Can we talk about how young Danny is? He was fourteen when he died. FOURTEEN!!
He defeated the literal king of the ghost zone, a version of himself that was powerful enough to end the world, and stopped the actual destruction of the planet (arguably two whole dimensions but still). And he did all this before the end of the year, or the end of the next year I don’t remember.
I think this is why we as a phandom are so drawn to the idea of ghost children, because Danny is a child. I want to see him be a fourteen year old, not quite a teen not quite a child. I want to see him act his age.
I want to see him with mentors, heaven knows his parents don’t fit the bill and Jazz is just a teen herself. But Danny would have to go through more changes in himself and his mental state than anyone could imagine, he’s need some sort of parental figure to guide him.
This is a long winded way of saying I want more Lost Time. Thank you.
ares slays his daughter’s rapist
Tim: Batcomputer, how would you gently break it to your family that you accidentally got married on a mission a few years ago, and now your husband, whose name you don't even know, has requested to spend a summer with you through his undead servants? Batcomputer: Here is an example of an elopement announcement. Tim: Scandalous and dramatic, I love it. Could you order two dozen elopement announcement business cards with the following information? Batcomputer: Understood. The shipment will arrive in four days. Alfred, four days later, going through the Manor mail: What the bloody hell? Bruce: What is it? Alfred reading: To whom it may concern, this card was just handed to you because you'd like to know who the man hanging off of Tim Drake's arm is. The answer: He's my husband with whom I eloped in the year of our great lord, Clockwork, 20XX. Much love and kisses! Mind your own business, the happy couple, Tim Drake and He of Glorious Darkness, Ghost King of the Infinite Realms. Bruce rubbing his eyes: Why does he do these things every time we take our eyes off of him? Alfred: I don't know, Sir. I sometimes wonder if the universe sent Master Tim to either test my will or punish me for a past life.
Disney princess Danny
It’s known that animals can sense death. Instances where pets gravitate to someone on their death bed and dogs barking at ghosts. Danny already knew this from before he half died, so he was expecting animals to rat him out with their sixth sense or become aggressive or cower from him. Instead, they all behaved the complete opposite than he anticipated.
Stray cats come running to rub against his legs, dogs nearly pull arms out of their owners sockets to get close to him, birds bring him trinkets, raccoons lead him to trash cans full of food, and even squirrels and rats get close to just sit on his shoulders. It’s… weird, but not unwelcome. He always loved animals.
Danny had come to semi-trust the animals that come to him. They know where the good food is and drinking water, they know when to steer away from a certain area right before something happens, and they always know when a person is bad or okay. So when an animal leads him somewhere, he follows. Sometimes they need help and he’s the one they go to. He’s helped plenty of raccoons out of garbage bins and cats out of gutters to have a good relationship with the animals of the streets.
What he isn’t expecting is to be led to Robin again and again.
The first time it was a cat. A mangy old Tom cat that rubbed against his torn up jeans and looked back with - Danny swears- a raised eyebrow. Danny follows and soon enough he finds himself standing a few paces away from Robin who is kneeling down to give clean water to the momma cat and her three kittens.
Robin freezes and so does Danny. They stare at each other.
“Um, hi?”
Robin straightens immediately, leaving the water on the ground where the cats can drink. Tom cat swaggers over to guard them.
“Civilian. Is there something I can assist you with?”
The dude is probably a year or two younger than Danny himself and he has to suppress a smile at the formal tone.
“Oh, uh, no? The cat just led me here.”
He can see Robin glance at the Tom cat who was now licking himself.
“Is that so?”
“Yea. Sorry to interrupt. Animals just like me for some reason.”
The three kittens one by one all totter over to him on unsteady legs after they had their fill. The orange one starts trying to climb his pant leg with its short and sharp claws digging into the jean material.
“They really like me.”
He carefully sits down crossed legged so the others could also climb all over him. Robin watches for a moment silently and when he sees Danny react well to the little pricks from tiny claws, he seems it safe enough to return to patrol.
