When Dr Aspen Greaves signed up for the Javelin Program, humanity's first foray into colonising deep space, they expected to wake up to life
For anyone curious, the total time stamp comes to almost exactly 18.5 hours. Phew! Enjoy!! I had fun making it! Thank you for giving folks permission to do this, @derinthescarletpescatarian!
[no curses/zombie au] an outbreak had people turning against each other, however, after your boyfriend, choso was bitten, he acted far stranger than anyone else at all • four parts 💫 • a/n: there is violence in this chapter and major character death(s)
on ao3 • more nightmarish stories • chapter four of four < first chapter • previous chapter
You watched as Choso left, knowing that he was making a decision on what felt safest, and not what his heart urged him towards. If these two were to keep their word, then he should be able to retrieve you unharmed, but even so, there was still a risk that this could all go wrong. A hostage situation was never so simple, after all.
Choso, however, was never careless with anything he did; therefore, this must have been a difficult decision for him, especially. It couldn’t have been easy to blindly trust the people who put you in such danger and him on edge, but he was already used to situations like these, back when he was fully alive.
Though something in him did change this time around, and you noticed it very well: it was like he was on the verge of slipping and barely holding on. If something went wrong, then you almost felt sorry for those responsible.
The researcher with the frosted hair from before—Satoru—stood at a measured distance, his posture slack but his expression sharp in contrast. He watched his counterpart—Suguru—hold onto you, but otherwise did not make any effort to speak. In some ways, his impassiveness unsettled you, but given that what you understood their job to be, perhaps it was right for these people to be so jaded.
Otherwise, you were faring well, considering. Whatever shock you experienced in the dead centre of it all had worn off by now, even if the outcome was now even less clear than before. At least, no matter what happened, you knew that Choso would pull through for you.
Though you felt something in the air shift. Even if the other man—Suguru—did attempt to keep hold of you, keeping his teeth away from your flesh, his resolve was already slipping to irreversible lengths. Since he was already half-turned, like Choso, he could infect you if he really wanted to. What was stopping Choso, however, you imagined to be something similar to him, or maybe, rather, that strange other man you had encountered in the temple. Suguru felt different from you; his mutation—whatever it was that was in his head—felt different from how it was for either.
As if to prove your suspicions, too, his grip then tightened without warning. His hand clamped around your arm with sudden force, and before he could bring himself to stop, his nails pressed into your skin. The pain was sharp enough to sting, but dull enough to soothe the ache and allow for something else to slip into you.
Your breath caught as you tried to pull away from his hold, to react, to understand what this creeping and cold sensation was, but it seeped into your blood and settled.
As that happened, Suguru’s grip faltered, and the last thing you could make out was Satoru exhaling, as if in disappointment, but perhaps not surprise.
You didn’t care too much about it, trying to fight back against something cold that slipped into your body and refused to leave. Choso had entered your mind during such a shift, and you remembered how he, too, thought of something else as he turned, even when it became overwhelming. You hoped that it would be easy to do the same if it had come down to it, but it didn’t feel that way for you.
You tried to steady your breathing, but each inhale felt like fire scaping against your lungs, with each exhale producing something sharper. Going still, therefore, felt like the easier solution, but that alone was a trap, as it felt something had been decided within you that wasn’t from a will of your own. Something else—something that wasn’t quite you—settled deep into your thoughts, and no matter how hard you tried to push back against the intrusion, it stayed.
Your last thought was of Choso, though, even as you turned, and you could not help but imagine his devastation when he was to come back.
For a moment, the memory of him grounded you, but then—
Everything started to darken.
Even so, you held on, even slightly.
~~~
In the meantime, Choso moved on a one-track path back towards the center of the city, forcing him to move at a pace that would have exhausted anyone living by now, but he was different now. Understanding that part was crucial: he was not exactly human anymore, and therefore, he needed to take advantage of that. If that meant pushing his body past its limit, knowing he could get away with doing so, then he would. His new instinct didn’t even fight him on it; hell, it even urged him forward, as if encouraging him to test what he could do now.
