ladyjanelly: (ben young smirk)
[personal profile] ladyjanelly
Title: The Space He Invades
Chapter: 1/1
Fandoms: Supernatural and Dark Angel
Pairing: None
Characters: Sam and Ben
Rating: PG-13 for violence, some language
Spoilers: For Pilot to Dark Angel and Season one of SPN
Feedback: Crit hard. I like it that way.
Notes: The title comes from Rush's song "Tom Sawyer" Should be read after "Today's Tom Sawyer" and "Ridin' The Storm Out." http://ladyjanelly.livejournal.com/tag/tom+sawyer
Special thanks to taniapretender for the awsome beta.
AU for SPN from around the middle of Devil's Trap. AU for Dark Angel from Pilot, but only for Ben.
Summary: That first winter, after the world goes to hell. Common and uncommon challenges.


There’s no way to feed all the dogs through to spring, so Bobby lets most of them loose to fend for themselves. They keep two in the house, for warmth and early warning if something bad comes their way. Bobby says that Ben can pick the third, and Sam’s expecting it to be the mastiff-mix that he wrestles with, or the half-grown black pup that follows him around everywhere.

He’s surprised when it’s the brindle mutt that’s always sleeping under the porch. As hard as Sam’s worked to not question Ben’s decisions on personal preference, he feels that he has to ask, “Why him?”

Ben answers like the query is a test. “It’s the fattest, Sam.” And he’s so careful to not glance at any of the others, the dogs he should care about.

Sam sighs and rubs his forehead. He’d like to promise that they won’t eat the boy’s pet, but he can’t guarantee it. “It’s probably better this way,” he says instead. “The stronger dogs might be okay outside where they can hunt.”

Ben nods but he doesn’t look Sam in the eye. Sam can’t think what to say to make it better,

They end up just keeping Bobby’s two dogs—the third would eat more than he would provide.

The first hard snow puts an end to most of their going outside. There’s no work to be done, no reason to leave the house. Bobby takes impressions of Ben’s hands with some softened candle-wax and starts on a pair of blades for him. They’re wicked little things, each barely five inches from the spike at the end of the handle to the short, double-edged, curved blade. The steel’s naked, but there’s an opening for Ben’s pinky finger, and points that’ll fit his grip perfectly until he outgrows it.

“I’m no Gil Hibben,” Bobby grouses as he polishes out every last burr in the metal.

Sam smiles over from where he’s working on copying dad’s journal and his own, along with Bobby’s and Danny Elkins’ into a single cross-referenced and annotated work. “Hibben doesn’t put a line of silver and iron in his. I’m not saying the man’s not a genius of hand-held weapon construction, but I’ll take your version of the Claw over his any day,” he counters.

Ben looks up from his own transcribing, a less-detailed version of the larger journal. Sam gives him the “go” with a glance, and he straightens in his seat. “Silver for shifters of any sort, cold iron for Fey and sometimes ghosts or witches.”

Sam smiles, proud, and they talk strategies for fighting evil until lights out.

The first month of winter stretches long and lazy, like an extended version of that one day. They’re warm and snug in their little haven, and the rest of the world seems too far away to worry about it too much. Bobby works on making weapons, Sam and Ben study their way through the expanse of Bobby’s library. Every day they get the best workout they can manage in the small space -- crunches, push-ups, pull-ups, jumping jacks.

There’s enough meat in the freezer that they don’t have to ration it. Once a week they split an MRE three ways, for variety. It’s amazing when pre-packaged military food becomes a treat instead of a necessary evil on a long hunt. Sam cuts his hair short, the annoyance of heating water to wash it doing what years of his father’s nagging couldn’t accomplish. He cuts Ben’s too, but leaves it long enough in the back to start covering the barcode.

“He looks like one of those heavy metal guys Dean listened to,” Bobby teases, and Sam pretends to be mortified at giving a mullet to someone who didn’t know to have better taste.

They all start to look thin in the face, Bobby especially, since he had the most weight to lose. Sam looks in the mirror and almost doesn’t recognize the hard lean man who looks back at him.

Ben has a growth spurt and puts on four inches of height. Burning off baby fat, Sam thinks, but he wishes he could look up some parenting websites or something, to see if Ben’s still within normal tolerances for height and weight. Bobby doesn’t even have a scale though, so it wouldn’t have been much use.

He worries when Ben starts to sleep more, and closer to the fire like he’s cold all the time. He’s tempted to give him a round of antibiotics, but there’s no sign of illness—no sniffles, no coughing, not as much as a runny nose.

He convinces himself it’s nothing, until the morning when Ben stumbles while carrying in firewood, falling to one knee before pushing himself back up like nothing had happened. He makes it halfway to the fireplace before he goes down again, and this time Sam’s there, scooping him up and carrying him over to the car’s seat he’s been using as a bed. Bobby hovers behind him, waiting to see what needs to be done.

“I’m sorry, Sam,” the kid mumbles against his shoulder. “I tried to be strong; I tried to make you proud.”

He’d never been much to carry, and weeks of chopping wood have made Sam stronger. Still, Ben feels like he weighs less than he had when Sam found him almost a year ago.

“How did I score?” Ben whimpers as Sam lays him down and wraps him in blankets. The question cuts him to the core. Ben thinks this was some test, that whatever’s wrong was planned.

“Did I pass?” His little eyebrows pinch together and Sam knows Ben’s taking his shocked silence as criticism, but he can’t straighten his thoughts out fast enough.

