First time actually posting Danny Phantom or DC fan fic I usually keep everything in my drafts or in my phone's notes lmao, but I am an avid reader of both fandoms as well as various AUs and fix-it's.
Walk with me shall you...
Danny is a Wayne but not in the way you think, you see Dick also isn't the eldest of the Bat Clan.
No for you see Bruce had a daughter during one of his Brucie Wayne tangents which resulted with the birth of a baby girl, who was a few years older than Dick.
Will call her Marien Wayne...
Bruce tried to shield her from his night life of being Gotham's vigilante but fails to realize that in the end when she chooses to leave the manor.
That she was already one ever since her dear little brother Jason was killed by Joker and at 16 had been in the shadows watching over Tim during his run as Robin.
She was gifted the name Veritas...for reflecting the naked truth that everyone needed....
So, while investigating a lead she accidentally gets into a street race and ends up with a thrill for speed. Here she meets someone who sees her and not just a Wayne or her vigilante persona, thus a whirl wind romance that ends with a baby.
And with some thinking decides that Gotham is not a place to raise a baby unless they were trained to survive her harsh streets. Talks with Alfred and prenatal appointments until she enacts her plan, she leaves under the gist of graduating early and off to college.
Along the way of driving out of Gotham, there was a Joker attack and, in the end, it's only her and the baby on their way out of Gotham. Distraught and the crushing reality that she would not be able to raise the baby alone she decides to put him up for adoption.
It just so happens that she was in Amity Park's sister city, Elmerton where she has her baby and leaves him in a random Amity Park orphanage.
Which is where Jack and Maddie go when they realize that the ectoplasm had evidently caused them infertility issues, and with a few signed papers they now had a baby boy.
Coming to terms that she was able to get her baby safe she stays in Elmerton for a few months of recouperation before traveling the mid-west and stopping in Fawcett City.
Building a sort of life as a college student that works at a 24hr coffee shop, she still does her vigilante work over the next few years. It's during an alien invasion that she crosses paths with Billy Batson as he transforms into Shazam.
Pulling a card from her dear dad, she takes Billy under her wing as they defend Fawcett City from their rogues and magical adventures due to Billy being Shazam.
As the years pass, Bruce welcomes Stephanie, Cass, Damian, and Duke into the Bat Clan's ranks, with the addition of Jason too once they work out a system.
Something causes Danny and the siblings to flee Amity City, whether it was the GIW or something entirely different. They take refuge in Gotham after she extends a helping hand to hide their ectosignatures from GIW devices.
It also just so happens that Veritas was in town tracking down a cult that stolen something from a temple and was tasked with returning it while Billy went to school.
Might write more or might post random blurbs it's a toss-up ^w^
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For your DanDad au, do Danny and Ellie have any memory problems due to either their injuries or new "age"?
Do any of them take after Jack or Maddie when it comes to making ridiculous mass science tech to solve any problem or inconvenience (like being easy too small)?
I've been thinking this over whether or not I wanted them to have memory problems like their past lives coming back at unexpected times but I really liked the idea that they all got a fresh start.
Dan starting new raising Danny and Elli, Danny not having to be traumatized with his original death and Elli with her not feeling loved by Vald for her creation, and even Jason getting to start a family in general when he probably never thought he'd get too.
Dan having his redemption was a starting point into why I started doing this DanDad AU cause it's mostly all about Dan and Jason being Dads to the twins, and all the Fun scenarios they can be placed with it!
As for if they take after their current grandparents I like to say while they don't have their old memories they do still have their personalities from before but just being raised by Jason and Dan in Crime Alley.
I've been reading many posts about Danny being the Ghost King, Jazz being Queen Mother, Dan redemption, Dani being his daughter, Danny and his clones, summonings, hilarious assumptions and so on. So, I thought why not combine them.
A new Ruler of the Infinite Realms has been chosen and all realms can feel the changes. But not everyone is okay with that because it has been a few millennia since the Tyrant King was sealed and there's suddenly this new ruler that they absolutely have no info on. That won't do for them.
So after countless hours of searching, scrying, seance and not so great attempts at summoning, the finally found a very old spell, written in on the wall of an ancient temple that they can barely read or translate, that have a slight higher chance of success. A spell that can reveal the royal succession lines of the Infinite Realms's throne. So naturally people fought amongst each other to have it for themselves and some of it got lost in translation or destroyed.
But the spell still works, not like how they want it or how the original spell intended to work, but it worked nonetheless so nobody think anything was amiss.
Of course, John Constantine got a version of the spell and had to share it with the rest of JL. The spell he got however only give him the barest bones of the succession lineage such as Royal Hierarchy, Royal Titles, Given Titles, Chosen Name and picture of that they look like. And since John is British the spell use the British royal hierarchy as template, meaning instead of conquest through combat, they think it's bloodline.
Most of the lineage are missing since the rulers were either ended and erased or forgotten, so the only thing that was clear was from Pariah Dark and Kronos (which is a shock for Diana) and downwards. So imagine their surprise when they look at the picture under current King of the Infinite Realms and see a being that looks like a teenage boy looking back at them. They were again shocked when looking below the new king and see a list of deceased male heirs with only one surviving princess.
The last thing Danny expected was Phantom showing up at his front door and dragging him out for a day at the fair. He certainly didnât want to hang out with 'Dan', much less trust him. But finding himself enjoying a day of rides and games? Sharing quips and food and heart-felt confessions? Maybe he and Dan have more in common than Danny realized.
Word Count: 9,217
Also on AO3
Notes:
It's finally here! I'm so excited to be posting my Valentine's Core Exchange. My giftee was @strawberry-avalanche . I went for a Danny & Dan centric fic, with some fluff, bonding, and redemption. I hope you enjoy this not-so-short story of Danny and Dan enjoying a day at the fair. Happy Reading! @valentines-core-exchange
Finally, it was a perfect Saturday, Danny thought. After all the chaos of time restructuring, his ghostly alter ego becoming number one on the most wanted list again, and learning how to help the ghosts instead of just fighting them, finally the half ghost had a day to himself. There was no one to bother him. His parents were out of town at a conference, his sister on a college tour. Vlad was out of his hair, busy with his new ward, a certain (formerly?) evil alternate Phantom. Best yet, he had plans with Sam and Tucker, an all day movie binge with all the popcorn and candy he could eat. Everything was absolutely perfect.
The boy bent down in his chair, tying his shoes to leave, when an insistent knocking came at the front door.Â
His brow furrowed; his friends werenât supposed to be meeting him here, were they?
Another knock came, this one more forceful.
Danny stood, calling. âIâm coming.â He hurried across the kitchen, a second later pulling the door open. âWerenât we meeting at S-â
The boy blinked, cutting himself off in his confusion. There, on the other side of the door was⌠himself. Or at least, the figure looked like him. The other teen wore all black, gothic look complete with eye-liner and half a dozen ear piercings. And a familiar scowl.
With that last piece of the puzzle, the answer fell into place. âPhantom?â Dannyâs mouth fell open.
âActually, itâs Dan.â His double shrugged, still scowling.
âDanâŚâ The boy said slowly. Was this really happening?
The other teen, at least in appearance, didnât acknowledge the word. Instead, his eyes flickered to the house behind. An odd look flashed in them for a second before a forcible disaffection shifted into place. âYouâre not doing anything today, right? Good.â
That broke Danny out of his disbelieving stoop. He stood up straighter, eyes narrowed in distrust. âActually, I was going to-â
A hand suddenly pulled him out the door, distracting him from his protest. âWeâre going to the fair.â
Danny blinked once. âWhat?â
âThe Fair.â Phantom said slowly, like he was stupid. âWhat, got cotton in your ears?â
âI heard you.â Danny pulled his hand away, arms crossing. âWhy?â
The other rolled his eyes. âVlad is driving me crazy. So I stole his credit card.â With a flash of sharp teeth, he swiped out said card. âIâm gonna eat all the disgusting greasy food I want, cheat at some carnival games, and ride the squirrel cages âtil I throw up.â
âHave fun?â Dannyâs nose scrunched; why exactly was âDanâ telling him this? Not that he cared, on his one day off in months. With a head shake, he pointed back into the house. âWhatever. Knock yourself out. Iâm gonna-â
âNo you donât.â Phantom grabbed his arm again. âYouâre coming with me.â
The movement gave Danny pause. That hand wrapped around his bicep, the solid warmth of it⌠he knew that Vlad had stabilized Phantom in this timeline using a human clone of himself, making the figure in front of him a half ghost again. But actually seeing the reality in front of him was another thing entirely. And the demandâŚÂ âWhy?â
The only answer was another eye-roll. Instead, Phantom started pulling Danny down the sidewalk. And the boy found himself following. He could keep arguing; a large part of him wanted to. He could even easily pull away â the other halfaâs grip wasnât all that tightâ but he didnât resist.Â
Instead, Danny followed his counterpart into the alley beside Fentonworks.
