_strangeangels_ ([info]x_strangeangels) wrote,
@ 2008-04-21 22:19:00
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Entry tags:challenge: spn_het_love, genre: au, genre: gen, genre: teen!chesters, rating: pg-13, series: strange angels

If You Try Sometimes

If You Try Sometimes

Word Count:  2570
Characters:  Sam, OFC (Gen)
Overall Rating:  PG-13 (Language, Angst)
Feedback: Absolutely. Concrit is always welcome.
Disclaimer:  The Winchester boys aren't mine, but I'd make Dean wear boots all the time if they were.
Spoilers/Warnings:  Passing references to events in 3.08 as well as the pilot.
A/N:  Written for the Birthdays Winchester Style challenge over at [info]spn_het_love.  I selected the prompt: Sam's first birthday at Stanford.

Beta(s): [info]embroiderama is the yin to my yang (or maybe it's the other way around).  Once again, she went above and beyond on this one.  The good parts are all her.  Any mistakes?  Those are all me.

Summary:  His birthday wasn't something to commemorate with noisemakers and chocolate cake.



The last time they celebrated Christmas, Sam was nine. The Sapphire Barbie and the sparkly glowstick had been replaced by the .45 he still kept wrapped inside of a towel and shoved into the back of his underwear drawer.

It was the first holiday lost to the rhythm of the road, swallowed up by a father’s secrets and the truth about monsters under the bed.

Dad’s mouth went thin when Sam decided that Easter fell into the same bucket as Christmas and Dean was the one who got pissed about not celebrating Halloween; Sam and his ‘puppy dog eyes’ had been a one-way ticket to tons of candy, especially when Sam held out his bag and whispered ‘trick or treat’ in his Luke Skywalker costume. Thanksgiving was the day where Dad would pile them both into the Impala and head for the nearest all-you-could-eat buffet, Dean talking around mouthfuls of mashed potatoes and gravy while Dad listed all the reasons they had to be thankful.

Like the fact that Dean getting out of his first hunt alive or how Sam’s research on a local legend had saved all three of their asses were really things anyone should have to be thankful about, a family full of freaks that counted their blessings by the number of scars that had already begun to fade.

Dad had ruined the only Thanksgiving Sam wanted to celebrate with a phone call.

But Dad drew the line when it came to Sam’s birthday.

If it had just been a card left on the nightstand in the hotel or even a piece of chocolate cake during dinner, it still would have been annoying. Dean wasn’t exactly low-key about it, leading an entire diner full of strangers in an off-key version of “The Old Grey Mare” instead of goddamn “Happy Birthday” or waking Sam up in the middle of the night by blowing into Sam’s ear with a kazoo because Sam would just rip up paper noisemakers. Dad would give him a present wrapped in newspaper but Dad’s idea of what a kid wanted for his birthday consisted of charms and rock salt and old copies of fairy tales before Walt Disney Studios got hold of them.

It was just another line on the huge list of things that Dad would never get.

You didn’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that your mother dying six months after you were born – six months to the day – wasn’t a coincidence. All it took was a couple of weeks at Pastor Jim’s, scrounging through his library and reading some books on numerology, but it was no use trying to convince Dad that your birthday wasn’t something to commemorate with noisemakers and chocolate cake.

It was no use trying to convince Dad of anything once he made up his mind.

Sam had learned that lesson the hard way.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


Waking up to the alarm clock, instead of Dean blowing "Happy Birthday" into his ear, was a relief.

So was eating his scrambled eggs and sausage without having to suffer through seven verses all saying Sam wasn’t what he used to be or the one waitress who always laughed at the way Sam would fold his arms and glare at Dean from the other side of the booth. Going to class and researching the Civil War at the library was the one of the best things to happen on his birthday in years, second only to meeting up with some of the guys for soccer before dinner and homework and his Early American History term paper.

Sam steeled himself for the beep of his answering machine, not wanting to listen to another special message from Dean.

