Author: Restive Nature
Genre: Crossover
Type: WiP
Shows: Dark Angel and Supernatural
Disclaimer: Neither show represented in this fiction belongs to me. Dark Angel is the product of Cameron/Eglee and Fox, whereas Supernatural is the product of Kripke and The CW. No profits are made from this fiction and it is intended for private enjoyment only.
Story Rating: PG-13
Timeline/ Spoilers: This story is a companion piece to “When It Changes”.
Setting: Takes place during Chapter Twenty-three- Frayed
Pairing: None
Summary: A series of vignettes. A collection of hunting trips.
The Diary of John Winchester
Name: UNK [Max kept calling it a carniphila (?)]
Classification: carnivorous mutated plant
Description: a plant found in swamps. It has mutated into some sort of semi-mobile (!) carnivorous being.
Lore Reference: none really
Encountered At: Florida City, Florida around Mangrove Swamp
Specific Attacks: Plant kills by injecting poison into unsuspecting passerby’s which works both as an instant paralyzer and rapid decomposer. The plant feeds off the broken down protein strands of the human body. It also, once completing the feeding, injects its spawn into the host body. (According to Max.)
Kill By: by trial and error, we discovered that fire was the way to go.
Personal Notes: Never in my life did I expect to see a thing like this. The damn thing was killing humans, feeding off them and propagating itself. I still don’t think I understand completely the scientific aspect of it. Max explained it a few times to Dean and myself, but she has an understanding of science far greater than our own. She even talked with her brother about it and as far as I know, he didn’t quite understand either. This sort of thing isn’t what we usually do, but since it was killing humans and Max seemed to have a good handle on the whole thing, we went ahead with it. (Took three damn weeks, but we did it!)
At this point, I’m not sure that we got all these plants, what with them injecting spawn into other bodies. I have no clue if formaldehyde would kill off the seeds. Our best bet is to make this information more widely known to others like ourselves. Maybe even alert a few of the right people in the scientific community.
Add. - I let a few of my contacts know what was up here in Florida. They are taking care of it and have discovered that if a body was recovered early enough, that the formaldehyde did kill off the spawn seed. That’s why the problem wasn’t so widespread. And since the plant seems native to Florida, or swamp type settings, we won’t see too many of them, since the plants couldn’t survive in other climates.
Entry: Eugene, OR
No comments:
Post a Comment