Hyphen 20 - Fragility
Hyphen 20

Fragility


Astra stared into the mirror, squinting. The bathroom's fluorescent lights buzzed softly overhead, their sharp glow banishing all shadows and burning spots into her eyes. The crowd outside rumbled, their cheers dulled by distance.

In the mirror, her reflection stared back. Her verdant green hair was longer, naturally falling into twintails. Her horns had shifted, the two migrating from the front and back of her head to sit on the sides, flatter and more circular.

The newly evolved Kirlia sighed. In any other circumstances, her transformation would have elicited the most joyous of celebrations. She was an adult now! Her powers had increased exponentially, and moreover, she finally had fingers! Only two, but they were small enough to actually do things with. Like pick up cups!

No, the real problem was that she gained an extra head in height. She was pretty sure regular humans didn't just shoot up randomly, so how was she going to explain that!? If she went out there now, there was no way that May or Roxanne wouldn't notice! Then the jig would be up, and then...

Then she would be found out as a Pokemon, and she would either be caught or be forced to flee back home in failure. In time, her village would be discovered and ransacked by humanity. Everyone she knew and loved would vanish into pokeballs or be scattered to the winds.

She would never talk with May or Brendan again. Trevor would pass on without hearing the song she had promised him. No more sharing roasted fish with the other Ralts by the bonfires. No more bribing the guard with stolen berries from human trails. No more dancing flames from the smith. And Grandpa would never paint again.

Astra shut her eyes and exhaled, banishing the morbid future from her thoughts. "Alright, just calm down," she spoke to herself, the corners of the sink digging into her clenched hands. "You've made it this far, this isn't gonna stop you. You can fix this." But how?

Pretend that nothing was wrong? May would almost certainly call her out, and Roxanne wasn't likely going to be much better. The Gym Leader might have been manageable if she were alone. But May would probably never let up until she figured out why Astra was suddenly sporting an extra eight inches.

Hide it? Her power had vastly expanded, so perhaps she could construct a bigger illusion. But that came with its own host of problems. Layering an image of her Ralts form over herself would be worse than nothing if anyone tried to, say, put her in a headlock and grind their knuckles into her scalp. Sometimes she wished that it had been Brendan who had tagged along.

But if she could keep anybody from trying to touch her, and if she could manage to maintain her false body's movement relative to her real self, then she could continue on as she had been. That was a tall order, and she wasn't looking forward to micromanaging eye contact, but it was the best option so far. Were there any others?

Leave? Sneak outside, retrieve Treecko and Slakoth and ditch the Gym as quietly as possible. Make a mad dash back to the hotel to grab her pack and hightail it to a different city. She struggled for a moment, before grudgingly acknowledging that it would almost certainly solve the issue entirely. But the concept of putting it into practice made her heart ache. Abandoning May with no warning, leaving just like everyone else in her life had done...

Astra closed her eyes, lips pressed tightly into a grimace. May would not take it well at all, to put it lightly. But if everything fell apart, then everyone back home would be in danger. If she had to make a choice between the two—

She cut that thought off with a scowl. No. Why should she have to make a choice, here and now? Things could change, and she hadn't been caught yet. Maybe, if…if things went perfectly, she wouldn't need to hide at all.

She hoped and dreamed for that day when she could finally discard her robe and feel the sun again. But she couldn't take that chance. Not now. But she owed it to everyone to try as hard as she could.

She blinked as another roar rang out from the distant crowd. How long had she been in here, anyway? It was strange that the matches had started again so quickly. Or, well, no. May had probably demanded a go right after watching her flee into the bathroom. But surely May would notice her long absence soon, and maybe she already had.

Gritting her teeth, Astra stared into the mirror. The reflection rippled and faded from view—and in its place there was a black robed, human-faced doppelganger of Astra as she had been only a short while ago: 4'4'' tall, and with a wide fringe of hair that covered her eyes. She tilted her head, watching the facade imitate the movement.

Taking a paper towel from a nearby dispenser, she noticed that her illusion didn't have the same reach as her 'real' arm, leaving the paper towel hovering in the air. An adjustment made it so that her false form was leaning over so the hand could reach. But when she brought it closer, her real arm moved faster than the image and the paper floated into the air again. She slumped. This was completely untenable, there was no way she could adjust her illusion on the fly for the rest of the journey!

She tapped on the sink's ceramic, glaring at nothing. The tapping slowed as a thought occurred. Did she have to keep it up for the rest of the journey? Out in the stands, she remembered seeing a small group of children, all at or below the height of a Ralts. But May and Brendan had been taller than her Kirlia form was now, and some adults out there had been even taller than the both of them. But her grandpa had said that humans didn't evolve. How could their sizes change?

Her eyes widened. Did they grow taller over time? So they were like trees, then: every year they'd grow another layer of bark—or skin, she guessed—and get a bit taller! Maybe. The comparison didn't seem quite right. Astra briefly lost her train of thought as she pictured May and Brendan as compact masses of ambulatory skin.

She made a face. Eugh.

Back to business. If her theory was right, then she wouldn't have to mask herself for very long at all. She could simply increase the height of her masque every so often until it matched her real height! Genius! She didn't really know how fast humans grew, but the seven days May had booked would probably be alright. Studying the illusion, she bumped up the height by an inch. No reason not to get started right away, after all.

Astra made one last check to make sure everything was anchored properly before she started to leave—and wasn't that a change. Utilizing her abilities in such a complex way would have knocked her out not even twenty minutes ago! All this new power coursing through her… she'd have to make a trip to the woods and let loose, see what she could really do.

She opened the door and took a deep breath as the roars of the audience amplified. No more hesitation. Head up, back straight, feet planted square, and one eye on her illusion. Watch out, Hoenn; a brand new Kirlia was about to play the greatest trick of the century!

The sound of rock scraping against rock rang in her ears as she left the bathroom, only growing louder in the few seconds it took to reach the stands. The arena came into view, and Astra stopped to take it in. May and Roxanne were staring each other down. May's Poochyena was facing off against one of Roxanne's Geodudes; it was the one that could use lightning, judging by the rather puffy state of Poochyena's fur. Where had her Lotad gone? Had it already fallen?

Sensing Treecko and Slakoth on the opposite side of the arena, Astra started to make her way across the foot of the bleachers. "Kick her butt, May!" Astra called out as she passed.

May took a brief reprieve from scowling to shoot Astra a surprised blink, then smirked. She opened her mouth—

"Thunder Punch!"

"Motherfuck!" May swore, turning back to the battle at hand. Astra let out a sigh of relief. May hadn't noticed anything off at a glance, so her illusion wasn't obviously wrong. She'd have to see if it would hold up under closer scrutiny later, though. Now, where were her lost Pokemon? Looking around, she spotted them sitting—or, in Slakoth's case, sleeping—on a large mat nearby.

There was a woman standing over them, spraying Treecko's injuries with potion and wrapping the larger cuts with bandages. She was wearing a familiar white dress and sported pink hair wrapped in two giant, circular bows with a white cap to top it off. Astra tilted her head, perplexed at the sight. What in the world was the receptionist from the Petalburg Pokecenter doing here? Or at least someone who looked very much like her.

"Hello?" Astra asked as she drew near. The woman looked up, staring directly at Astra's collarbone. It took Astra a confused glance downwards to realize that the woman was looking into her illusory eyes.

"Oh, you're the trainer for these Pokemon, are you?" the woman asked, standing up and smoothing the wrinkles from her dress. "I'm the Rustboro Gym's Nurse Joy. I've patched up your Treecko, but it was irresponsible of you to just leave him lying under those rocks like that."

She paused, frowning. "Are you feeling alright, dear? You seem rather pale. Really pale, in fact—oh dear. Do you feel dizzy at all?"

"I'm fine!" Astra took a hurried step back as the nurse reached for her neck—forehead, that was her forehead. This situation already could not pass fast enough. "I, uh, I'm always this pale. Albinism," she explained.

The nurse's eyes widened. "Oh. I'm sorry, I've never… forgive me." She coughed, looking away. "Well then! Um. Make sure you visit a proper Pokecenter to heal your Pokemon fully. Alright?" Joy grinned awkwardly.

"I will," Astra said. She hesitated a moment, looking over Joy's appearance again. "Say, do you have a sister in Petalburg? I met a Nurse Joy there too, and she looks just like you."

Joy blinked, then let out a bark of laughter. "Oh, no, no. All Pokemon nurses adopt the identity of 'Nurse Joy' when we graduate from med school. The hair is a wig, see?"

She lifted the edge of her hair, revealing black locks under what looked like a net. Huh. So there was more than one 'Nurse Joy?' Maybe a lot of them. Weird, why would they do something like that? Maybe ease of identification?

"I'm surprised you didn't know, Miss Badge Winner," Joy said, raising an eyebrow. "Woulda thought someone who beat Roxanne would know about that kinda thing."

Astra scratched the back of her head, letting out a small laugh. "Aheh, yeah, I haven't had much reason to visit Pokecenters until recently." The sound of thunder echoed from the arena, and Astra glanced backward as the crowd gasped. "I should get back. Thanks for taking care of Treecko!"

"Anytime!"

Recalling Treecko and Slakoth, Astra walked over to the stands and claimed the seat May vacated. The battle had progressed swiftly while she was distracted; Roxanne's Geodude was covered in bite marks and May's Poochyena was swaying, tiny jolts of static arcing between his newly poofy spikes of charred fur.

Now that she wasn't focused on finding her missing companions or worrying over how she looked, Astra took a moment to appraise the scene. Was May winning? The lack of a scowl on her face led Astra to believe that she wasn't losing, but where had Lotad gone? Had the water Pokemon fallen? She could tell that this was Roxanne's second Geodude, and Poochyena had done a remarkable job of weakening it. Would it be enough? Astra hoped it wouldn't come down to the wire like it had for her, but she had no doubt that May would never allow herself to lose.

"Rock Throw!"

"Dodge it and Bite!"

"Woo, that's how you do it!" Astra yelled as Poochyena skidded around the projectile and sunk his teeth into Geodude. She took a moment to wonder how the hound hadn't broken his teeth on Geodude's rocky exterior. Was it softer than it looked, or were Poochyena's teeth that good? They hadn't been able to hurt Skarmory much at all…

Her musings vanished as Geodude grabbed Poochyena and slammed him against the floor. The hound fell limp, and the crowd erupted once more.

"Boo! Boo I say!" Astra jeered. "You can do better than that! Boo!"

May glanced at her, then rolled her eyes and flipped her off. Recalling Poochyena, May threw a new pokeball and Lotad reappeared, scratched up but ready to go. Astra grinned at the sight; so May had recalled him when Roxanne's Electric-wielding Geodude had emerged!

"Water Gun!" May shouted, and Astra cheered as the Geodude was promptly sprayed into oblivion.

Roxanne recalled her fallen comrade. Light shone, and her last Pokemon, Nosepass, reappeared. Astra's hands clenched the railing in front of her, memories of gigantic, levitating stones fresh in her mind. "Come on, May! Show that big-nosed boulder who's boss!"

"Rock Tomb!" Roxanne commanded.

"Move right and use Water Gun, Lotad!" May yelled in return, and the battle raged on.

The roars of the crowd shook the stands, and Astra was all too happy to join them. Lotad didn't move much, preferring to simply batter rocks out of the way with sheer water pressure and scuttle out of any Rock Tombs before they struck. Nosepass acted much the same as before, flinging boulders with pinpoint accuracy and shooting pillars of stone from the floor.

The gigantic arena-destroying shield Roxanne had used in Astra's fight was conspicuously absent. Maybe it was too strenuous to use twice a day, even with healing? The fight didn't have quite the same pizzazz without it. Astra still enjoyed it even so, and the crowd echoed her excitement.

The earth quaked, rocks were shot out of the air with jets of cutting water, and spikes of rock scraped at—but never caught—the surprisingly nimble Lotad. It was a rather aggressive strategy, Astra noted. May never stopped attacking, or setting Lotad up to attack. Every rock that was knocked off course left his Water Gun to hit Nosepass unimpeded, and every dodge was accompanied by a cutting stream.

Finally, May pulled off a rather familiar maneuver and had Lotad shoot himself through the air to blast his foe from above. Nosepass faltered, then fell to the floor, unconscious.

"It seems I've been defeated yet again," Roxanne stated, smiling. "Well done! The Stone Badge is yours."

May took the emblem from the Gym Leader, raising it high into the air amidst the roar of the crowd. Astra joined in with their applause gleefully. The outcome had never been in doubt, but she was still happy to see it. Even if the finale had been a blatant ripoff!

May basked in the attention for a moment, before a brief shadow of uncertainty and confusion crossed her face. She lowered her arm, frowning at the badge in her hand.

With the show concluded for the day, the stands began to empty, the gathered trainers dispersing. Roxanne shouted at her interns and they jumped to attention, clearing stray debris from the field and fiddling with the cameras and lights.

Astra ran onto the field, a silly grin on her face. "You dirty copycat!" she shouted, skidding to a halt next to May. "That was the thing I did with Treecko at the end!"

May blinked, shaking herself out of her fugue. She turned, and levied a smirk at Astra. "Well look who it is!" she said, recalling Lotad and pocketing the badge. "You missed half of my battle, jerk. I had to help dig your Treecko out of the rubble, you know. And so what if I copied your little stunt?" she challenged. "Maybe I saw your sad attempt and had to show you how it was done!"

"Well sorry for having bathroom problems," Astra huffed, rolling her eyes. "Thanks, though." Her gaze turned sharp. "And what do you mean sad attempt? It worked perfectly fine!"

"Well as you can see," May drawled, motioning to the battlefield, "when you did it, Treecko got smashed by a rock. When I did it, I won." She grinned. "Seems like a bit of an improvement, if you ask me."

Astra glared. "S—so what!? You only got the idea because I did it in the first place!"

"And I thank you," May said, bowing theatrically, "for thoroughly showing me how not to do it."

"Oh you—!"

"Ahem." A cough interrupted them.

Both trainers blinked, only now noticing that Roxanne had reappeared next to them with a weary yet amused smile. The two shot each other one last look, one peeved and one smug, before turning to face Roxanne fully.

"By all means," Roxanne sighed, "Feel free to debate which of you two did better later. We even have the tapes, if you wish to review them. But please consider when and where you do so, hm?"

Having appropriately chastised them, Roxanne continued. "Now, I do have one last prize to the two of you. In addition to the Stone Badge, I will be giving you each a copy of my favorite Rock-type technique: Rock Tomb."

She held out two discs similar to the one Astra had received in the flower shop earlier that day. Pausing to make sure the illusion moved right, Astra took one of the discs and stashed it in her bag. "Thank you!" she said, smiling. "I don't know if any of the Pokemon I have can use this, but maybe I'll catch one in the future!"

"Yeah," May said, examining her own. "I don't have any Rock types either. Might have to pick one up, actually."

"As the case so happens, both of you do, in fact, possess Pokemon that can learn the move," Roxanne informed them. "Astra, your Treecko and Slakoth could both learn it. May, your Torchic has the potential as well." She paused. "Keep in mind that non-Rock-type Pokemon will have more difficulty using the move than a Rock type. Additionally, TMs are single use, so be certain of your decision. In any case, it is your choice on what strategies to employ in the future."

"Hm." May tapped her chin, considering the prospect. "…Eh. Nah. It doesn't really fit Torchic's style. I'll save it for a Rock type. What about you, Astra?"

Astra thought about it. The main point of the move, as far as she could see, was to hold opponents in place. The damage of the stone spikes was secondary. While it might be useful for Treecko, he was so fast that he didn't need it. On the other hand...

"I might give it to Slakoth," she mused. "I haven't trained with him much, but I think actually getting him into close range is going to be an issue. Having something to lock down opponents would be handy."

"Well reasoned!" Roxanne clasped her hands together, looking pleased. "I'm glad to see you both thinking about this seriously."

Astra tilted her head. "Do people not?"

"I do recall one trainer who, upon receiving his prize, immediately taught it to his Sharpedo." Roxanne replied, dryly. "He thought it would help pin down opponents in open water so its melee attacks would connect."

There was a lengthy pause.

"But there's… no ground in the ocean." Astra said, slowly.

To her side, May stifled a snort. "What a fuckin' moron," she muttered.

"In all fairness, thinking that one can use any move anywhere is a common mistake to make," Roxanne said, failing to hide her own quirk of the lips. "But only a well trained Rock type or an extremely dedicated non-Rock type would be able to use Rock Tomb somewhere like the ocean."

"Hn." May folded her arms, looking disinterested. She paused, then sent a grin at Astra. "Well, I guess not everyone can be as good as us, right Astra?"

Astra ignored the question, running over Roxanne's words again. "Wait, how would they be able to do that if there's no rock around?"

"Oh, well it's very simple. Experienced Pokemon can develop the ability to create the physical materials for certain techniques ex-nihilo," Roxanne explained, eyes bright. "It's actually fascinating how they can transform physical energy into solid stone or ice—"

"Aaand I think I'm done here." May rolled her eyes, abruptly about-facing and walking away. "Thanks for the TM and the badge, but I'm starving. I think I saw a burger place on the way here..."

"Wh—May!" Astra protested. That had been interesting!

May looked back, eyebrow raised. "Hm? What? You coming?"

Astra made several aborted motions toward Roxanne, then slumped in defeat. "Just give me a minute."

"Sure. I wanted to look at some of those displays anyway. I'll be in the lobby!"

Astra sighed, turning back to Roxanne. She was staring at May's retreating form with pursed lips.

"Your friend is not the most… sociable person, is she?" the Gym Leader noted.

"Yeah, that's… that's May for you." Astra chuckled awkwardly. "I've been trying to get her to be better, but it's… a work in progress."