The neighbourhoods shifted as he passed through them otherwise. He remembered how still the house he took you to was—his old childhood home—untouched by the undead, even days into the chaos, understanding that some weren’t as lucky. The more on route the suburbs were connected to the inner city, the more ruin that was left behind. Doors were split apart, windows were shattered, and old blood stained the driveways.
The contrast stayed with him more than the destruction itself.
Then, closer to the outskirts of the city, the damage worsened. Vehicles had been overturned, and the air no longer smelled neutral; smoke lingered, and so did rot. Something still otherwise burned up ahead, but that was no longer his priority, even if he did feel compelled to go and see if anyone needed help. Unluckily for anyone still alive during this mess, you came first.
By the time he got closer to the dead center of it all, it was exactly as he expected: overrun with the dormant undead. They thankfully did not react to him because he was only half-turned, but they twitched when he made too much of a sound when walking. Choso shuddered then, thankful that he had only been turned during the initial chaos, before anything risked swarming him. That would have been a horrendous way to go, and for you to follow.
For now, he didn’t allow himself to dwell on the matter, though. He moved faster until a building that he recognised from Satoru’s description came into view, standing apart from everything else around it. It was made of a tall, dark, and reflective material that left no hint of what to expect inside.
Choso didn’t slow as he approached, not even as the undead formed larger crowds around the buildings that remained untouched. He moved through them without much trouble, pushing some aside, redirecting others as he went. Then, at some point, one of them latched onto his shoulder, their teeth sinking into his skin—not out of hunger, perhaps, but curiosity more likely—and Choso stiffened. Though he found there was no more pain, any blood that surfaced was different, too, producing a thick, dark mass that hardened as soon as it spilled.
When it had settled over his skin, it felt more like a hardened, reinforced shell that wrapped around his body like a shield, rather than something that had once been fluid. When the thing that had reached for the same spot tried to bite him again, its teeth were shattered by the next attempt.
Choso did find it peculiar, though the moment did give him an idea. He dipped briefly to the ground, forcing blood to surface along his knuckles by scraping them hard against the pavement, forming a barrier around his hands. Then, he used the hardened layer to drive his first into the reinforced glass, forcing it to give way. Normally, a strike like that would do nothing, but now it was enough to shatter under impact. In doing so, he managed to trigger an alarm that was immediate and blaring, loud enough that it might have awoken every undead thing left in the city.
He stilled only briefly, but shrugged it off, knowing that he had to be especially fast now. He forced himself inside without looking back, holding onto the instructions for each of the basement and retrieve the case. The elevator wasn’t too difficult to find; just past the lobby and the now-empty reception, and through another layer of reinforced glass, access to it stood waiting.
However, accessing any floor at all, let alone entering the elevator, seemingly required a code. This briefly surprised him because he did not expect the building to still have any power, but even so, not even this made him falter. He pried the doors apart at their seams, punching through the metal floor no matter the complexity of the task ahead. He could have technically removed the panel overhead, but there was no reason for him to go up when he needed to go below.
Catching onto the cable beneath with one hand, he used it to lower himself down; the friction and coarse wiring not tearing apart the skin on his hand like it should have done. Instead, the hardened blood held firm, allowing him to almost smoothly glide down with a controlled descent, steadying him without the risk of tearing flesh or breaking bone.
When he reached the bottom, the entrance into the lab was already clear, and though he registered the absence of pain yet again, it only lingered for a moment before he pressed on. It bothered him, only for a second at a time, that each access point of the lab was lined with reinforced glass doors, but it didn’t stop him. Like before, anything he pushed against could be forced open, even if it wasn’t meant to be. He moved through the interior regardless of his limitations, his gaze fully intent on latching onto the description that Satoru gave him, even if it was vague.
It didn’t take too long before he found it, either.
