#theaxolotkween
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echoghost1 · 4 years ago
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Out Of This World (And Into The Next)
Word Count: 6,062
For: @theaxolotkween & @rayghosts/@ghostsray
Summary: What if when Danny first fought the Lunch Lady ghost she actually noticed how young he was. What if she didn't know he was more than just another ghost? What if when she commented on how underweight he was, she decided to help him?
You can read on AO3 or down below the cut
“Don't you see?” The lunch lady screamed as she holds Danny upsidedown by just his ankle, “This is why you need meat! You're skin and bones!” She holds him up higher and really looks at him before addressing him directly in her calmer tone, “When was the last time you ate anything?”
“Uh,” Danny started intelligently as he tried to ignore how odd it was that all the blood wasn’t rushing to his head, “This morning?”
It must be a ghost thing. If he could float then gravity wasn’t really affecting him the same.
“Yeah, I had cereal.” he nods, then adds to himself as an afterthought, “Didn’t finish it though.”
“What?! You didn’t! What about lunch then? It’s past noon!”
“Well this is my lunch hour,” he shrugged, “and I was about to eat, but uh,” he couldn’t help the wince as he finished, “then you showed up?”
She gasped and immediately let go of him.
He dropped about a foot before he flipped in the air and floated back upward right side up.
“Well, that simply will not do!” She looked over him with an expression that Danny wasn’t sure if it was pity or concern. He’d seen Jazz make that face at him a lot, that was for sure.
“Here, eat this!” she said as she shoved a piece of cake straight into his mouth.
With no other choice but to accept, he swallowed it. He wiped his lips for the remaining frosting with his thumb as the flavor of the cake made itself known. It was probably the best piece of cake he had ever had in his life. “Wow, that was delicious!”
He eagerly licked his fingers clean before looking back at her, “Do you have more?”
She smiled, “Certainly child. Right this way.” she held out her arm and gestured him to follow her.
They floated over to the back wall and she opened the door to the walk-in freezer. Only when she opened it, it wasn’t a freezer on the inside. It was the ghost zone.
He stopped in his tracks as he felt the chill from the freezer portal slowly edge its way towards him.
She turned back holding her hand out to him but stopped when she noticed his reaction, “What’s the matter, dear? Aren’t you coming?”
“I,” he hesitated slowly shaking his head, “I can’t go in there.”
She stared at him for a moment before a look of realization crossed her face, “Have you never crossed into the veil before?”
He assumed she meant the ghost zone so he shook his head no.
“Really? Odd, you feel just like it.”
He wasn’t sure how to reply to that, so he didn’t say anything.
She smiled again and floated closer to him, “You haven’t been a ghost for very long, have you?”
He didn’t see the point in lying, so he didn’t. “It’s only been a month.”
She was close enough to gently run the back of her finger down his cheek, “And yet you’re so fully-formed? Even without crossing? You must have a very strong will.”
He was so confused right now. Not even five minutes ago they were throwing punches and now she was comforting him? Were all ghosts this weird?
“Is your family still around?”
“Yeah.”
“Do they know you’re still here?”
“Of course they do! I live with them,” he answered totally perplexed as to what she was asking him. It seemed like there was some meaning that he just wasn’t understanding.
She gasped, “You’re haunting them?”
His hands sprung up on instinct and he waved them around trying to get rid of that line of thinking completely. “No, no, no! I can’t be haunting them! I’m not a ghost.”
She raised an eyebrow and floated back just a hair to completely get him in her view, “Hate to break it to you, Sugar, but,” she gestured to all of him or more importantly the fact that he was glowing and floating and looked exactly like a ghost right now.
He closed his eyes and sighed. “I mean I am right now, but not all the time!”
She pulled him into a hug, “It’s okay, Sweetheart. I know it’s confusing. Especially with how young you are.” she leaned back and examined his face with that same Jazz-face she had made earlier, “You had an accident? It happened fast, didn’t it?”
How did she know that?
“Where was your family?”
He looked down towards his boots and rubbed his arm, “Jazz was upstairs. In her room, I think?”
“And your parents?”
