So much has been going on in April that I haven't doodled much.
I had many days where I just didn't feel like drawing so I haven't even touched my croquis.
It's Ghost shaving Soapâs head, but looking back it doesn't really look like clippers. Oh well~
Let's just say only pure-hearted people can see them!(I guess I'm a bad personâŠ)
This was just a playful sketch I did for fun but since everyone found it cuter than I expected I thought Iâd share it here!
Iâm honestly not great at drawing faces. T.T
so I try to practice them whenever I can. This specific angle was really fun to work on so I saved it. Practice is the only way forward!!!
This is a comic sketch! I have so much fun drawing Soap as a silly little guy like this.
Isn't he cute? No? Hmph, well I think he's adorable! Hahaha
Here are some KruegerNikto doodles!
I'm uploading a mix of my recent work and a few older pieces I drew a while back.
I drew this while imagining whatâs behind Niktoâs mask.
Taking inspiration from the statue holding Medusa's head I wanted to portray the current Nikto boldly severing the remnants of his past.
These are some of my earlier works, so they have a cleaner look with fewer scars overall. I wanted Niktoâs hand to represent possessiveness and Kruegerâs hand to represent dominance.
Since they're early drawings the character interpretations might feel a bit flat but I just had a lot of fun drawing them! Haha.
This was just a brush test, so itâs a bit hectic. Hehe
I still love delinquent Krueger and Nikto⊠I really want to draw this story out someday(?)
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A Reaper!Ghost x Soap '09 Timeline/'22 timeline Crossover AU
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Fandom: Call of Duty MW (Reboot)
Pairing: Simon "Ghost" Riley/John "Soap" MacTavish
Chapters: 5/20
Words: 14K
Across every universe, in every timeline, in every life, Simon Riley will always find Johnny MacTavish.
-or-A Reaper!Ghost and Soap '09 Timeline/'22 Timeline AU Crossover Fic
Pairing: Simon "Ghost" Riley/John "Soap" MacTavish
Words: 3500
Triggers: Canon MC death, angst, body horror, reincarnation, Reaper!Ghost
[Through the Looking Glass]
[???]
[Lt. Simon âGhostâ Riley]
[Task Force 141]
[???]
The fire crawls across his nerves in blistering waves, gnawing at bone and sinew that arenât really there anymore. Ghost tries to breathe, but breath is not a thing his body knows how to do. His chest shouldnât hurt â it shouldnât exist â and yet it does, a phantom ache radiating out from where Shepherdâs bullet punched through his heart.
Heart shot. Couple minutes left, tops. He remembers thinking that.
Now heâs not sure he has a heart at all. Just an ache in the shape of one.
Heâs floating. Or falling. Or hanging suspended in an endless black that feels like a sky with no stars. He isnât cold. He isnât warm. He justâŠis.
Then something jerks him sideways.
A pull. A tether. A thread of gold, thin as spiderâs silk.
He follows it toward a faint glow in the dark. A glow that slowly resolves into the interior of a C-130 midflight and a figure sitting hunched over in the back.
Johnny.
And just like that, somehow Ghost is there with him. Not in a body. Not even breathing. Not alive. But present. Impossibly present, yet more real than anything since the flames.
John sits curled in one of the jump seats, his hands covering his face. His shoulders tremble, wracked with sobs as his whole frame radiates a grief so profound that Ghost feels it like an open wound. He doesnât feel the warmth of the plane. He doesnât feel the vibrations of the engines. He doesnât hear the hum of electronics.
But he does feel John.
Like gravity. Like home.
Ghost moves closer without meaning to, drifting more than walking, until heâs right behind him. He simply cannot stand to bear witness to Johnâs grief without trying to do something.
So without thinking, he reaches out.
His hands pass through Johnâs shoulders at first, sort of like dragging through water, thick and dreamlikeâŠand then something gives. Ghostâs fingers sink into warmth.
John inhales sharply. His shaking slows. He raises his head, blinking back tears as he breathes shakily.
Ghost leans forward, driving away the dark oppressive coldness radiating from Johnâs body and pressing what used to be his chest against Johnâs back. He canât hold him, not really, but the intent is enough. The universe bends around the want.
âJohnny,â he whispers, though no sound leaves him.
John shudders, his breath catching like he hears him. LikeâŠlike he can feel him.
Ghost tries to wrap his arms around him tighter, to bury his face in Soapâs hair the way he did last night, to tell him Iâm here, Iâm here, Iâm so sorry, Johnny, please donât cryâ
But his arms being to flicker in and out of focus. His hands blur.
The edges of his being crack and crumble like ash on the wind.
âNo.â
The panic is instant, primal. He doesnât have lungs, but he can feel himself trying to breathe hard. Trying to hold on.
Not now. Not yet. I just got here.
Soap lifts his head, red-eyed and hollow. Price is walking down the cargo hold towards him.
âNo. No, please, I donât want to go. I want to stay with him, even if itâs like this!â
He lunges forward, desperate to hold onto one more second, one more moment of himâŠbut his hand turns to ash and dissolves right before his eyes.
Ghostâs vision tunnels. The plane flickers. And John fades away like mist.
âJOHââ
His voice echoes into nothing as the world collapses beneath him.
He falls.
When he next blinks his eyes open, Ghost is staring up at an overcast sky.
He moves a hand to push himself up, and it sinks wrist deep into mud. Ghost gingerly sits up, pulling his hand out of the muck with a wet, sucking sound, and thinks to himself that it really must be a sign things are going downhill if heâs relieved to have a corporeal form once again. The whiplash fallout of Shepherdâs betrayal, his own violent death, and bearing witness to Johnâs grief have left him feeling raw and oddly hollow, and waking up to realize the afterlife is a stinking mud pit in the middle of a field has him feeling just a little bit hysterical.
Ghost pulls his legs up so he can prop his forearms on his knees. Heâs still wearingâŠwell, heâs still wearing what he died in. Uniform blouse and pants, tac vest, his skull balaclava. Sunglasses are gone, though. Muddy water is seeping through to his arse, but at the moment, Ghost is just relieved not to feel painâŠor nothing at all.
He looks around, evaluating his surroundings. No trees, no breeze. Thereâs a small hill nearby withâyou guessed it, more mud, but thereâs not a soul to be seen. No bird sounds, no animals. Itâs like death itself.
Ghost sits there as the minutes stretch on, until he thinks he should probably get up and see what this is all about. Heâs just about to push himself to his feet, when he sees a figure crest the rise of the hill. A man, inexplicably wearing a three-piece suit complete with top hat and cane.
âThere you are! I have been looking everywhere for you, Iââ The man breaks off and frowns at him. âI say, whatever are you doing down there?â
Ghost looks down at the muck around him and back up at the man. âSitting in the mud.â
âI daresay, butâŠwhy?â The man picks his way down the hill, sputtering. âFor heavenâs sake, do get up, Ghost, I just starched these spats.â
Ghost canât decide whether the fact that the man is wearing spats or that he knows his name is the more absurd tidbit of information. He dutifully stands and begins to wade through the mudâit is a nice suit, after all.