Roxanne hummed in assent. "Well, you may have your work cut out for you." She folded her arms. "Now then, I don't want to keep you for long. Did you want to talk to me about something else?"

"Just one or two things. You offered to have me sit in one of your classes. When are those, exactly?"

"Hmm. You're only staying the week, correct? Then my nearest one would be...Monday, a little after noon," Roxanne said. "It's a lecture on Pokemon typings and how that affects Pokemon psychologically and biologically, such as how Ghost types tend to linger around areas of spiritual or emotional significance."

Astra nodded along, then froze. She stared at Roxanne with eyes wide open.

Ghost type?

Ghost type?

Ghosts were REAL?

There were so many ghosts such that they were an entire Pokemon type!?

Her breathing quickened, suddenly recalling dozens upon dozens of nights spent around the bonfires, passing the time with tall tales, and jumping at shadows. Were all those stories true? Was the Hollow-eyed Gnasher going to carve the horn out of her head in the dead of night? Oh stars, what about the Hag in the Cauldron? She didn't want to end up as the broth in her stew! Astra wanted to eat new foods, not become them!

Roxanne looked at Astra uncertainly. "Um," she stated. "Are you alright? You're looking a little—"

"FINE!" Astra screeched manically. A few interns turned to look. She flushed. "I mean," she said, much more quietly. "I'm fine. I just—nevermind." She coughed and looked away.

She made a note to scrub her hands and feet very thoroughly the next time she took a bath. If she was going to be made into soup then it would damn well taste like soap. Silently, Astra shook an imaginary fist at that lumpy bar in her hotel bathroom that had only smelled like berries.

"I see." Roxanne was still looking at Astra strangely. "Does… Monday not work?"

"Wha—? Oh, oh Monday does work, thank you. I will definitely be there." And the more she could learn about these ghosts the better. Preferably how to make them go away. Would throwing a rock work? She could probably throw a lot of rocks now.

"Oh! If you're sure. Very well then, I look forward to seeing you there. I wish you a good weekend, Astra." Roxanne smiled and turned to leave.

"Ah, wait," Astra said, stopping the Gym Leader. "Just one last thing. Do you..." She hesitated, biting her lip. Ever since she had gotten her mission, she had been pondering a question. When she became Champion, she would be able to stop humanity from ransacking the village once it was discovered. And it would be discovered, eventually. But what about after that?

There would be a village full of her people in the forest, and an entire world filled with humans everywhere else. Would that be… it? Was that the end goal for forever? Or could there be something else?

Astra breathed out, squared her shoulders, and looked Roxanne in the eye. "Do you think that Pokemon could ever live like humans do?"

Roxanne blinked. "What an odd question. Why ask me?"

"Well..." Astra looked away for a moment, still uneasy. Because the Gym Leader seemed important to people, to Hoenn. Because she was a step above. Because every trainer had to pass through her. Because at her word, an entire generation of trainers would leap to obey.

'Because you could be an enemy,' Astra didn't say. 'But would you be one, Roxanne? If you saw a wild Pokemon talking in front of you, would you throw a pokeball?'

'Or would you say hello?'


"You work with Pokemon for a living," Astra said, instead. "I thought you might have some insight."

Roxanne considered the request, then nodded. "Well, alright," she began, "I'm not sure how much closer we could get to Pokemon at this point. From law enforcement to medicinal research to simple lifelong companionship, we've developed quite the coexistence. I'd say that Pokemon already live with humanity pretty well."

Astra shook her head. "No no, I mean like…" She paused, trying to figure out how to word it. "If they could ever be equal."

"Oh!" Roxanne's eyes lit up in recognition. "You mean like those books and games where they can talk and own shops, yes?"

Astra had no idea what she was talking about. Books and games? "Sure," she lied.

The Gym Leader nodded to herself. "I see. Well, as things stand, I'm sorry to say that I don't see that sort of thing ever becoming reality."

That was not the answer Astra had been hoping for. "O—oh," she mumbled, feeling as though a heavy weight had settled in her heart. "Are you sure? Why not?" she asked, plaintively.

"Well, as one example of many, unlike in fiction there's no species of Pokemon that can naturally learn to speak a human language," Roxanne explained, causing Astra to blink. "Individual exceptions do exist, but they were either the product of years of training or the result of extraordinary circumstances. Why, I remember reading an article about a Meowth over in Kanto..." She shook her head. "I digress. In the end, close as we may be, Pokemon are still animals. I'm afraid that fiction will remain just that."

Astra stared at Roxanne. "And… if someone did teach a bunch of Pokemon to speak?" she managed.

Roxanne thought about it. "Well, maybe," she admitted. "But such an endeavor would take generations to happen. There was only one study I can remember where a speaking Pokemon had children, and they only had a marginal improvement in learning the skill. It would take a concentrated effort across tens, if not hundreds of years to make the language acquisition self-sustaining. I don't think anybody would want to commit that much time to such a thing.

"But if they did… I don't think it would be impossible," she finished, smiling. "Perhaps in the future such an existence wouldn't be so far-fetched. I think I might like to see it. Who knows? Maybe you could be the one to help that dream come true."

A small twitch of the lips stole across Astra's face, and she had to turn away for a moment, rubbing at her eyes. "Heh… I half-expected you to just say that it was impossible," she said, trying her best to keep her voice level. "I know a lot of people back home would. So, thank you." She looked back, ruby eyes shining brightly. "I hope to see that future too!"

Roxanne's smile widened. "Well, I suppose you'd better work hard then, eh? Now, I believe you have a friend waiting for you. Take care, Astra."

Astra nodded, giving the Gym Leader one last wave as she sped off.

May was, as promised, waiting in the lobby, examining one of the displays. "Hey!" Astra called, drawing her attention. "Hope I didn't take too long."

"Eh." May shrugged. "It was only a couple minutes. I've just been here reading about—" she peered at the plaque again, "—Helix fossils. They're from some ancient Pokemon called Omanyte. Apparently they were worshiped by some cult in Kanto for a couple hundred years before they got into a fight with a different fossil fan club and killed each other off." May turned to Astra with a shit-eating grin on her face. "What a bunch of boneheads, am I right?"

It was the awful pun that finally set her off. An abrupt snort escaped from Astra's mouth, and then she found herself breaking out into hysterical giggling. She doubled over, trying, and failing, to keep her bottled laughter in check.

"Wow, uh." May scratches her head, chuckling. "Didn't know you were a pun fanatic. I didn't think it was that good."

"N-no." Astra managed to gasp out. Her eyes were wet again, but her face was hidden and she couldn't bring herself to care. "It was awful. It's just Roxanne said something amazing back there, and I've had to keep a straight face."

May tilted her head. "Ah? What was it?"

Astra exhaled slowly, shaking her head as she brought her giggle fit under control. "You wouldn't… you'd've had to have been there," she said, shooting May a smile.

"Hmph. Well damn, I'm almost sorry I left if it made you bust a gut that hard." May brushed a hand through one of her long side bangs, looking put out. Then she shrugged, strolling toward the exit. "Well, whatever. Let's blow this joint."

"By the way," Astra started as they left the building. The warmth of the sun washed over them, clouds forming myriad shapes and whorls in the otherwise clear blue sky. "Where are we going now? We have a whole week, after all."

"Right now? The nearest fast food junkhouse. I've eaten nothing but stew and trail mix for the past couple days!" May rubbed her hands together, a wide grin spreading across her face. "Your soups have been tasty and all but there's no replacing a good ol' cheeseburger."

"And don't worry," she added, slapping a hand on Astra's shoulder. "I'll help your poor, ignorant mind through the hurdles of navigating the menu."

Astra stared at May's hand, which had landed on her real shoulder, several inches above her fake one. She hurriedly batted it aside before May noticed anything amiss. "I don't need help looking at a menu!" she scowled, only partially faking her outrage because wow, she could read perfectly fine as of a week ago, thank you!

"Girl, I bet you can't even see over the counter!" May cackled, smirking gleefully. But she then paused, brows furrowing. "Huh."

Astra blinked at her friend's puzzled expression, wrath forgotten. "What?"

May rubbed at her eyes and peered at Astra again. May shook her head. "Nah, it's probably nothing. It's just… fuck, I can't put my finger on it. You look different."

Astra very carefully didn't let any alarm show on her face. Different? Different!? What did she get wrong? She'd been checking and re-checking her illusion at least twice a minute; was it falling apart already? How!?

Astra, repressing the desire to scream incoherently, instead asked, "O—oh? How do you mean?"

"I dunno, " May said, looking Astra up and down. May stroked her chin contemplatively. "You just seem… taller?"

Oh. That. Astra let out the tiniest of breaths. She had been hoping May would only notice a few days later, or not at all in the best case. She hadn't expected May to spot it immediately. It seemed she was more perceptive than she let on—or maybe Astra had misjudged her previous height and made herself too tall by mistake.

"Oh! Do you think so?" Astra made a show of looking herself over, voice deliberately cheerful. "I haven't noticed anything."

May was nodding before Astra had even finished speaking. "Yeah, yeah that's definitely it. I almost didn't even see it. Man, hasn't it only been like a week? I guess all this fighting must've knocked your hormones loose, or something."

"Right, right, that's probably it," Astra agreed, having no idea what May was talking about again. "I wonder how tall I'll get?"

May shrugged. "Who knows, maybe you'll be as tall as me someday." Her tone took on a teasing lilt. "Nah, that's a lie. We both know you're doomed to be a pipsqueak forever!"

Astra grinned. She had been right after all, humans were like trees! "Pah," she scoffed, waving a hand to batter May's words from the air. "I'll settle for nothing less than being an entire head taller!"

"Pff." May brushed a bang from her face, nose turned up. "In your dreams, squirt. Ain't no way puberty's gonna be that nice to a brat like you."

"I am not a brat!" Astra said, pouting. She paused. "Uh, what's puberty?"

May rolled her eyes. "Ha ha, very funny."

Astra looked at May, confused. "What's funny?"

"Your… joke?" May returned Astra's confused look. After a moment it was joined by a hint of panic. "Wait, do you seriously not know what puberty is!?"

Astra glanced around, fidgeting with her hands. She was starting to feel like she had asked the wrong question. "Should…I?"

"Really?" May pleaded, sounding faintly desperate. "Your grandpa or whoever didn't tell you anything? Hormones, getting taller, hair growth, any of that? At least tell me you know where babies come from!"

"Oh, is that all?" Astra said, relieved. She didn't know what a hormone was, but the rest she was more familiar with. "Of course I know where babies come from!"

May visibly sagged with relief. "Oh thank fuck, at least you know that."

"Well duh! Everyone knows that babies come from eggs!" Astra shook her head. "Honestly, how ignorant do you think I am?"

There was a considerable silence.

"Eggs?" May asked.

"Yeah, eggs. You know, about yea high, white with green spots. They break open and have a baby inside?"

"Eggs," May echoed. "You think babies… come from eggs."

"Well, of course they do!" Astra threw her arms up, exasperated. "I've seen it happen!"

"Did these eggs happen to come from a Pokemon?"

Astra hesitated. "Um."

May's hands slid over her face, and a long, deep sigh escaped through her fingers as she dragged them down. A moment passed.

"Alright," she said, clapping her hands together. "I am so not fucking doing this, so the next time you see Brendan, you're going to ask him what puberty is, alright?"

Astra blinked. "What? Why can't you just tell me?"

"Because the day I have to explain to someone where kids actually come from," May replied, "is the day I actually throw myself off a lighthouse."

Astra tilted her head. "What's a lightho—wait, people don't come from eggs!?" she gasped. But everything came from an egg! "Wait, then where—"

"Not gonna talk about it," May interrupted. "Ask Brendan."

Astra sputtered at the deflection. "Wh— you can't just tell me something like that and—"

"Shh," May whispered, holding a finger to her own lips. "Ask Brendan."

A moment passed.

"But—"

"Ask," May started, then motioned to Astra.

"…Brendan," Astra muttered, looking away.

May smiled brightly. "Glad we've got that settled!"

Astra glared at May, but, in the end, had to admit it wasn't a bad suggestion. Brendan was pretty smart, so he might be able to explain it better. Besides, May very obviously didn't want to discuss it, and pushing seemed like a bad idea. Astra nodded, accepting the delay in answers. "Alright, I'll do that, then."

Still, that left brand new questions burning in her mind. Namely, did humans really not come from eggs? If not, then from where? Acorns? Astra had a brief vision of May plucking a seed off of her hair and dunking it into a hole in the ground, out of which sprouted a half dozen mini-Mays. Maybe her tree theory merited a closer investigation.

"Do you think he's in Rustboro yet?" Astra queried. Brendan had said he would meet them here, and his bicycle would have made the trip much faster, supposedly.

May made a noncommittal grunt. "He still hasn't called or left a message." She checked her pokedex again to be sure, then put it away with a sigh. "Nada. Maybe tomorrow."

"…So, burgers?" Astra offered.

"Burgers," May confirmed.



They ended up at a squat building down a side road named 'Turbo Tauros.' Inside, its walls were covered with cartoonish iconography of a horned creature smiling and delivering sandwiches to joyful children, and the floor was covered with tables, benches and chairs occupied by groups of chattering customers, most of them families accompanied by small children.

Every minute or so, someone would bring out a tray of food, handing it to whoever ordered it. Astra stared at the massive trays, wondering how the chefs had managed to make all of them so quickly.

There was a counter staffed by three humans in uniform, all of whom had a small line of humans in front of them. The sounds of cookery were audible, but the cooks were hidden behind a wall, similarly to the sushi place back in Petalburg.

Astra and May got to the head of the queue, and the cashier gave them a joyless smile, asking for their order. Not actually knowing anything about what was on the menu, Astra ended up just copying what May ordered after all, much to her amusement.

The cashier dismissed them to the side, and May and Astra stood among others who awaited their order. Astra frowned, shuffling in place. The cashier had seemed… tired. They had barely said anything at all, and what they did had been apathetic and snappy.

She was again reminded of the sushi restaurant. The waitress there had been filled with a gentle warmth, and the atmosphere was relaxed and happy. Here though, while there was still joy and laughter, it was all buried under a small layer of… detachment?

Astra's musing was cut short when the cashier called out their order. Taking the tray, Astra and May found an unoccupied table in the back corner. The burger itself was a thick patty of meat with an odd yellow coating along the top between two slices of toasted bread. This was the first time Astra had eaten meat that wasn't from a fish, and as she took a bite she found it was pleasantly savory, and very juicy. It was good, even delicious.

But it also tasted… empty. It lacked the spark that made good food excellent. There was no love put into this burger. No care. No… life.

Astra looked at the cashiers, mindlessly taking order after order with no time to breathe. She imagined the cooks in the back, making the same greasy meals again and again for people they'd never see. She looked at the customers, chattering underneath posters bearing big, plastic smiles.

That wasn't right, Astra thought. Food was supposed to be full of joy! It was one of the ultimate expressions of camaraderie she knew. A good meal was supposed to bring everyone together, to show love to all those who partook!

This was… hollow.

Hollow food from hollow people wearing hollow smiles.

If someone came here too often, she wondered if they'd become hollow, too.

May snapped her fingers in Astra's face, breaking her out of her fugue. "The hell are you zoning out for?" May asked, eyebrow raised. "What, does the great soup master have something against burgers now?"

Astra blinked, then looked back down at the burger, still dripping onto the wrapping paper.

She shrugged, and took another bite. Loved or not, food was still food. Would she come back here if she had the choice? If she was in a hurry… maybe. Maybe not. The food wasn't bad.

She still could've done without all the grease, though. Getting the stains out of her cloak would be a pain.



Back in the Rustboro Gym, Roxanne was conversing with the Gym's resident Nurse Joy as her Pokemon healed. She didn't necessarily need to be present, but she liked to be there when they woke up. Her conversation with Joy was warm and in good cheer—Roxanne was enjoying the afterglow of a good battle, and Joy was just happy to have something to occupy her mind while she went through the motions of her job.

A knock on the infirmary door halted their talk. One of the interns poked his head in, looking hesitant.

"Ah, ma'am? We're having a problem with today's battle recordings."

"The recordings?" Roxanne asked, surprised. It was rare that the interns had issues that they couldn't solve themselves, and most of those were due to stray attacks breaking through the protections around the cameras. "What's wrong?"

"It's, uh. An issue with the audio, kind of? Parts of it aren't, uh. There?" The intern hesitated. "It'd be easier if you saw it yourself, ma'am. Or, uh, heard. Um." He shrugged awkwardly.

Roxanne hummed in assent, standing up. She nodded at Joy, who waved her out. Following the intern, she arrived at the small editing studio she'd had installed near her office. The room was filled with spare A/V equipment and a set of computers against the wall. Another intern was sitting at one of the machines, holding one headphone speaker to her ear and repetitively rewinding a video. She looked deeply confused.

"I'm back!" the first intern announced, causing the other to look up. A wave of relief crossed her features.

"Oh good. Sorry to bother you, Roxanne, but the sound on this recording is all wack," she said, standing up and waving to the chair. "Come listen, maybe you can find out what's wrong."

"Alright, let's take a look." Taking the intern's place, Roxanne retrieved the headphones and held one of the speakers to her head. "Now, what seems to be so 'wack?'"

The female intern giggled at Roxanne's use of slang, then took hold of the mouse. "It's pretty obvious," she said, restarting the video. "Just give it a moment."

Roxanne watched the screen, listening intently. The video was of her fight with Astra just earlier today. "Oh, does it have to do with her violin?" she questioned, looking at the interns to her side.

"Just keep watching."

Curious, Roxanne settled back to watch. The video opened with her doing her big intro. The two of them were in the arena, and both her recorded self and the crowd were audible. She finished her introduction, and then motioned for the robed girl to speak. Roxanne waited for the accompanying challenge.

