I own no recognizable characters. That's pretty much it. I own the original character, and the plot's a relatively original idea.
A rift opened silently over an unused intersection during the middle of a moonless night. The rift itself looked like a nearly unnoticeable warping or distortion of space. For several minutes the stars were skewed, the little dipper eclipsing its counterpart, before the rift collapsed into itself and spat something out.
It was hacking and wheezing, and it did not roll to a halt. It slammed into the side of a Stop Sign, where it did not go through, it did not bend or disfigure the sign, it just stopped. Painfully. And spent several minutes clutching at the newly formed bruise and attempting to expel its lungs via its mouth. Soon enough the coughing stopped, and one fleshless hand wrapped around the pole of the sign as the creature pulled itself to its feet.
"Sucks." The creature rasped, wiping blood off its lips and chin. "Aether. Hate aether."
A pair of blinding white-blue lights ghosted over him, blinding him, and then the car turned right and continued on its way. There was no way the driver hadn't noticed him, he was wearing an orange shirt and he had blood dripping down his chin. The car had also looked relatively new, and made entirely of fiberglass, and rounded. Cell phones should be common then.
He probably had about twenty minutes before he absolutely had to get moving. That should be enough time to get his bearings straight and see if his satchel had been sent through.
Ten minutes of searching the area around where he'd been thrown showed that it wasn't anywhere to be found. Fantastic. None of the tools in it were completely irreplaceable, but until he had a chance to do so, things were going to be... Difficult. His wallet being in there was actually the least of his concerns.
He was regularly tossed back and forth throughout the multiverse, what was even the point of plastic when he was occasionally tossed into a reality that never developed it?
Pointless. Worse was that a handful of lights had appeared in the distance to the east, two pairs that he could see. Turning towards Polaris he broke into a light jog. Even if they failed to notice his nature at a first glance, he was almost certain they were police and what he looked like alone would open up more unpleasant questions than he wanted to deal with at the moment.
-----
Two days following the roads and hiding in the woods and he had a vague idea of where he was. The world was completely normal. There was only one moon that rose and fell in a normal cycle, and it looked normal enough. Sparrows, squirrels, a few deer here and there, all as normal as could be. In fact, the thing most out of place was himself.
Which the animals apparently knew. He hadn't had a bite to eat in days. And without his supplies he couldn't fashion the basic disguise that let him blend in with the humans.
Alright, it was just an eye patch, but people had expectations, and it was easier to go unnoticed if they were met.
He'd spent two days running along the roads, and night was falling on the third. Off in the distance the glare of neon lights flicked on, and behind him the roar of thunder. Actually, thunder would have been less irritating. He was passed by half a dozen people riding Harley bikes.
The beginning of a plan formed in his mind. Simple, effective, and he'd have the opportunity to give someone else an equally bad day. And as the biker group turned into the waffle house parking lot, his plan crystallized.
He kept out of the direct light coming from inside and looked over his targets. Nothing, nothing, nothing, didn't any of these guys have a saddlebag? Forget it, there'd been a truck out back in the employee parking with a bed-box.
He hadn't found what he was looking for in the box, but there was a toolbox on the floor in the cab. Sliding open the back window to get in was depressingly easy, it was an older model, it didn't even have a latch keeping it closed. Now this was the easy part. The guy didn't own a single phillips head screwdriver, but he had almost every size of flat head. Perfect.
The short screwdriver with the fat handle was exactly what he needed. The hammer would be handy, too.
He positioned the corner of the screwdriver against the keyhole, and tapped the handle a few times with the hammer to make sure it was positioned right. He slammed down the hammer, the sound of grinding metal set his teeth on edge. He twisted the handle, but it refused to budge. No go for this one, just a ruined ignition. He did this to three more Harley Davidson bikes before he met with success. With the roar of an engine and a heart filled with elation, he straddled the seat.
"What the hell do you think you're doing on my bike, boy?" A muscular man stood in front of the bike, taller, much taller than the thief.
Of course, since the thief didn't even hit five feet, this wasn't exactly impressive.
The biker had an angular face, was decked in leather, and was wearing a red bandanna.
