MarginOfThought's Kinktober 2025 - Day 16: Remote Control (Sam Wesson x Dean Smith)
Sam felt a little light headed and he was pretty sure that it was not just because of the bad air in the office. This was crazy, right? But why did it feel so good then?
Nobody wanted to stay late but when Sales Director Smith had come up to him earlier and had asked him to stay late, offering more than overtime pay as his compensation, it had been easy for Sam to agree.
Smith had come by a little while ago once again, handing Sam a small cardboard box, telling him it would increase his overtime bonus but that he should probably take it with him to a quiet place.
Sam had gone to the men’s room after most of the other colleagues had left, opening the box in one of the stalls and nearly letting it fall into the open toilet.
Inside the box was a sachet of lube and a buttplug, from the looks of it one that hid another secret.
He was glad that he waited until most everyone was gone to open the box, otherwise his long bathroom break would’ve probably been a little suspicious.
Not one to let a challenge go, he efficiently opened himself up with the provided lube before slipping the plug inside. It wasn’t big enough to be uncomfortable but he could certainly feel it, a constant reminder of what was probably still to come during his overtime.
Sam walked back to his desk a little stiffly, sitting down even stiffer and did not even try to be productive any more. He stared at his screen, hips rocking back and forth a little unconsciously. His body quickly became accustomed to the plug and Sam settled deeper into his chair. The pressure felt just right.
Twenty minutes later Sam said goodbye to the last person on his team, the office empty except for him.
As if he had known, Smith called him only minutes later, the phone jolting Sam in his seat.
He picked up, not even getting a greeting out before he squeaked loudly as he almost felt like he was being shocked from the inside.
Deep laughter rang out through the phone. “So you were a good boy and put it in,” Smith said in greeting.
Sam was still clutching the table with the hand not holding the phone, breathing sped up, more from the shock than the actual sensation as the plug inside him vibrated.
“Mr. Smith,” Sam said, a second later.
“Come up to my office, will you, Wesson,” Smith replied and it was not a question as much as a demand.
“Sure,” Sam mumbled before the call disconnected.
Getting up even more stiffly than he had sat down, Sam shut his computer off and grabbed his bag before heading out of the office and into the elevator.
His knock on the door was quickly answered and Sam stepped into the dim office of Sales Director Dean Smith.
“Lock it,” Dean said as he pushed away from his desk.
Sam turned around to turn the lock when the plug inside him buzzed to life again and he tried to hide the squeaky moan, body clenching down on the toy, his legs locking up too.
A chuckle behind him unstuck Sam and he quickly flicked the lock before turning around.
“Mr. Smith-”
“There seems to be a problem with my computer,” Smith said, gesturing to his desk chair.
“Uh, oh, okay,” Sam mumbled out and moved over to the desk, sitting down when the other man gestured to the chair again.
Sam tried to keep his face neutral but it was a lost cause when the vibrations ramped up and he bit his lip to stifle a gasp.
“You see, “ Smith started. “Whenever I try to print the application seems to crash.”
Sam stayed still for a moment, genuinely confused. Did the other man actually want Sam to fix an IT-issue for him? Why had he made Sam put in the plug beforehand? The last few times they had fucked around in the office it had been a very quick, straight to the point kind of thing.
“Okay,” Sam replied, sounding a little confused.
While he clicked through the printer settings, he could feel Smith move behind him, heat bleeding through his shirt as the other man leaned over him.
“Oh, I think you have a problem of your own,” he said casually, looking down at Sam’s crotch.
“Well,” Sam just said before the vibrations returned and he couldn’t repress the moan this time.
The short bursts of pleasure were just enough to keep him hard and wanting without getting him too close to an orgasm and that was a kind of torture on it’s own.
The pleasure ebbed when the vibrations turned off once more and Sam breathed out heavily.
“Fix the problem without cumming and I’ll make it worth your overtime,” Smith said, mouth close to Sam’s ear so he could feel the heat of his breath. The older man nipped at his earlobe, making a shiver run down Sam’s back when he nodded dumbly.
“Yes, o-,” Sam whined when the vibrations turned on again, much higher this time.
Dean Smith chuckled again, stepping to the side and pulling out a bottle of lube from his desk drawer and placing it in Sam’s line of sight.
