#danny would have really liked this to go differently
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so I got Steve Trevor;
From one highly stressful situation to the next it seems, Steve really wishes his gun didnât get misplaced.
Especially considering heâs absolutely not where he was less than a minute ago, considering the endless void of⊠green.
Why is it always greenâŠ
âWhat the fuckâ Heâs keeping his stance ready for anything while trying to get his bearings at least somewhat, he seems to be surrounded by ruins, somewhat familiar looking ruins.
âYou have experience with Pandoraâs box, correct?âÂ
Steve quickly turns around and has his arms loose and ready, slightly up to either defend or attack.
In front of him is a floating⊠boy?
âHelloâ the slightly glowing, black and white clad teen gives him a lazy little wave, cheeky sort. alright then.
âWhere the hell am I?â
"Good guess but that's a little more to the left from here"
"What?"
The teenâs expression shifts to something more serious, "Listen, the box got stolen and I need someone with knowledge about the damn thing that can also inconspicuously come with me and isn't bound by dumb ancient rules to help me out with getting it back where it belongs. You came recommended by Pandora so..."
âAre you serious- wait, Pandora as in the Pandora?â
"Yes, Lady Pandora, keeper of the box with the ancient evils or whatever. Of course she knows about you, like I said you have prior experience with dealing with this thing- you are Steven Trevor right? Consort to princess Diana of Themyscira?"
"Consort-" Alright okay so this is really happening, itâs spread to other dimensions now or something? he rubs the bridge of his nose, he could use a good stiff drink to handle this revelation.
"Partner, boyfriend, whatever, listen we need to stay focused here" the teen claps his hands, it actually does effectively grab Steveâs attention back.
"Right, yes that's me. I'm, fuck you're telling me that fucking thing-?"
"Yes, and I could really use a hand here with solving this mess please. Oh uhm, Danny Phantom, nice to meet you.â Danny holds his hand out and Steve gives him a handshake. so the kid knows about the basic typical earth greeting. good to know.
âNow, we got no time to lose, I'll be sure to put you right back where I found you once we're done so no worries"
Well Steve doesn't really want that cause he was in the process of getting kidnapped when he got dragged through a swirling green portal. sadly his attackers confiscated his gun so heâs currently very unarmed but heâd take it if it means heâs not at risk of getting tortured for Justice League intel and used as bait to lure the heroes in.Â
"Just drop me off in Washington DC. I'd prefer that"
"Whatever you want bud" Danny grins and leads him towards a different portal in the distance.
Steve figures itâs in his best interest to go along with everything for now but once his comms stop being dead heâll notify the Justice League immediately. Still though, something in his gut tells him that this kid isnât bad news.Â
He has this weird feeling that Diana would like him.
Use this random DC character wheel to write a dpxdc prompt, fanfic, or blurb below! (Or just say what ya got ehehe)
#dpxdc#dp x dc#danny phantom#danny fenton#steve trevor#so this actually got me to read Justice League comics#as in the ones where the whole gang teams up and works together#and the guy is apparently the League's middle man?#like he's between the government and the JL#trying to keep the peace so to speak#oh and he's Diana's situationship. I am not exactly sure what's going on there just yet
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Harvest
My piece for ecto-implosion 2024!
I was partnered up with @tsubaki94 who did three whole lovely artworks, so go check them out here! (x)
(The AO3 Link (X) : broken up into smaller chapters rather than this one big guy)
25,252 words
Danny rubbed his foot around in the dirt, watching the small dust cloud billow up and hang there.
âWell come on, Iâll show you where youâre staying for the next few months.â Alicia turned around and started walking off.
âWait!â Danny bent to pick up his bags and rushed to catch up to his aunt, âI thought that you lived in the cabin?â He looked over at the cabin he spotted through the trees.
Alicia glanced back at Danny. She sighed, âI do. You donât.â
Danny frowned. âI wonât? Then where will I be staying?â
Side stepping a bush, Alicia grumbled, âyouâll see.â
They moved through the brush, dodging branches and stepping around roots and detritus on the ground. It was hot and humid and Danny was starting to feel sticky, carrying his bags with him through it all. The birds around them quieted as they approached and then started up again once they left. A gentle slope turned into a steeper incline and Danny quietly wondered how much longer they were going to take. He really hoped Alicia wasnât just taking him in a circle in some sadistic test to see how long heâd last before complaining. Or murder him. It wasnât likely, but Danny didnât know his grumpy aunt well enough to rule it out either. Probably not though. Maybe.Â
As they made their way up, Danny smelled a change in the air. He arched his neck around Alicia to try to see what the cause was, but quickly moved his head back and away from a sudden branch flying in his face. Just as Danny was weighing the benefits of asking for a break, the ground leveled out, and Danny got his first glimpse of the farm.
Golden strands of wheat waved in the slight breeze, stretching farther than Danny thought heâd see. In the distance, taller stalks formed a different swath. Alicia stepped out of the trees and onto a path that edged the fields. Following Alicia, Danny realized the smell had gotten stronger. âHuh,â Danny thought. He leaned over, closer to the stalks. Yep, the fields were definitely the source of the smell. Turning back to Alicia, he looked down the path and stepped next to his aunt to walk side by side. They seemed to be close to the edge and Danny could see a couple of structures in the distance.
âThese are the wheat fields,â Alicia said. âMy farm grows two kinds, spring and winter wheat. This here is the spring wheat; itâll be part of what youâll be helping to take care of on the farm.â
âOh. What else will I be doing?â
Alicia looked down at him, âWeâll see.â
Danny winced and looked ahead again. âAm I staying in one of those cabins ahead of us?â
Alicia huffed, âSure will. Iâve got a farmhand that helps out - sometimes stays in one of the cabins, sometimes travels back and forth from here to town. Youâll be meeting him later.â
âI didnât realize there would be anyone else here.â
âWell sure, ya think I can take care of a farm like this all by myself? Itâs a lot of work. Course, if one of my hands didnât leave me in the middle of the season, I wouldnât have let Maddie send you here at all.â Alicia looked down at him, âMy farmâs no place to goof around. We all have jobs around here and we all have to do them.â She leveled a sharp look at Danny, âUnderstand? Just because youâre my sisterâs kid doesnât mean you arenât responsible for pulling your own weight.â
Danny looked away, âYeah. I get it. Donât worry, Mom already told me.â More like lectured me to behave, Danny thought.
Alicia huffed.  âWell, just keep that in mind.â They walked the rest of the way down the path in silence.
As they neared the first cabin they could hear a bark, âThatâs Skip. He usually follows me around or hangs around the animals. Good for keeping most unwelcome visitors away.â
Danny looked out and around excitedly, âyou have a dog?â
Climbing up the cabin steps to pull open the door, Alicia said âyeah, but heâs a working dog, so donât go bothering him.â
Once Danny stepped in, Alicia followed, closing the door behind him. Sunlight streamed in through high set windows, illuminating the space. At one end there was a bed on a simple frame, a dresser next to it, and enough space for a chair and small table.
âThis is where youâll be staying. Got the place to yourself, though there isnât much to begin with. The toilet is the outhouse in between these two cabins, unless you really want to head down to bother me for mine.â
Danny gulped, feeling a little intimated. Â âGot it â outhouse.â
âYeah well, Iâll leave you to get settled in here and then Iâll come grab you for dinner. Most meals will be down in my cabin, since it has the kitchen. That said, you can bring food up here, but I donât recommend it. Racoons and the like will try to break in if they smell it up here.â
Danny nodded, looking around. âAnything else?â
âYouâd be best to wear boots if youâve got them starting tomorrow, but for now? Make sure the cabin door latches correctly when you leave or itâll swing open. Thatâs a great way to invite little rodents to make their home in here or to take a shit on the floor at the least.â Alicia looked over the cabin once, âFer now, settle in and Iâll come get you when itâs time.â Alicia opened the cabin door and left Danny alone with his thoughts.Â
Stepping over to the bed, he set his suitcases down and sat between them. The bed let out a soft wheeze, but otherwise stayed firm. It was more of a cot than a proper mattress, but that didnât faze Danny. He was looking to get shipped back to Amity Park as soon as he could anyway. Dust motes danced around him. The cabin was quite small. But at least Danny didnât see any spiderwebs or droppings. âSmall merciesâ Danny thought. Pulling out the older PDA gifted to him by Tucker, Danny tried to see if he could pick up a signal to send back to his friends. Waving his arm in the air didnât do much.  No signal. Sighing, Danny put the PDA down behind the suitcases and leaned back on his hands.Â
Closing his eyes and taking a deep breath, he could smell the dust in the air, hear the rustling of leaves on the trees, and the faint sounds of animals. He didnât know why his parents thought he needed to get away from Amity Park for the second half of the summer, but Danny was annoyed. He spent the first half of the summer trapped in summer school, and no sooner did he have the freedom to spend time with Tucker and Sam, than his parents and Jazz decided to send him off. Between more ghosts showing up and causing problems, and his parents paying more attention to him now that Jazz was off at college, Danny had felt like he hadnât had a moment to himself during the school year. Any extra time he used to have was taken up by his parents dragging him into the GAV to hunt down ghosts and talk about what he planned to do after high school. Danny had been looking forward to vegging out on the couch and running around the mall with Sam and Tucker instead of what?  Shoveling dirt? Or watering plants? Or whatever. Danny wasnât sure what would be expected from him this summer, but his mom made it clear that he was supposed to help his aunt with minimal complaint. Danny let his arms give out so he could fall back onto the bed.Â
He didnât know what to expect here, but he knew that back in Amity the ghosts would be having a great time wreaking havoc with one less capable ghost hunter there to kick them back into the Ghost Zone. At least Valerie had enough of a truce with Phantom now to be convinced to empty the ghosts back into the portal instead of handing them over to be subjected to the latest experiment his parents cooked up. Danny closed his eyes. Even thinking about what he would be returning to at the end of summer back in Amity Park was enough to exhaust him and before he knew it, he drifted off to sleep.
A short rap on the door woke Danny up, and he got up, threw a glance at his still unopened suitcases, and walked to the cabin door, pulling it open. âOh,â Danny said. It wasnât Alicia at the door like he was expecting.
âHey, you must Aliciaâs nephew?â the mystery man asked.
âUuuh yeah,â Danny rubbed the back of his neck trying to work out the crick that he put there by falling asleep cockeyed on the bed. âAnd you are- ?â
The man laughed, âAaah, figures that Alicia wouldnât have told ya. Iâm here to take you to dinner, Iâll tell ya about myself on the way.â
Danny eyed the man, dressed in a button down shirt, blue jeans, boots, and a hat - he certainly looked like he worked on a farm. Stepping out of the cabin, and making sure that the latch took, Danny walked after the guy as he led Danny to a dirt path off to the side of the cabins. âIâm Will, no it ainât short for nuthin. Down this path,â he gestured, âtakes you straight to tha bossâ place â and coincidentally dinner.â Will let out a barking laugh and continued. âIâve been working here for a few years now. Actually, for most of my life. Worked here during the summers in between school for Tish and Dick back when they ran the place. Later, when I realized city life didnât agree with me, I came back and started working here full-time. Alicia took over when they passed and sheâs a bit gruff, but just as smart as her ma in running the place.â
âOh, last time I was here, Alicia mentioned the women in the family being smart,â Danny said offhandedly as he looked around the woods.
Will hummed, âdarn right they are, never met a smarter bunch. The town was real glad when Alicia moved back, and I think theyâre still a bit sad her sister â yer ma â never came back.â Danny could feel Willâs gaze on him, âwhen were ya here last, by the way?â
âUh,â Danny said, looking over at Will, âuuh mustâve been a year and half ago? Roughly? It was only a short trip. My mom came down for Aunt Aliciaâs divorce party and my sister and I dropped in to make sure my dad had my momâs anniversary present. Thatâs a bit of a long story, but we were only here for a day.â
âAaah,â said Will, âmakes sense. I usually take a trip to the next town over to see my brotherâs kids around that time. Wouldnât have seen ya and Alicia ainât a big blabber if itâs not about the farm.â
Danny didnât have much to say to that, so he looked ahead to the path, which had started curving away. Coming around the bend, Danny could see Aliciaâs cabin through the trees and realized that Alicia could have chosen to take this path up when Danny was carrying his suitcases. His mood soured as they kept walking. Getting to the end of the path, and out of the trees, Danny noticed a small building behind the cabin. Maybe he could ask Alicia what it was for?Â
Will walked up to the cabin door and knocked, before opening and sticking his head in, âHeya Boss, got the kid. Anythinâ ya need help with?â
âYou two better wash your hands âfore ya even think about touching food.â Without turning around, she kept stirring the pot on the stove.
âYes maâam,â Will said, before turning around to Danny behind him, âFollow me.â And he walked into the cabin, heading around a wall to another door inside.
Danny glanced around the cabin as he stepped in. Nothing much had changed since the last time he was here. He heard water running and looked back around to Will, who was washing his hands in the small bathroom sink. Waiting for his turn, he looked around. There was a picture or two on a table along with a radio, a small couch and chair, and a little fireplace. But no TV. Danny frowned, resigning himself to a very boring summer.
âAlrighty,â Will said, hanging up the towel, âyour turn kid,â and he walked off around the corner to the kitchen.
Danny stepped in, noting the indoor toilet and shower that wasnât in his cabin, and washed his hands. By the time he got back out, Alicia and Will were outside setting down the final dishes on the wooden picnic table.
âAh there you are Danny, weâve got everything out here, come join us,â Alicia called him over.
Jumping down the stairs, Danny walked over to the table and took a seat next to Will. Alicia may be his aunt, but he felt more comfortable with Will from the short walk over than he did with her. A stack of bowls, a pot, and some bread on a plate got his attention.
Watching Alicia and Will grab bowls and dish out stew, Danny grabbed the last bowl and did so himself once the ladle was free. Grabbing a piece of bread, he started dunking it in. Watching Alicia and Will eat, he took a bite. Danny made a surprised noise.
Alicia looked over to him, âSurprised?â
Danny nodded and swallowed his bite, âa lot better than I was expecting.â
Alicia laughed, âIâll take it that my sister still ainât much of a cook if you think that.â
Danny sheepishly laughed, âMomâs cooking is alright.â How could Danny explain that most of the stuff in their fridge sat next to ectoplasm and that no matter how well the containers were sealed, most of the time, the food tasted slightly off from spending time in there? He elected to stay silent.
Alicia hummed in response as she ate another bite of stew. The rest of dinner passed quietly, and soon the sounds of bowls being scrapped clean echoed in the little clearing.Â
Alicia leaned back, waiting for Danny to finish.  Will took out a little pipe, tapping down the tobacco and lighting it. Danny wrinkled his nose at the smell as he finished his bowl and straightened. âThat was really good Aunt Alicia,â Danny said.
Alicia grinned, sharp and wide, âglad you thought so. Will, you can head back up, Danny here is going to help me with the dishes tonight.â
âAre ya sure?â Will asked.
âYea, weâve got some things to talk about anyway,â Alicia narrowed her eyes at her nephew.Â
Danny felt a chill run down his spine, unrelated to the waning light.
âAlright,â Will said, standing, âI guess Iâll be going then. Night Alicia, night Danny.â
âNight Will,â Alicia said.
âGoodnight Will,â Danny called out as Will walked back to the path they came down.
âWell,â Alicia started, âGrab the dishes and follow me in.â She stood up and grabbed the pot, heading back to her cabin.
Danny stood up, piled the bowls and spoons together in a neat pile, and walked in after Alicia.
âThere ainât no dishwasher in this old cabin, so weâll be doing everything by hand.â Alicia plugged half the sink and started the tap. âIâll let you rinse and dry the dishes.â Danny set the bowls off to the side of the sink and walked around her.Â
After filling up the sink sides, Alicia took the pan and started soaping it up. âSo, Danny,â Alicia started. âUm, well, Maddie,â she cleared her throat. âYer ma seemed worried about you. Anything I should know about? Since youâll be working on my farm and all.â
Danny shoulders inched towards his ears. âNo, nothing. I didnât need to get out of Amity.â He scowled at the pot Alicia was cleaning.Â
âHmmm,â Alicia replied, methodically working around the inside. âI never knew my sister to be a worrier, but I wonât pry. So long as you donât bring any strangers or trouble around itâs not really my business.â
Dannyâs shoulders relaxed some as he took the pot from Alicia and rinsed it off before setting it in the dish rack to start drip drying. The rest of the dishes passed quickly in the silence and as Danny was drying the last bowl, Alicia walked off around the corner.
Danny closed the last cupboard as Alicia came back around with a large fabric bag. âI donât want to keep you up for much longer, but weâve got some housekeeping to deal with first.â She held out the bag towards Danny. He took it. âFirst off, my cabin has the only shower. The only rules are to not use it when Iâm sleeping and to clean up after yourself. I mean pick up your towels and hang them to dry over your cabin porch railing. Iâve got a standing unit in the back.â At Dannyâs scrunched eyebrows, she sighed. âA washing machine,â she strode to the cabin door. Heading down the steps, she called back, âYou saw the structure behind the cabin?â
âUuuh, yeah,â Danny said, walking behind her.
âWell, the machineâs in there. We donât got a dryer, instead,â Alicia pointed up at a line stretching from her cabin to a tree. âThereâs a bag inside with clothespins. Youâll hang up your clothes after the washer gets done. I recommend getting up in the mornings and starting them so that they have the whole day to dry on the line. But thatâs just me.â Turning back around she said, âwell, I think thatâs most everything. Iâve got a bell Iâll ring to let yâall know when foodâs ready. I expect you to finish whatever youâre up to and to get down here when you hear that bell. Either youâre on time or you donât eat. Thereâs too much to do around here to wait around.â She looked down at him as the sun finished setting, the orange glow around them the last remnant of the day. Her face softened some, âbefore I send you back to get some sleep, any questions?â
Danny shook his head, âNaw, laundry out back, shower inside, donât bother you with either. I think Iâve got it all.â
âGood.â Alicia and Danny stood there for a moment. âWell,â Alicia cleared her throat, âIâll uh, see you tomorrow mornin then. Night kid,â and turned to walk back to her cabin.Â
Danny stood there for a moment before sighing and making his way back to the path.
_______
Danny woke up to knocking on the door and sunlight on his face.
Knock knock knock echoed through the cabin and Danny squished his eyelids together even tighter. Â âCome on, get up boy, you donât have time to lay around.â
Danny turned his head into his pillow and groaned. He spent long enough last night putting away his clothes and getting used to the small cabin that he fell asleep at a time that, had he been back in Amity, would have been early and yet here was late, based on how groggy he felt. Unrested.
Knock knock bang, âdonât think I wonât come in there kid,â Alicia warned.
Danny let out another groan before turning his head and calling out, âAlright, Iâll be out in a minute.â
Something that sounded like âtoo longâ came from the door before footsteps started walking down the cabin steps. Quickly getting ready â jeans, shirt, and unfortunately, FentonWorks patented hazmat boots, Danny pushed open the door, hopping a little to finish getting the second boot on. He jumped down the stairs, making his way to Aunt Alicia, who was leaning against a tree.
âWell, 56 seconds ainât bad kid, but come on. Youâre following me around for the day.â She pushed off and started walking, âI assume you donât have any experience working a farm?â
Danny shook his head, âno maâam.â
Alicia snorted, ânone of that maâam business, call me Alice.â
âI thought your name was Alicia though?â
Opening a little gate, Alicia whistled and then beckoned Danny through before latching it, âSure is, but yer ma and me had our Grandma Alicia, so family started calling me by Alice.â Walking off to a small building further back, she continued, âBut enough of that, weâve got a long day. You can ask if you have questions, but do your best to pay attention.â With that, she opened the door to a cacophony of clucking that quickly died down. Danny stepped in after her, and as his eyes adjusted he saw the inside of a coop. Two rows of chicken nests on either wall, with hens either standing around Alicia or sitting. Once they spied Danny hiding behind her though, they started squawking again and rushed forward, wings flapping and feathers fluffed. Danny started backing away before a hand pushed on his back and a bucket was shoved into his chest. Quickly grabbing it, Danny looked down at a bunch of seed and â
âOW!â Danny yelped as he started hopping from one foot to another, hens trying to peck away at the new intruder.
âWalk out, theyâre just not used to you is all,â and Alicia shooed him out of the coop.
âFuckâ Danny frowned, not quite running away from the coop and wishing he couldâve used his intangibility to get away from the chickens. Alicia laughed at him as the hens kept pace around Dannyâs ankles, lunging forward to peck at him. âHow do I get them to stop?â Danny yelled.
âJump the fence!â
Danny ran back to the gate and hopped over it with a little help from his ghost side to land a few steps away from the chickens.
Bwaack Squak Sqwauk!!
Danny looked up at Alicia who offered an unapologetic, âSorry. I forgot.â
Squinting at the slightly amused look on his auntâs face, Danny scowled, âDid you do that on purpose?â
âNo idea what ya mean kid. Anyway, for now you can toss some feed in, but otherwise wait out there. Iâll explain what I did when I get back out to you.â Alicia grabbed a basket hanging outside the coop door and walked back inside.
Danny glared down at the chickens who were still protesting his presence. âWhat.â
âSquuuuawk!â was the response back.
Danny sighed and looked down at the bucket in his hands. It had some seeds and other things mixed in. Looking back up at the chickens staring at him, Danny slowly raised a hand, âIâm going to throw some seeds in. Please donât scream at me for it,â and he reached a hand in. No sooner did Danny close his hand around some feed, then one of the hens decided to start flapping its wings again to cause a fuss. Danny jumped and glared at the chicken. Out of spite, Danny reached back in and with a handful of feed, overhand chucked it into the coop yard. Sticking his tongue out at the chickens that refused to let him out of their sight, Danny took another step back. He couldnât wait till his parentsâ summer banishment was over and he could go back to Amity Park.
Alicia stepped out of the coop with the basket and walked over to a trough sitting in the yard. After looking down, she gave a quick nod, and then started heading to the gate. Where the chickens were still standing. Glaring at Danny.
âUuuh,â Danny said, âDo you have a plan on getting close enough to take this bucket back?â
âSure do,â Alicia said, coming up to the gate, âstep closer and hand it over.â
Eyes never leaving the chickens, Danny inched his way closer to Alicia and when he was close enough, thrust out the bucket towards her. âDo they hate everyone?â He asked.
Alicia took the bucket, âNope. Not me,â and laughing, walked back to the coop.
âGreat, real reassuring,â Danny grumbled to her back.
Once Alicia finished up inside the coop, and with a basket of eggs in hand, she walked back out of the enclosure to Danny. âNoticed how I whistled before?â Danny nodded. âI was warning the chickens that I was coming in. Itâs how I let them know itâs me and not a stranger.â She grinned. âNot that it helped you any.â
Danny looking away, glaring.