He tried to think back to that day. It was only a month ago, but some of the details were a little fuzzy.
Had his parents just gone upstairs or were they out that day? Hadn’t they just tried to turn it on? No, it was a few days after that, right? Had he been alone or were Sam and Tucker there?
His head started to hurt as he tried to remember. It was like someone had taken an egg beater to his brains and scrambled them.
The lunch lady ghost pulled him into her arms and rubbed his back soothingly, “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have brought that up. I wasn’t sure how much you knew. Or how much you could handle.”
He pulled back, resting his hands on her broad shoulders, “Do you know?” he was so confused right now.
She smiled gently, “No honey, we only just met today.”
“Oh yeah,” he knew that.
He grimaced as the throbbing from his headache flared up. As if he was going to forget about that anytime soon. He rubbed his fist into his forehead trying to soothe the ache.
He thought he heard someone calling to him but he couldn’t focus.
“Why don’t we get you something to eat. That should make that nasty headache go away.” she patted him on the back and pushed him back down towards her shoulder.
The coolness of her body felt so nice that he closed his eyes and hummed in contentment.
“That’s right, just relax,” she whispered.
He could feel her move, the gentle sway as she floated was at just the right rhythm for him to let himself drift off to sleep.
He hadn’t even realized he was that tired until then.
Being a ghost was exhausting.
===============================================
Danny opened his eyes and was greeted with an unfamiliar ceiling. It was very high and the plain white paint was interrupted with large wooden cross beams.
He sat up immediately and floated a couple of inches off the bed. He looked down and found he was still in his ghost form.
He had never woken up that way before.
He looked back at the bed. It had a blue metal frame with one side that arched up along the wall, it reminded him of the bed he’d use whenever he’d visit his grandmother’s house. He had to think for a moment but then remembered what it was called, a daybed.
Why was he sleeping on a daybed?
“I’m supposed to be at school!”
He flew towards the door, but hesitated before he grasped the handle. He slowly reached out and tried to phase his hand through the door.
His hand just ran into the door as if he was solid. But he could feel that tingly feeling in his hand which meant he was using his power.
So why wasn’t it working?
He shrugged and went to open the door normally.
It opened.
He peered out and saw a short empty hall. The brickwork that was in the room he had woken up in, carried out into the hall as well.
There was a familiar scent wafting towards him and floated silently into the room at the end of the hall.
“Grilled Cheese?” he asked softly.
In front of a large flattop grill, like the kind in restaurants, was the Lunch Lady ghost and she was in fact, making a bunch of grilled cheese sandwiches. He looked around the room and found no one else there. Why was she making so many?
She turned to face him and smiled, “Well hello there Sweetpea. You feeling any better after your nap?”
“Uh, yeah?”
And he did. His headache had gone away. Although he was still really confused. Was this where she lived?
It looked like a studio loft apartment and an industrial kitchen had a baby. Weird, but it did fit her.
“Good to hear. You hungry? Lunch is just about ready.”
“Yeah okay.”
If he had slept wouldn’t it be time for dinner?
She put a couple of sandwiches on a plate for him, they were cut into triangles. “Milk?” she asked as she pushed the plate across the counter towards him.
He climbed up onto the barstool and just agreed to that too.
Why not? He couldn’t think of a reason not to. Besides he was hungry.
“Are you expecting anyone else?” he asked as he carefully picked up the hot triangle of cheesy goodness.
“No.” She set a large glass of milk down for him. Much larger than he would have poured for himself.
“Okay.”
This was so weird.
She didn’t think he was going to eat all of those, did she? There had to be at least ten sandwiches on the grill. She already gave him two to start with.
It felt like she was trying to fatten him up.
He really hoped this didn’t turn out to be some Hanzel and Gretel situation.
He took his bite and once again was overwhelmed by just how amazing her food was. It wasn’t just that it was perfectly grilled crispy bread, or that the cheese was just the right kind that it got stringy as he pulled it apart, it even had thin slices of lightly browned deli meats. The first one had ham but the next one was chicken.
Before he could even think to stop himself he had cleared his plate and downed half the milk.
