Feel free to send me requests. Just know that I only write for mlm, nblm, and nblnb. I donât do xreader stuff but I can do stuff with original characters.
Key:
đž=Wholesome/Fluff
đ„=Angst/Dark
đ„=Smut/NSFW
đ=Suggestive/Slight NSFW
âïž=Imagine/Scenario
Fandoms:
Supernatural
đžđ„ Finding the Words | Dean Winchester x Castiel
đž Lost in Translation | Dean Winchester x Castiel
đž Night Moves | Dean Winchester x Castiel
đž The Quiet After | Dean Winchester x Castiel
House MD
đž A Unlikely Prognosis | Wilson x House
Part One Part Two
đžđ„ A Different Kind of Medicine | Wilson x House
sometimes when chronically ill/disabled/neurodivergent people say âI canât do this thingâ they really mean âI can technically do this thing I guess, but not without pretty significant repercussionsâ and I really need more fully-abled people to understand the validity of that
The Quiet After
Tags: Post-Canon, Fix-It, Heaven, Established Relationship, Mutual Pining (Resolved), Domestic Fluff, First Kiss, Soft Dean Winchester, Gentle Castiel, Happy Ending
Note: I thought I would post this fic early to celebrate #destiel trending on tumblr. I might continue this fic if enough people like it or if I feel like it.
Summary:
After saving the world one final time, Dean and Castiel find themselves in a corner of Heaven built from comfort and hard-won peace. Under endless starlight and soft mornings, they finally allow themselves the one thing they always fought for but never claimed: love. A gentle, post-canon reunion fic about healing, stillness, and learning how to exist when the world stops ending.
First posted on my AO3 account: ficxworm
âŒïžSTORY BELOW THE CUTâŒïž
In Heaven, the summer night stretched out endlessly above them, a blanket of stars scattered across the velvet sky. The hum of cicadas filled the warm air, and the metallic groan of the Impalaâs hood echoed as Dean shifted his weight, lying flat on his back with his hands folded behind his head.
Next to him, Castiel sat more rigidly at first, cross-legged, his trench coat pooled around him. But as the minutes passed, he gradually leaned back until he, too, was staring upward in silence.
âYou ever wonder,â Dean said, voice low, âhow many of those stars we actually saved?â
Cas turned his head, eyes tracing the edges of Deanâs profile. âAll of them,â he answered quietly. âEvery world, every being that would have been wiped out if we hadnât stopped Chuck. Even the ones that will never know your name.â
Dean gave a short breath of a laugh, not mocking â more like disbelief edged with pride. âHell of a way to make a difference.â
They lay in silence again for a beat. Then Dean shifted his gaze to the stars, mouth twitching into a thoughtful line. âYou ever think we deserved it? Peace, I mean. Heaven. You. Me. Sam. A life after all that?â
Castiel was quiet for a long moment. âI used to think...no. I thought I had to earn it, endlessly. That I wasnât made for peace.â
Dean turned his head toward him. âWhat changed?â
Cas didnât look away from the sky, but his voice softened. âYou did.â
Deanâs breath caught slightly. He sat up halfway, resting on one elbow. âCasââ
âYou always saw something in me that I couldnât,â Cas said, eyes flicking over to meet Deanâs. âEven when I was broken. Even when I lost myself. You reminded me of who I wanted to be.â
Dean was quiet. The air was warm between them, thick with unsaid truths. Finally, he spoke, barely above a whisper.
âI kept waiting, yâknow. For things to get bad again. For something to go wrong. âCause thatâs always how it went. We get a little peace, then boom â world ends again.â
âBut it didnât,â Cas said.
Dean nodded slowly. âAnd I guess Iâm still figuring out how to live in the quiet.â
Castiel shifted, laying his hand gently beside Deanâs on the warm metal. Their fingers barely touched. Dean didnât pull away.
âI meant what I said,â Castiel murmured. âIn the end. About loving you.â
Deanâs throat tightened. His fingers curled slightly, brushing Casâs knuckles. âI know. I... I just didnât know what to do with it.â
âWhat about now?â
Dean met his eyes, green locked on blue. âNow I think...I finally believe I get to have that. That maybe I get to love you back.â
Casâs breath hitched, and then he leaned in â slow, deliberate. Dean met him halfway, closing the distance, lips brushing softly like a question neither of them had to ask anymore.
It wasnât desperate. It wasnât frantic. It was gentle. Earned. A kiss years in the making, beneath a sky they helped save, in the quiet of a world that had finally stopped ending.
Â
~lazy time skip~
Â
The light in Heaven didnât come from any sun â not really â but somehow it still felt like morning.
Dean stirred slowly, the cool sheets soft against his skin, the hum of peace lingering in the air like a lullaby. He blinked a few times, adjusting to the gentle glow filtering in through the window. Not because it needed to be there, but because it felt right. Cas said Heaven adapted to what brought you comfort. And this â this cabin in the woods, all golden light and dust motes â it reminded Dean of mornings at Bobbyâs. Of quiet, and safety, and something close to love.
And now? It reminded him of Cas.
A weight shifted beside him. Dean turned his head to find Castiel lying there, eyes already open, watching him with that small, serene smile he never seemed to get tired of.
âMorning,â Dean murmured, voice thick with sleep.
âGood morning,â Cas replied, voice soft and steady. âYou slept well.â
Dean snorted, a sleepy half-laugh. âSlept like the dead.â
Casâs brows furrowed for a second before the joke registered, and he gave a quiet, warm chuckle. Dean loved that â how Cas was still learning human humor, even here. Even now.
They lay in comfortable silence for a few minutes. No rush. No hunts. No danger. Just the sound of the breeze in the trees outside and the occasional creak of the old wooden house â all perfectly simulated, of course. But it felt real. He felt real.
