Late one night after a hunt, the Impala drifts over back country roads and Dean contemplates.
Had the Doctor given this well-known address, it probably would have gone something like this. Based on Baz Luhrmann's 'Everybody's Free To Wear Sunscreen'.
For all the years she's lived in New York, Amy has avoided that godforsaken graveyard-until the day she has to go, and Rory doesn't come home with her. In the weeks since then, she's been trying her best-really she has-but some days not falling to pieces is an awful lot of work. Then a letter from a stranger arrives in the mail, and it turns out to be exactly what she needed.
Martha travels back with the Doctor to Culloden, and learns just why the fate of a young piper has the Doctor so worried.
In which the TARDIS crew discovers the origins of broccoli.
Marital wisdom, advice on stain removal, and ultimately hilarity ensue when companions past and present meet in a diner.
Rory's been wanting to tell Amy something for a long time now, but every time he gets a chance, the words are just never there. A story of growing up in Leadworth with Amy, Rory and a little bit of Mels.
A medical student who is not Rose Tyler and a scientist who is not Daniel Jackson meet in a jail cell. Martha and Jonas may not be quite what anyone was looking for, but today they'll have to do. Looks like it's up to the B-team to save the day.
Bobby never wanted kids to begin with, and he was never going to admit to anyone that watching a preschooler trying to get a toddler to walk across his kitchen floor was turning out to be one of the high points of his life. Those rugrats of John's were growing on him. (Wee-chester fluff)
Just a series of one-shots where Captain Jack fails to die across different fandoms. Multi-fandom crossover. (It only says Supernatural, because it wouldn't let me pick more than one. Currently includes Chuck, CSI:NY, Fringe, Sanctuary and Supernatural.)
Rory isn't sure which is more surprising-the fact that he no longer exists, or the place he's doing the not-existing in. He'd had his own ideas about the afterlife, of course, but a waffle shop full of other nonexistent/not-quite-dead people was not one of them. (Multi-fandom crossover, but primarily Doctor Who and Fringe.)