The case stood out immediately, bright and out of place among the duller equipment. It was an eyesore by design, but somehow, given the outspoken nature of that man, that didn’t surprise him all too much. He closed the distance quickly and reached for it, only for his arms to strain from the moment he lifted it. The weight was far heavier than he had anticipated, but he pushed past his own limitations, readjusting and steadying his grip.
He could drag it, if he needed to, but it would take more effort, so he did not mind surrendering to the instinct just a little more to help through it, even if he knew that he perhaps shouldn’t.
The alarm above had already done its work, though, the sound drawing everything—and what was once everyone—in, filling the path he had taken until movement pressed in from all sides, crowding the space beyond what it should have allowed. Irritation surfaced, but situations like this were not new to him, given what his job was before. He could force his way out regardless of the weight he carried, and while it felt wrong to think it, the undead provided what he needed—
A way to climb back up the elevator shaft, even despite what he carried.
He shifted the case, securing it against himself before starting his way up. The climb was strenuous, of course, and his grip was firm to the point that it felt like it added weight rather than steadied it. This caused him to move slower than before, but he didn’t stop—not even as the undead reacted around him, erratic and grasping as he climbed, their weight crowding him in. Choso remained relentless, forcing his way through what was once people, leaving them to run towards the source of the noise.
Perhaps in doing so, he managed to save others trapped in the city, because as he left the building, more and more of the undead appeared, drawn in by the still blaring alarm.
Eventually, he made it past them completely, which left him with one last thing to do:
Getting back to you.
Assuming you were still you.
~~~
In the meantime, as you gave in to the assimilation of what had entered your body, you found yourself surprised that it didn’t feel like death, but something else. Yes, your vision had already been swallowed up by something endless and dark that refused to lift, but you weren’t completely gone. You could still react to sound and scent.
The instinct settled into you quietly all the while, threading through your body as if it had always belonged there, guiding you towards something that felt like relief. You tried to resist the full assimilation, though, knowing that surrendering to it fully would be wrong.
Even now, you kept thinking of Choso, even if by now, he felt far away—not by distance either, but—in memory, perhaps?
But then your body started to pull you towards something familiar. You noticed it through scent first; as something faint and grounding urged you forward, even if your movements no longer felt like your own. Overall, there was no clear decision behind what you did at all anymore, as if you, as a person, had been pushed to the very back of yourself, left to observe the world in mere fragments. You were aware when your weight shifted or when your arms moved—when your teeth bared—but not much else.
You hated it.
Then, something again caught you—
Another familiar feeling.
Hands?
“Easy,” a voice murmured, low and close, steadier than the chaos unfolding around you. “You’re still in there. I know you are.”
Choso?
Right, he was there, he had to come back, after all—with the cure—or whatever it was that they called it.
He stared at you with clear doubt at first, finding that your turned state made little sense when what was promised was anything but that. He had gone through hell and back to keep you safe, so their failed promise felt more like an insult than it did anything else. Though, whether or not it had been intentional or not didn’t matter, because it wouldn’t change what he was about to do.
He held onto you tightly as you lurched at him—seemingly mindlessly—your body twisting and writhing in his grip as you tried to fight against his grip. Your movements were sharp, erratic, and uncoordinated—hostile in a way that didn’t feel like you—your hands dragged against his arms as you tried to tear into him.
Then, without loosening his hold on you, he stepped back with you in tow, kicking the case toward Satoru, who immediately scowled at him.
“Careful,” Satoru barked out sharply, already staggering towards it. “If you want your share, you’ll treat it properly.”
Choso only shrugged, forcing himself to remain impassive for the time being, his attention otherwise solely fixed on you. He tuned out the pale-haired man as he prattled on about instability—about how everything could easily go wrong—not bothering to mention just how much of a beating the case took in getting here to begin with.