Dean rolled onto his side, brushing his fingers against Casâs. âWe got anything on the schedule today, Angel?â
Castiel considered it. âI believe... we have nothing to do but exist.â
Dean smirked. âSounds like a damn good day.â
Cas tilted his head. âWould you like pancakes?â
Dean blinked. âYou make pancakes?â
âIâve been practicing. Jack helped.â
Dean sat up slightly, propping himself on one elbow. âYouâre telling me the son of Lucifer is teaching you how to cook breakfast?â
âHe prefers waffles, but he said pancakes were a âclassic human bonding experience.ââ
Dean chuckled and leaned over to kiss Cas on the temple. âRemind me to thank the kid.â
They got up slowly. Dean pulled on a flannel â always a flannel â and padded barefoot into the small kitchen. Cas was already at the stove, wearing a worn apron that said âAngel in the Kitchenâ, a gift from Charlie (who stopped by their corner of Heaven more often than not, always with stories and cookies).
Dean leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, watching Cas carefully flip a pancake with more concentration than he ever gave an archangel.
âHey, Cas?â
Castiel turned slightly. âYes?â
Deanâs voice was softer now. âYou happy?â
Cas blinked, as if the question was unexpected â or maybe just unnecessary.
âI am,â he said, turning back to the pan. âYouâre here.â
Tags: Destiel yearning for eachother in a sickeningly beautiful way.
Summary:
When a broken-down Impala strands Dean and Cas in the middle of a Nebraska summer, what starts as a routine hunt turns into something slowerâsomething real.
Haunted by old songs, late-night drives, and the ache of almosts, they find themselves tangled in the quiet space between what they want and what they're afraid to reach for.
Somewhere between thunder and starlight, they stop runningâand start remembering what it feels like to fall.
First posted on my AO3 account: ficxworm
âŒïžSTORY BELOW THE CUTâŒïž
They landed in Nebraska in early July. Not because they wanted to, but because the hunt brought them there.
A simple case: vengeful spirit, old farmland, a family too scared to sleep. It was supposed to be in and out. One salt-and-burn and theyâd be gone before the sun baked the fields dry again.
But the Impala had other plans.
Dean lifted the hood and muttered a long string of curses that didnât solve the problem. âAlternatorâs shot,â he finally said. âCould be a few days.â
Heâd expected Cas to offer a miracle fix. Instead, Cas just stood beside him, gaze flicking up to the warm orange horizon. âThen weâll wait.â
Dean didnât ask why Cas didnât fly off. He didnât want him to.
They got a room at a crooked little motel outside town. Paint chipped off the siding. Buzzing neon sign out front that barely spelled âVACANCY.â
Two beds. A dusty TV. One radio near the office playing the kind of music Dean grew up withâworn vinyl voices crackling through the quiet.
On the second night, the song came on.
âOut past the cornfields where the woods got heavyâŠâ
Dean froze halfway through a sip of beer, head tipping toward the radio like it was pulling him back in time. âMan. Havenât heard that in years.â
Cas glanced over from his seat by the window. âYou know this song?â
âYeah.â Dean leaned back. âThis oneâs a classic. Old flame kind of song. First times. Summer nights. The stuff that doesnât leave.â
Cas tilted his head. âYou liked that?â
Dean looked at him. Really looked. No trench coat. Just a rumpled button-up and quiet eyes full of stars. âDidnât really get to have it.â
Cas didnât answer. But he didnât look away, either.
The third night, they drove.
No destination. Just Dean behind the wheel and Cas in the passenger seat, the windows down, the wind threading through the empty space between them.
The music played low. Dean didnât talk much, didnât need to. Every now and then he glanced sideways and caught Cas watching the road, his profile soft in the glow of the dash lights.
Deanâs fingers twitched on the steering wheel.
He wanted to reach over. Just a brush of knuckles. Just⊠something.
But he didnât.
Cas broke the silence eventually. âYou used to do this a lot.â
Dean raised an eyebrow. âDrive aimlessly?â
âDrive to feel less alone.â
Dean swallowed. âGuess some habits donât die easy.â
Cas didnât respond. But his hand stayed close to Deanâs on the seat between them. Not touching. Just near.
God, that near was worse than anything.
It stretched like that for weeks.
Cas didnât leave when the car was fixed.
He found excuses. A broken radio tower. A local haunting. A series of small, forgettable problems they could help with. And Dean let it happen.
They kept sharing motel rooms. Kept staying up too late. Beer between them, stars above them, the same damn song playing on the radio more nights than not.
Dean started watching Cas when he wasnât supposed to.
In the way his fingers curled around a coffee cup. The way he looked at a thunderstorm like it was speaking to him in a language Dean would never understand. The way he sat too close.
And then one night, in a lull between words, Cas asked, âWhat would you have done, if things had been different?â
Dean didnât pretend not to understand.
âMaybe Iâd have had a summer like the song,â he said, voice thick. âBack seats. First times. Somebody who made the dark feel less⊠heavy.â
He didnât look at Cas when he said it.
But he felt the answer in the way Cas breathed.
Felt it in the silence between them.
The next part came slowly, painfully.
One night, Cas fell asleep on the other bed. Dean watched him from across the roomâwatched the rise and fall of his chest, the way his hand curled under the pillow, the way his brow furrowed like he was still waiting for something, even in sleep.
Dean lay back. Stared at the ceiling. Wondered what it would feel like to reach for that hand.
The storm rolled in just before dawn. Rain on the windows, lightning flickering like some distant memory. Dean got up. Walked to the window. Didnât expect the words that came out of his mouth.
âI wish I met you before all of this.â
Cas stirred behind him. âWould it have made a difference?â
Dean didnât turn around. âMaybe Iâd have kissed you by now.â
The silence that followed was deafening.
Casâ voice was low. âThen you still can.â
Dean turned, eyes catching the softest flicker of something open on Casâ face. But he didnât move.
Not yet.
Rain still tapped gently at the window. A low rumble of thunder faded into the distance. The silence between them pressed like a weight, heavy and waiting.
Dean stood with one hand resting on the window frame. He could feel Casâ gaze on his back, steady and warm.
âThen you still can.â
Dean let the words hang there. Let them echo.
He swallowed thickly. âYou donât get to say stuff like that and expect me to think you mean it.â
Cas sat up slowly on the edge of the bed, the blanket pooling around his waist. His voice was quiet. âI wouldnât say it if I didnât.â
Dean turned around.
Cas was looking at him like he always didâserious, focused, but now there was something else underneath. Something soft. Something fragile.