Alicia paused for a moment, âWell, no matter.â She started walking to another log structure. âI want you to figure out what signal youâre gonna give the chickens and start visiting them in the mornings. Just so they get used to you. We donât want to upset them too much, so they need to start recognizing you.â Walking up to the much larger barn, she opened the doors. Danny was hit with the smell of animals and he scrunched up his nose, coughing.Â
Alice looked back at him and laughed, âWell, youâll get used to the smell soon enough.  Anyway, this is where weâve got the rest of the animals. Some pigs, cows, sheep - used to have a horse, but once we switched to using the tractor and truck full time, and old age killed her off, it didnât make sense to get another.  But that was a number of years ago at this point. I think ya mom and me were still kids then.â
Dannyâs eyes finished adjusting to the inside and he saw the animals in their stalls. The cows looked over at him, but it was one brave pig that snuffled up to Danny. âOh,â Danny said, crouching down. âCute.â Reaching out a hand, Danny tried to pet the pig, which quickly moved away and waddled back to its stall area.
Danny caught Aliciaâs smile as he stood back up. âPatâs rather friendly, but I wouldnât recommend getting too attached.â She gestured over to the far wall, âI usually open up the barn during the day, let the animals wander around. Before that though,â she bent down to grab a stool. âThereâs some tasks to get done.âÂ
Alicia made her way to one of the cows and picked up a stool and a steel bucket hanging up on the post. She turned back around to Danny, âYer gonna learn how to milk the cows here. We usually fill up the pail and then transfer them to bottles. We get too much milk to use ourselves, so neighbors will come and pick up some bottles from time to time.â She set the stool down with the pail on top, then moved to the larger cow. Going around to the back of the stall, she unlooped a short rope and tied it around the cowâs neck. âThis old gal here is Gully.â Alice jerked her chin to other stall, âand our younger one is Lass.â Alicia walked back out of the stall to move the stool and bucket closer.
âWhatâs the rope for Aunt Alice?â Danny asked.
âOh,â Alice said, setting down the stool and pail at Gullyâs side. Sitting down, she said, âjust to keep her in place. Gully doesnât move as much as Lass will, but sheâs used to the rope. Either way, it lets her know itâs her turn. Here,â Alice beckoned Danny over. "Now hereâs how you milk a cow.â
After the early morning of getting food to the animals, collecting the eggs, and milking the cows, Alice led Danny back down to her cabin. Going inside for a minute, Alice came out with a cup of water for Danny. âIâm gonna check on the oatmeal and cook up a few eggs for us. I want you to walk around the woods down here while I finish up breakfast.â
âAlright,â Danny said. âAnd uuuh, Iâll hear the bell when itâs time to come back?â
Alice chuckled, âHa - yeah, youâll hear it. Remember â donât dawdle when you hear it, come straight back.â
Danny downed the cup of water in one go and nodded, setting down the now empty glass on the table. âWill do.â Danny started walking off and he heard the creak of the cabin door. Just as he was about to exit the clearing, Alicia yelled back, âAnd donât step on my rhubarb!â
Danny walked around a bush, ducking underneath a tree limb, âOk!â and almost ran into a large leafed plant. He tilted his head. Squinted.Â
âI donât actually know what rhubarb looks like,â he thought. Danny shrugged and moved around it anyway. Walking further into the woods he felt the temperature drop some as shade took over. Standing still, Danny realized how quiet it was. No cars, no honking, no rushing of traffic in the distance. Instead, there was the rustle of leaves and the occasional bird call. He breathed in and out. Quiet, and it smelled like the earth. He looked around. A chipmunk scampered up a far off tree. Danny started picking his way through the bushes, tree roots, and other obstacles as he walked further in.
Danny looked back, and not seeing anyone, did his best to walk in a circle with Aliciaâs cabin in the center. He almost tripped a few times, before remembering that he could use his intangibility to easily get through the plants without crushing any. âProblem solved. I canât step on anything if I do this.â Without having to pick his way in between and around foliage, Dannyâs pace picked up as he walked the area. Coming up to what he assumed was near the back side of the cabin, Danny heard a sharp piercing bell echo around. Danny jumped. It was much louder than he thought it would be, especially through the trees. He started walking back, and spied Will coming in and out of view. Danny had gone farther than he thought and hurried up.  Just before he popped out of the trees, he dropped his intangibility and walked out behind Will onto the dirt path. âHey Will!â Danny greeted.
Will whipped his head around, âOh! Geee-zuuus kid. Whereâd you come from?â
Danny came up alongside Will, âthe woods. Alice showed me around the animals this morning, then had me walk around for a bit.â
Will nodded. âMakes sense. You see her rhubarb patch?â
Danny grimaced, âUuuh maybe?â
âYou donât know what they look like, do ya?â
Danny shook his head, âNot really.â After a moment of hesitation, Danny asked, âwhat do they look like?â
âOh well, youâll know it when you see it. Got these big leafs on them. Actually, sheâs started a new patch of them in her actual garden. Not hard to spot, thereâs about 6 of them? Started a year or two back to grow them in a different spot. Real finicky things, they donât like it down here, but I suppose Alicia likes âem well enough that she takes the time to baby the things. Me personally, I donât like âem all that much, wouldnât bother putting in thaâ much effort.â Popping out of the trees, Will waved over to Alicia, getting her attention to let them know they had arrived.
Alicia looked over, âGood â kid came back with ya. Iâll finish hanging this line and then Iâll get food out.â She turned back to the laundry.
Will nodded, âunderstood maâam.â He looked over and down at Danny, âWe best wash our hands and start setting out dishes then.â
Getting the table set up with a small plate, bowl, and spoon for each of them, Danny grabbed the pot of oatmeal, while Will grabbed the scrambled eggs. They got them set down in time for Alicia to round the corner from the back. âAah, thank you kindly boys. Wasnât expecting ya both to set up, but Iâm grateful.â Sitting down, she started dishing out a ladle of oatmeal for everyone and Will pushed off some eggs on each plate. Danny waited a moment for Will and Alicia to settle down and then started eating.
After breakfast, Alice once again shooed Will off to work and had Danny help her wash and put away the dishes. Putting the towel back on the oven handle, Alice turned to her nephew. âWell. Weâve got a long day ahead of us.â She glanced around. âYa bring a water bottle with ya or anything?â
Danny furrowed his eyebrows, âUh no.â He flushed, âI forgot to grab one when packing.â
Alicia huffed, bending down to open a lower cabinet, and rummaged around before pulling out a spare canteen. Standing up, she unscrewed the lid and looked down into it with one eye closed. âDonât think thereâs dust or nothing in there. Should work fine for ya.â She passed it off to Danny and started walking out the door. âGet it filled and Iâll see ya outside. If you need to pee, nowâs the time to do it.â She walked out and left Danny in the cabin. Looking around, he didnât see anywhere other than the sink to fill up the water. Shrugging, he got it filled up from the sink, then quickly went to the bathroom. Looping the water bottle strap around himself, he left the cabin. Making sure to latch it closed, he walked towards Alicia who had put on a wide brimmed hat and they started up the slope together.
âSoooo,â Danny said. âWhatâre we doing today?â
Alicia chuckled, âyouâll see. I always found it easier myself to see what someone was talking about than to just listen to someone blabber on.â
They headed back up to the animals. Walking towards the barn, Danny squinted his eyes at the change in light as they reentered. He put a hand to his mouth in an attempt to stifle a cough. Alice looked over at him, eyes crinkling. âFirst order of business, mucking out the stalls. Iâll do the first one, then youâll take over, so make sure youâre watching closely.â Danny wrinkled his nose as he took his hand away and watched Alicia roll up a wheel barrow from the side. She picked up a pitchfork, and as she speared the poop, started talking.
âYouâre probably familiar with the poop part of this. You want to get out all the large patties, and then go back and clean up the pissed sections.â Alicia grunted as she lifted a large chunk into the wheelbarrow. âIt ainât tricky, but sometimes the animals like to cover the patches, so you gotta make sure that you get all the spots. We want them to have clean stalls when we bring them back in this evening. Specially the cows, donât want them to get infections or nothing.â Alicia looked over at Danny who was looking up into the loft.
âHey!â she called, and Danny dropped his head down to look at her. âYou got that?â
âYes, Aunt Alice,â Danny rubbed the back of his neck.Â
Alicia narrowed her eyes at him, then continued mucking out the stall. When she finished, she handed the necessary tools over. âYour turn kid.â
Danny flushed as he grabbed at the pitchfork, âUh yes.â He looked around before facing his aunt. âWhat am I doing?â
Alicia stared him down. âThe next stall, boy. Get to it.â
Danny gulped and walked to the stall next to the one Alice finished. âSo I just-â and he mimed stabbing a poop patty.
Alicia raised an eyebrow and stared Danny down.
Turning back around, he prodded the pile. Standing there a moment, he shifted his stance and jerked the tines into the pile. He wiggled it in a little further. Glancing over at the wheelbarrow, he started to crouch a little, bracing against his leg, and tried to leverage the pile up. The pitchfork shook a little and Danny shifted a foot back to steady himself. He shuffled around and clumsily wiggleded the poop off and into the wheelbarrow. He looked up at Alicia. Alicia looked back into the stall then back at Danny. Figuring that was as good of a âgo aheadâ as he was going to get, he turned back into the stall and continued. Alicia came to stand by the stall entrance and give the occasional tip as Danny rooted around looking around for spots to clean up. Danny groaned as he finished the last spot. Rubbing his arm, he turned toward Alicia.
As he opened his mouth, Alicia cut him off, âOn to the next.â
Danny shut his mouth, glowering a little, and stepped over to the next stall in line. By the time he finished with that one, Alicia had come back with additional stall bedding, spreading it out and filling in the bare spots. Danny leaned against the stall divider and opened up his bottle, taking a gulp of water. It dribbled down his chin and he wiped it off. He hung his arms over the divider as he watched Alicia. Her movements were smooth and practiced, and she was methodical, poking around and moving material, building it up in spots and thinning it out in others. Alicia stepped back, shovel planted by her side. She glanced over at Danny, not surprised to see him watching.Â
âAny questions?â
Danny shook his head.
âNo? Well, Iâll leave you to the rest then,â and grinned at him, before leaning the shovel to the side and walking out of the barn.
Danny sighed and dropped his head for a moment. It wasnât hard to get the gist of what he had to do, but all of them? It felt like he spent an hour just cleaning out the two he did already. Not looking forward to the rest of the day, Danny pushed off the wall to continue.
At some point, Danny noticed something watching him from the barn door. His shoulders tensed as he turned around. The shape was grounded, solid in a way that most ghosts couldnât replicate, and Danny felt his shoulders relax some. Squinting against the bright light pouring in, he made out a fuzziness to whatever it was.  As his eyes adjusted enough to see more, Danny smiled. It was a large dog, light in color except for the face and ears where the fur darkened. Just as he was about to take a step to walk over, a low bark echoed throughout the barn. Danny stopped. The dog stood up but otherwise didnât move, keeping eyes on him.Â
âHey,â Danny said. âAunt Alice said your name was Skip?â
The dog lowered its head down, staring down Danny.
Hearing footsteps coming from outside, Danny looked up. Alice came to the entrance by Skipâs side. âSit,â she said. Turning to Danny, âcan you turn away from Skip a little?âÂ
Crouching down, she talked to Skip for a moment, before standing up and walking towards Danny. âAlright, this is Danny.â Coming to a stop near Danny, she clapped a hand on his shoulder. âHeâs going to be staying with us a while Skip.â
Skip stood up, turned away, and walked off. Alice faced Danny. âWell, that was Skip. He isnât the most friendly to strangers, but heâll get used to you being around eventually. Not that he hangs around us all that often. Skip spends a lot of time with the chickens, sometimes the cows or pigs depending. And you,â Alicia shook a finger at him, âwill be out with the crops. Shouldnât run into any problems with Skip, just donât startle him.â
Dannyâs face fell, âGot it.âÂ
Alice looked around. âSo, you about finished in here?â
Danny ducked his head, âeeh about that.â
Alicia sighed, âOk. Well, once you get done with this, come find me. Iâll be around, but if you canât find me, just give a shout.â She walked back out of the barn.
Danny sighed, hopes of having a dog crushed once again, and got back to work.
_____
Putting the tools back where Alicia grabbed them from, Danny walked out of the barn. Stepping out of the shade, his hand flew up to shade his eyes from the sudden sun. Glancing around, he didnât see Alicia. The woods on one side, chicken area in front, barn behind, and fields on his left. Dannyâs arms were aching, and he turned toward the woods.Â
Walking through them for a while, Danny found a downed tree and sat down on it. Head turned up to the dappled sunlight, arms stretched back, legs thrown out in front of him, he breathed deeply. He slowly built up energy in his chest, before directing the collected ectoplasm out from his fingers, through the log, and into the surrounding area. Nothing ectoplasmic echoed back through the connection and Danny slowed pulled it back, collecting and dispersing it back into himself. Once confirming there were no ghosts out there, he fully settled his weight down onto his hands.Â
He ignored the guilt building a home in his stomach and stayed for a few minutes, letting the sun soak into his being. Danny was starting to get warm, bordering on hot - a foreign feeling ever since his ice core fully formed. His eyelids fluttered closed and a soft breeze blew through, taking the edge of the heat off. Danny could feel his heart slowing, mind growing fuzzy, and then he toppled back off the log. His back hit the ground and the air escaped his lungs. Wheezing softly, he stayed there for a moment.  Gathering breath back in his lungs, he tried to roll himself over. Picking himself up, Danny did his best to brush the dirt and leaves off his backside. Turning his attention back where he came from, he stomped his way to the farm.
Coming back up to the path around the farm, Danny spied Alicia coming up to the barn. He started jogging faster before deciding to turn invisible and fly into the barn. Setting down in a shaded corner, Danny turned visible and walked to the open doors. Looking around behind him, he double checked that everything looked alright and walked out.Â
Alicia was almost to the barn doors, looking back at the chickens, when Danny popped out. âHey!â Danny called. Alicia turned around to look at Danny before sending one last glance back. Waiting for Alicia to get to the barn, Danny rocked back and forth on his heels. His arms didnât ache as much as when he first finished, but he could still feel the shaky weakness in them. Danny flashed a smile at her as she got to him.
âSo, how are you feeling? Up to walking through the fields with me?â
Danny grimaced before he could stop himself.Â
Alicia looked at him, âIâll take that as a yes.â She started walking away.
âUh.â Danny started. Alicia stopped. âI â uh â what do I do with the, uuh, poop. In the wheelbarrow?â
Alicia sighed before changing directions, walking back up and into the barn. âIâll show ya. Youâre gonna dump it in a pile out back. We let it sit and age a while before using it. Not the most glamorous, but it does the job.âÂ
Danny followed her in and took up the handles on the wheelbarrow. Alicia led him out back, through the gated fence, and to a pile of poop. Danny wrinkled his nose. It didnât smell as bad as he thought, but it wasnât pleasant either. He watched Alicia pick up a shovel that was leaning against a tree nearby, and she scooped the poop out of the small wheelbarrow and onto the pile. In a minute she was done and set the shovel back down.
âAs I said, not hard. Get that wheelbarrow back where I grabbed it from this morning and catch up to me. Weâve got a lot to do today.â
Danny hurried to comply and jogged to get back to Alicia who was halfway to the fields.
âSooo,â Danny stretched out the syllable, âwhatâre we doing anyways? Like the plants are all planted and stuff, right?â
Alicia scoffed at him and continued walking out to the fields. Coming up to a large field of corn, she sharply turned left and kept walking alongside it.
Danny hopped a little on one leg to change direction and catch up. After a few minutes of following Alicia and looking around the area â primarily at the woods in the distance, watching a bird fly up and overhead, and trying to find some shapes in the clouds â Danny sighed. He looked over at Alicia. Tried to find another bird to watch. Looked back down. Then further down at his feet. Kicked a stray rock, causing a small dust cloud to rise up. Alicia huffed. Danny paused for a moment. Started swinging his arms back and forth. Stopped. Started humming. Stopped. Shifted his weight on every step so he bobbed and swayed along more than walked. Stopped that. Looked back up at the clouds. He could feel the sun warming the back of his neck as they went.
Alicia glanced over at him, causing Dannyâs extraneous movements to still. His shoulders lifted and he ducked his head down. After another moment Alicia put her hands in her pockets. Sighed. âIf Will wasnât using the tractor to go around the farm today I wouldâve taken you around in it.â She leaned over to examine some of the corn stalks they passed by. Straightening back up Alicia said to Danny, âThereâs still a lot to do on the farm. We may not be primarily livestock, but crops also require a fair bit of work. We have to make sure theyâre getting enough water, fertilize from time to time, spray for bugs and other diseases, weeding of course, making sure we donât see signs of problems on the plants themselves, taking care of tractor maintenance â among other daily tasks. Youâll be out in the fields mostly. Iâll show you what needs done these first few days and then youâll be sent off to do those tasks. Donât worry, Iâll let you know what to focus on, but,â Alicia shrugged, âa lot of it comes down to watching and learning the first few days.â
âOh.â Danny said. âUh, so what kinds of plants do you grow here?â He scratched his warm neck.
Alice lifted up her hat before setting it back down, âWell, weâre a bit unusual â mostly growing feed for the livestock farms around here. Remember when you and Jazz jumped into town last year from Air Grits?â
Danny nodded, âYeah, that was weird; drove in this time though.â
Alice lifted her eyebrows for a moment, âYep. Bit of a hassle to drive into town though?â
Danny looked away, âUuuh yea, the roads were kind of bumpy?â
Letting out a loud barking laugh, Alice said, âThatâs one way to put it. The road up here has a lot of sections through the woods too. People here donât drive from town to town all that often. Makes us pretty secluded, and since there's not a lot of traffic it doesnât make much sense to put money aside to pave a more direct route in. Easier to just jump in from a plane for the most part. Unless you live close that is.â
âI guess. But what does that have to do with your farm?â Danny wrinkled his noise as a breeze briefly brought the smell of manure his way.
âMmm,â Alicia started. âWell, animals need a lot of food, and the harder it is to get it brought in, the more expensive it is. Growing up, your ma and me saw how the farmers struggled with the prices. When I grew up, I decided to shift the family farm to silage to help with the demand.   You wonât see a lot of farms like mine, most of the food is grown outside of our region here or in other states entirely.â She paused. âItâs also a hell of a lot more trouble to get it to all work out if Iâm honest. Thereâs a reason crops arenât grown in these parts.â
Danny nodded, looking back at the trees they passed by.
âTo answer your original question, we got a field we plant cover crops in. Depending on what weâve got, Iâll send the cows and pigs out there during the days. You wonât spend a lot of time there. Then weâve got this corn that weâre passing. Unlike the corn we eat, this gets left to dry out after it gets done growing.â
Danny looked over the field, eyebrows pinched together. âCorn?â
âYessir, this is a corn field weâre walking by. I guess for a city boy like you, itâll be easier to tell in a few weeks. These here are still growing their ears. Weâve got some fields we planted earlier â they got their ears and silk already. Youâll see them tomorrow probably.â
âWhy?â Danny interjected, âWhy did you plant them like that?â
âWell,â Alice starts, âOh, weâre coming up to the wheat here,â and pointed forward to the next field. âWe stagger our fields like that, so we stagger what time theyâre ready to harvest. It doesnât make sense to flood the ranchers around here with a bunch of feed all at once, or to hafta store a bunch of it. Arkansas up here in the north is a little interesting. I started doing that a couple years back, and itâs been alright. More work on my and Willâs end, but,â Alice shrugged.
Danny looked up at her, then tried standing on his tip toes as he walked. He couldnât see past the tops of the corn stalks and stumbled over an uneven patch on the ground. Righting himself, he glanced back up at his aunt. âSo youâve got corn and wheat, anything else?â
Alice looked down at him briefly, âSometimes weâll do soybeans, sometimes sorghum. Depends. Nothing youâll have to worry about either way. I think weâll keep ya working on the wheat and corn this summer.â Alicia looked at him from the corner of her eye. âSpeaking of, you drive yet?â
Danny choked on some spit, âSorry?â He cleared his throat, âIâm still a few months shy of being able to get my permit. Eeeer,â Danny looked up her, âWhy?â
âAaah,â Alice said. More to herself than Danny, she muttered, âNo matter, Iâll have to teach ya regardless.â She looked off in the distance before turning back to Danny. âToday, weâre going to go around the farm. Iâll show ya where are the different sections are and how theyâre organized.â
Danny squirmed, âYou donât have to do that Aunt Alicia, I could walk around by myself. Â I donât want to take you away from your work.â
Alicia narrowed her eyes at him. âYou wonât be. Iâve got stuff to do out in the fields anyway.â
Deflating a little under her gaze he nodded, âOkay.â
Walking out to edge of the farm, Alicia took Danny through a section of wheat, pointing out things to watch out for, checking moisture levels, and more. Danny did his best to pay attention, but kept getting distracted by the wind brushing through the wheat. The plants would bend and rub against one another, creating a raspy sound, like someone walking around. After a sudden gust that caused Danny to jump, Alicia looked up at him. She waited for Danny to settle again, then went back to what she was doing. He could feel his shoulders tense and looked around the tops of the wheat to make sure that there really wasnât anyone around. Danny moved to crouch down next to his aunt. He started to lean off to one side, unbalanced on the ground, and it was only when he put out a hand to brace himself did Danny notice that his hands were balled into fists. He slowly unclenched his left hand, the tension dissipating as he flexed it. Turning back to Alicia, he noticed she had turned to look at him. Danny looked back at her. She raised an eyebrow.
At Dannyâs clueless face, she rolled her eyes. âLook over at the roots by you â do you see anything out of the ordinary?âÂ
Danny ears flushed pink as he turned his head to look around him.Â
The rest of the afternoon passed by quickly, with Alice pulling snack bars from her overall pockets as a short break while they walked through more sections. As they exited a corn field, Danny heard a rumbling in the distance. After a minute or two of walking down the wider path, Alicia angled her head back, listening to something. âSeems Will is driving the tractor back. If he crosses near us, and has the cart hitched up, we can get a ride back.â
Danny desperately hoped that he would see Will. He might have the occasional ghost fight and Sam as a friend, but he wasnât fit. After a day walking around, crouching and standing, his legs were tired, feet aching, and even his arms felt heavy. Danny couldnât wait to get back to his cabin and fall face first onto his bed asleep. His stomach grumbled out. Actually, dinner first, then sleep. Hearing a change in the tractor rumble, Danny looked behind him and saw the tractor turn down their row. Danny waved at Will, and Alicia turned around. Ushering Danny to the side of the path, they let Will come to a stop, before closing the distance.