He sits down and gathers the shivering child into his arms. “It was an accident, Ben,” he says firmly, deciding to reveal his fallacy. “It wasn’t a test. I didn’t want you to be hurt; I didn’t realize you were sick.” And then, because his own father never would have said it, “I’m sorry, Ben, I’m so sorry.”

“So I was strong enough?”

Sam rubs the prickles from his eyes. “You were strong enough. Just next time, tell me when you don’t feel right, okay? I need to know so I can keep you healthy, alright buddy?”

Ben nods and Sam holds him as he drifts off to sleep.

“He’s starving to death,” Sam whispers to Bobby when he’s sure Ben’s resting. “I don’t get it; he’s getting plenty of calories, all the right vitamins…” He tries to focus on the obvious solution, but some bit of a movie he saw once intrudes on his thoughts—created humans, failing suddenly as their expiration dates arrive, and he’s afraid.

They give Ben an MRE of his own everyday for the next couple of days, and his energy comes back in full force. It doesn’t take a degree from Stanford to figure out that it’s the carbohydrates that Ben needed. The only problem is that at this rate, the last bit of starchy food will be gone before winter’s half over.

“The neighbors down the road have horses,” Bobby offers into the middle of their brainstorming. Sam looks at him blankly, trying to figure what horse meat has to do with carbs. “Horses mean horse feed,” Bobby explains.

“Low quality, but it should be edible.”

The next day Sam and Bobby pack up some of their surplus supplies—some meat, vitamins, one of the gigantic rolls of toilet paper, and they arm themselves with guns and knives. They leave at first light to slog the seven miles to the nearest house to the junkyard. It’s cold as hell and Sam bitterly misses the days of plowed roads and heated cars.

He starts calling out when they get to the gate and keeps it up until they’re almost to the porch. A part of himself that he’s ashamed of almost wants to hear the crack of a rifle, to have to protect himself and then scavenge through an empty farm. He’ll trade anything they have with them or back at the house to make sure Ben will make it through the winter. He’s afraid of the choices he’ll have to make if they won’t sell what Ben needs at any price.

An upstairs window in the house slides open, the muzzle of a firearm poking out. A face shows through the curtains, a boy no more than a few years older than Ben. The kid’s eyes are wide, scared, but his hands aren’t shaking. Sam holds his hands out to his sides and waits. After a minute the front door opens and a man steps out—tall, sandy blond hair, rugged good looks that Sam would have totally gone for back in college.

It takes half an hour of standing in the cold to convince the guy that they’re just there to trade, not hurt his family. The man, McPherson, has a nasty cough, Sam guesses pneumonia. The frigid air can’t be helping, but he won’t move the conversation into the house.

It turns out that the horses had been stolen back in the early days just after the Pulse, and yeah, maybe they could use a little more meat. McPherson trades everything they brought with them for twenty pounds of sweet feed, a mix of wheat and some sort of grain-based pellet, all mixed up with a coat of sticky molasses.

Sam tries a handful on the way back to Bobby’s house and decides he’s had organic trail mix that tasted worse. Shelling the grains of wheat with his teeth is like eating microscopic sunflower seeds, but it’s doable. When they get home he sorts the pellets out and crushes them down a little, mixes in some water and makes hard little biscuits out of them, like heavy pancakes.

The next day he and Bobby make the trek out to the McPherson place again, this time carrying nothing but half a dozen rounds of amoxicillin, and prescription-strength expectorant and ibuprofen. They come home with another backpack full of feed and a jar of hand-packed honey and Sam thinks that’ll get them through the season.

With the last of their physical needs taken care of, the rest of the winter passes by in relative quiet. They pick a semi-random day as Christmas and celebrate with extra rations, cheesy songs and one little gift. Bobby gives Ben the pair of claws he made, but there’s not really anything for anybody else to give.

A few days later they pick a promising morning and all three of them make the trek to the neighbors’ place. They’re welcomed in this time; it’s amazing, the difference life-saving supplies can make on a once-hostile attitude. The man’s name is Tom, and his wife’s Amber. The boy who’d held a gun on Sam is Davie. There’s a daughter, a little younger than Ben, named Brittney.

Sam’s brought some of the cakes, flavored with honey and the last of Bobby’s spices, and a beer they found in a back cabinet. The McPhersons have roasted pine nuts, baked chicken and a little instant coffee.

After dinner, Davie and Ben sit off to the side comparing their guns and knives. Tom talks to Bobby and Sam about going into town when things thaw out in the spring. They make plans to meet at the junkyard when the weather’s right, go in together. Safety in numbers and all that.

Night’s falling by the time they’re ready to leave—the temperature has been dropping and wolves have been heard in the area, so the little Winchester household bunks down for the night on the kitchen floor. As he’s drifting off to sleep, Sam thinks that besides watching Ben to make sure he didn’t kill anyone, the evening was the closest thing to “normal” he’s experienced since Jess died.

Over the next few weeks, boredom becomes the enemy. Sam and Bobby teach Ben cards and checkers. Sam makes a chess set out of coins and metal nuts and washers. Ben’s a good player, but painfully serious. Sam feels cruel when he wins against the boy and like a disappointment when he doesn’t, so the pawns go back into the coin jar and the other bits are sent to the odds and ends drawer.

Sam thinks of the neighbors sometimes, wonders how they’re doing. If the wind was less fierce or the snow less deep he’d have been tempted to walk down, just for something to do. If he had a reason, it’d be easier to justify taking the risk.

