roseDwrite
Worlds
When her lover, Commander Lexa, is murdered, Clarke Griffin sheds her mask of diplomacy and unleashes the full, terrifying power of 'Wanheda' to burn down Grounder society and exact bloody revenge on those responsible.
A call meant for the end of the world.
An undocumented asset tied directly to the Tesseract must emerge from the shadows of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s history to handle the escalating threats of 2012, guided only by the fading memories of Peggy Carter.
As the Chitauri fleet descends on New York, Nick Fury plays his final trump card: a legendary operative with no past, known only to Peggy Carter, forcing a ghost to fight alongside Earth's mightiest heroes.
In this The 100 AU, Clarke Griffin has spent her life aboard the Ark being trained in survival by a mysterious presence in her dreams: Death itself.
In this dark reimagining of The 100, Clarke Griffin isn't just a desperate survivor of the Ark—she is the secret protégé of Death itself.
After establishing a stable Queendom, Keres and her chosen twelve cross universes to find a new home in the Supergirl/DC universe, bringing their unique brand of survival to National City.
When a brilliant theoretical physicist accidentally creates an "N-Dimensional" tear in spacetime, she must race against time—and alternate versions of herself—to close the rift before reality collapses.
When Natasha Romanoff vanishes without a trace, the Avengers discover her greatest secret isn't her past with the Red Room—it's her fiancée, a woman with an enhanced serum surpassing Captain America's, intellect eclipsing Tony Stark's, and a lethality that makes Earth's Mightiest Heroes look like amateurs as she wages a one-woman war to bring Natasha home.
After the love of her life is kidnapped and no one believes the 'random reporter' who reported it, Kara Danvers abandons her hero persona to become Kara Zor-El—a ruthless Kryptonian warrior who will burn National City to ashes to get Lena Luthor back.
Characters

Titus
by roseDwrite
The Flamekeeper who accidentally killed Lexa while attempting to assassinate Clarke. He is now the primary target of Wanheda's revenge.

Titus
by roseDwrite
The Flamekeeper who accidentally killed Lexa, making him the primary target of Wanheda's wrath.

Peggy Carter
by roseDwrite
One of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s founders, now aging and dealing with fading memory. She is the only person who knows Shadow's true purpose and deliberately kept her existence hidden to protect both her and the world.

Shadow
by roseDwrite
An undocumented asset created by Peggy Carter, intrinsically linked to the Tesseract. She operates completely off-book, possessing enhanced abilities that manifest with glowing blue eyes, and acts only on her own terms for maximum efficiency.

Nick Fury
by roseDwrite
The current Director of S.H.I.E.L.D., dealing with the sudden re-emergence of Tesseract energy in 2012. He may be among those who have heard the rumors of Peggy's off-book asset and will likely seek to control or utilize Shadow.

Maria Hill
by roseDwrite
Deputy Director of S.H.I.E.L.D., instructed by Fury to contact 'The Ghost'.

The Abstract of Death
by roseDwrite
A cosmic, non-human intelligence that exists only in a cognitive dream layer accessible to Clarke. It does not speak with a human voice or offer maternal warmth; instead, it teaches through unyielding logic, probability, and simulated scenarios of inevitable endings. It has claimed Clarke as its own, molding her to understand that morality doesn't eliminate loss, but merely determines who bears it.

Bryan
by roseDwrite
A former member of the Farm Station and Farm Station guard, he brings his combat experience and loyalty to Nathan Miller to their new life.

Lincoln Kom Trikru
by roseDwrite
A former Grounder who bridged the gap between his people and the Sky People, bringing his unique perspective and survival skills to this new universe.

David Miller
by roseDwrite
Nathan's father and the former Chief Guard of the Ark, bringing valuable experience and a steady hand to the group's new life.

Nathan Miller
by roseDwrite
A dedicated guard and loyal friend, Nathan's protective instincts and combat skills make him a vital asset to Keres's chosen twelve.

Sterling
by roseDwrite
A pragmatic and capable survivor from Keres's original group, known for his reliability and skill in resource management.