Thanksgiving had been the worst; Dean kept calling back until he finished the story about the chick who tied him up to a vibrating bed and did things that sure as fuck made Dean thankful for quarters. Dean’s Christmas call ended with Dad’s voice bellowing in the background and a ‘yes, sir’ that made Sam’s throat swell – only goddamn Dean would be stupid enough to call him during a hunt just because it was Christmas. New Year’s Eve was a short ‘hope you’re getting some, too, Sammy’ followed by a girl’s giggle in Sam’s ear but at least Sam knew they were okay.

The only sound was the catch of the door closing behind him.

Sam powered up his laptop, organized his notes and waited for the phone to ring. He managed to type five hundred words while he waited for the phone to ring, an introductory paragraph and the basic premise for his argument about Reconstruction. He typed another three hundred and eight words before Sam decided that he might as well get the kazoo-blowing over with because, if he didn’t, there was no way in hell that he’d get the rough draft of his paper finished by morning.

Dean’s cell phone went straight to voice mail.

Sixty minutes and four hundred and fifty two words later, it was still going straight to voice mail.

And it didn’t help that his father’s gruff voice was the only thing ringing in Sam’s ears, reminding him that every choice had a consequence during the calm before the storm – before Sam screamed that he was leaving for Stanford with a duffel bag over his shoulder and Dad screamed that Sam was never coming back if he walked through that door. Dean had just sat there sharpening a knife, the slow switch of the blade brushing against stone, and the last thing that Sam saw before he slammed the motel room door was Dean staring at the floor.

“Fuck.”

Sam gave up after the third time.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


He used to call Dean back, when the loneliness overshadowed the fight they had after Dean found the acceptance letter, but the only person Sam could blame was himself.

It was easy to make excuses about it – Sam was too caught up in classes and learning how to live with people who believed that witches only lived in fairy tales and that ghosts could be friendly. Dean didn’t want to hear about Sam’s misguided attempt to rush a fraternity or the fact that he was thinking about becoming a lawyer. Dean wanted to talk about chicks and his car and how kick-ass Dad was on their last hunt. Dean’s idea of college was getting drunk, acting stupid and wearing a toga – and since Dean didn’t want to wear a toga, he could get drunk and act stupid and still score three hours with a chick anytime that Dean wanted to in the back of his car.

It probably would have been easier if Sam had actually gotten drunk but talking to anyone was better than sitting around listening to the click of his keyboard and the rustle of his notes, waiting for the call that wasn’t going to come.

Pastor Jim sounded surprised when Sam said ‘hello’ but he asked polite questions about Stanford, whether or not Sam was making friends and what classes he was taking. Sam didn’t mention the frat guys he fell in with during his first semester and Pastor Jim never mentioned Dad except to say that he had just finished tracking something in Arizona. When Sam didn’t jump at the bait, Pastor Jim excused himself with a polite ‘goodbye’ and told Sam to take care of himself.

But there was still one more person he could call.

Dean didn’t hold the Winchester record for being stupid and Sam was already dialing the number before he even realized it. He had scrounged the number up back in October after promising himself that he would never call – but Sam had the number memorized by the time he decided that fraternities sucked ass and that it might be nice talking to someone besides Dean.

It was a mistake but Sam decided to let the phone ring three times before he hung up.

She picked it up on the first ring.

“Jesus Christ, Eric! If you call me one more time, I’m gonna have to go over there and make you stop calling me every five minutes and you know what’ll happen when I get over there. You’re just gonna rip off my clothes and I’m never gonna finish my proof before I have to turn it in tomorrow.” She snorted. “So you have to ask yourself if you wanna get some tonight or if you still wanna be getting some three weeks from now after I’ve gotten an ‘A’ in Differential Equations.”

“Uh…”

“I’m still waiting for your answer.”

“I’m sorry. I dialed the wrong number. I…” Sam swallowed, remembering the way her scarf clashed with her hat and the clang of the door closing behind her as Sally Friedman ran back into school. “Sally, I didn’t forget…”

Her breath came out in a huff.

“I didn’t forget you either, Sam. It’s not like you gave me much choice ‘cause your exit was kinda spectacular for a fifteen-year-old, getting dumped in the snow two days before Thanksgiving with nothing but a notebook and a head cold to show for it.” Sally’s voice cracked, just enough for Sam to feel like an asshole. “But I thought you had this really shitty rule about not staying in touch with people after your Dad makes you pack up and leave town in the middle of a goddamn blizzard.”