The second time it’s a couple of rats that lure him away to find Robin fighting off more thugs than he probably should by himself. So taking the rats’ movements as encouragement, he takes the closest thing, a piece of plywood, and hit the nearest guy over the head with it. The guy crumbles like a wet sock and Danny is moving on to the next thug.
They sweep the floor with these guys with only a few splinters and a twisted ankle.
“It was dangerous to intervene,” Robin tells him. “I had it handled.”
“Yea, I know.”
The vigilante didn’t seem to be expecting that response from his stunned silence. He straightens as much as he can with bruised ribs.
“Well, I’m glad you know your mistake. Don’t let it happen again.”
Danny neither agrees nor disagrees, just shrugs and allow the rats to climb up his leg to his shoulder. Robin looks at them curiously. Danny gives a salute before leaving. Robin gives him a nod.
The third time it happened the roles are reversed.
Some people from the local gang are bullying the lonely, homeless teen to run drugs for them. They don’t seem to understand the word ‘no’. It gets to the point where Danny finds himself with his back against the wall and all his exits blocked with a guy shoving him again and again.
“Stop it!”
“I’ll stop if you agree.”
“I’m not doing it!”
Frank the raccoon and his buddy Bobby launch themselves at the guy’s ankles. The guy shrieks and pulls a gun.
“No!”
Before Danny can dive for it, a projectile comes out of nowhere to knock it out of his hands. He can’t even process what happened before the three are running away, two raccoons chattering at their heels before coming back to crowd him in worry.
Danny looks up to see Robin with a sword out threateningly, staring at where the three fled. He sheaths the sword after a few seconds.
“Are you okay?”
Danny realizes he’s breathing a little heavy and slows down a bit as he leans over to pet the top of the two heads.
“I’m- yea, I’m okay. Thanks for the save. Those guys were jerks.”
“I’m inclined to agree.”
Robin is staring at the raccoons and it takes Danny a long moment to piece things together.
“Did- did they lead you to me?”
Robin doesn’t answer right away.
“You have loyal friends.”
Danny smiles at the weird compliment. Looking down at the two heroes of the evening Danny is also inclined to agree.
The fourth time is funny in a way Danny doesn’t know how to describe.
It was the pigeons. They were at fault of course for how Robin’s secret identity was outed. By pigeons.
The grey birds swarmed Danny and settled in a cloud of feathers. One holding something in its beak before plopping it down in his lap like a golden retriever. It flaps off as Danny picks up the obvious wallet clip holding quite a bit of cash and a student ID. The card says Damian Wayne from Gotham Academy. Just then Robin comes skidding around the corner, clearly out of breath and freezes.
Danny looks down at the clip in his hand and back up at the vigilante. He looks at the crazy amount of birds around him and again at the vigilante.
Said vigilante straightens and approaches like he called Danny there.
“If I could have that so I could return it to its proper owner.”
He holds out a hand with false arrogance, but Danny can see the nervousness in his stance. Danny looks down one last time before putting the clip in the outstretched hand without a word.
Robin nods once, pockets the ID and money, and immediately leaves.
The fifth time just cements what Danny had already figured out.
He was at the park. Not Ivy’s park of course, the one where people actually like to go. He was helping the squirrels find and hide acorns when he’s nearly knocked over by a massive black dog.
“Titus!”
The end of the Great Dane’s leash is a familiar face. Damian Wayne’s eyes widen in recognition as he finally sees who Titus was so excited to get to.
“Uh-“
Danny has to close his mouth quickly or else the massive tongue on his face would have turned into a French kiss.
“Titus! Heel!”
Danny laughs at the embarrassed blush on the other’s face, obviously not used to his companion going off the rails like this.
“It’s alright. We both know how animals like me.”
Damian narrows his eyes to analyze the teen. Danny wasn’t about to pretend and Damian looked like he was debating whether to follow his lead or not. There was literally no one within hearing distance.
“Have you told anyone?”
Danny thought about redirecting, but thought better of it. He actually liked Robin and what he did.
“Nope. I haven’t and I won’t. I swear.”