She smiled and filled his plate again. “Don’t be shy now, have as much as you like.”
And he did.
After several minutes he finally pushed the plate away. If he even so much as thought about food, he’d explode.
He groaned and leaned back in the chair. It was so good, but his eyes must have been bigger than his stomach.
“Aw come here, you cute little bean,” she said as she floated around the counter and picked him up to place over her shoulder like he was a little kid.
“Hey!” he protested weakly while still feeling lethargic.
She ignored him and started to pat his back.
He hoped she wasn’t doing what he thought she was doing.
And did she get taller or something, because he didn’t think he was that much smaller than her.
Before he could fully process the situation he burped.
“Ah, that’s a good boy.”
Oh my god, she was doing that!?
He squirmed in her arms. He was not about to be treated like a baby. Absolutely not!
“Hey now, stop that.” she lightly scolded as if he wasn’t any threat to her at all.
Then again, he hadn’t been doing very well in their fight at the school.
“You,” he burped again, “stop it!”
He did not like this one bit. Even if burps made his tummy hurt less.
Wait, did he just think the word tummy?
He meant stomach. He was a big boy, he was supposed to use big boy words.
Wait, no!
“What are you doing to me?!” his voice came out a lot squeakier than he wanted. It was higher pitched than it was this morning too.
“I’m not doing anything,” and the look on her face showed she was telling the truth.
He looked down at his hands. They were so little now.
Somehow, he's gotten younger.
“Why am I little?” he said and his voice sounded even tinier.
She rested him against her hip, seeing as he was now about half his age, and smoothed back his hair, “that’s just what the veil does to some folks. It helps you learn about being a ghost I think. It’s easier to start from the beginning and all that.”
She walked away from the kitchen and back towards the room he had started in.
His room.
“Now I think after all that excitement, we best get you to bed.”
“But I’m not tired,” he said with a betraying yawn.
Or at least he hadn’t been a minute ago.
She tucked him in and kissed his forehead. “Sweet dreams, Cupcake.”
“Night night,” he mumbled already falling asleep.
===============================================
The next time he woke up he was much too small to get out of bed on his own. Or at least he didn’t want to risk it. The bed was very tall and he didn’t want to fall down.
“Ready for lunch?” she asked as she picked him up, “I made spaghetti.”
“Sketti!” he cheered and clapped. If her cheesy sandwiches were yummy he’d bet her noodles were just as good.
For just a moment as she set him in his high chair he thought it was a little odd that they were having lunch again.
Maybe it was always lunchtime here?
He forgot the thought the second she handed him his sippy cup. Apple juice was his favorite!
He was halfway through his second plate of spaghetti when he got bored and decided he’d rather play with the floppy noodles instead.
“Oh okay, I think it’s time for Nanna to just take that away now,” Nanna said as she did just that.
He pouted but then pulled his foot up through the hole in his chair just to see if he could.
He could! Fun!
The buckle was looser than it was before, despite his full tummy.
Nanna turned around and gasped, “Oh you’re getting sauce everywhere!” he floated up out of the chair as she approached, his legs disappeared into a tail as he moved.
He looked down at his new tail in awe.
Then immediately stuck the tip of it into his mouth just to see what it felt like.
He didn’t like it.
Nanna chuckled and plucked him out of the air like an apple from a tree. She cleaned up his face and hands. And feet! As soon as he figured out how to make them come back.
“Alright, beddy-bye time.”
He flinched. The last time he went sleep he got little. If he went sleep again would he keep getting tiny? What if he got so little Nanna couldn’t see him?
He burst into tears and started bawling.
“Oh? Oh no! What’s wrong?”
But he couldn’t answer her. He was much too upset. Also, what were words? He didn’t know how to.
She rocked him in her arms and did her best to soothe him.
He started to get sleepy from the motion but that just launched him right back into hysterics.
“Are you scared to go to sleep?”
He rubbed the tears and the sleep out of his eyes as best he could as he nodded.
“Oh pumpkin, you’ll be okay.”
He shook his head.
“No? Why not?”
