a subtle sort of brilliance (
theladyscribe) wrote in
avandell2007-04-29 10:50 pm
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Entry tags:
The Bile Rising From Your Guilty Past (TNverse)
Title: The Bile Rising From Your Guilty Past
Characters: Jo, OMC, mention of Dean (Jo/OMC)
Rating: R for language and sexual situations
Word Count: 821
Summary: She knew it wasn’t love, not by any stretch of the imagination, but she moved in with him three weeks later anyway. It wasn’t perfect, but it was the closest thing to happiness Jo had had in a long time.
Notes: Part of my TNverse. Takes place around the same time as Kate. Many thanks to
neethafor holding my hand while I put this together. Title from Pink Floyd’s “Run Like Hell.”
Characters: Jo, OMC, mention of Dean (Jo/OMC)
Rating: R for language and sexual situations
Word Count: 821
Summary: She knew it wasn’t love, not by any stretch of the imagination, but she moved in with him three weeks later anyway. It wasn’t perfect, but it was the closest thing to happiness Jo had had in a long time.
Notes: Part of my TNverse. Takes place around the same time as Kate. Many thanks to
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The Bile Rising From Your Guilty Past
She met Howie Washburn at Hot Lips Houlihan’s in Sacramento. He was Air Force – for once, not a Marine – and when he put The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly” on the jukebox, Jo decided he might be all right.
She knew it wasn’t love, not by any stretch of the imagination, but she moved in with him three weeks later anyway. After all, it meant she wouldn’t have to pay for a cheap motel room she wasn’t even sleeping in anymore. Besides, the sex was good enough to keep the lingering nightmares away. It wasn’t perfect, but it was the closest thing to happiness Jo had had in a long time. Still, she knew that something would go wrong, that it would never work out the way they - the way she - wanted it to work. They should have quit while they were ahead, but both of them were too stubborn and too stupid to end it.
It was when they got in the fight that wasn’t really about Pink Floyd that Jo realized just how doomed they were. It was inevitable, of course; it had probably been building up since the first night they had met and gone back to Jo’s motel room and she had put on that hideous orange plaid flannel of Dean’s to sleep (“It was my dad’s,” she had lied, when Wash asked the next morning).
It had been a long day for both of them, but they fell into their evening ritual anyway – Jo fixed dinner, Wash did the dishes, and then they fucked hard, Jo trying, as always, to push all thoughts of Dean and Sam and her past out of her mind with the thumping rhythm of skin on skin. She didn’t know what Wash was trying to forget, or if he was even trying to forget anything – he never said and she never asked.
She was drifting deep into her thoughts when Wash leaned across her, squishing her arm and rubbing sweat across her chest and stomach. The situation wasn't that annoying until she heard the heavy, grainy, twang of “In the Flesh” begin to play. It was The Wall. Again.
She groaned and looked at him. “The Wall, Wash?”
He glanced at her. “What?”
“The Wall?” she repeated. “Can’t you play something a little less grating?”
“You got a problem with Floyd, Jo?”
“No, Floyd’s good. But, Wash, you play this same album every night. I mean, yeah, it’s good, but it’s not that good.”
“And what would you rather listen to?”
She shrugged a little. “Well, Wish You Were Here has always been my favorite.”
“Yeah, why’s that?”
She shrugged. “Dunno. It just… It reminds me of home, you know?” She didn’t add that she hadn’t really appreciated Floyd until Dean Winchester came along and forced her to listen to the album (or that Dean’s Pink Floyd 101 class had ended with a rather engaging test of how well the Impala’s parking break worked).
Wash was silent for a moment. And then out of the blue, he said, “I think you’re lying.”
Jo raised herself up to look at him. “What?”
He shifted onto his side. “You’re lying, Jo. It’s not home that song reminds you of. Hell, if it were home you missed, you’d be calling every other day if not more often than that.”
“What are you saying, Wash?”
“I’m saying you don’t love me.”
“No, I don’t,” she admitted.
“The thing I don’t understand is why you’re here, with me, when you are in love with another man.”
She glanced away. “You wouldn’t understand,” she whispered softly.
“I wouldn’t understand?” he laughed. “Don’t you dare say that, Jo, when you don’t even try to explain. Don’t you dare try to pin this all on me. I’m not the one who came into this with a ghost on my shoulders, you are. So don’t you dare even think it.”
She slapped him. “He isn’t a ghost,” she snapped.
“What the hell, Jo? Ghost, shadow, call him what you like, but he overshadows everything you do. Everything, including sex.” He moved so that he was in her face, his eyes dark with anger. “So tell me, Jo, who is it you see when you shut your eyes while we fuck? Who is it? Because it sure as hell ain’t me.”
She looked down at her hands, biting back the tears that threatened to fall. “I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I’m sorry. This was all a mistake. I’ll just – I’ll just leave, all right? I’ll leave, and you’ll never have to see me again.” She stood up abruptly and began throwing her things into her duffle. Wash merely sat on the bed, a scowl on his face. She zipped the duffle violently and rose. “Goodbye, Wash,” she said and headed for the door, her back straight.
“Good riddance,” he muttered as she yanked the door open. She let it slam behind her.
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A/N: Yes, I totally named the bar after the character on M*A*S*H. And Howie is loosely based on Wash from Firefly, though they are definitely not the same person.