Insane how they barely know each other and just killed a ghost but are looking at each other like they’re something divine out of this world like they’re the fucking revelation sent from god just for them like well like that’s their soulmate
Dean Winchester in suspenders, driving a Prius, listening to news on radio, eating salad, taking weightloss tips is so wrong!!!
isn't that cubicle a little too small for Sam Wesson from tech support?
Gamble, my foreshadow queen!! I loooovee when Sam Wesson is over at Dean's talking about how he feels he should be doing something else, he mentions "there's something in my blood". Now this could just be that Sam's destined to do something other than be in tech support but of course it can also be about the demon blood in his blood!!
Sam smashing the phone was hot! Don't ask me why, just go with it!
ughhh, Ghostfacers!
Zachariah is one of those characters I love to hate!!
Edvard's Supernatural Guide 4x17 It's a Terrible Life
Spoilers for 5x01, 13x23, 14x14, 15x20
Once more, series four gives us a stand-alone episode which leaves me scratching my head for meaningful things to say about it. The majority of the episode is a bog-standard ghost-hunt wrapped up in the mystery of why these two guys who look like Dean and Sam and share their names seem to know nothing about the supernatural. That being the case, the ghost-hunt itself provides little worth deep discussion. The only real direct connections to other episodes comes in the form of the Ghostfacers and Dean conversation with Zachariah in the last five minutes.
To summarise the episode briefly, Dean and Sam are placed in an alternate reality where Dean is a salaryman in Sandover company while Sam works in the company's customer service department. The two do not know each other, but Sam has strange dreams (reminiscent of his visions in series one and two, as Paula pointed out) of himself and Dean fighting monsters and vampires. People in Sandover begin dying by gruesome suicide after being 'summoned to HR'. Sam ropes Dean into investigating after an employee stabs himself in the neck in front of Dean, only to find Ebeneezer Scrooge's ghost is behind the 'suicides'. They vanquish him together, then after a little bit of dithering, Dean rejects senior management's offer of a well-paid but soul-destroying job-for-life because he feels he has bigger things to do than be a salaryman. At that point, the senior partner reveals himself to be Zachariah, Cas's superior and one of the highest-ranking angels who set everything up as a test to prove to Dean that is 'born to this', i.e. meant to be a hunter.
However, a huge issue with this is the fact that – and here be spoilers – whether or not Dean is 'truly a hunter' is rendered completely moot by the fact he is soon reduced to Michael's vessel. The show is speaking out of both sides of its mouth: it tells us Dean has a special destiny and that it is up to him to personally to stop the Apocalypse, but it also tells us that Dean is just a puppet for Michael to use in his fight with Lucifer. What, then, is the point of the last five minutes of this episode when it all comes to nothing in the end? The previous episode ended with a similarly pointless scene telling us how important Dean is going to be in the Apocalypse.
The real issue here is once again the writers' lack of planning. Writers' discussions of series fifteen state clearly that series fifteen was the only time the writers knew what would happen at the end of the year. For the rest of the show, they did not know how each series would end. This means that the show we have is a pantser's first-draft, i.e. The first draft of somebody who did not plan in advance. I speak from experience when I say that gets messy fast.
A discussion in the comments of Paula's review brought up the fact that the two different plotlines – Dean would save the world vs Dean is just a vessel – continued all the way to the end of series five without a proper conclusion. It is unsatisfactory writing to have all of the build-up just for Dean's role to be Lucifer's punchbag in 5x22 Swan Song. ...How people think that episode is 'perfect' of 'the real end of the show' is quite beyond my ken. Even his intended conclusion remained without proper planning. For shame. It is only in 13x23 Let the Good Times Roll that the vessel / bloodlines storyline gets a proper ending, but... well, it was so bad that Jensen is on camera mocking that scene.
It did give us this visual, though...
Something Paula pointed out in her review is the implication that Zachariah used the three weeks Dean was in an alternate reality to heal him of a lot of his hell trauma. The episode makes a few subtle suggestions that this is the case, with Paula pointing out Zachariah checking up on how Dean was feeling and Dean 'detoxing'. Perhaps this is the case, and since there is nothing to suggest otherwise it is up to the viewer to decide. I do not think Zachariah cares all that much about Dean's mental state, and I find the idea of Zachariah healing Dean's trauma to be a bit cheap. The show never really explored it, so for it to be taken away so soon after it was revealed would be deeply dissatisfying. On the other hand, some of Dean's damage being healed would explain why he is never quite the mess one would expect him to be after his time in Hell.