Deanâs voice cracked around the edges. âYou have no idea what that would mean for me.â
âI think I do,â Cas said. âBecause it would mean the same for me.â
Dean dragged a hand down his face, pacing a step to the left like he couldnât contain the storm inside his chest. âThis isnât a one-night kind of thing, Cas. I donât⊠I donât do that with people who matter.â
âYou matter to me,â Cas said. âYou always have.â
Dean let out a bitter breath of laughter. âYou know how long Iâve wanted to tell you that? How long Iâve beenââ He stopped. Bit the words off like theyâd betray him.
Cas rose from the bed and took a slow step forward. âThen say it now.â
Dean looked at him.
Really looked.
The low lamplight caught in Casâ hair, his skin glowing like something holy. There was distance between them, but it didnât feel empty. It felt alive.
Deanâs voice dropped to a whisper. âI want you.â
Casâ breath caught.
Dean shook his head, pacing back a step. âBut itâs not just wanting. IâI need you, Cas. And that scares the hell out of me.â
âI know,â Cas said. âIt scares me too.â
Dean let that sit for a long moment. His jaw clenched. He reached out, just barely, like he might touch Casâ armâthen pulled back.
âBut if I start this,â Dean said, âIâm not gonna be able to stop.â
Cas stepped closer, slow and deliberate.
âThen donât.â
But Dean didnât move.
Not yet.
Because this wasnât some quick-flash summer fling. Not with Cas.
This was the song you didnât sing out loud because it hurt too much. The memory that never faded, even when you tried to drown it in whiskey or women or years of running.
So instead of kissing him, Dean reached up and cupped Casâ faceâjust held him there, thumb brushing across his cheekbone.
Cas leaned into it.
Dean pressed their foreheads together, closing his eyes. âNot tonight,â he murmured.
Cas nodded. âOkay.â
Dean could feel him breathing. Steady. Patient.
That was the worst part. That Cas would wait. That heâd give Dean all the time in the world. And it made Dean want to give him everything he had.
But not yet.
He pulled back, slow and reluctant. âLetâs just⊠sit, for now.â
Cas smiled, small and sad. âThatâs enough.â
They sat on the bed, side by side. Their hands found each other in the quiet.
And outside, the rain kept falling.
Eventually the rain had stopped, but the air was still thick with itâlike the storm had gotten into their bones.
Dean didnât sleep much. Not after what he said. Not after what he almost did.
He kept his back to Cas most of the night, eyes open, staring at the shadows on the wall. But he could hear him breathing. Could feel the space between their beds like it was still buzzing from the words theyâd shared.
In the morning, sunlight streamed in soft and gold.
Cas was already awake, sitting by the window with a cup of coffee in both hands. He didnât speak when Dean stirred. Just looked at him like none of it scared him.
Dean sat up slowly. âYou sleep okay?â
Cas tilted his head. âI didnât sleep much. But I didnât mind.â
Dean rubbed the back of his neck. âAbout last nightâŠâ
âYou donât have to explain,â Cas said. âYou were honest. I respect that.â
Deanâs throat tightened. âStill feels like I shouldâve done something.â
âYou did.â Casâ gaze was gentle. âYou stayed.â
That did something to Dean. Made his chest ache with the weight of how seen he felt. Like Cas understood the things he couldnât say out loud.
Dean stood, brushing past Cas on the way to the sink. His shoulder bumped Casâ, and he froze for just half a breath too long before continuing.
When he glanced back, Cas was smiling.
Not in victory.
Just in quiet understanding.
The stars were out in full that nightâclearer than Dean had seen in a long while. No streetlights, no neon signs, no hum of motel A/C units. Just the hush of the earth and the sky hanging wide above them like it had secrets it hadnât told anyone else.
Theyâd driven until the road ran out, pulled off onto a dirt patch beside a windbreak of trees, cornfields stretching out in every direction. Dean had killed the engine but left the radio on low.
And there it was againâthat songâdrifting out of the old speakers like it had been waiting for them.
âOut past the cornfields where the woods got heavyâŠâ
Cas stood beside the Impala, hands in the pockets of his coat, his eyes turned upward like he was listening to something the rest of the world couldnât hear.
Dean leaned against the passenger door, arms crossed, watching him.
Something about the way Cas looked in the starlight made Dean feel like he was looking at something sacred. Not in a holy way. In a human way. The kind that got into your chest and stayed there.
âI used to think this song was just about getting laid,â Dean said, trying to keep his voice light. âBackseat stuff. You know. Typical high school fantasy.â
Cas turned slightly, his gaze drifting to Dean. âAnd now?â
Dean let out a breath, the corners of his mouth tugging downward. âNow it feels like⊠trying to hold onto a moment you know is gonna slip through your fingers. Like you already miss it, even while itâs still happening.â
Cas said nothing for a beat.
Then, softly: âYou donât have to miss this. Not if you let yourself have it.â
Deanâs stomach tightened.
âYou always make it sound so easy,â he murmured.
Cas took a step forward. âItâs not easy. But itâs real.â
Deanâs throat worked around something hard and invisible. âYou scare the hell out of me, Cas.â
âI know,â Cas said. âBut Iâm not going anywhere.â
That hit harder than Dean expected.
He looked down, then slowly walked around the car, gravel crunching under his boots. Cas didnât move. Just watched him come closer, until they stood barely a foot apart.
Dean reached outâcarefully, like Cas might shatter if he touched him wrongâand rested his hand lightly on Casâ chest.
He could feel the steady beat of his heart through the thin fabric.
And something in Dean cracked open.
âYou were the only good thing in the worst parts of my life,â Dean whispered. âI donât know what the hell to do with that.â
Casâ hand came up, covering Deanâs.
âMaybe,â Cas said, âyou let yourself feel it. Just this once.â
Dean leaned forward slowly. Gave Cas every chance to move. But he didnât.
Their foreheads touched again, a quiet ache between them.
And when Dean finally kissed himâit wasnât rushed. Wasnât messy or unsure. It was slow. Deep. The kind of kiss that didnât ask for more, because it already was more.
Cas kissed him like heâd been patient for years.
Dean kissed him like it was the first time heâd let himself need someone.
The song played on in the background.
âI woke last night to the sound of thunder / How far off, I sat and wonderedâŠâ
When they finally broke apart, Dean didnât step back.