He slowly clapped his hands together once, to show getting small. Then he said, “poof.”
She blinked a couple of times then nodded in understanding, “You’re not going to get any smaller. I think you’re done. Now we get to see you grow up again.”
His eyes went wide with surprise.
“Yeah, you’ll be big. And even better, we get to find out what you love the very most.”
He didn’t really understand that last part. What could he love more than Nanna? He hugged her so she would know.
===============================================
He was just staring out the window when she came in to check on him.
The window didn’t use to be there, but sometimes things like that happened. Nanna could change the size of the things in the kitchen to whatever she needed them to be. Whatever food she wanted to cook she always had the ingredients.
He hadn’t been able to change anything before, but he was older now.
“What’s out there?” he asked as he gazed at the swirling green void. There wasn’t much to see, but there had to be something else right?
“Come on, Sweetiepie, it’s time for lunch.”
He sighed and followed her out. “Can I go outside after lunch?” he asked as he sat at the counter. He was happy he was finally big enough to sit on the tall chairs. He liked being able to kick his legs while he sat.
“I don’t know, you’re still so young.”
“But Nanna! I’m seven now! Isn’t that big enough?”
“You were fourteen when I brought you home.”
He scrunched up his nose as he pouted. It’s not his fault being here turned him into a baby and he had to grow up again.
“No more pouting.” she chided as she pinched his chubby cheek affectionately.
He sighed and wondered if Boxy was going to come over again. The Box Ghost didn’t visit all the time, but he was fun to play with when he did. Maybe Boxy would let him go outside.
He just wanted to know what was out there.
===============================================
When he was eleven, Nanna tried to help him find what she called, his Spark. The thing that he loved the most.
He still wasn’t sure what that meant.
“What’s your Spark?” he asked while he was stirring the batter for the cookies.
“Why that would be lunch of course.” she ruffled his fluffy white hair, “And you’re a close second.”
“So other people aren’t Sparks?”
She sprinkled in the chocolate chips as he continued to stir, “I think they can be sometimes, but that’s pretty rare. Sparks form around ideas or things. I don’t think it’s very healthy to have one for another person.”
He just stared into the batter as the chips slowly sank into the thick creamy dough. Something about it looked familiar.
“How do I know what my Spark is?”
“It’s hard to say. It’s different for everybody. For me, I knew right away. I always had a passion for cooking, and lunch was always my favorite meal of the day.”
She pulled out the baking sheet, set it next to the bowl, and handed him a spoon to scoop out portions.
“Basically, there’s something for you out there that fills you with joy and wonder and purpose. Something so wonderful and amazing that you want to do it every day, or you want to always have it with you. Maybe even start a collection of the thing.”
“Like how Boxy is with boxes?”
“Exactly!” she smiled happy that he was starting to understand.
“But how will I know what I like if all I know is here?” he dropped his cookie dough ball onto the sheet and looked up to the kitchen window.
There was a window in every room now. Always ready for him to see into the void of green.
It was never enough.
“Do you think this has anything to do with the windows?”
Nanna stopped, looked up, and just stared at the nearest window. It almost seemed like she hadn’t noticed it before now.
She hummed thoughtfully, “You know, you might be on to something.”
He perked up, floating high enough to be eye level, his tail swishing in excitement, “You think so?!”
“Maybe we can go out for a picnic the next time Box Ghost stops by.”
He flipped in the air as he clapped.
He couldn’t wait.
===============================================
It took much longer than he would have liked for Boxy to finally show up again. He hoped it wasn’t on purpose.
Nanna packed the biggest basket for their picnic that he had ever seen and Boxy carried the checkered picnic blanket.
Nanna told him he had to stay close, but she didn’t make him hold her hand the whole time so that was nice.
He was twelve now so he was old enough to know how to stay close and not get distracted.
Even if there was just so much to look at. Mostly everything was green outside of Nanna’s house, but sometimes there were bands of darker or even light greens. Occasionally they would pass by purple doors.
Nanna made sure he knew what her door looked like before they headed out into the abyss.
“If you get lost you just head home okay. You just go inside and wait for me.”