And waited.

And waited.

And… waited? On screen, Astra's violin case hit the rock of the arena with an audible thunk, and Astra held out a pokeball, without any of the vocal proclamations Roxanne remembered. The video continued in the same manner. Whenever it passed a moment where she clearly remembered Astra speaking, there was only silence. But the audio didn't seem corrupted at all—the crowd and Roxanne herself were still clearly audible even as the robed girl went through the motions of speaking.

Roxanne halted the video and leaned back, thoroughly baffled. She had never seen anything like this before. She turned to her interns. "Is the entire recording like this?"

The boy nodded. "Yeah, the girl doesn't seem to make a peep the whole way through."

"It happens even when you're standing next to her," The other intern added, "The audio only picks you up."

Roxanne hummed. "Is it the same with the next one?"

"That's the first thing I checked next, actually," the girl said. "That one's fine. The May girl comes in loud and clear."

The boy raised a finger. "It does show back up when Astra returns after the battle's over."

"Yeah." The girl shrugged. "We've run checks on the equipment, but we couldn't find anything wrong."

"I see," Roxanne murmured, glancing at the computer contemplatively. "Well, I will try my hand at it and see if I can find something. In the meantime, you two can help out the other interns until it's time to go." Judging by their relieved faces, they were extremely grateful to not have to deal with the problem.

"Thank you, Ma'am!" the boy said, heading out the editing studio door.

"Good luck!" the girl added, waving farewell as she followed her partner.

After they left, Roxanne sighed and turned her attention back to the screens. Cracking her fingers, she set to work.

Approximately three hours later, she gave up.

She had run every test she knew of, checked, double checked, and triple checked every microphone in the arena, and had even searched three pages deep on four distinct flavors of internet queries, all to no avail. As far as the entire setup was concerned, Astra—and only Astra—had never uttered a single word. Short of calling in a true expert, this was as far as her attempt could go.

It was baffling. Infuriating! One of the best amateur battles she had experienced and the recording was marred by some impossible error. Roxanne stared at the screen with furrowed brows, sipping on a large thermos of coffee she had acquired forty minutes in.

Whatever had gone wrong still confounded her, and she just knew it was going to niggle at the back of her mind for the next week and more. But it wasn't crippling, in the end. The fight itself was still intact, as well as Astra's wonderful violin music. The one-sided conversation was a bit awkward but could be worked past.

Roxanne set down the thermos and reset the video. She might as well analyze the fight itself and brainstorm a lesson while she had it up. The figures on screen sent out their Pokemon, and she smiled as violin strings began to sing. Most trainers who used instruments couldn't play nearly as well while battling, though the ones that passed through her gym tended to put them away for a badge fight. She took another sip of coffee, then idly attempted to figure out which notes corresponded to which maneuvers.

A few minutes later she reset the video, eyes narrowed. The fight played out again and Roxanne focused on the song, eyes tracking every move Astra's Pokemon made. A third re-watch confirmed her suspicions.

There was absolutely no pattern between what Astra played and the actions her Pokemon took. It was thematically appropriate—uplifting when she was in the lead, despondent when she fell behind. But it wasn't directionary.

"That little trickster..." Roxanne murmured. If she were of a more petulant temper, she might've decried the skulduggery as cheating. As it was, she was impressed by the double deception. Anyone looking to analyze Astra's music for patterns would find themselves spinning in circles.

That said, she did wonder what trick Astra was using. It was amazing that the girl had mastered both whatever it was and her violin at such a young age.

Roxanne frowned again, struck by a thought. How long had Astra been a trainer, anyway? This had supposedly been her first gym battle, but she already had such a formidable technique?

Roxanne minimized the remaining windows on the screen, then opened the trainer registry and started typing.

She stared at the result. Astra's date of registration had occurred not even a week prior. "A week?" she exclaimed, dumbfounded. "She caught and trained her Pokemon how to—no, that's impossible, even Steven wouldn't be able to—am I missing something?" She muttered to herself, pulling up the video again.

Watch the trainer, ignore the music. What was the scenario, from the top? A young girl who could command her Pokemon by methods other than speech, and who doesn't need much time to train them to do so. Roxanne tapped her fingers, something familiar buzzing at the edge of her mind.

She rubbed the bridge of her nose, sighing as her past self's Geodudes were taken out one by one. It had been a fun battle in the moment, but the memory of it was being soured by these conundrums. Trying to puzzle out how Astra would respond to her assaults without an audible cue had been just as frustrating as when she'd sparred… with...

Roxanne's eyes shot open. She looked at the video, with its numerous audio problems. Problems all centered around one girl. The girl who could give orders without speaking.

And suddenly, it all seemed so obvious.

Roxanne picked up her phone and dialed a number. It rang twice before someone answered.

"Roxanne!" A duo of voices echoed each other across the line, both childish and pitched high.

"It's been—" the boy exclaimed.

"—so long!" the girl finished, sharing in the boy's eagerness.

"What's up?" they chorused.

"Hello Tate, Liza," Roxanne greeted, a little awkwardly. She knew how to deal with children, of course. But it was different when those children were also your co-workers. "I'm afraid this isn't a social call. I have a rather pressing question about your… area of expertise."

"Oh?" The leaders of Mossdeep City's Psychic Gym answered in unison. "Do tell! Do tell!"

Roxanne looked at her computer. On the screen, a robed girl accepted her badge and celebrated without a sound.

"What can you tell me about telepathy?"





HAPPY 5 YEAR ANNIVERSARY EVERYBODY!

Back in 2014 I couldn't have imagined i'd get the response I have gotten. But we're not done yet, and we won't be till we reach the top!

Thank you all so much, and I hope you enjoyed the chapter! I hope you like suspense and shitty pholosophical musings on the soulless nature of fast food.

((Side note, if you like warcraft go check out my editor IronyOwl's quest 'Lord(s) of Lordaeron: A King Arthas Quest'
 
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Hyphen 21 - Lackadaisical
Hyphen 21

Lackadaisical



Once again, the low hum of fluorescent lighting droned in Astra's ears, the incessant buzz drilling into her thoughts without pause. She stared at the Pokecenter's ceiling, deeply slouched into a creaky chair. She and May had entered the center what seemed to be hours ago and had deposited their pokemon for healing. Unfortunately, there had been a massive queue ahead of them, so they had been waiting for quite some time now.

The computers were all occupied by trainers doing mysterious tasks, click-clacking quietly in the background. The magazines provided had either been taken or featured the most tedious content Astra could imagine. How many humans could possibly care about how good someone's personal patch of grass looked? Apparently enough to make a twenty-page booklet every month. Pass.

Lacking anything better to do, Astra had begun criticizing humanity's poor lighting aesthetic. Couldn't they have sprung for some nice, quiet candles instead? The flames would have been something to look at, and if nothing else some scented wax would have livened the place up a bit. The lights above continued to hum, uncaring of her steadily growing disdain.

Plagued by the ceaseless tedium, Astra sighed and slouched ever deeper into her chair. She was more 'laying down' than 'sitting' at this point; eventually she would fall off, but that was a problem for Future Astra.

Next to Astra, May tilted and swayed as she struggled to keep her head upright in the face of the very same nothing. Her eyes fluttered closed for a heartbeat, and she was halfway towards falling directly onto Astra before she abruptly shot upright, eyes wide. May blinked sleepily, then yawned and settled back. The cycle continued.

The lobby was otherwise mostly quiet, save for the buzzing of distant machinery and whatever small sounds came from the other trainers scattered about the floor. Someone coughed and turned a page in a book. Astra briefly considered getting up to peruse the small bookshelf, but she got the feeling that it wouldn't be any less empty since the last time she looked. Instead, she just slid a little further off the chair and continued to gaze directly into a shaded light fixture.

...

This is really fucking boring, Astra thought.

An uncounted eternity later, a voice rang out from the front desk.

"Numbers 87 and 88!" a Nurse Joy called, "87 and 88!"

Hearing her number, Astra tried to sit up, lost her grip, and then slid fully off the chair and smacked her head against the seat on the way down. The future was now, and Astra cursed her past self for her clear lack of foresight as she stood up, rubbing the aching spot on her skull.

May, for her part, jerked to her feet so hard she went airborne for a quarter-second. "Bwuh?" she asked dumbly, before clutching at her head and swaying. "Ah, fuck, got up too fast," she muttered.

Recovering quickly, the two trainers rushed up to the desk. Nurse Joy smiled at them as they came near. "Thank you for your patience," she said, laying two trays of pokeballs on the counter. "Your pokemon have been restored to full health. We hope to see you again!"

"Nn." May grunted, rubbing at her eyes. "Thanks."

"Thank you," Astra said, pocketing her balls. "Have a nice day!"

A blast of natural, uncooled wind hit the two trainers as they exited the Pokecenter. The city greeted them, sky still a bright blue. May yawned again, then lightly slapped herself on both cheeks. "Ugh," she groaned, one foot plodding in front of the other. "Why were there so many people there today? That took forever!"

"Well, it is the middle of the day," Astra reasoned, readjusting her robe. She made a note to retain better posture in the future—sliding down the chair had played havoc on her carefully wrapped clothes. "Maybe that's just how things are, usually?"

"Damn," May said, with a dour look. She pulled out her Pokedex, fiddling with it for a moment. "If all our trips there are gonna take that long, maybe I should get back to figuring out how to rig this thing to play games. Maybe I can beat my old Tetris score."

"Tetris?" Astra asked.

"It's a game where you gotta make lines out of four-piece blocks," May explained, "I got really good at it back in... Unova, maybe? Kalos? They all kind of blur together after a point."

"Huh." A human puzzle game? Astra would have to look into that. If it could save her from that tedious hell, all the better. "Were you good at it?"

May smirked. "Good? I completely decimated a versus tournament once! Lost the trophy at some point, but whatever."

"Oh wow!" Astra said, impressed. "Was it hard?"

"Nah, it was pretty easy." May glanced to the side, lips pursed. "I, uh, had a lot of free time to practice, that year. Not much else to do when you're just sittin' around home all day," she muttered.

"Oh," Astra said, wincing at the reminder of May's less than stellar social life. "I see."

The two of them continued their aimless walk, Astra lacking anything to talk about and May looking past the horizon with a sort of detached melancholy. Glancing about, Astra searched for something to talk about. After a moment, she belatedly realized that she didn't actually know where they were going.

"So!" she said, breaking the stillness, "What are we doing now?"

May didn't respond, so Astra continued talking after a moment. "I'd say we could go celebrate, but we just ate, so..."

May sighed, coming to a halt. "...You know, I think I just wanna go wander around by myself."

"Huh?" Astra asked, surprised. May wanted to split up? "Why?"

May scratched at her cheek and stared at the road ahead. "Eh, I just feel like being alone for a while. Besides, we've been basically attached at the hip since we've met." She turned her head, a smirk crossing her features. "If I hang out with you much longer, I'll be finding myself trying to plant a garden in my backyard and handing out berry soup to random ass neighborhood kids."

"Maaay!" Astra whined. "I'm not that bad!" She crossed her arms and huffed. "I bet your soups wouldn't taste very good anyway."

May stuck her tongue out. "Nyeh," she countered.

"But... yeah," Astra continued, sending May a smile. "We have been stuck together pretty tight, haven't we? I get it. I feel the same when Grandpa wants to monopolize my entire day with cooking or painting."

"Painting?" May asked, raising an eyebrow. "He makes art?"

"Yeah," Astra said, smiling. "Not that much, cause it's hard to get the right pigments where we live, but he did draw an entire mural on our ceiling."

"Huh. I've never really been into that kind of thing, but I guess that's pretty cool." May glanced around, shrugged, then turned down a side street. "Anyway, I'm off. See you later!"

"Wh- oh." Astra blinked, watching May walk away. "Right. Enjoy your walk, I guess? I don't even know what I'm gonna do now..."

"You'll figure it out!" May called out, raising one hand in farewell. "See you back at the hotel!"

Astra let out a sigh as May faded from sight. She looked around, noting the various storefronts that lined the street. None of them looked particularly appealing to her at the moment. Well, there were a few clothing stores, but she didn't think she had enough money to buy anything. She tapped her foot, pondering. What to do, what to do...

Well, she did have a new teammate to get up to speed, and a brand new well of power to stretch out. That ought to burn a few hours! With a grin and a slight skip to her step, Astra started walking. A moment later, she paused, then turned and started back toward the hotel.

She had a few things to pick up first.







The sun flashed in and out of view overhead, spraying dappled spots of light on the grass. The sound of leaves rustling in the wind echoed throughout the air as Astra ventured deeper into the forests beyond the outskirts of Rustboro City, passing by small hills and tiny brooks on her way.

After so long on human paths and in human cities, being totally surrounded by nature once more was making her feel nostalgic. If she kept her eyes forward, she could almost imagine that, in just a few yards, she would find a looming wooden gate with a Kirlia standing watch just inside, armed with a sharpened spear. Beyond him, another, more elderly Kirlia would be awaiting her with open arms, a gentle grin upon his face.

One look behind her would dispel that falsehood, where tall, gleaming spires of human make could be glimpsed through the greenery. It could be beautiful, in its own way, but a part of Astra wanted the illusion to remain, so she ignored it.

Astra paused upon reaching a large grassy clearing, and expanded her senses to their utmost. They had increased drastically since she had evolved, and this was her first time using them to their full capacity. Astra couldn't measure how far they spread now, as she didn't quite know the larger measurements humans used by heart yet. The range was large enough to tell if anyone was coming before it became an issue, and that was all she really needed.

Focusing, Astra did a sweep of the area and found, to her relief, no sign of any stray humans. She would have to keep an eye out, but for now this was as secluded as she was going to get without wandering too far away from the city. A good five to ten minute warning was all she would need, in the end.

Satisfied with her isolation, she dispelled her illusions and derobed, folding the cloth up and setting it to the side next to her bag. She clasped her hands above her head, now slightly more difficult due to the two new horns, and stretched, feeling her shoulders let out a few quiet pops. Twisting from side to side, she spun in place, watching as her skirt flared out.

Ceasing her rotation, Astra knelt into a half-crouch, then leapt forward and dashed across the clearing. She laughed as she went, each bound easily covering distances that her Ralts form would have struggled to match. Feeling a bit daring, she jumped and attempted to do a front-flip, but undershot and face-planted into the grass. Pushing herself up, she rubbed at her face and grinned. She would have to practice that, it seemed.

Turning over, Astra laid in the grass and stared at the sky overhead, basking in the afternoon light that she hadn't felt in nearly a week. It felt good to be out of her robe, and she was tempted to just spend the remainder of the afternoon just enjoying this moment. Alas, she had practice to conduct. But it wasn't like that couldn't be fun as well! She grinned, remembering all the times she had telekinetically squirted berry juice into her Grandpa's face.

Climbing to her feet, Astra examined the clearing she was in closely. It wasn't too unusual, merely a large area composed of grass, dirt, and loose rocks, enclosed on all sides by thick, hearty trees. Astra strode along the edge of the grove, closely examining the space she had from every angle.

Completing the circle, she picked up a couple large rocks and returned to the center, setting them down as markers. Closing her eyes and taking a deep breath, she focused, recalling what her Grandpa had once said about teleportation.

Remain centered. Keep your destination in mind: how it looks, where it is, how it feels. The clearer the image, the better the transition. Compare where you are, and where you will be. Keep it there! Maintain clarity.

And then, reach out





Space is not empty

Light fills the void

From stars long dead

Merely look into the sky

And see the flames that traveled so far

Just to shine upon you

...

But to move from one place to another

Space must be twisted upon itself.

But if space contains all things

Then, where does it twist into?

...

That space, too, is not empty.

Pray that you never see the light of that sky.

And the shadows that dwell within it







A familiar, twisted feeling surrounded Astra for a split second, and for an instant she thought she heard... something, but then her feet returned to the grass as quickly as they had departed. To her side, a subdued clap rang through the clearing as the air rushed to fill the void she left behind.

Opening her eyes, Astra looked down, and grinned wildly as she saw her markers had moved several feet away. Or rather, she had moved away from them! She had done it, and on her first try, too! She shot a fist into the air, letting out a cheer.

She could teleport!

Grinning, Astra focused on another marker, farther away.

zwip-CLAP

"Gah!?" She gasped, stumbling as her teleport dropped her a foot above where she had meant to be. Waving her arms wildly, Astra jerked backwards, overbalanced, and fell on her ass.

"Ow..."

Rubbing the sore spot, Astra grumbled at her mistake. Alright, so doing it right once in ideal conditions did not a master make. That just meant she had to practice more. Standing back up, she observed the markers she had set, picked one, and began teleporting around the clearing in earnest.

One, two, three four five-six-seven

It was then she was sharply reminded of the cost of the technique when a small headache abruptly blossomed into a full blown migraine. Clutching at her head, Astra stumbled toward her bags and fumbled around inside, retrieving the jar of Leppa berries she had harvested on Route 104. She picked the largest one, and bit through the fruits thick flesh, swallowing it whole. The spicy aftertaste wasn't her favorite flavor, but the sweet, blissful relief it provided was well worth it.

The pain and fatigue still lingered, but the Leppa berries were in short supply. A bit of rest would take care of it, Astra decided. Plus, she didn't really want to taste it again. Closing the jar, she set it beside her other things and sat against the tree. Looking at the boughs above her, Astra let out a sigh.

That was a really disappointing amount of teleports, she thought. All of them had been super short range, too. A pessimistic guess said that she wouldn't be able to go very far at all before basically falling over. Her Grandpa had teleported both her and the Guard from Birch's laboratory straight back home with only a bit of exhaustion to show for it! That had been amazing! Why couldn't she do that?