Grinning over at them, Will opened the door and told Danny, âYou look dead on ya feet, kid. Ready to get back?â
âYes please,â Danny begged.
âAlright, then climb in.â Will closed the door.
Danny gave a little wave and followed Alicia to the back, climbing up into the cart hitched up.
As Will got closer to the upper cabins, he let Alicia and Danny off before he went off to park the tractor and finish up some tasks.
âWell,â Alicia said, stretching out her back, âIâve got some stuff to get in order before dinner. If you want to call home, Iâve got a landline down in my house. Thereâs not enough time to take a nap or anything, not that Iâd recommend it anyway. Or you could always take another look in the barn, see if thereâs anything to muck out before the animals bed down for the night.
âOk,â Danny said. Alicia quickly turned and made her way down to the lower area. Danny stood there for a minute, looking off into the woods, before making his way behind his cabin to the freestanding outhouse.
After, he ambled to his cabin. Throwing open the door, he walked over to his bed. He flopped down on top of it, a leg and arm hanging over the edge. Danny wasnât sure how much time he actually had before dinner, but he just wanted to be horizontal for a while. His body settled down, weighing into the mattress as he tried to stop thinking. After a while, his face got tired of being smashed into the sheets and Danny turned his head to the side, examining the little cabin. The sunlight coming in through the windows was yellow orange and muted. He watched the dust motes dance down the shaft of light before they disappeared into the shadows by his face. Feeling his body relax further, his turned his attention to his wide open door. The sounds of the woods filtered in, quiet, through it. He heard a deep bark come from Skip from somewhere. The sounds of a fly buzzing around his doorframe before flying off. Birds called back and forth. Danny sighed and felt his eyelids slide shut. He couldnât wait to start counting down the days until he returned to Amity Park.
When Danny could feel his heart slowing down, he quickly opened his eyes and pushed himself up. The sudden shift started his heart beating rapidly. Despite wanting to sleep so badly after this day, Danny did not want to miss dinner and he had a sinking feeling that his aunt would not be happy if he didnât show up. Not knowing how much time passed, he got up and left his cabin, making sure the latch clicked shut before he walked down to Aliciaâs cabin. Rubbing his eyes with the back of his hands, he made his way down the slope. He didnât call last night, despite promising his family he would. Danny was relatively assured that his mom wouldâve called Alice anyway. More than that, Danny wanted to check in with Sam and Tucker. As enthusiastic as his parents could be about chasing down ghosts, they were hardly reliable when it came to dealing with the ghosts in town.
He heard a steady clacking as he approached Aliceâs door, and opening it, he found her in the kitchen cutting up ingredients.Â
Danny looked around, then cleared his throat. After a moment, Alice turned around to face Danny. âWhatâs up?â
âUuh, Iâd like to use the phone. If thereâs still time before dinner?â
Alice gave one short nod then gestured, curving her hand around to point. âPhone is on the other side of this wall, itâs a mounted one. You can pull up a chair if you want. I reckon you have enough time for a call.â
âOr two, if youâve got a special someone,â she tacked on, laughing when Danny spluttered half formed words at her. âAah just kidding kid,â Alice said as she turned back around.
Danny let out a wheezy, âthanks,â before walking to the other side of the wall. He found the aged yellow phone on the other side easily enough. Pausing in front of it, he took a deep breath, before lifting up his hand to the receiver. His hand rested there for a moment before he tightened his fingers and pulled the phone off, dialing the FentonWorks business number with his other hand. Bringing the phone up to his ear, he shifted his weight, an arm coming around to wrap around himself.Â
Briing brriiiing.
âŠ.
Briing Brriiing.
âŠ.
Bri â âHello?â A female voice answered. âYouâve reached the FentonWorks business. If itâs about ghosts or specters, weâre here to help. What can we do for you today?â
Danny let out a breath at his momâs practiced spiel. âHey, Mom.â
A gasp crackled through the landline, âOh Danny!â she said in surprise. âOh, honey, why didnât you call the house number?â
Danny looked up at a corner of the cabin. âThey all end up at the same place though?â
âHoney, but itâs different phones that ring â you know that. And Iâm not sure your father deleted off old voicemails from this number, so if we werenât here to catch your phone call you wouldnât have been able to leave a message!â
âThatâs what I was hoping for,â Danny mumbled under his breath.
âWhat was that? Danny, you have to ââ
âIS THAT OUR DANNY BOY?! HOW IS HE? ENJOYING LIFE WITH YOUR OLD BAT OF AN SISTER?â Jackâs booming voice cut through, clear enough to understand even as it crackled the closer he got to the phone.
Danny heard a rustling and a light smack on the other side. âJack darling, my sister is not an old bat,â she admonished. âBut yes, itâs Danny.â A pause. âDanny can you hold on a moment?  Iâm going to put you on speaker.â
Dannyâs hand crept up to the coiled cord connecting the phone to the base.
A couple of clicks, then â âOh Danny, can you hear us?â
And a competing âStill there Danny?â coming through at the same time.
Danny winced as the phone screeched. âYeah,â his fingers twisted around the cord, âIâm still here.â
âOh wonderful,â his mom said, âhow are you settling in?â
âMeet any farm animals yet?â his dad asked. A breath, then an excited âMeet any country ghosts?â
Danny sighed, his fingers twisting up more in the cord. âIâm doing fine. Aunt Alice explained where everything is, and I pretty much fell asleep after moving my clothes out of the suitcase. Sorry I didnât end up calling you last night.â
âThatâs fine sweetie, your aunt gave us a short call last night to let us know you made it there alright.â
Danny hummed, hunch confirmed. Hearing his dad take a breath in, Danny quickly tacked on, âand I havenât seen any ghosts, Dad. Met some cows, pigs, chickens, and the farm dog though.â
âAnd how is Skip doing?â Maddie asked.
Dannyâs face scrunched up, âFine? I guess? He didnât like that I showed up today, just kind of stared at me for a bit before walking off.â
Maddie laughed. âThat sounds like him. Heâs nice enough when he warms up to you. But no, he isnât too fond of strangers. Just give it time Danny.â
Danny huffed.
âYes, yes, but I think heâll be back before then Maddie,â Jack replied.
âOh, youâre absolutely right dear. How are ââ Danny heard distant footsteps.
âIs that Danny?â his sisterâs voice called out in the distance, a whisper coming through the phone.
âYES, COME HERE JAZZ, SAY HI!â his dad yelled.
Danny untwisted his fingers from the cord before starting to wrap them up again. âHi Jazz,â he said.
âOooh! Hi Danny! How are you doing!?â
âAlright,â he said. âAunt Alice was finishing dinner. I just wanted to check in with you guys before then.â
âOk Danny. Well, thank you for that. We donât want to keep you too long then.â Jazzâs voice turned sharp, âDo we?â
âNo! No, we donât Jazzy pants! Donât forget to call later! We miss you Danny boy! Donât work yourself too hard, but make sure you listen to your ba-â Jack cleared his throat, âyour aunt.â
âI suppose we should let you go then Danny. Thank you for calling us. As nice as it was to know you were there safe, itâs even better hearing your voice. We miss you sweetie, love you!â Maddie said.
A twin chorus of âLove youâs sounded off after her.
âLove you guys,â Danny said. He clicked the phone back on. Sighing, he pulled it back off after a minute. Dialing a different number, he waited for the signal to connect. Danny started counting, but before he could reach five, he heard it connect.
âSam?â Danny said.
A gasp, âDanny? Oh, I didnât know youâd be able to call so soon!â
Danny smiled. He heard a small voice come through, âIs that Danny?â After a moment, a much louder, âHey dude! How are you? Is it smelly there? Did you get a signal with my Charlotte?â
âHey Tucker, Sam. Uuh, no Tucker, your PDA didnât connect to anything. Other than that, itâs fine. I was outside, like, all day today. My legs feely like jelly,â he grouched.
Sam clicked her tongue, âThis is why you, and Tucker, should join me when I exercise!â
âYou can NOT convince me to join your exercise regime,â Tucker said.
âOne day,â Sam vowed, âone day youâll join me, Tucker Foley.â
Danny laughed. âAlright, Iâm glad I reached both of you. Iâve got some questions about our,â Danny paused for a moment, âcity guests?â
âGuests?â Tucker said. âWhat do you â oof.â
âGhosts, Tucker, keep up,â Sam hissed.
âGot it, there was no need to elbow me though.â
Danny could imagine Tucker melodramatically massaging his side as Sam rolled her eyes at him. âSo?â he prompted. âAnything to worry about?â
Tucker sighed, âdude itâs been dead around here, Poindexter was walking around campus yesterday, the Box Ghost was seen flying around the warehouses, and then today Vaaaal â the Red Huntress was chasing Skulker.â
âSkulker?â Danny snapped.
âYeah, no need to get your pants twisted Danny,â Sam said, âit was Skulker out of his suit of all things. No clue why he was wandering around like that.â
âIt was weird seeing his naked, blobby ass Danny!â
âEeeew, Tucker!â
âWhat?â
âGross! Anyway, Danny, despite having so many sightings the past few days, there havenât been many problems. Even your parents have kept the GAV destruction to a minimum. Your dad only dented a stop sign pole and your mom only scorched some leaves while blasting at the Box Ghost.â
âHuh,â Danny said, âthatâs good. I guess?â
âRelax, dude, if any problems pop up, Sam and me have got this. Along with Valerie.  We wonât let anything too bad happen. And hey! If all else fails, then your parents are always around.â
Danny snorted, âthanks, I feel so much better now.â
Sam sighed, âseriously though Danny, take it easy. You are nowhere near Amity right now, so itâs no use worrying about it. We have it covered and before you know it, youâll be back.â
âYeah, alright,â Danny said, fingers twisting in the cord again. âOkay. Thatâs â thanks for letting me know.â
âAre you okay?â Tucker asked.
Danny sighed into the receiver. âYeah.â Silence stretched out between the two sides of the call. Danny heard Alicia shuffle out of the cabin and down the steps.
âYeah, Iâm alright,â Danny said. âIâm just.  UUuugh.  I donât understand why my parents thought I needed to get away from Amity Park. And my sister didnât help, butting in with all these psychology studies about stressed teenagers, and environments, and whatnot. Can you believe that fink convinced my parents to send me away for basically my entire break!?! I already missed half of summer being in school, and now Iâm out in the middle of nowhere? Itâs stupid. I donât even know why they thought the ghosts attacks were putting me on edge in the first place! I donât even stick around for the ghost fights as Fenton because Iâm so busy running off to fight them myself,â Danny hissed. He heard a stair creak. He sighed, letting the tension bleed out of him. âAnyway, how are you guys? Enjoying your summer?â
Sam and Tucker started talking about how excited they were for a new movie that was coming out next week and Danny smiled softly, listening to their back and forth. Hearing someone clear their throat behind him, he turned around, and lowered the phone away from his ear.
âDinnerâs gonna be done soon kiddo,â Alice said.
âThanks,â Danny mouthed.
Finding a short break in the conversation, Danny interrupted whatever retort was coming next, âHey, guys. Iâm glad I could catch both of you, but I got to go. Iâll talk to you both later?â He untangled his fingers from the cord.
âOh,â Sam said, âYes, of course. Bye Danny!â
âBye! Talk to you later!â Tucker said.
âBye.â Danny clicked the phone back in place.
Collecting himself, Danny breathed out, plastered a neutral expression onto his face, and turned around to walk outside for dinner.
_______
Danny was in his bed. He was exhausted. His arms ached, his feet were sore, and his eyes were tired.Â
He rolled over. It was dark, likely the middle of the night, and he was groggy, limbs still heavy and heart slow from sleep. So why was he awake? He heard a far off call coming from the direction of the woods. âProbably a wolfâ, he thought. Closing his eyes, Danny settled back down. Or tried to. His skin itched and Danny twisted around to rest on his other side. Scrunched together his eyelids. Moved his feet around. Sighed, then pushed himself up. Slipping on his boots, he opened up the cabin door and stepped outside.Â
Looking around, Danny didnât see anything concerning. He stepped down and walked around the cabin, looking at the sky and the darkness in between the trees.   Danny walked back in the cabin, pulling the door till he heard the latch click, then walked to his bed. Sitting down he took a deep breath, held it, and his eyes glowed green in the dark as he released the breath. Ecto pooled beneath his feet and he pushed it through the ground. He stretched out his consciousness with the ecto, making sure that there was nothing unexpected in the area. The only thing he sensed was a small pool of ectoplasm in the ground, far enough down that it was probably undisturbed by anyone for hundreds of years. Breathing in, he called his ecto back.  Breathed in, then out. Followed the path of his breath through his body as it traveled. In through the nose, down to his lungs, inflating, then back up and out. Once he felt sufficiently centered in his body again, Danny kicked off his boots and laid back down. Sleep claimed him quickly once more.
Sun hitting Dannyâs face woke him up. Throwing an arm over his eyes, Danny groaned. He still felt sore from the day before, tired from the ghosts fights prior to coming to his auntâs, and annoyed from being sent in the first place. In short, Danny was grumpy. The sharp rap on his door a couple minutes later did not help.
âUp and at âem Danny.â
âIâm up!â he called back.
Hearing footsteps recede, Danny groaned. Loudly. Maybe he could convince his parents to pick him up? Call this summer trip short? Danny started plotting ways to get back home, with his parentsâ permission, as he followed Alicia back to the chickens, then off to the barn.
Neither spoke to one another, Danny doing his best to help Alice. Before long, she had him mucking out the stalls again as she walked off to attend to other chores. As Alice said, it wasnât tricky and the repetition had Danny zoning out, daydreaming about being back in Amity.Â
A short step back, and Danny tripped over a trough. Hitting the ground hard, he felt something squish against his backside. Danny sighed. He closed his eyes, gathered some motivation, then swung his legs over the trough and fully onto the ground. Standing up, he twisted around to see the cow pie he landed in. Wrinkling his nose, Danny pushed intangibility through his body to get the crap to drop off his butt and walked out of the way before releasing it. He stood there, feeling the warmth of the sun heating up the open doorway, and looked at the two stalls left to do. Danny was just about to turn around and walk off for a little break, when his momâs chiding voice echoed through his head. Turning back around, he went to finish the job before the food bell rang out.
Later that day, the walkie that Alice had given Danny earlier that day crackled to life. âDANNY! Get the first aid kit from the barn and get out to the field Will was working in. Now.â
Click.
Danny, who had been lounging by the storage barn, darted inside to grab the kit that hung up there, and ran back out. He activated his flight so he lifted just above the ground, and flew most of the distance to the field. When he was close, he dropped back down and ran the rest of the way.
âMmmm fine,â Will slurred out.
âWill Archibald Jacobson donât you dare,â Danny heard Alice hiss out.
He darted around a row to see Will by the woodchipper, Alice holding his arm above his head. âWhat happened?â Danny yelled, dashing the last few yards to them.
Willâs arm was wrapped in his overshirt, blood soaking into the fabric. He had blood on his tank shirt and his pants. Blood dripped down to his neck. His face had an out of focus expression.
Danny set down the first aid kit.
Flipping it open, Alice responded, âdarn idiot got distracted and forgot about the woodchipper next to him.â
âHey!â Will protested. âKid, donât listen to her, I was⊠safe, promâse! Jusâ goâ startled by this green thing â glowing like the sun â ân tripped ân fell is all.â
âDanny, press here,â Alice instructed, ignoring Willâs slurred explanation.
Danny helped Alice wrap up Willâs arm tight. Hauling him to his feet, Alice turned around. âDanny, Iâm going to take him into town. Iâm not sure how deep that cut went, but,â she trailed off, looking at the dopey look on Willâs face.
âGot it, what do you want me to do?â
Hoisting a shoulder over her own, Alice grunted, âhelp me get him there.â
Danny darted under Willâs other side to support him, and they started to walk him back. Will protested the whole way, claiming that he was fit as a fiddle and definitely didnât need to walk into town and that they should check out âthe weird creature in the woods, big, green, and glowing, canât miss itâ. Danny extended some of his flight powers to Will, lightening the load on him and Alice.  They walked Will past Aliceâs cabin, through a short stretch of woods, and into town. Will finally quieted down, grumbling instead of loudly complaining, and they made it into the small clinic.
âPatty!â Alice called out.Â
A middle aged woman came out from the back door, âwhatâs â oh, get him into the back room.â She propped the door open, and let them pass her, pointing them to one of the two examination rooms. Shooing Alice and Danny back out once they set him down, Patty got to work.
Walking back out to waiting room, Danny felt sick to his stomach. He was supposed to have gone to help Will out that afternoon, but decided to take his time and took a break near the chickens instead. âIs he going to be ok, Aunt Alice?â
âProbably,â Alice said, but the furrows between her eyebrows told a different story. âWell, nothing much to do in the meantime. You been through town yet?â
Danny blinked at the sudden shift, âuh, no, not yet.â
âThen Iâll show you around real quick while weâre here, make the most of this.â
Alice took Danny around, which consisted of walking him up and down Mainline and Riverway, the two major streets of the small town. There were only a handful of shops, the clinic, and a gas station.
âThatâs it?â Danny asked as they walked back to the clinic.
âYep,â Alice popped the p.
âItâsâŠ. tiny.â
Sighing, Alice said, âwell yea, most folks around here stay on the farms. You have a few homes down here near town, but most people prefer to move down to the bigger town about 50 miles from here.â
Stepping into the clinic, Danny now noticed the chime that signaled their entrance. They settled down in two of the three seats in the front area.
A few minutes later, Patty walked back out. âWell, Will should be fine. Itâll take a while for his arm to heal up, but heâs still got movement and feeling, so I donât think heâs got any nerve damage.â She smiled at them. âLucky, though, that he didnât lose too much blood. I got him a snack and had him lay down in the meantime. Whatâd he even do? He had fat hanging out of the wound and everything.â
âFool got distracted and the wood chipper was nearby,â Alice grumbled.
âHe tripped into it,â Danny added.
âHmm, well alright. You guys gonna take him back up to the farm?â Patty asked.
Alice uncrossed her arms, placing her hands on her knees. âSuppose so. His familyâs too far away to call to get him today. Iâll see if theyâll come pick him up tomorrow.â She sighed, running a hand through her mullet. âTomorrowâs Saturday, so they probably will.â
âDefinitely lucked out then,â Patty said. She walked back to check on Will.
Waiting for the âall clearâ to take Will back up, Danny stewed in his thoughts. He hadnât exactly done anything outright wrong, but Danny knew that if he had taken his job more seriously, he wouldâve been with Will and maybe he wouldnât have gotten hurt or as badly or â
âStop thinkinâ so loud.â
Danny jumped. The swirl of his thoughts coming to a halt.
âIâm sorry,â Danny whispered.
âWhat for?â
âI ââ Danny paused. âI ââ
âDanny,â Alice cut in. âIt ainât your fault.â
âBut ââ
âNope. Whatever ya think ya did or didnât do, itâs not your fault.â Alice side eyed his hunched, guilty looking form. âStuff like this happens â whether or not anyone else is around. So donât worry too much.â
Danny dropped his head down.
The silence stretched between them. Alice looked out the window, and Danny made a promise to himself to take this summer more seriously.
__________
The next morning, Danny waved Will and his family off as they left down the back road. Heâd be gone for the next couple of weeks to keep him away from the temptation of working. Knowing theyâd have to pick up the slack, Danny and Alice hurried back to work.
_________
A week later, Danny was settling into a routine, getting comfortable around the farm. He was getting quicker at mucking out the stalls, and as such, he had some time to do some laundry. Taking the path down to Aliceâs cabin, he passed under one of the open cabin windows.
â-addie.â
Danny stopped. Was Alicia talking to his mom?
âDanny?â Alicia asked.
Oh, they were talking about him. He stood there, holding his bag of laundry, curious about what his aunt would say.
âNo, heâs doing good work around the farm.â
Danny shuffled a foot around, making circles in the dirt as he listened in.
âYeah Madds, I can see why youâre so fond of him.â Alicia laughed in response to something Maddie said. âThat he is, you raised a good boy.â
Dannyâs eyes widened. Bugs buzzed around in the grass around him.
âMmmm. If he didnât have school to get back to, I wouldnât mind keeping him around,â Danny overheard. Eyes widening, he decided to quickly walk off to the laundry.Â
He hadnât realized that his aunt liked him that much. Even more surprising that sheâd want to keep him on. Danny remembered the start of summer school when his teacher all but groaned at him walking in. Danny had just failed the second half of their class not 2 weeks before. Due to the sudden ghost appearances, Danny hadnât been the most reliable in the last few years. But for someone to recognize his work? And be satisfied with it? Danny felt a warm feeling start in his chest. Maybe it wouldnât be so bad to stay for the rest of the summer.
______
A couple weeks passed from that phone conversation, with Will coming back and slowly starting to pick up more work again.
Danny had, for the first time since he arrived on the farm, a short work day. By the time lunch came around, Danny had finished his list of chores. After getting the confirmation from Alice, he had the whole afternoon to himself. Â
He walked around the farm, ending up at one of the wheat fields. Will and Alice were focused on the corn fields for the day and wouldnât be out this way until later. Standing there amidst the softly swaying strands, Danny watched the sky. The breeze in the air that moved the wheat also pushed the clouds around high above. He decided to take a seat between the golden rows, laying on his back, arm flung behind his head. Staring up at the clouds, he watched them flow across the sky, shifting forms as they traveled. The sun-warmed dirt below him felt like a warm blanket on his back. This close to the ground, it smelled sweet, a little moist and earthy. Danny pulled his cap lower over his face as the warmth settled into his bones. Soon enough, he was lulled off to sleep.
By the time he woke up, the sun had dipped lower in the sky. Sitting up, Danny didnât hear anyone around and got up. As he walked out of the field, Danny raised his eyes, jumping a little at Skip sitting down and watching him from a distance. Danny paused midstep. When Skip didnât make a move, Danny finished walking out of the wheat and onto the dirt path. They stared at one another for a moment. Out of view, one of the pigs grunted. Skip blinked, and his tongue lolled out of his mouth, before he got up to walk to the pig. Danny watched his tail wag as he left. He chuckled softly as he headed off to Aliceâs cabin.Â
After dinner, he stuck around, playing a card game with Alice, Will, and Jasper. Every so often one of the townspeople stopped by to get Aliceâs opinion about something or another and stayed for a meal. When Jasper lost the third game in a row, he called it quits and headed out for the night. Will, Alicia, and Danny played a few more rounds themselves, Will and Danny winning a round each, with the rest of the wins going to Alice. By the time they said their goodnights, the moon was rising. The sky had darkened considerably and the stars were twinkling to life above them.Â
âOh.â Danny breathed, stopping on the cabin porch.
