#I love fics that let Jazz just explore the badass revenge seeker angle
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lexosaurus · 2 months ago
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OH MY GODDDDD OMGG OMG I’M SO UNWELL RIGHT NOW WHAT THE FUCK HOW DARE YOU WRITE THIS HOLY SHIT THIS IS SO AHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
Bro I literally can’t breathe rn what a GUT PUNCH. Such a cool interpretation on the “What if Danny actually died?” trope where this time it’s Jazz out for blood!
Like damn, I love fics like this. She’s so protective of her family and I could TOTALLY see her just going off because her brother died because of these ghosts AND THEN THAT GUT PUNCH AT THE END. ONCE AGAIN, HOW DARE YOU.
Fuckkkkk fuck fuck. I have no words. Just a lot of explicatives. This is such a good oneshot and it really has me out here feeling hungry for more
Ectober Day 4 - Came Back Wrong
Word Count: 1,645
Tags: Angst, Character Death
AO3 (TBA)
Jazz didn’t hate the ghosts at first.
But now she loathes them.
Back when her parents research was merely myth, Jazz hadn’t bothered to focus on the theories or speculation they spurred out. Why would she?
Every waking minute at Fentonworks was spent talking about ghosts. Ghost this, ghost that. What new weapons they had conjured up (to her, it’d seemed stupid. Why did you need defence against things that weren’t real?).
Her own mind didn’t need plagued by ghosts all hours. But now, admittedly, it’s all she thinks about. She doesn’t think of them in the way her parents do.
The hatred may be the same, but the science—that doesn’t matter. She doesn’t want to cut them up or learn what a core is.
All she wants is revenge.
Because it was the ghosts that killed Danny, in the end. That stupid, stupid portal.
And in a right mindset, she’d blame her parents, their negligence. The practicality of it was, that it had been her parents fault. She was aware enough to know logically that Jack and Maddie Fenton had been the reason.
But the reason for their portal? Was their obsession with ghosts. And so it became deliberate ignorance.
Directly it might’ve been her parents, but if their obsession with ghosts hadn’t happened then portal would’ve never existed and her baby brother wouldn’t be dead.
The night is dark as Jazz sits by her desk, blinds open as she watches for any sightings of ghosts outside. Her eyes are heavy, a mix of academic drag and grief. Which one prevails, she doesn’t know.
She knows Danny would want her to keep going academically. And although Danny was never spiteful, merely witty, it feels important to do this. To..get justice…closure?
Jazz picks up the ghost scanner with a trembling hand. It constantly buzzes, a malfunction that her parents never fixed, but she doesn’t care. It’s the one bit of tech she trusts to be reliant.
A rare moment of determination, she’d stolen it from the lab when they weren’t looking. Her dad would probably think he’d misplaced it.
“Come on, come on.” She narrows her eyes, feeling as frustrated as she had on her last exam. Her mind doesn’t work the same way anymore.
Once studying was done with a breeze, but now this plagues her. Danny’s death. The emptiness. Her parents are constantly working.
Of course, she still gets good grades, despite being told she’s relieved of all assignments for the year. But it feels more like an obligation, than something she used to enjoy.
Perhaps this is what the burnout Danny used to describe is. Danny was never as academically competent, always slower but eventually getting there.
Now justice is all she lives for. Any will do. Any target.
She just needs…violence? To rant? Anger? She doesn’t know.
Just something.
Something to feel anything but the deep dread weighing down on her, tethering her to an endless cycle of grief.
And then the scanner starts wailing, making Jazz tense slightly. She relaxes, before checking the small screen.
“A loud noise, so a powerful ghost surely?”
And she’s right.
Ghost: Phantom.
Power Level: 7.8
Current Core Usage: 80%
Jazz interprets, given the ghosts core usage, that it’s currently in a fight with another one. Plays hero, of sorts.
Phantom’s the worst one for her. He’s never done anything to her—but she hates him.
He’d appeared a few weeks after the portal had opened, whilst everyone was still reeling over Danny’s death. Yet, at that time Amity couldn’t ever have expected the paradigm shift Phantom was about to throw them into.
Ghosts everywhere. Constant fights. Damage. Already grieving and to blame parents wearing themselves down even more to defend the town.
Albeit, not very well, but she didn't dare say that. They’d already lost Danny, they didn’t need to lose the ghost hunting too.
Without another word, Jazz slips on her winter jacket, slipping open the door and down the stairs. Scanner in one hand, compact ectogun tucked into her belt.
She can hear her parents' snores echo from upstairs. Good. They won’t miss her for a while.
Cold air freezes her to her bones as she steps out into the street, instantly looking up at the sky. Dark blue and empty, only a few stars twinkling.
She’s sure if Danny was here he'd tell her what constellations they were.