Heâs hallucinating, heâs decided. Shepherdâs betrayal, the fire, seeing John like thatâitâs all just a byproduct. Maybe he was hit with some kind of nerve agent. Or maybe it was that vodka of Nikolaiâs. Just a horrible fever dream. Either way, Ghost has died before, and itâs never been like this.
He half expects a herd of pink elephants to come parading through the mud next.
âYou know me, then?â He asks, indulging the hallucination.
âKnow you? Dear boyââ The man breaks off and blinks owlishly up at him. From here, Ghost can see that heâs about his age, with red hair, spectacles, and an astonishing collection of freckles across his face. âYou donât remember?â
âObviously.â
âWell, thatâs inconvenient. I knew you were disgruntled, butâŠwell, by god, you donât do things by the half, now do you?â
Ghost sighs heavily, tiring of the game. He just wants to wake back up in Johnâs arms and get back to it. âLook, misterâŠwhoever you are. This has been fun, but Iâm not interested in playing Alice in Wonderland while Iâm trippinâ balls out in the real world. So if youâll excuse me.â
The man scoffs. âA hallucination? Me?â
âUndoubtedly.â
ââŠan undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of an underdone potato. There's more of gravy than of grave about you, whatever you are!â The man laughs. âIs that what you think is happening right now, Ghost? A bad dream?â
âDonât call me that.â
âItâs the name you picked, old boy.â
Ghost grits his teeth and walks away. âIâm not talking to you.â
âWell, you wonât find anyone else, the direction youâre going.â
âI just need to wake up,â he mutters.
From somewhere behind him, Ghost hears the man softly curse under his breath. Footsteps pick carefully along the grass at the edge of the mud pit, coming closer. âGhost, youâre not dreaming. Youâre dead.â
Ghost chuckles, though a tiny thread in his chest starts to unravel. âIâve died before. Itâs not like this.â
Silence. So surprising, after the strangerâs apparent inability to shut the fuck up, that Ghost turns around.
âIâve died before,â he repeats slowly. âSeventeen, when I tried to hang myself in the shower. Then again in Syria, when I bled out and flatlined for nine minutes. Or when I drowned in Berlin. Suffocated under a pile of dirt in Mexico. I have died again and again and again, but it has never been like this, so I know that you are fucking lying!â
He shouts the last bit, feeling unsettled. âWhy do you think they call me Ghost?â
The manâs cocky expression disappears entirely, replaced by something tired and sad. âYour name is Ghost because you chose it, old boy.â
His voice softens, almost reluctantly. âThose memories arenât yours. Their Simon Rileyâs.âÂ
Ghost blinks, confused. âButâŠIâm Simon Riley.â
The man sighs, green eyes flicking towards the ground. âNo, Ghost. Youâre not.â
But before Ghost has a chance to say anything, the man interrupts. âLookâdo you mind if we take this somewhere a bit more civilized? The humidity alone is going to wreak havoc on this tweed.â
Ghost looks around him, that unsettling feeling starting to grow. âWhereâŠare we, exactly?â
âHow should I know? You chose it, not me.â The man looks around, wrinkling his nose in disgust. âDreary place. Hereâallow me.â
He reaches for the demitasse of espresso in front of him and takes an indulgent sip.
âA. Lacroix PĂątissier,â he holds his cup aloft. âLe patisserie artisanal Ă Notre Dame.â
When Ghost doesnât touch his, the man purses his lips. âWell? Drink up. Iâd have manifested something stronger, but given your talk of hallucination, I didnât think it was prudent.â
The espresso, when Ghost finally drinks it, tastes far too real.
âWhoâŠwho are you?â he asks.
The man takes a measured sip from his cup as if steeling himself.
âYou may call me Nigel. Reaper supervisor, intake division, third temporal quadrant.â He pushes his glasses up the bridge of his nose. âAnd you have been missing for quite some time, Ghost.â
âIâŠwhat?â
Nigel looks at him sadly. âYou really donât remember anything, do you?â
As good as it is, Ghost sets his espresso cup down hard enough to spill. Heâs had enough. âThis is too fuckinâ bizarre. This isnât real. I know it, and so do you. So stop bullshitting me.â
âStop bullshitting you,â Nigel echoes quietly. âFine, Ghost. Then take off your mask.â
Ghost stares at Nigel. âWhy?â
âBecause you still believe this is a dream,â Nigel says, voice maddeningly gentle. âAnd you wonâtâyou canâtâaccept the truth until you see it for yourself. So.â A prim, dismissive little gesture. âGo on. Take it off.â
Ghostâs pulse kicks higher.
He reaches up.
His gloves brush the familiar ridges of his tac vest, up to his uniform collar, then higher, exceptâŠ
No fabric.
His fingers pass straight through where cloth should be. The sensation is wrong, wrong in a way that makes his stomach lurch.
âNo,â Ghost chokes. He grabs harder, intending to rip the mask away. His fingers dig in and sink, not into fabricâŠ
He jerks back like heâs been burned. âWhat theâ?â
âGently,â Nigel says, though he does absolutely nothing to intervene.
Ghost ignores him. Both hands come up this time, searching and desperate. He drags his fingertips along his cheek, his jawlineâ
His gloves meet bone.
Bare bone.
Smooth, cold, slick as polished marble.
âWhatââ His voice breaks. âWhat is this? What the fuck is this!?â
From the edges of his uniform, up the column of his throat, Ghostâs muscle and sinew and skin have disappeared, leaving nothing but a gaping skeleton in its absence. Raw bone, orbital sockets, jaw and teeth and nasal cavity, exposed, like he has become the skull mask heâs always worn.
âNo. No, no, no.â His breaths come fast though he has no lungs. His shoulders hitch. His vision flickers. âStop. STOP!â
Nigel clucks. âThere, there. You really must calm down, Ghost. Youâll work yourself into a fit, and they do not pay me enough to deal with that. Calm down.â
âCalm down?â Ghost surges to his feet, chair scraping back hard enough to topple. Pedestrians on the street flicker like bad holograms. âWhat am I?â
âGhostâlistenââ
âIâm dead.â The realization slams into him like a sledgehammer. âIâm actuallyâthis isâJohnâoh God, Johnnyââ
All that remains is Nigelâs tired, bespeckled face, and a blank white room, a ledger on a pedestal before him.
âWell,â he says, clasping his hands behind him. âNow that youâve ruined a perfectly good afternoon, I suppose itâs down to business.â
Ghost trembles, his legs threatening to give out beneath him. âWhat is happening to me?â
âNothing is happening to you, Ghost. You simply donât remember. You chose to forget.â Nigel looks at him sadly.