When they first hear the howls, deeper and stronger than the voices of natural wolves, Sam wants to tell the universe “I didn’t mean that kind of reason.” Sound carries across the snow, and they hear the werewolf tearing the local wolf pack apart. Natural and not rarely mix well. When it’s done they hear the yips of victory heading away and to the west.

“Crap,” Sam sighs. The three turn and start pulling out backpacks and the necessary gear for this hunt. Every time Bobby turns to get something else, Ben moves supplies from Bobby’s bag and into his own.

“Quit that, boy,” Bobby orders, “What do you think you’re doin’?” He reaches to take the sack, but Ben doesn’t give it up.

“I hunt with Sam,” Ben says, his voice so firm that Bobby lets go of the bag.

“He hunts with me,” Sam confirms before Bobby can get himself in trouble. Sam stands and starts pulling on warmer gear; Ben gets dressed too.

“We have to travel fast,” Sam says and it’s an apology more than statement of fact.

Bobby grouses about it, tries to get Ben to take a heavier jacket. In the end though, he lets them leave. “You boys be careful,” he says, about as unhappy as Sam’s ever seen.

The march to the McPherson place is harder this time. The night air is sharp; the wind is vicious and from the wrong direction.

Ben walks point but Sam makes him stay close, only about ten feet ahead. It seems like the more dangerous position but it’s not. Ben’s small enough, quick enough, that Sam’s never had a problem shooting around him. The moon’s so full and bright that visibility isn’t a factor. And besides, Ben’s weight doesn’t break through the snow as deep as Sam’s does. If Sam was in front, Ben’s mobility would be hampered by walking in his tracks.

Their path is silent. They listen for trouble and coordinate their movements through hand signals. They’re about two thirds of the way to their destination, and they hear it before they see it, throaty growls and a large shape crashing through the underbrush. Ben starts firing as soon as he has visual contact, Sam a second later when he too can make out the target.

Silver rounds cut the huge furred creature to pieces. It dies on its feet but momentum carries it forward, faster than Sam expects it to. It falls into Sam as he’s trying to backpedal. The white snow collapses under him, and all he can see is sky and dark fur above him and glittering walls all around. Ben’s calling his name and the air’s being crushed out of his lungs.

A second shadow passes between Sam and the moonlight and he manages to get a single shot off. It yelps but keeps moving. Ben fires as well but Sam can’t get his head out of the snow to see if he hit it. “Ben!” he yells, “Are you good?”

The body pinning him down shifts--going from a four hundred pound hairy monster to a naked woman in a matter of seconds. She’s Caucasian, late 40’s, under-weight and nobody Sam knows, thank God. He shoves her off of him and scrambles to his feet. Ben still hasn’t answered him, and Ben always answers him.

Sam checks his gun for damage from the fall and then follows the churned up snow. There’s blood in the track and he tries not to worry because he knows he hit the werewolf, knows it’s bleeding.

There’s a torn-up clearing, more blood. Sam guesses Ben got free of the wolf for long enough to fight it. The tracks continue on the other side, and here Sam can’t see who was leading and who was chasing.

“Ben!” he shouts again, almost frantic with worry.

“Sam,” Ben replies and it’s closer and quieter than same expected. He turns the last curve in the path. This is where it ended, where the wolf turned to fight, where Ben caught it. The body on the ground is barely larger than Ben’s. Sam recognizes the person this time and wishes to God he didn’t. Blond hair, pale skin, heart-shaped young face—it’s Davie McPherson.

The knives Bobby made have left a horrible ruin in their wake and for a second that’s all Sam can see. The blades are short and curved, quick slash and bleed weapons and Ben’s used them to their maximum destructive potential. The McPherson boy’s body is mauled by dozens of sweeping cuts. None of them is over an inch deep, but they don’t have to be to immobilize wrist and elbows, to slice arteries and joints, to open the backs of his ankles and knees to the bone. There’s so much blood, so much damage, that it’s hard to call any one wound the killing blow.

And Ben…he looks so lost, so afraid as he lets the other boy’s head fall back on a too-limp neck.

“Nomlie, Sam,” he says, almost desperate for the man to get it. They’ve never killed something that looked so human before. Ben’s green eyes don’t leave Sam’s as he puts one knee under the dead boy’s shoulder and then hits down on the body with his other knee and one hand on his arm. There’s a pop as the joint dislocates and it flops on the ground.

“It’s okay, Ben,” Sam says and walks slowly over. “I know it was a werewolf. I’m not mad at you.”

Ben’s left arm hangs at his side; he’s not using it as he positions the corpse’s arm, using his knee as a fulcrum point again and snaps the bone between wrist and elbow. Blood drips from the cuff of Ben’s jacket sleeve, curling around his fingers before dripping to the gore-splattered snow.

Sam wants to stop Ben from mutilating the body—not because the dead have feelings, but because Ben’s too intense when he does it. It doesn’t look healthy. It doesn’t look sane.

“Ben,” Sam calls again, soft this time as he moves forward with hand outstretched. “Ben, it’s okay. I know, I know. It’s okay but I need to treat your arm, alright?” He feels like he’s taking a steak from a tiger, like there’s a chance of drawing back nothing but a bloody stump if he sets the kid off the wrong way.

“I have to make sure She knows, Sam. It doesn’t look like a Nomlie. I have to make sure it doesn’t get to the good place.” And Sam hates the panic in the boy’s eyes.