“That was my Dad’s shitty rule.”

“If they start handing out prizes for shitty rules, your Dad’s shitty rule gets the blue ribbon.”

Sally was tapping something in the background, probably her mechanical pencil on the table while she stared down at her proof with a frown on her face and tried to figure out what to say next.

“Is there a reason you’re calling me?” Sally asked finally.

“I…just wanted to talk to someone.”

“And I was the only person left on the planet you could think of? I know your brother’s always going on about screwing waitresses and eating pie and that gets as old as Janice going on about her rich fiancé and her puke-colored bridesmaids’ dresses but there’s gotta be someone out there you can talk to who actually knows what you look like now.”

“It’s hard making friends when your family is always moving.”

“Staying in touch with the ones you had probably isn’t a bad place to start, Sam. There’s this little thing called meeting people halfway and, if you did that, I think people wouldn’t spend six months figuring out ways to pay you back for being so shitty and not sending them birthday cards. You wouldn’t have big sisters helping their little sisters make voodoo dolls and rubbing your head with Nair or painting red pimples on your face.”

“And here I thought Dean got that bright idea about putting Nair in my shampoo all on his own.”

“Dean actually did that?”

“Oh, yeah.” Sam grinned. “But only half of my hair fell out so Dad shaved off the rest of it. Dean spent months calling me ‘jughead’ and yelling ‘hoo-ah’ at me every time I walked out of the bathroom.”

“Oh, God. I really missed you.” Sally laughed and Sam closed his eyes, feeling her hand wrap around his before she dragged him to the copier. “You know Janice still calls your brother ‘Dan’ and thinks he drove a big black Oldsmobile and she still gets pissy every time she goes to a McDonald’s and remembers how he stood her up.” She stopped laughing when Sam didn’t say anything. “Are you okay, Sam?”

“I’m fine,” he said.

“It sounds to me like you’re wallowing.” Sam could hear the smile in her voice. “And if you don’t stop wallowing, I’m gonna have to kick your ass.”

“Like you could kick anyone’s ass,” Sam retorted. “I bet you still hit like a girl.”

“I’d make an exception for you,” Sally shot back. “I only got a ‘C’ on that stupid paper ‘cause I didn’t wanna watch those dumb movies by myself after you left.” She sucked in a breath and Sam smiled in spite of the hard lump in his throat, waiting for the next inevitable rush of words.

But Sally just sighed.

“You better get happy, okay? I don’t want you calling me ten years from now just to tell me how much your life sucks.”

“And you better get an ‘A’ on your proof. If I get a phone call next week blaming me for Eric’s dry spell, I’m going to have to kick your ass.”

Sally snorted and that was their cue for ‘goodbye’ but neither of them said a word. Sam could still hear her breathing on the other end of the line, her fingers tapping rhythmically on plastic. There was more that he wanted to say, too – but ‘I’m sorry’ wasn’t big enough and the truth was too big to tell anyone.

“Sam?”

“Yeah?”

“Happy birthday,” she said softly before hanging up.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


Sam was halfway through dialing Dean’s cell phone number again when someone knocked briskly on his door. Sam set the handset into the cradle and waited for the kazoo but the only faces he recognized when he opened the door were the guys who watched chumbara movies with him on Saturday nights and his study partner in Freshman English.

She was standing right in front of everyone, holding out a cupcake loaded down with chocolate frosting and multi-colored sprinkles. It was topped off with one lone candle as bright as her smile and the only thing you could do when Jessica Moore smiled at you like that was to smile back.

“Make a wish, Sam.”

He took a deep breath and blew out the candle, letting Jess grab him by the hand and drag him out to the lounge. Someone had decorated it with two lonely streamers curled around the window and blue and white balloons on green ribbons that were already dropping onto the food-stained shag carpet. There was a table set up with punch and snacks and a couple of presents wrapped in bright paper on it – skin mags just like Dean would have given him and a mix tape from Jess. She popped it into the boom box set up on the bookshelf and Zach handed him a plastic glass full of punch and vodka, both of them laughing when Sam’s face screwed up at the taste.