âYou are a reaper,â he begins slowly. âDeath incarnate. Or, one of the incarnations, at least. We like to keep an even staff of around a hundred or so.â
âWh-what?â
âA reaper. The balance of good and evil. You are the antithesis of creation, spreading disease, injury, old age, all the causes of death. Reapers maintain the balance and help ferry souls theyâve reaped into the afterlife. And you, old boy, have been very naughty. You fell in love, went off grid, and we havenât been able to find you since.â
Ghostâs head is spinning. âButââ
âLet me put this to you plainly,â Nigel snaps. âYou were inhabiting the body of Simon Riley. You were supposed to be keeper of this timeline. Instead, you fell in love with a Scottish soldier, and once he died, you jumped timelines. Again and again and again. You completely lost your marbles and forgot even what you were, apparently. Went gallivanting off to be with your lover and abandoned your duties entirely. Touching, yes, but monstrously irresponsible. Youâve been completely shirking your duties.â
Nigel pauses to consider. âEspecially that Shepherd fellow. He couldâve used with a good reaping, if you ask me. Dreadful man.â He shivers. âAt any rate, weâve been looking for you ever since.â
Ghostâs jaw tightens. âI need to get back. To Johnââ
Nigel pinches the bridge of his nose. âYes. Tragic, heartbreaking, et cetera.â Then, bluntly. âNo.â
Ghost steps forward. âWhy not?â
âBecause,â Nigel says sharply, âyou let your body die entirely. Every last atom of it. Thereâs nothing to return to. Youâre burned out of this timeline, mate, pardon the pun. No going back, now.â
âYou mentioned timelines,â he says slowly. âWhat does that mean?â
Nigel lets out a long-suffering sigh. âThe universeâs ineffable iterations cannot be defined on a single timeline. Human choice is the lodestone of this world, and each choice creates distinct, separate patterns, each defined by a singular timeline. It is within the scope of these timelines that we strive to maintain the balance between life and death. That, my dear chap, is where you come in. Reapers are assigned timelines, inserted into viable hosts, and are tasked with keeping the balance. Manifesting death in a world of creation and light.â
Ghostâs stomach drops â or whatever approximation he currently has of one. âButââ
âBut,â Nigel continues, âgiven your track record of abandoning your duties every time John bloody MacTavish appears, you are not being reassigned anywhere near him again.â
Nigel gives him a flat look. âOh, donât I? Let me see.â He flips through the ledger. âTimeline Alpha. John died at twenty-three. You went missing for three months. Timeline Beta. John died at twenty-five. You vanished again. Timeline Gamma, Delta, Epsilonâshall I go on?â
He snaps the ledger shut. âAt any rate, you need to get back to work. Weâll put you in another body, in another timelineââ
Ghost bristles. âWhatâre you talking about? No. I want to stay here with him. I want to stay here with John.â
Nigel sighs heavily. âI told you, thatâs impossible. You canât have another body here. You forgot yourself and what you were and let your body die completely. Thatâs on you. Besides, itâs a bad idea. John MacTavish is going to die.â
Ghostâs throat works, bile climbing his throat. âI can save him this time.â
âYou canât even remember your powers,â Nigel laughs, a short, humorless bark.
âWhat powers?â
Nigel studies him for a long moment, lips pursed, as if weighing a difficult decision. Then he sighs.
âOh, this is going to take far longer than I hoped,â he mutters. âVery well. A demonstration, then. You always did understand things better when you could see them.â
He glances around the empty room, tapping the head of his cane thoughtfully against the floor. âHmm. Something simple.â
Nigel reaches out and conjures a flower out of thin air. A daisy, bright and unremarkable, its petals beaded with dew. He turns it between his fingers, inspecting it like a jeweler might a gem.
âThis,â he says mildly, âis life in miniature. Growth. Energy. Momentum. Creation, if you like poetic nonsense.â
Ghost opens his mouth to tell him to stopâbut Nigel has already closed his fingers around the stem.
He doesnât crush it. Doesnât tear it apart. He justâŠholds it.
The change is immediate.
The petals curl inward, bleaching from white to yellow to brown in the space of a heartbeat. The stem shrivels, going brittle and black. The green drains away like ink pulled from paper, veins collapsing, structure failing. The flower caves in on itself, collapsing into a fine, gray powder that trickles through Nigelâs fingers and scatters across the floor.
Ghost stares.
Nigel dusts his hands together, expression faintly apologetic. âDeath,â he says. âPerfectly natural. Happens to everyone, eventually.â
âThatâsââ Ghost swallows. His mouth is dry. âThatâs not normal.â
Nigel blinks at him. âOf course it is. Just not usually all at once.â
He snaps his fingers and a fly buzzes lazily past Ghostâs shoulder. It hovers there for a moment, wings catching the light.
Nigel flicks two fingers.
The fly drops.
It hits the floor with a soft, almost delicate tick, legs curled inward, wings stilled as if someone simply switched it off.
Ghost jerks back, his heartâwhatever passes for one nowâslamming. âYou didnât even touch it.â
Nigel arches a brow. âTouch is terribly inefficient.â
He leans forward, folding his hands over the head of his cane. âDisease. Entropy. Accidents. War. Violence. Time itself, when required. We donât invent death, Ghostâwe apply it. Redirect it. Nudge the scales when they tip too far in one direction.â
His gaze sharpens, green eyes fixing on Ghost with something almost like disappointment.
âAnd you,â he says quietly, âwere rather good at it.â
Ghostâs hands curl into fists at his sides. The phantom echo of power prickles under his skin, something old and vast stirring uneasily in his chest, like a memory that refuses to take shape.
âNo,â he says hoarsely. âThatâs not me.â
Nigel sighs. âIt is. Youâve simply forgotten how to listen to it.â
Ghost bristles. âWhat does this has to do with Johnny?â
âAbsolutely nothing.â
âButââ
âYour preoccupation with that man has caused nothing but problems. You need to let him go.â Nigel huffs. âBesides, my dear boy, in every timeline, John MacTavish dies young. That is his fate. And you? You are death. Literally.â
Nigel snaps the ledger shut. âSuit yourself. I can see you need to realize this the hard way.â
He sighs. âGo to him. Once heâs dead, ferry him across. Then, come see me, and weâll have a chat when youâre in a more receptive mood. Until then, try not to break anything else in the cosmic order, if you will be so kind?â He waves a hand. âOff you go.â
âButâ"
Ghostâs vision lurches.
The space around him warps.
He feels himself being flung downward, down toward the world again towards John, toward a fate he refuses to accept, the warmth of Johnâs grief still clinging to him like sunlight through smoke as Nigel casts him back down to earth.
Here at the End of the World Masterlist
A/N: Grief, existential panic, and some not-quite answers from Nigel. What do we think so far? Not too many people have found this fic--I don't know if its because they don't really like the 09 GhostSoap pairing or the concept is too far out there, but this will continue all the way into the '22 COD reboot series and we will see a more recognizable Ghost and Soap. Ghost's powers are going to become very, very important in the future, especially when fate (and Nigel) start to crack down. More whump and angst in the next chapter, so stay tuned! Thank you for reading!
Pairing: Simon "Ghost" Riley/John "Soap" MacTavish
Words: 1645
Triggers: Fluff and Smut
A/N: And the hits keep coming. My heart is breaking for Soap :( Also, if you want to hurt more, this chapter (actually, the basis for this fic) was inspired by this artwork from @amikoroyaiart
[Into Hell]
[15 1633Z AUG 16]
[Capt. John âSoapâ MacTavish]
[Task Force 141]
[Somewhere over Kandahar, Afghanistan]
âGhost? Roach? Come in, Ghost. Do you copy? Does anyone copy?â Soapâs still in the back of the jeep, frantically flipping through the frequencies on his radio. Beside him, Rookâs dead body drips blood onto the floorplan.