Will looked back, âDanny?â
âThe sky. I ââ he paused. âIâve been falling asleep so quickly I havenât had time to really see it.â
âOh, that all? Itâs pretty neat I guessâŠÂ Well, Iâll head up then, see ya later Danny.â
Eyes never leaving the sky, âNight Will. See ya tomorrow.â He walked down to sit at the table.
The door creaked open, âOh. Danny? Is that you still down here?â
Danny, from the picnic table, confirmed, âYeah.â
âHuh, I thought you and Will left a while ago.â
âHmmhmm. Will did, headed up already.â
âOoook. Well, you need anything?â
âNope.â
âAlright,â Alice stepped down, walking up to the table. Â âWell, itâs getting late. Â Now, Iâm not your mom, but maybe consider heading up yourself soon.â
âOk. Yeah, youâre right.â
ââŠÂ Ya really like those stars huh?â
Danny finally looked down, âYeah.â He grinned, âyou canât see the stars like this in Amity. I mean, you can, itâs not the worst, but itâs just so clear out here!â
Alice chucked, âSure is. Sometimes I forget how nice it is.â
âIf I lived out here, I would never take it for granted. I bet itâs so easy to track the constellations and star movements,â Dannyâs eyes lit up with the possibilities.
âDonât know much about the stars myself but,â she shrugged, âI guess it wouldnât be hard to, no.â
Taking one last look up at the stars, Danny got up, said goodnight to his aunt, and headed up to get ready for bed.
_______
âAnd Danny? Come into my cabin for a moment, your job today is going to be a little different.â
Will frowned, âAaah man, Danny gets to do that?â
âDo what?â Danny asked.
Alicia grinned. âBlackberry picking.â
âYeah, and itâs the best job of the summer,â Will grumbled. âYou better enjoy it kid.â He stood up. âWell, Iâll see you two later,â and he walked up the slope to get back to work.
âBye,â Danny called. Turning to Alicia, âSo what does berry picking mean Iâm doing, exactly?â He looked around, âI havenât noticed any berries around here.â
Alice laughed, âno you wonât. Come inside, I have to show you where youâre going.â
Danny furrowed his eyebrows but followed her into the cabin where some maps of the farm and surrounding area and a large basket sat on the table.
Alice picked up the first map, took a look, then rifled through the pile to find one that had a large circle on it. âAh, here it is,â she placed it on top of the pile and pointed to the circled area. âThis is where youâre headed today.â
Danny leaned in to look over the map. âThat looks like itâs in the woods?â
âYep,â Alicia said, âyouâre going to be taking a little walk today. Iâve got your lunch packed up, all you have to do is fill your canteen, and then head out for the day.â
Danny frowned. âAnd how am I supposed to find them?â
Alice rolled her eyes, âThey arenât hard to spot. Here,â she pointed to a different area of the map, âwe are. Youâre going to head this direction,â she moved her finger up, around a small lake, and to the circle. âItâs pretty easy walking. The pond will keep you on track, though itâs more like a glorified puddle, but whatever. Youâll hear the stream feeding into it, so if you do get lost, just hush up and listen. Youâll pick the berries, put them in this basket, and when itâs full, youâll head back. I scoped out the area last year and this was a fairly big thicket, so even if the animals have gotten to it there should still be plenty left for you.â She looked up at Danny. âGot it?â
Danny worried his lip. âI guess?â He hadnât really explored the surrounding area, but figured if he needed to, he could just fly up and look for the way back easily enough.
âGood. Well, get your basket and water and get going. Iâve got work to get to. See you for dinner kid,â and Alicia walked out the door.
Danny took another look at the map, doing his best to memorize the path. He sighed, picking up the basket, stopping by his cabin quickly to grab his water bottle, and started off to the trees.Â
Walking into the woods, Danny noticed a strap on the basket and quickly put it over his shoulder. The basket bobbed against his butt as he walked, but it was better than having to carry it the whole way. As Danny got further in, the undergrowth increased. Danny activated his intangibility and walked right through. The sun was bouncing through the leaves, casting spots of shadow and light. He heard the birds sitting overhead in the treetops and a beetle buzzed past Dannyâs ear. He made his way to the small lake.
As he got closer, he heard a soft bubbling sound that soon turned into a whoosh. Then the smell of the dirt changed â rich and a little heavy on the tongue. Danny walked through a bush and saw the puddle. If he wasnât intangible, he wouldâve gotten his boots wet.Â
Huh, Danny thought. It really is small.
The pond was only a couple of yards across and looked shallow.
Danny looked to his left and saw the stream that fed into it. Looking around the edge, he couldnât find where the pond emptied. Danny stayed there for moment, comparing what he was seeing to his memory of the map. Once he felt confident in his orientation, he floated up and drifted across the pond. Setting himself down on the other side, he double checked his intangibility was still activated and started walking again. True to Aliceâs word, the walk itself was easy, and Danny took the opportunity to look around at the woods. He spotted a deer in the distance at one point, and what looked like owl nests in some of the branches.Â
As he walked through a particularly dense area of bushes, he noticed some mist by a tree some distance away. Danny squinted at it. It was too warm in the day for there to be mist and, he looked around, it didnât look like there was any water for it to come from either. As he started to walk to it, Danny realized that he hadnât heard any birds in a while. Getting closer, he saw some wispy tendrils float out from the densest part of the mist. He tilted his head. Let some ectoplasm leak into his eyes. The mist suddenly contracted and came together to form a vague squirrel shape. Danny stopped. Followed the smallest tendril down to the earth. A squirrel, blood leaking out from a wound on its leg, was connected to it. Danny looked back up. The ghost followed the motion and looked at Danny. Danny looked back. Blinked. And stepped forward, holding out a hand. The squirrel ghost drifted forward and right before it made contact with Danny, turned to look back at its mortal body.Â
Danny held his breath as he watched one of the ears tufts twitch. The squirrel turned back around and jumped forward to touch Dannyâs palm. As it nestled into his hand, its soft, transparent body started to disperse again. Danny reached for his core and pushed the ectoplasm circulating in his body to his hand. His palm started glowing green before some ectoplasm coated his palm. The squirrel started condensing again, pulsing as it made contact. The ectoplasm flowed off Danny to mix in with the translucent body. The ectoplasm swirled around like bubbles in soda before losing shape and being absorbed. The squirrelâs ghost glowed bright and Danny looked away, closing his eyes.Â
When he no longer saw the light through his eyelids, Danny cracked open one eye, and confirming the bright light was gone, fully opened both eyes. What was once a misty looking squirrel ghost was now a small green blob. As it rotated around, eyes came into view, and opening up, looked at Danny, letting out a small chirrup in greeting. Danny smiled a little. It was cute, if a bit sad knowing where this little blob came from. Danny looked back at the corpse. Then up to the blob. The wispy tendril no longer connecting the two. Danny let his hand drop and the blob stayed floating. Floated closer to Dannyâs face. He could feel his eyes flash green. The blob ghost let out another little chirp and flew around Danny head before settling down on his shoulder, nuzzling up into his chin. Danny laughed at the ticklish sensation and then turned around to continue to the blackberry bushes.
As Danny got to the blackberries, he reached up a hand to the blob ghost. Gently scooping it into his hand, Danny lifted it up and onto the top of one of the bushes. Looking around and not seeing any animals, Danny focused on the bushes. There were a lot of them, and it seemed like the bushes had plenty of berries. Danny could make out at least 5 bushes growing into each other, and possibly more around some trees. He knelt down and picked a blackberry, tossing it into his mouth. As the berry burst open, juices sprayed Dannyâs mouth, and he stifled a cough. He ate it quickly and indulged in a quick cough. Even though it was smaller than the ones they bought from the store, it was noticeably sweeter. Danny smiled and swung his basket off his shoulder. He started carefully plucking berries off, and every time he accidentally squished one, he popped it in his mouth instead of the basket.
At some point the little blob ghost woke up and started darting between the leaves of the berry bushes, occasionally trying to eat one. Danny laughed at its antics, making a little ball of ectoplasm form, and tossed it for the blob to chase.Â
By the time the sun started its afternoon descent, Danny had his basket filled and a happy blob ghost nestled on top of the berries. Over the course of the afternoon, its green color had started disappearing and now it was more wisp than blob again. Danny frowned briefly and started off to the farm.
As Danny got near to the edge of the woods, the little ghost had lost all its color and was now back to a translucent wisp. Before he could give it more ecto, he heard a shout and ran out of the trees. Aunt Alice had dropped a screwdriver on the ground and when she stood back up from grabbing it, she spotted Danny. She waved, walking over to him.
âHey Danny, how was ââ the little ghost darted out from behind Dannyâs back, coming to face to face with Alicia. She frowned. âhow was the trip?â
He pulled the basket forward, âgood, there were plenty of blackberries.â
âAaah good. Any trouble finding them?â She eyed the ghost out of the corner of her eye.
âNope,â Danny paused, and taking a chance, said, âI found this little guy on the way though.â
âOh?â Alice raised an eyebrow.
âYeah.â Danny rubbed the back of his neck. âYou can see it, right?â
Aliceâs frown lightened. âYes.â Sounding choked up, she cleared her throat. âYes, I can. I didnât realize - well, nevermind.â She looked at the ghost, nuzzling into Dannyâs hair, mussing it up. âI donât know why itâs acting so friendly, but you best not encourage it. The less attention you give it, the sooner itâll pass on.â
Dannyâs ears flushed red, âpass on?â he asked.
âChiiiirup?â said the wispy ghost.
Alice leveled a glare at it. âAbsolutely not.â
Dannyâs mouth fell open. âWait.  What? Can you understand it?â
âSure can. Ever since I was little,â Alice answered.
âDoes Mom know you can see them? And understand them?â
Alice squinted at him, âSure does, was the first person I told as a kid. Real supportive of it all.â
Danny stood there for a moment. âMom knows? And she didnât have you help her with the â the ghost stuff?â
âNope. I was the reason she got into ghosts in the first place, but,â Alice shrugged. âI didnât want anything to do with them. After I got back from the big city, I just wanted to live a quiet life and Maddie respected that.â
âOh.â Danny looked between the ghost now on his arm and Alice. âReally?â
âYep.â
The ghost floated between the two, circling Alice once before resting back on Danny.
âWell, looks like we should go deal with those blackberries.â
As Danny and Alice finished sorting the blackberries into different containers, Will walked up to them. âHey! Oh, Dannyâs back already?â
Alicia snorted at him, âDonât act surprised.â
Will held up his hands, âAaah you got me. I saw you two meet up earlier.â He quickly reached down to pop one in his mouth.
Alicia smacked his shoulder. The ghost flew up and chittered angrily in his face.
Will smiled, showing off his berry splattered teeth, completely unrepentant. Chuckling, he walked off.
Danny looked at the ghost, now flying over the piles of blackberries, and then up at Alice. âWill didnât react at all.â
Alice grunted, âHmm.â
âAre we the only ones who can see this little guy?â
âFar as I can tell, kid.â
âOh.â Danny looked off into the tree line. âAunt Alice, what did you mean when you said itâd pass on?âÂ
âWell, exactly what I said. Little bugger died, and whatever was left will pass on to whateverâs next. Why? Whatâd you think I meant?â
Danny shrugged. âI guess Iâm just not used to ghosts passing on? Most of the ones I meet stick around and cause trouble.â
âAh. Madds has mentioned something like that. Have they caused you any trouble?â Alice probed.
Danny grimaced. âI guess you could say that. A lot of ghosts cause trouble around the high school.â
Alice nodded, âI can see how thatâd be distracting.â Alice watched a bee buzz around the table. The wispy ghost chased after it.
âYeah, most of them like to cause problems on purpose, but sometimes thereâs the little blobs that hang around and theyâre kind of cute, like a stray cat. They do make it hard to concentrate if itâs dark though.â
âWhat do ya mean?â
Danny looked back at his aunt. âCause, they, you know, glow green?â
âGreen? Huh. None of the ghosts round here glow green. I guess Will did mention something similar. And I remember Maddie showing me a vial of glowing green stuff once. Made me feel kind of sick.â
âOh, that vial was probably ectoplasm,â Danny said.
âEc-toe-plasm?â Alice sounded out.
âYeah,â Danny said. âItâs the glowing green stuff that ghosts are made up of.â
âReally?â Alice sounded unimpressed.
âHmmhmm,â Danny hummed. âYou can kind of see their insides if they get hit with an ectoblast. Itâs all gooey looking, like a really thick liquid. Their bodies kind of flow back in to fill the hole.â
Alice shook her head. âI donât know about all that. All the ghosts Iâve seen are just misty lookinâ and real hard to see if the sun shines through them. Well, thatâs only if I catch them. As I said, they donât usually stick around too long.â
âInteresting.â
Alice shrugged, âI suppose. Madds had a theory that ghosts only form when the living arenât prepared to die or something.â She laughed. âNot that I think most things around here have unfinished business. Everyone has a time and place, you know? A rabbit lives its life knowing itâll be eaten and all that.â
âI guess.â Danny thought for a moment. âI think a lot of the ghosts I know didnât even think death was a possibility.â
The little ghost zipped under the table and around their feet.
âPerhaps.â
In the time it took for Alice and Danny to finish with the blackberries and prepare dinner, the ghost kept fading bit by bit. Once Danny rang the dinner bell, the little ghost was completely gone. Danny tried not to miss it, knowing it was better that the little guy passed on, rather than hang around the ecto deprived area.
____
After dishes, Alice sat Danny down. âHow you doing kid?â
âFine?â Danny said, voice lilting up like a question.
âYou sure? You looked rather, uh, sad about that little ghost disappearing on us.â
Danny shrugged, âhmm, I guess Iâm not used to it.â
âIt?â
âYeah, Iâm not used to things justâŠ. Ending. I guess.â
âOh, is that it?â
Danny looked off to the setting sun.
âYou know, I can sympathize. Used to be a time when I thought that I could fix anything.â
Danny looked back at her. âWhat do you mean?â
âWell, you know Iâm divorced right?â
âSure, Mom visited you on the anniversary for that party last year.â
âRight, well I know it was a big celebration, but when it first happened, I was lost. I mean, I knew that it was coming. He didnât like the farm, fell in love with someone who wanted the city life with him. A real yuppie. And yet, when I sat in the lawyerâs office, papers in front of me, there was this emptiness that seemed to take me over. We both wanted our relationship to end, happy for it even, but, that didnât make it easier to deal with. Waking up and knowing that there wasnât going to be someone by my side? That there was no fixing it, no going back?  Itâs hard to accept that some things just canât be changed. Donât like talking about that even now.â
Dannyâs mind flashed briefly to Dan. His shoulders raised. âI guess. How did you deal with it?â
Alice hummed. âThe divorce? Time, I suppose. I had the support of the community here. With death?â She shrugged. âI grew up. At some point you just realize that some things have to happen and you canât change it, so you have to accept it.â
Danny huffed out air. âYeah, alright.â The variation of the age old excuse of âwhen youâre olderâ rang hollow in him.
A hand landed on his shoulder. He turned back to his aunt. âDanny. I mean it. Some things just need the perspective that time brings. Iâm still not sure my sister has quite grasped that.â She smiled. âNo fault to her; understanding comes in itsâ own time. Worrying about it wonât help.â
Danny watched the last of the light chase the sun down with his aunt beside him, before standing and heading to his cabin to think.
An hour later, he stood up from his bed and walked down to his auntâs cabin. By now, the air was cool against his skin. The cicadas were out, filling the air with a loud buzz. Danny stopped halfway down the path, trying to collect himself. As he stared up at the trees, his eyes burned. Rubbing them harshly, he breathed in, the smell of dirt and the green leaves settling into his lungs. He stayed there for a moment, collecting the resolve that started to slip away. He let out some ectoplasm around his feet to light up his path and continued. Exiting the trees, Aliceâs cabin was lit up, warm light enveloping it like an aura.  Cozy. Welcoming. Danny dispelled the ectoplasm around his feet as he walked towards the cabin, each step feeling heavier than the last. His shoulders curled forward until he stopped at the stairs up to the porch. He heard Alice set something down inside and a creak of a door, then a click as the front doorknob rotated open. Danny stayed at the bottom of the stairs, feeling frozen, as the door hinges creaked. Aliceâs red hair came into view first, quickly followed by the rest of her. Catching sight of something, she raised her head to look at Danny.
âDanny, that you down there? Everything alright?â voice soft as she stared down at him.
Dannyâs body moved, skipping steps as he rushed up to Alice. Her body swayed backward as he barreled into her, and she wrapped her arms around him to steady them both.
âI died,â Danny said, voice muffled in her shirt.
Alice didnât say anything for a moment, squeezing Danny close. His body shook as he cried into her shirt. After Dannyâs shaking petered out, Alice stepped backwards, hand on Dannyâs back to nudge him inside.
âTake a seat on the couch, Danny. You want tea? Hot chocolate?â
Sniffling, he wiped a hand against his nose. âHot chocolate please.â He went to sit on the couch, grief and emptiness gnawing at his insides in equal measure.
The sound of boiling water soon filled the space. A clink of a mug. Powder being measured. The fridge door opening and closing. Alice walked over to the sofa, two mugs in hand. Danny unstacked two cup coasters from the pile in the middle of the coffee table, placing them down for Alice.
Danny picked up his hot chocolate and took a sip, holding the warm mug in his hands. Â Alice said, âNow, what was that about?â
The silence stretched between them as Danny stared at the wall, quiet. By the time Alice had finished most of her cup of tea, Danny finally opened his mouth.
âWhen I was fourteen, I died.â Silence followed Dannyâs statement, Aliceâs torso turned towards Danny, but nothing else to indicate she was listening.
Danny let out a shaky breath. âI didnât, come back. All the way.â
Alice took another sip of tea.
Danny set his mug down.  Folded his hands together and set them on his legs. âI know what it sounds like, but Iâm not crazy. Iâm alive, but Iâm also, somehow, a ghost? Not like the one we saw today, but the kind I talked about, the glowing ones. I think I turned the portal on when I went inside to look. Not that I remember a lot of that, except for the pain,â Danny laughed, the sound hollow. âI mean, it wasnât working before, and after that, it was that glowing green. Itâs kind of pretty, actually? Or maybe thatâs just what I think. It swirls around, the ectoplasm, like a really slow whirlpool, but itâs vertical like a door, not horizontal like a pool.  It makes it really easy for Mom and Dad to get more ectoplasm samples. Actually, I gave the ghost today ectoplasm and it kind of turned into what I call a blob ghost? By the time we made it back to the farm it was back to that wispy appearance, so, I mean, that was different. But it was interesting, made me think of the blob ghosts back home. You know, the ones that donât pass on? Thatâs the kind that Iâm like. A ghost. I mean, Iâm alive too, but Iâm also a ghost. I donât know if that means Iâm still dead or not? I donât think anyone really knows, but itâs kind of cool because Iâm like the town superhe-â
âDanny,â Alice cut in. Danny stopped.
Alice took a breath. âDanny, do your parents know?â
Dannyâs eyes widened. Â He shook his head.
âAre you going to tell them?â
Danny tongue felt stuck to the roof of his mouth, throat tightening as he thought about the answer. He settled for a small shrug.
âAlright. Well, I canât say this isnât a surprise, but I wonât make you tell your mom or nothing. Thank you for telling me.â
Danny stared at his mug, still half full. He picked it back up. As quiet settled around them, he felt his heart speed up. Alice set her mug down, now empty.
âBut, I donât think,â Alice started, slow, âthat it matters too much. From what Iâve gathered, dead, alive, or something else, youâre still you. The caring and hardworking young man that Maddie described is the same one that arrived on my farm. Sure, youâre not perfect, and the implications of it all is damn worrying, not knowing, but thatâs life.â Alice swung her knee up onto the couch to fully turn her body to face Danny, arm braced along the backrest. âFor what itâs worth, people love you because of who you are, not what you are. That includes your mom and dad. Heaven knows when Maddie decides to love someone, she does it with her whole heart, no matter the circumstances.â She tacked on a lighthearted, âand that includes your fool of a fatherâ.
Danny laughed, rubbing his eyes of residual tears. âThanks, Aunt Alice. Iâll keep that in mind.â
Danny finished off his hot chocolate, bidding his aunt a goodbye, and walking back up to his cabin, feeling lighter than he had in a while.
______
During that week, Danny started helping out even more on the farm, volunteering to lend an extra hand when needed or after his own tasks were finished. He was getting comfortable with the flow of the days â spending mornings and evenings with the animals, afternoons in the fields, and helping out with various chores. It was easy to fall into the rhythm and to trade playful quips with Will and Alice when they worked together.
Alice called Danny over one day.
âWhatâs up, Aunt Alice?â
âYou know anything about machines?â
âUuuh,â Dannyâs eyebrows shot up, âI guess? Iâm familiar with my parentsâ inventions.â
âHmmm. Why donât you come over here then and tell me what you think.â
Danny peered his head into the propped open tractor hood, looking at the mechanics. âIt looks like the belt, here,â Danny pointed, âis wearing out.â
Alice appraised him.
Danny shifted his weight. âUh, was that it?â he asked nervously, feeling like he was taking a surprise pop quiz.
âYea. Yea, it was kid. You familiar with engines?â
Danny made a face, âSure? Iâll help my dad out sometimes when thereâs a problem with the GAV.â
âThe GAV?â
âOh, itâs our family car. Or van, RV, thing? My parents souped it up, so a lot of service shops wonât even look at it. My dad keeps up with most of the maintenance on it and makes me help out.â
Alice nodded, âOk, makes sense I suppose. Well, if youâve got a familiarity with it all, why donât you help me replace it. Iâve got a spare belt down in my cabin. Iâll go grab it and you can get the tools we need. Just look in the toolboxes around here, find the one we need for the tractor.â
Danny nodded in agreement and Alice walked off to get the part.
Later that night at dinner, Alice remarked to Will that it might be time to let Danny drive the tractor.
âSure thing boss! Whoâs gonna teach him?â
âI will. Iâll start him off with parking it in the barn, so tomorrow just leave it out when youâre done and Iâll walk him through it.â
Will nodded and continued eating.
âIâm what?â Danny asked.
Alice raised an eyebrow.
Danny swallowed his bite of food. âCan I even do that? I donât have a learnerâs permit or anything.â
From beside him, Will answered, âDonât need one. Most kids âround here start driving tractors much younger than you are. Itâs not like youâre going to be driving down the road or anything in it.â
âOh. You donât need a license for it?â
âNo sirree, and it ainât that hard to do either.â
Alice piped up, âYou good with that?â
âOh. Yeah. I guess, I just wasnât expecting it.â
The rest of the night and next day passed calmly. Then came Dannyâs first lesson.