Hand still around his arm, familiar white rings appeared around the otherâs waist. They spread, the warm light tickling Danny's skin in an eerie reflection of his own transforming light. He stiffened, watching.
His double changed, corpse blue skin replacing the human tone. Shoulder-length black hair flickered to white flames. Familiar icy blue eyes became blood red.Â
Danny couldnât help but flinch, the image playing behind his eyes, if in reverse. Cords of burning ecto energy binding him. A hellish warping of his own face, looming menacingly over him. Those same white rings, enfolding the figure into a smaller mirror image. So much worse than the towering monster -the nightmare of his enemy taking his place and hurting his loved ones.
The corpse-blue reflection filled his vision again. But now⌠they were truly eye to eye.
Phantom, teen-sized and equally scrawny, released him. His hard expression wavered for just a moment, brow furrowed, almost⌠remorseful. He stepped back. After a pauseâŚÂ
âWell? Arenât you going to âgo ghostâ?â The air quotes were audible, with more than a hint of derision.Â
And yet, Danny felt his shoulders lowered ever so slightly, the anxious tamper of his heart easing. He summoned his own rings, turning into ghost form.
The two lifted from the ground, silently flying towards the fairgrounds. Danny followed his counterpartâs lead, eyes fixed on the back of the flaming head. The other ghost didnât turn and look, gaze fixed on their destination. And that destinationâŚ
Soon, the colorful tents and rides rose into view. Music and laughter drifted through the air. Despite his swirling nerves, Danny couldnât help the up-turned twitch of his lips.
âHere.â Phantom said gruffly, breaking Danny from his observation. The other half ghost pointed down, landing between two trailers. With a flash of light, he turned human again.
Danny did the same. A quick text to his friends to tell them where he was instead of handing out with them, and he was following his counterpart out of the fair employeesâ parking lot and to the ticket counter. Phantom, surprisingly politely, bought two tickets. They passed through the gate, a cheery older woman giving the even-faced halfa a map.Â
âWhere to first?â Danny asked, hands in his pockets. He gave a deceptively casual shrug.
The other didnât look up for a long moment, nose buried in the map. His brow wrinkled in contemplation, like this was the most important decision heâd ever make.Â
Then, he pointed. âThere. I need to see the biggest pumpkin in the state.â
Danny raised a brow, but he didnât question. Wordlessly, he followed the other half ghost through the crowds and into a large white building. They passed through the door, the crowded barn smelling musty, of straw and barnyard animals.Â
All the while, Phantomâs even severe expression didnât change. Flat faced and silent, his eyes flitted over the giant pumpkins and watermelons. Slowly, he walked along the rows of painted gourds and prize-winning apples. Through the bee-keeping display. Passed the glass case holding someoneâs grandmaâs first place honey candy.Â
Straw-floored pens held bleating lambs and wide-eyed calves. These didnât crack that disaffected scowl. Nor the tiny piglets. Not even the fluffy baby chicks.
All the while, Dannyâs stomach churned with conflict. Earlier heâd flippantly thought he didnât care what âDanâ did but that was a lie. Now his muscles pulled tense, ill at ease. His mind flickered back to the fight, to throwing down the thermos. The realization of how cruel, how unfair it would be to imprison the ghost in front of him again.Â
And now⌠said ghost was watching a carton of eggs under heat lamps. Around him, small children pressed curious palms to the glass.Â
Danny had decided not to lock Phantom up again. Heâd chosen to give âDanâ a second chance. Heâd agreed to Vladâs plan to help the other ghost. And he desperately hoped, desperately wanted to believe it was for the best. ButâŚÂ
âMommy! Chicky!â A little girl enthusiastically pointed at one egg sporting a tiny hole.
But⌠Danny certainly didnât want to hang out with his counterpart. He rememberedâŚ. The graves, the rubble, the crazed laughter. The nightmares heâd had for months after seeing that ruined future. The twisted bodies, his own hands covered in blood, the world aflame.
And now, the author of that ruin was here. And frankly, Danny didnât trust him. Of course he didn't. And here in public, around so many childrenâŚ. The thought was making his stomach turn.
A finger gently tapped the glass of the incubator. Danny tensed, carefully eyeing the other half ghost. Power swirled in his core, ready to intervene if necessary.
âThere you go.â The words were almost so low to be inaudible, spoken toward the glass, to the hatching egg.Â
Dannyâs energy stilled even so slightly. He watched his counterpart, head tilted.Â
Phantom just stood there, watching. âGood job, little guy.â Something sparked in his eyes. Just the subtlest wrinkle of his brow, the twitch of his lipsâŚ.
The other half ghost felt something in his loosen. Hardly even realizing it, he let out the breath heâd been holding.
Suddenly, the otherâs head turned sharply. âWhat are you looking at?â
Just like that, the moment broke. Innocently, Danny raised his hands. âWhatâs next?âÂ
Phantom huffed, eyes narrowed. He whipped out the map, studying it again. âPig races.â He answered curtly, turning and walking away without a look back. Of course, Danny followed.
Phantom demanded they find some pig races to watch, and they did. A short walk found the two at the sawdust covered track. Metal bleachers surrounded the arena, crowded with people. Tired parents with strollers, carrying bags of cotton candy and huge stuffed animals. An old couple, the husband in a trucker hat, the wife carrying an oversized bag. A few twenty somethings, scandalously eating pork barbeque in front of the pigs.
The two half ghosts managed a seat on the end of the bench, beside a little boy wearing a tiny plastic pig nose and vibrating with excitement.
âWhen are the piggys gonna race, Daddy?â The child bothered his father, who patiently showed him the time again.Â
âOne more minute.â The man ruffled his sonâs hair.Â
Just then, the sound of a trumpet sounded. The announcer swaggered into the center. âItâs Pig Racinâ Time!â The southern accent came on long and thick. âGood morning and welcome pig racing fans to the Hogway SpeedwayâŚâ
With wide spread arms and charming enthusiasm, their host masterfully engaged the crowd. He introduced the racers, hogs punnifuly named after different Nascar drivers. The trumpet sounded again, the crowd shouting the name of their sectionâs chosen racer. And the pigs were off.
Danny watched his counterpart much more than the sprinting pigs. Phantomâs eyes followed the track, lips pressed closed and even. The expression was strange; it wasnât that âDanâ didnât want to be there. It was like he was unsureâŚ
âHamica!â The little boy sitting to Phantomâs side shouted above the crowd. âGo Hamica!â The child jumped out of his seat.Â
The sound swelled, the cheering and stomping shaking the benches. The little boy hopped up and down, small body carelessly slamming into Phantom in his excitement.
For just a moment, Dannyâs breath caught again. ThenâŚ.
âNumber 10! Hamica Patrick wins!â The announcer shouted while the pigs gobbled up their prize of cheese doodles.Â
âOur piggy won!â The little boy clapped. âShe won! Did you see?â He turned to Phantom, starry eyes blind to the halfaâs tense posture.Â
Wait. Why was the other half ghost tense?
The child continued. âShe won! Everyone was cheering so loud and our piggy won.âÂ
âYeahâŚâ Phantom finally answered quietly, giving an almost sad shrug.
With that, the boy lowered his raised hands. âYou werenât cheering.â Lips pursed seriously; maybe he was picking up on the seeming-teenâs odd mode. âYou havta cheer next race. Everyone's supposed ta cheer!â
Meanwhile the boyâs father was giving apologetic looks, trying to get his sonâs attention back to the race. âThe duckâs are going next. Donât you want to see?â
The boy pointed at âDanâ demandingly. âYou havta cheer.â
âAlright, Alright.â Phantom put up his hands and⌠he smiled. âIâll cheer.âÂ
Again, Danny felt like he was looking at an alternate reality. His counterpart was smiling. Not malicious or teasing. Nor mocking or crazed butâŚ
âIâll cheer. ButâŚâ That genuine smile cracked brighter. âYou have to cheer even louder. So loud everyoneâs eardrums bleed.â
Well⌠he was being a little macabre. But the little boy was laughing brightly all the same.Â
And Phantom kept his word. âOinkheart! You better run!â He did cheer, as loud and enthusiastic as any other pig racing fan.
