"Get the Salt!"
Brothers Keep Her
âYou think something is using me to get to you?â you ask as they usher you into their room at the Ramblinâ Inn motel. The low number of cars in the parking lot tells you this is no four-star place. It probably isnât even two-star.
Dean flips the light switch and tosses an army green duffle bag onto the floor in the corner of the room. The walls are covered in the gaudiest wallpaper you have ever seen, and the color scheme reminds you of that sitcom set in the seventies you used to watch. Itâs not pretty, but at least youâre inside and out of the chilly air.
Sam closes and bolts the door behind you. You stand off to the side awkwardly rubbing your marked hand. âHere,â he says to you. âLetâs get that cleaned up.â He gently leads you by your elbow to the other bed and sits you on the ugly green chenille duvet.
Dean pulls his blazer off and loosens his tie on his way to the little refrigerator as Sam digs through another, smaller duffle bag. The refrigerator door gives Dean a bit trouble before the sound of clinking bottles cuts through the room.
Neither one has answered your question. You know theyâre avoiding it, but why? Sam catches you staring at the letters on the back of your hand and waves at the beer Dean tries to give him.
âOh, come on!â Dean balks. âYou donât want a beer, now?â
Sam glares at Dean over your head.
âFine.â Dean slams the bottles on the table in the corner of the room and picks up his blazer.
Sam stands up. âWhere are you going?â
âTo get food. Iâm starving.â Before Sam can get another word in, the door slams and Dean is gone.
Sam sighs and tucks his hair behind his ears before he sits back down beside you. âDoes it hurt?â He takes the bloody paper towels from you as he turns your hand toward him.
You nod. âNot as much. Itâs better.â You both look to the door at the sound of the car starting. When it pulls away, you clear your throat. âYour brother doesnât like me.â
Sam looks up. âNo. Itâs not that. Itâs just... complicated.â
You study his face; youâve not been this close to him before and it stirs something in you. Tries to, anyway. Itâs hard to think about happy things when Professor McFarlane ... well.
âWe have a lot going on. Weâve been through a lot. Deanâs just... particular about who we trust. Itâs nothing personal.â Youâre surprised when the liquid he pours out of a little glass bottle turns out to be just water. Who carries tiny bottles of water around? Then he picks up a wad of cotton and douses it with peroxide. You clench your jaw at the initial sting, watching closely as he clears the drying blood away. Youâre not bleeding much anymore except for a few tiny red beads, so he presses a clean towel on it. âHold this,â he says, and you obey while he fishes through his first aid supplies again.
âWhatâs happening, Sam?â you ask, on the verge of tears. Itâs too much. All of it. You canât even deal with horror movies, let alone this. Yesterday you were just a barista at a moderately popular coffee shop by night and college student by day.
He clasps your hand between his and looks at you with puppy eyes. âI donât know, yet. But Iâll find out. Weâll stop it. I promise.â
You search his face. Can he really make a promise like that?
After he wraps your hand in fresh gauze with a little antibiotic ointment, he cleans everything up and digs his laptop out of his backpack. He opens it up then notices your shiver. âAre you cold? Is it normal cold or freak cold, like the ER?â He holds out his hands as if to feel the change in temperature.
âNormal, I guess,â you say, only because that panic hasnât seized your body this time.
âAnd we didnât pick up any clothes for you. Wow. Iâm so sorry. When he gets back with the car, we can go.â Those soft eyes would melt you if not for the hell you canât get out of your head.
You nod and look at the floor.
âUm... you hungry?â Sam loosens his tie and slides it from his neck.
âNot really.â
âOkay. I understand. Iâm going to change out of this. Iâll be right back. Donât let anyone in, not even Dean, until Iâm out of the bathroom.â
His warning is foreboding, but you nod. What else can you do? Not even Dean? Why would he say that?
Sam disappears into the bathroom with his bag, leaving you on the edge of the bed alone. You cross your arms tightly over your chest, but it hurts your hand, so you drop your hands to your lap. Itâs eerily quiet in the room, even with the low sounds Sam makes from the bathroom. You look around at their things scattered between the tables, chairs, and beds, enthralled by the mysterious life these men live.
Youâre staring at the goosebumps on your legs when the lights flicker in the room. You snap your eyes to the lamp on the nightstand between the beds as the commotion in the bathroom halts for a moment. Trying to convince yourself it was just a normal flicker, you watch it like a hawk, waiting. You donât trust it. You donât even realize youâve stiffened and clenched your fists so tight that your fingernails are drawing blood until Sam startles you when he opens the bathroom door.
He runs to your side when he sees you jump and whip around to look at him. âYou okay? What happened?â
You look back at the lamp on the nightstand, but it does nothing. A thousand icy fingers trace your spine as you turn to him and shake your head. Sam crouches in front of you dressed only in a pair of sweatpants, and the black tattoo on his chest catches your eye. You shiver again.
Sam rubs your arms, then drops his bag on the bed. He pulls out a hooded sweatshirt. âItâs wrinkled, and Iâve worn it a few times, but itâs mostly clean,â he says with one eyebrow arched. You realize heâs not sure how youâll react to the offering.
The bite of the cold worsens, so you reach for the shirt, offering the best smile you can, which isnât much. As you pull it over your head, Sam hangs his suit in the closet. The pleasant smell surprises you; you half-expected that public bathroom soap smell you remember from your first encounter. Instead, your nose finds the subtle hint of Samâs cologne. Itâs comforting. Itâs two sizes too big, but comfortable nonetheless.
He tugs a gray t-shirt on as the lights flicker again, and heâs by your side in an instant. This time, the flickering doesnât stop. With one arm around you, Sam digs into his bag. You cower into him, your eyes darting from lamp to light and back again. âTake this,â he says, shoving a small chain into your hand. He rummages through his bag again. This time he pulls out a can of salt, cracks it open, and starts pouring it in a circle on the floor. âGet in,â he orders, pulling you off the bed.
You do as he says. The flickering grows more violent. You want to know what the hell it is, but then again, maybe you donât. Knees locked, waves of tremors roll through you. When all the kitchenette cabinets slam at once, you yelp and cover your ears. Why did Sam make the circle so damn small? You want to curl up on the floor in a ball and hide, but there isnât enough room for that.
Sam stands in front of you with a sawed-off shotgun. You donât know how a gun is going to stop whatever this is, but heâs been at this for a long time, so you trust that he knows what heâs doing. âDean, pick up your damn phone!â he shouts into his cell. âWeâve got trouble!â Frustrated, he shoves his phone into his back pocket.
The beds start convulsing on their own and you think your heart is going to climb right out of your throat. âSam!â
âI got you!â he yells over the banging headboards.
The lamp on the nightstand rises into the air and hovers for a moment. You canât believe your eyes. Next thing you know, itâs hurling toward you. You donât have time to think.
Lucky for you, Sam is quick and smashes it to the floor in the knick of time.
And just like that, everything stops.
You canât move. You canât blink. You canât ease your breaths. Neither of you let your guard down for another few moments, and itâs not until Sam says quietly, âI got you,â that you break.