âWhen you go to park it, donât forget to let it out of gear and apply the parking brake. Thatâs about it. So, you good to go?â
âI think so, Aunt Alice.â
âAlright, well donât forget your ear protection, and Iâll let you get to it.â
Alice swung the door closed and stepped back from the tractor.
Danny put on the headset, and did one last review of everything, before he turned the tractor on. Looking behind him, clocking Alice still off to the side, he carefully backed up the tractor. Slowed down and came to a stop.  Danny turned forward again and started moving the tractor forward. Taking a circle around, he pulled up to the storage barn and eased the tractor in. Applying the brake and turning it off, he took off his ear protection and stepped out.
âNot bad kid, not bad. Now help me look everything over before we head back for dinner.â
Alice walked Danny through the daily checks and maintenance on the tractor, then showed him where they kept their log.
âWhat it comes down to, is if you notice a problem, either stop and fix it right away, or come get me or Will if you canât figure it out. Iâd rather you waste an hour doing that, then pushing through it and messing up the tractor on us.â
The bell rang out, clear and bright. Alice glanced out of the barn doors. âWell, guess itâs quitting time for ya. Letâs get this put back and get our asses down there.â Alice handed the binder back to Danny, who placed it back on the small table and hurried to close the doors and catch up with Alice.
Another week passed, with Danny learning how to operate the tractor, hitching up different attachments, and getting used to the daily checks.Â
âI think itâs time to start harvesting the far wheat fields tomorrow.â
âAlready?â Will asked.
âYeah, itâs ready to go.â
âHuh. Alright, if you say so boss.â
âWill I be helping with that?â Danny asked.
Alicia nodded, âyouâll be here through this first harvest, then youâll head back to Amity after that.â
âOh.â Danny forgot heâd be heading back soon. âRight.â
âSo soon?â Will asked.
âYeah, thatâs what I said. Madds reminded me that their school year starts earlier in the season.â Alice shook her head, âseems ridiculous, but thereâs nothing to be done for it.  The cities run on their own timeline.â
âWait, then when do schools around here start? And whereâs the school? I donât remember seeing one when you showed me around town,â Danny asked.
âOh, about a month later than yours I reckon. The school isnât on the main roads. Itâs back on one of the side roads, so the farm kids can get to it easier.â
âUsed to be in the town,â Will added. âWhen most of the town families moved out, the farm kids got together and convinced the adults to move it closer to them, oh, I reckon âbout 20 years ago?â
âCloser to 25 I think,â Alice corrected. âI remember the big commotion when I visited from college. Maddie, I think, organized it all.â
âSounds like Maddie,â Will agreed.
âMom did that?â Danny asked.
âSure enough. Everyone knows sheâs a force of nature when she puts her mind to something. She argued with near everyone about it.â
âDonât know why she fought so hard for it,â Will added. âHad to have been her senior year, didnât even make a difference for her, considering the changes took place after she headed off to college.â
âHuh.â
âShe never mentioned it to you?â
âNo, not really. But it explains where Jazz got her single-mindedness from. She turned our annual Spirit Rally into a whole week at Casper High during her freshman year.â Danny grimaced, âMy freshman year, I got put in a diaper and thrown on stage for it.â
Will laughed and Danny scowled at him. âSorry, but just a diaper?â
âAre you kidding?â Alice was flabbergasted.
âWish I was, it wasnât funny.â
âSorry, but you have to admit, thatâs just a little funny,â Will chuckled.
âIt really wasnât. Also, our counselor tried murdering Jazz.â
Will stopped laughing. âWhat.â
âYeah, she ended up getting, uh, jail, for it.â
Alice narrowed her eyes, âReally?â
âYep,â Danny said, âlast year wasnât so bad though. Hardly anyone called me a baby the whole week.â
âDamn.â
âWhat the hell is happening in those cities.â
The sudden somber shift made the conversation die down and dinner was finished quickly after.
The next morning, the bell rang out clear and sharp. Danny blinked his eyes open, noticing it was still dark out. Stumbling out of his cabin, he turned to Will, who was passing by. âWhyâre we up so early?â Danny yawned, pulling on a long sleeved shirt.
Will returned his yawn, jaw cracking in the early morning air. âOh, we do most of our harvesting in the morning or evening. Means real early mornings the next few days. Sânot so bad, once you get used to it.â
âMmm.â Danny responded, following Will downhill.
âHey Alice. You got the coffee brewing?â
âHey, boys. Sure do. Another couple minutes or so, then we can get started.â
After getting their coffee in thermoses, the group headed up to the fields. Danny was put on tractor duty.  Alice took over the truck with a wagon attached and Will was in charge of the forage harvester. With the exception of taking care of the animals, Danny and Alice traded back and forth on filling up their collection wagons and running them to the silo.
Soon enough, the harvest passed and it was time for Danny to return to Amity Park.
âYep, got it sis.â A pause. âUh huh.âÂ
âNo, no need, Iâll take him myself.â
âOf course I do.â
âNo, itâll be fine. A short trip up.â
âWill can do what needs to be done.â
âYes Iâm sure.â
âUh huh. See ya then.â
âTake care Maddie.â Alicia put down the phone and turned to Danny, seemingly unsurprised to see him leaning against the wall. âWell, Iâll be driving you back up to Amity in a few days.â
Danny nodded, not looking particularly taken back, despite the fact that his aunt hadnât gone up to Amity in the past 10 years or so.
The corners of Aliceâs mouth turned up, âalright then, make sure youâre ready. Itâll take a couple days, since you canât help with driving, but it should be a nice enough trip.â
âAnything to do before then?â
âNope, the only thing left to do is to check on the truck. As much of a help as youâve been with the tractor, Iâll be doing that. You just make sure you help out Will with any odd jobs before then.â Alice scratched the back of her neck. âUuh, ya excited to be heading back?â
Danny shrugged his shoulders. âI guess.â  He looked out the kitchen window, âIâll miss being here though. I know I caused some trouble when I first got here, but it grew on me.â Danny smiled softly.
âIt has a way of doing that,â Alice agreed. âWell, letâs get back to work then. It doesnât stop for rain nor shine.â
Danny finished loading up his bags in the short backseat and closed the back door. Hauling himself into the front passenger seat, he closed the front door.
âGot everything squared away?â
âYep. Double checked and everything.â Turning to grin at her, âbut if I forgot anything, that just means Iâll have to come back.â
Alice laughed and shifted the gear to start the truck rumbling down the path. Soon enough, bouncing along the road, a dust cloud behind them, the farm was swallowed up by trees.Â
The journey itself was uneventful. The mountains turning to valleys turning to farms turning to small cities and large ones, a one night stop at a motel, then back on the road, and finally Danny recognized the outskirts of Elmerton in the distance. He could feel the rumbling of something in his stomach, and it solidified into a nervous ball when they crossed the town limits.Â
Elmerton had enough tall buildings that Danny couldnât see over into Amity Park, but he could feel the flow of ambient ectoplasm moving about like chem trails, signifying the presence of a visiting ghost. Next to him, Alice clutched the steering wheel hard enough to turn her knuckles white. Coming to a red light, she glanced over at Danny and noticed his pinched eyebrows, eyes on her hands. She sighed softly, relaxing her hands and hitting the accelerator when the light turned. The sun filtered through the buildings, casting long lines of shadow that waved over the truck passing through. Danny turned to look out the window, head in hand, braced against the door. It was quiet, no ghostly interference on this side of town. Nevertheless, he could feel the ectoplasm that floated in Amityâs air reach out tendrils in Dannyâs direction. Welcoming him home, beckoning him closer, wanting to wrap him up in its embrace. He shuddered. After getting used to a non-ecto infused environment, the not quite alive reaction of the ectoplasm felt like a slimy slick hand on his shoulder, slipping off before trying to embrace him again. He didnât notice Alice next to him, her breathing becoming shallow and quick.
As the truck crossed over the interstate separating the two cities, Danny shuddered, feeling the sharp contrast of a decidedly unhaunted city to one that almost had more ghostly visitors than alive ones. He could feel the boundary like he was pulled through a film, the ectoplasmic residue clinging to his skin on the other side, settling back into his nose and lungs, coating the back of his throat and cooling his hands. It wasnât enough that someone like Valerie â fully human - would notice, but being so attuned to the presence of ectoplasm as a being shaped by it, Danny could feel it like a physical weight, bearing down heavier on him the closer they sped to FentonWorks. Aliceâs hands lightly shook as she clasped the stick to shift down.
Pulling up to the side of FentonWorks, Alice stopped the car. They both sat there for a moment, breathing in the quiet of the street, before a far-off blaster shot echoed in the distance. Danny turned to Alice, a wobbly smile on his face, âhome sweet home,â he said, punctuating it with a little laugh.Â
Alice looked past him to the door, then back to Danny. âI suppose so,â mouth set in a thin line.
Danny turned away, not wanting to parse what Alicia was feeling, and unclicked his seat belt.  He opened the door to slide out of the truck. Alice followed him out and walked around to knock on the front door. As her first rap against the door ended, weapons sprung out of the sides of the walls, focused down on her. Alice jumped back a little as a light popped out of the door, scanning Alice from head to toe. âFreaky,â she muttered darkly as something dinged and the door clicked open, the differential air pressure opening it further. Alice turned back around to Danny, âWhat was that?â
Danny shrugged, âIt seems Mom and Dad added some things while I was away.â
Alice gaped at Danny. âAdded some things? What was it like before?â
Popping open the back door to grab his bags Danny said over his shoulder, âOh, the weapons have been there since the first house defense upgrade, but the unlocking is new.â
Alice looked back to the door. âThatâs the new part?â She hesitantly reached a hand out and tapped the door hard enough to swing it open the rest of the way. She leaned forward a little. âUuuh,â she started, peering in. Clearing her throat, she spoke up, âAnyone home? Iâve got your boy back Maddie!â
Danny walked up beside her. âI wouldnât wait for an answer Aunt Alice. Itâs best to just walk in and take a seat.â Danny did so himself, setting his bags next to the stairs and walking back to the truck. Alice walked in, tentatively lowering herself down to the couch, and looked around wide eyed.
âJust what in the world has my sister been up to?â she said mostly to herself.
The slamming of a door and a loud beep sounded out as the truck was closed and locked. Danny walked in with Aliceâs bag and closed the door behind him. âSeen anyone yet?â he asked.
Alice swung her head around to stare at Danny, âNo, not yet.â She gestured around at the living room, a myriad of objects on the table, hung on the wall, or thrown onto a shelf. âDanny, what is all this?â
Danny barely glanced down before making his way to the kitchen, âprobably broken ghost inventions. I wouldnât touch any of them though, they can be a bit, well, temperamental.â
The sound of a cabinet door squeaking open, running water, and Danny came back with a water glass for himself and Alice. âHere ya go,â he said, holding one of them out.
Alice absently took the glass and sipped from it. Choking and spluttering, she set the glass down on the coffee table, slapping a hand against her leg. She collected herself, wheezing, and looked up as green light tinted her peripheral vision.
âOh Alice! And Danny!! I didnât hear you two come in,â Maddie said after exiting the downstairs lab. She quickly went over and swept Danny up into a big hug. âOh, I missed my sweet little baby boy.â Giving Danny one last squeeze, she stepped over to Alice to do the same.
A clang could be heard, echoing up the lab stairs and then some thumps as Jack made his way up. Danny set his glass down in anticipation.  No sooner did Jack realize Danny was home than he rushed over, knocking over a chair in the process, scooping Danny up into a bone crushing hug. âDANNY BOY!â was shouted right into his ear.
Danny did his best to move his wrists enough to pat his dad back. âHey Dad. Just got back.â He paused and with no indication that Jack was going to let go anytime soon, âCan you let me go now? Itâs hard to breathe.â
Jack, embarrassed, let him go, giving him a firm pat on the back, âSorry about that, I was just so excited to see you back home! JAAAAAZZIE-PANTS!â He called out.
Alice clasped a hand to her ear, scowling as Maddie looked on fondly. âOh honey, no need to yell like that.â She turned to face her sister. âItâs so good to see you here Alice. I donât remember the last time you visited and things have changed so much since then. Jazz was just toddling around and we still had the play pen set up for Danny.â Taking a seat, she pulled on Aliceâs sleeve, inviting her to sit next to her. âI missed you,â Maddie said.
Alice coughed and looked around the room, âI missed you too Maddie. If you ever want to visit the farm more often, you could.â
Maddie laughed and waved her hand around, âOh our work keeps us so busy nowadays. Speaking of, I hope you didnât run into any ghosts on your drive in?â Eyes twinkling, Maddie waited for the answer.
Alice frowned at her, âNo, we didnât,â and watched as her eyes dimmed a little.
âAah well, thatâs alright, Iâm glad you two made the trip up here safely. Speaking of, I was thinking we could all head out for dinner tonight? I know itâs not often youâre in the city, so it might be nice.â
Jack leaned down to Danny and whispered conspiratorially, âWe had an ecto sample explode in the fridge. All the food is completely inedible, but wouldnât you know it? The old chicken and hot dogs started a little kingdom in there. Fascinating stuff Danny. Really.â He looked over at him, âWould you like to meet them?â
Danny grimaced more than smiled, âUuuh no thanks Dad. I think I want to get started unpacking instead.â
Slapping a hand to his forehead, âThatâs right! I wonât keep you Danny. Go take your bags up to your room, weâll visit with your aunt down here.â
A boom echoed through the neighborhood and Maddie jumped, starting to reach a hand for her blaster before relaxing, continuing the conversation she was having with Alice. Danny stopped briefly to grab his bags and headed up the stairs towards his room. As he reached the top, Jazzâs door clicked open and she stepped out.Â
âDanny! Youâre back!â she said. Stepping forward, she wrapped Danny up in a hug, chin poking into his head as she said, âI missed you little brother.â
Danny awkwardly stood there holding his bags, âMissed you too Jazz.â He swayed a bag a little to knock into her leg.
âOh!â she said, releasing him, âSorry, Iâll let you get to your room.â Smiling at Danny for a moment, Jazz started down the stairs.Â
As Danny kicked his door open, he heard Jazz greet their aunt. Dropping his bags down in front of his dresser, he jumped up onto his bed. âUuuuuuuugh,â the groan rumbling throughout his chest. He breathed out, then rolled over onto his back, arms flung out and over the sides of his bed. Danny stared up at the glow in the dark stars, stuck on his ceiling years ago. He had barely been gone for a couple months, but already his room felt slightly foreign - like returning somewhere he didnât fit into anymore. It was like an old sweater you found again after a few years. Slipping it on and knowing every seam, texture, and fold as it settles around you, but no longer the same comforting weight â a little too thin, worn at the elbows and a hem starting to unstitch itself. Not as soft as you wanted to remember. Exactly the same, but time having polished away the fondness that once endeared it to you.
Danny rolled over onto his side, staring into his closet. The sliding door left cracked open from when Danny slammed it shut, the recoil pushing it back open before he left. He heard the cadence of a conversation float up the stairs and he closed his eyes.
Waking up to someone shaking his shoulder, he blinked awake. His room had darkened with the setting of the sun and Danny felt groggy. âMmMMMmm?â he hummed.
âDanny, weâre going to head out to the Nasty Burger for dinner. You gonna get up and come with?â
Danny bolted up, smacking his head into Jazzâs hand still hovering above him. âUp! Iâm up!â he said.
Jazz chuckled, âSee you downstairs,â and left his room.
Danny braced himself on his arms, letting the thrum of his heart settle back down from the adrenaline rush. After a moment he swung his legs down. A quick detour to the second floor bathroom later and Danny joined everyone else downstairs.Â
âAlright, now that weâve got everyone here â to the GAV!â Jack announced.
Danny sleepily followed Jazz out to the garage and clambered into his seat. Alice, who was following Danny, stopped at the open door. Looking around the retrofitted RV, she hummed and side-eyed Jack who had turned the key in the GAV, prompting the consol to light up in a variety of buttons and gauges. She stepped into the back and climbed into one of the open seats. Maddie closed the door behind Alice and got herself into the passenger seat. After clicking her seatbelt in and checking that the kids had as well, she pushed a button, the garage doors clanking open behind them. Jack flipped on the headlights and backed out of the garage.
âHold on,â Danny hissed up to Alice, who in turn, grabbed onto the hold bar at the top of the door.Â
Once Jack cleared the sidewalk and safely backed onto the street, he stepped on the gas and catapulted the GAV down the street, careening around corners, and speeding through yellow lights till they swayed to a halt in the Nasty Burger parking spot. Jazz sighed, Danny let out his breath, and Alice looked a little green. â Does your husband always drive like that Maddie?â
Maddie turned around, unclicking her seatbelt, âLike what, Alice?â
Alice eyed Jack nervously before looking back at her sister, âUuuuh. Nevermind Maddie. Letâs go,â and she opened up the sliding door to shakily step out.
The Fentons and Alice went into the Nasty Burger, quickly ordering food and sitting down at a booth. The chatter of the restaurant was pleasant, if a little overwhelming to Danny. He decided to listen to his familyâs conversation and looked out the window. As Alice asked after Jazzâs college adventures, Danny saw a bright blast light up the sky. He blinked and took a moment to process as a streak slithered through the air. A ghost! He turned around, nudged Jazz out of the booth, and slid out with a halfhearted excuse about the bathroom before making his exit. Hiding behind the dumpster, Danny transformed and flew off after the ghost that he could still see winding around the tops of buildings. The trusty Fenton thermos clattered against his leg as the wind whipped Dannyâs hair into his face. Coming up to a stop, he watched the ghost slow down over the park, then dive down. Danny pushed himself into action, darting into the tree tops to see where it went. He heard the whine of a blaster charge up below him and Danny looked down. Tucker stood there, a small blaster leveled at the backside of the ghost. Danny flew up towards the sky and starting arcing down the other side. Before he could do much, Sam ran out from the other side of the trees shooting at the ghost. A low hum joined the chorus of weapons and Danny turned invisible as the Red Huntress caught up to the ghost.Â
Danny drifted up higher, watching the teamwork between the three of them.  They quickly captured the ghost. He lazily drifted down to the trio.
âHuh, didnât know you guys would team up,â Danny said, turning visible.
Tucker flinched and the girls rolled their eyes.
âHey Danny,â Sam greeted.
Valerie retracted her helmet and stared at Phantom for a moment before, âHi, Danny.â
Dannyâs eyebrows flew up, pinched together.
Tucker laughed at his expression as it quickly morphed into a look of betrayal aimed at Sam and Tucker.
âSorry Danny,â Sam looked away. âVal kind of⊠figured it out?â
âSam!â Danny hissed, voice crackling like steam. âWhat does that mean?â His eyes darted back to Valerie, who just stood there, looking conflicted.
âExactly what I said Danny!â
Danny shifted so he could stand on the ground. âBut how?â He was starting to get angry at the lack of answers. It hadnât even been two months and without being around Valerie somehow pieced together his biggest secret?
Tuckerâs laughter died down.
âItâs â Danny please donât be mad,â Valerie spoke up. Her eyes darted around the clearing before landing back on Danny. âWhen Phantom disappeared after Fenton left it wasnât hard to figure out you two were connected somehow. And then Dani stopped by in town and-â
âDani came back?â Danny interrupted. He glowered at Sam and Tucker, eyes glowing brighter for a moment.
âIt wasnât a big deal!â Tucker tried to defend.
âYeah!â Sam chimed in. âShe was here for like, a day? Maybe? Hardly worth mentioning. She spent most of it playing pranks on Vlad.â
âAnd Valerie met up with her? But not me?â Danny voice raised in pitch, âI missed seeing my cousin and you didnât say a word?!? I thought I wouldnât have had to tell you two that Dani coming back would be something important to mention.â
Tuckerâs shoulders crept up to his ears.
Sam rolled her eyes. âReally, Danny, it is so not a big deal. We didnât even know for most of that day. She only came to see us towards the end of her stop.â
Dannyâs core felt a sting go through it.
âDid she know I was coming back?â
âYeah dude, we mentioned you were sent to your auntâs farm. She asked about you! Promise! Once she realized that, she told us sheâd try to stop by to see you. Seemed really excited to check out a farm.â
âAlthough,â Sam chimed in, âI donât think she realized youâd be back so soon? If you never saw her, she probably got distracted by something on her way.â Seeing Dannyâs sad expression, Sam said, âIâm sure sheâll be back to visit you, Danny. She did say sheâd stop by at least a few times a year to check in, right?â
Danny sighed. âYeah.  Iâm just bummed that I missed her. And with no way to get into contact with her,â he trailed off.
âActually,â Valerie started, âUhm, I gave her a little, well, kind of like a cell phone? It can make calls, but itâs also got a little button to send a distress signal to my suit if need be? And seeing as itâs never gone off, Daniâs okay. Ok, Danny?â
Danny looked down at the ground. âAlright. I guess thatâs better.â He looked preoccupied - lost in thought and still a little sullen.
Sam, Tucker, and Valerie exchanged glances with one another over Dannyâs bowed head.
Valerie gave a little cough. Seeing Danny head twitch at that, she said, âI saw Dani transform after one of her pranks. I was stopping by Vladâs office to see if I could find anything new.â Valerie paused. âShe looks a lot like you Danny. And once I saw that, and my suit recognized her like any other human, I approached her. She explained a lot to me and after getting lunch, I brought her around to Sam and Tucker.â
Danny looked up at his best friends. âReally? Valerie had to bring Dani to you guys?â
Sam nodded and watched Dannyâs expression lift at the confirmation.
âAnyway, Sam didnât tell me anything, but Tucker told me about the whole,â she waved her hands around, âCujo? The ghost dog thing.â She sighed. âIt wasnât easy to sort through it all, but I realized that I was being really unfair to you Danny. Iâm sorry for not hearing you out about it earlier.â
Danny shifted his weight from one foot to the other. âOh, well. Thatâs? Ok? I mean itâs not okay okay, but I understand. Why you acted like you did. Life dealt you a really bad hand with everything and you were dealing with a lot with your dad and his job and the A Listers and everything so â â a hand settled on his shoulder.
âDanny,â Valerie cut in. âYou donât to forgive me right away. Iâve had a few weeks to deal with this. I just wanted you to know that I know about your ⊠situation and that we â Red Huntress and Phantom â are cool now.â A bell tolled somewhere in the town. Valerie looked up at the street lamps turning on. âAnyway, Iâve got to get back, but it was nice to see you Danny.â She gave him a little smile, activated her hoverboard and helmet, and flew off.
Watching Valerie fly off, all three of them stood still for a moment.