âGhost. Come in, Ghost.â
Please.
Price is up in the cockpit of the C-130 with Nikolai. After Shepherdâs betrayal and the ambush at the boneyard, theyâd narrowly escaped by driving the stolen jeep right up the planeâs ramp as Nikolai took off. Price had leapt out before the jeep had even come to a stop. He isnât sure whatâs going on up there, but at this moment he does not give a shit. All he cares about is trying to get Ghost back on comms.
Shepherd ambushed us. He betrayed us. Ghost and Roach couldâve walked right into a trap. They could beâ
He keys the mic again. âGhost, this is Soap. Do you copy?â
With a frustrated growl, he jumps out of the jeep and storms the cockpit.
âI canât get âem on comms. We need tae go after them.â
At the controls, Nikolai glances up at Price, but Price shakes his head. Nikolai banks the plane.
Soap takes a step forward, holding onto the bulkhead. âEast? Whatâre ye doinâ? We need tae be goinâ north. Shepherd betrayed usâGhost and Roach are still out there. We need tae go save them!â
Price turns to him. âSoapââ
âNo. Donât you âSoapâ me,â he snaps, jabbing a finger in the direction of the cockpit windshield. âThat way!â Heâs shouting now, and he doesn't care. He can feel the panic climbing up his throat, hot and sour. âWe do not leave a man behind. Nik, turn this plane around!â
Nikolaiâs eyes flick between him and Price, a silent plea for guidance. Priceâs face is a grim mask of stone, but his eyes betray everything. Soap sees it then. The grief. The finality.
âDon't.â he whispers, shaking his head. âNo.â
âSoap, theyâre gone.â
âStop! Just stop,â he hisses. âHow do you know, eh? Ye donât. Ye havnae been with us. I ken theyâre not your men, that yer just back and they donât mean shit tae you and yer chompinâ at the bit to get to Shepherd, but I donât care. I am not. Leaving. My. Men. Behind!â
Priceâs jaw clenches, a tiny flicker of pain cracking through the mask heâs wearing, but itâs gone as quickly as it comes. âIâm sorry, John. Weâre too late.â
âDinnae SAY that!â Soap grabs a fistful of Priceâs vest and slams him back into the console. âYou dinnae get tae tell me thatânot when we havenât even looked! Nik, TURN. THE. PLANE. AROUND!â
Nikolai doesnât move. Doesnât speak. Just stares ahead with haunted eyes.
Price grabs Soapâs wristânot harsh, not forceful, but firm enough to stop him from punching him in the face. âJohn.â
A single word. Quiet. Final. The kind of tone a man uses when heâs delivering a death notification.
Soapâs stomach drops. His throat closes.
âHow do ye know?â he whispers.
Price looks like he wants to lie. Looks like he wants to throw up. Like he wants to give him one last inch of hope.
Nikolai turn in his seat and spits out something fast and furious in Russian. Whatever it is, Price doesnât like it, and the two argue back and forth until Nikolai angrily shoves his phone at Price, gesturing sharply at Soap.
Price closes his eyes and exhales heavily. The phone is unlocked, and he swipes to the text messages, clicks on the last one, and hands the phone to Soap. âNikolaiâs men found them in the Caucasusâ, near the border. They sent this as proof of what Shepherdâs done.â
He doesnât want to take it. He doesnât want to see.
Soap looks at the photo anyway.
Bodies. Two of them. Burned and charred at the bottom of a ditch, barely recognizable except for the remnants of their gear, most notablyâŠ
âŠthe edge of a skull mask, melted and blackened.
Soapâs heart stops.
âNo,â he says immediately. âNo. Thatâsâno. That is not him. That is not real. Iâd know ifâ"
His voice cracks, ragged and raw.
Iâd know. Iâd feel it if he were gone. Iâd know if he wereâŠ
Priceâs face falls. âJohnââ
âThatâs NOT HIM!â Soap roars. He slams his fist into the nearest panel, metal denting under the blow. âIt cannae beâSimonâSimonâs notâ"
He chokes on the name. The syllables breaks in his throat like glass. He canât say it. Canât finish it. Canât give it shape.
The world tilts on its axis.
He stumbles back, away from Price, away from the truth, his shoulders hitting the opposite bulkhead. Soap shoves the phone at Price before turning on his heel and storming out of the cockpit before he can break anything else. He canât breathe. He canât breathe, heâ
Soap doesnât know how he ends up in one of the jump seats at the rear of the plane, blood roaring in his ears. It sounds like flames. Thereâs an excruciating pressure building in his chest and he clutches it, trying to breathe as his world implodes.
Simon. SimonSimonSimon why? WHY?
Soap folds over himself, his elbows on his knees, his hands covering his face.
And he breaks.
Thereâs no sound at first, just a slow trembling that starts in his shoulders, silent and awful. Then the first ragged sob tears free. Ugly, raw, and dragged from the deepest part of him. He presses his palms to his eyes like he can hold everything in, like he can stop the grief from ripping him apart, but it doesnât work.
The memory of Simonâs smiling eyes beneath his balaclava echoes behind his closed eyelids, bright and cocksure. âSomebodyâs gotta look after you, sir.â The sound of his laugh, low and gravelly, vibrating through his chest. The feel of his hands, calloused and gentle, tracing the lines of his face.
Heâs gone. Simon is gone.
Betrayed. Burned. Alone.
And he wasnât there to stop it.
The C-130 flies on as Soap quietly weeps for Ghost like a child, his face in his hands. The pain in his chest is so bad he hopes it will kill him, an icy, raw blackness that swells until it threatens to drown him. Another sob wracks his body, and he bites down on the leather of his gloves to keep from screaming, the taste of salt and oil on his tongue as he presses them to his lips, smothering the sound until all that comes out is a muffled, animal keen.
He stays like that for a long, long time.
But then, the strangest thing happens. Something warm settles over his back and around his shoulders, like being embraced from behind. A warmth that spreads from somewhere deep inside his ribsâsoft, steady and shimmering like the last sunlight across Mishennaya Sopka.
Simon.
The warmth pushes back the darkness just a fraction. Just enough for him to breathe again.
He feels him. Somehow, John feels Simon here. Now. With him.
Soap goes still. A shudder runs through him, and he drops his hands from his face. Heâs still alone. The warmth is fading now, leaving in its wake a terrible sense of emptiness.
He lifts his head slowly. His vision is blurry and his eyes raw, but he hears boots coming towards him. Price sits stiffly beside him in the next jump seat, close but not touching. Thereâs an unlit cigar in his fingers that he turns over and over and over, staring at it.
Price doesnât say heâs sorry. He doesnât feed Soap false platitudes like what great men Ghost and Roach were or what they wouldâve wanted. He doesnât try to sympathize like he understands because Price knows Ghost and Soap were more than just partners, more than just friends, and even though Price has lost men, heâs never lost anyone like that.
So in the end, Price doesnât say their names at all.
He just tells Soap exactly what he needs to hear in order to get him to take the next step forward.
