25📑sastiel please

25. librarian/avid reader au


Under the reference desk, on a shelf about the height of his knees, Castiel maintains an irregular but meticulously curated rotation of books. They have no particular relation to one another.  They’re new, most of them, or so old they exist only in the library’s undigitized card catalog (last updated in 1982). He keeps this collection in a cast-off copy paper box with a lid, where his fellow reference librarians won’t see and ask questions about it. It includes both fiction and nonfiction, periodicals, and the occasional length of microfiche. Right now, it also contains a freshly baked banana muffin, carefully separated from old paper and cardstock by the three-ring binder that houses their printer manual.

However, the reference desk is slow this Wednesday, and librarians are known to be particularly nosy. Kevin is wordsmithing his thesis under the guise of working, and Charlie has been staring at her phone for the past hour; when he returns from a coffee run, Castiel is almost unsurprised to find her under his side of the desk, clearly searching for something.

“I smell baked goods,” she says accusingly as Castiel sets her mug on the counter above her head. The script on the side reads, SHE BLINDED ME WITH LIBRARY SCIENCE.

“You know the rules,” Kevin says from his assistant’s station across the way. “No food or drinks around the books—”

“Unless you’re sharing,” Charlie chimes in, slightly muffled. “Cough it up, Novak.”

“It’s not for me, or you,” Castiel says with dignity, pulling out his chair. “Yes, ma’am, may I help you?”

“Oh,” the woman on the other side of the counter says, eyeing Charlie’s position. Her toddler is trying to peer over the edge to see what his mother is looking at. “Could you tell me where the children’s books are?”

“Ooo, what’s in the box?” Charlie says, pulling it out.

“Be careful with that,” Castiel says. “The children’s books are on the lower level— I can take you to the preschooler’s section, if you like.”

“Oh, that would be nice,” the woman says nervously as Charlie pops up with the box in her hands.

“That’s private,” Castiel says to Charlie, and to the woman, “please, follow me.”

There was probably nothing else he could have said to better inflame their interest, and so of course when he comes back up the stairs both Charlie and Kevin have unpacked the box and strewn the contents over the entire reference desk, including microfiche, muffin, and easily thirty pounds of miscellaneous reading material.

“I don’t get it,” Charlie informs him.

“I really don’t get it,” Kevin affirms, holding up a recent land survey and photocopies of a series of newspaper clippings from the 1900s. “Is this for an outside project?”

“Of a sort,” Castiel says, pulling it firmly out of his grip.

“Um,” says a new voice, and Castiel looks up and sees Sam standing in front of the desk with a quizzical look on his face, eyes tracking over the mess spread across the desks.

“There you are,” Castiel says, and hands him the land surveys. “Topographical and soil type maps included. McHenry County is on Drummer Silty Clay Loam. And here are a few articles from the last time the… anomalies you mentioned were seen.” He picks up another book. “Here’s a new folklore compendium put out by the community college. It has a section devoted to Algonquin tribal myth.” Another, bigger book. “The book from Galloise County Public Library on Irish immigrant settlers. I need it back in five days.” A new issue of Popular Mechanic. “For Dean.” A sheaf of handwritten notes. “Isa Wells was in yesterday and I asked her about the… anomalies. She had a few things that might be helpful.” And at the very top of the stack, which now nearly reaches Sam’s chin, Castiel gently places the banana muffin. “For the road,” he says.

It’s a little hard to meet Sam’s eyes with Charlie and Kevin hovering with palpable interest just over his shoulder, but the man’s slow smile is worth it. “You know I’m going to have to eat this before I get in the car,” Sam says.

“They sell them at the end of the street if he wants his own,” Castiel says, which is as good as admitting that he’d gone and bought a muffin specifically to give to Sam, only for Sam and dear Lord. Oh, God.

But Sam smile just broadens, and he says, “I’ll let him know. See you soon, Cas,” with a soft undercurrent of something that leaves Castiel’s face hot, blinking dazedly after him as he turns and heads for check-out counter.

“Whoa,” Kevin says.

Castiel,” Charlie breathes in delight.

“No,” Castiel says preemptively, still blushing, and settles the lid on the box again.

