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#they helped set up his nest in a quite part of amity park
halfghostwriter · 1 year
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When a true baby ghost is born— a ghost not born of dying, but rather through the desire of another ghost— they are little more than a core with wispy ectoplasm emanating from them for about a month. During said month, they take on influence from their surroundings in order to figure out the form they’ll take, hence why so many young ghosts look like their parents.
Because they aren’t fully formed until a month after their birth, the parent or parents will take on a far more aggressive, primal form in order to protect their child. The parent’s form will become incredibly monstrous, and their size will increase, with triple their normal size being most common among parents. Their mental state also becomes incredibly instinctual, higher intelligence temporarily being replaced by aggression towards anyone the ghost doesn’t consider family. They stay in this state until the baby is fully formed.
Of course, Danny “don’t worry about it” Phantom forgets to add this bit of trivia to his explanation to his fellow heroes as to why he was taking paternity leave. In his defense, he didn’t expect them to visit during that month.
And he definitely didn’t expect his brooding brain to latch onto most everyone who visited as “part of his brood.”
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five-rivers · 3 years
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Loved Chapter 5
Sort of wanted to do something more elaborate with this, but it just wasn't happening. Meh.
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“But you aren’t really real, are you?”
Tucker’s question killed the mood fast than a bullet. Danny and Sam stared at him from their side of the blanket nest.
“You want to rephrase that?” asked Sam, glaring, arms crossed.
“Uh,” said Tucker, sweat starting to form on his upper lip. “I mean, clearly you’re real, just… maybe not entirely physical? You, it’s,” he made a sort of twisting gesture with one of his hands. “People who aren’t from here can’t see you. They can’t even touch you. That sort of implies that you’re not on the same level of reality as them.” He shrugged. “You call the other place the Dream, right? Maybe you’re in, like, a kind of daydream or something.”
Danny twisted a corner of a blanket in his hands. “No,” he said.
“Danny,” started Tucker.
“No,” repeated Danny. “I can’t—” He noticed he was breathing heavily, his eyes unfocused enough that he could see—No. “Tucker, I don’t—I don’t think I even have free will anymore.” No matter how much he Loved Clockwork and craved Love in return, no matter how glad he was that the dark future would never come to pass, that grated at times. “I need—” He gulped air.
(Before, if he was this panicked, his heart would be thundering in his chest. Now, it was far too quiet.)
Sam put a hand on his back, steadying. Tucker reached out, too, but hesitated, unsure.
“I need to be real,” he said. He needed to still exist, still be human, at least in part. He couldn’t lose that, too. No matter what else he might gain.
“You are real,” said Tucker. “I’m sorry, I—” He cursed lightly under his breath, “—I wasn’t thinking. It’s just… Maybe something you should think about. Maybe—Maybe you aren’t coming completely out of… I don’t know. Wherever you go.”
“Maybe,” said Danny, struggling to get his breathing back under control. “Maybe. I just. Not right now.”
“Okay,” said Tucker. “Yeah. What were we talking about before?”
“Who cares?” asked Sam. “Let’s watch a movie.”
“That sounds good,” said Danny.
.
Danny woke up first the next morning, which was somewhat unusual. Sam was definitely a night-owl, but Tucker woke up fairly early. He stepped over them, feet silent on the floor. Almost as if they weren’t really there.
He shook his head. Not now.
He went to the bathroom and took care of things slowly, deliberately, as if to impress upon his body that he was human.
Sam and Tucker still weren’t awake when he came back. Also, when he thought about it, the rest of the house was eerily silent as well.
No… There was music. Was that coming from outside? He closed his eyes to listen better and caught himself drifting off while standing.
That was abnormal. He knelt and shook Sam and Tucker’s shoulders. They didn’t stir.
Someone was here. And they were here without Danny knowing. That was bad. That was really bad.
He went to his parents’ room. They were asleep, too.
There was a nonzero possibility that he was the only one awake. (Assuming he had ever been awake in the first place and not, as Tucker put it, daydreaming.)
He went out, following the music. Music suggested Ember, but this didn’t seem to be her style. She preferred motion, energy, vibrance. This was quieter, subtler.
Then again, none of the others made sense.
(At least, Danny liked to pretend they didn’t.)
The music wasn’t louder outside, but it was clearer. The scent of something sweet floated on the air. Something warm. Like honey.
Was something buzzing?
Danny shook his head again, forcing himself back into awareness. Maybe he should try and figure out what was going on from inside the Dream. It wasn’t possible to fall asleep there. At least, Danny never had.
(Assuming he wasn’t always partially in the Dream, like Tucker said.)
On the other hand, it often helped to observe what was going on in the real world, on the surface of things, before diving. As messy as fights could be in the real world, winning them in the Dream was harder.
He forged on, periodically pinching himself. He wasn’t the only one on the streets, but he was the only one on the streets that wasn’t passed out. It looked like there had been some car crashes.
That’s when he saw her.
She stood in the middle of an intersection, looking away from him. She was built like a centaur, except the lower part of her body more closely resembled a massive deer than a horse. An elk, perhaps. Both her deer-portion and her human-portion had night-black skin, studded with white stars. Antlers curved and branched above her curly hair. A crown of red flowers sat on her head. She wore no other clothes.