He rested his forehead against Casâ, breathing him in like he was the only steady thing in the world.
âThis is gonna ruin me,â he whispered.
Cas gave a small, wry smile. âNo. This is going to save you.â
And for once, Dean let himself believe it.
The kiss lingered like smokeâlike something that would leave a taste behind, no matter how long the night stretched.
Dean didnât move.
He kept Cas close, their foreheads still touching, their hands still held between them.
And for once, the silence wasnât heavy. It was full.
After a moment, Cas pulled back just enough to look Dean in the eyes. âYouâre shaking.â
Dean huffed a laugh and didnât deny it. âYeah, well. Turns out letting myself want something doesnât come easy.â
Casâ thumb brushed lightly across Deanâs knuckles. âYou donât have to want it all at once. Just a little at a time.â
Dean swallowed hard, nodding. âThis⊠whatever this is⊠I want to try. With you.â
Casâ smile was soft and genuine. âThatâs all Iâve ever wanted.â
The sky stretched wide and quiet above them, stars blinking like distant promises. A breeze stirred through the cornfields, rustling like music beneath the last notes of the song fading out.
âStarted humminâ a song from 1962 / Ainât it funny how the night movesâŠâ
Dean tilted his head back, looking up at the sky with a breath that came easier now. Then he looked at Cas againâreally lookedâand something in his chest settled.
âCome here,â he murmured, tugging Cas toward the Impala.
They leaned against the hood together, side by side. Dean threw an arm around Casâ shoulders, and Cas leaned in like it was the most natural thing in the world. Deanâs hand found the back of Casâ neck, his thumb tracing lazy circles into his skin.
âYou know,â Dean said after a while, voice quieter now, âthis is the first time Iâve felt like I wasnât running toward somethingâor away from something. Just⊠standing still. And itâs not so bad.â
Cas looked at him, blue eyes shining in the starlight. âThatâs what love does.â
Dean turned to him, mouth quirking into a smile. âYeah? You think thatâs what this is?â
Cas didnât flinch. âI know it is.â
Deanâs breath caught, and for once, he didnât try to laugh it off. He didnât deflect or run. He leaned in, pressed a kiss to Casâ cheekâslow, reverentâand then rested his head against Casâ.
âThen I guess Iâm in it,â he murmured. âAll the way.â
And for the first time in what felt like forever, Dean Winchester felt like he wasnât just chasing a memory.
I just found out em dashes are one of the biggest indicators of chatgpt. As a chronic em dash user this pains me. I DO NOT support the use of ai to create stories and claiming them as your own.
I just read a gorgeous destiel fic that I need to rec here!
psalm 40:2 by unicornpoe, rated E
âHow the fuck do you know my name?â Dean hisses.
The man doesnât look scared. He is watching Dean like there is nothing else worth watching, lips a little parted, eyes a little soft. And blue. Real blue, like the ocean on a postcard.
The ice spreading down Deanâs spine makes him shiver.
âI suppose you could say Iâm your guardian angel,â the man murmurs. His breath fogs pale between them. All of him is unnaturally warm, like Deanâs touching somebody with the sun sewn up beneath their skin. âI have known you, Dean Winchester, for a very long time.â
*
Dean meets an angel who says he's from the future. It all gets a lot more complicated from there.
Tags: Dean has a thing for Enochian. Or more specifically Cas speaking Enochian.
Dean had heard Enochian before. A lot of it. Most of the time, it was by angels or chanted in the middle of some apocalyptic showdown. But hearing it come out of Casâ mouth? That was⊠different.
It started when they were researching a caseâsomething about a cursed artifact with angelic inscriptions. Dean was only half-paying attention when Cas, hunched over the bunkerâs map table, started muttering under his breath. The low, melodic cadence of Enochian filled the room, sharp syllables rolling off his tongue like a song. Dean froze mid-sip of his coffee, the sound sending a strange tingle down his spine.
âDean?â Cas looked up, brow furrowed. âAre you all right?â
Dean blinked, suddenly aware heâd been staring. âHuh? Yeah. Fine. Just⊠zoned out.â
Cas nodded and returned to his muttering, completely unaware of the effect he was having. Dean felt his ears burn as he quickly fled to the kitchen, pretending he needed a snack.
For the next few days, Dean couldnât get it out of his head. Every time Cas so much as opened his mouth, Dean wondered what it would sound like if he spoke in Enochian again. He started finding excuses to stick around when Cas was translating something, even though Sam kept shooting him weird looks.
âYou okay, man?â Sam asked one night, finding Dean lurking near Casâ room with no apparent reason.
âYeah, Iâm fine. Why wouldnât I be fine?â Dean snapped, way too defensive.
Sam raised his hands in surrender. âJust checking. Youâve been acting⊠weird.â
Dean knew he was acting weird. But how was he supposed to explain that hearing Cas speak Enochian made his knees weak? That it wasnât just the words but the way Cas said themâwith such reverence and powerâthat made Dean feel like he was seconds away from spontaneously combusting?
It all came to a head during a late-night research session. Dean had been avoiding being alone with Cas for days, but Sam had conveniently âneeded sleep,â leaving them alone in the bunkerâs library.
Cas was reading an old scroll, his voice soft but deliberate as he translated. Dean sat across from him, pretending to take notes but mostly just fidgeting. His heart thudded louder with every word Cas uttered.
âDean,â Cas said suddenly, snapping him out of his trance. âYouâre distracted.â
âOf course, you donât,â Dean muttered. He got up and started pacing, hands on his hips. âLook, itâs stupid, okay? But when youâre speaking that angel mumbo jumbo⊠it does something to me.â
Cas blinked, his head tilting like a confused puppy. âIt⊠does something to you?â
âYeah,â Dean admitted, finally stopping to face him. âI donât know what it is, Cas. Itâs justâdamn, itâs like hearing you speak it is⊠hot.â
Casâ eyes widened, and for a second, Dean thought heâd screwed everything up. But then Cas stood, stepping closer, his expression softening. âYou find it attractive?â
Deanâs throat went dry. âYeah. I mean, I didnât mean to, butâhell, Cas, you could read a grocery list in Enochian, and Iâd probably lose my mind.â
Cas stared at him for a long moment before a small smile tugged at his lips. âI didnât realize my language could have that effect on you.â
âYeah, well, now you know,â Dean muttered, feeling the heat creep up his neck. âSo⊠you gonna make fun of me or what?â
âDean,â Cas said, his voice low and steady. âI would never make fun of you for your feelings.â
Dean looked up, surprised, and found Cas standing closeâtoo close. Casâ hand hovered near his shoulder, hesitant, before finally resting there.