"I think I'm stealing your bike." He revved the engine and grinned. "You gonna stop me?"
"I'm gonna kill you!" The thief leaned back under the first swing and switched into gear while the man recovered. With a jarring bump he slid the bike onto the sidewalk and turned. The drop off the sidewalk was less jarring, but the drop was more painful.
"Get off my bike you bastard!" That sounded close. Too close. The thief turned around and almost gasped in shock. The man was obviously very determined, he had to be. He was holding onto the sissybar behind the seat and sliding along the soles of his boots.
"Nah." The thief held up his right hand, the fading light reflecting off of polished bone. "Think I'll keep it."
As the light from the waffle house dimmed further, a dim red glow became more obvious where the creatures left eye should have been. The look of dawning horror was something so common to the thief that it shouldn't hold for him any special appeal. Though it was always nice to know that there were still humans smart enough to fear him.
"Look out!" The thief turned around, and had just enough time to blink before eating bark. He peeled himself off the tree, and peeled was definitely the proper term. Looking at the bike, though, was a more gruesome sight. The biker was not in good condition. His nose was smashed in, but his head looked otherwise fine. His torso, on the other hand, looked like it tried to eat the tire without ever using his mouth.
"Where's your phone?" The thief wasn't actually too badly off. He was sore now, and he'd be a walking bruise for the better part of a week, but he was otherwise fine. The biker moaned in pain.
"Oh, I don't do it for me, I do it for you." The biker moaned some more as the thief rooted around his pockets. He pulled out two things. The man's wallet, and a tiny blue cell phone. He emptied the wallet and flipped open the cell phone.
"Nine-one-one, what's your emergency?" The thief pushed his fist against his throat and spoke.
"My ah, my friend he, uhm he wrecked his bike." Faking a slur is a lot harder than some would think, but it's not too terribly difficult to do with practice. Beneath him, the biker once again moaned in pain. The thief dropped the phone and the empty wallet next to the biker and disappeared into the woods.
Well, he tried at least. The woods were getting sparser the farther north he went, he must have been dropped pretty far south-west in America. Sooner or later they'd start getting denser, but until then he'd have to be more careful. This stunt was, quite clearly, poorly planned.
Of course, that's because it failed. He'd be touting his own genius if he'd succeeded.
-----
You can get pretty far on seventy-three bucks. Especially when you don't spend it on anything.
Two weeks and three days in this reality, and he'd already made it to the tabloids. He was listed in two incidents, once as the chupa-cabra, the other time they attributed the incident to "Visitors".
The cow had been more filling than he'd thought it would be, was it his fault he couldn't finish it?
Right now, however, he wasn't focusing on the mistakes he'd made throughout the past few weeks. Right now he was taking a gamble.
"You smell like you haven't bathed in a week." The girl was in her teens, red hair and blue eyes with enough metal in her face to justify a fear of magnets. He was tempted to ask why she was working in the local good will.
"I haven't been able to go home." Well, he could, but forcing his way back out of one reality and into another was more draining than running for days on end and losing a fight. The expression on her face changed from disdain to understanding faster than he could track.
"Sorry hun. How much ya got?" He was four-foot eight, had one eye, and at the moment looked like he had one arm. If people didn't look too closely he could easily be mistaken for a disfigured kid.
"I got twenty bucks, how far will that get me?" She studied him for a few moments before breaking into a smile.
"I think we can fit a new outfit or two in your budget, hun."
"Does that include a backpack?" Her smile slipped a little bit.
"Maybe just the one outfit then." She stepped out from behind the counter and led him into the racks. It took almost twenty minutes before she found what she called "The perfect outfit".
"Say hun, how about I treat you after work? How do you take your steak?" What was she looking for? Her tone, it was speculative, appraising. Odd.
"Ash in the chest, normally." Incomprehension. Confusion. Dammit. "Medium rare Miss..." His eye slid down. "Medium rare, Miss Ganes."
"Alright hun, you go ahead and try those out. I'll be up at the front when you're ready to check out." Human contrariness constantly eluded him. Today was no different.