Slowly, ever so slowly, Dannyâs own even lips cracked into a smile. He cheered too, just as loud as Phantom.
The pigs races finished, the host announcing the next show while selling plastic pig noses and pooping pig keychains to the parents of excitable kids. Then a quick trip to the ATM and Phantom pulled Danny towards the fair games.Â
âThat one.â The black clad ghostâs eyes fixed on a wall of balloons. Various prizes including a five feet long stuffed shark hung from the stall.
Phantom handed over a few bills. He fingered the darts, carefully aiming with furrowed brow. He threw, the projectile sailing straight for its target. âYes!â He cheered, only for the dart to harmlessly hit the balloon and fall.Â
Danny frowned suspiciously, unintentionally mirroring the other half ghost. Still both said nothing. Instead, Phantom just threw the rest of his darts. One by one, each failed to pop a balloon.
âCome on.â Danny shook his head knowingly. âLetâs try another game.â Trust that the first one they try would be rigged.
âNo.â Phantom grumbled, giving the attendant a few more bills. âIâm going to get it.â
Again, the seeming-teen carefully tested the aim of the dart, fixed on his target. Then⌠his gaze shifted for just a second, fixing on the other half ghost. His eyes flashed red, a purposeful smirk in them. Danny's brows furrowed in question.
The dart flew through the air, again harmlessly bouncing off the balloon and falling. Except this time, a second later the rubber sphere popped with a startling bang.
Danny flinched, shocked. For just a moment, a misty person-shaped outline wavered in front of the wall, a long clawed finger outstretched toward the balloonâs carcass.
Phantom smirked, self satisfied. Then his knees buckled.
Before he could register, Dannyâs arms were wrapping around his counterpartâs shoulders, stabilizing the other half ghost.
âIs he okay?â The attendant asked, eyes wide with concern.
Was Phantom okay? He frowned down at the pale, shaky figure. His stomach flopped, feeling unbalanced. What was happening?Â
Danny shook the unease away. âHeâs fine. Just needs something to drink.â
The fair worker still looked worried, brows furrowed, but didnât argue as Danny started pulling Phantom away.
âWait. I won.â The other complained. âMy shark.â
Danny gave him a dubious look but without a word, accepted the giant plushie from the worker. Holding the shark under one arm, he helped Phantom forward with the other. True to his excuse, he did steer them towards a truck selling lemonade. The two slid to the window, Danny handing over the money.
âI can stand by myself.â Phantom grumbled, just as the server handed over the two cups.
Unceremoniously, Danny unhanded his counterpart who ripped the shark from his grip.Â
For a few minutes, the two silently shuffled forward, finally finding an empty bench. They sat, drinking their drinks. Phantom wouldnât meet his eyes, head fixed down, almost as if embarrassed.
Finally, Danny broke the tense moment. âWhat was that about?â
The other seeming-teen looked up tentatively, almost sheepish, before shrugging forcibly casual. âI said I wanted to win at some carnival games. Donât give me shit about it.â
Danny shook his head. âNo. You almost fainted. Because you were, what, using a duplicate to cheat at balloon darts?â
âItâs not a big deal.â âDanâ made a point of looking at his fingernails. âJust over did it. Stupid⌠I need to be more strategic next time.â
âOr just.. Not use your powers to cheat?âÂ
Phantomâs eyes narrowed. âI said not to give me crap.â His arms crossed, the perfect picture of a petulant teen. âItâs not like I started melting this time.â
Dannyâs eyes popped wide. âThat doesnât make it any better!â
âLike you give a shit.â The other halfa sneered. âYouâve been avoiding me like the plague. Iâm stuck here, shoved in this tiny, scrawny body. With all the hormones and the acne and my powers barely working. Itâs like I actually am a kid again. The fruitloop keeps trying to act like heâs my dad now, making me go to therapy and shit.â His hands waved, pointing at Danny. âAnd youâre off, doing god knows what, playing the hero. Trying to completely forget about me.â
Dannyâs mind spun, trying to process the onslaught. That last part⌠âWait, thatâs not-â
âThis was a mistake.â Phantom stood abruptly. âI see how you keep tensing up whenever I do anything. Like Iâm five seconds away from ripping everyoneâs head off.â He grabbed his lemonade and stuffed shark. âI donât know why I even bothered. I wanted to tell you, show you that I was-.â He growled, cutting himself off. âGo do what you want.â The half ghost turned, stomping off.
For a long second, Danny just stared after him, thoughts churning. The otherâs figure grew farther and farther away. ThenâŚ
âWait!â Dannyâs mind clicked back into action. âWait!â He jumped up, running after his counterpart. âDan! Wait!âÂ
Within seconds, he caught up. âDan.â And wasnât that strange, using the name the other half ghost had given him for the first time. Danny shook away the thought. âDan. Iâm⌠Iâm sorry.â
Phantom⌠Dan stopped walking, giving him a dubious look. âYeah right.â
âNo, I am sorry. You showed up at my house and dragged me here because you actually want to hang out with me, right?âÂ
Dan didnât respond verbally, just gave the âyouâre stupidâ look again.Â
Danny didnât let that cow him, instead forcing himself to continue. âYouâre⌠youâre right, I have been ignoring you. And thatâs not fair. I canât even imagine why you want to spend time with me butâŚâ The flickers of hurt in Danâs face, the tension like⌠he was afraid of miss-stepping. Reasons churned in his head, nebulous and indistinct but so close to focus. His guts twisted; he wasnât ready to face this, whatever this was.Â
âBut you do.â Danny continued. âAnd weâre here. So letâs buy some greasy food, ride some rides, and play more games. But no more cheating.â He pointed severely.
For just a moment, Danâs hard expression softened, visibly letting out a breath. âAlright.â Then his eyes rolled, pointing back. âAnd yes more cheating.â The corner of his lip turned up. âI know for a fact you cheated at the spring carnival to get that stuffed bat for Sam.â
Danny stumbled over a response. That was true butâŚ
âItâs not going to kill anyone.âÂ
Again Danny felt like he was hit in the head. The understanding, almost compassionate look Dan gave himâŚ. It somehow wasnât a joke.Â
Danny couldnât help but notice his stomach drop. Still, he rolled his own eyes. âI guess it wonât hurt.â
With that, the two went off to find more games.Â
âHow about this one?â Danny motioned to one stall, a line of water guns set up opposite a line of moving targets.Â
Dan raised an appraising eyebrow. âHow am I supposed to cheat at that?â He muttered.
The teen gave him a light elbow jab in response. âIâm sure you can figure it out.â His voice lowered conspiratorially. âPlus itâs Vladâs money. Who cares how much we waste?â
Dan looked almost surprised. âYou have a point.â
The pair bought two seats. They played several rounds, not winning once.Â
âCome on!â Danny put up his hands. âItâs like half an inch away!â The dolphin-shaped racing marker smiled down mockingly, barely failing to reach the finish line.Â
The fair worker shrugged helplessly. âSo close but so far. Iâm sure youâll get it next time.â
Dannyâs eyes narrowed. Oh yeah, next time for sure. Then again⌠if they gave it another go, maybe?
âIâm bored with this.â Dan interrupted his debating, pulling him off his seat by the back of his collar. âOh. Those headphones look sweet.â
He marched up to a set of basketball hoops, set up fair behind a metal barrier. Sure enough, a pair of sleek black over-the-headphones hung from the side.Â
âI see you eyeing these beauties.â The hostâs voice projected. âReal Beats, would you believe it? Three shots to win them. Three in a row! Are you up to the challenge?âÂ
Danâs eyes narrowed, wickedly smug. âOf course, I am.âÂ
The black-clad halfa handed over the money, receiving a ball. He stood in front of the line, lining up the shot. Again, his eyes flashed ever so subtly. And he threw. The ball sailed through the air. It bounced off the backboard. Then its edge hit the hoop and it wobbled, starting to fall out.
Dannyâs shoulders fell, disappointed at the near shot.
Then, impossibly, the ball wobbled the other direction, falling neatly into the hoop.Â
Dannyâs mouth fell open. How was that possible?
