SUNDAY SMUT

deanxcasficrecs:

Originally posted by cosmiccurd

Happy Finnish Independence Day to all our Finnish readers and happy Sunday to the rest of you who can’t find Finland on a map! Thats right! You guessed it, it’s time for our weekly Sunday Smut! Because it’s a special day here and I’m feeling generous, I’ve selected something explicitly kinky and a little bit disturbing for you guys to read. So get comfortable, start reading and when you are finished make sure to delete your browsing history! – Admin A


Sociopaths in Love verse

Part 1. Title: Some Kind of Courtship

Author: Annie D (scaramouche)

Rating: Explicit

Words: 16,723 – Finished

Summary: Dean buys Castiel as a slave and has a fun time viciously breaking him in. But what Dean doesn’t know is that this is exactly what Castiel wants.
(Or, two sociopaths walk into a slave auction…)

(Read here)


Part 2. Title: The Occasional Sentimentality

Author: Annie D (scaramouche)

Rating: Explicit

Words: 7,512 – Finished

Summary: Dean has the Winchester business, Castiel is an independent contractor, their penchant for violence is something they have in common. For eight months they’ve been meeting off and on for brief yet intense encounters, but like all things, it can’t stay that way forever.

(Read here)

what she says: I don’t like romantic movies
what she means: I am completely sick of the same white, heteronormative love story being shoved down my throat by Hollywood. I can’t watch a movie about dinosaurs running on a rampage in a park without them forcing a pasty male and a pasty female into a no-chemistry, forced-smile, by-the-way romantic subplot. I have probably seen forty-five variations of the same bland fucking couple falling in love. Oh wait! Now they’re falling in love during WAR TIME. SO ORIGINAL. BUT WAIT. NOW THEY’RE SEPARATED BECAUSE OF LIGHT-HEARTED EMBARRASSING MISUNDERSTANDINGS. FUCKING DELIGHTFUL. GOD

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

thebibliosphere:

When I was nine, possibly ten, an author came to our school to talk about writing. His name was Hugh Scott, and I doubt he’s known outside of Scotland. And even then I haven’t seen him on many shelves in recent years in Scotland either. But he wrote wonderfully creepy children’s stories, where the supernatural was scary, but it was the mundane that was truly terrifying. At least to little ten year old me. It was Scooby Doo meets Paranormal Activity with a bonny braw Scottish-ness to it that I’d never experienced before.

I remember him as a gangling man with a wiry beard that made him look older than he probably was, and he carried a leather bag filled with paper. He had a pen too that was shaped like a carrot, and he used it to scribble down notes between answering our (frankly disinterested) questions. We had no idea who he was you see, no one had made an effort to introduce us to his books. We were simply told one morning, ‘class 1b, there is an author here to talk to you about writing’, and this you see was our introduction to creative writing. We’d surpassed finger painting and macaroni collages. It was time to attempt Words That Were Untrue.

You could tell from the look on Mrs M’s face she thought it was a waste of time. I remember her sitting off to one side marking papers while this tall man sat down on our ridiculously short chairs, and tried to talk to us about what it meant to tell a story. She wasn’t big on telling stories, Mrs M. She was also one of the teachers who used to take my books away from me because they were “too complicated” for me, despite the fact that I was reading them with both interest and ease. When dad found out he hit the roof. It’s the one and only time he ever showed up to the school when it wasn’t parents night or the school play. After that she just left me alone, but she made it clear to my parents that she resented the fact that a ten year old used words like ‘ubiquitous’ in their essays. Presumably because she had to look it up.

Anyway, Mr Scott, was doing his best to talk to us while Mrs M made scoffing noises from her corner every so often, and you could just tell he was deflating faster than a bouncy castle at a knife sharpening party, so when he asked if any of us had any further questions and no one put their hand up I felt awful. I knew this was not only insulting but also humiliating, even if we were only little children. So I did the only thing I could think of, put my hand up and said “Why do you write?”

I’d always read about characters blinking owlishly, but I’d never actually seen it before. But that’s what he did, peering down at me from behind his wire rim spectacles and dragging tired fingers through his curly beard. I don’t think he expected anyone to ask why he wrote stories. What he wrote about, and where he got his ideas from maybe, and certainly why he wrote about ghosts and other creepy things, but probably not why do you write. And I think he thought perhaps he could have got away with “because it’s fun, and learning is fun, right kids?!”, but part of me will always remember the way the world shifted ever so slightly as it does when something important is about to happen, and this tall streak of a man looked down at me, narrowed his eyes in an assessing manner and said, “Because people told me not to, and words are important.”

I nodded, very seriously in the way children do, and knew this to be a truth. In my limited experience at that point, I knew certain people (with a sidelong glance to Mrs M who was in turn looking at me as though she’d just known it’d be me that type of question) didn’t like fiction. At least certain types of fiction. I knew for instance that Mrs M liked to read Pride and Prejudice on her lunch break but only because it was sensible fiction, about people that could conceivably be real. The idea that one could not relate to a character simply because they had pointy ears or a jet pack had never occurred to me, and the fact that it’s now twenty years later and people are still arguing about the validity of genre fiction is beyond me, but right there in that little moment, I knew something important had just transpired, with my teacher glaring at me, and this man who told stories to live beginning to smile. After that the audience turned into a two person conversation, with gradually more and more of my classmates joining in because suddenly it was fun. Mrs M was pissed and this bedraggled looking man who might have been Santa after some serious dieting, was starting to enjoy himself. As it turned out we had all of his books in our tiny corner library, and in the words of my friend Andrew “hey there’s a giant spider fighting a ghost on this cover! neat!” and the presentation devolved into chaos as we all began reading different books at once and asking questions about each one. “Does she live?”— “What about the talking trees” —“is the ghost evil?” —“can I go to the bathroom, Miss?” —“Wow neat, more spiders!”

