Danny woke up gasping for air and fighting against his sheets. By the time he'd recognized his surroundings, he'd already rolled off his bed. He dragged in ragged, shuddering breaths. He could breathe. He could breathe. He wasn't suffocating. He wasn't at school, in his locker or otherwise. He could move he could stand. He did stand, skin prickling with the memory of electricity.
"Sydney?" he called, softly. "Is that you?" He could see a glowing form in the corner behind his dresser, and with that dream there weren't a whole lot of other people it could have been, but it was polite to ask. At least in Danny's opinion.
The ghost slid out, slowly, flickering. "Sorry, Danny," he said, and he really did sound remorseful.
Danny might believe it more if it wasn't 2:20 in the morning on a school night, and this wasn't the third time Sydney had done this. Still, Sydney was something like a friend.
"What is it, Sydney?" he asked. "Did something happen at the school?" Casper High was one of the most haunted buildings in Amity Park, which honestly didn't make sense.
Danny had done his research. The school was old, sure, but Sydney was the only person who had ever actually died there. That didn't stop the Lunch Lady, Technus, and a whole host of others from hanging around the place, although most of those others were pretty weak. Hardly strong enough to even interact with Danny or other ghosts.
Sydney shrugged.
"Then what's wrong?"
Sydney looked down at the ground. The puddle of not-light he cast on the ground – visible only to only Danny and other ghosts – rippled and glimmered.
Danny frowned. "I have fun talking to you during the day, Syd, but I do have to sleep. I'm human, you know?"
"I know," said Sydney.
"So why are you here?" asked Danny, briefly spreading his arms in exasperation and the dropping them to his sides again. He was still unsettled by the dream he'd just had.
Being close to ghosts while he was sleeping was just a recipe for nightmares. They weren't always about their deaths, but more often than not…
Sydney's death was a particularly unpleasant one. Danny did not expect to get back to sleep. Not tonight. Hence his annoyance.
"I need to…" started Sydney, before trailing off. "I need…"
"Sydney?"
"Warn you."
"About what?"
"Not what they seem," whispered the ghost. He looked away and phased out through the wall.
Danny's frown deepened. Usually, Sydney was much clearer than that. Sometimes, talking to Sydney, Danny forgot he was talking to a ghost.
Danny sat down at the edge of the bed and tried to work a kink out of his neck. He caught himself scratching at his skin as if he wanted to pull it off a minute later.
It was always like this since the accident. Especially after he had a dying dream.
Forcibly, he stopped himself. His skin was fine. There was no electricity flickering under his skin. He was alive. He was safe. His body was his body. His body.
(He was not floating above it, light as air, staring at its waxy pallor, at the glassy, empty eyes.)
He was alive, alive, alive.
Awake.
Not dead.
Slowly, he laid back down on the bed. He was alive, awake. A medium, yes, associated with more ghosts than could possibly be healthy, either physically or mentally, yes, but alive. Definitely, clearly, alive.
He didn't like it when ghosts woke him up. Especially when they came with ominous warnings about the future.
Maybe Sydney would let Danny track him down tomorrow, but Danny doubted it.
.
"Something's off," said Danny, staring up at the tall front of the school.
"Yeah," agreed Sam, "it's Spirit Week. When the teachers participate in medieval rituals to brainwash us into supporting the troglodytes that 'represent' our school in sports."
"I was going to argue," said Tucker, "but that is about what it's for, isn't it?"
"Yeah," said Danny, "I don't think it's that. Probably. Unless there's a ghost that appreciate the pun?"
"You appreciate puns."
"I'm not a ghost," said Danny, frowning at Sam.
"That's true."
Danny sighed. "I just have a bad feeling about this. I know you can't see like I can, but… be careful. If you do see anything weird, let me know."
"Hey, Danny!"
"Oh, I changed my mind. Kill me now, I want to be a ghost."
Jazz ran up and threw an arm around Danny's shoulders. "You left so early!" she said. "Are you excited about Spirit Week, too?"
"No," said Danny.
Jazz paused, looked at Danny more closely. "You look terrible," she said. "Maybe you should talk to the counselor?"
"Pass," said Danny.
"You know, you'll have to talk to me in more than monosyllables at some point."