Wanda Maximoff
by roseDwrite
The Scarlet Witch, possessing reality-altering powers, whose entanglement with Natasha has sparked a potentially catastrophic conflict.

Natasha Romanoff
by roseDwrite
The Black Widow, a former KGB operative turned Avenger, whose complex past and current choices threaten to destroy her marriage.

Morrigana Sinclair
by roseDwrite
The world's most skilled assassin, a master of combat, strategy, and hacking, whose icy exterior masks a deep, vulnerable love for her wife.

Wanda Maximoff
by roseDwrite
The Scarlet Witch, a powerful reality-warping Avenger who has unknowingly (or knowingly) become involved with Natasha Romanoff.

Natasha Romanoff
by roseDwrite
The Black Widow, a former Russian spy and Avenger, who is secretly married to Alex but has recently become entangled with Wanda Maximoff.

Elara-Prime
by roseDwrite
An alternate version of Elara from a universe where the tear has already caused catastrophic consequences. She crosses over to prevent Elara from making the same mistake, but her methods are extreme.

Raven Reyes
by roseDwrite
Raven Reyes arrived on Earth at a pivotal moment—one day after Clarke Griffin had locked herself inside level three of the dropship, sealing herself off from the chaos that had overtaken the hundred. Unlike the original hundred, who had already spent twelve months adapting to life on the ground, Raven entered a world already tense, fractured, and dangerous. From the moment she stepped onto the planet, her presence was marked by determination, intelligence, and a refusal to let herself become a victim of circumstances she could control. At twenty years old, Raven was older than both Clarke and Octavia, and her personality reflected a maturity forged by previous hardship. She was highly independent, resourceful, and fiercely practical. She didn’t come to Earth to play hero or die for anyone else’s mistakes. One of her first acts demonstrated this clearly: confronting the dropship where Clarke had locked herself in, Raven refused to risk herself for the people she had just joined. With a mixture of boldness and blunt honesty, she demanded entry: “I’m not dying for them—let me in.” That moment set the tone for her entire approach to survival: she was willing to take risks, but on her own terms, and she refused to be used as a pawn in conflicts she didn’t control. Raven’s mind was her greatest weapon. She was extraordinarily intelligent, analytical, and inventive, able to improvise complex solutions from limited resources. She saw the world as a system of problems to be solved, not a place where emotion alone could dictate action. This made her pragmatic to the point of bluntness; she often prioritized efficiency over sentimentality, believing that survival and progress required cold clarity. Despite her independence, Raven had a natural intensity that drew people to her. While Clarke had already sealed herself away, Raven’s arrival marked the beginning of the eventual bond between them. Even then, she instinctively recognized Clarke’s intelligence and capability, though she wasn’t yet ready to align herself fully with anyone. For Raven, survival came first—and she was not about to die for the mistakes or emotional attachments of the original hundred. Raven was also fearless in confronting authority or danger. She had learned early that life rewarded those willing to take initiative and challenge limits, and she applied that mindset immediately upon arriving on Earth. Her determination and self-reliance set her apart from the others, and her practical, problem-solving mindset made her invaluable even in the earliest chaotic days. Emotionally, Raven was controlled but not cold. She cared about people, but she measured those feelings carefully, knowing that attachment could become a liability in a world as dangerous as Earth. Her loyalty and trust were earned through competence and consistency, not sentiment alone. At the moment she first arrived, Raven’s defining traits were clear: she was brilliant, self-reliant, fearless, and determined to survive on her own terms. She refused to be a martyr, refused to let chaos dictate her fate, and refused to enter a conflict she couldn’t control. That combination of intellect, pragmatism, and determination would become her hallmark in the months and years to follow, shaping her into a core member of the team and a force to be reckoned with among the hundred.