The gameâs host looked just as shocked for a moment. Then, schooling himself, he collected the ball. âLucky shot.â He handed it back to Dan, who just wordlessly smirked.
The dark-clothed halfa lopped his second shot, then his third. Each landed perfectly. Suspiciously perfectly.Â
âThatâs three for the three.â The fair worker looked somewhere between stunned and suspicious. Still, he handed the headphones over.
Dan accepted the prize with a grin. âI guess Iâm just lucky.â He had the audacity to shrugged casually, the movement in sharp contrast to the smugness radiating off of him.
Danny didnât have it in him to begrudge the other half ghost his success though. The two walked off, in search of another game.Â
Theyâd walked for about a minute, out of sight of the basketball stall and Danny couldnât keep his surprise in anymore. âHow did you do that?â He asked, almost awed.
âJust simple telekinesis.â This time, Danâs shrug was legitimately casual.Â
âTelekinesis? ButâŚâ
âWait.â The seeming-teen stopped in his tracks, seeming to pick up on the otherâs stunned confusion. âYou canât do telekinesis yet? How?â He turned to look at Danny, a mirror of his own confusion. âThatâs as easy as breathing. HowâŚâ He chuckled. âHow donât you have that power yet?â
âWell, excuse me.â Danny frowned, hands on his hips; he didnât appreciate being laughed at. âNot all of us have Plasmiusâ powers and expertise downloaded right into our head.â
âWhat? No.â Somehow, Dan sounded even more stunned. âThatâs not⌠Even if that was how that workedâŚâ He looked almost⌠queasy saying the words. âPlasmius doesnât have telekinesis.â
âBut⌠yes he does.â Danny tried to argue. Vlad had definitely fought him with telekinesis before. Right?
âHe canât move things with his mind.â The other half ghost shook his head vehemently. âHeâs never been able to. Not even now. Iâve tried to explain it a bunch of times.â He pointed severely. âAnd not out of the goodness of my heart. He wouldnât stop annoying the shit out of me about how to do itâŚ. And Vlad canât do it.â
Danny blinked once, twice. âAnd⌠youâre serious. Youâre not messing with me?â
âNot about this.â Dan rolled his eyes. With a quick look around, they flickered red again. An aura seeped out of his hands, surrounding the newly won headphones. âThis telekinesis is one hundred percent Phantom.â The prize hovered off his palm ever so slightly, bathed in green light.Â
The other half ghost studied the floating object. It was an impressive show, even more shocking that Vlad apparently couldnât do it while Dan could so easily. Speaking of easily⌠Danny raised a brow, teasingly. âMaybe not one hundred percent Phantom. Since youâre not the only one, what with, Box Ghost, Lunch Lady, Technus-â
âShut up.â Dan elbowed him, surprisingly gently, not a hint of malice in the words. âAnd I guess weâre not the only ones.â
Danny blinked once, surprised for just a moment. Then⌠âOh right. I guess Iâll be able to do that at some point.â
Dan shrugged, the light around the headphones winking out as he caught them. âWant me to teach you?â
âReally?â The other half ghost asked, skeptical.
âSomehow you havenât figured it out yet.â The other snarked back. Was he⌠blushing? âAnd how else are you supposed to cheat at fair games?â
For just a second there was the impulse to snark back; he still didnât really want to cheat. But Dan was offering, authentically offering to teach him something. And Danny had said he was going to actually give this hanging out thing a shot
âSure. Iâd love it if you showed me how to do it.â Danny said, surprised at his own sincerity.Â
Dan gave a nod. âCome on then.â He pulled the teen along, searching for an at least somewhat secluded place. After nearly ten minutes of looking⌠âThis will do.â
They wedged between two stalls, the busy sound of fair goers waiting for food and workers calling out orders at their backs. The alley smelt of roasted turkey, cotton candy, and the sour tang of throw up. The perfect place for an impromptu lesson.Â
âThatâs going to be your target.â Dan pointed to an abandoned beer bottle. âFirstâŚâ
After about ten minutes of unsuccessfully getting his younger counterpart to understand, Dan looked just about ready to pull out his hair. âNo. You have to reach out. Like the powerâs an extension of you.â
âSorry, but that doesnât make any sense.â Danny also wanted to pull out his hair.
âOkay, fine. Here. Letâs try this.â Dan grabbed his hand and-
âThe fuck!â Danny just about screamed as his counterpartâs hand phased inside his. âWhatâŚâ He panted, panic suddenly clawing at his throat. âAre you doing?!â
âBad idea.â Dan was also panting, eyes blown wide. âBad idea. Too late now.â He pinched red-flickering eyes closed. âWeâre like three steps away from being the same person. I should be able to tell your core exactly what to do.â
âOkay?!â Still, Dannyâs heart pounded, mind racing back. Danâs hand, in chest. The solid gear clicking into place. Belittling laughter.
âIâm notâŚâ Dan growled. âThatâs not me anymore. I wonât hurt you.â
That was ridiculous. This was crazy. Why did he even agree to doing this? Any of this? Hanging out with Dan, learning from him? Just letting him wander around free?! Why did he trust him? He tried to trust him and this-
Like cold water rushing over him, heavy bricks falling. An immaterial wall shattered. Emotions flooded in. Pain, fear, guilt, regret. But not⌠not his.
Danny struggled to force his eyes open. When had he closed them?
Danâs eyes, the same as his own, half a foot from his. They rounded, sincere, desperate. âIâm sorry. Just let me helpâŚ.â
An exhale. There was a line that had been a solid wall. There was Danny and there was Dan. And Danny could see, he could feel over the line, into his counterpartâs self. The anger, the prickliness, the spite, the smugness. It was all a cover. A pathetic cover over the guilt, the fear, the regret, the pain.Â
A small, tentative nudge at his own core. Comfort, reassurance. He was out of practice.
Danny looked away, at his right hand. The one uncannily possessed. His stomach lurched violently. âDo whatever it is you were going to do.â
âIâm trying!â Dan grit his teeth. âStop fighting.â
Stop fighting? How was he supposed to-
A hand wrapped around his core, not crushing but⌠comfortably warm. Behind his eyesâŚÂ
Rain dripping down the windows, the world dark and gray. A huge, canopied bed. At his bedside, a picture of his family, the glass shattered.
âDanny?â A voice far away. âDanny?â He couldnât will his head to lift, not after-Â
âDanny?â The boy blinked and he was back in that smelly alley. Fingers snapped in front of his face. âPay attention.â Eyes focused on⌠Dan. Right.
Wordlessly, Danny nodded.Â
âLetâs get this over with.â His counterpart shook his head. His brow furrowed in concentration. And Danny felt his own core act.
Energy swirled around, flowing down to his fingertips and passed them. It stretched, ghostly fingers brushing the bottle. Then, as easy as moving his physical fingers, they wrapped around the target. The object lifted, eerily floating above the dirty ground. Gently it moved side and side of Danâs volition. With hardly a shared thought, the black-clade half ghost gave over control. Roughly, Danny grabbed the bottle, setting it spinning in the air.
âWow.â Danny gave a laugh. âWhy didnât you just say that?â
The other halfa rolled his eyes. âTry moving two things at once.â
The shared hand flexed, Dan guiding the movement while Danny acted. His telekinesis reached out, enwrapping a small pebble. It lifted, dipped, and spun.Â
At the same time, the bottle dropped. Reaching out with his other physical hand, Danny felt his power stretch. He let out a sigh of relief, catching the object.
For a few more minutes, Danny flexed his new power. His aura wrapped around handfuls of trash, the pieces bobbing in the air. They spun around the pair. First slowly, then faster and faster. Like dirty little moons circling a planet.Â
Slowly, a smile grew on Dannyâs face. He was actually doing this! His eyes twinkled playfully, suddenly dropping all the trash.