“It’s enough,” Sam says and takes Ben’s hand. He has a hard time telling Ben not to do this when he’s salted and burned more corpses than he can count. “She’ll know.”

Ben flinches away as Sam snaps open the pocketknife and cuts his sleeve open. Sam’s never seen him flinch from anything and it freaks him the hell out. Down from the jacket sticks to the blood. Sam helps Ben sit down, wishes there was somewhere warm and dry to do this, but it has to be now so it has to be here.

He opens the black-painted jar of colloidal silver uses half of it to wash the wound. Ben opens his mouth and gasps. His breathing goes irregular with the pain. As the fluff washes away, Sam’s hope that the injury is from claws dies. Ben’s upper arm is black with bruises all the way around and marked by rows of punctures.

Teeth marks. Bite marks, God damn it, and Sam’s not losing this one. He splashes more clear liquid on the wound, rubs it into the injury with his thumb and tries not to hear Ben whimper. He brings the jar to the kid’s pale lips. “Here, buddy, drink this for me, okay?”

Ben drinks dutifully, tipping his head back to get the last sip of silver-laced water. Sam hopes it’ll help, attacking the were-taint from the inside as well as the outside.

With hands that he will not allow to shake, Sam bandages the wound. Ben looks ill, shocky and tired. He needs warm and safe and a light for Sam to see by to check for other injuries. Sam lifts him to his feet. “Just a little bit further to the McPherson’s house. Think you can make it?”

Ben nods and straightens his posture. “Yes, Sam.”

Sam puts it off for as long as he can for the sake of Ben’s pride, but the kid’s legs give out before they reach their destination and Sam has to carry him piggy-back for the last mile or so.

The McPherson farm is a wreck—windows smashed, the door broken down, blood on the living room floor and Sam feels sick at the sight of it.

“Hello?” He calls as he carries Ben in. “Hey, is anybody alive here?”

He hears a broken sob of relief from the vicinity of the kitchen. The pantry door is gouged with claw marks but only cracked open less by than a hand’s width. Amber McPherson’s tear-streaked face appears in the gap. “Oh thank God,” she cries, as her and Brittney move the freezer away from where it had wedged the door shut.

Neither of them is hurt, at least not physically, but their family is shattered—son turned monster, father gone trying to bring him home.

All Sam can do is wait for morning and guard them until the threat is past. As dawn breaks he gets everyone up for the walk back to the junkyard.

Mother and daughter don’t make good time through the snow, but Sam doesn’t feel like they’re slowing him down. Ben’s feverish and as the first hour passes he grows too delirious to cling to Sam’s back and Sam has to hold him against his chest, off-balance and stumbling.

“Don’t wanna be a Nomlie,” Ben whines over and over. “Don’t let them take me, Sam. I don’t wanna go to the bad place. Don’t let me be bad; don’t let me hurt you.”

“That’s not gonna happen,” Sam says, as many times as Ben needs to hear it. He means it too, without reservation. Not gonna happen.

He’s exhausted by the time he gets back to Bobby’s place, his patience worn thin by worry and Amber’s constant fretting. His legs are burning from carrying his pack, Ben’s pack and Ben’s nearly-limp body.

Bobby opens the door for them, covering their backs with an old AK-47. It’s an impressive sight until the old hunter sees what Sam’s carrying and his face falls in sorrow.

“Aw, hell.”

The dogs go nuts, whining and growling. One of them grabs Ben’s foot by the shoe and shakes it until Bobby kicks both of them outside.

“I screwed up,” Sam says as they strip the bloodied bandages off. Bobby doesn’t say anything but Sam can feel how angry and disappointed he is. Together they hold the boy down while Sam uses a rubber-bulb syringe to get the silver-water deep into each of the punctures. They go over the rest of his skin, treat some scratches that look like they’re more from branches than claws, and then wrap the injuries again.

When they’ve done everything they can medically, Sam leaves Ben with Bobby and starts packing a bag. He grabs a day’s worth of food, the best sleeping bag, some of the prescription pain killers.

“Sam,” Bobby says when Sam opens the case from the back of dad’s truck. The hand-grenade is heavy in his hand; the silverware he’d planned on melting down for bullets is so cold.

“Sam, what are you thinking?”

“I have to get him out of here,” Sam says through clenched teeth. “I need to give him as much of a chance as I can, and I can’t do that where innocent people will die if my timing’s off.”

“It doesn’t matter where you do it, Sam, if you’re late pulling that pin.”

Sam knows it’s the truth, that no hunter he’s ever met would be able to stop a werewolf with Ben’s advantages.

“I have to try,” he says, and stares Bobby down. Don’t make me shoot you is what he means.

“This isn’t good,” Bobby says, but he stays out of Sam’s way as he lifts Ben in his arms.

“I know.” Sam says. He refuses to regret this, refuses to back down. “If he comes back without me, you know what to do.”

Bobby sighs, resigned. “Where are you going?”

It’s Ben that answers, in between whimpers. “The high place, Sam.” His voice is strained and small. “We have to go to the high place. We have to go where the Lady can hear us.”

Sam looks to Bobby and Bobby sends them a mile down the road and two miles up a dirt track to a forest fire watchtower.

The stairs are a bitch to climb. Once they’re up there though, Sam approves. The afternoon sun is on fire across the western horizon. The tips of the pines glow like the points of knives in the forge. There’s a decent roof and the wind is mild. Ben’s fever grows but he seems to be in less pain. Sam wraps the two of them up in the sleeping bag and tries to keep them warm.

