Sam Winchester (
boyking) wrote in
damned_institute2009-08-01 10:07 pm
Entry tags:
Nightshift 42: Ames Street
[from here; fast-forwarding past that thread with permission]
[ Inside Residence #3 ]
The problem with busting down a door instead of picking the lock was that the door wouldn't close properly after. When you were trying to barricade yourself inside from a horde of the living dead, not having a door that could close was a bit of an issue.
As were the very breakable windows. Sam didn't even know if the things outside were smart enough to deliberately smash the windows, but with enough pounding, glass was gonna break whether you meant for it to happen or not. He needed something with no windows and a single entrance with a locking door (preferably with a bolt, but he'd take what he could get). Which meant basement. If there was one. House like this, there had to be one.
No telling if the house wasn't occupied by zombies of its own, either. He didn't really have time to go around checking. Still, he'd rather take his chances in here than out there. Unlike Peter, apparently, the goddamn idiot, and he couldn't help wishing Dean had picked a better time to get his ass sedated. There was no way in hell he'd ever abandon his brother, but it didn't mean he liked having to turn his back on a town full of people or the guy who'd basically saved them both.
Too late to dwell, though. There wasn't anything he could do about it now.
Still holding onto Dean, he hustled him through the house. He was sure it'd been a nice home once, but it looked a bit broken down now, the walls cracked and yellowed, tiles in the dining room peeling. Sam didn't stop for anything. Taking a detour to look for a weapon was a bad idea when he had an armful of barely-conscious Dean and it wasn't as if he had his hands free, anyway. Keeping a grip on Dean was hard enough as it was. Dean wasn't exactly being helpful; he was damn near carrying his brother by the end, almost stumbling his way along. At this rate, his knee was never gonna heal.
He kept expecting one of those freaks to pop out of a closet any second, but either they were really lucky or something much, much worse was in store later. He found the door to the basement near the back of the house. Damn it, if it was locked—
But it wasn't. The knob spun beneath his hand, door swinging inward slowly, revealing pitch black darkness and a set of stairs he could hardly see the steps of.
Stairs. Oh God, stairs.
Stairs were good, technically speaking. They were narrow and let only one person through, two at most with some squeezing. It meant they could avoid getting dog-piled by a bunch of undead corpses. When you were supporting someone's dead weight on a bum knee, though, stairs pretty much just sucked. Looking down them now, Sam thought he might as well have been told to go down a mountain.
So he fumbled for the light switch along the wall, scanning the room to make sure there wasn't anything ready to jump them behind those boxes, then bolted the door and simply eased Dean down at the top of the stairs. They couldn't stay up here too long, but it would do for now. It didn't seem like anything was coming right after them. He figured they were...well, not exactly safe, but they weren't seconds away from getting killed. Which, frankly, was as safe as it ever got for them.
A few minutes, that was all he needed. Then he could go down first, check the area out. The last thing he needed was to drag Dean down only to have to drag him back up 'cause there was a damn zombie lying in wait. It'd be just their luck, too.
Sam let his head fall back against the door with a dull thump before he glanced over at Dean. Dean, who was starting to tip to the side dangerously. Jesus Christ.
It took some rearranging of limbs and a little bit of pushing, but he eventually got Dean to sprawl against his shoulder instead of just tumbling right over his lap. Though that would've made a picture worthy of blackmail and the thought almost made him smile. Almost.
Sam nudged him. "Hey. How're you doing?"
He didn't really expect to get a proper answer, but he was hoping to at least elicit a grunt. Maybe a mumble. Just something to let him know Dean could at least hear him.
[ Inside Residence #3 ]
The problem with busting down a door instead of picking the lock was that the door wouldn't close properly after. When you were trying to barricade yourself inside from a horde of the living dead, not having a door that could close was a bit of an issue.
As were the very breakable windows. Sam didn't even know if the things outside were smart enough to deliberately smash the windows, but with enough pounding, glass was gonna break whether you meant for it to happen or not. He needed something with no windows and a single entrance with a locking door (preferably with a bolt, but he'd take what he could get). Which meant basement. If there was one. House like this, there had to be one.
No telling if the house wasn't occupied by zombies of its own, either. He didn't really have time to go around checking. Still, he'd rather take his chances in here than out there. Unlike Peter, apparently, the goddamn idiot, and he couldn't help wishing Dean had picked a better time to get his ass sedated. There was no way in hell he'd ever abandon his brother, but it didn't mean he liked having to turn his back on a town full of people or the guy who'd basically saved them both.