Damian tilts his head and then looks down at Titus. He seems to come to a decision before looking back at Danny.
“You’re homeless, are you not?”
Didn’t think they were being that direct but sure.
“Yea?”
“I will pay you in food and shelter to take care of my animals.”
Danny blinks. Then actually considers the offer.
“What kind of animals? How many we talking?”
Damian grins.
The family finds out pretty quickly when a teen they’ve never seen before walks into the Batcave with two pails of food for the bats, Titus at his heels and Alfred the cat perched contently on his shoulders.
Duke stares and Bruce short circuits.
“Um, who are you?”
“Hi! I’m Danny. Damian employed me to take care of the animals.”
“O…kay?”
“And where is Damian?” Bruce sounds like it physically hurts to ask and Danny does not envy Damian’s position right now.
“Upstairs. I think he said he was going to his art studio.”
Bruce marches past the boy to the stairs before stopping abruptly and turning to Danny and Duke.
“Don’t touch anything. Watch him.”
Duke and Danny blink at each other for a moment as Bruce disappears up the stairs.
“I’m Duke by the way.”
Danny grins.
Am I the asshole for getting my best friend killed?
I swear to God, it was an accident.
My (27) BF (34) has a reputation for getting himself out of any jam you can imagine; and at first it was just a fun little thing the friend group noticed: there goes Oily J wiggling his way out of trouble again. but as the meme evolved in the group, it got to the point where we'd loykey started getting him into situations just to see how he'd get out of 'em, and he akept getting out of em. He was having fun with it too same as us. "Oh you guys," he'd say, "getting me into situations again," before laughing it off and getting out of it, so it was enrichment for our shared enclosures, and as time went on, the situations got more intense.
The trouble is, it turns out that putting a man in too many situations eventually gets the police interested. And not local hobsknockers cops either; they was like, proper three-letter FEDs. They put out a bounty on any information pertaining to his capture and everything. It was good money too so I thought, hey why don't I put J in another situation he can wiggle out of like always (and he'd wiggled outta worse before, so I thought this one'd be relatively mild), and at the next boardgame night (cause it was too late to do anything special for this one) we can buy some extra strong booze and get absolutely blitzed while having a giggle about the situation.
Boardgame night, and we were playing some social deduction nonsense or another and he says: "One of you is gonna betray me tonight." and I can't help but think, looking back on it, that he knew. It's stupid, I know he was talking about the game, but the way he said it, it was like he knew. We all felt it, and we had a big round robin round the table taking turns promising that we'd never betray him. And I said it so easily cause I thought it was true. Sure, I was gonna talk to the feds about a bounty; but, I fully expected my big beautiful oily boy to wiggle his way out of the trouble I was 'bout to cause, and that's not a betrayal. I wasn't lying. I didn't think I was lying.
My big beautiful oily boy didn't manage to wiggle his way out of it. They killed him and I got my blood money. He's gone.
He's gone and I'm devastated, crying, mourning. I loved him so much. We all did. And I can't stop thinking that it's my fault: that I'm the reason he's gone. and it is. and the guilt is eating me up inside. and I just need to talk to someone about it. So, I tell the rest of the group what happened in the group chat, hoping they'd understand that I didn't want this. I didn't want the government's blood money. It was supposed the be a prank. some joint enclosure enrichment. He was supposed to wiggle out of it like he always does... did, i mean.
They call me, among worse things, the asshole and kick me from the group chat. And, I know it's my fault he's dead: I know that. If I didn't do what I did, he wouldn't be dead right now. But, I didn't mean it for it to end up this way. He was supposed to be okay, damn it. I loved him. AITA?
What are these acronyms?
I love the idea of Wes but I like him best in two very specific scenarios. The first one is just him and Danny being put in a situation where they’re like the only competent people there and they have to fight or figure out the problem alongside one another and have to learn to trust each other. I just like the moment where they stare at each other like seriously, he’s the only other competent person here?