She spent the next minute sulking at her own deficiency. When the remnants of the headache faded away, Astra sighed and stood back up. Maybe she was missing something about the move that made it less exhausting? Or maybe it just got easier over time. Well, there was really nothing for it but to keep training. Except, maybe that could be saved for later? She did have a few other things she wanted to do, and spending half of her time incapacitated with psychic fatigue would not be conducive to that. She'd just have to set a day aside for practicing teleportation, more than the scant few hours of daylight left would allow. Maybe when she had more than just the one jar of Leppa.

Flicking her wrist, Astra summoned Slakoth's pokeball and the TM for Rock Tomb from her bag. She considered the disc for a moment. Was there a better way to use this? She mulled it over, but discarded the thought. It was a powerful utility move, and that was exactly what her newest teammate would need. If she didn't use it here, she might never use it at all. Pointing the pokeball at the TM, she watched as light flared across its shining surface. The disc dulled and cracked like the last disc had, and soon enough she was left with a lump of useless plastic.

Stashing that away, Astra tossed the pokeball into the air, Slakoth emerging in a flash of light. The sluggish creature peered around the meadow, eyes meandering over the scattered stones before coming to rest upon his trainer. Slakoth tilted his head. His eyes were always sort of half-closed, but even still he managed to squint.

"Slaa...?"

"Hey Slakoth," Astra said, smiling. She hadn't had the chance to properly talk with her newest companion, aside from an uneventful meet-n-greet during breakfast. "Bet you don't recognize me, huh? It's still me! And look," she exclaimed, twirling in place, "I evolved!"

A spark of recognition seemed to click into place behind Slakoth's dull expression, and a dopey smile covered his face.

"Slaaa...!"

It was the most unenthusiastic-yet-genuine congratulations Astra had ever heard. This guy just could not muster up the willpower to do anything, could he? Well, Astra hoped he would put at least some effort into practice. She clapped her hands.

"Alright! Now that we've got that out of the way, here's the deal. You ate my food, so you have to repay me by fighting at my side! As long as you do so, I will keep feeding and housing you, and you'll... uh." Astra considered Slakoth for a moment. "You will never have to do much of anything else, and aside from training, can spend all your time loafing around."

Slakoth's eyes lit up. "Koth!" he said, raising his head and giving her a very firm nod over the course of six seconds. Apparently promises of a perpetually lackadaisical lifestyle were right up his alley. Well, at least his demands were simple.

"Glad to see you agree!" Astra peered around the clearing and gestured at a fallen log. It flew over and embedded itself into the ground between her and Slakoth. "Now, attack this branch. Show me what you can do!"

Slakoth pushed at the ground below and climbed to his feet. He loped toward the log on all fours, his arms acting as a second pair of legs. As he reached the post, he lifted a paw and slashed across the bark. His claws raked through the wood with a dull crunch, leaving three deep gashes behind. Upon completing his attack, Slakoth proceeded to not bother resisting his own momentum and tumbled to the ground. He blinked, slowly.

"Slaaa..."

Astra stared at him. "Can you... do it again?" she asked.

"Slak." Tired.

"Really?"

"Slakoth..."

"Ugh..." Astra rubbed at her forehead, exasperated. "You can't just laze about when you're actually fighting, you know," she said, fixing him with a glare.

"Koth."

"Hmph. At least your attack is pretty good," Astra muttered, examining the damage to the post. "That would probably hurt a lot. Do you know anything else?" she asked, turning back to Slakoth. The TM had presumably taught him Rock Tomb, but Astra didn't know what he could do naturally. So far it seemed to be 'not much', but it never hurt to check.

Slakoth pondered the question for a moment. Or fell asleep with his eyes open. It was hard to tell. But eventually he nodded and returned to his feet. Slakoth examined the post for a moment before he suddenly turned his head, focusing on something behind Astra.

"Sla!" he cried, pointing in alarm. Astra's heart seized in her chest. They'd been discovered!?

She whirled around, psychic energy flaring in her hands as she beheld... nothing? She scanned the empty woods ahead of her fervently, searching for anything amiss. It was only the violent breaking of wood that drew her attention back to Slakoth. He gave her a lazy smile, a small chunk of splintered debris settling into the forest floor near the post.

Astra blinked, then scowled. "Slakoth! What were you thinking, tricking me like that!?" she demanded, the energy fading from her shaking hands. "You nearly—fuck, I got really scared there!"

Slakoth's dopey smile faded into a puzzled frown. "Sla...?"

"Tch. You don't even look sorry!" Astra fumed. "That was a pretty shitty prank, you get that? Don't you ever pull that sort of thing again, especially when I'm exposed! You're getting half portions next mealtime, and don't argue!" she warned, halting Slakoth's protest in advance. He slumped to the ground, despondent.

Astra held her glare for a moment more before something in the corner of her eye caught her attention. Turning, she stared at the practice branch and the large chunk now ripped from its side. She blinked, eyeing the massive gouge. "Eh? Was this you?" she asked, looking back to Slakoth.

"...koth," he said, muffled by the dirt his face was planted in.

"Huh. When did you do this? It looks a lot more effective than those scratches." Astra mused. "Can you do it again?"

Slakoth hesitated. Astra furrowed her brow. "What's the matter? Come on, if you did it once, you can do it again." Slakoth still looked uncertain, so Astra decided to add a little bait. "If you do it well enough, I might cut back on your punishment~" she wheedled, voice veritably laced with sweetness.

She wouldn't, of course. He had been really awful and deserved every bit of it. But he didn't need to know that, right? In any case, that extra push seemed to decide it. Slakoth pushed himself off the ground, his hands dragging loosely against the dirt as he faced the branch once more. He stared at the log with lidded eyes.

Suddenly, Slakoth tilted his head and his eyes shot open, his gaze anchored to the forest beyond. "Sla!?" he said, slack jawed.

"A giant Oran berry!?" Astra exclaimed, whirling to look. "Where is—"

The sound of crunching wood once again interrupted her wild search. Confused, Astra turned back only to see another gaping hole in the branch. Slakoth was sitting on the grass, giving her another dull grin.

Astra's eyes shifted from the new pile of wood scrap, to Slakoth, to the log and back again. For a moment anger flared in her heart, but then confusion drowned it out. Was the one punishment not enough? Why on earth did he pull another prank? Slakoth didn't seem like the type to continually make jokes at the expense of those around him. That would take a lot of effort, and wouldn't fit his demeanor of 'eternally sleepy'.

Come to think of it, why did she fall for it in the first place? She had seen the entire clearing, and there weren't any berry bushes to be found here. There was no reason to believe what he said had any hint of truth. She had just gotten fooled not even a minute ago, so why did she look?

"One more time," Astra commanded. Slakoth groaned, but got to his feet once more. Astra stared intently at the scene. Nothing would distract her from looking straight at Slakoth and the log. Not some random observer, not food, not even—

"Sla!" Slakoth cried, pointing at the sky.

"A triple rainbow!?" Astra gasped. She had only ever seen single-arced ones after heavy rainstorms; doubles were relegated to mere stories. She had never even heard of a triple! Astra craned her head skyward, gleefully searching for multihued arcs of light in the heavens.

Crunch.

Astra twitched violently, then closed her eyes and sighed.

"I just got had again, didn't I?"

"Slakoth."

"Quiet, you," she grumbled. Looking down, she was greeted a third time by Slakoth's dull grin, and a third hole in the now rather unstable log. The third time she had asked him to attack, and the third time he had distracted her.

"You weren't trying to prank me, were you?" Astra said, quietly. "You were doing what I told you to, and that's just how it works. You distract someone, then hit them when they aren't looking. Right?"

"Koth," he said, a hint of reproach and vindication in his tone.

Astra sighed. "Alright, I guess I understand why you did that now. It was still pretty shitty!" she emphasized, "I don't like fearing for my life, you know? But... you were just doing what I told you, and I didn't see what that was until too late. I'm... sorry that I misunderstood. I'll try to not jump to conclusions in the future."

Slakoth tilted his head. "Sla...?"

Astra blinked. "Right. Uh, no, you're not getting punished anymore."

"Slak," he pressed.

Astra rolled her eyes. "And you can have a little extra."

"Slaaa!" he rejoiced, raising his arms to the sky.

Astra shook her head, watching him with a wry smile. "Alright, save the celebration for later," she said with a clap of her hands. That log, ventilated as it was, could probably stand one more good blow before breaking down completely. "Right, let's test out what the TM taught you. Slakoth, use Rock Tomb!"

Reinvigorated by the promise of generous helpings, Slakoth stood to attention. For a moment, he looked confused. A second passed, and Astra had just started to wonder if the TM had even worked when Slakoth's eyes widened, and understanding finally dawned.

Slakoth's arms jerked, and suddenly a thin, brown glow suffused across their surface. Raising them once again, Slakoth slammed his fists upon the ground, twin plumes of dust and dirt bursting into the air. The ground erupted, a quintet of needle like spears emerging from the stone. Every one of them pierced through the post, the raucous of splintering lumber signaling the reduction of his target into naught but firewood.

Astra whistled, observing the damage with a massive grin. The needles weren't quite the spears that Roxanne's Geodude or Nosepass had shown, and there weren't as many, about half, but their power and utility were still a force to be reckoned with.

"Nice work, Slakoth," Astra said, her newest companion basking in the praise. "This should really help pin things down! Now we just need to string all these together... hm." Summoning her other two pokeballs, Astra tossed them into the air. A flash of light later, Treecko and Marill stood side by side in front of her.

"Hey guys!" Astra greeted as they peered around the clearing. "I know we just fought a gym battle, but I wanted to bring Slakoth up to speed as quickly as possible. To do that, I need a bit of help. So! Who wants to spar first?"

Treecko blinked, taking in his master's new appearance with curious eyes. To his side, Marill froze at the same sight, tail twitching sporadically. "Tree," he congratulated, giving Astra a thumbs-up.

"Aheh..." Astra scratched the back of her head, grinning. "Thank you, but that wasn't an answer... eh?" Astra paused, noticing Marill had gone oddly still. "Is something wrong, Marill?"

"Riii!!" she squealed, darting up to Astra with delighted, bouncy steps. She peered up at her trainer with wide eyes, grabbing and pulling down one of Astra's skirt ruffles. "Mar mar," she said, poking and prodding at it, before draping it over her head. Marill met Astra's bemused gaze, eyes sparkling. "Maaaa!"

"Stop that!" Astra chided, snatching her flap back despite Marill's disappointed whine. "Honestly! You can't just go pulling at me like that. I don't care how excited you are, my skirt is not headwear!"

Marill's cheeks puffed out. "Marill ril!" she huffed, walking back the way she came.

Astra rolled her eyes. "Yes yes, I'm sure your evolution will be even prettier than mine. Thank you too. Now does anyone want to answer my actual question? We're burning daylight, and I really want to get Slakoth ready to fight."

She waved at Slakoth. Treecko and Marill turn to examine their newest partner in combat. Slakoth, for his part, had laid down and fallen asleep in the past five minutes. A soft snore wafted through the clearing. Treecko and Marill turned back to Astra, visibly unimpressed.

Astra sighed, rubbing at her forehead. "Son of a bitch."




Astra hummed to herself as she sprayed more potion onto yet another of Marill's scrapes. To her side Treecko and Slakoth, both already bandaged, had gotten into a minor competition over who could achieve the most comfortable sleeping position. Slakoth was currently winning in her mind, but only because Treecko was cheating by using his tail as a chair.

As Astra patched over another wound, she reflected on the fights that had caused them. Slakoth had performed better and worse than she had expected. Better, in that Slakoth was surprisingly comfortable with Astra telepathically communicating commands as concepts and sharing her field of view. Possibly because he didn't have to spend energy on translating what she meant into what he should do. In addition, Slakoth was indeed strong, and when his attacks connected they did so with a startling finality.




Astra peered into the branches of a tree. "Were you aiming for that?" she asked, trying to see through the dense foliage. Next to her, Slakoth just shrugged. Marill was rolling around nearby, howling with laughter.

Up above, Treecko's legs flailed wildly as he attempted to extract himself from a hole in the trunk. Muffled screaming could faintly be heard from the ground.

"You'd probably be a nightmare to the Rebound teams back home if you put the effort in," Astra mused as she psychically tugged at Treecko. "Though I suspect the concept of effort would itself be a nightmare to you."

"Slak," he agreed.

"Well don't just say it!"

"Koth!"

"Ugh. Let me just—there! Hey Treecko, you okay? ...Yeah, I know she's laughing, but that's no reason to—wait no no don't—"

Treecko proceeded to hock a Bullet Seed into Marill's open mouth. Laughter was replaced by violent gagging, swiftly followed by enraged screaming.

Astra sighed, rubbing at her forehead. "Son of a bitch."




Worse in that... well, he was just so slow! Though he understood her commands well enough, oftentimes he was too sluggish in carrying them out to be effective. Even when he did, he tired so easily that he often needed a good six seconds of rest between actions, just to regain enough energy to move! Dodging was out of the question and her usual rockstorm practice had failed utterly.

What was it that May had said before? Slakoth's next form was more energetic? Astra longed to see that day, because as of now, well...

It left a lot to be desired.




"Rock Tomb!" Astra called, focusing on a charging Marill.

"Sla... koth!" Slakoth bellowed, his fists slamming into the ground below. Brown energy pulsed, and a cluster of rocky needles burst from the rock and pinned Marill in place. Her rotund body insulated her from the worst of her momentum, but she still cried out as the spikes pricked at her belly.

"Alright!" Astra cheered. "Now, give her all you've got!"

Groaning softly, Slakoth staggered forward at a leisurely pace.

Astra gaped at him. "Wh—we don't have time for you to loaf around, move faster!" she urged, eyeing how Marill had begun twisting herself free of her prison. "Come on, she's almost—!"

The sound of crumbling rock and a shrill cry interrupted her, and a speeding blue sphere impacted Slakoth's torso with a vengeance.

"—out," Astra finished, watching Slakoth tumble backwards. She sighed. "Son of a bitch."




Astra had learned a lot from the training, but most of it was merely a confirmation of what she already suspected. Slakoth was very slow, but very strong. Rock Tomb worked well enough to nullify his disadvantage, as long as his foe wasn't too far away or too strong to be held down. His forced distraction trick would allow him to get in a few crucial blows, and if all else failed he had an absolutely terrifying throwing arm. Maybe she should look into a projectile for him to carry into battle.

A whine broke Astra out of her thoughts, and she realized she had stopped part way through her bandaging Marill. The blue pokemon pouted at her, wriggling in impatience.

"Sorry," Astra said, finishing the patch. She did a last once over, then gave Marill a thumbs up. "Alright, you're good to go!"

"Mar!" Marill chirped, then wandered off to bother the two layabouts across the clearing.

Astra watched the ensuing scuffle, smiling. They had all done well, today. The Stone badge rested soundly in a little slot on her Trainer ID, and her goal, once so distant, seemed more attainable than ever. She couldn't have done it without any of them. Even Slakoth, as little as he had done, had been the deciding factor between failure and victory.

They had all earned a little time for fun, in her opinion. Astra checked her pokedex for the time, and found it to be half past four. Grinning, she summoned her pack and laid out an assortment of berries and fish. A quick psychic ping—much gentler than what she had done to that poor cashier in Petalburg—and all eyes snapped towards her.

"Hey guys!" she called, "It's..." she paused for a moment. It was too early for dinner, yet too late for lunch. So this was... a memory flashed. "It's time for linner!" she finished, grinning. Thank you, Billy!

All three of her minions perked up, and then it was a mad dash to get to their food first. Treecko was the winner, darting over before Slakoth had even gotten himself off the ground. Marill came shortly afterwards, with Slakoth bringing up a surprisingly not so distant third. Apparently the lazy bum could actually move, if there was food involved. They descended on their respective portions with a ravenous vigor; Slakoth joyfully devouring his extra handful of Oran berries.

"You know," Astra started, swallowing her portion of Magikarp, "We haven't really done anything together, have we? I mean, there was all this training, but that's, you know," Astra waved a hand in the air. "Serious stuff. So! I was thinking that we could play a few games while we have the time!"

Treecko perked up, setting down his food. "Treecko?" he asked, laser focused.

Astra grinned. "Yes, like Rebound, among a few other things."

Marill glanced between her trainer and her teammate, confused. "Mar?"

"Oh don't worry, Rebound's real easy to understand." Astra reassured. "I'll tell you what to do. Who knows?" She grinned mischievously. "Maybe you'll be better than Treecko?"

Marill shot to her feet, eyes blazing. "Marill mar!"

Treecko stared at her, eyes narrowed. "Ko," he scoffed.

"That's the spirit!" Astra cheered. She rubbed her hands together, smiling. "Now, here's how we're going to do it..."




A ball had been retrieved, a rectangular ovoid field had been marked out, and Treecko and Marill stared intently at each other from opposing sides. Astra stepped up to midfield, glowing with power. Around them, walls of psychic energy materialized, boxing them in with a ceiling to top it off. Astra grinned, making a few tweaks to the barrier's size, making it cross a good two-thirds of the clearing. She hadn't been sure she could pull that part off. Evolution was the gift that just kept on giving.

"Alright!" Astra announced. "I want a clean game! No pings, flashes, illusions..." Astra paused, noticing the confused looks on her minions faces. "Okay I guess that doesn't really apply to you two," she muttered, rubbing at her chin. "Uh. Well, just. Don't intentionally harm or disable your opponent! First to seven wins, the goal is the far wall behind your opponent! Are you ready?"

"Tree!"

"Mar!"

"And have you decided what you want if you win?" Astra asked.

Both Pokemon blinked, not having considered it.

