AUTHOR'S NOTES: This is episode 5 in the series "The Song Remains the Same", a serialized story written in the episodic style of the original show. It can be read as a stand alone story, and a summary of the story so far will be given at the beginning of this episode. (Btw there is a lovely little photo banner that goes with this story. If you'd like to see it, google: fanspired sam/dean archive and scroll down the list of stories to "Something Wicked?"

Other episodes in this series:

Pilot episode "I Can Never Go Home"

Episode 2 "Golem"

Episode 3 "Prank'd"

Episode 4: "Together"

(Remember, if you have favourited me as an author, you still need to favourite/story alert this episode to be sure of receiving alerts from the site when it has been updated).

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND DISCLAIMERS:

I should like to offer my grateful thanks to my most loyal supporter for being my beta-reader and, as always, I offer my apologies to the writers and creators of Supernatural for my use and abuse of their original material. Inspirations for this episode include SPN episode "Something Wicked" (of course), and hints of "Dead in the Water" and "Road Kill". My principal external inspiration is the Peter Jackson movie, "The Lovely Bones" then the TV series, "The Ghos Whisperer". There may also be hints of "Dexter" and "Bones"; I'm not sure, yet. Specific allusions to my external sources and to other fandoms will be acknowledged when the closing chapter is posted.

*** A SPECIAL APOLOGY TO MY REGULAR READERS ***

I'm so sorry for the great gap in time that has passed since I last posted an update to this series. I'd like to assure you that this has not been due to any loss of enthusiasm on my part for the story or the project, but to a specific work commitment that has prevented me from devoting my attention to my writing. That commitment has now been dispatched and normal service will be resumed from now on. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for your patience, your loyalty, and your continuing support.

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EPISODE 5: SOMETHING WICKED?

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THE ROAD SO FAR:

After leading a hunting raid that leads to the death of his cousin, Sam Campbell is estranged from his hunter family and tries to escape the life. He attempts to start afresh in a new town and is employed by John Winchester, but a death vision of John's wife and son under horribly familiar circumstances draws him back into the world of the supernatural. When the yellow eyed demon possesses John and murders Amanda, Sam rescues their son Dean and teaches him about hunting. Dean abandons his old life as a college student and would be musician and, together, he and Sam embark on a quest to find and rescue John, and avenge the deaths of their mothers.

In the wake of an explosive quarrel the friends are re-examining the nature of their relationship. Dean is coaxing Sam to address his intimacy issues, but Sam still has doubts and he is concealing secrets about his past and about his psychic abilities. Meanwhile the demons Meg and Ruby have appeared in disguise to Sam and Dean, and Dean has received help from a mysterious blue-eyed stranger.

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Prologue

Lichtburg, Wisconsin.

He couldn't even say what it was about the boy that fascinated him so much. He wasn't a particularly exceptional or attractive child. He was much like any of the other neighbourhood kids, small for his age perhaps, with dirty blond hair and pudgy cheeks and eyes that were somehow too big for his face, and there was something ungainly about the way he walked as he followed after the girl. He was always with that girl. That meant there were fewer opportunities to get him by himself, of course, but it stirred a kind of resentment for other reasons. There was something about the way the boy looked at her, like the sun shone for her, that was both compelling and discomfiting . . . because it was something that was beyond his experience . . . Maybe that had something to do with it.

Of course they were all memorable, in their way, but Donald Helfer especially so, because he was the first. First times are always special.

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Suzy had a big empty cookie tin she'd saved from Christmas. She bought a post card and wrote a message to the future, and for good measure she put a stamp on it. And she added the whole of the rest of her pocket money for that week: twenty three cents. There was a picture of her favourite pop group, too. Donald was a little jealous of those brothers because Suzy went on and on about them, but he didn't really mind because he knew they lived hundreds of miles away, in Utah, and he lived right next door to Suzy.

She was too old for him, he knew that – because he was only nine and a half, and she was nearly eleven – but Donald thought she was the prettiest girl he'd even seen. She had hair the colour of caramel fudge, and it flowed down the sides of her face in waves and ringlets and smelled of apples; and her eyes were the brightest, clearest blue – the colour of his favourite marble. And she was his best friend in the whole wide world. She didn't tease him because he was short and awkward and a bit bandy. She didn't mind that he had freckles. And he didn't mind too much that she called him Donny.

Donny put his marbles in the tin along with one of his old comics, and they both cut off a piece of their hair and put that in as well. Then they spent the rest of the afternoon taping songs from the radio onto a C60 with the cassette recorder Suzy'd been given for her birthday. Afterward Suzy went to fetch that day's newspaper: Thursday April 29th 1976.

While she was out of the room Donny rewound the tape a little way. He leaned real close to the microphone and whispered "Suzy Wayte, I'll love you forever and ever," then he hastily took out the cassette, slipped it into its case and dropped it into the tin. He was startled and a little alarmed when Suzy returned and took it out again, but she was just wrapping everything in the newspaper, and then she carefully covered the paper in Saran Wrap before placing it in the tin.

Donny dug the hole – under the tree in his back yard. It was hard work and it made him sweat, and the shovel gave him blisters but he didn't tell Suzy that. After they'd put the tin in the bottom they pushed the cool, damp earth back into the hole, patted it down with their hands and covered it over with grass clippings. They promised each other that this would always be their special secret, and they would come back to this spot on the same day in thirty years and retrieve their time capsule together. They sealed it with a pinkie swear.

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Donald Helfer was nine and a half years old when he was murdered on Friday April 30th 1976.

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