
Posted originally on the Archive_of_Our_Own at https://archiveofourown.org/
works/1267399.
  Rating:
      Explicit
  Archive Warning:
      Rape/Non-Con, Underage
  Category:
      M/M
  Fandom:
      Supernatural
  Relationship:
      Dean_Winchester/Original_Male_Character(s)
  Character:
      Dean_Winchester, John_Winchester, Original_Monster_Character(s)
  Additional Tags:
      Rape, Rape_Aftermath, John_Winchester's_Bad_Parenting, Hurt_Dean
      Winchester, Teen_Dean_Winchester, Dean_Whump, Traumatized_Dean, John
      Winchester_Bashing, Not_Beta_Read, Prompt_Fic, Community:_spnkink_meme
  Stats:
      Published: 2014-03-10 Words: 1774
****** What took you so long? ******
by Valinde_(Valyria)
Summary
     Nothing is more important than the hunt, than the kill.
     That's what John tells himself anyway.
Notes
     Prompt fill: John uses Dean as bait during a hunt and things go
     wrong. Dean is injured (raped?) when the plan goes bad, but insult is
     added to injury when he discovers his dad used him.
     John never considered failure a possibility; he never considered how
     badly Dean could be hurt if the plan failed.
     ***
     AN: A 'Hagondes' is a Native American monster that abducts and eats
     the young.

John tracks the monster easily enough. Dean keeps a level head and he makes
sure there’s a trail of for John to follow – broken leaves and bent branches.
With his prey distracting him, the Hagondes doesn’t seem to notice or care.

Two hours later he’s followed them deep into the forest and there are smears of
blood to follow as well. It’s red and human and clearly Dean’s not the
Hagondes. The ever increasing amount of it worries John, but Dean’s tough and
the monster won’t hurt him too badly until he has him back in his lair.
Hagondes feed off their young victims slowly. Dean will be roughed up by the
time John catches up, but not badly injured. He’s a hell of a lot tougher than
the other high school kids the thing's been picking off one by one.

John keeps telling himself that even as the trail becomes harder to follow,
just splatters and smears of blood, no longer branches and leaves marked
intentionally.
He loses the trail sometime after midnight and has to double back, wasting half
an hour. For the first time he thinks perhaps using Dean as bait wasn’t a good
idea. But no. That’s just nerves. Dean’s fine. He’s a tough kid, hardened by
years on the road. Even if the Hagondes has him back at its lair, it’ll be
playing with him, not really hurting him yet. They like to drag it out, feed
off their energy before their flesh.

Still, when he hears Dean scream he’s actually relieved.

The cave stinks, the remains of god knows how many teenagers and kids
mouldering in the corners, and John gags a little as he enters even though he's
gotten used to the stench of death over the years. It’s dark, just the silver
of moonlight lighting his way, so he makes himself stand still while his eyes
adjust. He presses his back to cold stone and waits with ears pricked.

He can hear the monster panting and Dean crying.
crying.

Real fear twists in his guts for the first time as he listens to his son sob
and gasp. It’s a sound he hasn’t heard in years. Dean will sometimes shed a
silent tear or two in shame when he gets a tongue lashing for a fuck up, or in
pain at a nasty injury, but he never makes any noise, hasn’t since he was a
boy. Since Mary died. This is different, this is not the stoic boy he’s used
to, the seventeen year old who’s stronger than most men twice his age. This is
the sniffling, gasping, shameless crying of a child in pain and John clenches
his teeth and readies his shotgun in one hand and the knife in his other.

As his eyes adjust he can make out the shape of the monster and his son. It’s
hunched over Dean, and for an awful moment John thinks he’s wrong – thinks he’s
listening to his son getting eaten, but then he recognizes the violent rocking
movement of the Hagondes. Suddenly the pained little huffing noises and broken
sobs coming out of Dean seem a thousand times louder and John thinks he might
be sick.
On automatic he lifts the shotgun, his aim steady, and blasts the thing in the
head. It snarls and Dean screams.

The next few moments pass in a blur of adrenaline. John doesn’t spare a thought
for his son, just falls into the fight. The Hagondes is strong, but John is
prepared and with it weakened by the shotgun blast, he’s able to bury his blade
in its shrunken heart without too much effort. It’s still twitching so he hacks
off its head for good measure.

When it finally stills, he sits back and pants to get his breath back. Only
then does he note the sobbing coming from a few feet to his left. Dean’s
clothes are torn and he’s a mess of blood and muck from the filthy cave floor.
John kneels beside him and places a gentle hand onto his shoulder.

“Dean?”

His son flinches and curls up tighter on his side, not looking at John or
responding, but his chest shakes with renewed sobs as his crying intensifies
and he tries to keep it in. “Shh,” John says. “It’s dead now Dean. You’re
safe.”

Dean still doesn’t reply.