Now that the fluffs out of the way. Wes is incredibly determined to out Danny like he is in most phanon. Now imagine that Danny pulls him aside one day and tries to explain that he needs to stop danny could die, he’s begging. And Wes just looks him straight in the eye and tells him he’s a bad liar.
And then boom. Wes manages to expose danny. Maybe over a live stream, I don’t know. But the point is he’s done it and he’s all smug ready to gloat and basically tell everyone who called him crazy I told you so. Then danny’s parents start shooting at him again, then the GIW get to him first. They drag him off kicking and screaming.
This whole thing from Wes’ perspective and he has to deal with the guilt and tries to find a way to rescue Danny. Also, it turns out being proven right was everything he thought it was going to be. Especially, once his brothers start avoiding him. He just changed from being the crazy conspiracy theorist to either being the one who took the city’s hero away or being praised for finally destroying “that horrible ghost”.
He wants to go back. Danny was right.
Article link at the end of post. Hi all! I recently downloaded Substack and wanted to write about a pretty messy topic that I have a lot of feelings on: Ares' unofficial title as 'protector of women' in modern cult space. While I personally use it and find there to be enough history to back it up as a UPG title, it's not super black and white when you look back into historical records and mythology.
So naturally I wrote a little article about it! I discuss myths that are usually used as sources for this title along with generally looking at how Ares interacts with gender norms and how that can influence the discussion.
I hope it's a fun read and please let me know if something went horribly catastrophically wrong on the actual posted part as I am not tech-savvy and not used to Substack. Link below!
I love fics where the Bats are confronted with the fact that they don't really know each other as well as they may have thought. Not in an angsty way, but in the way you kinda know your sibling has hobbies and friends on a technical level but don't realize the fact that he is a different person outside of the family (and in this case vigilante) setting. Some examples:
Steph always gets Damian drawing materials that he's very excited for but has no idea the kid is a weeb until she catches him drawing Cheese Vikings fanart in a manga style. Damian doesn't understand where the surprise is coming from, that's how he's always drawn. Steph shows him her cosplay pictures (she does love a good characterization) and they end up going to comicon together.
Jason at a club with some friends and he sees Tim across the room having the time of his life with his friends. They're both equally shocked at the fact that the other has friends outside of their teams and Jason gets hit with the realization that Tim is just another teenager (kinda like him, he's 20 tops) and they're both underage drinking.
Duke having his mind blown away at the fact that Dick is actually amazing at fighting games. He kicks his ass in Mortal Combat and smash bros and he actually knows how to do combos. Dick is equally taken aback by Duke's perfectly aesthetic and super organized Animal Crossing island and begs him to let him have some of his rare flowers for his own place.
Cass and Bruce making faces each time they're reminded the other is a human being with human needs. It doesn't help that they're awake at really weird hours and have caught the other making the walk of shame into the manor one too many times. The painfully awkward eye contact, the vow to never talk about it.
[Phic Phight Phill Phor @mistythefifth!]
Tucker was a lot of things. A genius. A first-rate bachelor. A carnivore. A snack. A geek. Unbelievably handsome. An Esperantist. God’s gift to women (and men of good taste). A gamer. Cool beyond cool. A hacker. Eminently eligible. A ghost hunter. Drop-dead gorgeous. A hobbyist archer. A magnet for Cupid’s arrows. The reincarnation of an ancient and possibly evil pharaoh. Bootylicious. The best friend of the personification of memento mori and also Danny Fenton. And, most importantly, too fine.
He was not, however, in any way equipped to deal with this.
“It's so obvious,” said Wes. “If you'd just open your eyes–”
“You're the one who needs to open his eyes. Or at least get checked for colorblindness.”
“Do you hear yourself? If even you think it's reasonable to mix up Fenton and Phantom just by swapping colors–”
“Uh, one, it isn't, and, two, I was talking about coming to school wearing… that.”
Paulina pointed a manicured fingernail in the direction of Wes's clothing, which was, in her defense, a particularly eye-searing combination of flannel plaid jacket, striped t-shirt, novelty camouflage pants, and bright orange boots. Even Tucker didn't dress like that. Regularly. Wes hunched in on himself.