âIâm glad you told me,â Cas said, his eyes searching Deanâs. âAnd⊠for the record, Iâve always found the way you say my nameâjust my nameâvery attractive.â
Deanâs lips parted, his heart skipping a beat. âCasâŠâ
Cas leaned in, and Dean didnât stop him. He couldnât. The moment their lips met, it was like every awkward moment and unspoken feeling finally made sense. Casâ hand slid to the back of Deanâs neck, grounding him as they kissed, slow and deep.
When they finally broke apart, Dean grinned, breathless. âGuess this means I canât complain when you go full angel mode.â
Cas smiled, his eyes crinkling at the corners. âIâll try to use it sparingly.â
âDonât,â Dean said, pulling him in for another kiss. âI like it too much.â
The aroma of roasted turkey filled the air, mingling with the faint scent of cinnamon and nutmeg. House slouched on the couch, eyes glued to a football game he didnât care about, a beer in one hand and the remote in the other. He was already three comments deep into mocking the playersâ poor strategies when Wilson emerged from the kitchen.
âHouse, if you donât help me with this stuffing, I swear youâre eating frozen pizza for dinner.â
House tilted his head, pretending to weigh his options. âFrozen pizzaâs not terrible. Less effort, more cheese. A win-win.â
Wilson set down the tray he was carrying with a heavy sigh. âFor once, can you just pretend to care about tradition?â
House smirked. âI am. Iâm traditionally annoying.â
Wilson shot him a look but couldnât help the small smile that crept onto his face. Thanksgiving had always been a mixed bag for both of them. Wilson, ever the sentimentalist, tried to uphold the rituals. House, true to form, found ways to undermine them. Yet somehow, they always ended up hereâtogether.
Reluctantly, House pushed himself off the couch, favoring his leg as he limped into the kitchen. âFine. But if I burn this stuffing, itâs on you.â
Wilson rolled his eyes. âYouâre not going to burn it. Just stir it while I handle the gravy.â
House picked up the spoon and gave a half-hearted swirl. âYou know,â he started, âThanksgivingâs a weird holiday. We gorge ourselves, argue about football, and pretend weâre thankful for things weâre going to complain about tomorrow.â
Wilson didnât look up from his task. âAnd yet, here you are. Complaining and stirring at the same time. Truly, a multi-talented man.â
House chuckled, a rare, genuine sound. âCanât let you have all the fun.â
They worked in companionable silence for a few minutes, the sounds of bubbling pots and the occasional clink of utensils filling the space. House, despite his protests, found a strange comfort in the domesticity of it all. He glanced at Wilson, noticing the way he meticulously whisked the gravy, brow furrowed in concentration. It wasâŠendearing.
âHey,â House said suddenly, breaking the quiet. âWhy do you do this every year? The whole cooking-for-two thing. You could just go to a fancy restaurant or something.â
Wilson paused, spoon in hand, and looked over. âBecause itâs not about the food, House. Itâs about being with people who matter.â
House arched a brow. âSo, no one else answered your invites, huh?â
Wilson shook his head, laughing softly. âNo, idiot. I choose to spend it with you.â
For once, House didnât have a snarky comeback. He just nodded, stirring the stuffing a little more thoughtfully.
When everything was finally ready, they sat at the small kitchen table, plates piled high with turkey, mashed potatoes, and all the fixings. House eyed the spread with mock suspicion. âWhat are the odds you poisoned something?â
âVery low,â Wilson replied, taking a bite of his own food. âIâd miss your charming commentary too much.â
They ate in comfortable silence for a while, the tension of the day easing with each bite. Eventually, Wilson raised his glass. âTo surviving another year. And toâŠwhatever comes next.â
House clinked his bottle against Wilsonâs glass. âTo tolerating each other. And maybe even liking it a little.â
Wilson smiled, and for once, House let himself enjoy the moment.
Thanksgiving wasnât about tradition, or even the food. It was about finding something worth holding onto, even in the chaos. And in that, House thought, they were both pretty damn lucky.
Tags: I donât even know what to tag this as. I wrote this a few days ago in a desperate attempt to pretend the end of the show never happened.đ
The bunker was quiet, heavy with an emptiness that lingered in every corner. Dean sat alone in the library, hunched over a half-empty whiskey bottle and a pile of unfinished research. Heâd been drowning out the silence with work, but nothing could fill the void left by Castielâs absence. Nothing could fill the ache of those last words Cas had left him with: âI love you, Dean.â He hadnât had time to respond, hadnât known what to say. By the time he did, it was too late.
Or so he thought.
A familiar flutter of wings filled the air, and Deanâs heart leapt. He stood slowly, the bottle slipping from his hand and hitting the floor with a dull thud, spilling across the concrete.
âDean,â came the voiceâlow, steady, and achingly familiar.
Deanâs breath caught. He turned, and there he was. Castiel, standing in the doorway of the library, looking just as he had before he left. Maybe a little tired, a little worn, but real.
âCas?â Deanâs voice was thick with disbelief, and he could feel his hands start to shake.