Either way, Satoru set off to work, allowing a makeshift setup to come together quickly: pieces of equipment pulled from stabilised black foam spread across the ground. Suguru stepped forward, allowing his sample to be taken without hesitation, whereas Choso stayed right where he was. You were held firmly against him, restrained by his grip as Satoru approached to take Choso’s sample.
Then, just as Satoru reached to inject the mixed concoction into his companion, Choso lurched forward to intercept him, pulling the syringe free, driving it into you instead.
It was his plan as soon as he was forced to accept you as their hostage, after all.
As the needle sank into your body, the solution—mixed with the blood of the half-turned and something else—took hold immediately. Your entire form jerked violently in his arms, the reaction to the injection harsh and unsteady, as if something else was being forced back into place. Your movements became wild and frantic as you thrashed to an almost violent extent, your breathing rough and uneven, your skin paling, until—
It all stopped.
Your body went still against his own, the tension fading just enough for the difference to be undeniable from the moment you opened your eyes.
Before you could say anything, Choso blurted something out, his voice strong with desperation, heartbreak, and relief all at once.
“Oh—thank goodness,” he started, his words catching. “I thought I lost—”
However, he didn’t get the chance to finish, Satoru lunging at the remains of what was still seeping into your body—pulling the almost emptied syringe still lodged in your arm and plunging it into his own flesh—resulting in something wrong.
Like you, his body started to seize and convulse sharply, but unlike you, it didn’t stop when it was supposed to. Lesions spread across his flesh instead, unevenly, splitting open something beneath that resembled eyes—bright and blue—blinking open one by one across his body.
Still shaking, Satoru barely managed to get a word out.
“You ruined everything,” he finally managed, his voice rasping and strained, “you’ll both—” he paused to cough and sputter, unable to finish his accusation. His gaze snapped briefly back to Choso, his shoulders twitching as he tried to continue. “That was everything you just wasted,” he spat. “Everything. One shot—”
Choso caught him mid-speech. “Just one shot?” he repeated, the betrayal setting in even though it had been obvious from the start. “So, you were never going to offer her anything at all, were you?” he asked him, already knowing the answer.
Then, after a brief pause, he added, quieter, “Were you even going to use it on him?” he asked, gesturing towards Suguru, understanding that he was likely going to administer it on himself from the start.
At that, Satoru didn’t even reply, his gaze snapping towards you with accusation and resentment consuming him.
That much was enough for Choso to react, though. Something in him—that instinct which was becoming more and more difficult to ignore—pushed him forward without any hesitation that time. He lunged towards the other man, attempting to drive a punch straight toward his face, only for those unnatural eyes across his body to track the movement, allowing him to slip away just in time.
“So predictable,” Satoru scoffed, a strained laugh breaking through.
Choso didn’t respond, moving again, guided by the instinct fully that time. He was faster and more direct with each punch he threw, his strikes aimed with intent each time. Even if Satoru could anticipate the attacks, he hadn’t accounted for being gradually forced back and losing space, allowing Choso to step by step, close in, leaving him backing up against a wired fence along the pavement, allowing him to—
Connect his fist at last. A few hits were avoided, sure, but with nowhere left to retreat, Satoru lost whatever advantage the foresight on his body had given him. His confident demeanour faded quickly, replaced with the strain of trying—and failing—to keep the attacks at bay as Choso pressed forward, driven by something not quite human anymore, not even primal, but focused instead.
With each blow, Choso prevented him from being able to recover, wearing him down quickly, until the final strike caved in his skull entirely.
The lesions—the eyes, whatever they had become—stilled and blinked close at last.
Suguru—or rather whatever or whoever now occupied his mind—watched, only moving away once it became clear how little chance remained without Satoru, because not even he surrendered to the instinct fully. Choso didn’t spare a second, though, advancing on him with that same force, ending his life with a caving blow before any chance of escape was possible.
Then, his attention returned to you.
His eyes, still bloodshot, locked onto you, searching—waiting for something familiar to surface—ready to react if it didn’t. He was right on the verge of slipping—right on the edge of surrendering to something he shouldn’t, only for your voice to pull him back to earth.