âWhat? Already tired?â Dan asked.Â
The other half ghost didnât dignify the question. Instead, he jerkily pulled the shark into the air. He sent it in a slow circle around them. Closer and closer, all the while humming.Â
âIs that the Jaws theme-â
Danny rammed the shark into his counterpartâs side.Â
The plush snoot had Dan bending forward dramatically. His eyes narrowed. And Dannyâs smile disappeared. Maybe that had been a step too far; he was getting too comfortable. ThenâŚ
Dan rolled his eyes. âOh, you can effectively attack me with plushies. Color me impressed.â The words came out thick with sarcasm, not the least bit amused. But underneathâŚ
A feeling like subdued laughter brushed Dannyâs core.Â
The smile wavered back into place. âYou say that all serious butâŚâ Just hint of a smirk. âYou thought that was hilarious.â
âI did not.â Dan tried to deny. But standing side by side, core open to Dannyâs prodding, he had no leg to stand on. âItâs this stupid teenage brain.â He lifted a hand pleadingly. âThe meat suit thinks the dumbest things are funny. IâmâŚIâm a big scary grown up ghost, I swear!â
He sounded so desperate, it was almost funny. Danny struggled not to laugh. âSure you are.â
For a moment more, Dan pouted, eyes trying to argue his point. Then⌠he huffed. âFine. It was funny.âÂ
Effortlessly, he pulled his incorporeal hand out of Dannyâs. The other half ghost shivered, feeling oddly bare as the background nose of Danâs emotions faded away.Â
Across from him, Danâs arms were crossed, eyes fixed down.
Dannyâs brow furrowed. What exactly was Danâs deal? Flip flopping between emotions. He was snarking and joking one minute and then the next, clamming up and serious. He wanted to be having fun, and then admitting that he was enjoying himself the worst possible thing ever. Part of Danny was at a loss, at his witâs end. How was he supposed to deal with this?Â
But another part⌠the glimpses he caught from the otherâs core. The anger and harshness, covering all that pain and guilt and grief. That made sense. How many times had Danny himself put on a brave face while he was hurting?Â
There was another layer though. Uncertainty, insecurity, loneliness.Â
So much there and Danny had no idea where to start, what he could say to help, to make it better.Â
So he offered what comfort he could. âItâs okay if you thought it was funny, you know. It doesnât mean youâre any less badass or terrifying or whatever.â He shrugged. âPlus, weâre here to have fun. Let yourself actually enjoy it.â
The other half ghostâs shoulders loosened. He looked up and⌠for a long moment, there was something heavy and serious in his eyes. His mouth opened and closed, chewing on the thought. ThenâŚ.
âAl⌠alright then. Letâs go have some fun.â Dan finally said, seemingly letting the heavy words go, for now at least.
âYeah.â Danny gave him a hearty pat on the back. âI saw one of those milk bottle toss games with a bunch of giant plushies. Wanna play that?â
âSure.â Dan shrugged. Then pointedly. âAnd I expect you to use our lesson.â
âOf course.â Danny replied airly. âCanât have you shoving your hand intangibly into me for nothing.â
âAgain, I blame the teenage brain. You get forcibly de-aged and all the common sense goes out the window.â
âYeah, yeah.â Danny waved him off. âYou donât see me complaining.â
âYou havenât been de-aged before, have you?â Dan raised a brow.Â
âWell no, butâŚâ He trailed off, at a loss for a response to the seeming-teen. Or rather, just teen. The thought almost knocked him off his feetâŚ. Dan actually was his age again, wasnât he?
âThought so.â The other teen snorted, ignoring the odd look. Then pointing. âThereâs your milk bottle toss.â He blinked. âWhat the hell is that?â
Dannyâs brow furrowed, just as confused at the ambiguous giant stuffed animal. âA cat? Racoon? Maybe a red panda, except⌠you know, green?â
Dan rubbed his chin, deadpan serious. âAh, the famed green cacooanda. Of course.â
That earned an appreciative snort from the other half ghost. âNice.â
Despite his earlier sarcasm and resistance, Danny fully intended to use what Dan had taught him. A few telekinesis assisted ring tosses and he was walking away from the stand with his own green cacooanda.Â
âI canât believe it.â Dan said, dubious. âYou actually did it.â He gave a scoff, his typical haughtiness as present as ever. But a twinkle in the corner of his eyeâŚ. Dan not-so-secretly looked proud.Â
More games followed. Wack-a-mole. Skee-Ball. The Shooting Gallery. Darts. Ring the Bell. Even Duck Pond and Bingo. The pair hit up every one, until all the game hosts eyed the two suspiciously, muttering about calling security, much to Danâs amusement.
âThat was satisfying.â The black-clade teen smirked, carrying his collection of cheating-won spoils. âHow ya feel about getting burgers?â
âYeah.â Danny nodded. His eyes nervously flittered over the booth, still wary of being caught cheating. But⌠he smiled down at his own pair of headphones and the stuffed bear he planned to give to Jazz; his stomach leapt, giddy at the thrill. Slowly, he grinned. âThereâs a bunch of stalls set up by local charities and stuff near the South Gate. The foodâs normally good and not that pricey.â
âAwesome.â Dan agreed with a nod.
They grabbed lunch, sitting at one of the picnic tables in front of the impromptu restaurants. Neither really talked. Not that Danny minded. That had been the pattern for most of the morning and early afternoon, conversation revolving around what game to play next, which prizes either had their eyes on.
Now, Dan chewed his burger, the corner of his lip subtly lifted. At the same time, his eyes flitted from stall to stall, drifting over the crowds of people. People watching. Just the smallest hint of awe and curiosity flickered in his eyes.
Danny watched all this, his own lips quirking slightly.
Next came the rides. After a quick discussion about what to do with their prizes â they really should have waited until after to play the games â and finding a place to phase them into the ground for later, the two hurried to the midway. So many options stretched in front of them, Danâs eyes practically shining with excitement.Â
âWe have to do the Gravitron first.â The black-clad teen pulled Danny through the crowds.
As they rounded the corner, the ride appeared before them. Danny could almost feel his eyes go heart-shaped. His heart picked up, airly giddy. It was shaped like a spaceship!
âCome on!â It was Dannyâs turn to tug his counterpart onward.Â
With fastpass bracelets, the two boarded the ride. Back against the padded wall, the boy grinned as the lights started flashing and everything started spinning.Â
âYeah! Woa!â People cheered and screamed as the ride rotated faster and faster.Â
Without even a belt to hold him in place, Dannyâs back pressed against the wall, the weight of gravity overwhelming. Suddenly, the panels slid up, the lady to his right shouting in surprise. The boyâs feet rose off the floor, body held in place solely by the centrifugal force. He just shouted louder.
Far too soon, the ride slowed, the panels slotting back into place and feet returning to the floor. The spinning gradually stopped and the force of gravity lessened to its normal weight.Â
Dannyâs ears rang slightly, balance wobbly and stomach churning; boy was he glad they hadn't pigged out on too much greasy food yet. Still, his heart pounded, a buzz with adrenaline. He grinned. âLetâs do that again!â
Ride again, they did. A second spin and then a third had Dan grinning with him, eager to try something else.Â
âThe drop tower?â The teen pointed. And the pair was rushing off again.
The tilt-a-whirl. An upside down swinging Pirate Ship. The Round-up, the Gravitronâs almost vertically spinning cousin.Â
The two half ghosts took turns choosing which to ride next and excitedly pulling each other across the midway.
âWhatâs this one?â Danny pointed. âMusic Express?â
âLooks kinda boring.â The other half ghost shrugged. âLetâs try it.âÂ
The cars formed a circle, alternating flat and sloped sections making the track look lop-sided. The two picked a car, Dan sliding in first. Danny sat beside him, the metal bar over their laps locking them into place. Again, music started and they were off.
The circle of cars rotated, first slowly and evenly. Honestly, indeed a little boring. ThenâŚ
âWhat wants to go faster?!â The operator yelled into the microphone.Â
The riders screamed their agreement, the music speeding up. The cars spun faster. Laughter and shouts rang out; Dannyâs screams joined the merry noise, caught up in the joy around him.Â
Then, he slammed into Dan, his shout choking. The spinning force pulled him towards the center and right into his car-mate. His hip and shoulder dug into the other teen, Danâs own enthusiastic shouting cutting out. The black-clad teenâs mouth snapped shut, face going beat red in mortification.
âYour.. your face!â Danny burst out laughing, unable to keep the amusement in.
Dan just wordlessly shoved Dannyâs face away.Â
The ride continued for a few more minutes, the rotation even reversing and sending the cars backwards. All the while, Danny laughed, a large part of him enjoying Danâs discomfort.Â
Finally, the music slowed, movement trickling to a stop. The ride over, Danny exited first. He offered his hand to help his counterpart out.Â
âI guess this oneâs on the no list, huh?â Danny asked, taking pity.Â
Dan took the offered hand. âNah. I want to go again.â
âOh?â The other teen blinked once, surprised.