âItâs me,â Castiel said, his lips curving into the smallest, warmest smile. âIâm here.â
Dean crossed the room in a few quick strides, grabbing Castielâs coat as if to make sure he was real. âCas, howâhow did youâŠ?â
âI fought my way back,â Castiel murmured, his eyes softening. âThe Empty let me go, but only because I needed to be here. With you.â
Dean swallowed, his chest tightening with emotions heâd kept locked down for too long. He tried to think of something, anything to say, but all he could manage was, âI thought Iâd lost you.â
Castiel reached up, his hand resting on Deanâs shoulder, grounding him. âI couldnât leave things the way they were, Dean. Not after⊠not after what I told you.â
Deanâs eyes stung, but he forced himself to meet Casâs gaze, swallowing hard. âCas, when you said that to me⊠I didnât say it back. I didnât get to.â
Castielâs expression softened, and he nodded. âI didnât expect you to.â
Dean let out a shaky breath, one hand still clutching Casâs coat, as if heâd disappear if he let go. âWell, you should have. Because, Cas, IâŠâ He paused, his throat tightening as he searched for the words heâd buried for so long. âI love you, too.â
The words fell between them, raw and unguarded. Castielâs face softened, his blue eyes filled with a warmth that seemed to reach into Deanâs soul. âDeanâŠâ
Dean didnât let him finish. He leaned in, pressing his forehead to Casâs, his hands tightening on his shoulders. âIâm sorry it took me this long to say it. I was scared. But Iâm done running from thisâfrom you.â
Castiel closed his eyes, his own hand lifting to cup the side of Deanâs face. âYou donât have to run anymore.â
In the quiet of the bunker, Dean leaned in, his lips meeting Castielâs in a kiss that was both soft and filled with a lifetime of unspoken promises. They stood there, wrapped up in each other, finding strength in a truth theyâd both fought so hard to find.
When they finally pulled apart, Dean kept Cas close, his voice a rough whisper. âYouâre not going anywhere again. You hear me?â
Castiel smiled, a quiet certainty in his eyes. âI hear you, Dean. Iâm not going anywhere.â
For the first time, Dean felt at peace. They were both finally where they belongedâtogether, in a world that had finally let them find each other.
Dr. Gregory House, MD, was, if nothing else, predictable in his unpredictability. To everyone around him, he was a brilliant diagnostician whose addiction to painkillers was as legendary as his ego. Dr. James Wilson, his bestâand often onlyâfriend, had long ago accepted that House was his own worst enemy. But tonight, for the first time, Wilson saw a glimmer of willingness in Houseâs eyesâa willingness to try.
âYouâre serious about this?â Wilson asked, skepticism coating every syllable.
House rolled his eyes, adjusting himself on Wilsonâs worn leather couch with a wince. His leg was already aching. âDonât look so excited, Jimmy. Yes, Iâm serious. For now. Thatâs as much as youâre getting out of me.â
Wilson nodded, his expression softening. He wanted to reach out, offer some kind of reassurance, but knew better. Instead, he kept it simple. âThen letâs start small.â
For the first time in his life, House let someone take his stash. He handed over the orange prescription bottle to Wilson, who tucked it away with a wary glance, half-expecting House to snatch it back. But House didnât. He just sighed, his fingers drumming against his thigh, betraying his restlessness.
The first few days were the hardest. The withdrawal symptoms crept up like a slow burn, insidious and relentless. The pain was one thing, but the itch, the cravingâthe need for Vicodin felt like it was tearing him apart from the inside out. House threw himself into work, trying to drown out the pain with puzzles and patients, but it was never enough.
Wilson was there through all of it. He spent every break checking on House, convincing him to come over after work, even making dinner a few times. At first, the effort was awkward. Wilson wasnât used to this kind of care, and House wasnât used to receiving it. There were moments of sharp tension, glances that lingered a little too long. And there were the times Wilsonâs hand brushed Houseâs, lingering for just a second before pulling back.
After a week, House was sitting at Wilsonâs kitchen table, staring at a plate of cold spaghetti. Heâd been quiet all evening, staring off into the middle distance.
âMaybe this was a mistake,â he muttered. âI need the pills to function. Without them, IâmâŠuseless.â
Wilson leaned forward, voice gentle but firm. âYouâre not useless, House. Youâre justâŠnot used to relying on anyone but yourself. Itâs okay to need help.â
âYeah? Then why donât you need help?â House snapped, the bitterness in his voice sharp enough to make Wilson flinch.
âI do,â Wilson admitted, surprising himself. âI justâŠchoose different ways to cope. Youâre not broken for wanting to take the edge off your pain, House. You just need to find something that wonât destroy you.â
Wilson held Houseâs gaze, the vulnerability in it catching them both off-guard. For a long moment, neither of them spoke. Finally, House slumped forward, rubbing his temple.
âSo, what then?â he muttered. âWhat am I supposed to do now?â
âOne day at a time,â Wilson replied softly. âAnd if you need me to, Iâll be here for every single one of them.â
The next few weeks were a blur of tension, progress, and plenty of setbacks. House was still grumpy, still sharp-edged, but every once in a while, Wilson would catch a glimpse of something differentâa House who was tired, vulnerable, and maybe, just maybe, a little grateful.
One night, House showed up at Wilsonâs door unannounced. He looked haggard, his usual bravado worn thin.
âI thought about going to the pharmacy,â House said, not meeting Wilsonâs gaze. âBut I came here instead.â
Wilsonâs heart twisted. âIâm glad you did.â
They didnât talk about it any further. Wilson let House crash on his couch, and as they sat in the darkened living room, Houseâs head lolled back on the cushion, his guard down in a rare moment of ease. Wilson found himself looking at him a little too long. He realized, with a pang, that there was something more hereâa tenderness he could never quite put into words.
âThanks,â House murmured sleepily, eyes half-closed. And then, with a wry grin, âFor not saying I told you so.â
Wilson chuckled. âYouâd hate me if I did.â
âYou think I donât already?â Houseâs voice softened, and his eyes drifted to Wilsonâs. âIf I didnât⊠I wouldnât still be here.â
The words lingered, heavier than Houseâs usual quips. Wilsonâs breath caught, and before he could think better of it, his hand reached out, brushing against Houseâs fingers on the couch cushion. He half-expected House to pull away, but he didnât. Their fingers rested together in a silent, unspoken acceptance.
As the months went on, the little moments between them grew. The small, shared glances, the lingering touches. It was an intimacy they never discussed but one that quietly became essential. In those fleeting moments, House found something he didnât dare nameâa balm that was, in some ways, as addictive as the Vicodin.
One night, as they sat in Wilsonâs apartment after a particularly hard day, House looked up at him, expression open in a way Wilson had never seen before.
âThis thing weâre doing⊠is it just the drugs? OrâŠâ Houseâs voice trailed off, uncharacteristically hesitant.
Wilson felt his throat tighten. He reached out, gently brushing a strand of hair from Houseâs face. âNo. Itâs not just the drugs, Greg. ItâsâŠus.