“Where are you?” she grits out, watching as the small screen on the scanner shows a bright green dot, about two blocks ahead. There’s another dot too, smaller and weaker, before it disappears off the map. Jazz presumes Phantom has captured or weakened the ghost, whatever he does.
So she needs to be fast.
Within less than a minute, Jazz makes it to the street where the scanner showed, then shoves the scanner into her pocket. She doesn’t need to alert her presence.
And there he is.
Phantom is smaller up close than she’d initially thought, although no one at Amity has ever got a good glance. His back is facing towards her, the black of his jumpsuit glistening under a street lamp.
Something cylindrical in his hands has captured his attention, probably why he’s not noticed her yet. Jazz strains her neck to look, but can’t see.
Phantom. The ghost that’s put her parents through so much hell.
The ghost that’s, whilst Amity was still reeling from Danny, racked up the problems on their list by causing destruction to infrastructure and pointless money. All with a side of witty banter.
“You.” Jazz tries to steady her voice, feeling the grief trickle through. All this, for her brother.
She never got to grieve properly. No one did. How were they supposed too, with ghost fights all around?
Phantom’s reaction is immediate. His back stiffens and he swivels around.
The eyes. They’re a piercing lime green, just like the portal. The portal that killed Danny.
“What do you want?” Phantom’s asks, tone initially surprised but flattening. He’s younger than Jazz expected. Fifteen, at most.
Near the same age as Danny.
“What do you think?” Her eyes narrow, reaching for the ectogun attached to her belt. She doesn’t expect a logical answer.
Of course Phantom won’t know why she’s here, or what she’s after. He’s just a ghost with an obsession of being some copy-paste comic hero.
“I—I don’t know.” The ghost mumbles, eyes now averted down to his left hand. He tucks the cylindrical device under his shoulder before tracing a round shape on his left palm.
That’s…strange. Jazz thinks. Not the answer, but his behaviour. Is he thinking of something in the past? Better yet, he’s still here. Usually Phantom, at least to news reports, is enigmatic, and never likes being filmed.
So the fact he even turned in the first place is perplexing.
But then she thinks of Danny. Buried in the cemetery, grave stricken of flowers due to the quickness of their grief. Amity bombarded with attacks on the constant, never any peace.
All Phantom’s fault. At first, perhaps (the attacks) not. But over the months, he’s gotten quite a reputation. She’s sure he has some sort of control over Amity. That ghosts come to Amity now just for the sake of fighting him.
When he’s really just a five-foot nothing skinny teenager like her brother.
If Phantom is gone, she’ll finally get a break. Get to grieve for Danny. Danny can get the justice and tribute he deserves.
The ectogun is sleek in her hand, tucked under her coat. She knows what she’s doing, having received multiple lessons from her parents after Danny’s death. They didn’t want to lose her too.
Unlatch the safety trigger, quickly aim, shoot.
It’s that simple. She points.
”Please! Please—don’t do that!” Phantom pleads, “You don’t know what you’re doing—please, put it down!”
“Please, Danny! I need you!” She cries out. She’s in Danny’s room, the bed still unmade, clothes still strewn about.
Untouched from when Danny had last left it. He’d gone into the lab, and that was it. Electrocution, they told her.
He’d been barely hanging on at the hospital. And then his body couldn’t take it any longer.
Her brother is gone.
The next thing Jazz knows is the cold pavement underneath her body, sitting with her knees drawn up to her chest on the curb. The ectogun is a few feet away, glittering in the lamplight.
”I can’t—“ she sniffles, not even realising it. Her cheeks are damp, eyes stinging.
”What’s wrong?” An echoey voice besides her. Phantom. His eyes are narrows in concern. He sits near her, but leaves a gap.
Why’s he still here? He should’ve gone long ago.
“What’s wrong? My brother is dead and his body was barely cold before you waltzed in with your stupid puns and caused damage everywhere!” The anger radiates through Jazz’s body as she scowls at him, “My brother’s death was cast aside because of you. My parents never got time to grieve, none of us did. Too busy expecting another ghost attack or repairing damages.”
“Your brother?” Is all Phantom responds. Wiping her eyes, Jazz takes a glance at him. He’s hunched over, grimacing with an expression she can’t quite read.
”I just want Danny back.” She chokes out, wiping her eyes again, feeling the tears fall.
He’s gone. Only fourteen. What sort of age is that to die? Killed at the invention of their own parents. She’ll never hear his (admittedly annoying) chatter about space, nor have their petty arguments again.
Even the times he got on her nerves meant something.
”Jazz, I—“ Phantom starts to say, but freezes.
As does Jazz.
”How do you know my name?” She tilts her head, voice sharp.
She wipes her eyes, again, blinking back the bleary vision.
Then looks right into Danny’s green eyes.
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