Maybe Sally Friedman was right after all.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


Sam was drunk by the time he staggered back to his room and pitched face forward onto his bed. Some idiot had bumped a car outside and the alarm was going off, an incessant beep that screeched through his head. Even wrapping a pillow around his ears didn’t help and Sam stood up slowly, stumbling across the room to call campus security.

The red light on his answering machine was blinking.



A/N:

The title of this story is a song lyric from “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” by The Rolling Stones.

This one just popped into my head in the midst of a break – I had to take wee breather finishing up the last chapter of a WIP.

I based this story on the assumption that Sam was at college for four years (thanks, in no small part, to Kripke’s admission during the 2006 Paley panel that the two years of a rift between the brothers that was noted in the pilot “was a mistake” because Sam was originally supposed to be younger in the pilot) while acknowledging the pilot’s statement that Dean hasn’t spoken with Sam in two years. So, Sam’s still talking to Dean in my fanon timeline – even if it is only sporadically at this point.

I did look up the academic calendar year for Stanford just to make certain that Sam would still be in a dorm on May 2 – which is highly probable (particularly if he was taking classes during the summer term.) I did base this on the 2008-2009 academic year but, hey, I made the attempt.

I confess that I took liberties with the numerological meanings of the number six. It’s supposed to symbolize luck, creation, perfection and beauty. I warped it to apply to Sam and Azazeal. On the other hand, six is also considered “the number of man” and is referenced in the Book of Revelations as: “This calls for wisdom. If anyone has insight, let him calculate the number of the beast, for it is man's number. His number is 666.”

Who knew that there was a gender-based difference between fiancé and fiancée? Not me…until I looked it up.

Chumbara is the term used to classify the classic “kung fu” movies of the sixties and seventies. I decided that Sam would stubbornly refer to them that way.

Lastly, I would be remiss in not pointing out that, if you liked Sally Friedman, there’s more of her in The Square Root of Pi and Iambic Pentameter and other Methods of Elizabethan Torture. Those stories aren’t gen though, given the age of the characters and their ratings, they are definitely gen-friendly hetfics. ;-P



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[info]geminigrl11
2008-04-22 05:07 am UTC (link)
Spectacular. LOVE the continuation of this series (Sally is my hero).

Leaves me feeling (as always) like if someone would have just GIVEN a little (like JOHN, not that I am bitter), everything could have been so much less painful. Sam kind of lost and sad at school and wanting the very things he'd run from always tugs at my heartstrings. And yet, leaving really was necessary--not just for selfish reasons, but so he could BE, which is kind of summed up for me by the ending with Jess. (And I love the Dean-Jess symmetry).

MORE! :)

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-22 05:40 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much! Sally is definitely one of those lucky creations I've stumbled across since this whole fanfic thing started for me. ;-P

Sam kind of lost and sad at school and wanting the very things he'd run from always tugs at my heartstrings. And yet, leaving really was necessary--not just for selfish reasons, but so he could BE, which is kind of summed up for me by the ending with Jess.

Thank you for picking up on that. I really was trying to show Sam stuck in the middle of finding himself (which, based on the Freudian slip in the original entry, was based on some of my own college experiences) and getting desperate until he finds that balance. In my mind (though I've not written it), Sam's relationship with Sally when they were freshman in high school gave her the guts to go on being Math!Girl and not holding herself back. I was happy that she could give some of that back to Sam, in a small way.

And there was a lot of Dean-Jess symmetry, although the cupcake was probably less annoying than the kazoo. I love the idea of Jess being Sam's friend before the relationship evolved.

MORE! :)

There will be. I've long had the glimmer of a story where they meet while the boys are on a case. But this one wrote itself so I didn't tell the muse it was writing the wrong story. ;-P

Edited at 2008-04-22 05:41 pm UTC

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[info]xphoenixrising
2008-04-22 05:25 am UTC (link)
Aww! So cute! This was very well done!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-22 05:42 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much!