House met his eyes, the hint of a smirk curving his lips. âYouâre sappy, you know that?â
Wilson just smiled, letting his fingers linger against Houseâs cheek. For once, neither of them tried to hide behind a joke. In the stillness of that moment, they both understood: they had become each otherâs medicine.
And for House, that was a kind of healing he had never thought possible.
The Unscheduled Arrival | Second/Last part of A Most Unlikely Prognosis
Pairing: Wilson x House
Tags: Mpreg, House isnât good with emotions(as usual)
Dr. James Wilson stood in the middle of Princeton-Plainsboroâs oncology department, watching the steady rain outside his office window. It had been a surprisingly quiet day, despite the constant low hum of hospital activity around him.
But his mind wasnât on his patients. It was on House.
For the past few weeks, Wilson had been anxiously waiting for the inevitable: the moment when House would finally go into labor. Their lives had already been an emotional roller coaster, and the impending delivery had everyone â including Cuddy â walking on eggshells.
Not that House had made it any easier. True to form, heâd continued working cases as if nothing unusual was happening. His only concession to pregnancy had been wearing looser shirts, and even that had felt like a battle Wilson had only barely won.
Wilson checked his phone for what felt like the hundredth time that day, half-expecting some snarky text from House complaining about Cuddy or the clinic, when his phone actually buzzed in his hand.
âER. NOW. â Houseâ
Wilsonâs heart leapt into his throat.
He bolted out of his office and sped down the hallways, his thoughts racing.
House had been acting fine all morning, showing no signs of distress or discomfort. But if he was summoning Wilson to the ER, something had to be wrong.
Bursting through the double doors of the ER, Wilson scanned the area until his eyes landed on the unmistakable figure of House, sitting on a gurney with his legs dangling over the edge, his cane leaning against the side.
Wilson rushed over, immediately assessing the scene. House was hunched forward slightly, breathing heavily. His face, usually composed of a confident smirk or a raised eyebrow, was now pinched in discomfort.
âHouse,â Wilson gasped, rushing to his side. âWhatâs going on? Are youââ
House cut him off with a dry laugh, though it was strained. âOh, just a little thing called labor. You mightâve heard of it.â
Wilsonâs eyes widened in alarm. âWhat? Itâs too earlyââ
âYeah, well,â House grimaced, âtell that to the kid. Apparently, theyâre eager to get out and start screwing with our lives.â He winced, gripping the edge of the gurney. âHavenât you ever heard of a punctual baby?â
Wilson blinked, his mind struggling to catch up with the situation. âAre you serious? Youâre in labor?â
House shot him an exasperated look. âWhat was your first clue, Dr. Oncologist? The fact that Iâm sitting in the ER or the fact that I look like I want to punch someone?â
Wilsonâs brain snapped into gear, and he reached out to squeeze Houseâs shoulder gently. âOkay. Okay. Letâs get you upstairs to OB.â
âWow, what a brilliant idea. Itâs almost like youâre a doctor,â House grumbled, but his usual sarcasm was noticeably weaker. A sheen of sweat had started to form on his forehead, and Wilson could see the strain in his eyes.
An OB nurse appeared, having been alerted to Houseâs condition, and within moments, House was being wheeled toward the elevator. Wilson walked alongside the gurney, his hand resting lightly on Houseâs arm.
âWhy didnât you call sooner?â Wilson asked, his voice tight with concern. âHow long have you been in labor?â
âSince this morning,â House admitted with a wince. âBut I thought it was just Braxton Hicks or something. Then it got⊠a bit more intense.â
Wilson stared at him in disbelief. âHouse, youâve been in labor for hours? Why didnât you say anything?!â
House gave him a pained smile. âDidnât want to miss the thrilling conclusion of the case I was working on. Turns out the patient had a fungal infection in his brain, by the way. Youâll thank me later.â
Wilson opened his mouth to respond, but before he could say anything, House let out a sharp, involuntary groan, clutching his abdomen as another contraction hit. Wilson immediately grabbed his hand without thinking, and to his surprise, House didnât pull away.
âBreathe, House,â Wilson murmured, trying to sound calm despite the panic rising in his chest.
âOh, thanks for the tip. That wasnât the first thing on my list of things to do while having a baby,â House snapped, though his grip on Wilsonâs hand tightened.
By the time they reached the OB floor, the contractions had grown closer together, and the nurses quickly transferred House to a delivery room. Wilson hovered nearby, feeling utterly out of his depth as they prepped House for what was now an urgent situation.
House, for his part, was barely maintaining his usual composure. He was in pain, clearly, and the steady stream of snarky comments had slowed considerably as the contractions took their toll.
Cuddy arrived not long after, looking more frazzled than usual, but when she saw the situation, she gave Wilson a reassuring nod. âHeâs in good hands, Wilson. Iâll make sure everything is handled.â
Wilson paced the small waiting area, his stomach twisting in knots. He wanted to be with House, but he also knew that House didnât want an audience right now. Still, the helplessness gnawed at him. This wasnât a situation where he could swoop in and fix things. All he could do was wait.
After what felt like an eternity, the nurse poked her head out of the room and motioned for Wilson to come in. His heart pounded as he stepped into the room.
House was lying back on the bed, looking thoroughly exhausted. His hair was damp with sweat, and his face was pale, but he was still conscious, his breathing heavy but steady. The attending doctor was standing nearby, giving instructions to the nurses.
âWilson,â House muttered, his voice raspy. âYou look like youâre about to faint. Maybe you should sit down.â
Wilson ignored the comment and rushed to Houseâs side, taking his hand again. âHow are you doing?â
âPeachy,â House groaned, his eyes squeezing shut as another contraction hit. He took a few deep breaths, his grip on Wilsonâs hand iron-tight.
Wilson glanced at the doctor, who nodded. âItâs time,â she said calmly.
House let out a short, bitter laugh. âGreat. Letâs get this over with.â
The room buzzed with quiet but urgent activity as the final moments of labor arrived. Wilson stayed by Houseâs side, his heart pounding in his chest as he watched the incredible, surreal scene unfold before him. He had never imagined heâd be here â not like this. But here he was, watching as the person he cared about most in the world brought their child into the world.