Unsurprisingly, the outfit was a good fit. Tan cargo pants with six pockets, a green tee-shirt with a skull on the front, and black cotton boxers. Throw in the faded, dusty black backpack and he had maybe four dollars left of what he budgeted for clothes. He bundled everything together and headed to the front and...
Dammit all to Hell.
How did a cop get here while he was trying on clothes?
Run, play along? Hell, reveal himself and disappear during the shock?
Screw it. "Alright Miss Gaines, I think that'll be it."
"Everything look good, hun?" He nodded. "I rang up your purchases while you were in the back. Comes up to fourteen eighty-three."
He pocketed his change and glared, first at her, then the officers car in front of the store, then back at her. She grinned.
"So, who's your friend?" Her grin widened.
"Oh, him? That's ol' Boyd. I figured you'd like a ride wherever you're goin'." He rolled his eye. He was short, not young.
"Thanks, I guess." The officer was getting out of the car before he'd finished stuffing everything into the backpack. He got out the glass doors of the Goodwill before he got a really good look at the officer. Even hunched over, Boyd was nearly six feet tall, his hair wasn't salt and pepper grey. It was just salt. And no man who looked that old should be that muscular.
Boyd stared at him. He stared at Boyd. The winds shifted and he sneezed, the old cop took that as an opportunity to close the distance.
"Bless you, son."
"Thanks. What can I do for you, Boyd?" The old man hesitated, unsettled by his familiar use of the officers name.
"You seem to have me at a bit of a disadvantage, son. You can start by tellin' me your name."
"Hatch. Ling. My name's Hatch Ling." Hatch grinned as the officer stared at him, clearly unimpressed.
"That's great, son, but I need your real name."
"For all intents and purposes, Mr.Boyd, that is indeed my name." His stance and posture shifted in such a way that it set Boyd on edge. And then he just smiled and relaxed, and Boyd knew there was something wrong there.
"It's Officer Boyd, son. Now, I'm gonna have to ask you to come down to the station with me. I'd bet you're parents are right worried about ya'." Hatch pinched the bridge of his nose and slowly rubbed up and down. Some assumptions caused stress. Stress caused headaches. Headaches sucked.
"Can I get a shower out of it?" The officers look was a very good attempt at being unreadable.
"I don't see why not."
"You have my gratitude, old man." He'd disappear the instant their backs were turned anyway, but at least his escape would be squeaky clean.
-----
It was four weeks ago when he was tossed into this reality, and he was getting tired of roughing it.
Back home he had a warm bed and he could look forward to a good fight every few days. He didn't mind showering in the rain or catching wild game, but dealing strictly with humans was starting to bother him. He loved them to bits, really, he'd have passed his job over to the nearest pretender if he didn't, but this... Mundane routine was just so boring.
But tonight was different.
Without a cloud in the sky it was a truly beautiful night to be walking through the woods.The moon was full, the air was crisp, and it felt like something was trying to get under his skin.
Things had gotten a little too calm. Good things, bad things, those he could deal with. The downtime while the scales were tipping? That drove him nuts.
The winds picked up and Hatch took a cautious sniff of the air. Hamburger. And dogs. There must be a camp sight nearby. Or a dog show. He angled himself into the wind and ambled off.
He could hear them well before he could see them. People talking, dogs barking and growling, some laughter here and there.
What he saw, however, was, well, holy-
"Fuck." All sounds stopped, even the wind slowed to a stop. Hatch stared at dozens of creatures.
Werewolves.
And they stared back.
All except three. Three werewolves were closing in on him, fast, and he had to make a decision, faster.
Fight run fight run fight run- Run!
Three on one was not a winning battle, well, he could kill them, probably, but three on one was just for starters. And Hatch didn't want to have to pull out the nasty tricks. Magic? Outright defying physics? Revealing that he could practice, rather than just exist through, would probably end worse than his corpse cooling somewhere.
The first werewolf, dark brown and bulky, lunged for him. Hatch rolled forward, underneath rippling muscle and fur, and bolted to the side as soon as his feet were under him. He broke into the tree line and twisted under and through the brush. He could hear them though, they weren't running into trees, they only barely rubbed against bark, dammit, they knew these woods. Well, what did he expect? This was their territory, of course they should know it. Hatch stopped avoiding trees and ran straight for the oak in front of him. He took two steps vertically up the tree before jumping off of it, twisting in the air, and swinging off of a low hanging branch to another tree.