"...Mar," Marill said after a moment. A fire lit in her eye, and she stared at Astra with visible determination. "Marill mar!"

"Power? Ah, so you were inspired by my evolution, huh? And after the incident with Steven— hm." Astra considered the request, then nodded. "I can do that, I think. If you win, I'll do my best to find you a cool TM! That should do the trick, yeah?"

"Mar!" Marill cheered, pumping a fist. Her tail wagged through the air, excitedly. "Riii~" she sang in anticipation.

Astra smiled at her, then turned to Treecko. "Now, did you decide on a prize?"

"Tree..." Treecko looked hesitant, then... blushed? "Tree.. Treecko." He said, looking away and fidgeting.

Astra blinked. "You want to spend more time with me?" she asked, touched. "I guess all these new additions to our team have you feeling a bit left out, huh?" Astra smiled. "I'd love to! We can spend a few hours this week doing whatever you want, how does that sound?"

Treecko nodded happily, and Marill burst out laughing. "Marill mar!" she chortled, pointing at a bristling Treecko. "Mar!"

"Hey!" Astra barked, fixing Marill with a glare. "There's nothing shameful with wanting to spend time with me! If you have a problem with it, you can keep it to yourself. Now apologize!"

Marill puffed up, but a flash of guilt flashed over her face at Astra's words. Rubbing her arm, she glanced away, before visibly forcing herself to look a glowering Treecko in the eye.

"Marill." she said, her voice soft and regretful. "Rill marill."

Treecko eyed her, then gave a single nod. "Tree."

You'd enjoy it too.

Marill rolled her eyes, looking away. "...Rill." she admitted, after a moment.

Maybe.

Treecko smirked. Astra watched them, nodding in satisfaction. "Hm. Glad that's settled. Now, who's ready for some Rebound?" Two cries of agreement reached her ears, and Astra grinned.

"Good!" The ball in Astra's hand began to levitate into the air, spinning in place. She grinned, and pointed to the sky. "We begin on three! One, two—" Her arm dropped, now directed at a very surprised Treecko. "You. Think fast!"

Astra pushed, and the ball shot forward. A half second later, the air popped as she teleported herself outside of the field. Treecko was paralyzed with shock for a moment, but recovered in time to whirl around, his tail slamming the ball across the field toward Marill.

Astra tracked the ball intently. Treecko's speed advantage made him Astra's favoured contender for victory, but Marill's sheer will to succeed could turn the tide if she applied it right. This wasn't any ordinary ball game, after all. She wondered which one would figure out the trick first.

A smirk on her face and eyes glued to the ball, Marill readied herself as it soared across the midpoint. Marill took a running leap, letting out a battle cry as she swung her tail around, the blue sphere on the end hurtling toward the oncoming ball with enormous force. The two balls completely ruined the moment by, in the slimmest of margins, failing to touch at all.

Marill landed on her face, and the ball unceremoniously bounced off the far goal.

"Point to Treecko!" Astra announced. The ball was enveloped in purple and made its way back to the middle.

Treecko folded his arms and leaned back, smirking. Marill pushed herself up and leveled a deathly glare, furious.

"Mar..." she growled. Treecko merely stared at her, eyes lidded.

"Don't worry Marill!" Astra said, giving her a thumbs up. "You've got this! And nice shot, Treecko!" she added when Treecko gave her a side eye. The two contestants returned to their original places, and Astra began to count down. "Three, two, one, ball's free!"

The ball twisted and turned in midair, and this time Marill was ready. She turned left, then spun right with all her might, her tail rocketing out as if to tear itself free. They collided in an intense, violent confluence and ball instantly reversed course at twice its original speed, carving a great arc in the air as it scraped along the shimmering violet ceiling.

Treecko squawked and raced after it, but even a last second leap of desperation only brought him half as high as his target. The ball flew into his goal with a muted thud, before a purple field sprang into existence and carted it off to midfield. Treecko slumped.

"Point to Marill!" Astra announced. "Score tied!"

"Mar!" Marill cheered, sending a smug grin towards Treecko.

Treecko glared, but there was a glint in his eye that Astra recognized. Oho, he had an idea, did he? Astra grinned. Things were about to get interesting.

The ball spun, the players returned to their starting positions, and once more the ball was flung. Treecko's tail slammed it hard, and it spun off to the side, bouncing off the wall and bypassing Marill entirely. Or it would, had she been staying still. Marill met the ball halfway to her goal and jumped, blocking the ball with her stomach. The sphere bounced off and went skyward, leaving just enough time for Marill to set up the perfect serve. Tail met sphere, and once more the ball rocketed down the field. Marill waved it goodbye, giving Treecko a cheeky grin.

Treecko eyed the ball, watching as it soared far out of reach overhead. He smirked, puffed out his cheeks, and then he spat a single, golden seed into the sky. The seed struck the ball and it shot upward and smacked against the ceiling. The ball fell, and Treecko met it with all the fury he could muster.

Marill, having settled back in anticipation of her victory, stumbled to her feet with a shrill cry of surprise, far, far too late to stop the ball speeding past her and into the goal. It bounced off, and she could only gape at it. She turned back to Treecko slowly, frustration and a hint of calculation burning bright in her eyes.

"Point to Treecko," Astra announced, grinning madly at his maneuver. It wasn't as efficient as just blocking it with a psychic field, but it worked wonderfully nevertheless. She sent Treecko a mental nod of approval, pride and excitement radiating in return. "Clever. Let's see if Marill can match it."

The ball was set loose once more. It started much the same, if prolonged. Marill and Treecko sending the thoroughly battered ball streaking back and forth across the field. Treecko halted another high pass from Marill and sent it spinning back, and this was apparently just what Marill was waiting for. She rusheed over and smacked the returning ball with her tail, but as it soared over midfield she suddenly curled into a sphere and rolled sideways at great speed. Coming to a halt, she set her sights on the ball and began to swell.

Treecko, focusing more on the ball than his opponent, came to a skidding halt in its path and prepared to swing. He was then completely flabbergasted when a condensed beam of water abruptly knocked the ball off course, sending it zig-zagging around him into the wall and ricocheting directly into the goal.

"Point to Marill, with a classic midfield redirect!" Astra cheered. "Scores tied, two to each. Now you guys are really getting it." She pumped a fist, grinning excitedly. "This is the excitement I wanted to see! The Kirlia back home used to pull such dirty tricks. It's good to see you two get into the spirit of things!"

Treecko and Marill look at Astra for a moment, then stared at one another. A smirk was shared, and an accord made.

"Tree."

"Rill."

No more holding back.

"Round five!" Astra swiped a hand through the air, and the ball shot off once more. "Let's go!"

And then the arena was filled with the sound of sport. Flashes of light shot through the air, streams of water burst from unexpected angles, desperate saves and heroic pitches were performed and failed in equal measure. Through it all, Astra stood to the side and watched.

It was regretful, she mused, that she couldn't play for a round or two. She had played against Treecko in the village but there hadn't been a need for barriers then, surrounded by rock as they had been. Out here she wouldn't be able to keep these barriers up and play a decent game. Evolving had just let her put up the barriers in the first place, and every time the ball struck it drained just a bit more of her power.

But that was okay. This was helping Treecko and Marill improve, and though she couldn't add another ball the novelty of non-psychic strategies was doing well to keep her interested. It still didn't match the sheer intensity the games back home could reach.

Astra tried to refocus on the game, but as she served another ball she found thoughts of home intruding once more. The guard would surely have made a snide comment on that nearly botched save. Her grandpa would have nodded sagely and offered advice from afar. The other Ralts would have let out 'ooh's and 'ah's in concert with every play.

But they couldn't. They weren't here. They were at home, miles and miles away. There was a sudden, quiet ache in her heart. There hadn't been a day of her life where anyone she knew had been more than a short walk away. But the world had turned out to be so much bigger than she had thought, and now they were so far apart. What were they doing now? She wished she could see it.

Astra twitched as her barrier flickered, thoughts derailed by yet another goal scored by Marill. She wiped her now damp eyes with her arm and grinned at her pokemon. She couldn't get bogged down in gloom-town while there was a game to play! She spun up the ball again and let it fly, watching the resultant chaos.

Eventually the thirteenth game came upon them. The score was tied at 6-6 and the next 'mon to score would win the game. Astra had thought that Treecko might come out on top, but type advantage turned out to be a non-factor when they weren't directly attacking each other. Marill was really giving it her all to compete with Treecko's sheer speed. She supposed a final tiebreaker was appropriately dramatic for such an intense showing.

Treecko and Marill stared each other down as Astra moved the ball into place. Treecko crouched down, ready to leap in whatever direction the ball flew. Marill's tail twisted around her body, prepared to unleash all of her might in a single blow.

"Final round!" Astra called. The ball spun in the air, and Astra added a little flair by making the glow more pronounced. The ball turned purple and violet and sparkly and quite suddenly looked as if she pulled a star-laden dusk sky out of thin air and shoved it into a sphere. The effects would vanish pretty much immediately after she threw it, but it was appropriately dramatic as fuck, as May would say.

"Are! You! Ready!?" Astra yelled. Two voices roar in affirmative, and she grins. "Alright! Winner take all! Now, let's GO!"

The ball streaked forward, psychic energy trailing behind it like a comet tail. Marill twisted, roaring as she extended her tail to its full length—

A furred arm shot out of the tall grass and grabbed the ball, stopping it dead. Marill fell over with a squawk. Astra and Treecko blinked, utterly baffled.

A head poked out. Slakoth looked around, then at the ball in his hand. He smiled.

"Slakoth!"

He stood up in a process best described as arduous, then directed his grin at everyone present.

"Wh—Slakoth?" Astra asked, incredulous. "How did you get in there? My barrier should have—" she stopped, spotting a pile of dirt along one of the edges. "Did you dig your way inside?"

He nodded. "Koth!"

"I... okay? But why?" she asked. "You kind of interrupted the tie-breaker game."

Slakoth grinned again, and raised the ball up. "Koth!"

Astra blinked. He wanted to try? "Well, that's fine, but maybe not right now? It's kind of a bad time—"

"Slaaaaa—" he said, drawing the ball back.

"— And you're doing it anyway, please don't—"

"Koth!"

He threw the ball. It zipped past Treecko's face in a flash and smashed headlong into the barrier. Astra yelped and clutched at her head as her construct flared white. There was a dull pop and the barrier winked out. At the impact site, the ball slowly floated to the ground in tatters.

"Treecko!?" Treecko exclaimed, rushing over. He held up a piece of the ball and let out a disappointed sigh, shooting Slakoth a disgruntled look. Marill took one look at the scraps Treecko was holding and let out a choked screech, then promptly rounded on Slakoth and tackled him to the ground.

Astra rubbed at her temples and raised a hand. Marill, currently in the process of wiring her tail around Slakoth's neck, protested fitfully as she was enveloped by purple and dragged away. Slakoth, unsurprisingly, didn't seem too bothered by the attempt.

"Well," Astra started, giving him a stern look. "I hope you enjoyed your pitch, 'cause you ruined the only ball I had."

Slakoth grinned. "Slak!"

"No dinner."

"SLAAAAK!?"

The game ended in a tie, to the disappointment of all involved.




They played a few other games after that. One in which Treecko and Marill tried to see how far Slakoth could throw each of them. Treecko liked to assist his momentum by leaping off of tree branches as they passed, while Marill tended to have Slakoth toss her underhanded so she could roll for long distances. There had also been a few rounds of tag, which had rapidly devolved into 'catch-the-filthy-cheating-teleporter'.

But, as with all things, time moved on. The sky's hue had shifted to its darker colors, and purple had begun showing at the edges. Astra recalled her trio to their homes and packed up what errant materials had been left out. She hummed as she tucked newly emptied jars away, rearranging things so the full ones were nearer to the top. There were distressingly few of them. She'd have to restock sometime soon.

Her hand brushed against something hard, and she paused. Setting the rest of her things inside, she reached in and pulled the object out. Astra stared at it. A delicately carved wooden box stared back, a complex latch sealing it shut against the outside world.

A moment passed, and Astra hesitated. Then she sat the box on the grass and unlatched it. Inside was a bundle of brown cloth covering a sphere. Even through the cloth, it seemed to pulse in a dark, abyssal glow. She gently unravelled the tight weave, and underneath it all was a sphere of pure midnight, six inches across. Though smooth to the touch, a third of the surface area seemed shattered, and streaks of throbbing purple veins speared through the center in a tapering double helix.

It was cool to the touch, just shy of freezing, and Astra felt uneasy just holding it. This was the Ancestor's orb, and her grandfather had entrusted it to her as an emergency measure. Supposedly it would increase one's power magnificently, though she didn't exactly know how. Kind of an odd oversight on her grandpa's part, now that she thought of it. He apparently had no trouble with the thing, but others... hadn't. In her insatiable curiosity, Astra herself had done the lightest probe inside that same night and it had shown her a vision of... something. A meeting in a hollow log. The smell of wet grass and thumps of muted raindrops. The details faded in and out of her recollection, like mist or fog.

But it was the same type of vision as the one she had witnessed when she evolved. She knew that the more powerful Kirlia in the village could receive premonitions of the immediate future, albeit rarely, but none of them had ever said anything about weird fog visions and they certainly didn't say anything about suddenly being able to read! Not to mention that she had been a Ralts at the time.

So, clearly the visions and the orb were connected, somehow. A problem, because anyone she could talk to about it were either miles away or... gone. And so the question remained: What were these visions, and why was she receiving them? Answers were nowhere to be found.

And so, one path remained. Attempt to trigger one on her own, and see if it provided any new information. It had happened twice so far on accident, she reasoned, so it should be easy to trigger it on purpose. The lack of clarity on the earlier ones could be forgiven—the first time she had been completely blindsided, and the second she had been busy evolving. Evolving again was... probably not going to happen anytime soon, but she could replicate the first occurrence easily enough. This time, she would be prepared.

It still took Astra a few moments to work up the courage to actually follow through on her internal declaration. Her power skittered over the surface, and she had to take a deep breath to stop her hands from trembling. Swallowing her fear, Astra closed her eyes and reached out, breaching the surface of the orb.

A moment passed. Then two. Astra cracked an eye open, peeking around for signs of sepia and fog. She blinked as reality failed to vanish into mist. Nothing happened? No vision? Why?

She bit her lip, staring down at the shadowy sphere. The purple veins within seemed to throb in the fading afternoon light. The tendril of power she had extended into the surface prodded hesitantly at the darkness. The orb's dark light pulsed, as if it were eager, or even desperate to be called upon.

But no visions. Hm. It seemed there really weren't any answers here. Was there something she was missing? Maybe if she pushed deeper into the core she could find the trigger to whatever it was that gave her those visions. But that was almost certainly a bad idea; she was already examining it far too closely to be comfortable already, and that was almost literally just scratching the surface. Who knew what could happen if she just... dove in. Nothing good, she suspected. For now, this was a dead end. Disappointing.

Astra began to pull out, but stopped as a thought struck her. This orb had been gifted as an emergency measure, hadn't it? If she ever found herself in a supremely difficult situation, her Grandpa had wanted her to have one last failsafe. That said, she still didn't really know how to use it, and she wondered again as to the strange omission of that particular bit of information. Nevertheless, if she flailed about blindly there was the risk of just making the situation worse.

So, Astra figured, she should probably figure out how to use it before she accidentally exacerbated whatever disaster made her bring it out in the first place. The 'how' was still a bit sketchy. She was already prodding around inside of the thing, but she didn't feel any stronger. Perhaps trying to actively pull on the substance inside would do the trick.

Astra looked around at the deserted clearing and let out a breath. Alright. Maybe she should test it. A little bit. Just to be safe. Striding back to the center of the clearing, Astra examined the treeline. Best to get a baseline first, she decided, and hitting a tree with an attack would be a good a test as any. Raising a hand, psychic energy began to coalesce in her palm. Instinct guided her power, and a swirling lavender sphere of pure mental force sprang into existence. Setting her sights on a tree, Astra exhaled, then pushed.

The sphere shot forward, shooting through the air in a soundless flash. It hit the tree and exploded in a massive pink and violet wave of force. A great boom resounded through the forest, and the tree crashed to the ground, the entirety of its trunk reduced to splinters.

Astra let out a low whistle, eyes wide. Wow. She was pretty strong now! She let out a bark of laughter and glanced at her hand, flexing it. She grinned. With her power, her teleportation, and not to forget her Pokemon, Astra was having a hard time imagining what she would even need to use the orb for in the first place. Still, prudence demanded her to at least figure out how to work it.

Right. Time to do this. Steadying her hand, Astra began collecting energy into her palm once more. At the same time, the tendril inside the Ancestor's orb reached out and gently tugged at—

Power.

Astra gasped as a veritable torrent of sheer, unrestrained power rushed into her body. A purple mist so dark as to nearly be pure black surged across her coat, dying it in streaks of obsidian. A sense of euphoria filled her, and Astra knees buckled at the sensation of so much energy filling her veins near to bursting. She laughed. It was a wild, gasping and manic thing, and the very air seemed to darken as ever more energy was drawn from the orb and into Astra's psychic attack. The lavender bubble rippled as a stream of dark energy flowed into its center, and it quickly became a deep, dark purple, doubling, then tripling in size.

Astra ran a free hand through her hair, crimson eyes bulging. This was her power...? Was this what her Ancestor was capable of? The world took on a strange clarity, every line sharp and every color dulled. This was... incredible. It felt like she could fight the whole world and win without a scratch. If she had been able to do this from the start, she would have wiped the floor with Steven, not to mention Norman!

Steven, that odd pokemon trainer that had decimated her and May only a few days ago. Norman, Mays father and the jerk of a Gym Leader who had denied Astra even the chance to fight. The bubbling ecstasy curdled as the two names drifted into her thoughts.