Too late to dwell, though. There wasn't anything he could do about it now.
Still holding onto Dean, he hustled him through the house. He was sure it'd been a nice home once, but it looked a bit broken down now, the walls cracked and yellowed, tiles in the dining room peeling. Sam didn't stop for anything. Taking a detour to look for a weapon was a bad idea when he had an armful of barely-conscious Dean and it wasn't as if he had his hands free, anyway. Keeping a grip on Dean was hard enough as it was. Dean wasn't exactly being helpful; he was damn near carrying his brother by the end, almost stumbling his way along. At this rate, his knee was never gonna heal.
He kept expecting one of those freaks to pop out of a closet any second, but either they were really lucky or something much, much worse was in store later. He found the door to the basement near the back of the house. Damn it, if it was locked—
But it wasn't. The knob spun beneath his hand, door swinging inward slowly, revealing pitch black darkness and a set of stairs he could hardly see the steps of.
Stairs. Oh God, stairs.
Stairs were good, technically speaking. They were narrow and let only one person through, two at most with some squeezing. It meant they could avoid getting dog-piled by a bunch of undead corpses. When you were supporting someone's dead weight on a bum knee, though, stairs pretty much just sucked. Looking down them now, Sam thought he might as well have been told to go down a mountain.
So he fumbled for the light switch along the wall, scanning the room to make sure there wasn't anything ready to jump them behind those boxes, then bolted the door and simply eased Dean down at the top of the stairs. They couldn't stay up here too long, but it would do for now. It didn't seem like anything was coming right after them. He figured they were...well, not exactly safe, but they weren't seconds away from getting killed. Which, frankly, was as safe as it ever got for them.
A few minutes, that was all he needed. Then he could go down first, check the area out. The last thing he needed was to drag Dean down only to have to drag him back up 'cause there was a damn zombie lying in wait. It'd be just their luck, too.
Sam let his head fall back against the door with a dull thump before he glanced over at Dean. Dean, who was starting to tip to the side dangerously. Jesus Christ.
It took some rearranging of limbs and a little bit of pushing, but he eventually got Dean to sprawl against his shoulder instead of just tumbling right over his lap. Though that would've made a picture worthy of blackmail and the thought almost made him smile. Almost.
Sam nudged him. "Hey. How're you doing?"
He didn't really expect to get a proper answer, but he was hoping to at least elicit a grunt. Maybe a mumble. Just something to let him know Dean could at least hear him.

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"Uh..." Dean said intelligently. It came out as a vague grunt.
Whatever it was, he was sure he'd be cool with it. Dean couldn't help feeling like he'd nod off again, the black haze still so slow in clearing that he'd stopped paying too much attention to it. Sure, he didn't feel like he could keep lunch down, but so what? If he got sick, he got sick and if he didn't? Well, he could work with that too. Feeling so heavy made him cool with just about anything, and even if he couldn't exactly focus on the thing in Sammy's hand - much less look right at it and recognize it for as a pair of scissors, and make the connection it didn't belong in his goddamn leg - he was sure he was gonna be chill with whatever happened next. He was flexible like that. Dean just couldn't get himself to care. The drug-induced darkness, heavy and pressing in on him, seemed a lot more interesting.
Despite the sedatives, Dean jerked when something suddenly went into his leg. It flashed white through the haze. A moan of pain escaped him as he unconsciously flinched, tried to squirm away from his brother, unaware of the fact he wasn't exactly helping things as he weakly tried to push him away.
As cool as he felt with everything in general right now, he wasn't sure he wanted to get too comfortable with this.
Drugged as he was, Dean's perception of time was crap. He had no idea how long that something was digging around in his leg, sending spikes of white pain cutting through his nice little fog, but eventually it stopped. Dean's breathing had hitched a little, even half-conscious as he was, sweat beading on his forehead. The pain hadn't cleared his head, but he was starting to think that maybe he wasn't totally cool with everything and maybe he was starting to have second thoughts about all of this. Dean's leg continued to bleed, red running down to stain his sock and dribble to the floor as his brother finished removing the glass shards from the fresh injury.
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Household scissors weren't meant for delicate work, though. It wouldn't have been as much of an issue if Dean had been alert enough to hold still, but as it was, Sam found himself struggling to keep Dean in place while trying not to do anymore damage to the open wound.
