Subject: Oh, this takes me back.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-05-08 05:39:00 UTC
For at least a few characters in practically everything I write, I give them something awful in their past, good reason to believe that something awful will happen in the future, or both. Of course, I usually pair them with a more idealistic or happy-go-lucky character and watch the two of them bicker, but sometimes I just pile so much nasty stuff on the entire story.
In one of the biggest cases of the latter, which I wrote about a year ago, I had originally intended as a deconstruction of the clichés of Internet paranormal fiction like the creepypastas. It turned into what is probably the darkest story I've ever made.
One of the main characters ended up with his mind and personality destroyed, with its remnants piloting a body that had been twisted, enthralled, and "modified" by a humanoid abomination called the Gentleman, and became a central antagonist for the second third of the story before his nervous system started breaking down during one of his fights and he ended up being turned on by the other modified once-humans.
The protagonist, who had an ability to see events in possible futures in his dreams in reference to the old cliché(though I subverted it by making it a plot device exactly once and a problem every other time his clairvoyance showed up), was driven close to madness as it became more and more probable that he'd fail, which caused him to have steadily increasing nightmares where he watched alternate versions of himself get killed, often at the claws of the once-humans, all the while with the knowledge that what he was seeing was actually happening in a potential world, and that one of the dying versions he saw might be him.
His love interest was later aged to death by the Gentleman, and since the abomination was planning on healing itself by draining the minds of a nursing home(it makes a lot more sense in context, I swear, the Gentleman didn't mind-drain the elderly just to be extra-evil), and the protagonist had to burn it down to keep his enemy from coming back to full strength.
No, I don't usually write nearly as dark as that any more, because that story was incredibly over-the-top as it was, though it was very fun to write.
Actually, since the protagonist ended up charged with arson and later deemed legally insane after recounting his experiences, and the Gentleman was alive at the end, that story may not have been the best choice to put in a thread about what seems to largely be about characters succeeding after undergoing their traumatic events at this point.