"Not good enough, is that right, Norman?" Astra muttered, irritation creeping into her tone. "I'd like to see you try this on for size! I bet you couldn't just ignore me now! Stopping me from saving my home, dragging May all over the world..." She seethed. "How dare you... how dare you do that to everyone I care about!"

Dark power coursed through her soul. Astra's attack swelled, eclipsing her in height and digging a hole into the dirt.

"And Steven," she spat, glaring sightlessly into nothing. "Making fools out of the both of us, beating down on a couple new trainers with your overpowered pokemon. Then rubbing your stupid moral superiority into our faces. Did that feel good? Did it!? I bet you couldn't talk to me like that now!"

The attack rumbled as it expanded yet further, Astra failing to notice as light faded from the clearing. Her heart thumped wildly, and her teeth grit together in pure rage. "Nobody in the entire world would dare talk to me like that, now! Forcing us to hide in the forest, forcing me to hide who I am, making me live in fear every moment of the day. How dare they!?"

"They need to pay," Astra ground out, arm shaking as the sheer mass of power strained her to her limits. Her eyes glowed crimson. "They all need to pay!"

The sphere shook violently, towering over Astra as the energy within twisted and swirled erratically.

"THEY SHOULD ALL"

Astra pulled her arm back.

"JUST"

Her hand formed a fist, swelling with dark power.

"DIE."

Her arm shot forward, and the obsidian ball flew, carving a great trench as it went.

The tree vanished. The tree behind it vanished. The boulder behind them ceased to exist. A straight line through the forest, twice as wide as Astra was tall, evaporated into nothing. The sphere vanished into the distance, and Astra fell to her knees, exhausted. The dark mist faded, her skin returned to its natural white and she stared at the rift in the earth, wide eyed.

There was a terrible, ghastly silence. And then, there was light.

A gargantuan black pillar erupted in the distance. It stretched high, high into the sky, parting the clouds and splitting the horizon in half. The wind picked up, then blasted through the clearing in a hellish gale, whipping stones through the air and tearing branches from trees. A low, all-consuming rumble shook the earth, and Astra fell over as the ground trembled beneath her.

Astra huddled on the ground, eyes shut tight and cradling her head in her arms as the world ended around her.

After what seemed like a lifetime, the earth ceased to quake and the winds quieted. She sat there for a while, terror freezing her in place. Shaking, Astra uncurled and sat up, twitching.

In front of her, a massive gouge in the earth tunneled into the horizon. She couldn't see the end of it, as a giant pileup of felled trees blocked the path. All around her, the formerly serene clearing was now littered with branches and leaves.

In the distance, a siren began to wail. Astra's breath quickened, fear and panic overtaking her mind. Jerking around, she stumbled at the unexpected weight of the Ancestor's orb still clutched in her hand. She shrieked and dropped it, scrambling backwards. She stared at it, before another wail sounded through the air, closer.

Glancing at the gouge, she looked into the sky and recoiled in horror. Above the explosion site, a small patch of sky had turned from a vibrant blue to a sickly shade of yellow, as if the pillar of black had scarred the heavens themselves. Choking back a sob, Astra rushed forward and snatched the orb up, touching as little of it as she could.

Her bag had been surprisingly untouched, and Astra quickly dumped the orb into its box with the cloth and slammed it shut. Shoving the box into her bag, she summoned her robe and had it wrap itself around her as quick as she could muster. Jamming her hat on her head, Astra teleported away, just as a multitude of mental signatures entered the edges of her radius.

Her panic fueled teleport took her all the way to the city's outskirts, and a few more tactical bursts took her straight to a deserted alleyway outside the hotel she and May had visited with a raging headache. Nearly sprinting, she brushed past all the people panicking in the lobby, fumbled with the key, then burst into the room.

The room was dark and empty. May's pack lay next to the bed with its owner nowhere to be found. Dropping her bag next to May's, Astra dove under the covers of the bed and pulled them tight. She lay there, shaking, eyes narrowed into pinpricks. It was dark, and the blanket muffled the sirens still wailing outside.

Astra curled into a shivering ball and clutched at her face, breath hitching.

And then, with nothing left to distract her from what she had done, Astra began to cry.




Twenty minutes later, muffled footsteps pounded the carpet outside. Muttered cursing as another set of keys were fumbled. The door opened.

"Fuck fuck where—" May said, panicked. A pause. The shuffling of feet. Hesitation, then the rustling of cloth. Light flooded her sanctuary, and Astra buried her face deeper into a stolen pillow. An exhale, relief and worry in the same breath. "There you are." A pause. Then, awkwardly, "You okay?"

Astra sniffled, curling deeper into the mattress. No. No she was not.

"Right." Another pause. "It was the, uh, giant explosion thing, yeah? Lot of people getting worked up over it, and all. Kind of a crazy lightshow, from where I was. Heh. Um." Silence. "You weren't anywhere near that, right?"

Near it? Astra almost laughed. She caused it! But words alone could not convey what she had felt there. Hatred, wrath, rage. A darkness so overwhelming that she had never noticed when it usurped her mind. A power so unearthly that it scarred the sky. How could she explain any of that?

"It was scary," Astra whispered, hugging the pillow. "It was really scary..."

A sigh. "Yeah. Yeah it was, wasn't it?" A creak, and then suddenly May was under the covers, sitting next to Astra. Blue eyes met red, and May grinned sadly. "Hey. Got room in here for one more?"

Astra blinked, hiccuped, then abandoned the pillow and latched onto May, shuddering uncontrollably. "Woah—hey!" May yelped, leaning away. Astra didn't care and pulled May closer, burying her face into May's side and holding on for dear life.

"Erk," May croaked, tense as a bowstring. Slowly, hesitantly, she relaxed, wrapping an arm around Astra. "Um. There, there?" she asked, awkwardly patting Astra on the back.

May's fumbling attempt at comfort did more to lift Astra's spirit than all of the past twenty minutes of isolation combined. Astra snorted. "You're really bad at this," she muttered, wiping her tears on a sleeve.

"Oh, well fuck you too," May muttered back, and she sounded so put out that Astra couldn't help but laugh.

There was another silence, but more comfortable. "I'm sorry," Astra said, finally.

"It's fine," May reassured. "Big fuckoff explosion blows up a quarter of the forest outside town, anyone'd be scared. Though, uh." May glanced around at the small bubble under the hotel blankets. "It's kind of boring in here. If you want, we could order a movie or something." She paused, wrinkling her nose. "Maybe after a shower."

Astra tilted her head. "A movie?" she asked, waveringly.

"Yeah! A new Datney one came out recently, and I was kind of interested. It's called Treasure Galaxy, and it's about—"

"No, no, I mean, what's a movie?"

May paused. Opened her mouth. Closed it. A look of grim determination crossed her features. "Tomorrow I am going to rent the entire King of the Amulet trilogy and we are going to binge the fuck out of it."

"Okay?"

"Go take a shower, I'll figure the movie out."

Astra took a shower. May ordered a movie. Astra left the bathroom, once again covered in towels, to see May sprawled across the bed, an entire Poochyena having made her lap a seat. Her Torchic had decided to make Poochyena a perch in turn. Lotad was off to the side, staring at them. A small water stain on the floor showed that a brief but unsuccessful experiment with Tentacool had taken place.

"Yo." May raised a hand in greeting. "Get yours out. It's fuckin' sleepover central today. You know," she added at Astra's curious look, "Since I suck ass at hugging, apparently."

Astra rolled her eyes, but soon enough Treecko staked a claim on her lap and Marill settled next to Lotad. Slakoth decided that the most comfortable spot was 'nearly falling off the bed' and she couldn't be bothered to care. May hit a button on a small rectangular device—a remote—and the TV hanging across from the bed flared to life. And then Astra's entire world narrowed down to an impossible display of light and sound.

It was unlike anything she'd ever seen before. It was like her Grandpa's paintings, only alive. It was like a shadow play, but loud. The Smith's fire show was the only one that came close, but even that could not compare to the sheer breadth of color and majesty. It was art, it was music, it was acting. It was all of them at once and then more and it was the most majestic thing she had ever seen.

In the movie, a young boy traveled to the heavens in search of treasure. But Astra, in this moment, surrounded by friends, found one of her own. He raced amongst brilliant swirls of starlight and the glittering sparks were all reflected in Astra's eyes that night.

Some time later, May grunted. "That robot is fucking annoying."

Astra hummed in agreement, her earlier fears buried under sheer awe. The robot was really fucking annoying.



Pretty nervous about this one. It's pretty much (barring one notable exception) all Slice of Life type stuff, which I hadn't intended for. Entire thing bloated out of control so I had to save what would have been the other half for next chapter. Had to rename it from 'cacophony' (which will instead be next chapter) 'cause the relevant event isn't happening here, too.

Sorry if some of the 'battle' bits make your eyes glaze over, tends to happen to me as well. Some people find those sections fun enough, I suppose. I could spend a day or two re-writing it, or maybe cut it altogether, but on the whole the entire bit isn't important enough for much more attention and I just want to ship this damn thing out so I stop stressing over it during the holidays.

In any case, some exciting stuff happens next chapter that should feel much less 'filler' and if you recall the games you should have a decent guess as to what.

And if you have the time, please check out Mycelium Roots, a fully illustrated quest about a mushroom by my good artist friend Dexexe. Also Lords of Lordaeron, a Warcraft quest starring a young King Arthas by my beta IronyOwl.

And as always, thank you for reading!

Edit: fucking horizontal lines went missing.
 
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Hyphen 22 - Disturbance
Hyphen 22

Disturbance




"—Authorities are still investigating the site of the massive explosion yesterday evening, but no cause has yet been—"

Click.

"—tellin' you it's a sign of the end times! Look up at that big ugly bruise in the air and tell me that things are gonna be okay when the sky itself is bleedin'!"

Click.

"—although there were no reported human injuries, the destruction has elicited concern for the local Pokemon population—"

Click.

"—got a close look before the police cordoned the area off, it was the spookiest thing I ever saw. Entire forest got churned up by the wind, yeah, but at the epicenter? Sand. It was all just... sand, far as I could see. Real quiet too, could barely hear myself breathe."

"That must have been very disconcerting."

"No shit. Felt like the skin was gonna crawl off my back closer I got. Something's wrong there, now. Sun was still up but it was like the light didn't reach all the way, and it was cold. If my heart wasn't thumping in my ears I could've sworn that I'd died."

Click-thwip.

The small TV in the hotel's eating area went dark. Astra stared listlessly at the now black screen, chin resting on a folded arm. Across the table, May set the remote down, shaking her head. She took another bite of the enormous muffin she had bought from the breakfast service.

There were a few other TV's set around the spacious dining hall, still blaring whatever channel those nearby deemed entertaining enough to watch, but no other guests had chosen to sit in their little corner, preferring their own solitude. The morning sunlight shone through the window next to them, a cheery greeting from the sun to harken a new day. Or it would, were there not a new, if unseen, obstruction to dampen the mood.

"Man," May said, swallowing the chunk of pastry. "I saw the whole thing and I still can't believe that happened. Didn't even know you could do that to the sky. Wonder what it was..."

Astra looked down at her own muffin and took a nibble. "... I just hope it doesn't happen again." she said, quietly.

"Mmm. Yeah, I suppose. Still," May pressed, "You must be a little curious too, right? What do you think? Secret government project? Aliens? Maybe it was one of those mythical Pokemon that only show up every thousand years or so." May took another bite, considering the options. "Bet if I could catch something that could do that, I could beat the entire league in five minutes flat."

Astra winced. "I'd really rather not think about it," she deferred. The movie and a dreamless night's sleep had done well to allow Astra to... not forget, but distance herself from the event. Still, she would really rather not have it shoved into her face every other minute. Dwelling on what she had done, what she had felt— no, she was far better off doing something else. Anything else.

"Tch, you're no fun," May muttered, taking off another chunk off her muffin.

Astra just shrugged, turning her attention to her own pastry. It was a delicious new flavor— pecan?— but she couldn't seem to work up the energy to feel enthused about it. "You said we were going to binge a 'trilogy' today?" she questioned, sitting up. Maybe another movie would lift her spirits.

"Mmm!" May swallowed the rest of her muffin, then shook her head. "Uh-uh. Puttin' that plan on pause, for now," she said, to Astra's disappointment. "We can save that for when Brendan finally gets his ass to town. It'll go better with a bigger audience. Actually, speaking of..." Frowning, May pulled out her pokedex and tapped at it. She scowled.

"Still no texts?" she questioned, incredulous, "I thought he was gonna beat us here. What gives?"

"Maybe it's taking him longer than he thought it would?" Astra hazarded. She hoped not; if he kept searching around Route 102 he could risk becoming a danger to the village. "Or... maybe he is here, but he doesn't know we are?"

May blinked at Astra, as if the thought had never occurred to her. "So you think that he thinks..." she said, slowly.

"That we're still on our way," Astra finished, polishing off the last of her muffin.

May was silent for a moment, then scowled. "That stupid— oh, I am going to put the hurt on him if he actually thought that weak-ass forest would take me more than a few days. Not even one message!"

"Well, it's not like you messaged him either," Astra pointed out.

"Wh— that's not— you— " May sputtered, red faced. She coughed, then fixed Astra with a glare. "Well I could say the same about you!" She accused.

"Hey, I didn't even know it could do that until yesterday!" Astra retorted, folding her arms. Apparently there was a certain number combination assigned to each pokedex, or phones in general. She didn't know why Brendan hadn't asked for hers. Did he not want it? She wished she had known enough to ask him for his. "I still don't really know how it works, and you've known about—" She hesitated, "Texting?— for forever. Don't pin this on me!"

"I— okay yeah, but— look you can't always just—" May struggled to find the words, gesticulating wildly with every failed retort. She huffed, blowing a stray bang out of her face. "Forget it," she grumbled, sliding to her feet. "I need some air."

Astra got to her feet as well, but paused, running the conversation back in her mind. Maybe she had been a bit too accusatory. It wasn't May's fault that Astra didn't know about phones, or that Brendan hadn't contacted May or gotten her own number. Still, someone had to reach out first, and Astra couldn't. She'd have to bring it up again in a bit, see about finally finding out where Brendan was.

May paused at the door long enough for Astra to catch up, then the two of them headed out into the sunshine. The sky above was free of clouds, save for a few wisps of white scattered about. People walked the streets, but despite the bright, sunny day, the atmosphere was one of barely concealed worry and anxiety, so thick that Astra could practically taste it.

A glance skyward revealed the cause: in the distance, an ugly dark yellow blotch stained the sky above the forest. Astra could barely see it from this far away, but even that small glimpse sent a shudder down her spine. They stared at it a moment more before May grunted and turned away. Astra followed after, fidgeting and consciously stopping herself from looking back.

"So, if we aren't watching those movies, what are we doing?" Astra asked, looking around at the various storefronts that littered the street.

"See the sights, pick some fights, grab some bites, say goodnight," May recited, shrugging. "The four rites of tourism. It's what I usually do when I move somewhere new. There's usually a special spot I try to visit first, unless the town we move to is landlocked. Fortunately," she said, smiling, "Rustboro happens to have one as well! Hung out there yesterday until the whole, uh, thing went down."

"Oh?" Astra asked, curious. "A special spot? What is it?"

"I think I'll keep it a surprise until we get there," May winked, grinning. "Trust me, it's pretty awesome. Just gotta get to the docks."

"The docks, huh?" Astra pondered the location. What could be at the docks? A boat, maybe? "Well," she began smiling back at May. "I look forward to it! It must be pretty special if you enjoy it that much."

"Of course it is!" May boasted, grinning right back. "I'm the one who's showing it to you, anything would be awesome if I'm there!"

The smell of salt filled the air as they neared the western side of the city, and the titanic golden towers of the Devon Corporation loomed ahead of them. Astra gazed at the gleaming spires in wonder. The largest house back home had been her own, carved into a cliffside as it was, and the skyscraper towered over both it and the trees, living up to its name aptly. How had humanity even built these behemoths? Was it stone or some other, more arcane material she couldn't even conceive of? Why did they even need something that tall?

May probably wouldn't be much help in that regard, Astra mused. If she couldn't even make a simple fire, Astra doubted she knew the specifics of building construction. Well, maybe she wasn't giving her enough credit. She had been at least mildly helpful with everything else so far, and this was a human building. Might as well ask.

"Hey," Astra said, catching Mays attention. "What are all these buildings made of, anyway? Back home it was all wood or stone."

May stared at her for a half-second, then rolled her eyes and snorted. "I really shouldn't even be surprised, and yet here I am," she muttered. "I think it's... concrete, glass, steel, and plaster?" she guessed, waving a hand at the tower.

Astra tilted her head. "What's concrete?"

"Fuck, I dunno! I think there's like, gravel? Maybe?" May hazarded. "I'm not a damn architect, Astra."

"Mm. Yeah, fair enough. Thanks!" It was more than she started with, at least. Another few things to find answers to. Maybe Brendan would know more? Astra eyed May speculatively. Speaking of...

"So!" she chimed, grinning. "Are you gonna text Brendan yet or not?"

May twitched, then shot a half-hearted glare at Astra. "He should be the one texting me," she muttered, and it sounded oddly petulant.

"I don't think he's going to," Astra observed. "I mean, he hasn't so far. I'd like to say that he will, but it's already been half a week and I want to see more movies!" She gave May an encouraging grin. "Come on, just ask him where he is already!"

"It's not that easy, you know," May grumbled, staring down at her pokedex. She hesitated. Typed out a sentence. Two. She paused, added a third, then scowled and deleted the whole thing.