Dean jerked. Sam yanked the scissors back just in time, cursing under his breath. This wasn't the best idea he'd ever had. Too easy to nick something vital like this, end up with Dean bleeding out in minutes. Leaving the glass in wasn't an option, though. He needed to bandage the cut and the pressure from that alone would drive the shards deeper into the flesh.
Sam paused, deciding how best to go about this when a quiet thump came from just above them. He glanced up. Time to move faster. His plan was essentially to wait it out down here; the town had all the signs of a curse and the basic theory of a curse was that if you lived through to sunrise, you were good to go. It sounded easy enough, but frankly, making it to sunrise didn't happen too often. Either way, he needed to fix Dean up just in case they had to get moving again.
Even if they were pretty trapped if anything came at them from down here—having a single exit and entrance only was a double-edged sword—but Sam wasn't thinking about that right now. He'd...deal with it if the time came.
In the end, he just held Dean down as well as he could while he carefully gripped each piece of glass between the scissor blades, talking meaninglessly the entire time because he figured maybe it'd help if Dean could hear him. Sam was midway through another just take it easy, I'm almost done when exasperation won and he muttered, "Damn it, stop moving."
He pulled out the final shard, letting it and the scissors drop to the floor as he exhaled. Christ. Dean looked like absolute crap, paler than even before. He leaned forward, hand on Dean's chest. "You okay?"
He couldn't help the spike of worry, though he knew Dean would be better again once he had a few minutes to recover. Dean's leg was a mess, too, covered in blood. Some of it Sam's blood, in fact, from where Sam had gripped him with his bleeding hand. He needed to at least wash the wound, if he couldn't disinfect it.
For the second time, Sam dragged himself to his feet and limped his way through the maze of junk. Sudden vertigo struck and he grabbed onto a shelf blindly to steady himself. It occurred to him that he hadn't eaten or drank anything since lunch. Hardly the first time he'd run on empty, but it wasn't something where the effects went away just because you did it often enough.
Behind the rows of canned tomatoes was where Sam hit the jackpot. Or—maybe not. But he did find a nearly empty case of bottled water, just three of them left. He took two and returned to Dean. His bloody hand kept slipping, but he managed to unscrew the top and wash out Dean's leg as much as he could before he wrapped the strip of fabric around it. It was crude, but it would hold.
Sam gently pressed the mouth of the bottle against Dean's lips, one hand behind his head to keep him supported. He tipped the bottle just the slightest, trying to coax his brother into taking at least one drink. He didn't want dehydration added to their list of problems. And who knew—if luck was on their side for once, it might even wake Dean up a bit.
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He couldn't swallow the water on his own at first, not when it didn't seem to want to go down and he instead choked on it, coughing it up as his eyes fluttered open again, eyebrows unconsciously scrunching together in discomfort. Dean groaned, a hand making a motion like he wanted to push the water bottle away but not quite making it, like he'd forgot halfway through what he was doing and went "screw it". It took a few more tries and more sputtering before he was able to pull together the coordination to remember how to drink and not just spill it on himself. He managed a few unsteady, small swallows before he started hacking all over again, chest heaving. Water trickled down the corners of his mouth. Between the scissors and the water, Dean wasn't having a fun wake-up call.
Popping to his feet was out of the question. But so was just chilling out like he'd been feeling was an awesome idea, especially when something or another kept interrupting him from sinking into the haze and letting that feeling of heaviness wash over him. In fact, he was starting to think he actually wasn't cool at all with any of this and that cottony feeling in his mouth? It bugged him.
The problem was he couldn't turn his head away from the offered water bottle; trying to get his body to actually do something was totally outta his league right now, even harder than remembering how to drink. Over the next couple of minutes, Dean somehow got through a quarter of the bottle - a lot of it ended up on his clothes whenever he gagged on it, but every now and then he'd instinctively remember to swallow the water. By now he was feeling just plain dizzy, nauseous, the blurs sometimes sharpening into things he almost sorta-kinda recognized before they tilted sickeningly away on him. Dean wondered if he was drunk. He thought he smelled cheap beer. Didn't remember drinking any though, and he hadn't been this shit-faced in a long time either. There was a good chunk of time where he forgot what he was thinking before it came back to him, right when he was already busy retching on the water.
Yeah. He didn't feel awesome. He felt like shit and he couldn't even seem to move.
As if from a distance, Dean could dully hear Sam. There had been a person talking at him, but he hadn't been sure it was his brother. Maybe he'd been imagining it. Now he knew who was trying to friggen drown him, one water bottle at a time.