He nodded as he memorized her door. It was purple, like all the others, but it didn’t have a handle. It was the kind that just swung open when you pushed it. Whether you were on the inside or the outside, it always swung outward. The bottom third of the door was metallic and shiny enough for him to see his own reflection. Above that was a little circular window, like a porthole on a ship.
He wasn’t sure why that made him smile.
Once she was confident that he could recognize the door they made their way out.
They flew for a while amongst the endless green sky until they came across a doorway. He hesitated for just a moment. The frame looked familiar. Very familiar.
“Are you sure it’s safe to go in there?” he asked as he hovered closer to Nanna.
“Of course, Dumpling. It’s the most stable gateway.”
He knew that.
“Did you want me, the Box Ghost, to go first and scare off any nasty humans?”
Danny nodded and took the wrapped-up picnic blanket from Boxy and hugged it to his chest.
Boxy came back after a few minutes, his head the only thing poking back on their side of the portal, “The Box Ghost has found no one!”
The trio flew out of the portal and straight up through the house until they were outside.
The air felt so different here and he didn’t know why he hadn’t noticed the difference sooner. He took a deep breath and looked up at the sky above. It was pitch black and he could barely make out a few twinkling stars. He couldn’t stop the smile on his face when he saw the crescent moon above.
How could he not smile when it smiled at him first? He wasn’t sure if it was a waxing or waning crescent.
He paused and wondered if this was it. Was this his Spark?
He followed Nanna and Boxy to the park and they had a lovely time with food that was delicious, as always.
He couldn’t keep his eyes from drifting up to the sky whenever there was a lull in the conversation.
“What’s on your mind, Honey?” Nanna asked as she packed up the last of the, now empty, food containers.
“I found my Spark,” he said in barely a whisper, eyes still trained on the sky above.
===============================================
Now that he had found his Spark it felt like everything was moving so fast. His powers came to him more easily. The outfit that he always wore changed to better suit his Spark. He found new things that only he could do.
He loved every second of it.
Then before he knew it, he was fourteen again.
“I think you’re ready now,” Nanna said after a particularly quiet lunch.
“You think so?” he floated out of his seat and helped her with the dishes.
She set the plate down on the counter and took his gloved hand in hers, “Yes my little explorer. You were made to roam.”
He was beyond excited but he had spent so much time with Nanna that he knew he’d miss her, “How about I leave after lunch tomorrow?”
===============================================
He floated in the basement invisibly. He had meant to just pass through, but the room hadn’t been empty.
He just floated there and watched her work.
She was completely oblivious to his presence.
He hadn’t thought of her once while he’d been away.
He had to smother himself when he audibly gasped at the realization.
She flinched and looked around. She never looked to where he was floating.
He was about to just float back inside the portal, about to just call the whole thing off and go back to Nanna’s.
He was, but she shut the portal doors before he could slip back through.
She reached for her hood and slipped the red-tinted goggles over her eyes.
He flew away before she could do anything else.
He found himself in the park. The same one he had found his Spark in.
He looked up to the bright sunny sky. It wasn’t as lovely as the night sky, but it had its own charm.
He floated up and sat in the nearest tree as he tried to decide what to do from here.
Nanna said it wasn’t good to linger. She said not to haunt people. Not to cling to the living.
But that was his mom.
He looked down at his white gloves and wondered if he could still do it. He wouldn’t go back if he couldn’t.
===============================================
He could.
He wasn’t sure why though. This ability had nothing to do with his Spark. It made no sense
Unless he was right before and he wasn’t just a ghost? But wouldn’t Nanna know that?
He stood on the front steps of his childhood home and hesitated. His hand raised to knock on the door, but it was his house wasn’t it? Maybe he should just walk in?
But how long had he been gone?
He should have checked that first.
He dropped his hand and turned around trying to think of the best way to figure that out while also trying to remember what day it was when he left.
The door opened behind him and the person stopped mid-word to gasp, “Danny?”
He turned and felt like a deer in the headlights.
His sister.
God, he hadn’t thought about her either.
He was a terrible brother. A horrible son.
He should have never come here.