*whispering* destiel 38 for the mini fic thing

38. cop/person getting a speeding ticket au


“Oh, he’s hot,” the drunk and disorderly in the back seat says, leaning over as much as she can to peer through the grate between the headrests. “What’s his name? I can’t read it from here.”

“It’s none of your business,” Castiel says, scanning through the file on the MDT.  Dean Hendrix, 27 and an Illinois native, grins up at him from the screen with the same easy charm he’d layered on when Castiel had first walked up to his window. According to the DMV, his eyes are hazel, but they’d looked very green in Castiel’s flashlight. No history of moving violations, not even a parking ticket, and a criminal record that’s similarly clean. But he’d been going so far over the speed limit it was technically a felony, on a gravel road to boot, and Castiel’s in no mood to grant favors.

“At least tell me if he’s legal,” the woman whines. “If you throw him back here, I want to know how creepy I can be.”

“Ms. Masters, please,” Castiel mutters, eyes on his pen and ticketbook. “Contain yourself.”

“So— a little? A lot?”

Castiel privately decides he will not be bringing Dean back to the cruiser, even if the man is drinking directly out of a whiskey bottle when he goes back to hand him this ticket. He opens his door and the warm night air rushes in, heavy with the smell of rain.

Wind is driving the light rain in sheets, rippling and quiet on the road and the shoulders of Castiel’s clear raincoat. They’re far enough out in the country, in the tall corn and dense soy, that everything outside of Castiel’s headlights is a murky black. The shadows twine long and febrile against the wet ground. Dean gives him another smile when Castiel reaches the car, sprawled loose and relaxed across the front bucket seat. “Hi again, officer.”

“Mr. Hendrix,” Castiel says gravely, and his face falls a little.

“Man, really?”

“The speed limit in this zone is fifty-five,” Castiel says, and tears out the thin pink slip. “You’ll be required to show up in court, whether you plead guilty or innocent, and the court date is set for a month from now. I hope—”

“Hey.”

Dean Hendrix is still smiling but his body is still, his face gone fixed and rigid. His eyes are on his side mirror, slightly wider than they were before.

“Hey, officer. Can I tell you something?”

“What would that be?” Castiel says. There’s something about the way the man is staring at the mirror that makes him uncomfortable.

Dean slowly turns his head to look up at him. “There’s a reason I was speeding.”

“You told me,” Castiel says. “You were trying to get to a party. You’re late.”

“I lied,” Dean says, blinking hard.

“I assumed so, yes. You’re hardly the first person to lie about that.”

“The real reason is that I was trying to get away from something,” Dean says, face drawn, eyes fever-bright. “Something bad.”

Castiel’s unease is growing, and he shifts his weight back on one heel.

“Don’t look back,” Dean says.

Castiel stares at him. “Why?” he says, and then something moves out of the corner of his eye, from the direction of the cruiser behind them.  

Don’t,” Dean says urgently, his fingers twitching, and Castiel doesn’t dare take his eyes off of him. “Don’t look. We’re having a nice conversation about this fucking ticket. Everything’s fine. Is there someone in your car?”

“What?” Castiel asks, dry-mouthed, watching Dean’s hand clench on the side of the car, the other with a white-knuckled grip on his knee.

“Is there someone in your car with you?” Dean repeats, pitching his voice under the susurrus of the rain. “Do you remember where you picked them up?”

“I… she was drunk,” Castiel says, searching for the memory. Truck stop? Gas station? “It was close by.”

“I bet it was,” Dean says. “Just keep looking at me, alright?”

Castiel swallows, and settles a hand on his belt, closer to his gun. “What’s going on?”

“Nothing is going on. You’re giving me a ticket, and I’m trying to talk you out of it, and in a second you’re going to come around the front of the car. Maybe you saw something on the floor that made you suspicious. Maybe you want to make sure my headlights are both working.”

One of the cruiser’s doors slams shut.

Shit,” Dean says, and brings up a sawed-off shotgun he’d been hiding behind his leg.  

