Info


Created
6 years, 6 months ago
Favorites
1

Basic Info


Full Name:

Beckett

Gender:

Male

Age:

20-ish

Species:

Debatable

Story:

His own

Creation Date:

May 1st 2017

Profile


Beckett's a bit of a lost character with a few different stories that are completely disconnected. In general, he is melancholy and lonely; lost in a world where he ought to belong.


His original sticks him with a group of the Chosen - he and his friends are destined to swear themselves to the gods in order to save the world or something like that. Restore balance. idk. On their journey, however, they are still attempting their pledges and sorting out who belongs with which god, desperately trying to ignore that the Lord of the Hunt is a part of their pantheon. 

As reality begins to crumple, despite their best efforts, Beckett makes up his mind (against his companion's earlier protests) to take on his supposed destiny.

Beckett, having pledged fealty to the Lord of the Hunt - the death god of the realm: a solemn, cruel being that regulates the flow of life - finds himself stretched taut, with wild, feral impulses; the drive to seek prey and deliver its life to his Lord.

The rest of the group finds Beckett again after a long and desperate search. Beckett is less than pleased, as he is suddenly saddled with having to keep himself from harming the others.


For Beckett's second story, he is the antichrist son/true prince of Satan. The children of the noble family are under some very strict rules, with a threat of being sent to the mortal world to learn their lesson. As the crown prince, Beckett is under intense scrutiny - and he is far past expectations. The adults panic: Beckett's too perfect. The "mortal realm" threat is actually a thinly veiled coming-of-age ritual, and they're afraid they'll never be able to send the straight-laced little demon.

The adults coerce another kid into framing Beckett. Sent to the mortal realm as punishment for a crime he didn't commit, Beckett's heart is broken; convinced he's done wrong and everyone has lost faith in him. He is slam-dunked into a mortal body in the middle of a school day, and he bolts from the school, the town, and possibly the county.

After his initial panic, as the sun begins to set, Beckett picks a house at random and charms the folks as he walks in that he is their son. He charms their daughter and snags her bunk bed and cries himself to sleep. He struggles with the family to prioritize the little girl, distraught that he's thrown a wrench in their lives. They worry about him and his health as his vessel corrupts to be more skeletal.

Eventually, he reveals himself to the little girl, and shortly after the parents, admitting he's horribly homesick. They do their best to get him home: when he finally is able to contact his father, he's told it's all a setup, and all he needs to do to return home is put his body back where he found it! Beckett is horrified - he doesn't remember where he got it, and he's modified it since.

In the end, Beckett finds that his vessel was stolen from an abusive home; so he decides to keep it and returns home as a half-mortal.