Dean's eyes opened. This time they stayed open, even if he had trouble focusing on anything and he couldn't even shake off what felt like concrete weighing him down to push that water bottle from his face.
"N'more," he said, confused, only it came out as a barely coherent mumble under his breath. His tongue felt thick in his mouth. Head pounded. This time, a little louder: "Sam?"
He thought it was his brother, at least as sure as he could be when everything just swirled around him. Dean's eyes wandered over to Sam, still with that glassy look. There was a blur leaning over him that looked like it could be a person. Could be Sam. Maybe. Actually he wasn't sure at all, gazing at the blur's general direction without any real recognition, and Dean found himself suddenly distracted by a weird feeling in his leg, his eyes starting to slide away from the person-shaped blur 'cause multi-tasking wasn't something he felt up to right now. Leg or the blur, one or the other.
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This was all as familiar as it was strange. Sam had lost track of how often he'd sat like this with Dean, but it'd be a long time since he'd had to do it, too. It struck him suddenly how close he kept coming to losing Dean. And it wasn't really even new, but ever since—
Sam snapped his attention up as Dean's eyes flickered open. "Dean. Hey."
A louder thump from upstairs and this time, he swore he saw a light sprinkle of dust fall to the ground. Oh, God, was that ceiling gonna give? He hoped that ceiling wasn't gonna give, but it occurred to him that just because those things weren't pounding right outside the door didn't mean they didn't know food was available in the house. The basic drive to feed made them just as dangerous despite their lack of intelligence, if not more. Revenants didn't have the tracking power of vampires, but it was entirely possible they'd caught a scent. He and Dean had, after all, been bleeding when they'd moved through the house.
Sam splashed the remainder of the water over his arm, then wrapped a second strip of fabric around it, tugging on it with his teeth to keep it in place. It was even more of a hasty job than Dean's bandaging, if that were possible.
Looking down at Dean's leg, he realized that the makeshift bandage had been soaked with blood faster than it should've. Damn it. Dean wasn't bleeding out, but with the state he was in—not to mention all the blood he had lost before they'd arrived here—Sam wasn't willing to risk it, either. He needed Dean recovering, not growing worse.
It'd be too much to ask for a first aid kit down here, though. Medicine cabinet was his best option. But it meant leaving Dean down here alone and it meant going up there while a zombie (or more) was wandering about.
He chewed his lip, debating, before finally settling on a decision and getting up again, this time to look for a more suitable weapon. He wasn't comfortable with leaving his brother's side, but those floorboards were definitely creaking up there and the entire house just seemed more and more broken down as time went on, like it was rotting, too. He was fairly certain it wasn't going to cave, but...And Dean wasn't doing a lot better despite his brief moment of lucidity. His eyes were already starting to glaze over again by the time Sam returned with a tire iron.
"Dean." Sam crouched down, wincing at the movement. He cupped his face and turned Dean towards him, trying to get him to focus again. "Dean. I gotta go. I gotta go and I'll be back, but you have to stay awake for as long as you can, okay?"
He pressed the tire iron into Dean's hands. "Here."
Right now, Dean wasn't awake enough to lift it, never mind use it, but just in case—if he woke up or something happened. Anyway, it was better than leaving him completely defenceless. Especially when there was nothing to specifically keep a revenant out, no salt lines or devil's traps. Hell, he didn't even know what'd been used to raise the dead and unless he did, there was no telling what would work or what might actually make it worse.
So Sam took the non-paranormal route, mopping up the blood as well as he could and tossing the ragged t-shirt in the opposite side of the room before pushing several boxes in front of Dean. He wasn't invisible, but at least he wasn't exposed. If all went as planned, none of this would even be necessary.
With one quick look back at Dean, Sam headed up the stairs. Of course, once he was out, it meant the door couldn't be locked again. The bolt didn't lock from the outside. He cast a glance around, shoved a near-empty shelf with a few withering books on it in front. It didn't prevent the door from being opened, but it kept the door from view and maybe that would be good enough to keep it from being noticed at all.
He edged carefully into the living room, picking up a fireplace poker as he did. Nothing so far, but what he'd heard downstairs had come from just down the hall.
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It was only after a moment or two that it might have seemed odd that they remained perhaps a little too silent, and that the smell of rot and decay that was almost everywhere in the town was suddenly much stronger. Then the arms around Sam tightened and both faces turned up to stare at him with dull, accusing and, in the case of the girl in particular, horribly familiar eyes.