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[info]joans23
2008-04-22 05:28 am UTC (link)
Aw, his answering machine was blinking. It makes me happy :)

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-22 05:43 pm UTC (link)
Of course it was! ;-P

I really tried to make Dean a "presence" even though he wasn't technically in the story. Kripke may never forgive me for making that presence a kazoo and a blinking light on an answering machine.

Edited at 2008-04-22 07:10 pm UTC

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[info]gwendolyngrace
2008-04-22 02:36 pm UTC (link)
Awesome. I love the way Sam ticks off the holidays and how they observed (or didn't). I'm a big fan of any fic that reconciles why Dean hadn't bothered him in "two years" when he'd been away for four, so yay for that.

And Sally! Sally is still Sally and yay for Sam deciding to call her, and even more YAY for Jess and her cupcake.

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-22 05:49 pm UTC (link)
Thank you!

The holiday section was actually my favorite part of the story, particularly the line about "a family full of freaks" because it just screamed Sam and how angry I suspect he was after the "Christmas betrayal" - how it got worse the more he realized the whole American Apple Pie life was something he would never have.

But I digress...

I'm a big fan of any fic that reconciles why Dean hadn't bothered him in "two years" when he'd been away for four, so yay for that.

I tried. I still don't know what happened, in my mind...but I did try.

And Sally! Sally is still Sally and yay for Sam deciding to call her, and even more YAY for Jess and her cupcake.

Yep! I didn't actually intend for Sally to crop up - initially, it was all about Jess - but I felt that Sam was searching for something familiar to help him ground himself...and Sally was the way I decided to do that. She was fun to write if a little bittersweet (even if her emphasis on words still makes me cranky) and it was the closure I felt that they deserved due to the circumstances of Sam's departure.

As for Jess, I like to think that they were friends before they were anything else - although I was amused by the fact that she obviously planned the party since she had the time to make Sam a mix tape. ;-P

Edited at 2008-04-22 07:10 pm UTC

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[info]emgrace4
2008-04-22 03:31 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, Sally was back! Nice job with this!! :D

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-22 05:49 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much!

I suspect we haven't seen the last of Sally...but she sure as hell surprised me when she showed up in this one. Initially, a lot of that conversation was supposed to be with Jess.

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[info]emgrace4
2008-04-22 06:45 pm UTC (link)
It's funny how that happens! Plus I loved it with Sally. She knows Sam, and Jess is just this new girl that he doesn't have a history with. It worked really good with her.

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-22 06:50 pm UTC (link)
Sally rocks!

And you're right - she worked in that scene much more effectively than Jess because they did have that history. I could see her getting away with saying some of the harsh things Sam needed to hear and he would listen because it was Sally and not his study partner telling him that friends need to be held onto.

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[info]embroiderama
2008-04-22 07:18 pm UTC (link)
“But only half of my hair fell out so Dad shaved off the rest of it. Dean spent months calling me ‘jughead’ and yelling ‘hoo-ah’ at me every time I walked out of the bathroom.”

LOL! Oh god, Dean would *so* do that.

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-23 11:35 pm UTC (link)
I amused myself mightily by writing that line - especially knowing how Sam's long hair was probably one of his personal forms of rebellion against his military father.

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[info]halfshellvenus
2008-04-22 07:20 pm UTC (link)
I always come into these "mid-stream," because I don't read the het universes they come from.

I liked this one very much, though I felt frustrated too (as I'm sure you intended) with John for being SUCH a needless killjoy, with Dean for being such an ass, and with Sam for not understanding that Dean's loud, obnoxious love is still love after all. Sam gets an inkling of that toward the end, but then he gets sidetracked before he does something about it.

I really loved Dean's secret Christmas phone call with John bellowing in the background. That was so poignant and sad and perfect. Hunt or no hunt, John would have found a reason for a Christmas phone call to be wrong, and I love that Dean does it anyway.

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-23 11:48 pm UTC (link)
I always come into these "mid-stream," because I don't read the het universes they come from.

Yeah... I was hoping the story would work without knowing that background. I wanted to have someone Sam knew tell him some hard things...and Sally just sort of cropped as the person to do that. I had actually intended the "meeting people halfway" conversation to come from Jess but the muse was unwilling...

