The first body they found was slumped against a road sign. Then another near a rusted-out truck. These weren't demonic kills or angel smitings. The victims were covered in black, veiny growths, their eyes wide and vacant, as if their very souls had been vacuumed out.
The town was a graveyard of the living dead. Amidst the chaos, they found a young deputy, Jenna Olson, terrified and clutching a shotgun in the local hospital. She was protecting a newborn baby—a girl whose mother had succumbed to the darkness moments after birth. [S11E1] Out of the Darkness, Into the Fire
If you want to explore more about this specific era of the show: The psychological bond between Sam’s secret struggle with the Rabid infection Castiel’s torture at the hands of the angels The first body they found was slumped against a road sign
Sam didn't answer immediately. He was staring at the road ahead, where the asphalt seemed to shimmer with heat that shouldn't be there. "We let it out, Dean. We actually let it out." The victims were covered in black, veiny growths,
The first body they found was slumped against a road sign. Then another near a rusted-out truck. These weren't demonic kills or angel smitings. The victims were covered in black, veiny growths, their eyes wide and vacant, as if their very souls had been vacuumed out.
The town was a graveyard of the living dead. Amidst the chaos, they found a young deputy, Jenna Olson, terrified and clutching a shotgun in the local hospital. She was protecting a newborn baby—a girl whose mother had succumbed to the darkness moments after birth.
If you want to explore more about this specific era of the show: The psychological bond between Sam’s secret struggle with the Rabid infection Castiel’s torture at the hands of the angels
Sam didn't answer immediately. He was staring at the road ahead, where the asphalt seemed to shimmer with heat that shouldn't be there. "We let it out, Dean. We actually let it out."