Hatch doubled back, not even a bare whisper in the wind as he listened for the beasts following him. The third one passed underneath of him, older than the other two, and he saw the old wolves ears twitch. He either heard Hatch, something very doubtful, or he heard the wolves ahead of him turn around. Regardless, Hatch took a hard left and sped up.
Judging by the amount of barking, more of the creatures were starting to get into it. Hatch ripped off his eyepatch and glanced over his shoulder. Blond werewolf? Didn't matter, she was jumping through the trees and gaining. Hatch slowed down, slightly, and made a plan. He was still faster than them, and he was more compact and turned sharper than them, but they knew the woods.
He launched himself at the ground back at the direction she was coming from. It put him back on the path of the three larger males, but he'd figure out what to do when he ran into them. He heard a branch snap, and hurled himself to the right. A black blur passed through where he'd been. He glanced back and-
Shit.
The werewolf bounced off the tree, at him. Hatch hit the ground and he could feel huge, furry fingers pass through his hair.
He swallowed dryly as he got into a shaky run, his center of balance quickly righting itself. A vicious sneeze almost felled him. This was getting worse by the second.
Planplanplanplan- wait. That was just so stupid it could never work, he was not going to go through the center of the werewolf gathering. An explosive crack behind him and an explosion of bark next to him was not going to change his mind.
"Stop running, and we won't harm you." The old werewolf. He had marks on his chest, some kind of surgery? But why would it show up on his fur. Not important. Focus on the gun. Mostly not important, getting shot would suck but it wouldn't even slow him down.
Unless it was a leg shot- No! Focus! Run away now, answer uncomfortable questions never.
The bullet kicked up dirt where his foot had been while he was going full tilt back to the clearing. He sneezed again. This time, however, he didn't notice the sound of twigs breaking, of leafs being crushed, he just saw brown and felt the air get shoved out of his lungs when his momentum was reversed.
"You're pretty fast for a runt, you know that kid?" That compliment would mean so much more if he wasn't blinking stars out of his vision and struggling to breathe.
"End of the line, you were pretty fun for a kid." He felt teeth closing around his neck. There were twenty-eight separate points pressing into his neck. Any one of which would hurt, and bleed a lot, but wouldn't be fatal. Idiot.
"Gus, don't!" The teeth closed, just a little bit. Now or never. "We don't know-" Hatch slammed his claw into the beasts mouth, and his normal thumb into the creatures eye. The werewolf screamed and Hatch pushed himself away, but his wrist was caught in the bastards mouth.
"You-" Hatches foot found its way into Gusses groin, cutting off whatever witless banter was about to come from the mouth wrapped around his hand. That same maw opened and Hatch had to act fast.
Damn, its eye was already growing back. Wait, actually he could use that.
The distal phalanges of his right hand were sharpened. A mistake Hatch often regretted, but right now was quite handy. His right hand knifed foreward, parting through flesh and muscle, cartilidge and jugular, stopping when it hit spine.
"Let me go, Gustav here lives!" He could see them. Curious, horrified eyes staring at him. Some in the trees, most in the dark.
"Don't lie, kid." The speaker wasn't as big or vicious looking as the beast healing around his hand. The way he was talking though, he acted like- Oh. Alpha. "Fang and claw, kid. You already killed him."
Silence spread amongst the moonlit darkness. Gus was looking down at him, eyes wide and fearful.
"If I didn't feel the need to prove people wrong, I'd actually kill you." Hatch managed to roll them over, barely, and planted his feet firmly on the beasts chest. There was nothing special about his wrist bones, and this guys muscles were Strong, he was firmly stuck in the creatures throat. With a jerk and a pop he stood up and fell backwards, his stained hand free of the beast.
He wasn't given the opportunity to stand before two wolves slammed him against a tree, the old one had one hand around his neck and Hatches right hand pinned against the bark. The alpha had his left hand pinned against the tree as well.
"Evenin' neighbors." What more could he say?
A/N Hit by sudden inspiration, I thought I'd go ahead and share.