She hugged him and all his thoughts stopped.
“Danny, where have you been?” she pulled him tighter before pulling back to really look at him. Checking to see if he was hurt.
His eyes started to water, which was not something he wanted. He didn’t want to cry in front of his sister and he definitely didn’t want to do it on the front steps where anyone could walk by and see him.
“Oh, it’s okay! Come here,” she pulled him into the house and he didn’t resist.
He was too busy trying to keep all the liquid in his face to stay in its proper places.
They sat on the couch but she didn’t let him go. It was like she was afraid that he’d disappear if she wasn’t touching him.
That was a silly thing to think. He could disappear anytime he liked. Human contact had nothing to do with his ability to be perceived by the human eye.
Seeing his normally level-headed sister have such an irrational thought helped him calm down a bit.
“When Sam and Tucker told everyone that you’d been taken yesterday I never expected you to just appear on the doorstep.”
His mouth dropped open slightly but he couldn’t find his voice. Yesterday? He had an existential crisis, was taken in by a nice ghost grandma, figured out the point of his continued existence. Oh and had regressed into a baby and grown-up again, in only one day?!
“How?” the word was so soft Jazz didn’t even notice.
She just kept on talking, “I mean the weird story about a meat monster spiriting you away was definitely original, but obviously not believable. Well not believable to anyone but mom and dad of course.” she looked him over again with a more critical eye, “Where were you anyway? Did you try to run away again?”
He didn’t know how to answer her. He wasn’t sure if he should lie, tell the truth, maybe even just let her believe whatever it was that she wanted to believe.
He just hugged her again. His face burrowed into her shoulder all he could think to do was say he was sorry. So he did.
Over and over and over again.
Was he sorry for disappearing or for being a ghost? He didn’t know. Maybe it was both.
He didn’t know if it was just a coincidence or if he had been crying loud enough, but his parents were soon there too and everyone was hugging him tightly.
His breaths came in shuddering gasps and it took him several minutes before he could calm down again. Everything just felt so much. He felt so warm and alive.
He still didn’t know what to tell his family about why he disappeared. Or what he really was.
He wasn’t sure he’d ever be able to tell them.
When they finally asked he said he didn’t know. He just acted like he didn’t remember anything at all.
He was saving the true story for his friends.
===============================================
He had to wait until the weekend because his parents refused to let him go to school until they figured out who had taken him.
But he couldn’t tell them now. They’d hurt Nanna.
They might hurt him too.
He remembers the stories his mom used to tell. The ones about changelings. How angry she would look just thinking about them.
He was just glad all the tests she tried didn’t tell her he was different. That as far as she was concerned he was human.
The tests only proved that he was the original.
I guess it was nice that she didn’t assume the worst.
He was sitting on his bed with his blankets purposely fluffed up around him. He needed to hide the fact that he wasn’t actually touching the bed, that he was floating a few inches above it.
He was always floating at Nanna’s and it just felt weird not to.
There was a tentative knock on his door and he flew over and silently landed before opening it.
His friends instantly tackled him with affection. The trio was on the ground in a tangle of limbs and apologies.
Once they finally stopped talking over each other and untangled themselves, Danny closed the door as they each took their favorite seats. Tucker in his computer chair and Sam on the windowsill.
Danny took his spot on the bed and pulled his knees up to his chest. It had been over a week and he wasn’t sure how he was going to explain what happened. He still had a hard time figuring out how he had spent so long away in such a small window of time.
“So do you really not remember or is that just what you’re telling your folks?” Sam asked as she kept her eyes trained on him. It was like she was looking for any hint at all for the truth.
“It’s hard to explain.” he started simply.
“Just start at the beginning. What happened after the lunch lady napped you?” Tucker prepped as he anxiously fidgeted in the desk chair enough to wobble it.
“I fell asleep? And when I woke up Nanna was making lunch.” he couldn’t help the fond smile, “She always makes the best lunches. She only makes lunch. It’s only ever lunch. Good though.”
“Nanna?” Tucker asked as he shared his confused look with Sam.
“Yeah. that’s just what I call her. I don’t think that’s her name.”