Castiel is diving away from the car as Dean brings the barrel up, and his entire focus is on the tall cornstalks pressing up to the sides of the narrow road and the cover they can offer. He’s not looking when the shotgun goes off, and he’s not looking when something shrieks, a raw shredded-metal sound that tears at his ears. The darkness around him is thrashing, roiling like a thunderstorm, and when the shotgun fires again it shudders with red edges.

He’s down on the wet gravel, panting, palms sore from the impact and water soaking into the knees of his pants. He doesn’t remember getting there, and flinches violently when he realizes that someone is standing next to him. He rolls and yanks his pistol out, blinking furiously in the rain, and Dean stops with his hands raised.

“Hey, it’s okay. It’s gone now.”

The darkness has gone flat and black, still like death. Dean has blood dripping down his forehead, all the way to his chin.

“You can put the gun away,” he says. “Really.”

Castiel just stares at him. “What,” he says. “What the hell.”

“Well, look at that,” Dean says. “Right on the first guess.”

Jody Mills and Linda Tran for 12, Donna is welcome if you write poly!

12. writer and editor au


“Oh, hello there,” she says, surprised but making sure her smile is extra big for the little boy who answers the door. “My name’s Donna! Are your parents home, by any chance?”

The boy just stares at her.

“Your mom? Dad?” she tries.

In the hallway leading into the house, a tow-headed girl sticks her head around a corner. “Oh my God,” she says. “Seriously?”

“Seriously,” says the boy, who’s looking at Donna like she’s a particularly underwhelming school pet.

“Um. Maybe we can talk inside—?” Donna starts, but the girl’s head disappears.

Mom,” she hears, “I told you! Someone called the cops on you!”

“What?” An older, female voice.

“I said they called the cops!”

“Who did? Why?”

“I don’t know! They probably heard the screaming!”

“Anyway, our moms’re home,” the boy says, and leans back with his hand on the knob. “I guess you can come in, if you’re a police officer.”

He pulls the door all the way open, then trots away, leaving Donna deeply confused and stranded at the edge of the foyer rug.

“O-o-okay then,” she says to herself, slowly stepping forward, and then yelps in surprise as a door crashes open and a tiny woman in an apron appears, complete with murderous-looking hand trowel.

“I’m not keeping her chained up in the basement, or whatever that sick old man thinks!” she yells, shaking the trowel at Donna.

You might as well be!” a second woman yells through the door. From the direction of the sound and stairs beyond the doorway, she probably is in the basement.

“I see,” Donna says weakly.

The first women whirls and says, “Jody! You are not helping!”

“He’s saving me. We’re going to run away together on his ugly-ass boat, and my next book will be a Jimmy Buffet tribute.”

“Nice try! You’re on contract for four more books with Hachette, including the one that I am supposed to be editing right now.

“We’ll fake my murder, and frame you. It won’t be hard.”

“If you have time to come up with that, you have time to write! Write!”

“Ma’am,” Donna says, and tries not to quail when the tiny woman turns on her. “We, ah, received a noise complaint and—” The woman is swelling like a bullfrog, and Donna hastily pushes out, “And I’d appreciate the opportunity to speak with your partner. Before I go. If that’s okay?”

Before the tiny woman can explode, there are footsteps on the stairs, and Jody emerges to wrap her arms around her wife. From Donna’s perspective, this looks a bit like hugging a nuclear warhead.

“Linda. Hun. If you scare the nice police officer, who’s going to save us from burglars?”

“I have a gun,” the first woman, Linda, mutters.

“And a permit,” Jody adds hastily, looking up at Donna. “Listen, I am so sorry about this. Can I make you some coffee?”

“Ohmygodyourejodymills,” Donna squeaks out, because Black Heart is on her nightstand right this minute in hardcover because she just couldn’t wait that long. The solemn face from the dust jacket is now blinking at her surprise from the above her wife’s head.

“Why, yes,” Jody says, starting to smile. “Yes I am.”

No,” Linda says. “You are an irresponsible and endlessly procrastinating—”

“Can I sign something for you?” Jody says, already moving around Linda towards her. “Come on in, I’ve got plenty of promo copies if you don’t. Let’s talk about your favorite. I’ll get a new pot going just for you.”

“Jody!”