Danny did not notice any of this at first. No, what first jumped out at him was the unmistakable chain of Love binding him to her and vice versa.
He’d never met anyone like this, so—
She turned to face Danny. But she didn’t have a face. She had a mask. A well-made mask that had both eye-holes and a mouth with lips that seemed to curve. It was also covered with pulsing, swirling, hypnotic patterns. Black and white chased each other across the mask, not respecting the mask’s physical curves.
Danny could feel his mind start to go fuzzy. Felt the ground go soft under him as he sank into the Dream. A distant part of him wanted to look away, but the rest of him could only blink slowly, captivated.
“Come,” she said in a fascinating combination of an out-loud voice and a True Voice, tugging lightly on the chain that attached Danny to her.
Danny complied, trotting out into the intersection. When he was most of the way there, she turned away again.
“Follow,” she ordered.
Danny did, vaguely noting how rapidly the sidewalks and concrete buildings of Amity Park flowed into smoothly rolling hills covered in grass and flowers. The air grew heavier. Hotter. The perfume of the flowers combined with the buzzing of the bees and the gentle music served to make Danny even drowsier than before.
Still, he could hardly nod off in this situation, walking behind her, Love connecting them.
Sluggishly, belatedly, a name came to mind. “Nocturne,” he said. The name tasted like milk and honey, like chamomile tea, like sleep. She stopped and inclined her head slightly towards him. “You’re different from before.”
“We haven’t met,” she said. Then she turned more fully, the lips on her mask curving into a smile. “Has our parent been showing you Dreams of me? Perhaps I looked more like this.” She changed, her body warping before Danny’s eyes to become an impossibly tall man completely covered in starry black robes. Except, of course, for his mask and curved, ram-like horns. “This is as good a place as any, I suppose.”
Danny nodded, not quite sure what he was agreeing to, and looked around. Amity Park was nowhere in sight. The hills were a little lumpy, as if the grass and moss were growing over oddly shaped rocks.
“Let’s sit,” said Nocturn, lowering himself elegantly to the ground.
Danny followed, movements clumsy and blurred by sleep. He blinked, and found his hands occupied by a large mug. He looked up at Nocturne. Had he given this to Danny, or…?
Nocturne smiled. Danny looked away, not feeling like getting caught in the hypnotic swirls of his mask again. There was something off about those rocks under the grass. Something about their shape…
Then he saw it and inhaled sharply through his teeth.
Bodies. They were bodies. Still breathing, but…
He looked back at Nocturne. He’d known Nocturne was being too nice to him. He was new to being other, but not new to being a younger sibling. Older siblings only acted like this when they had set up everything in their favor. When they wanted something.
Even knowing this, he struggled to keep his eyes open. Could he fall asleep in the Dream?
“What are you doing to them?” he asked. “How do I wake them up.”
Nocturne hummed. “I have an idea. Play a game with me, sibling, and I’ll tell you.”
“What kind of game?”
“You ask me a question, and for every answer I give you, I get something from you.”
“Like, an answer from me,” said Danny, trying to clarify his position, “or something else?”
Nocturne’s smile showed teeth.
“If I play this game,” said Danny, “I have to be able to say when it ends.” He didn’t want to be dancing around conversational pitfalls every time he interacted with Nocturne, after all. They were siblings.
(And though Love was not trust, it was Love. And Love was undeniable.)
“Of course,” agreed Nocturne, easily.
“Alright, then,” said Danny. He adjusted his grip on the mug.
The grass was crawling. He blinked, hard, and shook his head, dislodging two bees that had landed on his ear.
“How do I wake them up?” he asked.
“You can’t,” said Nocturne.
Danny paused, waiting for Nocturne to take what he wanted.
“You have other questions.”
“Aren’t you going to take something from me, for the question?”
“Yes, I am.”
Danny pursed his lips, realizing he had just wasted a question.
“If I can’t wake them, who or what can?”
“I could. Or they could wake themselves.”
Danny mulled over what that could mean. He had no idea where to start with the second part, but the first…
“What would I have to do, to get you to wake them?”
“You—”
The chain around Danny’s neck went taut, pulling him through the fabric of the Dream at breakneck speeds. He was in Clockwork, his sibling behind him.
You must not bully your sibling, my dear. I have enough love for both of you. You do not need to be jealous.
Danny swayed. Now that so much of the tension between him and Nocturne was gone, he was no longer able to use it to support his wakefulness.
Drink your milk, little Love. You’ll be able to find your friends.
Danny nodded sleepily and tipped the mug back. He didn’t remember what happened after that.
.
“Hundreds of Amity Park citizens are still in comas as health officials race to find the cause of the mysterious event. Some say that gas leaks are to…”
Danny tuned out the TV and glared at his cereal. He knew he had fallen asleep in the Dream and had done something, but the memory was beyond him. Maybe whatever it had been was beyond an even partially human mind.
Or whatever kind of mind Danny had.
His fingers twitched. He was going to go down again later today, to see if Clockwork would help him find everyone else. If they could be found at all. He didn’t want to. He was angry. Angry that this had happened, that it was still happening. Amity Park was his, and Nocturne had no right to try and steal and break and—
The terrible part, was that even though he was angry, his general desire to reach out to Nocturne, to lean on their Love… That had not diminished.
He looked forward to seeing them again.
The news continued to talk about the coma victims.
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