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But somehow, Sam just hadn't expecting kids, and that was kind of stupid of him, come to think of it, because towns would've had children just like they had adults. But he hadn't been quite looking down as much as he should've until something grabbed him out of nowhere. He jumped, instinctively pulling away except their grip was far tighter than it should've been, and Jesus her eyes, what the hell--
He would've known if it was actually her and it wasn't, but he couldn't help but hesitate for a split second before he just grabbed one by the arm, trying to dislodge it and knock it into the wall or something because they might've looked like children, but he knew better than to treat them like one. He had no idea what would take a zombie out; from what he'd seen earlier, they could be crippled or knocked down, but as far as killing them for good, he knew there was no way to do that without proper supplies. Which he didn't have.
And really, there was nothing not disturbing about having kids stare at you like you were fresh meat while you contemplated whether or not running an iron poker through them would do the job. He'd run into his share of changelings and child spirits and they were all far creepier than anything else.
Probably why Lilith was so keen on taking them as hosts.
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The boy on the other hand tried to take advantage of Sam's momentary distraction, tightening his own grip and opening his small mouth wide to reveal rotten but disturbingly sharp teeth. There was maybe a moment's pause before he lunged in an attempt to take a chunk out of the hunter's leg.
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But maybe it was easier, in a way, that they looked a lot less human. Even if it made no sense.
Sam jerked back, narrowly escaping a full-on bite, but he stumbled, sudden weight on his knee making his legs buckle and sending him flat on his ass. Something scraped the surface of the skin, though he couldn't tell if it'd drawn blood or not. He scrambled back, eyes on the girl starting to rise to her feet. There was no way he could take one without removing his attention from the other, but sitting there to let them both come at him was a bad idea. He risked the boy and went for the girl instead, snatching up the poker and shoving it forward, trying to drive it right through her chest, pin her to the wall even if he was lucky.
Those dull white eyes might've had something to do with why he'd targeted her first, but Sam wasn't really willing to think on it, too busy trying to get back to his feet. He didn't need that thing tearing out his throat. If he went down, there'd be no one to take care of Dean.
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Sam didn't have time to let his guard down for even a moment however. The other child monster had been dislodged when he'd fallen backwards and then scrambled away, but it was uninjured and, with the poker still caught in what had once been its sister's chest, Sam was temporarily at a disadvantage. And while the boy's eyes clearly lacked much by way of even basic intelligence, he could still charge at Sam's open side, seeking once again to grab a hold of him and bite.
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His side was still bleeding from where the stitches had torn and the other one went right for it, and he had no idea if it was because these were kids instead of adults, but they were moving a lot faster than the ones in town had been. Could've just been time passing, though, the creatures getting stronger as the night wore on. He'd been down there with Dean for a decent length of time.
Either way, an entire night of putting both his and Dean's weight on his injured leg had locked it up. With the added sharp throb in his side, getting off the ground in time wasn't even on the table. Sam threw up his arm instead, teeth sinking directly into the flesh just below the elbow, the damn thing latched on like a dog with a bone. White hot flashed through his arm. He bit back a yell, resisting his initial instinct to just yank, aware that he'd just tear a chunk straight out of his arm that way.
He fumbled for the poker, hoping to hell he could grab it before the corpse decided to chew off a piece of him all on its own. He pulled the weapon free, knowing full well he'd just unpinned the female in the process, and slammed the poker forward, aiming straight for the head this time. He had no idea what damage it would do—like everything in this place, nothing about this situation was matching up with what he thought he knew—but if it'd stun the monster enough to stop eating him, he'd take it.
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But things were not quite done yet. Freed from what as keeping her from moving, the girl advanced on Sam again, no doubt intent on trying to finish what the boy had started.
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He rolled over onto his back, watching the girl go right for him with a freaking hole in her chest, not large, but still, he could damn near see through her body. God.
With no time to actually get out of the way, not with the state he was in, he brought the poker up and let her come at him. He didn't know if it'd be stupid enough or hungry enough to impale itself, but it was his best shot. His only shot, really, because if it didn't work, he was screwed and he knew it.
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The boy hadn't moved. Sam wasn't about to assume that one was dead, but it seemed getting stabbed in the head had at least temporarily stopped him altogether, which was more than he could say for the female. If he could get the girl on the floor, he could stop her in the same way. He had no idea why something like that would work on these zombies when it hadn't on others in the past, but at this point, Sam wasn't up to working out the logistics of it. If it looked effective, he was willing to use it.