“She’s a guest, we can’t just let her go empty-handed.“

“I don’t want to be any trouble,” Donna says, faint and getting fainter as Jody Mills, the crime writer of the century, puts her arm over her shoulders. Oofda hey.

“You’re trouble! Now leave!”

“Honey, you’re fine. Let’s go sit down.”

#37 Jo and Charlie

#37 – meeting in prison au


“Oh yeah, baby,” Charlie says with a leer. “Come to mama, you’re so pretty—”

Jo chooses not to be offended that it’s the phone she’s talking to, a shiny newest generation iPhone that had somehow made its way out of the warden’s back pocket and down Jo’s workshirt. Charlie makes grabby hands and Jo passes it to her with an eyeroll.

“I’m going to do such bad things to you,” Charlie murmurs, hefting a hammer. “Oh, yes.”

“Do you want to be alone together?” Jo says, leaning back again the wall.

“Oh, honey, don’t be jealous,” Charlie says, already cracking open the casing with deft little taps. “You’re getting at least thirty minutes of head for this one, especially if I can get it hooked up before they call dinner.”

“A good grab, then?” Jo asks, a little strained because there are a bunch of girls right outside this closet who might hear her. Still pleased, though, because she’s had to get pretty damn close to Buckley’s hairy ass to get the thing.

Charlie grins at her, eyes bright and hair falling loose from her ponytail. “That, and I really like giving you head.”

“That’s fair,” Jo allows, and Charlie laughs while she eviscerates the phone.

for the ask thingy: 17, 24 and 26!

ask thingie here (x)

17. favorite AU to write

does this mean, like, favorite I’ve written or favorite I keep coming back to like a murderer to the scene of the crime because ding ding ding the answer to both is “coworkers in love” 

24. favorite scene you’ve ever written

I remember sitting on my bed giggling while I wrote about castiel being taken down by the flu like a deer with a broken leg for shut up

26. story you’re most proud of

too long we have tarried took soooo looooong. it was meant to be an exchange gift and it was overdue BY SIX MONTHS by the time it was published and no one, not even really me, was actually expecting I would ever get it out but (shanya twain): so-o glad we ma-ade it, look how far we’ve come my ba-be-ey… holly jolly also took a lot of perseverance 

number 23 (halloween list)

prompt: children’s footsteps (x)


My beautiful darlings,” sighs the voice over intercom’s crackling lines. Not sad, not sobbing, just resigned; a regrettable but necessary choice made, a mild inconvenience to be suffered. “I do feel badly about this. You must know that I love you.”

Dasha has already beat her hands bloody on the door that will not open, wired glass cutting deep into her ruined fingertips as she claws at it mindlessly. Kaisa pries at the edges, while Umit works at the panel next to it with grit teeth and sweat sliding down her forehead. The dormitory is already warm and growing stifling, an orange light growing the corridor beyond.

“I never thought it would come to this,” the voice, the Fat Man says. “Sometimes I find it hard to believe we’ve lost so much. But they are coming. They’re coming for you, my darlings.”

“Let us out!” Dasha screams at the small hole she’s made in the glass, in the mesh. Wisps of smoke are bleeding through the opening, and the air wavers from the heat. “Let us out! Let us out!”

“Sleep, children,” says the Fat Man urges them softly. “I don’t like to think of you suffering. Lie down and sleep.”

“I have an idea,” Natasha says. She’s standing behind the other girls, watching them work and deliberately keeping her hands from forming fists. Two of the younger girls, the ones who still dance in demi-pointe shoes, sit on the floor at her legs.

Shut up, dura,” Dasha snarls, face a rictus of fear. “Let us out!”

“I can get us out,” Natasha says, though she doesn’t know for sure.

“Children of the Red Room,” the Fat Man muses to himself. “I’d never let them take you back, my darlings.”

Kaisa is looking over her shoulder, thick blonde braids framing her pink face. “How?” she asks, suspicious but desperate. “Where?”

“I need Umit,” Natasha says. “I need her to open the vault.” Umit is the best of them at electronics, though the body-lessons still make her cry. She is at least useful in this one area, unlike many of the other girls.

“The vault!” Dasha says with a horrible cracking laugh. “The vault. Yes, let’s go, deep as deep can get. We’ll bury ourselves and save him the trouble of burning us!”