Focusing intently, May typed out a new text. Her eyes flicked to the side, and she bit her lip. She added another. "Fuck, no, no. Just. Come on—" May growled, deleting it again.

Astra tilted her head. Was it really that hard? "If you're having trouble, maybe just say: 'Hey Brendan, me and our super cool friend Astra made it to Rustboro, are you here yet?'" she suggested, peeking at the blank screen.

May snatched the pokedex away, scowling at Astra. "I can't just say that, It has to be better! Something like... hm." Looking back at her pokedex, May tapped at it's buttons in a frenzy, pausing only to backtrack when she made a mistake.

"Hah!" she grinned, tapping it one last time. "That should do it! Now we just gotta wait."

"What did you send?" Astra asked, trying to see the screen again. "Let me see!"

"Nu-uh," May denied, holding the device just out of reach. "Only way you get to see my chat history is if—urk!"

A man ran straight between the pair, cutting May's declaration short and knocking the teen aside. "Out of the way, brats!" a familiar voice shouted.

"Oh no!" Astra exclaimed, rushing to Mays' side. "Are you okay?"

"I'm fine," May grunted, as Astra helped her to her feet. "Ass hurts a little, though. Hey, watch where you're going you— you!?"

Astra turned to look, then had to double take. Growing ever distant, the distinct blue form of the Aqua grunt from yesterday morning sprinted down the street, clutching something in his arms.

"That guy!?" Astra said, incredulous. "What's he doing here!?"

"Thief!" Another voice hollered, as if answering her question. "Scoundrel! Stop! Please! That is Devon property!"

From the Devon towers, another familiar figure dressed in a green suit hurtled down the street, screaming and moaning to the world. It was the portly employee Astra and May had met yesterday, and whom they had defended from the Aqua grunt.

"This guy too?" May said, bewildered. "Didn't we just deal with these two yesterday? What is going on?"

The Devon employee sprinted down the street, panting and wheezing. Looking up, he spotted Astra and May. Recognition and hope crossed his face in rapid succession, and he jogged up to them, gasping for air.

"You two!" he cried, red faced. "Thank goodness! Listen, that Aqua scoundrel snuck inside Devon headquarters and stole some extremely valuable property! All of the police are still investigating that damned blast site in the forest, they won't make it in time. Please, I need you to stop him!"

Astra grimaced at the man's pleading tone. It wasn't like she didn't want to help him; his desperation was evident enough, and there was precedent. But after all that she had gone through recently, she was sure she was straddling the knife's edge of 'normalcy'. Did she really want to go through even more trouble so soon?

On the other hand, she could literally feel the hope radiating off of him as he looked at them. They had beaten the grunt rather handily before, after all. Could she really look this man in the eye and tell him 'no', especially when she was the only one who could help?

Astra wavered for a heartbeat, then sighed and shared a glance with May. "Well, we did say we would kick their ass if they showed up again," she said, lightly.

"That's all the excuse I need." May slammed a fist into her palm and smirked. "Looks like this asshole needs to be reminded that nobody gets to shove me around and get away with it! COME ON, JACKASS, I'VE GOT A SHOE JUST BEGGING TO GET SHOVED DOWN YOUR THROAT!"

Whooping, May about faced and dashed down the street, chasing the Aqua thug with wild abandon. Astra followed close after, cloak billowing in the wind. "We'll get what he stole right back to you!" she called out to the Devon employee. "That's a promise!"

"Please be careful!" he shouted back, voice fading into the distance. "He's a menace!"

Rushing after the thug, Astra and May ducked and dodged around bewildered pedestrians and cyclists. The streets weren't so crowded as to be impassable, but more often than not Astra found herself wasting precious seconds darting around a surprised businessman. The Aqua grunt had no such preoccupations, shoving aside any who stood in his way.

"Keep your eyes peeled!" May ordered, spinning past a woman with an umbrella. "We need to keep on his trail even if he books it down a side street!"

"Look, he's slowing down a bit! I don't think he knows we're on to him yet," Astra said, huffing as the grunt made a hard left. "I don't know if he's going anywhere in particular. Does he have an escape route? Does he even have a plan?"

"Fuck if I know, but I'm not losing him!" May shouted, skidding around the corner. "Look, he's heading straight for a park! This is our chance!"

The park ahead was a generous plot of land covered with lush grass. Instead of trees, it dedicated most of its space to large playground equipment. It also happened to be mostly deserted. Free of pesky, obstructing pedestrians, Astra and May began to speed up, gradually catching up to the Aqua thief.

"Hey!" May yelled, catching the thug's attention. "Stop running, you coward!"

The grunt jerked, then threw a glance and a curse over his shoulder. "Shit, you two again!? Shove off, you brats! This briefcase is Team Aqua's now!" he yelled, clutching said briefcase closer to his chest.

"No way!" Astra rebuked with a glare. The briefcase again? What in the world was in that thing? Nothing this guy should have, that's for sure. "We know you stole it! We already beat you once; give it back or we'll pound you into the dirt again!"

"After all I went through to get this thing? Hell no, the Boss would keelhaul me!" The grunt shouted back, snarling. "And he's a hell of a lot scarier than you two! You'll have to pry it out of my hands, you snot nose little twerps!"

"You asked for it!" May roared, pulling a pokeball out of her bag. "Poochyena, take that guy down!"

Poochyena appeared in a flash of red light, already dashing ahead. The grunt took a quick look over his shoulder and the blood drained from his face. Fueled by terror, he burst into an all out sprint, outpacing the viciously barking dog by a hair's breadth.

Screams and shouts erupted from all sides as they burst out of the park and back into the sidewalk. Poochyena was giving it his all, barking up a most severe promise of pain and wrath, but, much to Astra's quiet, and May's very, very vocal consternation, the grunt seemed to be ever so slowly gaining ground.

He wasn't going to give up, was he? Astra narrowed her eyes, breathing labored. She couldn't keep this up for much longer, and even at a full speed, the grunt seemed to have no intention of slowing down. She exhaled. Fine. If he wasn't going to go down, she would just have to give him a little push. Concealing her hand in her robe, Astra reached out and—

"Oh, fuck this!" The grunt screamed, fumbling at his belt. "Zubat, use supersonic!"

Another flash of light revealed a small, wildly fluttering blue and purple creature with two wings, two narrow legs, large ears, no eyes, and a gaping mouth that took up half of its head. It flipped around and landed on its masters collar. Turning to Poochyena, the Zubat reared back and screamed.

Poochyena abruptly dropped, howling like mad, and a split second later the supremely high pitched shriek hit Astra. Pain erupted in her ears, and she cried out as the world tilted and swayed around her. The power in her hand backfired and recoiled inside her head as her concentration abruptly vanished.

Astra fell to the ground, clutching at her ears. May, too, had stopped in her tracks to protect her hearing from the sudden, shrieking onslaught.

"Hah!" The Aqua grunt jeered, sprinting away from the scene. "That'll teach you to mess with Team Aqua!"

"Mother... fucker..." May grunted, taking a few wavering steps forward before stumbling. Astra was no better herself, barely able to stay upright at all. "Bastard! If the world could just stop fucking spinning—"

"What the?" someone said. A figure rode onto the scene, the sound of a bike chain rattling as he pulled up next to them. "May? Astra? Holy crap, are you guys alright?"

Astra looked up in surprise, trying to focus past the ringing in her ears. That voice... "Brendan!?" she gasped, eyes wide. "What are you doing here?"

Dismounting his bike, Brendan hurried over to their side. The black haired boy looked the same as back in Petalburg, sporting a red and black shirt, a white and green hat, and, most strikingly, a pair of shorts over a pair of pants. "You guys left a three block long panic in your wake, I was just following it. Then that screech— never mind that, are you hurt? When did you guys even get here?" he said, offering Astra a hand.

"I'm just... a little dizzy," Astra managed, taking his hand. He pulled her to her feet and Astra kept her head down, briefly rechecking that her face looked right. She shook her head, then grinned at him. "Still... wearing the double pants... I see?" she mumbled, swaying.

"Is that really what you should be focusing on right now?" Brendan asked, annoyance mixing with worry. "What happened?"

"Oh, now you show up," May spat, shaking her head and blinking. She scowled. "We're fine, but that bastard's getting away. Brendan!"

"Eh?" Brendan looked up, staring at her owlishly. "What?"

"That Aqua jackass just shot out our ears!" May snapped, pointing at a dwindling point of azure speeding into the distance, a winding path of shoved-aside pedestrians trailing in his wake. "At this rate he's gonna get away with it scott free! Get on your bike and go after him!"

"You were attacked?" His eyes widened, then narrowed. "Aqua? The environmental group? Why would they—?"

"They stole something from Devon!" Astra burst out, pushing Brendan towards his ride. "He tried to attack us yesterday for it too! You have to catch him!"

Brendan still looked unsure, but a spark of determination lit up in his eyes. "Alright then. You two better explain this later, though." Jumping on his bike, Brendan about faced towards the direction the grunt had left, then hesitated. He looked back. "You should phone the police, or at least a medic!" he called, pumping on the petals. "I'll keep track of him, okay?"

Astra shook her head, shaking off the last of the dizziness. "No way! We'll be right behind you, Brendan, don't let him get away!"

"You better fucking talk to me this time, asshole!" May yelled, flipping him off. "Keep us updated, and save some ass kicking for the rest of us!"

Astra and May watched Brendan speed after the Aqua goon, a clearly exasperated wave of the hand his only response. Astra sighed, rubbing at her head. "Good idea. He's a lot faster on his bike than we are running, he'll probably catch up real fast, though I don't know how well he'll do in slowing him down once he does. I can't believe he showed up now, of all times."

"Yeah, whatever," May muttered, jogging over to pick up her dispirited Poochyena. "Good try, little buddy. You'll get him next time."

Poochyena whined, then licked May's face in apology. May sputtered, letting out a small chuckle as she wiped drool from her face. "Alright, in you go." A flash of light, and Poochyena vanished.

May turned to Astra and jerked her head to the side. "Come on, let's get going," she said, glancing at the whispering onlookers. "At the speed he was going, Brendan's probably already caught up to the guy. We've got a dumbass to beat to a pulp, and I don't trust Brendan to not get his Mudkip eaten by that guys Poochyena."

"Right, right, I'm just..." Astra took one hesitant step, then jogged forward, catching up to May. "Yeah. I'm good. Let's go."

Pushing past the pedestrians, the two of them jogged in the direction they had seen Brendan and the thug vanish. Approaching the street they had last caught sight of them, they slowed down, unsure where they had gone. A minute passed as they dithered, then Astra and May jumped as a ringing sound came from May's bag.

Opening her bag, May took out her pokedex, hesitating only a moment before hitting a button and lifting it to her ear. "Brendan?" she asked, tapping her foot. "Did you get him? Where are you?"

Astra blinked in surprise as a voice came crackling from the device. Was this a 'Phone Call'? So it was like talking but over long distances. Sort of like telepathy, in that you didn't need to be near the recipient in order to talk to them. The range was surprising; Brendan had to be ages away by now. How did it reach all the way? It was also, to Astra's frustration, too quiet to hear from where she was.

May's foot stopped, her scowl deepening in response to the voice on the other end. "Tch, figures. Right, we're coming after you. Don't go getting beaten before I can do it, got me?" Pulling the Pokedex away, May turned back to Astra, irritated. "Bastard stole someone's bike when he saw Brendan coming, but Brendan's still on his ass."

Astra frowned. "Well, that's bad. We need to stop him before he does anything else. Did Brendan say where they were going?"

"Yeah. Asshole's booking it towards the mountains. Shouldn't take too long to get there if we jog." Examining the street signs, May jerked her head down the road. "Few more blocks then gotta turn east. Time to head down Route 116."



Route 116 wasn't much different from the last parts of Route 104. Trees lined both sides of the packed dirt road, through which tall grass made valiant efforts to reclaim precious soil. None of it was particularly unusual, considering it was more or less part of the same woodlands.

Astra and May jogged down the path, huffing as they went. Astra took out her water bottle and chugged, sweat dripping down her face. She was very much not cut out for this. Walking she could handle just fine. That mad sprint earlier followed by non stop jogging? Completely different beast. Couldn't the mountains have been closer to the city? She gasped as she came up for air, wiping her sleeve across her face and leaving it horribly damp.

Black, she had discovered, was very good at absorbing the light of the sun. And its heat. Very definitely its heat. Why hadn't she listened to the Guard so long ago? At least she could still psychically billow her cloak for some air flow, but May's presence made it a much trickier task.

Astra glanced at her companion, who seemed to be taking the ordeal somewhat better than Astra was. Sweat still beaded down May's face, but it was set in determination rather than Astra's own exhaustion. Still, even May seemed to be flagging a bit.

Jogging a bit closer, Astra poked May in the side. "Hey," she said, offering her the bottle.

May blinked, then nodded, taking the bottle and drinking deeply. She exhaled, handing the significantly lighter bottle back. "Thanks."

"Yeah. How much further is it, do you think?"

"Dunno," May answered, peering at the mountain ahead. "Maybe another ten minutes?"

Not too bad, then. She could hold out that long. She took a deep breath, pace steadying out. Hopefully Brendan and their target were at the base of the mountain, and they wouldn't need to sprint somewhere else. Silence descended on the pair, Astra too tired and May too focused to talk.

Up ahead, a shape formed on the horizon. Astra blinked as she made out a small figure dashing for their life down the road. It soon resolved into a small girl, wailing in despair.

"What the hell is it now?" May groused, glaring at the girl. "We're behind enough as is."

"Hey!" Astra called out, stopping to catch her breath, May reluctantly coming to a halt as well. "Is something wrong?"

The girl ignored Astra, blasting past them in a tear filled blur. "I DON'T WANNA GET EATEN BY BUUHUUUHUUUGS!" she howled, vanishing into the distance.

Astra and May stared at the dwindling dust cloud, bewildered. They looked at each other.

"Did you understand that at all?" May asked, waving a hand in the girls direction.

"Not really?" Astra said, shrugging. "It wasn't very coherent." She paused as something at the edge of her hearing began to buzz. "Wait, do you hear something?"

"No? What is it?"

"I dunno, it sounds like those lights back at the Pokecenter—oh." Astra stopped as the buzzing grew louder, staring at the road ahead with wide eyes. "Oh no."

"Eh?" May said, blinking. "What's—oh shit."

On the road ahead, a dozen insectile forms scuttled angrily down the dirt path, white carapaces gleaming in the sun. Black and green eyes glared balefully up at them, and their stunted wings buzzed with enough force to drown the air in sheer noise.

"Nincada swarm!" Astra bellowed, fumbling for a pokeball. The foot-tall insects had rarely traveled south enough to bother Astra's village, but on rare occasions a great swarm would crawl in from the north and try to devour the entire garden. Psychic assaults had been workable, but another strategy had proven to be far more effective.

After all, everyone knew that Nincada couldn't swim.

"NINCADA-CADA-CADA-CADA-CADA!" the Nincada screeched, fury thrumming through every word. "CADA-CADA-CADA-CADA-CADA—!"

"Marill," Astra called, tossing her ball into the air. "Water gun! Drown them all!"

"Marill ma—Mar!?" Marill appeared then recoiled, shocked at the sight of so many Nincada. Shaking her head, she heeded Astra's command and swelled up, then blasted a pressurized stream of water down the trail.

The great chorus cut off as a Nincada took the hit head on, crumpling under the blow and crashing into the Nincada behind them. The two fell to the ground in a clump, thoroughly soaked. Their limbs twitched, struggling limply before falling inert. Marill let out a whoop in celebration, then prepared to fire once more. A moment later, Lotad appeared next to her, blinking at the oncoming horde.

"Just one hit? Hah!" May sniffed, grinning. "Don't even need to worry, this'll be a piece of cake! Lotad, blast them to smithereens!"

"Tad!" Lotad warked, adding her own blast of water to the mix and forcing another Nincada to fall.

The two water pokemon fired rapidly down the trail, four more falling to the onslaught. One Nincada, larger than the others, let out a rallying cry as the remaining five closed into melee range. They split apart, two Nincada diving for Lotad and the larger one leading the last two in a charge against Marill.

Astra grimaced. She had hoped that Marill would have gotten them all before they closed into melee. She'd seen the sorts of injuries Nincada had left on the village guards, and she'd wanted to spare Marill from that. If Marill could just ward them off for a bit...

"Tail whip!" Astra ordered. "Don't let them get too close!"

Marill whirled around, tail neatly smacking one of the small Nincada and sending it flying into a tree. The other two, furious and undeterred, descended on Marill, claws raking a multitude of shallow gouges across her sides. Marill screeched in pain and anger, spinning around and blasting the smaller Nincada in the face. The insect rocketed into a tree and fell to the ground with a wet thump.

"NINCADA!" The large Nincada roared, flaring its stunted wings. It jumped on Marill, claws scoring marks into her head as it furiously slashed away.

"Ah!? Throw him off, Marill!" Astra yelled, wide eyed. Stop, drop, and roll!

Curling into a ball, Marill spun forward, crushing the surprised Nincada between herself and the ground. The Nincada released its hold and fell, twitching as it lay on the packed earth. Suddenly it flipped over, glaring daggers at Marill. An eerie calm overcame its eyes, fiery rage transitioning into cold calculation.

Astra blinked, surprised. This was one tough bug. Nincada weren't usually this stubborn. "Finish it off with a water gun!" She bellowed, pointing at the defiant insect.

Marill swelled, but before she could fire, the Nincada quickly bit into the earth and then spat. A glob of brown shot through the air and hit Marill directly in the left eye. Marill cried out in pain, water spilling onto the dirt as her stubby arms wiped frantically at her injured eye.