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Seemed quiet enough, though. They would've been down here by now, drawn by the ruckus or the blood, if they were here.
He thought about burning the corpses--standard procedure--or at least locking them in a room somewhere because he wasn't entirely certain they were actually down for good, but blood was soaking through his shirt and Dean still needed him. Besides, something told him that if they were gonna get up, it would've happened already.
Gripping the table against the wall, frame hanging crooked over it, he pulled himself to his feet. The vase on the table wobbled and crashed to the floor, spilling water and wilted tulips. He needed a bathroom. The medical cabinet. The house wasn't large, but the thought of making a sweep to search this out suddenly felt far too daunting. He stared at his wrist for a full ten seconds before he remembered that he didn't have a watch. What time was it? How long had it been? An hour or two, maybe? Couldn't have been more than two. They had a hell of a long time to go if they were gonna wait it out till sunrise.
He didn't bother taking the stoker with him. The body was gruesomely pinned to the floor, but the unsettling thought of leaving it that way was offset by the fact that he simply felt a bit more secure knowing that it was pinned. Just in case she reanimated again. He didn't know enough about this particular form of necromancy to say anything for sure, and if it was a curse like he was almost positive it was, that left even more up in the air.
For the first five minutes or so, he tried to take in everything he could see in the near pitch black, find a clue or something to add all this together while he searched his way through, but after he nearly stumbled into a wall, he gave up multitasking. A dish on the top of the microwave yielded a set of keys with a tiny flashlight. It'd do. He tried to take it off the key ring at first, but his bloody fingers kept slipping on the metal and he gave up on that, too.
He finally found the bathroom around the corner and down the hall. He edged inside cautiously. Empty. Not wanting to leave Dean alone any longer than he had to, he didn't take the time to be delicate about his search, just rummaged through the cabinets, shoving items aside (hairspray, cleaning products, shampoo, stacks of towels, prescribed sleeping pills, other stuff he didn't stop to register) until he located a bottle of rubbing alcohol and—no actual first aid kit, but the alcohol plus the clean towel was good enough.
As much as he was fairly certain there were no more zombies left in here, he knew he couldn't just leave it up to an estimated guess. He'd have to make sure. At least the place only had one floor. He really didn't think he could make it up and down that many flight of stairs tonight.
It was only when he passed through the living room for the second time that he caught the stag head over the fireplace. He'd missed it in his haste when passing through earlier, though God only knew how. It seemed pretty damn obvious now that he actually noticed it. It was by no means a normal stag head. It looked...a bit rotten, parts of its skin peeling off in places. He stared at it for awhile, a creeping paranoia making him feel as if it was watching him. Sam figured this was somewhat justified, given the circumstances. It seemed a bit too possible that the head was alive and ready to bite his finger off if he got too close.
Man. Shaking the sensation off, Sam glanced over at the large living room window. The curtains were of heavy fabric and drawn closed. He wanted to know how many revenants were out there in the streets, but he knew better than to reveal that he was inside like that. If they hadn't already known. So far, so good.
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Christ, he hoped he was right about this.
Sam spun around and went back through the house. If the hunting gear was stored in a truck somewhere outside, he was flat out of luck, but if not—if not. It was possible. His only problem was, where the hell did normal people keep their hunting gear when inside a building? This was something he had no expertise on. He couldn't remember the last time he'd actually put anything away in their proper place. Drawers in motels were always left empty. He—they, it was they again—moved on so fast, unpacking was pointless. It made it easier to just grab and go, anyway, if they had to leave unexpectedly, especially if you had ten kinds of illegal weapons on you.
The master bedroom seemed unlikely, and the kids' bedrooms were out of the question. Probably not the kitchen, either. It left the study he'd looked in, an old computer sitting on a rough, heavy oak desk, a bookshelf lining the wall. Closet to the right.
His flashlight was starting to dim. Sam picked up the pace. A search through the closet left red smudges on the doors, but that was about all he accomplished. Damn it. Basement?