âYes. Youâre sitting on the inside next time.â His teeth flashed mischievously.Â
âGuess I deserve that one.â Danny chuckled.Â
Sure enough, they rode again, this time Danny suffering through being crushed by his seat companion. Dan laughed somewhat evilly all the while, reveling in the discomfort just as much as Danny had earlier.
Bumper cars. Three different mini-coasters. A few turns on the Racing Slide. A surprisingly disorienting house of mirrors, followed by a ridiculously lame âhaunted house.â Even the good old carousel and ferris wheel.Â
Conversation drifted, most trivial but some⌠almost serious.
The fairwheel ground to a stop, the pair hanging at the apex. âSo⌠how does it work?â Danny asked, casually looking at his nails.Â
Dan gave him a suspicious look. âHow does what work?âÂ
âIf you didnât just download Vladâs expertiseâŚthen how does it work?â
The other teen stiffened slightly, eyes fixed far away on the Amity Park skyline. âItâs mainly emotions. I mean, you and Vlad figured that out. Ghosts are made of emotions. And thereâs⌠theyâre not really memories, I guess. More like⌠the shape of them.â Slowly, the car started descending. âLike I watch football with Vlad⌠because heâs into it and wonât shut up about father-son bonding.â Dan narrowed his eyes pointedly. âAnd I find myself liking it.â He stuck out his tongue. âAnd the weird images of boring board rooms. And Maddie with long hair. It was so curly then, falling against her cheeksâŚâ He grimaced. âSometimes I really wish I hadnât eaten Plasmius.âÂ
The words were so blunt, so casual; Danny choked on air. Dan ignored his hacking. âI mean⌠I think I would have just faded away if I hadnât soâŚâ He shrugged.
Danny blinked at him. What was he supposed to say to that? A response did niggle at his mind thoughâŚand to his horror, the question slipped out. âWhat did he⌠taste like?âÂ
âThe grossest cheese ever.â
Danny and Dan enjoyed all the rides the fair had to offer, the afternoon gradually giving way to evening. The sun set, the warmth of the day becoming the chill of night. The lines grew longer, teens and young adults piling in to enjoy the bright lights and music. Still, the two were unbothered by the waits, thanks to their blessed fastpasses.Â
The night stretched on, every ride enjoyed to the two teensâ heartsâ content. And finallyâŚ
âThe squirrel cages.â Dan spread his arms, practically beaming up at the towering mess of metal. âSaving the best for last.âÂ
They boarded one of the odd, apostrophe-shaped cars. The plush bench sat under them, metal bars and mesh cradling the two riders. The center, oblong frame creaked, beginning to spin. The car rose into the air, swinging.Â
The sound of more people being loaded onto the ride rang out below. Danny held his breath in anticipation. Any second nowâŚ
A sudden jolt of movement. Beside him, Dan gasped.Â
The center rotated, the cage swaying violently. Rising higher and higher in the air. Dannyâs heart fluttered. They reached the top⌠A burst of speed and everything spun. Both boys screamed, the cage flipping end over end.Â
A flurry of movement, the world turning. The inky-black sky flashed into view, then the thousand glittering lights of the fair loomed below. The sky, the ground, the sky, the ground. The scene flickered. On and on.Â
Screams reverberated, terrified and elated. Weight shifted, the car turning and flipping. Dannyâs heart pounded, his stomach in his throat.
Far too soon, the ride ended. Danny looked over at his counterpart, bothâs eyes blown wide. âGo again?â
Dan nodded eagerly.Â
They rode again. And again. And again.Â
Head over heels, the world turned in flashes of light and dark. Dannyâs ears rang, shouts and cheers filling his brain. His head swam. Pressed side by side with Dan, hands grasps to the bars over the door. His veins filled with more adrenaline than blood. In every molecule⌠terror, giddiness, elation.Â
The joy bubbled up, first in a smile. A grin. A shout. A laugh. The cackle burst out, unrestrained. Beside him, Danâs guffaws rang in kind. The laughter filled his world, his mind. Danâs laugh and his⌠they were the same laugh, but also so different. Chests and shoulders shook, the delight too much to hold.Â
The two half ghosts laughed and laughed and laughed.Â
They laughed until they couldnât breathe. Until the ride stopped and both stumbled out of the car. Until Danny, one arm around the otherâs shoulders, helped a green-faced, wobbling Dan past the ride operator and the line of waiting riders, and the other teen threw up on his shoes.Â
âStupid clone body.â Dan complained without heat, whipping his mouth with the back of his hand.
âThatâs just being human.â Danny laughed.Â
âWell, can my body not?â He rolled his eyes, the orbs still sparkling with mirth. âEating and sleeping are great, really, but I could do without the ability to vomit.â
âHey, youâre doing better than my first time. You lasted for more than one ride.â The other half ghost shrugged, the movement bringing his counterpart just the tiniest bit closer. âWhen we went to the fair when I was eleven, I was finally tall enough. I begged to ride. Jazz and Mom absolutely refused, the chickens. But Dad rode with me. It was the best thing ever. We flipped so many times.â His speech grew faster with his excitement. âI was so dizzy after. Stumbling around like Iâd just drunk a six-pack. I wobbled up to Jazz, told her she was a chicken and missed the best ride ever andâŚâ A snort burst forth, threatening to choke his words. âI threw up all over her! Iâd eaten so much cotton candy before, it was bright blue! And little bits of popcorn and hotdogs.â Danny held his stomach with one arm. âYou should have seen her face.â He giggled lost in the memory, in the lingering adrenaline rush.Â
Beside him, Dan shook his head in amusement. âI remember. I was there.â
âYeah.â Danny laughed. âI guess you were⌠there.â He trailed off, the meaning finally hitting him. Eyes trailing over, to his counterpartâs face. Similar to his, not just because the human body was a clone, but⌠âI guess you were.âÂ
Something shifted between the two, in that meeting of eyes. An unspoken understanding lingered. That heaviness that had flashed in Danâs eyes, right after their lessonâŚ. It leered, visible but not weighty.Â
âCome on.â Danny finally offered, smile gentle. âYou wanted to eat a bunch of greasy food today. Think your stomach is up to it?â
âOf course.â The other flashed his teeth playfully.
The two weaved through the midway, away from crowded rides. They passed tens of food stalls, visiting at least a half dozen for all the staples. Cotton Candy, Kettle Corn, Candy Apples. They got the best ice cream from a local farmâs stand and incredible homemade pumpkin fudge. And so much fried food- a red-velvet funnel cake, corn dogs, fried pickles, bacon-wrapped fried Reesesâ, and the famed, delectable fried oreos.Â
With their haul, they walked past the fairy-light lit garden displays, plants of all shapes and sizes swaying in the breeze. Clangs sounded from the old-fashioned blacksmithâs shop, curious onlookersâ faces lit by the fire light. A bluegrass band played on the lawn to ground-shaking stomps and cheers.
âThis looks like a good spot.â Danny motioned.Â
Theyâd wandered to an empty spot on the grass, near the pond at the edge of the fairgrounds. Dan gave a nod, carefully putting down his portion of the food.
And so the two teens sat and ate. Lights flickered on the water. At their backs, music spun. Fiddle and mandolin sang, soft and slow in some kind of lullaby. Â
The quiet weighed but⌠not heavy, not oppressive. It encompassed, gentle and protective, like a blanket. Dan ate slowly, unhurried. His eyes drifted over the lake, gaze on the gentle lapping water. But his mind was elsewhere.
And Danny watched his companion. Not tense and distrusting as before but patient, ready to talk when Dan needed.
The lullaby ended to cheers. The sound petered out, the set ending. The murmurs of the crowd ebbed away.Â
The wind picked up, movement catching Dannyâs eye. At the other side of the pond, the trees swayed. Needles and pine cones ruffled, falling to the water with tiny plops.Â
âDo you really think Iâm terrifying?â Dan finally broke the silence.
Danny turned, eyes wide. Of all the questions to ask, he hadnât been expecting that. âWhy do you ask?â He swallowed, eyes darting away evasively.