I can say, of all the het stories I've written, the one I would recommend to folks who aren't necessarily fond of het is The Square Root of Pi. I always viewed it as a coming of age story for Sam, so writing about his first girlfriend made sense, but it's just as much a character study of Dean as it is of Sam.

Not that I'm trying to lure you to the dark side of het or anything. ;-P

I liked this one very much...

Thank you! It still feels uneven to me...but that could have been Sam's frame of mind while I was writing it. Part of my fanon is that Sam is just so angry about what he's already lost that he colors his father and Dean in poorer lights than they deserve, you know? But he still yearns for what he's known and misses his family even though he doesn't want to go back to the way things were.

I really loved Dean's secret Christmas phone call with John bellowing in the background.

Thank you so much for picking up on that detail! It was one of my three favorite bits in the story, along with Sam's description of Thanksgiving and Sally's comment about Dean, waitresses and pie. ;-P

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[info]halfshellvenus
2008-04-24 12:07 am UTC (link)
I was hoping the story would work without knowing that background.
Oh it did-- I don't want to scare you. The two of yours I've read have been non-Het, and it was only in reading other comments that I realized they were moments in a larger universe. This one made sense all by itself, truly.

Part of my fanon is that Sam is just so angry about what he's already lost that he colors his father and Dean in poorer lights than they deserve, you know?
I think John deserves everything he gets from Sam-- especially after that "don't come back" ultimatum. But for Dean... that 'rejection' (if you will) is such a typical, adolescent thing that I can easily see Sam doing that. In some ways, it could also be how Sam finally separates his identity from Dean and gathers his own independence. Kids usually go through this with their parents, but in many ways Dean WAS also a parent to Sam, and so he suffers in that same splitting-off "you don't know a damn thing!" kind of way.

But he still yearns for what he's known and misses his family even though he doesn't want to go back to the way things were.
I prefer to think that he misses them, so this works well for me. I have issues with Stanford Sam and S1 Sam treating Dean like dirt, especially when Dean so clearly adored him. But do I understand why Sam just could not be what John and Dean wanted, and what an awful position that put them all in? Oh yes. :( That irreconcilable dilemna is one of the things that so attracted me to the show, actually. :)

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-24 12:38 am UTC (link)
Oh it did-- I don't want to scare you.

*whew*

I didn't want to pull out the anvil of exposition, so I'm relieved that it worked. (Although, to be fair, if I couldn't write either of them in a gen fic by now, I really need to find another hobby... ;-P )

I think John deserves everything he gets from Sam-- especially after that "don't come back" ultimatum. But for Dean... that 'rejection' (if you will) is such a typical, adolescent thing that I can easily see Sam doing that.

I agree with you on both counts. I am not part of the "John is evil" camp - he raised his sons to be soldiers and that shows in how he treated them. I think he did so genuinely believing that it was necessary and out of regard for them both. But kids don't need a drill sergeant for a father...

I wrote Dean as being particularly obnoxious less because it annoyed Sam but more to show how hurt Dean still is, and the lengths he will go to be noticed - even in a small way - by the brother he raised. (Your parent comment was highly apropos. That's part of why Dean so willingly sacrifices himself for Sam, in my opinion.)

I prefer to think that he misses them, so this works well for me.

I do, as well.

I know that Stanford was a necessary part of Sam's character development because it does help him define a sense of self...but, as someone who left my family to find myself, I think he still would have missed them. I think I tap into that part of myself when I write Sam as a teenager - there's a lot of anger involved in my own personal story because of how I was raised (which you know and I won't belabor) but there are still those moments that I remember as being "good."

But I digress. This is totally outside of your comment, I'm afraid. (Been packing all day so my brain is worn out. But I *will* talk meta with you all night if you let me - even if it makes no sense... Fair warning and all that. ;-P)

Gah, maybe Sam is really my inner Mary Sue. ;-P

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[info]theladyscribe
2008-04-22 07:23 pm UTC (link)
YAY!

My personal fanon re: the mix-up in the time continuity is that Dean showed up for Sam's birthday and got him drunk. And the next day he met Jessica Moore while nursing a hangover. But that has nothing to do with your fic.

