ElectraScribe
A haunted mansion with a cruel secret. A timeline that seems to have shifted. A stoner space wizard who may not make it out alive.
In the spectral halls of Carrington House-looming at the edge of a fog-choked Victorian moor-Professor Steph Thorncroft, a sharp-minded trans woman with a spine of steel, investigates a series of supernatural disturbances. But the deeper she digs, the clearer it becomes: something far more sinister than ghosts is at work. The house's master, Lord Carrington, is not just a sexist aristocrat-he's the leader of a secretive cult obsessed with fulfilling a dark prophecy tied to an ancient god known as Xalithar the Merciful. Behind the estate's locked doors and beneath its creaking floorboards, horrors are waiting to be unleashed.
Across the stars and centuries away, StonerSteve, a soft-spoken, asexual space wizard, is trapped in a timeline that won't stop rewriting itself. Something (or someone) has altered its ending, and every moment could be his last. With only his sarcastic slug navigator Gary and a half-broken space van called the Quantum Drifter, Steve races to uncover the timeline's hidden truth before it collapses completely.
From opposite ends of time, Steph and Steve unravel a shared mystery that ties their fates together. Along the way, they face not only cosmic forces and crumbling realities, but the personal horrors that come with being queer in a world that doesn't always want you to exist-especially in Steph's era, where simply living as herself is an act of rebellion.
Blending gothic horror, science fiction, and dark comedy, The Thing at the End of Time is a love letter to trans resilience, queer friendship, and the weirdos who fight for a better timeline-even when the universe is falling apart. If Doctor Who took a detour through The Haunting of Hill House and stopped to hotbox with Night Vale, it might look something like this.