âEarlierâŚyou said having fun doesnât make me any less terrifying or whatever. But thatâs notâŚâ Dan looked down, picking at his nails. âI donât care about being scary. I donât⌠I donât wanna be like that. Thatâs not why⌠I donât deserve⌠thatâs notâŚâ He stumbled over the words, finally gritting out. âJust answer the question.â
For just a second, Dannyâs stomach twisted; his impulse was to lie. But⌠back in the alley, his core brushing Danâs. A door opened between them. And⌠a door, once opened, may be walked through from either side.
He couldnât lie, not about this.
Danny swallowed, nodding. âAfter I saw your future and the CAT and everything⌠I had so many nightmares. Mostly about you escaping.â The evil laughter, terror on his friendâs faces, Amity Park in rubble. Heâd wake up sweating, heart pounding and ecto-blast in hand. Ready to defend. Now⌠his mouth felt dry, an odd feeling squeezing his core. âThose went on for months.â
âAnd then it happened.â Danâs knees pulled his chest, eyes wide, haunted, and⌠guilty.
Numbly, Danny nodded. It had. He remembered; the rubble, the cries for help, the flames. He shivered. That reality had been erased. Clockwork fixed the timeline, like he had the first time. But it still happened. The monster from his nightmares returned, more powerful and dangerous than ever. And nowâŚ.
His eyes focused. On the boy sitting across from him. That monster was here and⌠he wasnât a monster at all.
And that was the hardest part. The Phantom as evil incarnate. As a twisted, unfeeling abomination. That was easy. But this Phantom? This oddly human reflectionâŚ.
âIâm sorry.â Danny found himself saying.Â
Dan looked up at that, blinking at him startledly. âWhy the hell are you sorry?â
In a less somber setting, he might have laughed but now, Danny just shook his head. âAfter the CAT, I kept telling myself that I promised Iâd never be likeâŚlike you.â The odd feeling squeezed again, something like guilt. âIâd never let that happen. Because⌠because I promised.â His head fixed down, gnawing on his lip. âBecause I was stronger. I knew better now. I was better. I was⌠I was different somehow. But thatâs⌠thatâs a lie.â He forced his gaze back up, focused on the wide-eyed boy in front of him. âWeâre⌠three steps from being the same person. If things had been differentâŚâ
The rain, the bed, the shattered picture frameâŚ. That terrible scene from Danâs memory. It was so easy to imagine that as his reality. Losing everything, his life destroyed⌠A twist of fate and their places could have been swapped.Â
âSo⌠Iâm sorry. Iâm sorry that happened to you. Iâm sorry that you lost everything and that youâre stuck here. And having to deal with being 16 again and Vlad thinking heâs your dad. AndâŚâ Danny wrung his hands. âIâm sorry that I forgotâŚâ
After the fight, when heâd thrown down the thermos, heâd realized, heâd seen it. That Phantom was hurting, in pain. That he was still just a grieving kid. But in the months since, heâd lost sight of that. âIâm sorry that I forgot youâre a person too. I forgot who you really are.â
Dan stared at him for a long moment, brow wrinkled. His mouth opened and closed a few times. Then⌠âYou are so stupid.â Somehow, no heat was in the words. âIâm the one whoâs supposed to be saying sorry. Iâm supposed to be groveling, on my knees, begging. IâŚI destroyed the world, Danny.â His voice started to tremble. âI killed so many people. Maimed so many ghosts. Tried to kill Valerie, my only friend, so many times. IâŚI tried to kill Mom and Dad.â His eyes shone, taking on a glassy sheen. âJazz, Sam and Tucker. I tried to kill all of them twice. Twice. AndâŚâ His face paled, almost queasy. âI am horrified. I am disgusted. I⌠It makes me sick. I hate⌠I hate what I did. I hate who I was. AndâŚâ Finally, tears started falling. âI donât deserve any⌠any of this. I definitely donât deserve you saying sorry to me. You⌠you idiot. Youâre too good for your own good. And Iâm⌠Iâm justâŚâ
Dan stuttered to a stop, words choking as he furiously whipped at his face.Â
And it was Dannyâs turn to stare stunned. What could he say to that? Nothing was good enough. Nothing would ever be good enough. By all accounts, Dan had done horrible things, unforgivable things. Danny had every reason to still hate and fear him. No reason at all to offer forgiveness or sympathy. ButâŚ
The empathy was there, twisting Dannyâs heart into knots. Somehow, he understood. Far too well.
âDo you want a hug?â The question slipped out before Danny really considered it.
Dan, apparently completely stunned, nodded immediately.
What heâd asked hit Danny just as the response came. For a moment, he mentally berated himself; what a stupid thing to ask. Dan didnât actually want a hug. And what was he doing trying to comfort his formerly evil, formerly older alternative self? But then againâŚ
Dannyâs resolve crumbled. He leaned over, wrapping his arms around Danâs shoulders.
The breath-hitching sob caught Danny off guard. Dan letting his walls crumble in front of him had been unbelievable just this morning. But after the rides and games, sharing quips and food and heart-felt truthsâŚ. Now it all made sense.
The pair sat for a long time, Danny hugging his counterpart. Danâs shoulders shook, hands balled in the back of his jacket. Tears wet his shirt. And the only sounds were his own heartbeat, Danâs pounding right next to his. And the dark-clad teenâs soft cries.Â
Gradually though, the tears slowed. The sobs quieted. The shaking stopped. Breathing slowed and evened.Â
Taking a deep breath, Dan pulled away. âI⌠Sorry.â His face burned red, embarrassed. âThat isnât⌠I didnât want to break down on you.â
âItâs okay.â Danny shook his head. âMaybe it didnât go how you wanted. But this is why you wanted to hang out with me, right? To apologize, getting everything out in the open.â
The other half ghost nodded. âAnd show you that IâmâŚIâm different.â He wiped his eyes. âIâm trying to be better.â
âI can see that.â The skin around his eyes crinkled, dawning smile genuine.Â
And Danny meant it. In a dozen little ways today, heâd witnessed it. This Dan was a far cry from the Phantom heâd fought all those months ago.
âIâm glad to hear that.â Dan gave a watery smile.Â
Just then, a loud boom cut that air. Lights flashed in the sky. Fireworks above the pond.Â
âLook at that.â Danâs eyes widened, voice breathlessly awed.
The two sat, side by side watching the fireworks. Sparks danced across the sky, spheres and swirls and spirals of every color.
And Danny could never have been happier he opened that door and let Dan drag him here. He didnât know what the future held for them, where exactly his and Danâs relationship stood; were they friends now? Family? ButâŚÂ
âCotton Candy?â His counterpart offered, holding open the bag.
âSure.â Danny nodded, taking the last handful.
There had been tears and apologies. A release of tension and fear and bitterness. New discoveries made and old similarities uncovered.
Danny tore the piece of floss in half, giving Dan back the other piece.Â
And most importantly, the incredible chance to start again.
Dan accepted with a nod and a smile. âThanks. For everything.âÂ
Constantine wasnât upset no no of course not ⌠he was fucking pissed!!!
How on earth was this his life now??? He grabbed as many totems and charms as he could. They were going to need as much luck as they could get their hands on.
-
âBloody fucking Hell this is by far the worst idea I have ever heard and I want absolutely no part of it!!!â
âJohnâ
âDonât you John me Z! This is obviously a bad idea!!!â
WonderWoman sighed, âWe understand the risks but we are out of options.â
âPppfff as if we wanted you here in the first place palâ
âHal!â
âWhat itâs true if this spell? Summoning? Offering? What ever the hell itâs called didnât require two magicians we would have just let Zatanna do it!â
âStop it everyone we cannot be fighting amongst ourselves right now! We have to be ready for anything that happens and whoever decides to help us.â Superman crossed his arms. âUh question, I get the whole dabbling in magical creatures equal bad but uhhh who or what are we doing exactly?â Wally said offhandedly to Robin(Dick)
âThatâs just the thing ⌠we donât know this Circle is essentially an open invitation to anyone who can help us,â Zatanna sighed âWhich means we have to be ready for the worst including whatever it is this creature may want in exchange.â âOh yeah,â John huffed âOur first born, blood of a virgin, Supermanâs soul totally nothing we need to worry about or take to mean We. should. Not. Do. this! !â
Batman âcleverlyâ choose that moment to walk in, âAlright then start it up.â
Magic is always hard to describe; the colors, and motion like something out a fantasy but this ? This was inexplicable as the candles rose to the ceiling, smoke filled their eyes and the sound of, well -some kind- of animal shook their ears. Then as fast as it came it was gone, as they adjusted to the scene they saw who now occupied the middle of the circle.