âThe healthy human mind doesnât wake up in the morning thinking this is its last day on Earth,â he begins quietly, staring down at the unlit cigar in his hands like it held the secrets of the universe. âBut I think thatâs a luxury, not a curse. To know youâre close to the end is a kind of freedom. Good time to takeâŠinventory. Outgunned. Outnumbered. Out of our minds. On a suicide mission. But the sand and the rocks here, stained with thousands of years of warfareâŠthey will remember us. For this. Because out of our vast array of nightmares, this is the one we choose for ourselves. We go forward like a breath exhaled from the Earth, with vigor in our hearts and one goal in sight: We. Will. Kill. Him.â
When Soap finally finds his voice, it comes out hollow.
âI dinnae care if I die, Price. I want to be the one tae pull the trigger. If I have tae follow that bastard Shepherd straight into hell tae do it, I will.â
Price exhales, a long heavy breath that sounds older than anything in this war. He puts a heavy hand on Johnâs shoulder, a rare, comforting touch that says everything he canât.
âI know, son,â he says softly. âI know. Iâll be right there beside you.â
Soap stares at the wall of the plane, empty and numb and burning at the same time. He nods once, barely moving.
âThen letâs go finish this,â he whispers.
The warmth inside him flickers once more. Soft. Lingering. Like a sunset saying hello.
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An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Fandom: Call of Duty MW (Reboot)
Pairing: Simon "Ghost" Riley/John "Soap" MacTavish
Words: 100
Triggers: None
âI could recognize him by touch alone, by smell; I would know him blind, by the way his breaths came and his feet struck the earth. I would know him in death, at the end of the world.â
--Patroclus, Song of Achilles
Sunrise and sunset. Life and death. Cyclic patterns as old and inevitable as time itself, the waxing and waning of opposing forces in a cosmic dance that is as predetermined as it is tragic.
And yet.
Sometimesârarely, dangerouslyâthose opposing forces reach across the divide to flip the proverbial middle finger to fate.  They find each other again and again, in different bodies, different eras, under different skies. Not because they are meant toâŠbut because they choose to.
But fate has never been kind to defiance. It remembers every slight, and it collects its debts in blood and bone.
They have been Achilles and Patroclus, Alexander and Hephaestion, Hadrian and Antinous. Lovers written into history as cautionary tales disguised as legends.
But for the purposes of this story, their names are Simon and Johnny.
And this time, the balance does not remain untouched.
Here at the End of the World Masterlist
A/N: Here we go! I've had this 09 Ghostsoap/Reboot Ghostsoap AU brainrot living rent free for quite some time, so I decided to finally go ahead and start posting some of the chapters I have done. It's a Reaper!Ghost x Soap pairing, with a multiverse/reincarnation AU. Basically an excuse to mashup the original series with the reboot. The Ghost and Soap in these first few chapters are going to be the 09 version and the timeline will be within the 09 games, so be prepared for a lot of canon-typical violence and heavy angst--heed those trigger warnings. The character death(s) are canon, and the main character deaths will all be temporary. This fic WILL have a happy ending, it's just going to take us awhile to get there.
Pairing: Simon "Ghost" Riley/John "Soap" MacTavish
Words: 2400
Triggers: Canon MC death, murder/betrayal, graphic depiction, canon typical violence, angst and whump
A/N: Check the tags, this chapter covers the MW2 Canon ending - graphic violence and death.
[Just Like Old Times]
[16 1810Z AUG 16]
[Capt. John âSoap MacTavish]
[Task Force 141]
[Site Hotel Bravo, Afghanistan]
âYou know what they say about revengeâŠyou better be ready to dig two graves. Go ahead and end it. It wonât change anything. Hmph. I knew you couldnât do itâŠyouâre a good warriorâŠbut you could never take that extra step, Soap, to do what was absolutely necessary.â
***
Soap wakes up with Shepherdâs knife in his chest. His hand flutters weakly at the hilt. He knows a fatal wound when he sees one.
Price is nowhere to be seen.
Standing above him, Shepherd begins loading bullets into his .44 Magnum.
âFive years ago, I lost 30,000 men in the blink of an eye,â he says bitterly. âAnd the world just fuckinâ watched.â
Soap coughs, tasting blood. He tries to reach for his service weapon, but Shepherd kicks it from his reach.
âTomorrow there will be no shortage of volunteers, no shortage of patriots.â He points the gun at Soapâs face. âI know you understand.â
Shepherd pulls the trigger.
But the bullet never hits him.
Out of nowhere, Price slams into Shepherd from the side in a brutal, full-body tackle that sends the pistol skittering across the dirt. The bullet punches into the sand inches from Soapâs skull, spraying grit across his face.
Soap tries to push himself upright, but the knife shifts in his chest and white-hot agony flares outward like a shockwave. He collapses back, choking on blood.
His vision wavers. Tunnels.
Price and Shepherd are a mess of limbs, punching, grappling, rolling through dust and gravel. Shepherd headbutts Price, but Price just shakes it off, driving his knee up into Shepherdâs face.
I have to help Price. Pistol. Whereâs my pistol?
Clumsy fingers find his leg holster. Itâs empty.
Shepherd had a gun.
It takes every bit of strength he has, but Soap manages to roll on his side. He sees the discarded .44 lying in the dirt a few yards away.
Thereâs a figure crouched next to it.
Heâd know the shape of those shoulders anywhere. The same shoulders heâd kissed in the half-light, trailing his way across that chest and up that throat. The same hands that held him like they werenât something the world kept trying to break. Heâd know the tilt of that head, the coiled power in that frame, the rise and fall of that chest. The beat of that heart he knows better than his own
John MacTavish doesnât have to see the soft brown eyes beyond the skull mask to know who it is.
Simon.
Soapâs breath catches. A wet, broken sound slips out of him.
â...SiâŠmonâŠ?â
He tries to crawl toward him. A dying animal tucks itself into the ground and hides from the world as its last warmth slips away. But John doesnât crawl toward earth or shadow.
He crawls toward Simon, toward the faint, impossible outline of him, dragging himself through sand and blood and grit because every instinct left in his failing body understands one thing.
If he is going to die, he will die going home.
Soapâs fingers dig weakly into the dirt, dragging his body one inch, then another. The movement tears something inside him and the knife grinds against bone, slicing through muscle, blood blossoming fresh through his uniform. His vision darkens at the edges. He keeps going.
Just a little farther.
Another inch.
Another breath.
But just as he reaches out for the gun beside Simonâs boot, Shepherdâs heel crashes down into the side of his face.
White pain detonates. The sound cuts out. Like someone pulled the plug on the world.
Darkness swallows him whole.
***
He wakes up choking on blood. Soap shifts his legs in the sand, trying to roll over but heâs too weak, and he blinks, struggling to focus.
Price and Shepherd are still fighting. He mustâve only been out for a minute or two. Price goes down and Shepherd straddles him, punching him over and over in the face.
Heâs going to kill him. Shepherd is going to fucking kill him.
 âPâŠrceâ Soap gurgles, dragging breath into dying lungs.
Price canât die. Shepherd killed Simon. He killed Roach. He betrayed them all. Theyâve got to stop this.
He canât let Shepherd win.
Blindly, his hands fumble at the knife in his chest. He grips it, trying to pull.
Heâs too weak.