Well before moonrise he uses electrical tape to loop the silver pieces to the grenade and then wraps the package to Ben’s chest with the handle and pin exposed.

Ben prays to his Lady, mumbled words about trying to be strong, promises to believe in Her.

If you ever loved him-- Sam thinks as the sky grows dark, hell, if you exist at all, you’ll help him. And he’s not sure if he’s praying to God or Fate or Ben’s Lady.

You promised me, he wants to remind Ben, you promised you wouldn’t leave me. He won’t have Ben die thinking he’d failed, so he swallows the words and threads his finger through the ring and holds on.

The moon rises and the closest thing Sam’s ever going to have to a son of his own convulses in his arms. The air is cold; his tears are hot and Ben’s promise won’t be broken because Sam’s not going to let himself be left behind, not this time.

“Hold on,” he whispers, to both of them and he holds the hell on. Ben’s breathing becomes ragged, becomes a growl like blood’s choking through vocal cords that aren’t made for words anymore.

Now! Sam’s instincts scream. Still he holds on, waits for Ben to turn in his arms and pull the pin. He knows his only chance to walk out of this is to set the grenade and push the boy over the edge, but he won’t.

Sam’s spent the last four years expecting to die fighting some big evil thing; he always thought it would be quick and ugly and a big stupid waste. But this—this feels right, to be there for Ben like he was there for Dean. The cost doesn’t matter a bit.

Ben shivers in his arms; the moon shines down on the boy, shimmers blue over his delicate features, makes diamonds of the dampness in his lashes. Hoarse breathing evens out and the little body relaxes.

Thank you, Sam breathes into the baby-soft hair. Oh thank you.

Ben wakes just after sunrise. “You saved me,” he whispers as he traces his fingers over the dried tear-tracks on Sam’s cheek. “You made me strong.”

They stay at the tower for one more night, the last night of the full moon, before walking home together.

Something changes in Ben after that. Sam thinks it’s because he’s seen Ben at his weakest now and didn’t send him to the Nomlies or ditch him out in the woods. It took blood and fear and pain but Sam feels like he’s truly inside the walls. The way Ben says his name sounds less and less like “Sir” and more like “Dad.” He smiles more, even laughs, especially when it’s just the two of them out working on their cardio with long runs over the melting snow.

When Sam reads at night, Ben brings his own book over. He presses his skinny little shoulder against Sam’s arm like it’s always been that way and they share the light of a single lantern.

It’s the little things, but they go a long way towards easing Sam’s sense of failure at his bad parenting over the winter. It’ll be okay, he promises, looking down at the boy who had come to mean so much to him, I’ll figure this out. I’ll take care of you; I’ll make sure your life is as good as I can make it.

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Date: 2006-12-06 04:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chinae.livejournal.com
Yes!

This is one of my favourite SPN WIPs.

Thank you so much for updating.

:)

Date: 2006-12-06 04:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad you liked it. Anything that you really enjoyed?

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From: [identity profile] chinae.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-08 03:00 am (UTC) - Expand

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From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-09 01:13 am (UTC) - Expand

Date: 2006-12-06 07:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skyebanshee.livejournal.com
Oh I have to go rec this to a friend who I got hooked onto the first two stories.

You can really see how much Sam's grown to care for Ben, and those last scenes, where Sam is ready to freakin' blow himself to kingdom come with Ben, if he has to...it gave me shivers, but in a good way...if...er...that makes sense.

I really liked how you incorporated Ben's belief in the Lady, and how he's still such a lost little boy at times (such as when he realized it was Davie MacPherson that was the werewolf).

“I have to try,” he says, and stares Bobby down. Don’t make me shoot you is what he means.

I can see Sam's grief and his determination kind of all rolled into one.

Thank you, Sam breathes into the baby-soft hair. Oh thank you.

Ben wakes just after sunrise. “You saved me,” he whispers as he traces his fingers over the dried tear-tracks on Sam’s cheek. “You made me strong.”


That sort of broke my heart, but definitely in a good way.

Thanks so much for sharing it.

Oh, such love for this...*off to rec to a friend*

Date: 2006-12-06 12:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Dude, thanks for the depth of your review. It's really cool, knowing what's a hit and what's a miss.

When I started this, I sorta imagined that Sam would ween Ben off of his love of the Lady, not that he'd start to almost believe himself. I love writing this universe because they keep surprising me as the author.

Thanks for pimping it out too, I appreciate it.

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From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-07 12:38 am (UTC) - Expand

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From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-07 02:47 am (UTC) - Expand

Date: 2006-12-06 01:26 pm (UTC)
kentucka: kitty ears ([Jared] Sam / lonely)
From: [personal profile] kentucka
oh dear, LOVE LOVE LOVE! why isn't there a word stronger than that?

the emotional build-up was intense, I had to try my hardest not to start crying at the end.
a-pro-pos end, thanks for not leaving us with a cliffhanger.

there are so many great lines that I can't pick a favorite. like
The way Ben says his name sounds less and less like “Sir” and more like “Dad.”
little words, but so much meaning, so much impact. and you keep that up from the first to the last paragraph.

LOVE.

Date: 2006-12-07 12:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
I was so worried about the "more like dad" line. Thank you for letting me know that it resonated with you.

Was the moment when Ben fought off the wolf-taint a little anti-climatic? That bit was a pain in my ass, man.