âWell,â Danny started, âIâve got to get back.â
As he started moving to walk off, Sam grabbed his arm, âAre you mad at us?â
Danny turned around. âNo, Sam. Iâm not. I just â Iâve had a long day and I want to go eat dinner. Can we get talk about this tomorrow?â
âPromise? Iâve got a new game I can bring over to play,â Tucker offered.
Danny smiled at them, âThat sounds good. Iâll see you guys tomorrow.â
Danny started walking backwards and turned invisible from one step to the next. He flipped up into the air and flew off, back to the Nasty Burger. He transformed in a stall, washed his hands, and walked out to the booth. As everyone turned to look at him, Dannyâs neck flushed red. âHi.â
âYou doing alright Danny?â Jack asked.
âUuuh yeah, just,â Danny paused, âhad to take a dump?â He slid into the booth, Jazz pushing over his tray of food.
âIf you say so mâboy.â Jack shoved more fries into his mouth.
Jazz scolded her father for his manners and Maddie smiled fondly at her eldest.
Danny inhaled a third of his burger and as he took a sip of pop, looked over at his aunt. Alice had a smile on her face, but it was stretched a little thin, eyes crinkling right underneath them, a fist on the table and body turned, supported by the window and booth back. Danny went back to eating his burger. Aunt Alice had looked like she was in pain that she was trying to hide ever since they entered Amity Parkâs borders earlier. He hoped she would be fine considering Maddie had wrangled her into staying for a couple days. Danny ended up ordering another burger and Jazz decided to split a small shake with Maddie. Once they had finished eating, they climbed back into the GAV and headed home. Danny started feeling sleepy again, leaning his head on the cool window, watching the streetlights pass by. Jazz looked over at her brother, noticing how relaxed he looked. She missed him.
âYou know Danny,â she started, âyou look so much more relaxed than before.â
Danny glanced over at her. âIâm not giving you the satisfaction of saying you were right.â
Jazz smiled softly as Dannyâs head rolled back against the window. âI wouldnât expect anything else little brother,â she whispered.
___
Danny heard the clicks and whine of the Fenton door weapons activate and after a few seconds, the doorbell rang out. He left his room, heading down the stairs to hear his mom invite Sam and Tucker in.
âHey guys,â he called down the half flight of stairs. He waited for them to start walking up before he turned around and led them to his room.
Pushing open his door, he dropped onto his chair. Tucker grabbed a spot on his bed and Sam, after closing the door, took a spot at the foot of the bed.
âSo,â Sam started.
âSo,â Tucker added.
âSoooo,â Danny finished, âany thing else I should really know that you didnât bother to update me on?â
Tucker winced at Dannyâs tone.
âNope,â Sam popped the p. âVladâs still mayor,â she ticked up a finger. âNo new halfas that we know of, no new ghosts.â
âOh!â Tucker interjected. âDash had a wipe out on a skateboard.â He looked smug, âI caught it on video, wanna see?â
âYes!â Danny cheered, leaning forward to watch.
Sam scoffed at them, but she also leaned in.
After catching up on all the little things Danny missed over the summer â a new girl moved in next to Tucker, Samâs petitions and protests, teaming up with Valerie â Danny stood up and stretched. His spine let out a loud crack and Tucker gaped at him.
âGeez, are you okay? What were you even doing on that farm?â
âYeah Danny, you sounded like my Bubeleh and sheâs, like, 80.â
Danny laughed, sitting back down. âActually, I think that was because Iâve been sitting so much the past few days. I was pretty active before that.â He thought for a moment. âI might be able to beat Dash in a race now.â
Tucker snorted, âI donât know dude, he decided to start working on his legs this summer. Heâs no longer, like, a Dorito with sticks for legs.â
Sam definitely didnât giggle as she said, âBut sure, weâll take your word for it, Danny.â
Danny rolled his eyes as he sat back in the chair. âAlright, enough teasing me.â
âYeah, letâs talk about Sam ditching our elective class to take environmental sciences. Can you believe she disrupted our carefully crafted schedule that ensured we shared as many classes as possible just for? What was it? The earth? Can you believe Same is ditching us like this?â
âHuh,â Danny said, he turned to Sam, âwhatâs that class even about.â
Sam glared over at Tucker before looking at Danny, âIâm glad someone here is taking an interest in the important things in life.â Sam launched into an hour long explanation. After the first five minutes, Tucker had pulled out his PDA to play a game, mouthing along to parts of Samâs explanation from time to time. Danny got the basic idea shortly after that. He started to tune out, thinking about school. How in 2 short weeks, heâd be back in the classroom, probably juggling ghost attacks, Dash, the other A Listers, homework, and sitting in a cramped chair for hours on end. The sun coming through his window warmed Dannyâs side. He glanced outside at the street. A bird flew across, but otherwise it was buildings, sidewalk, and asphalt as far as he could see. No green at all. He wondered if Undergrowth would make another appearance, and if Danny could convince him to â
âDanny, are you even listening to me?â Samâs sharp voice called out.
Danny whipped his head away from the window, âUh, yeah, Sam, Iâm listening. You were saying something about,â he searched his short term memory, âthe climate?â
Sam huffed and crossed her arms, âSo, as I was saying â â
âAs she was saying,â Tucker interrupted.  âSheâs shamelessly ditching us, Danny. Can you believe it?â Tucker slid dramatically off the bed and grabbed Dannyâs jeans, âand Sam doesnât even care!â he cried.
âTucker, you know thatâs not it,â Sam reprimanded. âBesides, didnât you sign up for Advanced Algebra or Calculus or something? Youâre also ditching us.â
Turning around to face her, Tucker gasped. âHow. Dare. You. Itâs Finite/Brief Calculus and thatâs only because they refused to put me in the computer class again this year.â
Danny laughed, âThatâs because you hacked the schoolâs computers and played that banana song over the intercom for all of lunch.
âBecause peanut butter jelly time is a classic,â Tucker grumbled. He got up, sitting back on the bed. âAnyway, you should have your schedule by now too. Have you looked at it?â
Danny rubbed the back of his neck, âeh? I think my parents handed it to me this morning, but I didnât take a look.â
âOh, well then what are you waiting for? Letâs see it! I want to see how many classes we share this year!â Sam demanded.
Danny sat up in his chair and rolled over to his desk. Grabbing the school letter, he opened it, gave the schedule a once over, and then surrendered it to his friends. Sam grabbed the paper and her and Tucker leaned over it.
âIt looks like we share PE again Danny,â Tucker held up his hand for a high five as he continued looking at the schedule.
âWe all share chemistry this year, right before lunch,â Sam added.
âOh nice. And look â we end the day together in art too,â Tucker pointed with his other hand. Sam and Tucker looked over at Danny. âDude?â
Danny stared past them, eyes not focusing on anything. When Tucker waved his hand in front of his face, he jolted back to focus and gave a half hearted smile as he high fived Tuck. âYeah, thatâs great.â
Sam narrowed her eyes at Danny, âthat doesnât sound very enthusiastic. Are you not excited for this year Danny?â
A shrug was her answer. âI donât know.â
Tucker glanced over at Sam, âWhat do you mean? When you finished summer school, you seemed pretty thrilled to finalize your schedule request and send it in.â
Danny looked out the window, âYeah, I know. And I was.â
âWas?â Sam echoed.
âWell, this summer on the farm was a lot different. I liked it, being outside and stuff. Working on things, knowing that I was making a difference for people.â
âDanny,â Tucker started. âDo you not want to be in Amity anymore?â
Danny whipped his head to stare at Tucker, âOh course I want to be here! I missed you guys so much! And I missed a lot of other stuff too!â
âDanny.â Sam waited until he looked at her. âYou can have missed us, and not want be in Amity Park.â
Danny dropped his gaze to the carpet between their feet. âYeah, I know that. I do want to be here. I do!âÂ
He fell silent, struggling for a moment.
âI just â itâs so much, you know? The ghosts, and Dash, and school, and my parents, and all of it. Itâs so much, all the time, without a break. And I donât feel like I have a choice in any of it either. Obviously I canât skip school and I canât avoid Dash. We live in the same town after all, and thereâs only like, three places for teenagers to hang out. And then the ghosts on top of that! And the ghosts are here because of my parentâs portal, but Iâm the one that turned it on â I canât just ignore that the ghosts are causing problems even if I want to.  I donât feel like I have a choice but to take responsibility and step in. And I know you guys have been helping Val and stuff, but -â Danny shrugged his shoulders.Â
âI like being on the farm. Itâs quiet. And even when there are ghosts,â he noticed their faces, ââ and there are ghosts,â Danny confirmed, âtheyâre different! They donât cause trouble. Itâs like,â Danny waved his hand around, âeverythingâs so close to the cycle of living and dying and everything has itâs time from the plants to the animals and like â uuuuugh,â Danny threw his hands up. âI donât know how to explain it. Death is always a part of living and everyone out there is used to it being a part of life, so when it happens itâs less of a tragedy?â Danny looked away. âI guess,â he scratched his arm and fell quiet.Â
Sam and Tucker looked at Danny, waiting for him to clear up what he was trying to say. The wind pushed against his window, a slight whistle from uneven weathering strips cutting through the quiet of the room. Danny sighed and looked at the ground in front of his feet. âI feel like less of a freak for dying and coming back when Iâm out there.â
âOh Danny!â Sam moved forward.
Tucker let out a quiet âDannyâ.
Danny pushed away from them in his chair, rolling back some. Rubbing his arms he said âI mean, I know Iâm not a freak or anything, but itâs hard to forget that I died when Iâm in Amity, you know?  I canât escape reminders of it and that it makes me different from everyone else. When Iâm out there on the farm itâs just? I feel at rest.â He laughed, âthatâs stupid isnât it?â He ran a hand through his hair. Looking up at them, âA ghost who feels at rest. But DAMN! I do, getting to be part of life and death like that makes me feel normal â I feel like I belong out there.â
âDanny,â Tucker glanced over at Sam before turning back, âDanny, do you want to stay there?â
âTucker!â Sam admonished, âI donât think ââ
Danny laughed, âYeah, I think I might want toâŠ. Would you hate me if I left you guys again?â
Sam rushed forward to pull Danny into a hug. âOh Danny, I donât think we could ever hate you.â
Tucker joined in, âYeah, weâll just have to visit you.â
Dannyâs smile was smushed against both their shoulders.
âDo you think I could get internet out there?â
And all three of them laughed.
_________
âSo, thatâs what I want to do. If I can,â Danny said. He stared at the coffee table in front of him. His parents sat on the couch across from him.
âWell, Danny, I donât know if weâll be able to do that.â
âBut if thatâs what you want, weâll support you son!â
Danny looked up and gave him parents a smile, âThanks.â
_______
It turned out Alice was familiar with the work programs that the local school utilized for their students. It consisted of students taking the core classes, like math and science, in the mornings, and then working on the farm in the afternoons.
The trick was getting Casper High to agree. But between Alice and Maddie, there was no trouble convincing Principal Ishiyama and Mr. Lancer that Danny would be better off in the modified program. As long as he came back to take the state proficiency tests, he could even still earn credit for Casper Highâs records without having to transfer them back and forth.
Within a few days, Alice, and now Danny, climbed back into the truck, ready to head back down to Arkansas.
âBye!â Danny called, waving out of the window.
A chorus of byeâs and love youâs sent Danny off as they drove away.
Extra:
âCome on,â Danny laughed as he looked at his friends struggling up the side of the silo.
Tuckerâs hand slid off a rung and he yelped.
Looking up at Danny, Sam asked, âare you sure this is safe Danny?â
Laughing again, Danny started climbing again, âSure is. Besides, I can always catch you guys before you hit the ground.â
âWow, thatâs sooo reassuring,â Sam grumbled.
Reaching the top of the dome, Danny disappeared from both their sights. They heard some clangs before his head popped back over the edge, âcome on! Hurry!â He grinned at Tuckerâs frown as Sam reached him first. Danny disappeared again as he gave Sam room to clamor up. Soon enough, both their heads popped back over the side. Twin grins met Tucker as he finished climbing up. Hands thrust towards Tucker, he grabbed them and let himself be pulled up the rest of the way.
âOkay, weâre here. What are we supposed to be doing?â Tucker asked as they crawled their way to the middle of the silo.
Danny sat down, and pointing up said, âLook.â
âOooh,â Sam breathed.
âWow,â Tucker added.
The sky stretched up above them, shades of blue creating a fabric where streams of stars traveled across the expanse. Blushes of red and green broke up the inky darkness and stars twinkled back and forth. A light breeze caressed the trio and they laid back, enjoying the view.
#ectoimplosion2024#danny phantom#danny fenton#danny phantom alicia#danny phantom fic#the bee writes#it is very late so i'll look over things once i sleep... i'm hoping there's nothing weird happening with format#ok! it's now later. I've got the AO3 posted and linked#warnings: there is a farm accident and therefore brief mention of an injury. also a brief mention of animal death#ao3 separates out the âinjury chapterâ so if you want to skip that part and get a summary of what happens then you should head there#this is the longest thing i've ever written actually. and most of it was written in the last 2 weeks.#every time i join a phandom event something happens irl: a case study (in this case it was multiple things)
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Once Upon A Time chapter 5
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Jason Todd knew it was only a matter of time until his bubble burst and one of his brothers found out what he was getting up to. He was just hoping he could pull it off for a little longer. Even though the pit still reacted at the strangest times, he felt calmer, more normal, than he had in years. He wanted to hold it close and make sure nobody could take it from him.
From Replacement: you went back to college? Does B know?
Fuck.
â
Danny had been wary at first. Rich boy Jason Todd-Wayne in his college classes. The man was older than Jazz, though not by much, and a freshman with him. Either the guy was a bad influence or Danny just had really shitty luck.
He and the universe both knew the answer to than one really. But 60 bucks a week to reteach the guy basic math and Jason always gave him dinner in the deal? Danny wasnât going to look that particular gift horse in the mouth. If there was one thing Danny had forgotten during the past almost two years it was how hungry his human side got. Not having money and being on the run meant opportunities to eat were few and far between.
What Danny didnât expect was how sarcastic and assholish the rich guy could be. He loved trading snark. Danny assumed that it came from them both having older siblings. But between that and the half formed core that was slowly shoring up, Danny found himself growing attached. He had missed having friends. Getting to talk to Sam, Tucker and rarely Jazz through a conspiracy message board wasnât enough. Most of the time it was just a way to make sure that nobody had been captured by the GIW. They had a way to pass longer messages but to do that too often would be suspicious.
âSo I donât get it,â Danny said, gesturing at Jason with some fries almost a month into tutoring, âWhat do people actually do at Galas? The tabloid pics just show a bunch of people in uncomfortable looking suits standing around with champagne.â
ââŠ.thats really it. Itâs boring as shit.â Jason kicked his chair back on two legs, leaning against the wall. âIf I liked you less Iâd invite you.â
âIf you liked me less?â
âOh yeah. Because then youâd have to meet my brothers, the assorted not quite adopteds, my dad and scarier yet, our butler.â Danny choked on his laugh.
âYour butler is the scary one in that situation?â
âAlfred is like a ghost. Always there when you turn around.â Jason put on the accent âMaster Jason, you really must come home more. Nobody quite enjoys my cooking like you.â He let the chair legs settle on the floor. âNow imagine that from behind you in a dark kitchen at two am while youâre half drunk and trying to make a sandwich.â
âOkay, yeah, I could see it being that scary. My sister wasâŠ.â Shit he hadnât meant to mention Jazz. âShe was the only one who cared sometimes.â May as well rip that bandaid off.
âYeah?â Jason asked, taking a drink from his coffee cup. âDidnât know you had a sister.â
âMy family and I donât see each other anymore. Itâs for the best.â He hoped Jason wouldnât ask more questions, because âmy parents sold me out to the government that only knew where I was because of the Justice League which is why I hate them and by association your dad, and now my sister is in hiding in a different state with a new identityâ was way too difficult to explain. âI left before they could kick me out.â
Danny watched Jasonâs face twist into a frown. âBigots suck. Sorry man.â
âYeahâŠ. WellâŠâ Danny busied himself with finishing his burger. Then, once he chewed and swallowed. âWait. Is your dad the one that fell into the champagne tower last year?â
Jason groaned, âheâs not always like that I promise.â
âNo I get it. A weird âFamily Friendâ invited us to his fancy party so he could hit on my mom once. I accidentally on purpose took out the entire buffet table including a cheese fountain so we had to go home.â
âCheese fountain?â
âYou know those chocolate fountains?â Danny asked. Jason nodded. âLike that, but with fondue cheese instead. And before you ask why, all I can say is it was in Wisconsin.â
Jason watched him with an unreadable expression for a moment, and Danny assumed he was processing it, because when the expression broke, Jason was laughing.
He looked so much younger when he laughed like that, and Danny remembered that they had both had, in their own ways, a rough life. âYeah. I know. I was finding cheese in the weirdest places for weeks.â
âDid you get invited back?â Dannyâs heart ached with the fact that a month or so later, Everything Fell Apart.
âNo⊠IâŠâ he cut himself off, remembering the horrified looks his parents gave him as their weapons, the ones he fixed, were turned against the âbeastâ that âpossessedâ their son. The looks mimicking the ones they gave him when the party screeched to a halt as he did his best impression of a Scooby Doo villain being unmasked. The screams of shock turning into ones of horror. The -
â-anny? Danny?â He blinked and shook his head.
âWhat? Oh, sorry.â He took another drink from the coffee, emptying the cup. âNo. I never was asked back. You done?â He looked at their empty plates and grabbed the tray. âWe should get to the library. Though Iâm sure someone as good looking as you has plenty, these x-es wonât find themselves.â He was overcompensating for zoning out now, words coming out faster than normal.
âYeah⊠are⊠you okay?â Jason asked, as Danny bussed their tray and grabbed his backpack, a backpack bought by his tutoring money. A tutoring gig he desperately did not want to fuck up with his own bullshit.
âMe? Fine. More than. I just zone out sometimes. Come on.â Dannyâs words were still coming out too fast. He took a few breaths during the couple seconds Jason took getting his things, trying to ground himself as much as possible. He was going to be normal. He was going to be normal if it killed him. Again.
The walk to the library was quiet and Danny was thankful for that. He needed to get his head on straight if he was going to be any help to Jason and he still had his own homework to do after. As they walked in, both Danny and Jason instinctively looked towards the desk where Barbara usually worked, but she wasnât there, some other guy was checking in books with quiet beeps.
Danny had learned over the last month that while Dick, Tim and Damian were Jasonâs official siblings, Barbara was an unofficial one and he liked her the most.
It made sense, since she didnât seem to pry into Jasonâs life the way Jazz would have if she was here. Not that he would have minded her prying for how much he missed her, but four years ago he would have hated it.
â
Jason knew the haunted and hunted look that had settled into Dannyâs eyes. The way he trailed off into something vacant. How his breathing seemed to get stuck in his chest. Which is why he tried to interrupt the cycle before he could spiral. Something big happened to him, and Jason knew he wouldnât want to break down in a cafe in front of people.
Thankfully he seemed to snap out of it quickly, instead overcompensating into energetic. The message was clear. âDonât ask about what just happened.â Carefully, Jason let Danny lead him into the library, aware of his positioning and making sure not to follow too far behind or loom too much. Considering he had at least six inches on Danny, that last part was hard, but he tried.
He could feel the pit spiraling in him, circling and coiling like a dragon deep in his chest. Itching to doâŠ. Something. It wasnât punch or claw or fight. This was new. He didnât like it in the slightest.
He looked over to where Babs usually was, then remembered she had a class, criminal justice degree, how apt, as he and Danny went towards what was now their spot. Jason found he had the sudden impulse to pull Dannyâs chair out for him, and shoved that particular useless idea back down into the abyss it belonged in.
â
Danny looked over at Jason who stood at the edge of the table lookingâŠ. Angry? Confused? and pulled out his own books. âI promise, my zoning out isnât contagious.â He said, looking up at Jason and kicking the chair across from him out from under the table for Jason to sit. He gave a wry smile, âif it was, I donât think anyone in my high school would have made it.â
Jason snorted a laugh, snapping out of whatever thoughts he had been thinking. Jason pulled the chair out further and sat, sitting more comfortably than he used to. More of the true Jason, Danny was realizing, less of the person he was supposed to be. In another lifetimeâŠ. But no. He couldnât⊠not while he was being hunted. It wouldnât be fair to Jason to have to hide such a huge part of himself and his past.
Not to mention he hadnât ever come out to Jazz and his friends. Well he hadâŠ. But more in the âhey Iâm dead but not reallyâ way and less in the âso I like guysâ way.
But in spite of those barriers, this tentative friendship with Jason was enough to keep him happy.
Which made the next kick in the teeth from the universe completely expected.
All he had wanted was to walk home in peace. Sure it was almost midnight, in Gotham, but still. He made it most of the way, and was slinking through the Bowery when it happened.
Guys with dark clothes and weapons were suddenly in front of him. He turned only to see more at his back. There had to be five in total? Or was it six? Danny didnât have time to count.
âHey guys.â He hedged, muscles tensing as he raised his hands to show he wasnât a threat. âDonât mind me, Iâm just trying to get home. Long walk and all that. If I could justâŠ. Scooch past you?â Danny took a step to do just that and the lead goon swung at him with a baton.
He hopped back slightly, dodging the hit when it came. âNot a chance. Boss needs someâŠ. Help with his latest ideas. Youâre coming with us.â
Danny ran through his options in his head. Option 1: get kidnapped. Option 2: get the shit kicked out of him. Option 3: beat the shit out of them and get labeled as a possible bat to be or possible rogue to be. Option 4: go fully ghost and either escape unscathed but wind up more firmly on the GIWâs radar.
Option two or three would wind up happening, because he wasnât going to put himself at the mercy of the Bat-ass again, and he wasnât going to offer himself up on a silver platter to the GIW.
The moment one tried to grab him, Danny dodged out of the way, and that seemed to bring the goons on him en masse. They seemed well practiced, but considering it was Gotham, there wasnât a big surprise there. The next few minutes were a flurry of elbows and knees, punches and kicks, batons and clubs.
Danny would dodge and counter, disarm one and fling their weapon across the street. He would have sore ribs and bruises from his elbows to his knuckles come morning but he was slowly winnowing them down. He had a brief thought about the conservation of ninjutsu, as the fewer goons there were the stronger they seemed to get. The realistic answer was they were less concerned with hurting each other when there were fewer of them, he knew that. But everything was more fun with ninjas.
When there were three left, one threw a punch that connected with his nose. There was a pop and crunch and a hot rush of blood down his face even before the pain set in. He spat out the blood that collected in his mouth from the way his head snapped back when he was punched. Another one came at him, and his own years of training caught the guyâs arm, judo throwing them into another look and sending them both careening into a wall. The move was trickier with gravity, but he made it work.