“It's laundry day,” he said.
“Your mama's washing your shoes too, huh?”
“Shut up,” said Wes. “I don't need to take this from a necrophiliac.”
“You–!”
Tucker couldn't take much more of this. “You guys do know that there's an actual evil ghost in here somewhere? You know, the one who turned the school into a maze and trapped us in it?”
“I don't know what you're worried about,” said Wes, “Fenton's not going to leave you here.”
Paulina scoffed. “Fenton's hiding in a closet somewhere. Mi amor, Phantom, on the other hand, will beat up that nasty ghost and sweep me off my feet at any moment. You can thank me now.”
Tucker loved Danny like a brother, but these guys had way too much faith in a guy who'd once lost a fight with a grocery bag. (Long story.)
“That's great,” said Tucker. “But may I remind you: giant maze.”
Wes rolled his eyes. “Mazes are easy. You just have to make all right turns. You can stop the performance already.”
“My what?”
“You know, hyping up your lying friend. Being a ghost doesn't make him cool.”
“Nothing could make any of you cool,” said Paulina, “but Mr. Delusional is right. Mazes are easy.”
“You're calling me delusional, when you're–?!”
“Okay, okay,” said Tucker. “So, three things. One, the right hand turns thing is only good for getting out of a maze, not for finding people in it. Two, it only works if you start with a wall that connects with the outside. And, most importantly, for it to work, you have to actually be doing it.”
Tucker was definitely channeling Danny, or maybe Sam, but there was such a thing as being too laid back.
“Well, we're not stopping you,” said Paulina, examining her fingernails. “Go run off and do whatever. I'll tell Phantom when he comes to rescue me. Probably.”
“Hey, wait, no, Fenton's coming for him–”
Yeah, Tucker wished he could leave. But these two had no ghost fighting experience, would throw themselves at a ghost if they thought it would get Danny's attention, and would throw themselves at each other if Tucker wasn’t here. Heck, they were doing it with him here.
Sam probably would have left, which meant that he was channeling Danny.
This was terrible. How did Danny do this?
“Look,” said Tucker, interrupting the argument. “Even if you think that we’re going to be rescued, we don’t know when and we don’t know if there are other ghosts around who could attack us. We need some kind of a plan.”
Paulina and Wes stared at him.
“Other than just waiting to be rescued,” clarified Tucker. He waved at the ‘room’ around them. “We aren’t even somewhere we can barricade, and I don’t know about you, but I don’t see a drinking fountain or a bathroom anywhere.” They were, in fact, in a fairly featureless stretch of hallway, complete with lockers, slightly-cracked linoleum, and buzzing fluorescent lights. The locker numbers were non-sequential and had three more digits than the highest-numbered real lockers at the school.
“I never go to the bathroom at school,” said Wes. “That’s where they get you.”
“Dude,” said Tucker. “Like, how? Do you not drink or what?”
“I don’t drink at school. If I did, I’d have to use the bathroom.”
“No wonder you’re so crazy,” said Paulina. “I’d say that you should just go to the bathroom with your friends, like a normal person, but you don’t have any of those.”
“I do too!”
“Yeah? Who?” asked Paulina.
Tucker listened, too. And took out his PDA. This would be good data for his all-school relationship map.
(Hey, it was an important multi-function tool. How was he supposed to know who to ask out without it? Or who to blackmail with what if someone more credible than Wes Weston found out Danny’s secret?)
“I’m not going to tell you. You’ll just say that they aren’t real.”
Ooh. That was just sad. Tucker put his PDA away.
“Well, now I am,” said Paulina.
There was a sudden, startling chime from the PA system. Tucker looked around, trying to find the speaker.
“Hi, so, first off, don’t panic,” said Danny’s voice.
That… was maybe not the best way for Danny to start. Jeez.
“Oh! Oh! It’s Phantom!” said Paulina, bouncing distractingly.
“It’s Fenton,” said Wes, “and it’s about time.”