I'm so glad you liked it, and thank you so much for leaving me a big fat comment. :)

(no subject)

From: [personal profile] kentucka - Date: 2006-12-08 11:50 am (UTC) - Expand

Date: 2006-12-06 05:52 pm (UTC)
trinity_clare: (winchesters solemnly swear)
From: [personal profile] trinity_clare
Ooh, I like this more than sandwiches.

Date: 2006-12-07 12:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Mmmm, sandwiches.

Glad you enjoyed.

Date: 2006-12-06 07:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dolimir-k.livejournal.com
I just read this entire series and I have to say I really enjoyed it. Wonderfully fleshed out! Very well done!

Date: 2006-12-07 12:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Yay! Glad you liked it.

Date: 2006-12-06 07:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lucywiggin.livejournal.com
Really glad you decided to continue that:)

Date: 2006-12-07 12:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
It's the AUverse that would not end, man.

Date: 2006-12-06 08:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] some-stars.livejournal.com
oh, i just *love* these stories. you do such a good job of changing sam, so imperceptibly and hugely, making it all make so much sense. *sniffle*

Date: 2006-12-07 01:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Ben's really giving him something to live for (or die for) now that Dean's gone. He doesn't have Dean's experiance dealing with children, but he's really trying hard.

Date: 2006-12-06 08:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] apieceofcake.livejournal.com
Lovely series and this one had me in tears at the end. Enjoyed them, thank you :-)

Date: 2006-12-07 01:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Yay! Hope it wasn't too sappy there.
-J.

Date: 2006-12-06 09:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blue-icy-rose.livejournal.com
You realize I will now have to rec this to all my friends who have ever been fans of either show (or both), right? Because this series is just awesome! I love the dynamic between Sam and Ben and how at first, every time Ben said "Yes, Sam." it was like saying "Yes, sir." but now after all of this, Sam sounds more like Dad. Ben's got a family! He's a Winchester! *g*

I'm so interested to see what Ben's life will be like with Sam acting as his uncle/dad. Because really, Ben was pretty much a hunter already except Manticore had him hunting down humans and stuff. There's just so much to love about this series that I don't even know where to start. It's very believable, the way you're merging these two worlds.

Also, I'd like to say thank you because I've been trying to work out how to make a Buffy/SPN/DA crossover work but, well, there's a reason I'm an English/Criminal Justice major, lol. Math is so not my strong suit and I completely forgot that they escaped in 2009. But basically (and there's a reason I'm rambling about this, promise) the premise I had was that Buffy's traveling with Dean and Sam and they find Ben (because as much as I love Alec, I've got this huge soft spot for Ben and I squee when I see a fic with Ben) and/or Max (because I thought it'd be interesting to see what either of them grew up to be like with people who cared and were a constant) and decide to take them in. But mine was going to have them finding them after the Pulse. But when reading this, I realized that those sound very similar so I wanted to double check and see if you minded me writing that because while we may have had similar ideas, you started writing yours first and I don't want you to think I'm trying to rip your idea off. So, if the answer's no, then I'm cool by that. (If it makes any difference, I'd be writing and posting this for/at [livejournal.com profile] buffyxdean and at Route 66, a Buffy/Dean site, so you can see what a large part of the focus would be on.)

Either way, I love this series and thanks so much for sharing! This has to be my favorite SPN/DA crossover that I've ever seen. ^_^ Looking forward to more!

Date: 2006-12-06 10:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Yay, pimp this fic! :)

I'm thrilled you enjoyed it. It's sorta cool that Ben's more of a person now, although I worry about making him too much of an OC for the DA fans to relate to.

It sounds like your fic has enough differences (Dean and Buffy and Sam finding the kids, it being post-pulse, etc) that I'm not worried about it. I think it's fanfic, fic based on somebody else's creation. I'm sure there are ideas I wouldn't have had without reading something else by somebody else. It's organic, and everything grows on something else. I don't get when people are like "but Sue is my OC so nobody use her!" Much less ideas that more than one person can come up with. I think I'd be much more protective of my words, the way I put emotion into language.

Date: 2006-12-06 11:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whisp.livejournal.com
*mad flailing*

I LOVE this series so much. Crossovers = uber love for me, and you craft this one so well. I love your attention to the timeline, to canon details, to their personalities and traits, and just everything.

It nearly broke my heart when Ben was infected by the werewolf. And when he was mutilating the corpse, *sob!*. Also, I love the growth in Sam throughout this series, and how he moves from wanting to fix the kid up and drop him off somewhere, to becoming his family and coming to love and depend on Ben as much as he did Dean. Sam's able to understand Ben better towards the end and is becoming more attune to his motivations and how his upbringing has and will affect his actions. That Sam was willing to die for him in order to prevent Ben from becoming what he feared the most says so much about their relationship. And lines like this one “You saved me,” he whispers as he traces his fingers over the dried tear-tracks on Sam’s cheek. “You made me strong.” and this The way Ben says his name sounds less and less like “Sir” and more like “Dad.” make me all warm and tingly inside.

I hope you continue this series, I'm really enjoying it.

Date: 2006-12-07 01:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
I am a total crossover hoooor! I don't think I've written anything ever that wasn't an AU or a crossover.

when he was mutilating the corpse,
Yeah, sometimes Ben's not quite as healthy as Sam hopes or thinks.

Sam's able to understand Ben better
Sam really has to listen between the lines. There's so much that it wouldn't occur to Ben to say.

Glad the two scenes at the end that you quoted weren't too sugary or heavy-handed. I agonized over both of them, so I'm happy they worked.