Run Like Hell:
Run, run, run, run
You better make your face up in
Your favourite disguise
With your button down lips and your
Roller blind eyes
With your empty smile
And your hungry heart
Feel the bile rising from your guilty past
With your nerves in tatters
When the cockleshell shatters
And the hammers batter
Down the door
You better run
She met Howie Washburn at Hot Lips Houlihan’s in Sacramento. He was Air Force – for once, not a Marine – and when he put The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly” on the jukebox, Jo decided he might be all right.
She knew it wasn’t love, not by any stretch of the imagination, but she moved in with him three weeks later anyway. After all, it meant she wouldn’t have to pay for a cheap motel room she wasn’t even sleeping in anymore. Besides, the sex was good enough to keep the lingering nightmares away. It wasn’t perfect, but it was the closest thing to happiness Jo had had in a long time. Still, she knew that something would go wrong, that it would never work out the way they - the way she - wanted it to work. They should have quit while they were ahead, but both of them were too stubborn and too stupid to end it.
It was when they got in the fight that wasn’t really about Pink Floyd that Jo realized just how doomed they were. It was inevitable, of course; it had probably been building up since the first night they had met and gone back to Jo’s motel room and she had put on that hideous orange plaid flannel of Dean’s to sleep (“It was my dad’s,” she had lied, when Wash asked the next morning).
It had been a long day for both of them, but they fell into their evening ritual anyway – Jo fixed dinner, Wash did the dishes, and then they fucked hard, Jo trying, as always, to push all thoughts of Dean and Sam and her past out of her mind with the thumping rhythm of skin on skin. She didn’t know what Wash was trying to forget, or if he was even trying to forget anything – he never said and she never asked.
She was drifting deep into her thoughts when Wash leaned across her, squishing her arm and rubbing sweat across her chest and stomach. The situation wasn't that annoying until she heard the heavy, grainy, twang of “In the Flesh” begin to play. It was The Wall. Again.
She groaned and looked at him. “The Wall, Wash?”
He glanced at her. “What?”
“The Wall?” she repeated. “Can’t you play something a little less grating?”
“You got a problem with Floyd, Jo?”
“No, Floyd’s good. But, Wash, you play this same album every night. I mean, yeah, it’s good, but it’s not that good.”
“And what would you rather listen to?”
She shrugged a little. “Well, Wish You Were Here has always been my favorite.”
“Yeah, why’s that?”
She shrugged. “Dunno. It just… It reminds me of home, you know?” She didn’t add that she hadn’t really appreciated Floyd until Dean Winchester came along and forced her to listen to the album (or that Dean’s Pink Floyd 101 class had ended with a rather engaging test of how well the Impala’s parking break worked).
Wash was silent for a moment. And then out of the blue, he said, “I think you’re lying.”
Jo raised herself up to look at him. “What?”
He shifted onto his side. “You’re lying, Jo. It’s not home that song reminds you of. Hell, if it were home you missed, you’d be calling every other day if not more often than that.”
“What are you saying, Wash?”
“I’m saying you don’t love me.”
“No, I don’t,” she admitted.
“The thing I don’t understand is why you’re here, with me, when you are in love with another man.”
She glanced away. “You wouldn’t understand,” she whispered softly.
“I wouldn’t understand?” he laughed. “Don’t you dare say that, Jo, when you don’t even try to explain. Don’t you dare try to pin this all on me. I’m not the one who came into this with a ghost on my shoulders, you are. So don’t you dare even think it.”
She slapped him. “He isn’t a ghost,” she snapped.
“What the hell, Jo? Ghost, shadow, call him what you like, but he overshadows everything you do. Everything, including sex.” He moved so that he was in her face, his eyes dark with anger. “So tell me, Jo, who is it you see when you shut your eyes while we fuck? Who is it? Because it sure as hell ain’t me.”
She looked down at her hands, biting back the tears that threatened to fall. “I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I’m sorry. This was all a mistake. I’ll just – I’ll just leave, all right? I’ll leave, and you’ll never have to see me again.” She stood up abruptly and began throwing her things into her duffle. Wash merely sat on the bed, a scowl on his face. She zipped the duffle violently and rose. “Goodbye, Wash,” she said and headed for the door, her back straight.
“Good riddance,” he muttered as she yanked the door open. She let it slam behind her.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A/N: Yes, I totally named the bar after the character on M*A*S*H. And Howie is loosely based on Wash from Firefly, though they are definitely not the same person.
Run Like Hell:
Run, run, run, run
You better make your face up in
Your favourite disguise
With your button down lips and your
Roller blind eyes
With your empty smile
And your hungry heart
Feel the bile rising from your guilty past
With your nerves in tatters
When the cockleshell shatters
And the hammers batter
Down the door
You better run
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And you know, I was just thinking today how awesome it would be if there was a Jo/omc fic to read. So you totally just made my night, hehe. ;)
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And hell, poor Wash for having to play seconds to Dean.
Yeah, Neetha and I had that discussion while I was plotting this out (we talked about how he's just a fill-in for Dean and he knows it).
I was just thinking today how awesome it would be if there was a Jo/omc fic to read.
o_O Freaky. But don't you just love it when that happens?
And there is more Jo!angst coming your way soon! I'm writing a ficlet for the
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Always! =D And awesome for more Jo!angst! That new challenge at
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I'm real excited about that ficlet for the challenge. Have I told you lately... that I love you? lol
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And I'm excited about the ficlet too. I'll probably send it to you later today for beta/whathaveyou.
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Great read :D
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