“And, secondly, no, I haven’t found the office. I’m possessing the PA system. And, no, I can’t hear you, unless you find one of the PA buttons and–”
There were a series of beeps, followed by shouting, followed by a screech of feedback.
“--ough of that!” said Danny, getting control of the system again. “So, if you can get to a button, I can hear you, but I can’t teleport you out, so that’s kind of pointless. Unless you’re being attacked or something. Which could be happening. This guy named himself Daedalmouse, which sort of implies the existence of a Mousotaur, and I’ve been fighting a lot of ghost rats trying to find him. I’m pretty sure that finding him and beating him up will undo the whole labyrinth thing, but I don’t know how long it will take – yes, I know about the right hand wall trick, but that only works for getting out of mazes that are, you know, following the laws of physics, and not finding crazy ghosts that aren’t following the laws of physics. I’ll try to check in by possessing the speakers every couple of hours, but in the meantime, hang tight, find places with water, all that survivalist stuff. If you find a way out, go for it, but no Icarus stuff. Icarus,” mumbled Danny, sounding distracted. “Icarus. Icar-mouse?” The PDA system chimed again, and then fell silent.
Except for everyone mashing the buttons, but that was just unintelligible noise and didn’t count.
“The ghost is named Deadmau5?” asked Paulina. “What a rip off.”
“He said Daedalmouse. Like Daedalus? From Greek mythology? Ringing any bells?” asked Wes.
“Whatever,” said Paulina. “I bet you don’t even know who Deadmau5 is.”
Tucker breathed in slowly through his nose. “Let’s at least find one of the call buttons so that we can, you know, call for help? Hello? Wes? Paulina?” Tucker sighed and adjusted his glasses. “Or so that we can call Phantom when he gets on next?”
“Please, like you need the announcement system to call your best frie–”
“Yes, and then once Phantom knows where I am, he will come and rescue me,” said Paulina, skipping down the hallway.
“Sure,” said Tucker. He started walking. He didn’t want Paulina to get too far ahead. “Are you coming, Wes?”
“You could just call him,” said Wes. “On your phone.”
As a point of fact, Tucker had already tried that. It didn’t work. “I don’t have Phantom’s number, Wes.”
“I hate you so much. All of you.”
“I know, Wes.”
.
“Oh! Look at that!” said Paulina, pointing around the corner.
Tucker ran forward - well, jogged, they’d been walking for a while, vainly searching for a classroom door - thinking she’d seen a ghost. She hadn’t.
They all looked at the vending machine, hungrily.
Paulina ran forward and punched in a number on the vending machine keypad, then stopped and turned back to Tucker and Wes.
“Do, like, either of you have any money?”
“Aren’t you rich or something?” asked Wes.
“Which is how you know I’ll pay you back,” said Paulina. She flipped her hair over her shoulder. “I can’t believe that the one time I leave my purse in my locker during school, this happens.”
“Is it still school property if it’s in a nightmare ghost maze?” asked Tucker, because there was jerky in there, and his ultra-predator instincts needed fuel, darn it. “We can always say the ghost broke it.”
“Okay, but, like, how?” asked Paulina. “I’m not breaking my nails on this thing.”
“Just move,” said Tucker, pulling out his PDA and nudging Paulina to the side. He probably had some dongle or other that would connect to the vending machine. Not this one… Not that one… There, he could slide that into the card reader and then just run the program. He hadn’t tested this before, so he had no idea if it would–
Tucker didn’t have Danny’s ghost sense, but after over a year of ghost hunting, he’d picked up a few things. Like when a ghost was about to cream him. Unfortunately, he still didn’t have much of a skill set when it came to what to do when he noticed a ghost was about to cream him. He looked over his shoulder.
Yep. That was a giant ghost rat, all right.
He dropped his PDA, then threw himself to the floor as the rat jumped straight at his head. It hit the vending machine, sending it crashing to the floor. Paulina screamed and ducked around the corner. Wes stared, frozen.
Tucker shoved his hands in his pockets and pulled out his lipstick laser. He spun the top and started firing. The rat yelped. He loved this thing so much.