“You came back for me,” you spoke softly.
The cadence of your tone stopped him, forcing him to stagger a step back as something in him gave way, forcing his balance to falter before he dropped down in front of you, catching himself on his knees. When he looked up, the rawness in his expression stood stark in contrast to everything you had just witnessed.
“I’m sorry,” he breathed out. “I shouldn’t have left you—”
You met his gaze, your chin tilting down to hold his.
“It’s okay,” you assured him. “I don’t think they meant to do it, but something just slipped—”
You stopped yourself with a quiet exhale.
“I’m just happy that I made it back to you, considering,” you admitted, choosing not to linger over what had happened. It felt easier to let go of that much, the usual weight of panic absent, replaced with something that felt much steadier. “I thought I wouldn’t get to see you again.”
Choso watched you closely, taking in your reaction, digesting the way you spoke.
“You’re not… panicking,” he caught.
You blinked at him, surprised by yourself, before letting out a small breath of a laugh. “I guess there’s… It’s like there’s something in my head telling me everything’s fine, so it all just feels… clear, even with all of this happening.”
He nodded quickly, understanding exactly what you meant.
“It’s like that for me too,” he acknowledged.
“So, what of that cure then?” you asked, glancing at the corpses and the scattered aftermath of what was once in the case.
“Something I think I know how to replicate,” Choso considered, understanding that two half-unturned and a mixed solution of what was otherwise tightly packed into the contents was needed to piece something together. “Maybe that can be what we do? Slowly reestablish more people like us—those already turned—and take things back before everything falls completely apart.”
You hummed in consideration. “That would be nice.”
“But first,” he caught, stopping you before he let the thought go entirely. “You’re no longer as afraid of things, are you?”
You shook your head.
“Then… how about I finally show you that spot I’ve been meaning to take you to?” he suggested, thinking about a rooftop that looked over the highest point of the city, which, even despite the destruction ongoing, was something he still wanted to experience with you.
“The one I always refused to go to because I was scared of how high it was?” you replied.
“That’s the one,” he confirmed, then added more vulnerably, sounding closer to the man you remembered him as, “I’ve been wanting to show you… a lot of things. Things we couldn’t see before because of—” he stopped himself, hesitating because he did not wish to upset you.
But you didn’t mind.
“That’s okay,” you assured him, placing a gentle hand on his shoulder. “We can do all of that now, and more.”
He leaned back slightly, just enough to get a proper look at you.
“God, I love you,” he could only bring himself to say. “I love you so much.”
Whatever this world had become, whatever was left of it, he could—and would—face it all with you, and if there was anything left to build, to take back, he would do that too.
tags: post-s12x02, mutual pining, case fic, truth spell, cas and dean use their feelings irresponsibly || rated: E || now complete
“I think,” Cas grits out, “that the spell requires me to say the truth. I’ve been trying to suppress it with my grace, but it’s… not working.”
“Got it,” Dean says, nodding, because he can work with this. “Yeah. Sure. So give me some truths. Some stupid little ones.”
Cas narrows his eyes. “Such as?”
“Like, I dunno, what’s your favorite color?”
Cas’s face somehow goes stonier. “Green,” he ekes out.
Dean clears his throat. Blinks a few times. “Oh.”
Or: when Dean and Cas investigate a group of high school students getting mysteriously ill, Cas gets hit with a truth spell.
This was a long time coming (actually, it's 6 months late... waves at things) but The Trials and Tribulations of Edward Harcourt is FINALLY COMPLETE!
Chapter 5 and 6, along with the 5 different Epilogues have been added to the game. So you can now discover what sordid affair was happening in the depths under Castle Garbuie.
Will you save the day? Will you perish in your trials?
Only your choices will tell!
PLAY THE FINAL CHAPTERS!