“Okay? But why call her that?”
“Because she’s my Nanna?” he tilted his head to the side and realized that this was already getting hard to explain and he hadn’t even gotten to the weird stuff yet.
“Like your grandma?” Tucker asked like he was grasping at straws.
“Yeah!” Danny pointed excitedly at Tucker, glad to have a word for it. “She’s my ghost grandma!”
“And you’re okay with that?”
“Why wouldn’t I be?”
“She literally kidnapped you.”
“No, she didn’t kidnap me. She just took me home with her.”
“Did you want to go home with her?” Sam asked slowly like he was a toddler again.
He did a quick check and he was in fact still a teenager. “It was more like I was abruptly adopted.”
“Is that a thing?” Tucker asked with the most incredulous look.
“Yeah, it’s a ghost thing. Nanna says that older ghosts can adopt any child ghosts, or in my case, baby ghost, that they come across. Luckily, I’m a teenager now! Again?” he put a finger to his lips as he thought about whether or not it would be ‘again’ or not.
Tucker snickered, “Hold on, you’re a baby ghost?”
“Former baby. I’m done with that now.” he sighed and looked away as he mumbled to himself, “I’m so glad that’s over.”
“Excuse me, what?” Sam exclaimed wide-eyed.
He chuckled nervously, “Remember when I said it was hard to explain. That’s what I meant.”
“Wait, hold up.” Tucker stood up from his perched on the edge of his seat position and started to pace, “Are you saying that you were a literal ghost baby or???”
Danny winced and visibly leaned away from his friends, “yeah… it was super weird. Also,” his shoulders were nearly touching his ears with how much he was trying to edge away from the conversation, but knowing he just needed to tell them already, “I think I was gone longer than a day.”
“WHAT?!”
Oh boy, he had a lot of explaining to do.
===============================================
After a very long and snack-filled conversation later, it finally seemed like that they were all up to speed on what had happened to Danny.
“Man, I wish I could have seen you’re baby form.” Tucker chuckled as he set his chip bowl aside.
“Why? It was just me, but littler?” then he suddenly remembered that his ghost form had changed after he found his Spark. “Oh, that’s right! I got an upgrade! Wanna see?”
“Yeah, man!” Tucker said at the same time Sam said, “Of course!”
Danny smiled and transformed.
Both his friends just gasped as they looked at him.
And then they kept staring.
His smile faltered and he bit his lip.
Sam gasped again and shot up to point right at him, “Fangs!”
Well, that wasn’t what he was expecting to hear. Also, hold on?
He ran a curious tongue over his teeth and yeah she was right, his teeth were a bit sharper now. “That was probably from all the meat I ate.”
“Also you’re green,” Tucker added helpfully.
He floated over to his mirror and just stared at himself. Nanna didn’t have any mirrors and he never really thought to check.
His skin was green but much paler than Nanna’s was. He also had bright glowing freckles dusting across his nose and cheeks. It didn’t take much looking to see the constellations they could make. His hair was still white but now it moved like it was being blown in a soft breeze, or maybe it was more like he was underwater?
No! It moved like solar flares! Strands arcing and bending as if he was being affected by cosmic winds.
He smiled and saw his fangs. They weren’t too sharp or scary looking, thankfully. They looked more like slightly dramatic canines than true fangs. He’d seen a few actors with teeth like this so it wasn’t too inhuman.
But he was literally green and glowed so he wasn’t sure why he was worried about that.
Although he was surprised that no one had noticed that he was not as skinny as he was before. He’d gained, as Nanna would say, a healthy amount of weight. Then again, he did wear pretty baggy clothes. He supposed it would be easy enough to overlook that they weren’t exactly loose anymore. And his face still looked the same when he was human, he’d always had chubby cheeks.
Besides, that wasn’t even the best part. The best part was his outfit. Which his friends so rudely hadn’t mentioned yet.
The suit he wore wasn’t so clingy and form-fitting anymore. It was puffier and looked like the ones he’d seen in pictures. Except his was cooler because it had stars on it.
He was an astronaut. Just like he had always wanted to be.
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