A part of him hoped so, hoped really, really hard, but man, if it was in the basement—he hadn't searched down there that thoroughly, too occupied with Dean to even think about it. Still, if there'd been some proper weapons there this whole time—
The corpses were still where he'd left them. Sam went down the stairs as fast as he could, which wasn't very fast, He half-expected Dean to be missing or torn apart on the floor, but Dean was right where Sam had left him. Sam checked him over first to make sure he was doing okay before he began pulling things out from shelves and shoving more junk aside. The bell on an old tricycle jingled cheerfully. He knew he should've tended to the bite in his arm first—it was still bleeding—but right now, he just wanted his hands on a solid weapon. He had no idea how much time passed. All he knew was that he'd nearly turned the basement upside down when his fingers finally closed around a large container, shaped like it'd fit on an ATV.
He flipped it open, casting another glance back at Dean as he did. There was no rifle or shotgun anywhere nearby, but inside, there was a pistol inside. A Glock, ten millimetre. Hunting pistol. And a hunting knife. He loaded the gun, tucking it into his back. He thought about taking another magazine, but frankly, if sixteen rounds weren't going to last them, they were as good as dead.
Making his way back to Dean, he sat down heavily beside his brother. Actually taking the weight off his leg made him that much more aware of how much like crap he felt.
He took Dean gently by the shoulder. His brother was looking at him this time, glassy-eyed, but at least his gaze wasn't sliding all over the place. "Dean."
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Dean had forgot all about Sam, didn't even really register the fact he magically had a tire iron appear in his hands, and instead had been totally engrossed in the weird feeling in his leg ever since he was left alone. His chin had drooped to his chest, eyes half-closed as he stared, seeing some white with some red and it not really clicking that he was bleeding and damn, that might be a good chunk of blood. The next thing he knew, something was shaking him, pulling his attention away from his leg. The person-shaped blur was back, but this time he was able to recognize the voice and hold onto it.
Sam. Oh yeah, he'd been with him, hadn't he, he suddenly remembered.
Dean gazed up at his brother, right at him this time even if his head was just a shifting blur, when suddenly Dean's face went even more pale than before. His coordination was crap, the drug still kicking his ass, but the lunch from earlier kicking his ass even more - he suddenly had got some coordination back and it was just enough to suddenly lurch out, narrowly miss headbutting his brother, and make a fumbling urgent grab at his clothes. He couldn't string together a sentence, but his brother was one step ahead of him anyway, 'cause by the time the nausea hit him, he was being held leaned over to the side, Sam bending him over.
Just barely.
Dean puked, gasping as it felt like he'd thrown up his whole damn stomach, with his guts riding shotgun. Eventually he had nothing left to throw up, dry-heaving and sagging in Sam's arms.
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The tire iron clattered as Dean propelled himself forward. Sam caught him before he could hit the ground, keeping him steady with an arm around his chest and one hand resting on the back of his neck. He simply held him as Dean emptied pretty much everything in his stomach and then some. When Dean was down to dry-heaving, he eased Dean upright again, reaching for their remaining water bottle and managing to get Dean to swallow a sip or two. Not more than that; he didn't want Dean going through round two of throwing up with the water.
Sam shifted them both a few feet away. He would've gone further, but he couldn't find the energy to. This was good enough. No point in giving up their vantage point, anyway.
Making sure Dean wasn't ready to throw up a second time, Sam turned his attention back to the bite on his arm. He unscrewed the cap on the half-full bottle of alcohol, wincing as he splashed some over the wound. The edges were ragged, red and angry. There was no need to take a close look to know that he needed stitches. Of which there were none at the moment. Seriously, what kind of house didn't have a well=stocked first aid kit, complete with sutures and all? Sam thought everyone oughta anticipate slicing a part of yourself open at least once.
He ended up just pressing the towel against the injury, gaze drifting down to Dean's bandaged leg. Carefully peeling back the cloth, he eyed it for a bit, then cleaned it with the alcohol and replaced the bandage. It'd stopped bleeding as much. Sedation aside, he figured Dean would be okay. Nothing he wouldn't recover from the next morning, provided nothing else went wrong tonight.
Sam placed the hunting knife, still in its sheath, next to Dean's hand. He glanced back at the door, as if expecting it to be wide open with zombies pouring down. Adrenaline rush from the fight upstairs essentially gone, the urge to close his eyes began taking over. Sam blinked, shaking it off. Sleeping now would be a bad idea.
He leaned back against the wall, shoulder to shoulder with Dean. For the first time since he first hauled Dean down here, he wondered how Peter and his brother were doing. God, he hoped they were okay. But if he had to be honest, a part of him just wasn't expecting them to be. He knew the odds all too well from experience.