Along with the additional chapters, there have been changes in the back end code (due partly to the SugarCube update and to the update). There are still a few things I'd like to implement (Achievements, QoL and accessibility, etc...), so while the story is complete, this is technically an OPEN BETA.
The update includes:
a New Game+ function (to unlock a hidden option)
a Character Randomiser (for Chapter 1)
and a Discord (for bugs and feedback)!
For the full breakdown, check the dev log on itch:
Hi Everyone, This was a long time coming (and 6 months late). But here is the first final build of The Trials and Tribulations of Edward Har
I'm sorry it's ending like this! but i hope all this non-released content helps everyone move on from it- I even included the ending! Thank you so much for everything you did for me, for being such loyal readers that even now so many people commented asking for outlines and story segments that i had left even though it'd been so long since i picked it up.
It really touched my heart knowing you still love it so much after so long.
Honestly, thank you.
Goodbye and goodnight, Mo dao zu shi- Ghost of Mine.
SCALES OF JUSTICE - GAME AVAILABLE ON HG AND STEAM!!
Hello my dear readers,
WE DID IT! I wrote a book. A full book! It's now available on the Hosted Games app, with 600k words waiting to entertain you on a morning, afternoon, evening, or night when you decide to submerge yourself into a world of fantasy and adventure!
You also can play the game on Steam! Here's the link -> https://store.steampowered.com/app/3089710/Scales_of_Justice/
I am so, so grateful to everyone who has been here for me during these past 3 years. What began as a shy attempt at dreaming has grown into a marvelous project that taught me so much, brought me so many new experiences and skills, and is going to end with my first publication as an author. I cannot be more grateful and excited. I hope this is only the beginning of an amazing journey.
Rather, I know this is one. This is not the end!
DESCRIPTION:
Journey into the magical world of Therania, a place where heroism and villainy are paths of Fate that can be foreseen in one’s destiny. Join forces with four eccentric individuals with puzzling goals and fight, plan, persuade or run, as you attempt to get a grip on your own legacy!
Scales of Justice is a 600,000-word interactive novel, the first volume in a planned series by Julia Owl. It's entirely text-based–without graphics or sound effects–and fueled by the vast, unstoppable power of your imagination.
Rumours circulate the streets of Capital. Rumours of an artefact, as dangerous and powerful as one can only fear. Some claim it’s capable of twisting one’s true nature, shaping it much to the owner’s whim; others say that it can identify a soul’s essence, putting the Ritual of Fate in a tight spot for the first time in centuries. The mage who made it is unknown; whispers in shadows only talk about a labyrinth, set somewhere hidden to protect its power. Many want to get it; many others, to destroy it. You? You are none of those–you just want to live.
And yet, your (almost) safe and peaceful life as a humble adventurer is threatened by a letter with today’s date on it, written in your mother’s hand…
Play as male, female or nonbinary; gay, straight, bisexual, or asexual.
Meet four distinct characters, with stories and ideals that highly differ from one another: a runaway heir, a rogue knight, a lost alien, and a foreign leader. Romance, befriend or doom them, and watch their tales shape your own.
Choose one of the three species available and discover your own worldview and the world's view of you. What is it like to be a human, a half-elf, or a half-satyr in this vast realm?
Fight, conjure, heal, plan, or persuade–choose your path and deal with trouble in your own way.
Buy yourself a horse! You want one, don’t you?
Learn, think, doubt, conclude. This world has a pre-written destiny – will you abide by it or challenge it? Who are you, and who will you become?
Who is worthy of holding the scales?
Content Warning: This piece of interactive fiction was not written with children in mind. The story contains mature themes and scenes of violence, including cult ceremonites, kidnapping, and fighting.
USEFUL LINKS:
If you want to know a little more about this project and read chapters 1-5, I'll leave the link to the game here -> https://dashingdon.com/play/myimaginedcorner/scales-of-justice/mygame/
If you want to discuss anything on CoG's forum, I'll leave the link for SoJ here: