This is a fanfiction crossover between College Chemistry's altered earth and my new favorite cartoon- Fairly OddParents: A New Wish. If you don't have context, feel free to watch the show or just skip past this one and go to Ca.
The first 20 (10x2) episodes are on Netflix globally while the rest are coming soon.
I chose 'K' as the crossover chapter because it just give alkali metal vibes to me.
For context: soo there's this kid, Timmy, who had fairy godparents named Cosmo and Wanda, and a godbrother named Poof. So once Timmy turned 18, (according to a speculated timeline among the fandom) he lost his fairy godfamily.
Nobody knows for sure what happened to him next. Soo I don't know how many years later but this girl, Hazel Wells moved to the city, Dimmadelphia, soon after her brother left for college. Cosmo and Wanda, now on retirement, lived their lives as normal human beings.
But seeing Hazel's misery upon moving and her brother leaving, they come out of retirement, reveal themselves to her as fairies and become her new fairy godparents.
She had a bully... friend... frenemy... I don't know for sure what he is to her for sure, but he's a spoiled rich kid named Dev who really wants to impress his dad, who loves his ugly boots more than his son. So he mirrors his dad, and doesn't want to think for himself.
They became friends over a group project and then had a falling out at the Founder's Day festival. Dev, realizing his mistake, feels miserable... when he meets a fairy, who takes pity on him and becomes his fairy godparent. This fairy is grown-up Poof, who renamed himself Peri. And that's how the final episode on Netflix ends.
And that is where I'm starting the story. I know there's more episodes but I'm not considering them for now because if anyone decides to watch the show as of this point before watching, they're not way too confused. But one catch, everyone has powers too! Overpowered world indeed!
I'm imagining that the show is set in 2030, because there are a few tech things there like robot statues and stuff which aren't particularly 2024.
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2030
"You're my WHAT?!" Dev exclaimed, leaping onto his feet.
"Fairy godparent. I grant your wishes, but I'm also your friend... well, I will be if you let me." Peri explained. This was his first godkid, and he did not want to mess up. He knew how much his parents helped their previous godkid. They were like a second family to the human boy.
To anybody else, Peri would have looked quite confident and peppy, but only the periwinkle-clad fairy knew the extent of the stress.
"Friends? I don't need friends." Dev scoffed. "But..." The boy was reconsidering his decision, thinking about how much a fairy godparent could help him. "I'm not turning down a gift."
Peri sighed. He knew Dev's type. They were brought up with every modern convenience in the world, but were hurting inside thanks to parental neglect. They think it's compensated by things, but no ten-year-old would admit that the things don't matter. Because let's be real, it makes for a great classroom flex.
Alright, Dev,” Peri said, trying to sound encouraging. “So, what do you want to wish for first?”
Dev thought for a moment, his mind racing with possibilities. “I wish… I wish I could impress my dad.”
Peri sighed. "That goes against Da Rules." He poofed up a purple book bigger than him. "Cannot wish for people's appreciation." He read aloud, then shook his head. "The Council added that in recently, after realizing that a lot of kids disrupt the space-time continuum by wishing for their crushes to notice them."
Dev frowned, then sat back down onto his bed. "Just my luck..." he grumbled under his breath.
Peri wanted to help the boy, he really did. But he couldn't risk getting them both in trouble. Not on his conscience. "I think you need a distraction."
He poofed on a lab coat and doctor's head lamp, then sat beside the boy. "So... what are your powers, Dev?"
"They're lame anyway..." he sighed dejectedly. "Not a single noble metal."
But seeing the expectant look in Peri's eyes, he whispered the powers softly. "It's... neon, silicon and potassium."
"Yo, that is cool!" Peri exclaimed, genuinely amazed by the combination. "You can make signs glow, work well with tech and deal with electricity."
"Yeah but it's no gold or platinum. At least silver! My grandfather Doug Dimmadome has gold. My father, Dale has platinum. I don't even have silver." he muttered, but then a little glint formed in his blue eyes.
"I wish I had gold as my power."
Peri nodded, although not as enthusiastically as usual. "Those aren't radioactive, or threatening so... all right. It doesn't really go against Da Rules." He waved his wand. Dev's eyes suddenly lit up like a flashlight, literally and figuratively.
"Cool!" He whispered, looking around as if through a car windshield, with the headlights on. "I love this power..."
Peri smiled, glad to have impressed his first godson. He felt like Dev was a real friend to him, so he descended slightly from his hover, landing on Dev's bed to sit beside him. "Thanks. I just hope I can live up to my parents' legacy... they're some of the best fairy godparents in all of history!"
"I know that feeling... the Dimmadome name is a lot to live up to..." Dev replied, turning off his eye headlights, and turned to Peri. "I'm sure your family's good. You know... I think you're actually a good friend.
The periwinkle fairy's eyes welled up dramatically. "Really?"
“Yeah,” Dev said, a bit awkwardly. “I mean, you’re the first person who’s actually listened to me.”
Peri smiled, feeling a warm glow inside. “Thanks, Dev. That means a lot.”
Just then, the door to Dev’s room burst open, and his father, Dale Dimmadome, stormed in. “Devin, the power’s out in the house! I need you to fix it with your electricity powers.”
Peri startled with a jump, and poofed himself into a periwinkle comic book, which looked like Dev was reading. Nobody should know of his existence. Dev slid the comic a few inches away from him, a drop of sweat rolling down his forehead. "Can't you just call an electrician? Or have an O-PAIR drone do it?"
"It's part of my new cost-cutting tactic. Drones and robots need maintenance and maintenance people need money. I need the money for better things, like my new rockets I'm adding to my boots."
"But dad, you have hydrogen, you can float."
"Yeah and you have potassium. You can fix this." Dale snapped back. "So, fix it."
***
"What do you mean, it doesn't work?"
"I... I don't know, Dad."
Lie.
He knew it was Peri that altered his power. He had gold now, and he knew it well. But how was he supposed to say, 'Oh, I have a fairy godparent. I wished for him to change my power and then that happened.'
"O-PAIRs," he beckoned to the two drone s hovering in the air beside him. "Take Devin to that elementalist. That blondie who came for his test. A real no-nonsense woman, I must say. I have to call an electrician." He cared more about his electricity than his son's elemental wellbeing, it seemed.
The O-PAIR drones whirred to life, their mechanical arms gently guiding Dev out of the room. He glanced back at the periwinkle comic book, hoping Peri would stay hidden.
As they made their way to the elementalist’s office, Dev’s mind raced. He had wanted to impress his dad so badly, but now he felt like he had made everything worse. The gold power was cool, but it wasn’t practical for situations like this.
When they arrived, the elementalist, Dr. Aurelia Oxide, greeted them with a warm smile. “Hello, Dev. What seems to be the problem? Your father sent you here with the drones, I see...”
She knew better than to deal with the boy's obvious daddy issues. Elements were more her thing.
Dev hesitated, unsure how much to reveal. “I… I think my powers aren’t working right.”
Dr. Oxide raised an eyebrow. “Let’s take a look.” She led him to a diagnostic machine and began running tests. As the machine hummed and beeped, Dev felt a knot of anxiety tighten in his stomach.
After a few minutes, the young doctor looked at the results, her expression puzzled. “It seems your potassium power has been replaced with gold. That’s highly unusual. Have you experienced any unusual events? Anything fairly odd, I guess?”
Dev’s heart skipped a beat. He couldn’t tell her about Peri. “Uh, no. Nothing like that.”
Aurelia nodded slowly. “Well, gold is a valuable power, but it’s not as versatile as potassium. It might be worth considering a way to restore your original abilities.”
She knew how gold worked. She used it. She was basically named after it. After all, its luminescence saved her and her roommates from blackouts over the years.
Dev sighed. “Is there any way to do that?”
"Well... I'm not too sure, so I'd suggest you speak to a more experienced elementalist... my father would know, but he's been retired for years now." she thought to herself.
"I see... totally unrelated. Well... there is one thing, but I need to have you sign a contract."
She produced a sheet of paper, with three or four paragraphs on it. Dev sighed, grumbling a bit. "I wish I could just have it shortened..."
His keychain in his pocket vibrated ever-so slightly and the contract seemed to become more comprehensive. "You're going to have a fairy cast a spell on me?" he read.
Aurelia gasped slightly. "How did you..."
"Always read the fine print."
"Smart kid." Aurelia nodded.
"Wait... a fairy? Those are real?! And here I thought that bald Crocker guy from the Galax institute was fresh out of an asylum." Dev shook his head. He really did think that about the weird creature of a man until he met Peri.
Aurelia smiled. "Was it a fairy though?"
"Okay... it was." Dev confessed. "I wanted to impress my dad by getting the same powers as him."
"Well... I had a fairy godparent. She was amazing. It was from around 2009, when I was three. Till I was twelve, and we had a huge disagreement about a guy."
"How does that work? You're a human. She's a fairy."
Aurelia's eyes widened with disgust. "What?! No, eww! She wanted to marry this one fairy guy, and I could not stand the idea of having him as my fairy godfather. I'd met him before, and... boy, was he stupid or what!"
"Uh-huh..."
"I tried to convince Wanda over and over again that Cosmo's not as good as her fantasy at all. So then we had a fight. The two of them got married soon after, then I don't know what happened next. Most kids forget their fairy godparent at eighteen, but I lost mine at twelve. 2018, if my math is right." she sighed, as she thought about her pink-haired fairy godmother. She wore her hair in a distinct curl, and knew about a hundred different shades of pink.
"WAIT--" came a third voice. "What did you say her name was again?"
"Wanda," Aurelia answered, though there was no one in the room except her and Dev. She figured it was just the sunglasses wearing rich boy seated on the patient's chair.
"That's my mother..." Peri answered, poofing onto the table. "And my father is Cosmo."
Aurelia's eyes scanned the young adult fairy, most probably 18 or 19 years old if he was a human. She had received a letter from Wanda once, reaching out to her. It was a year after Aurelia renounced Wanda.
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"Dear Aurelia," it said. The golden girl could almost recite it.
"It's me, Wanda. I'm just writing to talk to you about my life. First of all, I told you so. Cosmo is super sweet, actually, but he is a bit clumsy, to say the least. Sometimes I get so mad that I think that I agree with you that I shouldn't have married him.
But let's look at the positives. Soon after we got married, we became the godparents of a ten-year-old boy from Dimmsdale, Timmy Turner. He lives across the Atlantic though - in the USA, while you're in Cobalt Crescendo, a city-state in, Europe.
We even have a child of our own, Poof. The first baby fairy born in years. The two boys and Cosmo make me feel like the luckiest fairy in the universe...
I know it's been a year now, but I still miss you. All this nonsense over a boy is quite silly -- I agree with you on that one. I know we can probably never see each other again, but I just want you to know that I still love you, Auri.
Give my love to Xeno and Fluora, from your missing-for-a-year pink notebook.
~ <3 Wanda"
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"I see her in you, Peri..." Aurelia mouthed, her eyes nearly watering. "Did she ever tell you about me?"
Peri nodded quietly. "She told me that... that you were a quiet girl. You were sheltered by your parents out of their concern. You never left the university, and even if mom suggested that you wish to leave, you were so afraid to leave that all your magical adventures happened indoors."
Aurelia smiled wistfully. “Yeah, that sounds like me. I was always too scared to step outside my comfort zone. But Wanda made those indoor adventures magical. She was my best friend.”
Peri’s eyes softened. “She always spoke fondly of you. She said you had a heart of gold, even if you didn’t realize it.”
Aurelia chuckled softly. “She had a way with words. I guess that’s why she was such a great fairy godparent.”
Dev, who had been listening quietly, finally spoke up, trying not to look too sappy as he enjoyed the moment. “So, what do we do now? How do I get my potassium power back?” he scoffed.
Aurelia took a deep breath, gathering her thoughts. “Well, since Peri is here, he might be able to help. Fairies have a unique understanding of elemental powers. Peri, do you think you can reverse the wish?”
Peri nodded, though he looked a bit uncertain. “I’ll do my best. Changing powers isn’t easy, but I’ll try.”
He waved his wand, and a soft glow surrounded Dev. As the magic worked, Dev felt a familiar tingling sensation. When the light faded, he looked down at his hands, which were now crackling with tiny sparks of electricity once more.
“Potassium is back,” Peri said with a smile. “But remember, Dev, it’s not about impressing your dad. It’s about being true to yourself.”
Dev nodded, feeling a sense of relief. “Thanks, Peri. I won’t forget that.”
Aurelia watched the exchange with a warm smile. “You know, Dev, having powers is a gift, but it’s how you use them that really matters. Your dad will see that in time.”
Dev felt a renewed sense of determination. “Yeah, I guess you’re right. Thanks, Dr. Oxide. And thank you, Peri.”
Peri grinned. “Anytime, Dev. That’s what friends are for.”
As they left the office, Dev felt more confident than ever. With his powers restored and a newfound understanding of what truly mattered, he was ready to face whatever challenges came his way. And maybe, just maybe, he could find a way to impress his dad without needing to change who he was.
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