Danny looked up at the last remaining goon. He grinned, teeth too sharp and stained with his own blood, eyes glowing just the faintest green. âRun.â
They did.
Unfortunately for the goon, they ran smack into the chest of one Batman.
#writing#fanfiction#danny fenton#danny phantom#dc x dp#dpxdc#jason todd#red hood#dead on main#batfam#dp x dc crossover
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Here are two ideas for Ari Hauntington. Do you have any head canons for Ari and Ember from Danny phantom. and Number 2: What if Ari was the Ghost in Fanning the Flames and how do you think the episode would play out?
My only real HC about Ari and Ember interacting is that I don't think theyd like one another much. Purely on principle. Ari worked hard for her fame and puts a lot of effort into being as human and "normal" as she can. Ember on the flipside gained all her fame from brainwashing people and honestly didnt really attempt to hide the fact that she was a ghost, DP is just a universe where the average person does not think ghosts are real.
Ari wouldn't like how Ember uses her powers. Ember would probably view Ari as pretty boring and annoying but also deep down be kind of jealous of how Ari got to be a popstar in life and death.
Fanning the Flames would go VERY differently because like there'd be no brainwashing involved. Ari isnt exactly doing anything wrong, shes just pretending to be human. Which would be an interesting dilemma for Danny to face. A ghost interacting and outright deceiving people on her true nature, but she doesnt have any bad intentions. She just wants to hold up to the expectations placed on her and do what she loves. Something that he'd probably relate to.
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I see you responding to all the divorced dad! Daniel asks with wonderful fluff and smut, and I raise you some angst.
How about Daniel taking on more co-parenting, so the kids are fully at his house for 2 weeks or more. And you love them, but your "babysitting" skills are more fun, rather than practical. You're playing with them when it's supposed to be quiet time, allowing them ice cream and more Ipad time, basically spoiling them rotten. So now Danny's looking like a "bad cop" and has to pull you aside and talk to you.
NONNIEEE oh my god, iâve been looking at this for a few days !! i love some good angst.. bring me more..
and i LOVE this scenario, actually. this was originally a long ramble, but it turned into a drabble. enjoy<3
daniel doesnât expect it at first, that youâd be so up for helping him look after his kids. itâs a discussion you both had early on, daniel curious why youâre so into him, when heâs literally just.. a divorced father. youâre quick to convince him there are many reasons but that night, only one reason gets brought into fruitionâ heâs fucking hot.
but anyways when the time comes that he has the kids more often, he mentions it to you and youâre overjoyed!! you love his kids, and they seem to have a decent liking towards youâ so itâs a win! heâs happy to hear youâll be around to help look after them, and he canât thank you enough (or, he can. itâs just not a way he can thank you when kids are around).
so, when the kids arrive for their 2 week stay, youâre there with daniel to greet them. they hug their dad first, daniel nuzzling his nose into their hair before placing a kiss on their foreheads. then, they turn to you and give you a hug too. it warms your heart. really. youâre glad youâre developing somewhat of a relationship with the two, even if it was a slow start.
it doesnât take long for daniel to realise that you and him have different parenting skills. i mean what did he expect, really? youâ a young, childless woman vs himâ an older, experienced father. itâs not exactly surprising, but he didnât expect it to be so different.
when itâs time for them to calm down, get settled as itâs coming up for their bedtime, youâre still playing happily with them. the sight is heartwarming, he canât deny that. but, he knows theyâll be hyper as soon as they drop into their beds. he hesitates to interfere, they look so.. happy. theyâre enjoying themselves, running from you with giggles erupting as you chase them around. eventually, he stands infront of the doorway that his daughter is running into. sheâs looking behind, trying to look for you when she bumps into danielâs knee, and is scooped up into his arms.
âdaddy, help! sheâsââ she starts loudly, giggles bursting before daniel interrupts her.
âi know honey, thatâs why itâs time to stop. itâs almost time to sleep, and youâre up running around,â daniel gently scolds, subtly eyeing you at the side of him. youre stood with his son, hand on his shoulder as you stare at daniel guiltily.
âsorry, itâs my fault,â you mutter, giving the little guy a squeeze. âi got carried away and didnât realise the time,â you continue, and daniel swallows. shit. he didnât want to make you upset.
âno no, youâre fine. nobody is in the wrong or in trouble,â he smiles weakly, blowing a raspberry into his daughterâs cheek as he changes the subject. ânow, whoâs ready for bed? iâll race ya..â
it was fine. it was done. it was one night.
until it wasnât.
you were allowing them more time on their electronics than he would. you were allowing them ice cream before bed. you were allowing them to run around when it was quiet time. you were allowing them to go completely out of routine.
and now he looked like the bad guy. he looked like bad cop. and he couldnât handle it. they were growing more attached to you, starting to love you more as the days went on. but when he put a stop to your antics, they would deflate. they werenât as happy. they didnât want dad messing it up, they wanted you fixing it.
and thatâs how you end up here.
daniel asks you to come with him as the two kids watch a movie in the living room, bundled up in blankets on the sofa. just five minutes ago, you were all having a pillow fight while daniel set up the film. but it was breaking point for him.
he shuts the door behind him, turning round to look at you smiling softly at him. your smile falters at the deep exhale that escapes him, and you move a step closer.
âdanny, is everything alright?â you ask, tilting your head so you could see his face, try to read his emotions. you feel a pit in your stomach when you notice his tight lips, his dark eyes and furrowed brows.
âwe need to have a talk,â he lets out, voice low. you gulp in response, nodding slowly. you ask him what about, and the response is âyou.â
âme? dan, have iâ have i done something?â you ask worriedly, wringing your hands nervously as he still doesnât move.
a sigh escapes him this time, finally looking up and staring at you. you feel a shiver go down your spine at the look he gives you. âlook, we need to talk about how you look after the kids,â he starts, making you tilt your head.
âoh? what abââ âyouâre too lenient on them, and you make everything a game. they canât live like that, discipline isnât necessary all the time, but sometimes it is,â he interrupts you, and your jaw falls at his words.
âiâ i donât make everything a game? i try to mark things a little more fun, make life a little less mundane. youâre strict on them, danny, a little too strict. iâm trying to balance that,â you respond, it was evident in your tone you were upsetâ offended at what he said.
âyou arenât balancing anything!â he whisper-shouts, leaning closer and your eyes widen at the sudden silent outburst. âyouâre messing with the way theyâve grown up and lived their entire lives. let me parent them like theyâre used to. keep your antics to yourself,â he tells you, coldly.
you feel an ache in your chest at his words, and his attitude. why was he so bitter? why was he so afraid of letting them have a little more fun? âtheyâre kids, danny. let kids me kids.â
for some reason, that snapped something within him. danielâs face twisted before he scuffed loudly, pointing a finger at you. âyou donât have kids, so you donât know anything about parenting, or what itâs like to be one.â
the silence after that sentence is deafening, and you canât see momentarily due to the tears welling in your eyes. you shakily breathe, before letting out a wet laugh. âyeah, youâre right. iâm not a parent. but thatâs not by choice, is it daniel?â you ask him coldly, before turning around to the coat stand, grabbing your own.
danielâs heart drops when he realises what he had said, and the impact it had on you. earlier, when i mentioned the plethora of reasons you liked daniel and his kids? a big reason, and one of the main onesâ you canât have kids yourself. you canât get pregnant, therefore biologically you cannot have your own kids.
daniel crossed a lineâ majorlyâ but he wasnât able to fix it in time. he snapped out of his thoughts due to the front door slamming, and you were gone.
NONNIE OH MY GOD this gave me the opportunity to introduce some lore about reader đ divorced dad! daniel angst? mmm, yes please. send in any genre about this series as much as you like!
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Remember, you asked.
First, you misunderstand the batfamily's concept, or what fanon made them to be (canon is a lil shit we don't like bc its inconsistent.) I would not call them brutal, in the slightest. "Brutal" means savage, uncontrolled violence, which you could say is true to the batfamily, but they are not "brutal" as a family unit, and rarely brutal as individuals. The violence is more often than not stricktly neccesary.
The batfamily is inherently human, a huge family made by choice, with flaws, grief and anger coating every bond, because of the line of work they are in. They are different, yet they still find comfort and familiarity in each other. You can call them toxic, because they are in canon, but the fandom had managed to make something better, something functioning out of it.
The batfamily heals each other, and they offer a place of healing for others.
But then, why DP? You asked.
First, there is the obvious joke we should adress, the adoption bait Danny is. Black hair, blue eyes, trauma is basically Bruce waynes exact adoption type.
Second, Danny has a broken homelife, as much as people want to overlook it. Jack and Maddie are not good parents, fixated on their job, neglecting their kid. Because it is neglect, even if they love him.
Oh look! A sudden point that comes up! Paralells.
Danny's relationship with his parents brings a paralell to Tim's relationship with his own. The Fentons and the Drakes both love their son, but their job is always more important. They were not fit for parenthood, and they have no clue what to do with a child.
And lets not forget that Danny died a pretty traumatic death, which realistically would cause a fourteen year old biig ptsd, which I feel like is not properly explored in the show (shocker). And then he is brought back by this green goo (more on ectoplasm later), which brings us our second paralell, which is Jason Todd. Jason also died a traumatic dead at age fourten, and then was brought back to consciousness by green goo.
So, you have a teenage vigilante with black hair, blue eyes who had to die to gain his powers, is super traumatised, and hunted by his own parents, also has a creepy old man who wants to make him his sucsessor.
Yeah that is another paralel to Tim, and surprisingly Dick. (Slade when I cach you...)
I dunno about you, but Danny just fits into this little found family thing they have going on.
But what about Jass, I hear you asking.
Jass was also neglected, and then forced to take on a third parental role when Danny was born. Her love for psychology is not an accident, she wants to provide the best life for her brother, and emotional growth can only be supported by an emotionally mature person.
Add that to the fact that her brother technically died at fourteen, and you get a pretty good gist about how much trauma she herself might be repressing, which is an amazing point of discusion in any media.
Now onto the worldbuilding, and why DP adds so much to the DCU.
First, lets address the elephant in the blog, green goo. The lazarus pitts make so much sense as contaminated ectoplasm, it's not even funny. Ectoplasm is what ghosts are made out of, its what gives them life, what helps them heal. So it would make sense that it would assist with bringing back a person, but really wrong. It's dirty with age, and death, that's why it works as it does. It's an excellent plot drive, with Danny hellping Jason overcome the effects of this horrid thing inside him, and it also gives us an exciting premise of Jason being somewhat an opposite of Danny. Fully dead, and fully alive, not some half this half that. Jason is not just a ghost possessing his own body, he's him, he's still one, body and soul, even if he died.
Second, the GIW (Guys In White/Ghost Investigation Ward) and the AEA (Anty Ecto Acts).
The AEA goes against Meta Protection Laws, dehumanizing ectoplasmic beings and taking away every right denizens (residents of the infinite realms/ghost zone, more on that later) would deserve as sentient beings.
This brings in a tension point for the justice leauge and the gowernment, makind for stellar drama. Also a tension point for Damian and Jason, who are considered Ectoplasmic beings (lazarus pit).
The GIW are the enforcers basically. They experiment on denizens, they are a government organization, and such.
The implications of the Infinite realms, and how it fits.
As we know, the DCU is a multiverse, with a lot of different universes, The ghost zone, or Infinite realms, depending on who you ask, is basically the veins of the universe, and the ectoplasm is its blood. There, it fitts nicely, I am not going into politics bc that is really author dependent.
All in all, the two just fits together so perfectly, it would have been strange not to decide a crosover is due.
This is all I have right now, if I missed something, feel free to tell me.
I genuinely want to know where DCĂDP got started. Who looked at this brutal, angry, violent family and said "you know who would go great with this? An overrated nickelodeon cartoon about ghosts" like ?????
#dc#dcu#batfamily#dpxdc#dc x dp#danny phantom#dp#rant post#ramblings#Honestly OP asked the wrong question#I mean#can you blame a person#when you ask such a silly question for going on such a long rant?#Bold of you to ask a specific question that targets that one specific thing I love talking about#found family
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fortunately, or unfortunately, they only see each other like 3 times a yearâŠ
#danny phantom#danny fenton#valerie gray#college au#blood#gore#grayghost#they have a situationship for sure#but are so not on the same page#danny would have really liked this to go differently#but he lost track of time and his opponent got bored of waiting#Valerie hunts ghosts for the government#sheâs more targeted and efficient than the giw#and travels a lot#but her home base is amity#where sometimes she sees fenton on weekends heâs home from school#he revealed his identity right before leaving for college#and sheâs had a minute to sit with it#sheâs very against the bridge thing#but keeps his identity secret#on the off chance she figures out how to get rid of phantom without harming danny#donât worry tho sheâll get his ass for this#pheeeeew#this is probably (definitely) the most involved comic Iâve ever done#enjoy!
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Instead of Ghost King Danny (Monarchies are icky)(Danny deserves better) may I present to you Speaker of Peace Danny
In this headcanon the Infinite Realms are treated as a loose collection of states and peoples that don't always like each other and have no unifying federal government. Speakers are individuals who have earned the respect of those powers by performing some kind of communal service.
Wulf is the Speaker of the Journey, because all travel in the ghost zone has a thirty percent chance of getting so lost you'll never find home again and Wulf, as one of the only proficient portal users around, frequently helps the lost find their way home, earning his title.
Danny earns his title by repeatedly bringing peace through either diplomacy, or beating idiots up until they're ready to listen to that diplomacy. He redefined ghostly/living relations, helped Dora take her throne over her brother who everyone hated, and calmed down four separate wars and helped the ghosts involved find a resolution that wasn't 'kill each other again'.
Basically, Speaker of Peace is the realms interpretation of the superhero duties he's taken on.
#in this headcanon Pariah Dark was an arrogant fool who sought to conquer the unconquerable#everyone is glad he's gone#i also like this headcanon because it lets danby be more free#he still has duties but not the kind of coutly bullshit that went out of fashion forever ago#there are so many different kinds of government i don't know why the Infinite Realms would limit themselves to one really stupid one#also 'infinite' strikes me as really hard to centralize#some people have been lost behind the forest of hungry trees for three millenia#how is some king they've never met going to tell them what to do?#danny phantom#danny fenton#fandom stuff#my thoughts#headcanon#anti monarchy
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i have... âšDanyal Al Ghul Headcanonsâš but specifically for my yaelokre danyal oneshot
There's also the tumblr post here but I recommend the link in the title because its the ao3 version, and that one is edited and has some stuff in it that's not in the tumblr post, and will be the version I'm using.
So for summary: this Danyal is also from a Demon Siblings Au where Danny is five years older than Damian. However, things turned out a bit differently, and Danny and Damian had a fantastic relationship with one another. Danny loved music and regularly came up with songs to sing to Damian with. Specifically the folk band Yaelokre's EP "Hayfields" (seriously go fucking listen to it its sooo good. Harpy Hare is the second song but its my favorite. Special shoutout to @gascansposts for introducing the band to me)
He falls off a train when he's twelve and Damian is seven while the two of them and Talia are on mission. He ends up with magically induced amnesia and wakes up in Arkansas while the Fentons are on their yearly Divorce-iversary visit to Aunt Alica, and since he can only remember his name, he ends up being taken into their care.
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Yaelokre Danny has the same facial scar as Things in Threes Danyal, since he was initially another version of him where things turned out better. I'm debating on whether or not I should take it away however, and give him a different scar (maybe from when he fell off the train?), just because the scar is a pretty key identifier for Ti3 Danyal.
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Danny frequently visits Aunt Alicia in Arkansas! Well, only after he gets settled in and stuff. He doesn't really like the city that much and prefers the countryside where Alicia lives. I know she lives in a cabin but I'm changing it to a farm, so she puts Danny to work and gets him to help her.
I don't want to confine his hobbies to only being star stuff, because people tend to have more than one hobby and I feel like it reduces him to one-dimensionality, so he likes to garden, and learns guitar. His room becomes filled with plants, and he turns their roof into a rooftop greenhouse right below to OPS Center.
He has a complex relationship with the weapons from his past, but he's not... like... appalled by it? When he finds his weapons in the Fenton attic all he thinks is that they're his weapons, and he starts carrying a knife on him afterwards. Essentially he becomes fascinated with weaponry because its one of the few physical ties he has to his past, and while he's not training like he is in the League, he allows his strong muscle memory to guide him through his katas.
Danny likes climbing things. This causes Problems For Everyone Else.
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Danny was not the "kinder Al Ghul" in the League. His kindness extended to his brother and family, and that's it. To everyone else he had high expectations out of them, and the pride you'd expect from the grandson of Ra's Al Ghul and trained by its top members. While he wasn't like, unnecessarily cruel or anything, he wasn't merciful either.
This transfers post-train fall as him coming off as no-nonsense and unforgiving. He's not fond of the idea of giving people second chances, and is skeptical of the idea. He's disgusted by incompetency and views it as an unforgivable offense, especially if he thinks that the person should know better, although he's not sure why. Some egocentrism for the soul.
He doesn't like being touched by anyone who isn't family, and gets irritated when anyone grabs him or holds onto him for extended amounts of time. Dash has gotten hit so many times. With Jack Fenton's tendency for abrupt physical affection, it doesn't make it any better. I'd argue it'd make it worse because Danny doesn't want to be touched more often than not.
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Danyal had a red scarf in the League that he wore on his last mission, it came off before he fell off and caught itself on the roof. Damian still has it and took it with him to Wayne Manor. He's got it locked in his room and takes it out when he's alone and missing Danny the most. One time he forgot to put it away before leaving his room, and Dick was visiting the manor for something and found it. Damian found him holding it and freaked out.
Dick could only say "I've never seen you wear this, Damian, this is really pretty--" before Damian shoved him to the floor and stole it out of his hands, before screaming at him; "Don't touch this! You don't ever touch this! This is mine! You hear me!?"
It caused such a commotion that the rest of the family present came to see what the fuss was about, and Damian kicked them all out of his room. Dick is the one brother Damian's the closest with, so the fact he reacted so strongly shocked them all.
This is likely what leads to the "Danyal" conversation.
#dpxdc#danny fenton is not the ghost king#dp x dc#dpxdc crossover#dp x dc crossover#danyal al ghul au#yaelokre danny#yaelokre danyal al ghul#the yaelokre danny post didn't really go into him interacting with other people but i'm trying to figure out his personality post amnesia#just know this: he's not canon danny. im spitefully refusing to make him a Cookie Cutter of canon danny because the idea pisses me off lmao#he's complex and confused and morally gray even with the amnesia bc memories aren't stored in one part of the brain they're stored#in different parts depending on the memory and muscle memory exists and danny might not actively remember the things that shaped him but hi#body does. and somewhere deep in his mind so does his brain. his memories weren't destroyed theyre locked away in a place where his active#conscious can't reach. plus its magic amnesia and i have comic AND cartoon realism on my side.#danny's personality from the league doesn't get challenged that much by the fentons because danny's learning this about himself just as muc#as they are. Jazz can't âFixâ what's wrong with him when neither of them know it and Danny is always the first to figure it out and then#keeps it to himself. Also. Jazz has a fucking life? she's not the family therapist she has friends and hobbies even if we the viewers don't#see it. But also i just really deeply despise the idea that Jazz âfixesâ danny's league issues just by existing and being the therapist#because it waters her down into a one-dimensional character who only exists in the context of providing emotional support and life advice t#danny. also therapy only works on someone that's actively trying to change. otherwise its just psychoanalyzing and people tend to hate#being psychoanalyzed without consent. which as a result may have them refuse help. anyways point is: i believe that growth is slow and#complex and danny would hide a lot of the stuff he discovers about himself because if there's one thing he still retains from being an#assassin. it's how to hide. he likes jazz but there are some things you just hide from people.#damian also told dick to âkeep his filthy hands off his thingsâ. which was also a shock because it sounded something he'd say more to tim#damian was distraught the entire time.#okay thats all i have for now.
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Tagged by @soyouwinagain to post 6 photos from my camera roll in the past week, thank you comrade, I was hoping someone would tag me đ«Ąđ«Ą except then I had to go back a couple weeks otherwise all six photos would have been my dog at a cocktail garden.
Ivan Fedotov and Erik Johnson at Flyers training camp, Fedotov in full Russian saint mode; a flower outside of an Indian restaurant; Yankees outfielders running away from each other and I'm so mad I only got them running back to position bc they were being SO cute while a reliever was warming up; Keats at the aforementioned cocktail garden, he was sweatin'; giant rotting boat outside of Ikea; boxes containing all of my earthly possessions.
#having a good day đ went to rittenhouse to hang with sierra while they did work then went to a flyers rally and got free stuff#heroically refrained from asking flyers reporters about danny briere's plan for eetu mĂ€kiniemi during the q&a#took the bus all by myself!!!! an actualy achievement lol i'm so scared of buses and i was so worried i would end up in like delaware#but i did not i ended up at my house#so now i feel much more confident about taking the bus..exposure therapy LMAO#went to a pizza place near me i have not been too and it FUCKS#my new favorite thing to do rn is if i can eat anything on the menu and its super slow in the restaurant is to ask#what the cashier or server recommends. way better than if i were just panicking and ordered cheese pizza#i need to start unpacking my art supplies and bathe my dog but overall...VERY good day so far#if the padres and the phillies pull through we'll be in good shape#OH!!!! AND EVERYONE BEING SO SO BRAVE FOR TEAM LIFT FEST!!!#ME N MAX ARE SOOOO PROUD OF EVERYONE AND I'M SOOOO EXCITED TO SEE WHAT THE NEXT TWO WEEKS BRINGS!!!!#i've been having some frustrations with myself bc there was a lot of stuff i should have scaled down and didn't#and my ethos running this w max is way different than fth but none of the sign up materials reflect that#which i'm frustrated with myself for not thinking through more carefully and conscientiously#even tho going into this we knew so much of the fest was going to be us throwing puddy at the wall and seeing what sticks#but i have been frustrated with myself for not thinking through how materials like the sign up form don't reflect the like spirit of how we#wanted to run it#so it's really nice to see that people are being really brave and getting excited for each other and getting excited for what's#being offered#i'm sooooo excited!!!!!!!!!#ok i'm done lol i have to finish this soda and face the disaster that is how i packed my art supplies#when i can do art again. know.#fresno oilers.txt
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regular playing deck of cards but each of the major suits represents a diff caroline and clara of course would be the jester bc shes a wild card
in my heart i think its
red - clubs
lady - spades
kate - diamonds
caroline - hearts
with
caroline - king
carmilla - queen
vince - jack
danny - ace
and of course every suit has the version of them in that timeline...i havent actually really considered much of the others variants...in ladys timeline i know danny still transitions albiet much later and changes her name to magnolia which is a sly reference to reds comment about danny name [as in going from daniel to danielle so she can keep her nickname - the only one of the carolines who addresses her like such] and i also did consider kates relationship to vince specifically which is such an odd pairing and not fully fleshed out yet but its there....anyways that is my thoughts i need to go back to working now
#its just a bit difficult cause while obviously i know a lot abt red bc shes kind of the 'main' caroline#and caroline ie the original caroline just follows the original plot so of course she knows the rest of the cast#meanwhile lady is such a massive bitch and disregards the story in its outright so no one would really like her...and she has no opinion on#danny since shes viewed as an irrelevant side character. maybe she tries to be nice to carmilla but its. ok itll take too long to explain#cause its 'popular' girl befriends the 'weird' girl but specifically my experience of it which differs from the commonly accepted view#and then kate just wakes up and immediately isolates herself from everyone ever so theres very little interactions lol#but she knows most abt whats going down and remembers everyone so she Does have opinions...idk idkkkk things to think about !