It didnât take long. Within minutes, the cries of a newborn filled the room, and the nurse carefully handed the baby â a tiny, wriggling bundle of life â to the doctor.
Wilsonâs breath caught in his throat as he looked at the child in awe. A healthy baby girl.
The nurse gently placed the baby in Houseâs arms, and for the first time since this whole thing started, House looked⊠stunned. Quiet. His blue eyes softened as he stared down at the infant, and for a moment, there was no sarcasm, no walls.
Wilson felt his chest tighten with emotion as he leaned closer. âSheâs perfect.â
House blinked, his voice softer than Wilson had ever heard it. âYeah. She is.â
For once, there were no jokes. No biting comments. Just the quiet, undeniable reality of what had just happened.
This is my first fanfic so any feedback would be great.
Read part two here: Part Two
A Most Unlikely Prognosis
Pairing: Wilson x House
Tags: Mpreg, House isnât good with emotions(as usual)
Dr. James Wilson sat in his office, nervously tapping his pen against his desk, trying to focus on patient files but failing miserably. The thing occupying his mind was far more complicated than any case heâd ever handled, and it had nothing to do with cancer, his usual area of expertise.
It had to do with Gregory House.
More specifically, it had to do with the fact that House was pregnant. A phrase that still sounded insane even in Wilsonâs head. Yet, somehow, it was real.
It wasnât like House was going to take this in stride. In fact, he was doing the exact opposite.
âPregnant. You. Me.â Wilson had sputtered when they first found out, the shock rolling through his system. But House, in his typically nonchalant manner, had dismissed it with a shrug.
âYeah, yeah, science is weird. Iâm fine. Youâre fine. The babyâs probably gonna be a sarcastic genius. Relax.â
Except Wilson couldnât relax. House, being House, was still throwing himself into the most ridiculous cases, and Wilson had the sinking feeling that he was treating his pregnancy as nothing more than a minor inconvenience. There was no way he was going to slow down, which worried Wilson to no end.
The door to his office creaked open, and there was House, strolling in like he hadnât a care in the world. He was still limping as usual, cane tapping rhythmically on the floor, though Wilson had noticed the faintest change in his gait as his body adapted to the changes.
âWilson, you look like youâre about to diagnose yourself with something tragic,â House quipped, flopping onto the couch. âLet me guess, another existential crisis? Or are we out of herbal tea again?â
Wilson frowned, his heart rate picking up as he glanced at the small but noticeable curve of Houseâs abdomen. âWe need to talk, House.â
House rolled his eyes. âOh God, not this again. Youâre not going to lecture me about working while pregnant, are you? I already get enough of that from Cuddy.â
âThatâs because sheâs right!â Wilson snapped, standing up and pacing. âYou canât keep pushing yourself like this! Youâre still doing differential diagnoses like nothing has changed. You barely sleep as it is, and now youâreââ
âPregnant?â House interrupted dryly. âYes, Iâm aware. You do remember that Iâm a doctor, right?â
Wilson stopped pacing and faced House, his concern evident. âI know youâre a doctor, but youâre also⊠youâre carrying our child, House. You canât just act like this is nothing.â
House let out a long, dramatic sigh. âWilson, Iâm fine. The baby is fine. If I needed to take it easy, Iâd know.â He waved his hand dismissively. âIâm not some fragile damsel in distress.â
Wilson frowned, moving to sit beside him on the couch. âBut youâre not invincible either. Youâre already putting extra strain on your body with your leg. The last thing you need is more stress.â
For a moment, there was a rare silence between them, and Wilson hoped his words had sunk in. But then Houseâs blue eyes glinted mischievously, and a small smirk tugged at his lips.
âAre you saying youâre worried about me? How touching. Maybe we should throw in a foot rub while youâre at it.â
Wilson groaned, rubbing his temples in frustration. âHouse, this isnât a joke.â
House leaned back, resting one hand on his stomach, seemingly more amused by Wilsonâs anxiety than anything else. âYouâre acting like Iâm about to pop out the baby tomorrow. Iâve got months to go, and letâs be honestâyouâre going to be the one panicking in the delivery room, not me.â
Wilsonâs jaw tightened. âWhat if something happens? What if a case gets too intense, and it takes a toll on you or the baby? You canât keep playing these reckless games.â
House narrowed his eyes slightly, the air in the room shifting. He still wore his mask of indifference, but Wilson knew him well enough to sense the flicker of vulnerability behind it.
âDo you really think Iâm stupid enough to risk⊠this?â House asked quietly, his voice lower than usual.
Wilson hesitated, then shook his head. âNo. I know youâre not. But you always push the limits, House. Iâm just worried your limits arenât the same now.â
House studied him for a moment, his expression unreadable. Then, to Wilsonâs surprise, he let out a soft huff, leaning his head back against the couch.
âLook, I know youâre freaking out because this whole thing is⊠weird. Trust me, I get it. But I can handle it. Iâm not going to suddenly start knitting onesies or taking yoga classes, but Iâm not an idiot either. If something feels off, Iâll deal with it.â
Wilson searched Houseâs face, seeing the truth in his words, but the worry still gnawed at him. âI just⊠donât want anything to happen to you. To either of you.â
Houseâs smirk softened, and for a fleeting moment, the sarcasm melted away. He reached out and poked Wilsonâs arm lightly. âIâm not going anywhere, Wilson. And neither is this kid. Iâll slow down if I have to. Just⊠donât start treating me like a patient, okay? Iâve got enough of those.â
Wilson exhaled, feeling the tension in his shoulders loosen slightly. He nodded, though the worry hadnât fully dissipated. âOkay. Just⊠promise me youâll be careful.â
âScoutâs honor,â House replied with a mock salute, though there was a sincerity in his tone that made Wilson believe him, at least for now.
As House got up and limped toward the door, Wilson called out after him. âAnd House?â
House paused, glancing over his shoulder. âYeah?â
Wilson allowed himself a small smile. âYouâd better start thinking of baby names. Weâre not naming it after Cuddy.â
House snorted. âFine. How about âCancerâ in honor of your specialty?â
Wilson groaned, but this time, there was a hint of laughter behind it. At least, for now, House seemed willing to compromise. And in their world, that was about as close to a win as Wilson could hope for.