That said, it still irritates me a little that Sam's Hell-trauma gets depicted and explored in more detail later in the show. Oh, and Sam's Hell-trauma is soooooooo much worse than Dean's, don't you know? Dean was only in Hell for forty years, but Sam was in the cage with Lucifer for two hundred years. That storyline should have been Dean's, but got taken away from him here in 4x17 It's a Terrible Life to be recycled with Sam later. Almost as annoying as Dean not being the one to kill Michael in 14x14 Ouroboros, but rather Jack swept in at the last minute and did it for him, because... I dunno, why did that happen, exactly?
...I think after, say, a year of being tortured to death every day, a person will have been reduced to an animalistic state and there is little difference between forty years and two centuries, but whatevs.
And speaking of alternate realities: I really was surprised at the number of people who complained about The Winchesters changing established canon by having John know about hunting when he met Mary in the 1970s rather than after her death in 1983. But I suppose that is to be expected of western, especially American audiences: they do not generally want to analyse or look for subtext. They want everything up front and explained, at least by the end of the film, and think 'subtext' is just fan-fiction. That being the case, though I and others twigged pretty quickly to the possibility the show took place in an alternate universe, others seemed to have forgotten the fact Supernatural showed us alternate universes, memory wipes, and such things loads of times.
And then the bitching. 'If it's a different universe and different characters, why should I care? It's completely irrelevant.' I would say 'watch it to the end', but a lot of people really had a bee in their bonnet about how much they hated the show. Therefore, they never got to see Dean saving the multiverse. Perhaps that was Dean's 'destiny' all along, and the 'Apocalypse' he was meant to stop had nothing to do with Lucifer or Michael at all.
The show had its flaws, the main one being nobody wanted a story about John and Mary, but I generally liked it. It reminded be a lot of early Buffy in aesthetics, tone, and humour, and the plotting was much stronger than Supernatural. Each episode either had some relevance to the overall plot, character development, or both. The hate it got was undeserved, a lot thereof being due to Jared not being involved and the whole social media mess he caused in June 2021.
I think people just wanted Supernatural again... even though late Supernatural was much more like The Winchesters than it was early Supernatural.
Returning to Supernatural, the 'suicides' in this episode were rather gruesome, but the first one strained credibility a little. Microwaving one's head to death is probably a very painful way to die, but can jamming a plastic spoon into the closing mechanism really make the microwave think the door is closed? I have no idea, but I doubt it. I also wonder why the ghost of Sandover got the man to die in such a conspicuous way, especially in the work place. At least he had the sense not to do it during the middle of the work day.
And while speaking of Sandover, how did Ian get away with wearing casual clothing for as long as he did? And if it were so easy for him to get away with it, why was everybody else wearing their uniform? And once again, why does the building have so few surveillance cameras? My secondary school had them in 2005, including in the toilets. What excuse does Sandover have?
Pleasantly enough, Sam was not a douchebag in this episode. Paula commented that with all of Sam's psychological baggage removed, he is actually a decent 'hero'. It really is a shame that the show has made Sam generally into somebody I would rather not see on my screen because when he is not being an arse, he is quite likeable. This makes a nice change. Dean, on the other hand, reminded me a lot of a certain kind of douchebag, i.e. Upper middle class privileged douchebags of the kind one would expect to see in an American equivalent of The Bullingdon Club. Tax-paying, law-abiding, and not hampered by grievous psychological scars, but perhaps also a little bit of a twatty rich boy.
The Ghostfacers made a return, too, which was fun, but I have nothing more to say on them for now. One last comment is that most of this episode has bright, clear colours, but as soon as Zachariah zaps Dean and restores his memory, the colour palette of the shot becomes much duller. This is not the only time Supernatural does this, with 2x20 What is and What Should Never Be making use of the same visual cue. Dean's dreamworld is mostly saturated colours, whereas the real world is far more washed out. With this in mind, consider the ending of 15x20 Carry On.
Here endeth the analysis. You can read more of my analyses here:
Series 1
Series 2
Series 3
Series 4
Sundry
And you can read Paula's here.
P.S. Do you remember me saying Dean is Cassandra? Well...