"Do I?"
Danny rolled his eyes.
"Anyway, I've got to go to talk to Mr. Lancer about my speech! Have a great Spirit Week, guys!"
She ran off.
"I will never understand her," declared Sam. "But I think she does have a point about the counselor. Maybe they'd be able to help with the nightmares? At least the non-ghost-caused ones."
"All my nightmares are caused by ghosts."
"Eh," said Tucker, giving a half-shrug.
"Will it make you feel better if I agree to go?"
"Yes," said both Sam and Tucker.
"Ugh. Fine," said Danny.
.
Danny walked though the deserted hallway, pass in hand, study hall abandoned behind him as he looked for the counselor's office. He'd never been there before, but it should be around here somewhere, right?
A cold hand settled on his shoulder.
"You must be Danny Fenton! Your sister told me all about you."
Danny turned to look up at a tall woman. She was dressed a lot more flamboyantly than Danny would have expected.
"Yeah? That's me. Who are you?"
"I'm Penelope Spectra. Your counselor! Why don't you tell me what's wrong with you?"
"Uh," said Danny. There was something unpleasantly an unexpectedly pejorative and assumptive about that statement. Weren't counselors supposed to tell you that there wasn't anything wrong with you? That your feelings were valid.
He shrugged. He couldn't put his feelings into words.
(Couldn't open his mouth for fear of cold leaking out past his teeth, his soul exhaled with his breath.)
(Why did he feel this way?)
"Why don't you step into my office?"
The room was… not what he expected.
"Sorry about the dust," said Spectra. "I'm just moving in. They upgraded me." She smiled, showing all her teeth. "So… like I said, your sister told me a lot about you, and I have a few things I'd like to try for your laz—Excuse me. Your difficulty with staying focused. It happens sometimes with traumatic brain injuries, that a promising young mind can be—Well. In any case. I am here to support you and find a way for you to succeed. What's troubling you?"
Danny's ginger perch on the dusty chair turned into a frustrated slump. "Nothing," he said. He pushed himself back up. "I should go—"
"Oh, just humor me," said Spectra. "There has to be some reason you came. Anxiety? Stress? Social pressures?"
Danny shook his head and stood up.
"Nightmares?"
He sat back down.
.
Danny leaned over the table to whisper to Tucker during English, when they were supposed to be reviewing vocabulary words.
"Have either of you seen the counselor before?" asked Danny, after what was easily the worst week of his life. He was starting to have suspicions, but…
"Yeah," said Tucker. "When you were in the hospital. He was pretty cool."
"He?" asked Danny. "He?"
"Yeah?"
"I've been seeing a ghost for the past week."
"Ghost therapist? Well, if it's working…"
"It isn't. She's from hell. I swear. A literal demon from hell."
"Exorcism?"
"Exorcism."
.
Jazz didn't often come to school after hours, but she'd left several important things and she was the student body activity director, voted for and everything.
Important thing #1, her speech, which she had to practice.
Important thing #2, the—what was that?
Already spooked by the late-night atmosphere, she ducked into a doorway and peeked at the place she'd seen movement. There weren't many classes held down that hallway, and she didn't come down this way often, so maybe she was just—
No. That was her little brother and his friends conducting some kind of satanic ritual over a wastepaper basket.
Their parents were terrible influences. She was going to give them a stern talking to when—what what what what WHAT—
What had she just seen?
She looked back around the corner to see the… whatever it was dissolve in smoke and fire and shadows. Then Danny and his friends started cleaning up as if this was a perfectly normal Thursday night.
Jazz… Jazz was going to process this. Later.
She turned around and walked straight back out to her car. There was, after all, nothing that important.
.
"So," said Danny, leaning towards Sam on the bleachers as he watched his sister give her speech. "Looks like we saved Spirit Week."
"Never say that to me again," said Sam.
"But we did. Look at all this spirit-filled people."
"You were literally the only victim."
"But Sam~"
"It does seem less grim, though, doesn't it?" asked Tucker, contemplatively. "You are no longer the goth bird of happiness."
"Maybe a bit," allowed Sam. "I think that's just because everyone's glad this week is over, though. No offense, Danny."
"None taken. I'm glad it's over, too."