Price is shouting something, but itâs drowned out by Shepherdâs fists. Inch by excruciating inch, Soap pulls the knife from his body, his hands slipping on the bloodied hilt.
Two gloved hands cover his. Skeleton hands painted over fabric.
Ghost is kneeling at his side, haunted eyes fixed on his, and together, they pull out the knife. Blood wells from the wound, pulsing.
Soap flips the knife in his hands and throws it, hitting Shepherd right in the eye socket.
Heâs dead before he hits the ground.
Soap collapses back, spent. Price is lying motionless a few meters away as the wind picks up, blowing sand across their bodies. And GhostâŠSimon kneels beside him, pressing both gloved hands against Soapâs mortal wound.
John tries to lift his hand â just to touch him, just once â but his arm gives out halfway, and he slips under before he ever reaches him.
***
âSoap! Soap!â
He comes back to himself with a violent jerk, dragging in a wet, rattling breath that sends agony tearing through his ribcage. The world is sideways and blurred, smeared with dust and blood and the metallic stink of gunfire. His chest is a furnace. Every inhale scrapes like broken glass.
âSoap, stay with me!â Priceâs voice. Low and rough and terrified.
Soap blinks up at him. The sky spins overhead. Sand whips across his face. Price is crouched over him, both hands clamped over the hole in his chest, trying to stem the bleeding with pressure that would make a lesser man scream.
A choked cry rips from him.
âEasy, son. Breathe. You hear me? Just breathe.â Priceâs hands are shaking.
Soap coughs, tasting iron. The world flickers. Shapes smear. Sound warps. He tries to focus on Priceâs face but it keeps drifting away, like his vision can't decide whether to anchor itself or give up entirely.
Movement over Priceâs shoulder catches his eye.
A figure.
Ghost stands a few meters behind Price, half-shrouded in dust. Unmoving. Watching him with an expression Soap canât see but feels all the same. He reaches a trembling hand toward him. His fingers shake violently, coated in drying blood.
Ghost doesnât speak. Doesnât move.
He justâŠfades. Static around the edges.
Gone.
No. Just let me go. Let me be with him.
Soapâs hand falls back to the sand.
âNo, no no, Soap!âstay with me!â Price barks, dragging him upright enough to get an arm under his shoulders. âItâll hold for now. Come on, get up!â
Rotor wash explodes across the clearing. Bursts of sand sting Soapâs skin. Price drags him toward the incoming helicopter, his boots digging trenches in the sand. Soap feels himself slipping, consciousness thinning into threads.
âI thought I told you this was a one-way trip!â Price shouts as Nikolai jumps from the helicopter, throwing Soapâs other arm over his shoulder.
The Russian grunts. âLooks like it still is. Theyâll be looking for us, you know.â
âNikolai, we gotta get Soap outta hereââ
âDa. I know a place.â
By the time they lift off, his head is in Priceâs lap and he can barely feel the hands shoved into the bloody hole in his chest.
Across the aisle, Ghost sits in the jump seat and watches as Soap passes out again.
***
The heloâs ceiling spins overhead. Nikolai is shouting something. Price slaps his cheek, begging him to stay awake while his own blood pools warm beneath him.
âWhat the hell kind of name is Soap, eh?â
Price slides his M1911 to Soap. He catches it and shoots Imran Zakhaev in the head.
Cold air on his face. Hands jostling him.
Price. âGet him inside!â
âYeâve got no photograph in yer dossier, no history. Who are you?â
âNameâs Ghost. But I used to be Simon Riley, sir.â
âThe safe house is up ahead!â Nikolai shouts over his shoulder as Price keeps pressure on Soapâs wound. âKeep moving!â
Simon pulling him into a dark corner of a safehouse and kissing him breathless. His laugh muffled against his shoulder. Tracing the scar above his eyebrow, his voice at sunset, soft and fondâ"I love you, Johnny.â
âYe come back to me, Si. Ye come back.â
Hands strip his gear and cut away his uniform. Someone tries to start an IV. Someone else is yelling for morphine. Priceâs voice cuts through them all. âOut of the bloody way! Get a doctor!â
Soap gasps uselessly. Nothing goes in. Nothing reaches his lungs. His hands twitch weakly at his sides, but he canât get anything to obey him.
Price is shouting. âKeep pressure on that wound!â
âIâm trying!â Nikolai grunts. âHang in there, my friend.â
Ghost appears again. Closer this time. Standing at the foot of the cot. Silent, solid. Shadowed eyes fixed on him.
Soapâs heart stutters violently.
âHe needs help, now!â
He canât think. Canât speak. Canât breathe. Ghost steps closer until heâs right beside the bed. A gloved hand touches Soapâs sternum with unbearable gentleness.
Soap tries to lift his head toward him, but the pain blinds him. Memories spill out unbiddenâ
His hand brushing Simonâs curls off his forehead. His smile in the dying sunset.
Ghostâs body. Burned. Broken. Nothing left to bury.
Soapâs breath shudders out of him.
âWeâre losing him!â
***
When Soap opens his eyes, the world is silent in a way it has never been before.
The shabby safehouse is still there. The cot, the metal table, the flickering lamp, the scattered medical supplies. Price is hunched over the body lying on the cot, pumping compressions into a bare and bloodied chest.
Soap steps toward him automatically, but his boots donât make a sound. Thereâs no weight to them.
Price shouts something and Nikolai scrambles, and Soapâs chest tightens. He knows who it is before he even looks.
The man on the cotâthe one Price is fighting forâis him.
He stares down at his own body, pale and open-eyed, blood drying in streaks from his mouth. Priceâs hands are shaking as he works to restart his heart. Nikolai hovers close, face ashen. A medic stands to the side, shaking his head.
Soap should be panicking. Probably. He thinks.
But he isnât.
Because on the far side of the room, leaning against the peeling wall like heâs been there all alongâŠ
Simon is waiting for him.
Not flickering. Not vanishing. Not a hallucination this time.
There.
Whole.
Real.
âSimonâŠâ Soap breathes, though he isnât sure heâs breathing at all.
Ghost steps forward, his boots silent on the concrete. His skull mask is gone and he can see Simonâs beautiful face, still the same but somehowâŠmore. Something bright behind the eyes. Something ancient. Something exhausted.
âJohnny.â His voice is just as soft and gentle as he remembered it.
Soap doesnât walk to him.
He runs.
He slams into Simonâs chest hard enough to stagger them both, hands grabbing fistfuls of shirt, pulling him in, holding on with a desperation that breaks something loose inside him. Simon wraps his arms around him without hesitation, burying his face against Johnâs neck, clutching him close like heâs afraid to let go.
Johnâs breath hitches, his voice breaking. âI saw you. I sawâGod, I thought Iâd lost you. Iâd thoughtâŠSi, how are you here?â
Simon pulls back just enough to cup Johnâs jaw. His thumb brushes his cheek, warm as summer light.
âI know.â His voice trembles. âI know, Johnny. Iâm sorry. I am so sorry.â
John shakes his head, tears slipping free. He kisses himâquick, frantic, like heâs terrified Simon will disappear again if he leaves his eyes closed for too long. Simon holds him steady and kisses him back once, slowing them both down to something longing and reverent.