“There’s nothing down there,” Kaisa says uncertainly, her hands drifting away from the doorframe. “Nothing but the tanks.”

“We could put ourselves in the tanks,” Anitchka volunteers, voice small. She’s watching the older girls try to open the door with an owl-like stare, and makes the mistake of glancing up at Natasha.

“We could,” Natasha says neutrally.  The girl brightens, and gets to her feet.

“What happens when the power goes?” Umit asks, not looking away from the panel.

“Umit,” Dasha says turning to look at her with an awful grimace.

“The door has been shorted,” Umit tells her, low and almost gentle. “I can’t open it. We’re trapped, no matter what we do.”

“We’ll be asleep, if it works,” Kaisa says.  She’s edging back from the door. “We’ll be frozen like the soldiers, and we won’t even know when we die.”

“I’m not going to die!” Dasha screams, throwing herself back at the door. “I’m not going to die! Let me out, let me out—

“Dasha, Dashenka,” Umit murmurs, turning to her, even as the Fat Man says, “It’s almost over. Everything is almost over, my darlings.”

There’s a rumble from somewhere outside their concrete-block room, with its brass beds and its handcuffs at every headboard, and a fine sheet of dust rains down from the ceiling.  

“Everything is almost done,” the Fat Man says, and the rumble becomes a series of approaching booms, one after the other, faster and faster as they race towards the dormitories.

Natasha doesn’t say anything more, just turns and runs, and feels Anitchka grab the back of her thin shirt to keep pace. Dasha or another of the older girls might have kicked her loose, but Natasha’s bloody tundra is only a few weeks behind her and everything in that carefully compartmentalized part of her mind is still raw and red.  She lets her.

The dormitories are linked by an interior hall, lights flickering up and down the cold white plaster, and the hall leads to the stairs. The stairs go down, down, down, Anitchka stumbling and Natasha grabbing her thin forearm in a brutal grip and dragging her along when she falters. She’s lost track of the other one, the youngest girl. She risks a glance back the way she came and sees Kaisa pelting down after her, alone.

They reach the vault door at the same time the lights go, and the dark overcomes them. The noises starts to die away as well, dust thick and choking, the smell of hot metal and smoke acrid in the air. Nastasha’s arm burns from half-carrying Anitchka down the last of the steps.

“Umit?” she asks the darkness, though she didn’t see her follow.

“Dasha wouldn’t… she stayed with her,” the darkness answers in Kaisa’s voice. “Perhaps they’ll still come.”

“Perhaps,” Natasha says.

“The power is gone,” Anitchka says, high and worried. “It’s gone, even if she was here.”

“It means the door can’t shock us when we force it open,” Natasha says grimly, starting to feel her way along the wall.

“What’s the point?” Kaisa cries. “The tanks won’t work, we can’t sleep! We’re going to die here in the dark!”

The rumble above them is almost constant, the grind and grumble of a hundred feet of concrete settling in over their heads like a shroud, like Chernobyl’s sarcophagus. Something else the new, naked Russia would rather bury. “I didn’t come down here to put myself in a tank,” Natasha says as her hand brushes a blistering hot pipe; right where she remembers it. “And the power outage can only help us.”

“What do you mean ?” Anitchka demands, sounding every bit as young as she is.

“Help me open the door, and I will tell you,” Natasha says.

It’s not the most impossible task she’s set herself, but it takes eons to do it in the dark with two girls she does not trust: to follow the pipe to the radiator set into the wall, to burn her hands and wrists feeling in the gritty dust below it, to find the syringe and scalpel, to take them back to the door and use them, as she has imagined for so long, to coax its heavy tumblers into motion.

“What is it?” Kaisa asks, both of them pressed to her back as she works at the door. “What did you find? What are you doing?”

“I need you to hold this,” she grunts, her sweaty palm sliding on the scalpel’s handle just enough for it to nick her.

Tentative fingertips skim her knuckles. “What am I holding?”

“You useless cow , hold it or we really will die here in the dark,” Natasha shouts, straining, and a third set of smaller hands reach under hers to brace it up, shaking with the effort.  Kaisa’s hands join Anitchka’s a second later, and together they force up the last steel tumbler, and the whole door groans.