ANYWAYS, this was AWESOME, as usual. I adore Sally and I love that you included both her and Jess, and that her relationship with Sam is distant enough that I don't feel like he's cheating on her or anything by being with Jess.

I love the flashback-y type stuff with Sam's previous birthdays and holidays (I LOVE that Dean calls him on holidays to let him know that he's getting laid and Sam should be getting laid too if he knew what was good for him). It breaks my heart just a little that John is still so adamantly against staying in touch with Sam (even if he does occasionally drive past the campus to make sure he's okay).


Lovely and awesome story and man, do you make me wish for more Sally.

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-24 12:19 am UTC (link)
I think there should be more stories where Dean gets Sam drunk. Or where Sam is drunk, period.

Hmm... I already write a decent drunk!Charlotte. Since I seem to be on this gen kick, they could sit around and complain about Dean. ;-P

ANYWAYS, this was AWESOME, as usual.

*is blushing*

I really didn't intend to bring in Sally - Jess was originally going to have the "meeting people halfway" conversation but I realized it had more punch if it came from someone who had been in that situation than Jess. But I did want to write something with Jess in it, too. (Someday, my Sam/Jess fic will come.)

Thank you for picking up on some of my favorite bits - the holiday section was the one part I was the most proud of from a writing perspective. ;-P

Lovely and awesome story and man, do you make me wish for more Sally.

Well, this is me. Apparently, characters can take over my muse and hold it hostage. (I also have the first three paragraphs of another Sally story written...)

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[info]starpixie16
2008-04-22 10:42 pm UTC (link)
Absolutely wonderful, as always. I wasn't even expecting Sally to pop up, but I'm thrilled that she did!

...Dad’s idea of what a kid wanted for his birthday consisted of charms and rock salt and old copies of fairy tales before Walt Disney Studios got hold of them.

I liked that little detail. It just seems so fitting that Sam would be familiar with those fairy tales for that reason.

... and the last thing that Sam saw before he slammed the motel room door was Dean staring at the floor.

Oh, Dean...the image of that scene speaks volumes. The way Dean stares at the floor so he doesn't have to watch his brother leave...it's heartbreaking.

I can't even begin to quote my favorite part of Sam and Sally's phone conversation because I loved every word of it. :D

It was topped off with one lone candle as bright as her smile and the only thing you could do when Jessica Moore smiled at you like that was to smile back.

I really liked the inclusion of Jess here. It was a little like Sam said goodbye to his past then opened to the door to his future. Just lovely. :)

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-24 12:23 am UTC (link)
*is blushing*

I actually wasn't expecting Sally to show up, either. I really meant most of that conversation to happen with Jess but...Sally is becoming as increasingly irksome as Penny that way. ;-P

Oh, Dean...the image of that scene speaks volumes. The way Dean stares at the floor so he doesn't have to watch his brother leave...it's heartbreaking.

I'm glad it worked. I worried that it was a little OTT. (Even though this particular version Dean is a wee bit more emotional than he is in the show...) I think he spent a lot of his time like that, stuck in silence listening to the two people he'd die for scream at each other...

I can't even begin to quote my favorite part of Sam and Sally's phone conversation because I loved every word of it. :D

*hee*

I am still a little in love with the "hoo-ah" joke and pretty much anything Sally said about Dean and pie. ;-P

I really liked the inclusion of Jess here. It was a little like Sam said goodbye to his past then opened to the door to his future. Just lovely. :)

*whew*

That is exactly what I was hoping in the end, so I am now relieved to know that it worked. Sam seemed so uneven (which, emotionally, was what was going on) and I felt that the execution suffered...

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[info]contrary_lady
2008-04-22 10:58 pm UTC (link)
That was just awesome! I loved your OFC & the way you brought Jessica into the story as well. :)

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-24 12:07 am UTC (link)
Thank you so much!

Sally, I confess, is one of my favorite original characters and she worked perfectly for what I was hoping to accomplish with the conversation. I thought it made a nice transition from Sam's past to his present, since he seemed so lost to me during most of the story.