âI missed you,â John whispers. âI missed you so much.â
Simon closes his eyes. Pain flickers across his face. âJohnâŠyou canât stay. Itâs not your time.â
âClear!â
A painful jolt shoots through Johnâs chest. He gasps, gripping Simonâs shirt tighter. âWhat dâye mean? Iâm here with you. Thatâs all I want.â
âJohnnyâŠâ Simon swallows, glancing over Johnâs shoulder.
John turns.
âClear!â
Another violent jolt rips through him. Across the room, Soapâs body arches off the table.
Simonâs hand tightens on his. âTheyâre trying to bring you back.â
John blinks at him. âBack? Simonâwhy? Why would I go back? Yer here. I want to stay here. With you.â
Simonâs face collapses into something broken and tender and unbearably sad.
âI wish you could.â He lowers his head until it meets Johnâs. âGod, Johnny, I wish that more than anything.â
Soapâs body convulses again in the corner of his vision. Another shock. Price is shouting his name.
John feels something tug at himâsoft at first, then stronger. A pull behind his ribs, like a hook sinking in.
He clutches Simonâs shirt. âSimon, whatâs happening? Donâtâplease donât let leave meââ
âYou have to go back,â Simon says hoarsely, voice breaking. âYouâre not done yet.â
âNoâNO! Simon, pleaseââ His fingers slip through Simonâs clothes like theyâre losing substance. His grip fails. His hands blur. His chest feels like itâs being torn open from the inside as they shock his body again.
Simonâs voice reaches him through the distortion, right against his ear. âI love you, Johnny. I love you forever.â
The world dissolves into white.
John is ripped backward, through air, through light, through the ether itself, and Simon disappears from his arms, from his sight, from everything.
He slams back into his body like a freight train.
Pain detonates. He gasps. Air. Real air, tearing into lungs that werenât breathing a moment ago.
âIâve got a pulse!â Nikolai shouts.
Soap arches off the cot, choking on the world heâs been forced back into.
Pairing: Simon "Ghost" Riley/John "Soap" MacTavish
Words: 2100
Triggers: Canon MC death, murder/betrayal, graphic depiction, canon typical violence, angst and whump
A/N: I realized I'm really behind cross-posting these chapters from Ao3, I'm trying to catch up. Check the tags, this chapter is rough, and contains Ghost and Roach's canon ending from the original game series. Just a reminder that this is a reincarnation/multiverse AU, so not all canon deaths are permanent.
[Loose Ends]
[15 1536Z AUG 16]
[Lt. Simon âGhostâ Riley]
[Task Force 141]
[Georgian-Russian Border]
âTask Force, this is Price. More of Makarovâs men just arrived at the boneyardâŠSoap, cover me. Iâm gonna slot that guy over there and use his radio to tap into their comms. Ghost, weâre going silent for a few minutes. Good luck up there in Russia. Price out.â
***
Itâs an ambush.
Somehow, Makarov knew they were coming and sent a small army to wipe them out. Ozone and Scarecrow are dead. Roach was able to retrieve the DSM, but now he and Ghost are pinned down at the dilapidated house at the edge of the clearing.
Smoke drifts thickly through open windows. The fuckers have nearly surrounded the building, and thereâs nothing to do but wait and try to hold them off while the DSM upload finishes. Ghost is braced in an upstairs window, firing down at the hostiles while Roach clacks away at the computer. Compartmentalizing the only way elite operators can, he wonders how Soapâs doing on his end. If heâs been ambushed, too. If heâs currently fighting for his life with his back to the wall.
Never shouldâve agreed to this. Never shouldâve left âim.
Between shots, Ghost watches Roachâs hunched over form. He needs to get his head in the gameâRoach needs him solid, not worrying over their Captain who is most likely handling his own shit like a fucking professional.
Itâs a bit of an out-of-body-experience, though, trying to function when your heart is hundreds of miles away.
Ghost ejects his spent mag and slams another home as Shepherdâs voice crackles in over the comms.
âThis is Shepherd. Weâre almost at the LZ. Whatâs your status, over?â
Without turning, Roach gives him the thumbs up sign.
Ghost thumbs his mic. âDSM secured. Weâre on our way to the LZ.â
He breaks for the door, hollering over his shoulder. âRoach, letâs go!â
Roach grabs the DSM and bolts from the terminal, coughing on smoke. The DSM is in a thin Pelican case but itâs awkward to carry and shoot at the same time, so Roach is forced to abandon his rifle in favor of his sidearm. He wordlessly slots into his lieutenantâs side, covering down as they move together through the open doorway.
Locked in like magnets, Ghost and Roach move instinctually towards cover.
Bullets kick up ground at their heels.
âMove! Move!â Ghost shoves Roach toward the treeline.
The safehouse behind them erupts in a burst of gunfire. The hostiles have taken it and now have the high ground. In the distance, Ghost can hear the Pave-Lowâs distinctive thump-thump-thump vibrating through the valley. Exfil is coming, but there is a lot of open ground between them and salvation.
A whistle arcs overhead, and the earth explodes to their right.
Mortars. The bastards are sighting in on them.
Ghost pulls them into a weave, his heart in his throat. Itâs no longer Shepherd waiting for him at the finish line, itâs the promise of seeing Soap again.
Iâm coming Johnny. Iâm coming.
âCome on, Roachâmove your arse!â The words are unnecessary as theyâre sprinting full out, but they still light a fire under the young sergeant, reloading mid-stride one-handed as his pistol clicks on empty.
Almost there.
Weâre almost there.
A mortar shell whistles, too close.
Ghostâs instincts scream at him. âGET DOWN!â
The blast hits like a freight train. Dirt, fire, and shrapnel explode around them, and he feels himself lifted off the ground, then slammed back down. The world tilts sideways. His vision whites out.
When it clears, heâs on his back, lungs burning, heart slamming against his ribs. His weaponâs gone. He drags himself onto his elbows, head spinning. Roach is sprawled a few feet away, blood streaming from his shoulder, his side, his leg. Heâs been hit. Bad. Gloved fingers claw in the dirt as he weakly tries to get up, coughing wetly.
âRoach!â Ghost crawls to him, grabs his bitch strap, and drags him behind a rotted-out vehicle. Bullets ping off metal.
Roach has been hit at least twice. Shrapnelâs torn open his leg. Heâs pale and breathing in shallow, wet gasps as shaking hands fumble at his rig, trying to staunch the blood. Ghostâs stomach drops. Roach needs aid and he needs it now, but every second the hostiles get closer to sighting them in. The legsâ bleeding the worst, so Ghost slaps a tourniquet on it and hopes itâll hold.
âOn your feet, Sergeant.â Hating himself for the callousness in his voice, Ghost hauls Roach upright and slings one arm across his shoulders.
With the other, he hands him the DSM.
âJust hold onto this. Iâve got us from âere.â
With a quick breath and a count of onetwothree, Ghost moves out from cover at as close to a run as he can. Roach is trying to keep up but his knees buckle, forcing Ghost to use his other hand to haul him along, unable to fire back.
A bullet creases his calf. Ghost stumbles, and they nearly go down.
Mortar shells bracket their position, getting closer.