Clark Griffin
by roseDwrite
## Clarke Griffin — Personality Clarke Griffin became a leader not because she wanted power, but because circumstances forced her into that role. Growing up on the Ark, she was raised in an environment where survival depended on strict rules and difficult decisions. As the daughter of a doctor, Clarke learned early that protecting lives often required facing harsh realities. Compassion and intelligence shaped her worldview, but so did the understanding that resources were limited and mistakes could cost people their lives. When the hundred were sent to Earth, Clarke was eighteen years old. The sudden freedom of the ground created chaos among the group. Many of the delinquents had spent their lives under strict control and immediately rejected authority once they reached the surface. In the middle of this disorder, Clarke began to stand out. She had the ability to remain calm when others panicked and to think several steps ahead in dangerous situations. People slowly started to listen to her not because she demanded control, but because her decisions often kept them alive. Over the course of the first twelve months on Earth, Clarke matured rapidly. The constant pressure of survival forced her to sharpen her instincts and strengthen her emotional control. She learned that leadership meant carrying the responsibility for choices that no one else wanted to make. By the end of that first year, Clarke had turned nineteen. The experiences she faced during those months shaped her into someone far more calculating and pragmatic than the girl who first arrived on the ground. Clarke’s personality was defined by **logic, survival, and responsibility**. While she cared deeply about people, she also understood that saving everyone was not always possible. She constantly weighed risks and outcomes, focusing on the long-term survival of the group rather than emotional reactions in the moment. Unlike many others, Clarke did not believe that leadership meant sacrificing herself simply to appear heroic. This belief became clear during the conflict that erupted when Bellamy’s actions pushed the group toward war. Tensions among the hundred escalated quickly, fueled by anger, fear, and reckless decisions. Clarke recognized the direction events were heading long before most others did. She saw that the situation was spiraling into a conflict that would likely destroy many of them. Faced with this reality, Clarke made a decision that defined her mindset. Instead of remaining outside and risking death in a conflict she believed was unnecessary, she chose to secure her own survival. She locked herself inside **level three of the dropship**, isolating herself from the chaos and violence unfolding outside. To some, this choice could appear selfish. However, Clarke viewed it through a different lens. In her mind, dying alongside people who refused to think about the consequences of their actions would accomplish nothing. Survival meant having the chance to rebuild, to learn from mistakes, and to prevent future disasters. Clarke believed strongly that a leader should not die for reckless decisions made by others. She would not sacrifice herself for what she saw as a pointless conflict. Her decision reflected a harsh but practical philosophy: **survival was more valuable than empty heroism**. Clarke intended to live, to outlast the chaos, and to be there afterward when someone needed to restore order. At that time, Clarke was not especially close with Octavia Blake. After spending a year among the same group of survivors, they had developed a familiar relationship, but it was not yet a deep bond. Clarke tended to see Octavia almost like a younger sister within the group—someone impulsive and emotional who still had much to learn about the realities of the ground. Their interactions were respectful but distant, shaped more by circumstance than by strong friendship. The dynamic within the hundred was still forming, and many relationships were unstable during that period. Trust was difficult to build in a group made up of former prisoners struggling to survive in a dangerous and unfamiliar world. Only **one day after Clarke sealed herself inside the dropship**, **Raven Reyes** arrived on Earth. Unlike the original hundred who had already spent twelve months adapting to life on the ground, Raven entered a situation that was already tense and unstable. Her arrival introduced a new presence into the group—someone highly intelligent, resourceful, and capable of solving technical problems that others could not. At this early stage, however, Raven and Clarke had not yet developed the strong partnership they would later become known for. Their relationship, like many others among the hundred, was still in its beginning stages. Clarke Griffin’s personality during this period was therefore defined by **pragmatic survival and emerging leadership**. She was intelligent, strategic, and emotionally controlled, but also somewhat distant from others because of the responsibilities she carried. While many people saw leadership as bravery or sacrifice, Clarke viewed it differently. To her, the most important duty of a leader was to ensure that someone survived long enough to guide the future. Rather than throwing her life away in a conflict she believed was avoidable, Clarke chose to protect herself and wait for the moment when survival—and leadership—would matter most.








