrae, cantate Deo; psallite Domino."
Kingdoms of the earth, sing unto God; sing praises to the Lord.
There's conviction in his tone, itself speaking of an underlying belief in the power behind the ritual. As he speaks, Sam begins to walk clockwise, circling Meg.
"...qui fertis super caelum caeli ... "
... that carry above the sky of heaven...
Meg doesn't try to twist around to look at Sam, but stares at Dean in something approaching disbelief.
"An exorcism? Are you serious?"
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