Lexi did the only thing a true superfan would do: she stopped fighting for a favorite Gabby and started fighting for all of them.
Because in the Superfanverse, the story never ends. It just drops another beat. gabby mitchell superfanverse
Lexi Marrow knew she was Gabby Mitchell’s biggest fan. Not in the casual, “I have all her albums” way. Lexi had the rarest vinyl variants, the canceled tour merch, the bootleg demo cassettes. Her bedroom was a shrine: walls plastered with posters, a shelf of limited-edition dolls, and a custom-built PC running a fan timeline that mapped every “era” of Gabby’s twenty-year career. Lexi did the only thing a true superfan
A shimmering tear in reality revealed a hallway made of soundwaves and glitter. Lexi Marrow knew she was Gabby Mitchell’s biggest fan
“You’re not competing,” Lexi said. “You’re a multiverse. Metal Gabby, your rage protects Acoustic Gabby’s softness. Ghost Gabby, your sadness gives Executive Gabby depth. Silent Gabby, you remind everyone that music doesn’t need words.”
Lexi didn’t destroy Vance. She merged him. Using a fan theory she’d written years ago — the “Infinite Encore Hypothesis” — she channeled every Gabby’s voice into a single song. The Retcon Pulse shattered. Vance stood frozen, then dissolved into a harmless collectible trading card: “Vance the Purist (Common).”
The Gabbyverse stabilized. New timelines bloomed: Cowboy Gabby. Cyberpunk Gabby. Gabby as a mermaid. Gabby as a time-traveling librarian.