I'm about 800 words into the next one. I have so much envy for authors who just pour out 1500 words of good fic/day. If I get 300 it's an accomplishment. Even better if they're the same fic.

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From: [identity profile] whisp.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-07 06:32 am (UTC) - Expand

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Date: 2006-12-07 12:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whispersins.livejournal.com
YES YES YES YES!!! Another part!! *claps*

I swear hun, everytime I read these stories I don't think you can make me melt and love Sam and Ben eevn more and you ALWAYS do! There are so many great, heart warming, painful moments in this story that I don't even know where to start!

Ben, when he was finishing off Davie, so confused and hurt! His belife in the Lady through this all and him wanting Sam to understand, not to blame or hate him! I had to stop and colect myself before I contuined reading!! And Sam, willing to blow himself away with Ben, his determination to see Ben through this and to not let another person leave him, especially someone his is coming to think of as his son! You're breaking my heart! It's so obvious how these two care about each other, and yet hoe their still lost, confused boys just looking for a reason to live!

The way Ben says his name sounds less and less like “Sir” and more like “Dad.”

I melted, it's just soooo awesome and sweet and guh!

It’ll be okay, he promises, looking down at the boy who had come to mean so much to him, I’ll figure this out. I’ll take care of you; I’ll make sure your life is as good as I can make it.

I heart you, hun! Making me all weepy and emtional! This promise from Sam to Ben, it nearly killed me!

Date: 2006-12-07 02:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
I'm so glad I'm maintaining the interest and compassions of the readers without getting meladramatic.

Ah, Ben. Better-adjusted, but still crazy in his own way. Struggling to make his world-view and the real world fit together and never having an easy time of it.

Glad the "more like Dad" line worked. I worried about it so much, and added it at the very end.

And the last line took me forever to get so that I was happy with it, so I'm glad that worked too.

Date: 2006-12-07 01:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dhark-charlotte.livejournal.com
OM goodness, I was weeping halfway through. Is this your only crossover fic? One of the best DA crossovers I've read so far. Am definitely friending if you have more for me to read (if that's okay)

Date: 2006-12-07 01:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
I've got some others, but this set of 3 is the only DA one. Check out the "crossover crack" tag in my lj.

I'm a crossover and AU hoooor! I can't think of anything I've written that doesn't fit in one of those descriptions.

Please, friend away. The more the merrier.

Date: 2006-12-07 04:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lunardreamed.livejournal.com
I seriously squealed when I saw another story in this series.

Date: 2006-12-07 06:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Cool. Hope it lived up to your expectations.

Date: 2006-12-07 04:58 am (UTC)
shallowz: (Default)
From: [personal profile] shallowz
This is a wonderful SPN/DA crossover! I especially enjoyed:

Something changes in Ben after that. Sam thinks it’s because he’s seen Ben at his weakest now and didn’t send him to the Nomlies or ditch him out in the woods. It took blood and fear and pain but Sam feels like he’s truly inside the walls. The way Ben says his name sounds less and less like “Sir” and more like “Dad.” He smiles more, even laughs, especially when it’s just the two of them out working on their cardio with long runs over the melting snow.

A happy kidBen!:-)

Date: 2006-12-07 06:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it. I was worried about that last bit.

Yay, Happy!Ben!

Date: 2006-12-07 08:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beluga.livejournal.com
'Though I have read a few bad D.A x-overs in the past I dunno why I've been avoiding reading this 'verse' of yrs.. Cos it rocks big time!!!!
There's nothing in it I don't like!! :-D
xx

Date: 2006-12-07 06:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad you liked it. I think the problem I have with most SPN/DA crossovers is the time-conflict. I wanted to see if I could make it work without messing with the timelines, keeping the AUness of it as small as possible.

I love the crossover, the challenge of making it work.

Thanks for the review,
-J

Date: 2006-12-07 08:59 am (UTC)
ratcreature: RatCreature as Sam and Dean. (sam and dean)
From: [personal profile] ratcreature
Yay! I'm so happy to see this xover universe continued!

Date: 2006-12-07 02:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Did it live up to your expectations?

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From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-07 06:24 pm (UTC) - Expand

Date: 2006-12-07 09:13 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Oh God how I love this series!!! I was going to quote off my favorite lines but there are just TOO damn many! It’s just beautifully written and so full of fear, pain, tentative hope, and love it just breaks me in two. We’re watching (I hope) Sam’s love change Ben and change his future. Now granted the kid’ll probably always be a little past twelve on the crazy clock, but Sam is so loving and protective and patient and loyal that I know we don’t have to stick with Dark Angel’s future for the kid and have him go completely nuts. If Sam can just keep him this side of sane, maybe even bring him just a little closer to normal or well less not-normal, I would love to see it, hell I would love to see more of his struggle to do just that! As many one-shots as you’ve got for us, we’ll be ready and waiting for more! Now excuse me I have to go shamelessly recc to all my friends a certain talented writer’s great new story in this incredibly unique series!

Date: 2006-12-07 05:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad you liked it. Glad Ben came off as still not-quite-well. He'll never be normal, but he might be controllable.

Date: 2006-12-07 03:30 pm (UTC)
digitalwave: (Default)
From: [personal profile] digitalwave
Sweetie,

I was so happy to see a new part to this series. I love watching the love and trust growing between the two of them. Ben blossoms under Sam's patience and his steady care. And, Ben is fillig the terrible hole left in Sam's soul by Dean's death.