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DP X DC: A Minor Drinking Problem
Phantom is a relatively new member of the JLA, but it's been a few months, and things are settling in well. He's shy and polite but is a master of the snark with villains.
Before a big mission, the all hands on deck kind, everyone is talking about scars and the crazy stories behind them to distract from the coming fight. Danny, finally feeling like he can join in the conversation with all these adult heroes, pulls off his right glove to show a pretty gnarly scar on the back of his wrist. âI got this one when I fought a guy from the Revolutionary War a few weeks ago! Didn't think he'd charge me with a bayonet.â He shares a couple more stories and scars, but only the ones that he can easily show off.
Because of stories like that and some historical depictions of Phantom from different time periods, they think he's this ancient and powerful immortal that just looks like a teenager, it wouldnt be the first time. He's powerful enough to go toe to toe with Superman, so there's no way he's actually a kid. He even sometimes has the haunted, world weary eyes that their most hardened members only get after experiencing too much. Danny, being our lovable, obliviously dense idiot, has not realized that they think he's an ancient being.
After the mission concludes -it was a rough one-, the JLA celebrate their victory with a couple drinks back at the watch tower. Danny is understandably uncomfortable with this whole situation and keeps asking, âAre you sure I should be here?â They reassure him it's fine as they pass around beers, which Danny politely declines several times. Danny eventually sees this as the perfect chance to pad his blackmail folders on his inebriated coworkers.
Anyway, as the night goes on, they have a good time, but Phantom still hasn't gotten a drink like the rest of them, and Green Lantern (or hero of your choice) really wants their shy friend to come out of his shell. So, he slams an open beer bottle on the coffee table in front of Phantom. âCome on Phantom! Let loose a little. Celebrate!â
âDude! What the hell?! I'm 16! That's illegal!â Phantom squeaks in shock.
âWe don't care how old you were when you died. It's how long you've been a ghost that counts.â Flash slings an arm around Danny's shoulders from where heâs sat next to him on the couch. Flash can't get drunk, but he also thinks it would be fun to see their uptight new member drunk.
âThat's even worse! You'd be giving alcohol to a two year old!â Phantom is horrified that his coworkers are so casually breaking the law.
âBut you said you fought in the Revolutionary War this morning!â Green Lantern said with his eyebrows knit in confusion.
âNo, I said I fought someone from the Revolutionary War. As in, the ghost of someone from the revolutionary war!â
âYou can't pull that on us. There's murals and stuff of you from thousands of years ago.â The Flash waves off with a laugh.
Phantomâs finger presses painfully hard into Flashâs chest. âI do not need to explain time travel to you of all people. My mentor hates you, and I'm STILL sent on missions constantly to clean up your messes.â Phantom's clear and low. Flash liked it better when he was shouting and not staring him down like a predator with narrowed eyes.
(This random idea popped into my head. It made me laugh, so I thought you might, too. Here you go!)
#dpxdc#dp x dc#dcxdp#dc x dp#dp x dc crossover#dc x dp crossover#danny phantom#dp x dc prompt#plot bunny#the flash#green lantern#time travel
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A Week (He Will Take You)
~
Danny moved to Gotham for school, while there he noticed that Gotham's ambient ecto was really murky for lack of a better word.
This didn't really affect him too much besides a mild headache every once in a while but that also just might be stress from all his school work so maybe not.
Anyway
This murky ecto seemed to effect the people who lived there or more importantly the ghosts,
They were visible to the human eye like most ghosts back in Amity but instead of looking very much like a ghost they still looked like humans if a bit off putting.
They all seemed to be continuing their normal lives as if still fully alive, with the people around them none the wiser.
Danny noticed this and began approaching them to figure out what was going on.
Apparently the murky ecto in the city had made it so that they were strong enough to still continue a somewhat normal life but not be able to cross over to the GZ.
In other words they were stuck in Gotham
Danny was the Ghost King so he could easily fix this problem, all he needed to do was give them a bit of pure ecto for around a week to fully stabilize them them then he would just open a portal into the GZ and they could cross over with all their things also transferring into the GZ for their new haunt.
Unfortunately this looked rather worrying to an outsider,
Imagine you're used to your neighbor being very outgoing so you and others see them a lot suddenly this man seems to appear in their life out of nowhere an at exactly one week, your neighbor and all their belongings in their home disappear no trace to be found.
You tell people and they begin saying the same story they knew someone and them a man with black hair and blue eyes appeared in their life, then they and all their things disappear in exactly one week.
Of course the police in Gotham do the bare minimum so they're no help.
But it starts to begin a trend, especially online.
"Oh careful or the blue eyed man will make you disappear in a week"
This of course after time catches the bats attention, Gordon had already given them all the information he had.
"Young adult early twenties, dark hair, blue eyes"
That was it.
The bats look into it and from their point of view Danny is a serial killer.
But they can't find the connection between all of his victims, they range from young children and the elderly from different backgrounds absolutely no connection,
Worrying enough he doesn't just make one person disappear he has taken entire families up to over a dozen, without anyone figuring out how he's doing it or why at all.
The disturbing thing also being that he seems to take everything in their home, leaving it like it has always been empty
Like no one had been living in it.
People have tried to take photos of Danny get some kind of evidence of his existence, but when they try to do it, it either comes out completely corrupted or their devise simply shuts down fully.
Danny of course has no clue what is happening he's just happy that he's able to help so many ghosts, and is trying not to fail his exams.
~
Danny leaving the house he just helped: "That went easier than I expected!"
Neighbor peeking from the window: "Shit it's that guy! "
~
Red Hood marching down into the cave: " The fucker took many from my territory without me even realizing it!"
~
Tim: "I'm pretty sure his kill count is nearing the hundreds and he just started like maybe 4 months ago, this is bad."
Barbara: " I think I got a theory, this matches up with the new school year beginning so maybe their not a Gotham native which narrows down my suspect list."
Bruce: "Hn."
Tim: "Yes thank you B for the insightful commentary"
~
Danny trying not to fall asleep while on his way to class: "Strange I keep seeing shadows following me, oh well must be the stress!"
Bats who are pretty sure Danny is the killer: "Has he done anything suspicious yet?"
~
Just an Idea
#glowy-death-ideas#danny phantom#dc x dp#dpxdc#batman#danny fenton#dp x dc crossover#dc x dp crossover#prompt fill#story prompt#prompts#writing prompt#dp#ghost#ghosts#dp x dc
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Dc x Dp #42
Danny raising both de-aged Dan and Dani in Gotham and a small apartment. Everything seemed to be fine for the most part. Though he was tired of how many different jobs he had to keep taking because of all the rogues running around and trashing the place. He came home and complained everytime about the stupid rogues that was causing trouble. The latest was the Joker with his bombs blowing up the coffee shop he worked at.
He complained as he made his way into the kitchen to prepare dinner, missing the look that was shared between Dani and Dan.
Because while they were physically regressed to the ages of toddlers, their powers still stayed intact. Of course, the most Danny had to deal with was the two occasionally floated when they were sleepy or excited. Which he could handle. He didn't know how much the two were holding back in his presence to appear on their best behavior.
Which lead to Red Hood standing over said toddlers in the middle of the night. Dan holding a bloodied Joker by his hair. And by the faint trail of blood behind him, they were obviously dragging him somewhere.
Now, he's dealt with kids with superpowers before, but he didn't think he would have to deal with literal babies.
"So, what do you kids got there?" He asked, voice inquisitive yet static-like due to the voice modulator in his mask.
"We got a bad clown!" The girl chirped, blue eyes piercing with a proudness that no toddler should have about beating up someone. Though, he'll give it to her, he was a bad clown.
"And why do you have the bad clown?" He asked, ignoring the pained groan said clown let out that was muffled due to him being face down on the concrete. Hearing the sound, the young boy that had him lifted his head and slammed it down on the ground with a strength that startled Jason for a moment. His hand reflectively going for one of his pistols before settling.
Well, that answered the question of whether or not the kids did it themselves. Sparing a glance between two, he noticed the boy was a bit more roughed up
"He upset mama." The boy answered plainly, frowning as if upsetting his mother was the most unforgivable thing there was. Though, what kid didn't think that way? "He made mama job go boom!" She said, spreading her arms in an exaggerated manner to imitate an explosion.
Ah, Jason did remember Joker did blow up a few buildings the other day. He guessed their mother was working at one of them. Did that mean that she was a meta on the run, a civilian with two meta children, or some sick handler of child soldiers?
"Well, we better bring him to mama, shouldn't we? Bet she'd be really surprised to see what you two did." He offered, curious to see their reactions.
Both children suddenly looked up at him with matching blue eyes that sparkled with excitement. Probably because he wasn't going to stop them from what they were doing.
"Let's go see mama!" The young girl cheered, the boy giving a nod in affirmative before the two began walking down in a direction that was no doubt their home. The boys grip on the Joker's hair unfaltering as he continued to drag him through the pavement.
Jason followed the strange group, hands nestled in his pockets as he couldn't wait to see the reaction of their mother when the group returned home.
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Of all the places he could have been summoned to, Danny Phantom had never considered a private schoolâs bathroom to be one of them.
With glowing green skin, a shock of flickering flames for hair, and a suit made out of the spaces between collapsing stars, Danny stared down at the stupefied faces of Gotham Academyâs finest students. One of them had their face in their hands, having caught sight of him and undergoing all the stages of grief in but a moment.
They sat around a circle that he was appropriately impressed with considering the limited space they had to work with. Danny could see the empty stalls, some of which were adorned with drawings and writings that were left by the, no-doubt, extremely busy caretaker.
âSeriously, a bathroom?â Danny wrinkled his nose.
âHoly shit, that actually worked?â One of the kids blurted out, then slammed their hands on top of their mouth.
âDid you expect it not to?â Danny squinted at them, frowning. Itâs Friday, so itâs not like he had much to do, but Danny would prefer it if his time wasnât wasted.
âNo- no, your⊠uh, highness?â
âAll of that schooling and youâre still uneducated,â one of the other ones hissed at the red headed kid who spoke. Itâs âYour Majesty.â Heâs a king, idiot!â
That was a pretty solid burn but, âItâs actually just Phantom. Did you guys want something? Iâm busy.â
Heâs not busy, but who cares?
âUhâŠâ the kids exchanged glances. The one in the back sighed and spoke up. He adjusted his glasses.
âWeâre sorry for bothering you, Phantom. You wouldnât happen to have a solution for dimensional separation, would you?â
âHuh.â Danny tilted his head, face souring. âI hate dimensional issues. Theyâre the worst. Whoâs causing them?â
âHis nameâs Klarion!â The one who slapped a hand across his mouth earlier piped up.
âOh! The lords of chaos or whatever. Yeah, I can help, for a price.â
Danny is against unpaid labor. Extremely against it, considering his side gig is being a half-dead vigilante. Then again, are you really a vigilante if youâre not half dead on a regular basis?
âWhat do you want?â Despite the reluctance from earlier, itâs clear the one with the glasses made the big decisions in this weird friend group.
â⊠A hundred dollars.â
âThatâs it? No stipulations?â When Danny nodded, the kid had a calculating expression. âDeal.â The teen said immediately. He pulled out cash and wow, Dannyâs definitely in a place with a different tax bracket.
He snatched it. Nasty burger money!
âDealâs a deal. Also, donât ever summon me again, but if you do, donât ever do it in a bathroom again. You kids are so weird.â Danny floated out of the circle, grinning sharply. He formed a small bird- he doesnât know why, but it felt right- of ice and handed it to the kid with glasses. âThere. Proof of the deal.â
With that, Danny disappeared. Private school kids were so fucking weird, but⊠Dash and his goons were probably worse. Whatâs a little ritualistic summoning in the face of teenagers?
ââ
âI leave you guys alone for ten minutes and you summon the king of the dead?â Robin narrowed his eyes at his teammates, traitors who had the good graces to look sheepish. âHow could you?! I wanted to try, too!â
Kid Flash patted him on the shoulder, a granola bar appearing in his mouth now that the possible world ending terror disappeared. âSorry, Rob. Maybe next time! Magic still isnât real though.â
âIâm not doing this shit in a bathroom again,â Artemis rolled back to her feet. âHe sounded like he was going to rip our bones out if we ever summoned him in a bathroom again.â
âUghâŠâ
#dcxdp#dpxdc#danny phantom#batman#bruce wayne#dc x dp#dick grayson#Robin#young justice#artemis crock#kid flash#Iâm aware Artemis didnât know about rob in this ep#I think? itâs been a while since Iâve watched it#Wally West
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Family Dinners - dpxdc
"Holy shit, you're Bruce Wayne!" Danny gaped, jabbing a finger at the man sitting at the head of the table.
The bustling dining room goes silent as everyone turns to look at him.
"Danny, who did you think was going to be here?" Tim asks, disbelief plain in his voice and Danny feels his face flush red.
"Sorry, I, uh, I guess I just never put it together. Tim Drake-Wayne. Wayne Manor. It, uh, makes sense now." He laughs sheepishly and scrubs at his neck before slumping back down into his chair.
"Well," Tim says with an indulgent sigh, "at least I know you're not just friends with me for my connections."
"Yeah, I'm really sorry, I just never thought about it, I guess."
Danny sinks lower as everyone around him laughs. Come to dinner, he said, the food is the best, he said, ignore the family, he said. Danny really wishes he'd listened to Tim and just ignored themâalmost as much as he's regretting accepting the offer in the first placeâbut... he's having dinner with Batman.
Ancients, that's so weird!
The last time he saw Batman was in the future and, suffice it to say, it was not going well. There hadn't really been time for family dinners there.
Wait. Family dinners?
He peers around the table, openly gawking at everyone as it all clicks into place.
"Everything alright, Danny? Now realising who everyone else is?" Tim asks with a roll of his eyes.
"Uh... something like that..." Danny mumbles as everyone laughs again.
From further down the table, the smallest Wayne scoffs and clicks his tongue.
"I thought you said he was smart, Drake?"
"So, you all do it, too, then?" he asks, ignoring the jibe. Danny's only a little bit jealous as he thinks of how much easier they must have it, how much easier it'd be if his family had been on his side, too. "You all work together?"
"Nah," Dick says from across the table with a brilliant grin. "Tim's the only one that works with Bruce, we all have different jobs. I'm a police officer in Bludhaven."
"Disgusting." Danny blurts out without thinkingâbecause seriously, what kind of self-respecting vigilante would also be a police officer?âbefore clapping a hand over his mouth. "Sorry."
The whole table laughs again, the loudest being the blonde girl a few spaces down from Dick. Look, Danny wasn't really paying attention to names when they were all paraded in front of him. Dick only gets remembered because his name is a joke.
Come on, Danny, recover!
"That's, uh, not what I meant, though."
"Oh?" Dick asks, cocking his head slightly to the side. Is it Danny's imagination or does his smile tense slightly?
"Yeah, I mean like, you know, in costume. It must make it so much easier to have everyone together like this."
"Costume? What do you mean?"
Yeah, Danny's not imagining it, everyone tenses up at that. It's really only now that he's realising that this probably isn't how he should bring up that he knows about their... night time activities. In fact, he probably shouldn't be bringing it up at all.
"Uuhhh..." Danny looks wildly around the table as he continues making his stupid noise. Think, think, think! There must be a way out of this!
"Danny?" Tim asks, looking concerned.
"Oh, Ancients, this isn't how I wanted it to go at all," he mutters, slipping even further into his chair. He's almost on the floor now and he so, so wishes it could just swallow him up.
His real first meeting with Batman was meant to be cool! He had planned to be Phantom, maybe save them from a tight spot, prove his worth as a mysterious and powerful ally as thanks for the help Batman gave him in the future.
"Danny, what are you talking about?" Tim starts tugging on his sleeve in an attempt to pull him back up from his pit of despair.
Eventually, Danny relents and sits up straighter, hiding his face in his hands and whining all the while.
"I'm sorry, I just didn't expect him to be here and it threw me off so now I look stupid and it's so embarrassing!" he wails, flailing his arms wide. "Why wouldn't you warn me that Batman was your adopted dad, Tim? Couldn't you have let me know?"
"I'm sorry, what? Danny are you alright? There's no way Bruce can be Batman, look at him!"
"Yeah," the blonde girl laughs from the bottom of the table, "look at him! That's a wet noodle of a man! Batman can actually do things, B is incapable of pretty much everything."
"Thank you, Stephanie," Bruce sighs, massaging his forehead.
It's... Those are the first words Danny's heard Batman say since everything went down and it's enough to knock him out of his embarrassment.
It's really good to hear his voice again. Especially now, when it's strong and healthy and full of personalityâeven if that personality is little more than a tired father right nowâfar better than how it had been, at the end.
Danny sits up, back straight, and grins. He's got this. He remembers it perfectly. Some people count sheep to fall asleep, Danny repeats his mantra to be certain that he'll never forget it.
"Gamma alpha upsilon tau iota mu epsilon, 42, 63, 28, 1 colon 65 dash 9."
Once again, the whole table falls into silence.
"Holy shit..." breathes the other D name (Duke? Danny's pretty sure he's Signal) from opposite Stephanie. "Isn't that...?"
"The time travelling code." The littlest Wayne says stiffly. "We have met in the future?"
"That's not just the time travelling code, Dami." Dick says, looking between Danny and Bruce. "That's the family time travelling code."
Danny's grin freezes in place.
"I'm sorry, what?"
"1 colon 65 dash 9." Dick explains, still flicking between him and Bruce. "It means you've been adopted into the family and we should all treat you as such, no questions asked."
"Tell you what, I'm about to ask a question." Danny says, dumbstruck. "You just told me it was a code to identify time travellers, not anything about being adopted! What the hell, B?"
Bruce looks about as shellshocked as Danny feels.
"We must have been close," he says finally, after opening and closing his mouth like a fish out of water a few times.
"No! Not that close!" Danny reels back, taking a deep breath ready to refute it all, but... "Well, I mean, you found me when I first got stuck, and you helped me get better despite being... And then we fought together against the, uh, bad guy, before he, um, he... before you couldn't."
An uncomfortable beat passes while they all pick up on what Danny tried so hard not to say.
"So, you're not from the future, then, you travelled there and came back?" Tim asks, breaking the tension and leaning forward with a glint in his eye.
"Yeah, it was a whole end of the world thing, but don't worry about it," Danny says with a hand wave, "It's all kosher now, won't ever happen."
"What did happen?"
"Seriously, don't worry about it, we cool."
"How long in the future was it?"
"About ten years? You were pretty spry for an old man, B," Danny laughs, wishing they'd get off the topic of what happened and get back to the adoption bit.
Everyone shares degrees of a cautious smile as they relax out of the shock, and Dickâwhose grin is the biggestâsays, "No wonder you got the family code, you're already riffing on him like one of us. How long were you there for?"
"A week, before I managed to get back to my present and stop him then."
"A week? Jeez, B, that has to set some kind of record, seriously."
"Oh!" Danny says, sitting bolt upright and blinking in surprise before pointing at Dick and bouncing in his seat. "You're Nightwing!"
"What?"
"That's exactly what Nightwing said when Batman told me the code! Makes so much more sense now."
Dick laughs and claps his hands, delighted.
"You were not formally adopted?" The grumpy small oneâDami?âasks, his face pinched.
"I didn't even know I was informally adopted."
"And your parents? Are they alive or dead?"
"Damian, stopâ"
"They were dead in the future, but they're alive now." Danny says, looking down. He fiddles with the tablecloth, twisting the fabric around his fingers as he fights down the pang of sadness that he always feels when he thinks of them now. He forces a bright smile on his face and hopes it doesnât look too strained. "I just, uh, can't talk to them much, anymore."
"Damian," Dick warns, "1 colon 65 dash 9. Treat them as family, no questions asked."
"This is Damian treating him as family, the little turd has no manners." Tim scoffs, rolling his eyes, but he gently bumps shoulders with Danny to knock him out of his funk. Danny can't help but send him a watery smile.
"I have the most exemplary manners, Drake, unlike some people." Damian spits, crossing his arms with a pout. "I was merely ascertaining his status to see how he could possibly fit into the family."
"I know this is all a bit sudden, Danny," Bruce smiles, ignoring Damian and reaching out to lay a warm hand on his arm, "for all of us. But if I felt strongly enough to give you that code after spending a week with you in the future, then you are more than welcome in this family, if you so choose it. I think I can speak for all of us when I say we'd like to get to know you a bit more."
"I know a threat when I hear it, Bruce." Danny snorts. "But, yeah, I get it. I'm sorry this is all so weird, it really wasn't how I wanted to find you again, but... I'm glad I did."
"So are we, Danny." Dick says, with a warm smile. "And formally or not, 1 colon 65 dash 9 means you're family. Welcome to the fun house! No take backs or refunds, sorry. You're stuck with us."
#dpxdc#dcxdp#dc x dp#dp x dc crossover#batpham#hailsatanacrabđŠđŠwrites#look. this has been in my mind for so long guys so long - and idk if its canon that the batfam have codes for time travel situations or what#but i feel like ive seen it before and if its not canon it should be#so here - how i think that would be funny to go down#i have so many thoughts about TUE and its place in a dpxdc crossover like holy shit there's so many ways it can go!!#i have another wip in the works thats kinda similar to this but with superman and i cannot wait to work on it again#there are so many ways i wanted this to go but i just couldnt get there - i wanted to keep it on the shorter side but like#perhaps ill have to expand#i just love the idea that like. theres a stranger at your table who knows you and knows you well. who knows the secret that youd die to keep#there's a stranger at your table and he says something and you know he's family. you know you're strangers but now...#now you have to be something more#oh man theres so many juicy ways it can go and I KNOW I DID NONE OF THEM#i want to write this whole plot again and make it angstier#(me with everything)#anyway! sorry love you all hope you enjoy it!!
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