Edited at 2008-04-24 12:07 am UTC

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[info]muses_circle
2008-04-23 01:00 am UTC (link)
Have I mentioned how much I love Sally? I love Sally, dude. She's awesome! ♥

Nice job!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-24 12:06 am UTC (link)
Thank you so much!

I'm a little fond of Sally myself. My muse thinks there's another story or two left with the name Sally in it. (And I might be happier with it, though, if it finished the story with Charlotte in it and let me work on the one with Alice. ;-P)

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try
[info]quirkies
2008-04-23 06:01 am UTC (link)
Aww! The Sam Angst is wonderful - without being whiny, just true to his interpretation of their lives. The appearance of Sally made me squee like a fangirl, but then the conversation got me all choked up. Ultimately, Jessica's smile felt like a huge relief (What? She has a happy ending! *holds fingers in her ears* I can't hear you.)
Perfect Winchester slice of life.

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Re: try
[info]elanurel
2008-04-24 12:03 am UTC (link)
The Sam Angst is wonderful - without being whiny, just true to his interpretation of their lives.

Thank you! I worried that it made the story a little uneven, because his view of his life is uneven - he wanted normal and is angry that his life wasn't...but I think he misses those things all the same.

The appearance of Sally made me squee like a fangirl, but then the conversation got me all choked up.

Dude, I actually cried when I wrote it. We all know I'm emo but, still... ;-P

And I did want to make some sort of transition from Sam's old life to his new one, and the Sally/Jess parallel seemed like a good way to do that since Dean wasn't answering his cell... The original conversation was actually supposed to be with Jess but I think it meant more coming from someone who was hurt by Sam not staying in touch...

I just didn't expect Sally to show up when I started writing it.

*she's almost as bad as Penny*

Perfect Winchester slice of life.

*smishes*

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[info]pheebs1
2008-04-23 07:54 am UTC (link)
Sally is awesome. Another excellent, strong creation from you!

"“Oh, yeah.” Sam grinned. “But only half of my hair fell out so Dad shaved off the rest of it. Dean spent months calling me ‘jughead’ and yelling ‘hoo-ah’ at me every time I walked out of the bathroom.”"

HA Ha HA! as is Janice calling Dean, Dan!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-23 11:55 pm UTC (link)
Sally is awesome. Another excellent, strong creation from you!

From the person who created my favorite OFC, you've just earned yet another big hug when we get the chance to meet IRL. You realize that I have a list. (And may be going to London sooner than I thought for work!)

You're the second person to point out the "hoo-ah" speech so far. I must have hit comic gold with it or something. ;-P

*smishes*

Edited at 2008-04-23 11:56 pm UTC

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[info]pheebs1
2008-04-24 08:48 pm UTC (link)
I look forward to that RL meet muchly!!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-25 03:28 am UTC (link)
Me, too! And it might be as early as June!

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[info]pheebs1
2008-04-25 07:46 pm UTC (link)
Whee, that's exciting!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-25 10:04 pm UTC (link)
I was told that if the auditors need to go to London, I have to go to. (Twist my arm.)

If that happens, I'll be flying out on a Tuesday, working Wed-Fri, and then flying back on Monday. I figured that would give us plenty of time to hook up and do stuff.

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[info]pheebs1
2008-04-25 10:38 pm UTC (link)
It would. OOH YAY! soon as you get word of dates, lemme know so I can sure to be around, WOO!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-26 01:19 am UTC (link)
You will be the first person I tell. ;-P

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[info]misskatieleigh
2008-04-23 03:17 pm UTC (link)
lovely as always sugar. I like the bittersweet ending the most.

*hugs*

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-23 11:51 pm UTC (link)
*smishes*

Thank you so much. I was going for something of a bittersweet feel, the whole "choices you make have consequences" theme. I think Sam was lost during most of the story and he's only on the verge of finding himself.

I did refrain from using the anvil of exposition after the blinking light. ;-P

Edited at 2008-04-23 11:56 pm UTC

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[info]coell
2008-04-23 08:00 pm UTC (link)
Cute story!

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[info]elanurel
2008-04-23 11:48 pm UTC (link)
Thank you so much!

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