I'm so glad that this is a AU, that the Ben who's growing up under Sam's care has the chance that the Ben on the show never had.

Having Bobby here too was just a wonderful bonus. Thank you so much for writing more in this 'verse. :)

Date: 2006-12-07 06:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Yay! Glad you liked it.

I was so happy to see a new part to this series. I love watching the love and trust growing between the two of them. Ben blossoms under Sam's patience and his steady care. And, Ben is fillig the terrible hole left in Sam's soul by Dean's death.


Yes! That's what it's all about, man.

And the giving Ben a chance, because god, Pollo Loco broke my freakin' heart. I don't think I ever forgave Max for hitting him when he was handcuffed.

I love Bobby. I think Amber and her daughter are gonna stay with him when Sam and Ben go back into the world.

Date: 2006-12-07 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rio87.livejournal.com
HOLY SHIT! I didn't know you had a journal

*calms down*

*waves*
hi, I've been reading your stuff over at ff.net I'm so glad I found this story at LJ to *adds to memories*

with Sam's looking out for him, Ben might have that snowballs chance in hell that he didn't have in the show...

I love that just because Ben's got a 'home' now, he's still unstable and Sam shouldn't forget that.

I only hope that Sam's got a bit more of a hold on Ben before Zack finds tham, or things could get really ugly

(btw I found my way here by [livejournal.com profile] spnnewsletter but are there any comms that you post this story to?)

Date: 2006-12-07 07:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Thanks for letting me know how you found this. I sometimes wonder.

I think I put this one on
supernaturalfic
sn_fic
jam_pony_fic
crossoverfic
sn_crossovers

I am a crossposting hooor!

Glad you found me. :)
Things go up here a lot earlier than on ff.net. I usually get around to there when I've got time on my hands and think of it. I don't really read there anymore. The comms here are just so rich.

Heh. You think Ben would leave with Zack, or do something bad to him? So many ways that could go ugly.

(no subject)

From: [identity profile] rio87.livejournal.com - Date: 2006-12-08 11:44 pm (UTC) - Expand

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Date: 2006-12-08 10:22 pm (UTC)
tabaqui: (samshadowbynyaubaby)
From: [personal profile] tabaqui
Ooh, man. Okay - wait - is there *more* of this? The first comments says 'WIP'??

I *like* this. I love them figuring out how to survive, I love Sam trying so hard to be a brother/father to this little boy...

It's good stuff.

Date: 2006-12-09 03:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
There will most-likely be more. I'm writing one-shot and short-series fic in a set AU universe. That way if I ever run out of steam, I'm not leaving it 'unfinished.' I can concentrate on what I want each bit to say and I don't leave cliffhangers that go on for months this way. :)

You did catch the previous two, right?

Glad Sam's evolution to parenthood is working for everybody. So tricky to make it warm and good without it being too-fast and over-sweet.

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Date: 2006-12-09 01:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] em16.livejournal.com
Man oh man, I continue to love this story ridiculous amounts. I adore the bond between Sam and Ben, and I'm curious to see how their relationship changes now that Sam is "inside the walls". The progression to get there felt natural too, not at all forced, which is ultimately so much more satisfying. Ben's reaction to/interaction with people who are not Sam will be really interesting to see as he seems to trust Sam exclusively. I hope you will continue the series! I'm so gleeful whenever I see a new installment posted :)

Date: 2006-12-09 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad it feels natural. That's always the worry with building a relationship between unrelated characters, whether they're OCs or crossover guys or AU-seperated-at-youth-really-brothers-but-they-don't-know.

he seems to trust Sam exclusively.

Yeah, outsiders (aka anybody not-sam) aren't really people to Ben. They're objectives to rescue or potential threats or sources of resupply, but not anything he has an emotional reaction to at all beyond what Sam wants him to have.

It's really hard to imagine Ben in any sort of adult relationship at all, not romantic, not sexual, not even friendship. The closer he gets to Sam, the more dangerous he becomes if Sam dies or is taken away somehow.

Date: 2006-12-09 02:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] braveinnewworld.livejournal.com
*flails* I loved this! Just now read all four parts there are so far and don't know what else to say but that I FREAKIN loved this. *flails again*

Date: 2006-12-09 08:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Yay, glad you found me and happy to hear that you liked the fic.

Date: 2006-12-12 12:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] garnet-words.livejournal.com
Oooh, this just gets better and better!

And I just love this line: The way Ben says his name sounds less and less like “Sir” and more like “Dad.”

Love it, hope you write more soon!

Date: 2006-12-12 02:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad you liked it. It's always scary, writing more in a universe that's going so well. Like "is this part going to live up to the rest." Happy to hear it's living up to the previous parts.

Date: 2006-12-16 07:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] derlinde.livejournal.com
I just caught up on this entire series. Absolutely loved, enjoyed it, and want more of it!

Date: 2006-12-19 12:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad you enjoyed it. Hopefully, I have at least one more in me.

Date: 2006-12-17 08:55 am (UTC)
minim_calibre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] minim_calibre
I love the way you paint such a vivid picture of their world, like with
There’s enough meat in the freezer that they don’t have to ration it. Once a week they split an MRE three ways, for variety. It’s amazing when pre-packaged military food becomes a treat instead of a necessary evil on a long hunt.
this.

Date: 2006-12-19 12:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladyjanelly.livejournal.com
Glad you're enjoying it. I'm always trying to make the world believable, without bogging the story down on endless detail. Thanks for letting me know where it worked for you.
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