Luckily for them, the door is built to withstand blunt force, not manipulation. Luckily it is meant to open from the outside (only from the outside). Natasha’s fingers are numb and Kaisa is crying from frustration when it cracks, and Anitchka slips her small thin fingers through it and pulls with all her might.

There’s a weak light here, pale and greenish where it maps the edges of the floor and moves in rippling chevrons towards them and the doorway: emergency lighting. It stings after the darkness, no matter how weak. Natasha looks away, back over her shoulder, and sees that half of Kaisa’s face is slick and dark, a head wound left unattended.

She also sees a ragged, uneven shape on the stairs, lowering itself step by step.

“It’s me,” Umit says steadily, despite the wheeze in her chest and the full weight of the other demi-pointe is in her arms, not moving. “Darina is dead.”

Kaisa squeals and runs for her, dropping the scalpel with a clatter; Anitchka follows wordlessly to help her with the younger girl, who appears to be unconscious. Natasha sweeps out a hand for the scalpel and tucks it in her sleeve. She plants her bare sole against the door jam to force it open wider, and it takes all her strength to open it enough for her body to slip through. The steel is almost a foot thick.

She doesn’t wait for the other girls to follow, trotting quickly into the cavernous vault. The placement of the emergency lights paints everything in a ghoulish underlight, leaving the rounded ceilings dim and haunted and the walls untracked. It doesn’t faze her. She knows where she’s going.

Her feet take her past abandoned desks, paper and folders scattered in panicked haste and rustling with a sound like dead leaves as she picks her way through them. The boxy, paste-grey computers are gutted, screens a blank black and electronic entrails strewn over the floor, the tables, the chairs. Keyboards dangle from their cords, swaying gently as the ominous rumble continues far above them, sound occasionally rising to a muffled crescendo as another bomb is detonated.

There isn’t much time, even if she succeeds in finding what she wants. A few minutes dawdling and they will all die. Natasha picks up her pace, vaulting onto a desk and continuing when the way is blocked by a supply cart. The desktops take her to the far side of the long, long room, to the metal stairs that lead to the offices above.

The book is in the head technician’s office, the prized possession of a man called Lukin. He is not Soviet, not properly; one of Ivan Alexandrovich’s volunteers from the fractured aftermath of the Great Patriotic War. His windows look down on the banks of desks like the boss of a factory floor, and they spiderweb and shatter in large, jagged pieces under blows from an abandoned chair.

Hate has been cored out of her, the hollow where it burned sanded smooth, but Lukin ranks as Natasha’s least-favorite technician. It occurs to her as she picks her way carefully over the glass that the man is probably dead, shot by the Fat Man or burning alive in his bed. The thought makes for satisfying contemplation while she feels her way through the dark room, to the desk, to the secret panel in the bottom of the top drawer, through the combination. 19-17-10. Predictable.

Distantly, she can hear the girls shouting. They’ve followed her into the vault, and as Natasha picks her way back down the metal staircase they appear from around the corner.

“Where did you go?” Kaisa cries, hurrying towards her. Natasha is growing impatient with her constant emoting.

“What is that?” Umit asks, immediately noticing the book.

Natasha doesn’t answer her or acknowledge Kaisa. Anitchka, she sees, has already seen and understood. The girl runs on ahead of her, towards the deep silo, and is already descending the ladder when Natasha reaches it. Natasha swings onto the metal bars with the book tucked awkwardly to her chest, and begins to ease her way down one-handed.

“You want the soldier,” Umit says above her, quietly.

There are many soldiers. There is only one soldier.

“He will get us out,” Natasha says.

“Who?” Kaisa says in confusion. She is a very stupid girl, Natasha thinks; possibly the stupidest.

“I will stay here with Galya,” Umit says. “In case you fail.”

Natasha nods once, feeling for the next rung, and holds the book more tightly.


aka the au where the winter soldier acquires five daughters and becomes the world’s most overprotective NIGHTMARE DAD

1. chernobyl’s sarcophogus
2. ivan alexandrovich serov’s russian version of operation paperclip