John has to help him walk back. He takes small painful steps and John tells
himself it’s because he’s turned his ankle, ignores the ripped jeans hanging
from bruised and bloody hips. It takes hours and Dean remains mute, silent save
the occasion stifled hiss of pain and the chattering of his teeth. John feels
him shivering in shock the entire way. He's no good at the soft touch but he
tries to comfort him, talks quietly, tells him that he did good to leave such a
clear trail for him to track and that he’s earned a few days off once they get
back to the hotel, that he doesn't have to go to back to the school he and Sam
have been at for the last few weeks. Dean doesn’t respond, doesn’t look at him.

Mercifully Sammy is asleep when they get back to the motel, and John half-
carries his eldest to the bathroom, quietly so as not to wake his youngest.
Dean lets his father unlace his filthy boots and pull off his ruined jeans and
torn shirt, but his shivering turns into outright shaking and his teeth rattle.
He stinks and a shower would be best, but John doesn’t think he could wash
himself in his current state, so he runs a bath.

Dean climbs in gingerly, like an old man, and when he sits down he flinches and
lets out a pained whine. John stares at the blooming bruises on his son’s
skinny hips and thighs, the scratches on the knobs of his spine, the ugly red
marks around his neck. Dean starts sobbing again, curling forward to press his
face against his knees. John knows how embarrassed Dean must be to be crying in
front of him, so he doesn’t comment, just starts methodically washing off
Dean’s back, shoulders and arms. There are bite marks and finger bruises all
over him, but his arms are especially bad. Rings of red and purple around his
wrists and forearms where the monster had held him down and --

John swallows past a lump in his throat as he uses a wash cloth to clean Dean’s
bruised and skinned knuckles. It looks like he spent the evening punching a
brick wall or something and his fingernails are just as bad, torn and bloody
from where he’d scratched out at the Hagondes, bits of the monster’s scaly
black skin caught there underneath them.

Dean has gone quiet, tears dried up.

“You did good son,” John says. “That thing isn’t gonna hurt anyone else.”

John tries to remain clinical as he cleans Dean’s back – there are a few nasty
bruises and a cut lower down that will need a few stitches – but as he’s
cleaning the sore looking, puffy bites to the back of his son’s neck, his hands
start shaking. He sees it in his mind’s eye, the stinking Hagondes pining Dean
to the ground, teeth buried in his boy’s neck as its hips jerked back and
forth--

He lifts his shaking hands and stares at them for a moment. When he looks up
again Dean has his head resting against his knees and is staring at him,
meeting his eyes for the first time since John found him.

They're red from crying and there are unshed tears clinging to his eyelashes,
but his face is blank and devoid of all emotion. When his face is relaxed, when
he’s not smirking or grinning that big stupid teenage smile of his, Dean looks
so much like his mother that it hurts. John finds himself looking away, over
Dean’s shoulder and at the dirty tiles of the motel bathroom.

“You told me to wait for you dad,” Dean says and his voice is quiet and hoarse
from all the screaming he’s done over the last few hours.
John makes a grunting noise of vague agreement. He darts a quick look down at
Dean’s face. He’s still staring at John, face pale and still. Just to give
himself something to do John picks up the cloth again and starts rubbing at the
mess of blood and mud in Dean’s short hair. It’s darker than Mary’s was.
There’s a bump to the back of his skull and John carefully probes at it with
callused fingertips, but there’s no fracture.

“What took you so long?” Dean asks, voice cold and flat.

“I came as fast as I could Dean,” John tells him.

“I heard you,” Dean whispers. “Saw you.”

John freezes.

“You were there when it jumped me.”

John opens his mouth to explain, defend his actions. Dean was bait, sure, but
it was hardly the first time and he hadn’t thought the thing would do more than
rough him up,  hadn't known how it played with its food, but he can’t form the
sentences.

“I kept waiting for you to jump out and stop it,” Dean says. “But you didn’t.”

“Dean-” John starts but is silenced as Dean erupts into violence. He lashes
out, clawing at John and throwing a wild punch towards his face. His face is
twisted in anger, mouth pulled back into a snarl and he still looks like Mary.
His voice isn’t cold anymore, it’s a low hiss. “You let him," he spits. “You
fucking let him--!” but it seems Dean can’t form the words either because the
accusation dissolves into a meaningless howl of betrayal.

John lets him land a punch, but it’s weak and off target and the ache in his
jaw is unsatisfying. He catches at Dean’s fists, pulling him close and trying
to calm him. Dirty water sloshes over the tub, soaking his shirt and jeans as
Dean fights him, thrashing and swearing. Then like a switch has been thrown, he
goes limp and huddles closer, pulling at John instead of shoving. He’s crying
again, awful racking sobs that sound painful and make his entire body
shake. “Why’d you...” Dean sniffs into the cotton of John’s shirt. “Dad, why’d
you leave me...” Hiccups- “with it?”

John pats his hair like he used to when he was much younger. He opens his mouth
to say I’m sorry. Or I didn’t think it hurt you like that. But instead what
comes out is: “It’s dead now. Job’s done Dean.” He grits his teeth. “Forget
it.”
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