Horns
âBollocks it just had to be a devil.â
Black hair sloppily put into twin buns, held together by ⌠twine???
Supermanâs eyebrows creased in slight confusion.
Tan skin painted black in the pattern of an old broken glass on their arms.
Flash stilled next to his nephew.
A scar from a blade ran across one half of their face.
WonderWoman lowered her lasso.
Gold eyes.
Zatanna felt uncomfortable.
There in the circle stood what they would all guess to be a 12 maybe 14 year old???
Batmanâs stomach suddenly felt uncomfortable.
âWhat the âŚ.-â
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So I was going to write a post about Danny being Alfred, but you know what would be even funnier?
Alfred being Clockwork
Not only would some things like his apparent omniscience make sense, it would be the gate way into something even more hilarious,
BRUCE BEING DAN
I mean yes, he could always be Danny, but Dan has the same brooding vibes and is actually half businessman-socialite, courtesy of Vlad.
I just think it would be hilarious if Dan and Clockwork decided to shore up as pseudo father and son in an alternate universe/timeline where the Fenton's are rich and only had a son and also are better at hiding their crazy (and probably aren't mad scientists)
Imagine poor Dan being Brucie!
The chaos, the torture, Alfred/CW laughing in the background as he suffers!
It's wonderful
Dan deciding to redeem himself by beating up villains and shit politicians (the only reason why he suffers being Brucie) and donating and saving kids from losing their families like he did!
CW being omnipresent and chaotic but ultimately getting a much needed break where he can drink scotch and watch Dan stumble through redemption, chiding him through it the entire way
Dan not killing cause he's trying to go back to his roots or something, CW being able to just shoot whoever without thinking too much about the timeline
Dan seeing a small black haired blue eyed child that is an absolute spit fire and reminds him so much of his younger self (Danny) only so much more jaded and broken and alone, like he was after the explosion, and deciding to take him in
(Everytime Dan gets worried he's going to mess up, CW throws back a shot without a care in the world and tells him not to worry, which doesn't help at all)
Summary: "If someone listened to the Ghost Zone that day, they would know something great was about to happen. The realm practically sang itâs joy to all who would listen."
Or, Dan gets redeemed through parenthood or something.
Pt. 1 Â Pt. 2 Pt. 3 Â Pt. 4 Â Pt. 5 Pt. 6
Read it on AO3!
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âMmmm ⌠Beatrice? No, that sounds terrible, um. Olivia, Charlotte, Isabelle.â
Dan listed off whatever names came to mind, finding something that might fit her.
The little ghost was sitting on the floor in front of a low table, one surrounded by a couch and a couple plush chairs. She was happily scribbling away on a piece of paper with some crayons, drawing one vague shape after another, humming as she experimented with mixing colors and shapes. Dan had wondered where Clockwork had gotten the papers and crayons, but ultimately didnât care enough to ask. It made her happy and kept her entertained for a bit, thatâs all that really mattered.
Dan sat on one of the chairs, thinking hard. He was running out of names at this point. He only knew so many to begin with. He didnât want to pick a name someone else he knew had, that would get weird quick.
The girl interrupted his thoughts with a little sound of satisfaction, holding her paper up to inspect it for a moment. She flew over to Dan, sitting in his lap and shoving the paper in his face.
âGood?â
Dan smiled fondly at her, taking her paper to look over the colors.
As it turned out, it wasnât difficult to teach the girl how to speak. She had been learning since before she could speak, was ever observant and curious. She was already using a lot of words, even if she struggled to string them together in proper sentences. It was only a matter of time, though, and he knew it would be sooner rather than later.
It also meant he really had to watch what he said around her. He was not about to be one of those parents who let their kids constantly curse.
âIt looks lovely, dear. Do you want to put it with the others?â
âYeah!â she said with an excited squeal, flying over to the couch where two stacks of papers sat. She added hers to the top of one, the drawings she had decided she liked for one reason or another. Dan couldnât tell the difference between any of them. They all looked like scribbles to him.
She went back to the table, getting another piece of paper to start scribbling away, each stroke slow and thoughtful. It was curte, how focused she got over her little drawings. If only he could go to the human realm he could get her some coloring books. He could get her many things she would want and need. She would have to start learning math and reading soon.
Ghosts didnât typically need to learn as much as human children were taught in schools. He definitely knew there was no proper education for them. There werenât enough of them for it to be worth it. He figured their parents or guardians or whatever taught them whatever they felt they needed to know, and as far as he was concerned all his girl needed to was some basic math and reading. At least, thatâs all she needed to know school wise. There was plenty to teach her about surviving in the ghost zone and using her powers.
If he was going to teach her math and reading, though, he would need some supplies, more paper and pencils and books and all that.
Perhaps he could convince Clockwork to let him go sometime âŚ
But then heâd want to take the girl with him.
He wouldnât dare take her right now. Sheâd have to learn how to properly disguise herself before he could do something like that and he wasnât even sure that was something she could do. He could still try to teach her. She should be strong enough to learn how to use her ghostly powers by now. And if she couldnât disguise herself, he would just have to go without her. He supposed he could introduce her to the human realm differently, maybe in a forest far away from people who might hurt her. He knew sheâd love that, too. There would be so much for her to look at and explore. Then maybe when she was old enough they could go into a town or something while invisible.
Of course, that was all depending on whether or not Clockwork would allow it.
Heâll consider that step one for now.
Until thenâŚ
âMaybe Virginia ⌠Leyla?... Willow?â
He really was going on empty here. He sighed, turning his head to watch the girl draw. Her hair flickered along her black, more flashes of purple streaking across the blue as she tried to concentrate. For a moment, it was peacefully silent.
âAurora maybe.â He hummed to himself as he thought that one over. It was a nice enough name, probably the closest yet to something that would fit her. Yeah, it fit her really well. âWhat do you think, kid? Is Aurora a good name?â
She looked up at him with her big eyes, head tilted to the eyes and eyes squinting as she thought. Then she smiled real big.
âYeah!â
Dan chuckled at her excitement, feeling it bubbling up in his chest.
âThe congrats, kid, you have a name.â
âYay!â She cheered, flying up to Dan to hug him and cuddle against his chest, picture forgotten on the table. He rolled his eyes but it wasnât like he was about to push her away. She was far too happy and he wasnât going to ruin her good mood. Instead he wrapped an arm around her, letting her rest against it and relax against him. He thought they would settle in for a cuddle and a nap for a while. Thatâs what she usually did, but he guessed she wasnât ready for that yet. She was staring at his face and he could feel that was curious once more and wanted to ask a question.
âWhat is it, dear?â
She had to think for a bit to try and find the right words, eventually settling on, âWhat name?â She patted his face to with a little hand to make sure he knew she was talking about him.
The issue being, of course, that he didnât really have a name.
Clockwork tended to call him Daniel and his old enemies called him Phantom, but that wasnât really him anymore. Maybe part of himself had once been that kid, that boy who had thought of nothing but protecting his home and friends and family, but only part. He couldnât really be considered the same person. Of course, he wasnât Plasmius, either. That was just another part. He was someone different from either of them.
Sometimes, when he needed to call himself something in his mind, he would call himself Dan, but that wasnât really his name, either. It was just a placeholder. He didnât really want to go through the process of having to think up another name when he had only just thought one up for her.
âIâm your dad. You can call me that, okay?â
She nodded, snuggling back into his chest with a yawn.
âNah-night Dad.â
Those words affected more than he really expected them to. He was flooded with warmth, emotion making his eyes sting. He blinked away the tears, burying his face into her flickering hair in an attempt to quell the sudden surge of emotion. He could feel the girl's core thrum with love in response, purring happily at the affection.
âI love you.â The words slipped from his lips so easily, but he couldnât bring himself to regret them. Not when they were so true. He loved her very much, his little Aurora.
Both real names and fake out names, Billy totally wouldnât just tell them his name, oh and titles!!!
Gonna draw a âfamily treeâ soon lolz
There are going to be 7 surviving clones.
Iâm thinking of making three triplets and naming them rhyming names a la âHuey, Duey and Lueyâ. (Ducktales)
Having trouble deciding on names cuz I feel like with 7 different people named them and then there is something only Vlad calls them, much like âlittle badgerâ.
Also should I make profile posts about Vlads kids ?