After that we were supposed to sit down, quietly (glare glare) and write a short story to show what we had learned from listening to Mr Scott. I wont pretend I wrote anything remotely good, I was ten and all I could come up with was a story about a magic carrot that made you see words in the dark, but Mr Scott seemed to like it. In fact he seemed to like all of them, probably because they were done with such vibrant enthusiasm in defiance of the people who didn’t want us to.

The following year, when I’d moved into Mrs H’s class—the kind of woman that didn’t take away books from children who loved to read and let them write nonsense in the back of their journals provided they got all their work done—a letter arrived to the school, carefully wedged between several copies of a book which was unheard of at the time, by a new author known as J.K. Rowling. Mrs H remarked that it was strange that an author would send copies of books that weren’t even his to a school, but I knew why he’d done it. I knew before Mrs H even read the letter.

Because words are important. Words are magical. They’re powerful. And that power ought to be shared. There’s no petty rivalry between story tellers, although there’s plenty who try to insinuate it. There’s plenty who try to say some words are more valuable than others, that somehow their meaning is more important because of when it was written and by whom. Those are the same people who laud Shakespeare from the heavens but refuse to acknowledge that the quote “Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them“ is a dick joke.

And although Mr Scott seems to have faded from public literary consumption, I still think about him. I think about his stories, I think about how he recommended another author and sent copies of her books because he knew our school was a puritan shithole that fought against the Wrong Type of Wordes and would never buy them into the library otherwise. But mostly I think about how he looked at a ten year old like an equal and told her words and important, and people will try to keep you from writing them—so write them anyway.

*sobs for like the umpteenth time this day and reblogs the fuck out of this*

[Fic] Bullets in the Gun

kotobells:

Dean/Cas – NC-17 – Alternate Universe – Human, Hunter Dean, Detective Castiel, Abduction, Handcuffs, Snowed In, Guns, Mild Painplay, Plot with (Some) Porn

“Sorry, sweetheart, but I’m going to need to borrow your car.“

[ AO3 ]

For darkforetold and the spn_j2 xmas exchange, and the prompts: “assassins/targets or cops/criminals” + “rough sex, gunplay”. The biggest thanks to queeniebroccolini for betaing!

https://www.tumblr.com/audio_file/kototyph/136370309548/tumblr_nh9y0jh1ZX1qcgc0j?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio
http://kototyph.tumblr.com/post/136370309548/audio_player_iframe/kototyph/tumblr_nh9y0jh1ZX1qcgc0j?audio_file=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tumblr.com%2Faudio_file%2Fkototyph%2F136370309548%2Ftumblr_nh9y0jh1ZX1qcgc0j

athenaria:

What Are You Doing New Year's Eve? - Cover 

This song to me is incredibly intimate, vulnerable, & a little timid. So, that’s how I approached it musically. It’s exactly how I’d make my New Year’s move. Listen, share, enjoy. xo

Okay, so–that happened.
That could have gone better.
(It could have gone worse.)
You made it around the sun another time, so–
that’s something.
Of course, home feels a little less like home,
and alone feels a little more like suffocating.
That’s okay. You’re gonna learn
to breath through it, someday.
Maybe next year.
But the good news is,
you cried a lot, this year.
Keep doing that.
It’s one of the most important things
you know how to do, even though
you think you’re bad at it.
You made it through this
sideways hiccup of a year,
even though it waltzed you out the door
with two left feet. You stumbled–
but you kept going.
And that’s something.
So, I’ll drink to us.
I’ll dedicate this next song to survival.
We’ve got our hearts in our teeth
instead of roses,
but if there’s time for one last dance,
by god, lets make it a tango.

THE YEAR IN REVIEW, by Ashe Vernon (via latenightcornerstore)

backstageleft:

baratheas:

phoenixflorid:

housetohalf:

did-you-kno:

Ninjas don’t wear black. They used to disguise themselves as civilians. Unlike ninjas in movies, the real guys were smart enough to know that wearing a black outfit with a face mask wasn’t the best strategy for blending in. Source

But this leaves out the really neat part! The reason we equate the above image with a ninja comes from Kabuki theatre. Within Kabuki theatre there’s a convention of having Kuroko (stage hands) dress in all black (with a full face covering) and move around among the costumed actors in full view, moving scenery, props and costumes. In a similar way, Bunraku puppeteers dress in all black, and only the lead puppeteer’s face would be uncovered. The audience knew to ignore these people and focus on the actors, and to only see that the scene was “magically” changing. So when a play called for a ninja assassin to jump out of nowhere and kill someone, the easiest way to create the surprise reveal was to disguise the ninja in the all black garb of the Kuroko and to remove the face covering and start acting at the last second. This would shock the audience, who were conditioned to not focus on them. Pretty cool, yeah?

WHAT THE FUCK I THOUGHT “STAGE NINJA” WAS JUST A CUTE THEATER TERM FOR CREW. THERE WERE LITERALLY GOD DAMN STAGE NINJAS

AS A FORMER STAGE NINJA I CAN CONFIRM THIS IS BOTH A THING AND AWESOME.

This is the best and most delightful piece of information.