I'm guessing Samuel was blamed for murder-suicide and nobody pushed Mary too hard with questions because it upset her too much.
This sounds very plausible to me. I keep wondering what Liddy remembered of her evening with the YED, and whether she ever said anything about it, or brought up the mysterious stranger who helped Mary and her dad fight the YED off.
And I think that John just saw his baby boy--by the time Dean had matured enough to resemble the stranger John met in the diner, he just saw Dean. And he'd been through so much since that brief meeting he probably didn't remember what the guy looked like.
Yeah, comparatively John dealt with him very little.
As for the Colt, I assume that since Dean said he would only need it for "a few days," that's how long it would take to have Elkins show up to reclaim it. Asking for the Campbells would still get him Mary at that point, I would think.
And (for me) how John dealt with the fact that his oldest son looks exactly like that weirdass stranger from back in '73.
Maybe dying came with a little convenient amnesia.
My visual memory isn't strong enough to remember some guy from 30+ years ago--he didn't spend much time with him either. Mary might remember, though.
Part of me does wish that after all Castiel's talk about Destiny being unchangeable, they'd returned at the end of the episode to find Mary now alive and leading the family on its hunts against the occult, with John having gotten up in her place to investigate the noise in Sam's room in 1983.
I'm sure there's a fic writer somewhere who's working on it, Matt...
That would have been kind of awesome, Matt. But I'm not sure the episode needed more HSQ.
You know, I was thinking about this this morning trying to fall asleep (Which what probably led to weird but hot sex dreams about Castiel, but anyway)...
Why is Castiel talking to Dean anyway? I mean, Sam is the one who believes in God. He's the one with faith -- why doesn't Castiel just appear to Sam and say "I am an angel of the Lord. Can I just say, fucking with demons is not good? Here's your bro from hell -- don't be naughty or God will smite?"
Why all the circuitousness? I know, I know -- plot, but still. The free-will, not interfereing arguement doesn't cut it, because I really think Sam is more apt to follow an angel's suggestions than Dean's.
Maybe he's afraid of Sam.
Maybe he's afraid of Sam.
Interesting point. Or, maybe it's a case where if they encountered each other, it would go nuclear rather quickly.