[ Cas's chin lifts, impassive at the reminder of Sam's age. He was never a child, and from what he understands, neither were the Winchesters. Still, fourteen seems old enough to Cas to understand right from wrong, and "de-aging," if that is what it was, and not some variation on time travel, doesn't change a person. Talking to them can. De-aging any of them wouldn't change them. If you ask Cas, that was a mistake. ]
Have you perhaps noticed, Dean, that we're not in the real world? This isn't a second chance that God gave us out of the goodness of His heart. This is a purgatory. We're all already dead. So either we: "A," wake up from this god-child's dream with everything the same as we left it or "B," we learn something and take that back with us to reality. Which do you want for Sam?
no subject
Have you perhaps noticed, Dean, that we're not in the real world? This isn't a second chance that God gave us out of the goodness of His heart. This is a purgatory. We're all already dead. So either we: "A," wake up from this god-child's dream with everything the same as we left it or "B," we learn something and take that back with us to reality. Which do you want for Sam?