- Jun 18, 2015
- 10,109
- Gender
- Female
- Pronouns
- She/Her
- Posting Status
- Irregularly

The discovery that Evan was in an alternate dimension somehow managed to be less alarming then the discovery that he had a family. The thought that there might be an alternate version of him had simply not occurred to either Evan, and when someone had brought up that they was, in fact, an entire Sideralis family on the island he'd been taken aback.
So he'd sat in the station while he'd been called up, waiting to find out what was going on. The discovery that Evaristus--because apparently his alternate universe variant didn't go by Evan at all--was missing did not come as much of a surprise.
It wasn't hard to figure out what had happened. They'd swapped places, although the hadn't the faintest idea why. Aberrant powers? Something to do with the island itself? Maybe Evaristus himself had instigated it, trying to escape something or another.
It had obviously backfired. Evan was fairly sure that Evaristus had taken his place, just as he'd taken Evaristus's, meaning the man had likely found himself in the middle of a high security US government facility. According to what he'd been told, Evaristus didn't look much like him, and still had both eyes, which meant the government would be very interested in him.
Hopefully he was still alive, but Evan was firmly of the mindset that whatever had happened, he bore no responsibility. He hadn't asked to be brought over, and if his life would be better for it (and he was having a hard time imagining a way it could get worse than how it had been) then so be it.
The police had opted to drive Evan over to the house, where his family were apparently very worried about him. Evan wasn't quite sure how to feel about that. They'd never met him, after all. They knew an alternate version of him that was, by virtue of them not being dead, very different than he was. He was effectively a stranger, and yet apparently they were willing to welcome him with open arms.
For all his skepticism, the first glance of them was a punch to the gut. There was his father, just like he remembered, a bit older and grayer, a little bit more tired. His father as he would have been. His mother, though, was different. Thinner than his mother had been, her hair showing no signs of gray. Almost younger looking, as if she'd aged backwards in the years since he'd seen her alive.
But they weren't his parents. Not really. They were the parents of some other version of himself, and he had to remind himself of that fact every moment that he looks at them.
They slot him into their lives with alarming ease. They don't talk about Evaristus. They call him Evan when he asks them to. They show him a room that isn't his and tell him he can stay there. The entire experience is surreal, even more than being on an island filled with monsters already is.
The longer it goes on, the more convinced he becomes that there's something else going on. They're leading up to something, but he doesn't know what.
So he'd sat in the station while he'd been called up, waiting to find out what was going on. The discovery that Evaristus--because apparently his alternate universe variant didn't go by Evan at all--was missing did not come as much of a surprise.
It wasn't hard to figure out what had happened. They'd swapped places, although the hadn't the faintest idea why. Aberrant powers? Something to do with the island itself? Maybe Evaristus himself had instigated it, trying to escape something or another.
It had obviously backfired. Evan was fairly sure that Evaristus had taken his place, just as he'd taken Evaristus's, meaning the man had likely found himself in the middle of a high security US government facility. According to what he'd been told, Evaristus didn't look much like him, and still had both eyes, which meant the government would be very interested in him.
Hopefully he was still alive, but Evan was firmly of the mindset that whatever had happened, he bore no responsibility. He hadn't asked to be brought over, and if his life would be better for it (and he was having a hard time imagining a way it could get worse than how it had been) then so be it.
The police had opted to drive Evan over to the house, where his family were apparently very worried about him. Evan wasn't quite sure how to feel about that. They'd never met him, after all. They knew an alternate version of him that was, by virtue of them not being dead, very different than he was. He was effectively a stranger, and yet apparently they were willing to welcome him with open arms.
For all his skepticism, the first glance of them was a punch to the gut. There was his father, just like he remembered, a bit older and grayer, a little bit more tired. His father as he would have been. His mother, though, was different. Thinner than his mother had been, her hair showing no signs of gray. Almost younger looking, as if she'd aged backwards in the years since he'd seen her alive.
But they weren't his parents. Not really. They were the parents of some other version of himself, and he had to remind himself of that fact every moment that he looks at them.
They slot him into their lives with alarming ease. They don't talk about Evaristus. They call him Evan when he asks them to. They show him a room that isn't his and tell him he can stay there. The entire experience is surreal, even more than being on an island filled with monsters already is.
The longer it goes on, the more convinced he becomes that there's something else going on. They're leading up to something, but he doesn't know what.