But giant ghost rats had thicker skin than the typical animal ghost, because it jumped on Tucker, knocking the laser out of his hands. He and the rat rolled around, wrestling.
Man, all this scene needed was some fire, and then it’d be straight out of that one mov–
Paulina came screaming back around the corner, carrying a large cork board over her head. It was covered in motivational posters with slogans like ‘If someone tells you that you cannot become immortal, they are liars,’ ‘Doesn’t it make sense that a lot of witch hunts are witch hunts because it’s your birthday?’ and ‘If we all work together we can make the north pole collapse under its own weight.’
She slammed the board down on the rat’s head and it sort of staggered off Tucker, twitching. It was a good thing it was too stupid to go intangible. Paulina had used enough force that Tucker would have some broken ribs if the rat was smart.
But the rat’s disorientation was momentary. It turned back to Paulina and Tucker, teeth bared. Which was when Wes started shooting the rat with the lipstick laser. The rat yelped and twisted to face him, levitating up into the air, which in turn gave Tucker enough time to roll to his feet and activate his wrist ray.
He didn’t like the wrist rays as much as the lipstick laser, they were harder for him to aim, but at this range, that hardly mattered. After being hit a few dozen times, the rat ran away, squeaking.
“Thanks,” said Tucker. “That was– Thanks. Can I have that back?”
Wes, pale faced, handed the lipstick laser back to Tucker like it was a loaded gun… Which wasn’t exactly inaccurate…
“That was so gross,” said Paulina, holding her hands out in front of her as if they were contaminated. Tucker didn’t know what her problem was, she hadn’t even touched the rat.
“Yeah,” agreed Wes, who hadn’t even been near the rat, breathlessly. He was getting some of his color back, though, so that was good. Tucker never knew what to do when people passed out. Unless those people were Danny, in which case what to do usually involved evacuation, ghost first aid, and deciding how many days to tell Danny he’d been out for when he woke up.
“Could’ve been worse,” said Tucker. “Luckily, you had me. Tucker Foley, too fine.”
Paulina and Wes stared at him, lips starting to curl. Tough crowd.
How did Danny do this?
Tucker shrugged, discarding the thought, and walked over to the vending machine. He rescued his PDA - the reinforcement upgrades were really paying off! - kicked the machine to shake off some of the broken glass, and reached in to pull out a packet of jerky. It had his name on it. Metaphorically speaking.
“Are you really going to eat that?” asked Wes. “That thing was all over you.”
“Well, yeah,” said Tucker, peeling open the packet. “But it was dead, so…”
“It could have the plague,” said Wes.
“Then I’m already dead,” said Tucker. “Since it was all over me and all. Ooh, this type has cheese in it.” He took a bite and the walls shimmered. The next thing Tucker knew, he was standing on the front lawn of the school, along with the rest of the student body.
“We’re out?” asked Wes.
“Phantom saved us,” said Paulina, clasping her hands together, her previous disgust forgotten. “I knew he would. Next time, I’ll have to give him a hero’s reward. Fate is so cruel, to keep us apart.”
Wes scoffed. “He literally sits two rows behind you in almost every class you have.”
Tucker took a deep breath, anticipating the argument, then turned and walked away. They were out of the maze. It wasn’t his problem anymore. He could enjoy his jerky.
High overhead, Tucker heard Danny scream. “It was about the ‘mice’ finding the cheese in your stupid maze? Why the heck are you Ancient Greek themed if you’re just a mad scientist?!”
An eldritch horror!Phantom au in which Danny's boyfriend is a monstrosity beyond human comprehension and he makes that everyone's problem lol
I just love the thought of everyone else being horrified when they see Phantom yet Danny is so nonchalant. He just wants to cuddle with his boyfriend why is everyone screaming??
How I imagine the dynamic:
*the forever young au*
I just think it’s neat.
Moss * She/Her * Current hyperfixation is Danny Phantom * if I stop posting either the hyperfixation has taken a walk and I'm waiting for it to come back or I'm dead
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