Suddenly, gunfire erupts ahead of them at the treeline.
âFuck!â Ghost shoves Roach to the ground in a low depression in the ground, covering him with his body. The hostiles have them surrounded, picking them off at will from the treeline while the mortar fire nips at their heels.
Fumbling at his tac vest, he yanks the MK-124 from its pouch, pops the cap, thumbs the lever, and throws it as far as he can towards the trees. He keys his mic. âThunder Two-One, Iâve popped orange smoke in the treeline! Standby to engage on my mark!â
âRoger that. I have a visual on the smoke. Standing by.â
Beside him, Roach has his IFAK open, plugging the gunshot wounds with shaking hands. Ghost takes the quick-clot from him and does it himself.
âI got you, Roach. Hang in there.â
Tick. Tick. Tick. Seconds counting down. A series of heartbeats. Sand through the hourglass.
Roach is slipping. He can feel him losing consciousness.
No time. Theyâre out of time.
Iâm coming, Johnny.
Then, over the comms, the beautiful sound of their backup calling in on station. âThunder Two-One, cleared hot!â
Ghost pulls his service pistol and drags Roach forward, firing one-handed at shadows between the pines as the Little Bird helicopter flies in low overhead, taking out the incoming hostiles.
Another mortar hits the earth behind them, the shockwave throwing them both onto their knees again.
Roach doesnât get back up. Ghost shakes him violently. âCome on, get up! Get up! Weâre almost there!â
When the next mortar hits, he sees John reflected in its aftermath. His smile in the dying light. His laugh against his throat. His fingers in Simonâs hair.
âYou come back to me, Si. You come back.â
Ghostâs breath catches. No. He refuses to let that be the last thing John ever said to him.
He hauls himself to his feet again and drags Roach forward. âStay with me, Roach. Weâre almost there.â
They stumble into the clearing just as the Pave Low punches through the smoke, its rotors sending dirt and pine needles whipping through the air. Roach sags against him, and Ghost half-drags, half-carries him toward the bird. Shapes burst from the treeline behind them. He raises his rifle, firing in controlled bursts, but his arms are trembling, his breath ragged. Roach isnât responding at all anymore.
The Pave Low touches the ground, and Shepherd steps out, flanked by two Shadow Company operatives.
For a split second, Ghost is nearly overwhelmed with relief.
âShepherd!â he shouts, hauling Roachâs limp body up higher. âSandersonâs hit bad. We need to evac nowââ
Shepherd strides toward them. His eyes track the pelican case in Roachâs hand. âDo you have the DSM?â
His voice is too even. Too calm. Ghostâs stomach goes cold. âWeâve got it, sir. Right here.â
âGood work, gentlemen.â Shepherd takes the case. Â âThatâs one less loose end.â
He takes out his service weapon and shoots Roach in the gut.
Itâs a sound Ghost will never forgetânot the gunshot, but the wet, sickening thud as the bullet tears through Roachâs flak jacket into the soft tissue beneath. Roach jerks, a final, spasmodic convulsion, then goes slack. Dead weight. A puppet with its strings cut.
The world stops.
âNO!â
There isnât time for him to lunge at Shepherd. There isnât even time for disbelief. The roaring of the helicopter, the gunfire in the distance, the blood rushing in Simonâs own earsâall of it goes silent. There is only Shepherdâs face, impassive and righteous, and the gun swiveling in his direction.
Before Simon can process whatâs about to happen, before the rage or the grief can even take hold, Shepherd turns the .44 on him.
The bullet hits like a punch from God.
Not a clean kill shot. Shepherd doesnât grant him that mercy. The bullet hits just left of his sternum point blank, punching through plate and muscle and bone like they were nothing. The impact throws him backward. He lands hard onto his back, the breath torn from his lungs in a brutal, agonizing gasp. Pain, white-hot and absolute, floods his system.
Heart shot. Heâs got a couple minutes left, tops.
Heâs dying.
Not like this. Please, not like this.
Ghostâs fingers twitch, trying to reach for his weapon, for Roach, for anything, but he canât feel his arm. Canât feel his legs. Shepherd stands over him, a dark god on a battlefield of his own making.
âArea sanitized, sir. All targets destroyed.â
All he can see from his vantage point on the ground is boots converging on Shepherd. His vision is narrowing, tunneling, shrinking to a pinpoint. Roach makes a small, broken sound as he hauls himself an inch at a time across the ground toward Ghost.
Shepherdâs men grab them both by their vests and begin dragging their bodies to the edge of the woods.
Ghost tries to speak. Tries to key his comms, to warn Price. To warn John.
Nothing comes out but a thin rattle of air.
Radio chatter crackles faintly over his radio, sounding far, far away.
âGhost! Come in, this is Price! Weâre under attack by Shepherdâs men at the boneyard! Soap, hold the left flank! Do not trust Shepherd! I say again, DO NOT TRUSTâSoap, get down!â
Ghost gasps. Or tries to. His lungs seize. Blood bubbles against the back of his throat, warm and metallic. His heartbeat stutters, skipping, failing.
Johnny! Johnny, no! Please, not him. Not him!
Ghost hears the sound of a body being thrown into a ditch, and after a moment he feels himself being picked up and tossed in after Roach.
He lands hard on his side, the shock punching a fresh burst of agony through his chest. Roach is still somehow alive and still dragging himself, one shaking hand reaching for Ghostâs fingers.
Ghost tries to lift his hand to take it. He canât.
âYou come back to me, Si. You come back.â
Shepherd is standing above them and looking down like theyâre nothing.
Thatâs when he smells the gasoline.
No. Oh, no. No, no, noâ
A Shadow Company soldier is standing next to Shepherd, upending a canister of gasoline over their bodies. It splashes across Ghostâs vest and pants, soaking into his balaclava.
Roach whimpers, his fingers brushing Ghostâs wrist. Pleading. Terrified. Somehow, Ghost manages to close his fingers around Roachâs.
Iâm sorry Roach.
He looks up and sees Shepherd standing over them, smoking his cigar.
Oh please God, no. Johnny, Iâm so sorry.
Shepherd flicks the cigar into the ditch. Ghost watches it arc downward in slow motionâ
a comet of red light, almost beautiful, in a sickening wayâlike the sun dipping behind Mishennaya Sopka the night before.
Johnnyâs eyes at sunset.
His hand on my face.
His lips smiling against mine.
Flames erupt. Hungry, roaring, and alive.
Roach screams.
Ghost tries, but nothing comes out.
The world is fire. Unbearable agony. Hell itself.
But then, beneath the pain, beneath the smokeâŠ
âŠsomething else. A pull. A warmth. Not from the fire.
From above.
From beyond. Like a hand closing gently around his, like a voice he almost recognizes. Not Johnâs, but close. Whispering through the crackling flamesâŠ
âThere you are. Iâve been looking for you, Ghost.â
His heartbeat stutters once.
Twice.
Then stops altogether.
And the fire swallows everything whole.
Here at the End of the World Masterlist
A/N: Oof. That was hard to write. That scene still guts me to this day, but as hard as it was I'm looking forward to a little canon-fix-it on some character deaths (MW3 Soap, I'm looking at you).