"What!?" Astra said, shocked. Had it just shot a wad of mud into Marill's eye? What a sneaky little bug. She tensed as light flashed in the Nincada's eyes. "Come on, Marill!" Astra called, focusing. "Don't let this bug get the better of you!" Roll left and fire!

Marill growled, scraping away the last of the mud off. Though her injured eye was free of debris, Marill kept it closed. Curling up on herself, Marill pushed, sending herself barreling to the side. At the same time, the Nincada reared back and leapt forward—directly to Marill's left!? "Marill, wait!" Astra shouted, panicked. "It's already—!"

Marill had uncurled, already preparing her water gun. The water caught in her throat when she saw Nincada already descending upon her. She recoiled, half-formed water gun falling apart once more in an alarmed gurgle as Nincada's claw slashed down.

Pain.

And then Marill screamed. A red line opened across her remaining eye, trickling crimson down her cheek. She clutched at the wound and fell to the ground, rolling around in agony.

"Marill!" Astra exclaimed, reeling back as the pain surged along the psychic link. "No no no— return!" Red light flashed, and Marill's cries were mercifully cut short. Astra stared at the pokeball, grimacing.

To her side, the duo of Nincada facing May's Lotad had finally been vanquished in an aquatic beatdown. May glanced over at Astra's battle, then cringed. "Holy shit," she muttered, wincing at the brief glimpse she had seen. "That looked really bad. How the hell are you getting bodied this badly?"

"I don't know," Astra growled, glaring at the Nincada. The insect stared back, eyes gleaming and claws raised. "But I'm putting an end to it. Slakoth," she said, her newest teammate coalescing onto the trail in yet another burst of light. "Let's go!"

"Sla?" Slakoth blinked, taking in the Nincada before him. He gave it a lopsided grin. "Slaa..."

The Nincada seemed to take offence to that. Buzzing furiously, the insect darted forward, claws poised to strike—

"Rock tomb," Astra said, flatly.

—only to stumble and shriek as a quintet of rocky needles erupted from the ground, piercing its chitin and pinning it in place. The Nincada wriggled furiously inside its stone prison, chittering furiously.

"Nincada! Cada-cada-cada-cada-cada—!"

"Slakoth?" Astra asked, sweetly.

"Sla?" he responded, giving his trainer an expectant stare.

"Throw it through a tree."

Slakoth grinned. "Koth!"

The Nincada stilled as Slakoth meandered up to the spiky prison. Beady eyes widened in alarm as Slakoth's paw descended. "Cada!?"

"Slak." Slakoth grinned, and then there was a light crunch as his hand closed around the Nincada's back, breaking the stone needles with casual ease. Nincada struggled against Slakoth's grip, legs clawing frantically at thin air.

"Nincada!" it said, head swiveling violently, searching for any possible salvation. Its eyes alighted upon its fellow Nincada scattered upon the ground like refuse and it paused, all hope draining from its eyes. "Cada?"

"Koth." Slakoth agreed, winding back.

Slakoth eyed a tree near the trail, wound up, and threw. Nincada screamed, wings flaring uselessly. The bark crunched as the insect collided with the trunk, and myriad cracks burst open along Nincada's back. Nincada let out a mournful croak, then fell to the ground, twitching.

Astra glared at the Nincada for a moment, then sighed. "Good job, Slakoth," she said, raising his pokeball. Slakoth gave her a wide smile as he vanished into his pokeball.

"Well, that happened." May said, looking around at the scattered bodies. She frowned as one of them jerked upright, but relaxed when it merely looked around woozily and stumbled off into the forest. "What the hell set them off?"

"I'm not sure," Astra admitted, turning back to the road. "Maybe that girl earlier...?"

"No way," May disagreed, shaking her head. "With the way she was squawking, that kid never would've messed with a bunch of Nincada. Maybe it was that Aqua jerk? But how would he make a bunch of bugs riot if he was running from Brendan?"

"I don't know," Astra said, starting down the road again. "But we'd better hurry. If something happened—"

"Nin... cada..." A raspy voice called out from behind them. Both trainers whirled around in shock, staring at the large Nincada. Said bug had struggled to its feet, and even now was limping towards them, breath rattling with every shaking step.

"How the hell is it still moving?" May grimaced, eyeing the large rends in its back.

"Why is it still moving!?" Astra demanded, throwing her hands up in exasperation. "It should've been knocked out twice over from that! Why does it... huh?" Astra paused, staring at the Nincada. The white hot rage and icy fury it had radiated earlier had vanished. In its place was stubborn determination, respect, and... something.

Struggling onward, the Nincada came to a stop a short distance away from the two of them. It appeared to study Astra for a moment, before nodding its head and... knelt?

Astra stared at the Nincada. There really was no other word for it: it had folded its front legs under it, closed its eyes, and then leaned forward, dipping its head down. It was kneeling. Why?

"Nincada," It rasped, syllables coming out between harsh gasps for air. "Cada-cada-cada nin."

Puzzled, Astra brushed against the bug's mind, searching for an explanation.

Submission.

Ah. Well then.

"I think," Astra started, slowly, "That it wants to join me."

"Yeah, guess so." May said, considering the bug. She frowned. "Not a fan of bugs, personally, and these guys seemed pretty fragile. Gonna go for it?"

Astra hummed, considering Nincada in a new light. "He didn't seem weak at all." she mused, thinking aloud. "He was smart enough to target Marill's weak points and fast enough to actually hit them when it mattered—"

"Okay, yeah, fantastic," May interrupted, brushing Astra's monologue aside. "Just toss a ball and let's go. We're in a hurry, remember?"

"You're the one that asked," Astra muttered, fumbling for an empty pokeball. "Yeah, got it. As for you," she said, staring at the Nincada. "I don't like you. But you're good, and I suppose that's enough."

Nincada looked up, antennae twitching. Its eyes flickered from the pokeball to Astra. If it could have smiled, Astra got the feeling it would have.

"Nincada," it intoned, oddly formal. It bowed again, and then vanished into red light. The pokeball fell to the ground, wobbled thrice, and then fell still with a chime. Astra picked it up and stuffed it into her bag. She'd have to sort it out later.

For now, they had to catch up to Brendan, and catch the Aqua thief. She grimaced. Not having Marill would be a major hindrance, and while Slakoth did well, she hadn't yet tested him in a full scale battle yet. She shook her head, going to May's side and returning to their journey. No use worrying now. After all, Treecko was still completely fresh; so long as she had him, there wasn't anything that could stand in her way.

"Hey," May began as they ramped up to jogging speed again. "Weren't you complaining like, two days ago about not finding anything to catch?"

Astra huffed, already feeling her legs straining once again. She glanced at May. "Yeah? What about it?"

May grinned. "With all these pokemon basically falling into your lap, I guess you'll never have to bug me about it again, huh?"

To her astonishment, Astra found she still had enough air in her lungs to groan. "You're terrible, you know that?

"Haha!"



Chapter was getting way too long so I cut the front third off. God, the anxiety never really gets better.

Sorry about the delay. Next one will definately be called Cacophony. It has roughly 10-11k already done. I anticipate a few more thousand yet to go.

Please enjoy. And tell me what you think.
 
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Hyphen 23 - Cacophony
Hyphen 23

Cacophony



The base of the mountain came into view six minutes later, and it took half that time to finally reach it. Astra took deep, gasping breaths as she and May finally began to slow down. Never again, she vowed as she slogged through the final mile, legs feeling like jelly. Never. Again.

The mountain in front of them speared into the sky, the odd bush or tree the only break in the uniformly reddish-tan stone. Relatively boring, but behind it loomed Mt. Chimney, a smoking beacon that dwarfed the mountain before her, taller than anything Astra had ever imagined. She had only ever seen the landmark from the few times she had climbed to the top of the village's canopy, or more recently from a few vantage points in her travels. The smoke constantly flowing from the largest peak was a mystery to her. How could a mountain smoke? Was it on fire? But how could you set a rock on fire?

Whatever the reason, it had always been too far away to tell, and the smoke always seemed to billow to the north. But from this distance she could see the row of successively smaller peaks trailing southward, leading to the smaller mountain directly before them.

Route 116 ran up against the mountain, leading up to a large opening in the steep rock edifice. A tunnel through the mountain, it seemed, though Astra couldn't see the far end. Absently, she wondered how long it would take to pass through. Off to the side was a small lodge with piles of what Astra assumed was mining equipment lined up against the walls, alongside a couple bicycles.

Standing around the lodge were about a half dozen burly looking workers. They were gathered together, glancing at the tunnel mouth occasionally and muttering to each other in low tones. And sitting at a large table next to them—

"Brendan!" Astra exclaimed, exhaling sharply in relief. "You're okay!"

Brendan, who had been quietly conversing with a forlorn looking old man, looked up and grinned. "Guys!" he called, standing up and beckoning them over. "Glad you caught up in time. Things are getting serious."

Astra and May staggered through the last few yards, and Astra took a moment to examine the old man. The first thing she noticed was the strong scent of salt, strongly reminding her of the beach. His head was bald and shiny, contrasted by the full white beard and moustache coating the bottom of his face. His face was marked by a swathe of oddly colored spots, laugh lines and crinkles around his eyes. He also looked to have been crying recently, and still seemed to be on the verge of tears.

Brendan, on the other hand, looked like he had been dragged through a bush. His clothes were dishevelled, and he looked to have gained a few scrapes and cuts at some point. Had the Aqua grunt attacked him? Actually, where was he? Astra glanced about, but couldn't spot the telltale flash of blue. What happened here?

"Who's this old dude?" May asked between gasping breaths.

"What do— ah," Brendan started, then blinked. "Right. Just moved. This is Mr. Briney. He's a well known sailor, so much so that practically everyone in Hoenn knows him."

"What's a sailor?" Astra asked, tilting her head. Brendan gave her an incredulous look.

"He travels on a boat a lot," May answered absently. "Okay so why's he looking like his pet died?" She looked around, frowning. "And where's that Aqua jackass? Did he get away?"

Mr. Briney abruptly burst into tears. "Peeko!" he wailed, clutching his hands together and crumpling in on himself. "My darling Peeko! Oh, please be safe..."

"Oh jeez, hey, hey now, don't worry," Brendan said, patting Briney on the shoulder. "He'll be just fine. Me and my friends are gonna go in there and rescue him, alright?"

'Oh, will you?" Mr. Briney sniffed, looking up at Brendan with shining eyes. "Please hurry. Peeko is my dearest friend in this world. Oh..."

"Peeko?" Astra asked.

"Mr Briney's pet Wingull," Brendan answered, patting Mr. Briney on the shoulder once more. He stood up, jerking his head toward the mountain tunnel. "Come on, I'll explain on the way. The thief is still in the tunnel."

"The tunnel?" Astra asked as the three of them started towards the cavernous opening. "Don't tunnels lead somewhere? Why hasn't he left?"

"Rusturf Tunnel is supposed to lead to Verdanturf Town, but you know that huge explosion yesterday?" Brendan asked. "Apparently the aftershocks were enough to destabilize some of the support structure inside, so there was a big cave in right in the middle. Whole passage is blocked off by a giant pile of rubble. Those workers were called in to clear it, though apparently it's slow going."

Astra winced at the reminder of her escapade. Was this her fault too? "Was anyone... inside?" she asked, afraid of the answer.

Brendan hesitated. "I didn't hear anything about it, so I don't think there was."

Astra exhaled, a weight lifting off her shoulders. "Good." she said, relief in her voice. At least she hadn't hurt anyone.

The workers nodded to them as they passed. "Good luck in there," one said, folding his arms. "But try to keep it quiet, alright? We don't need more trouble than we've already got."

"We'll try," Brendan said, nodding back. "Thanks for the info."

May examined the tunnel ahead, ignoring the well wishes of the laborers. "So when the dumbass ran in, he didn't know it was a dead end..." She said, a grin spreading across her face. "He's trapped himself. Fish in a barrel."

"Fish in a— huh?" Astra blinked, confused. What kind of expression was that? "Okay. Well, at least he can't run away anymore. Now we just need to get that briefcase out of his hands, and..." Astra hesitated. "Rescue Peeko? Is he in the tunnel? Why?"

"That'd be the fault of our target," Brendan said, sounding grim. "I caught up to him when the workers tried to stop him from going into the cave. I wasn't able to take him down, however; he used his Zubat to supersonic the entire camp and took Peeko hostage in the confusion. The noise drew a whole horde of Nincada out of the woods too. I had to deal with the swarm before they could hurt anyone, but they whittled me down to Mudkip in the process. The Aqua member hightailed it into Rusturf Tunnel while I was distracted."

"So that's where they came from." Astra mused. "We fought a dozen of them on the way here. They were chasing some girl."

Brendan shrugged. "I don't know about any girl, but I think I did pass someone on the way. That might've been her."

"I'm just happy we can finally kick this bastard's ass once and for all," May said, grinning. "He's been giving us the slip for way too long."

"Just be careful," Brendan warned as they entered the mouth of the passage side by side. "There's an entire colony of Whismur inhabiting the burrows here. We have to be quiet or there'll be an uproar."

The air turned chilly past the threshold, and soon the dim artificial lighting from the tunnels' sparse lanterns were all that illuminated the dark. The tunnel seemed to curve south, leaving them with only a few yards of sight. At least it wasn't super cramped; Astra could fit about two and a half of herself laid out lengthwise from wall to wall. Though if a fight broke out she doubted that they could have more than a few pokemon out without running into problems.

Astra gazed at the tunnel walls, the enclosed atmosphere reminding her strongly of home. The walls were startlingly barren, aside from the frequent man-made structures reinforcing the stability of the rock. Her Grandpa would love to work on such an expansive new canvas.

"What's a Whismur?" she asked, turning back to Brendan.

"A normal type pokemon, average of two feet tall with a spherical body plan, stubby arms, large, padded feet and two giant ears folded over its head." Brendan responded, reciting the information stoically. "Mauve with yellow highlights, eyes consist of two sets of four lines arranged in a plus sign."

"Did you like, memorize a textbook?" May asked, glancing at Brendan. "No really, did you actually sit down and reread one enough that you can just spout lines off it verbatim?"

That was an interesting shade of red Brendan was turning, Astra noted. "What's a textbook?" she asked, turning to May. "Is it different from a regular book?"

"Anyway," May continued, ignoring Astra's question and Brendan's confused doubletake, "Doesn't sound like too much of a problem. Just some purple puffballs, right? Even if they get a little mad, we can deal with it no problem!"

Brendan gave her a flat look. "When Whismur get scared, and they scare very easily, they scream loud enough to rupture eardrums."

May and Astra stopped, staring at Brendan with wide eyes. He stared back, eyes lidded.

"Ah," Astra said, after a moment. "That sounds... bad."

"You couldn't have mentioned that before we went inside?" May quietly hissed, glancing warily at the looming darkness.

"Maybe you'd know if you looked in a textbook," Brendan huffed, folding his arms.

"If you got one on you I can smack you with it."

"I still don't know what that is!" Astra complained.

"And that is very concerning!" Brendan exclaimed, his voice suddenly breaking the hushed silence the three had fallen into. He looked at Astra, worriedly. "When you say that, what exactly—"

"Whismur?"

Everyone froze. All eyes turned toward the newcomer. A Whismur had stumbled out of an unseen side tunnel around the corner and was now staring at them. Brendan, Astra noted, had described it rather accurately. Even the really absurd looking eyes. It shied back, trembling as three sets of eyes abruptly turned its way.

"W-whis..." It whimpered, then darted behind a wooden support pillar. It peeked out after a moment, then shrank back again when it saw them still looking at it.

Astra held up her hands and backed up a few steps, which seemed to help with the large amount of distress she could sense from the creature. "Brendan," she asked, keeping an eye on the Whismur (which had, alarmingly, started to cry a bit if the wet sniffles were any indication.) "Are they really as bad as you said?"

"I was exaggerating," he admitted in a whisper, also sidling towards the wall. "But it's not pleasant. And if there are any more, it really can get that bad."

"Fantastic, at least I'll only be mostly deaf," May muttered. "How the hell did that other guy— whatever. I doubt it wants to fight, so let's just slide around it. It's only like, what, thirty yards? Easy."

May backed against the far wall and began to sidestep down the corridor, Brendan and Astra following suit. Astra skidded along awkwardly, her hat making it harder than expected to keep flat against the wall. If she were alone it would be a simple matter to just teleport down the hall, but that wasn't an option right now. She couldn't even risk trying to talk. With the way it was practically radiating fear, who knew what it would do if she spoke up?

Probably scream. Not ideal.

That said, it was well on its way to doing that already. The poor thing was basically frozen in place, and a low keening sound had replaced the sound of sniffling, growing louder with each step they took. Was it... whistling?

"This isn't working," May growled, coming to a stop. "We've only moved ten yards and it's already starting to sound like my damn tea kettle. How do these things function? We're not even doing anything!"

Brendan frowned. "The collapse yesterday must have the whole nest on edge. They're sensitive, but not this much. Not normally. The Aqua member barging through with a frantic Wingull in hand probably exacerbated the issue." He paused, then gave May a strange look. "You drink tea?"

"Oh my, yes," May drawled, her voice suddenly taking on a strange, airy inflection Astra couldn't place. "I just love to put a kettle of vintage Oddish blend on in the morning, really start the day off right you know is now the fucking time? Astra," May said, turning to the smaller girl. "Can't you like, music this guy asleep or something?"

Astra shook her head. "I left my violin at the hotel. I don't think I'd know how to do that, anyway?" She thought about what she'd practiced so far. Most of it had been battle songs, and improvised ones at that. She'd have to review the sheet music Trevor had gifted her. "Sorry."

"Damn. Brendan, any ideas?" May asked. "Cause all I've got is to try knocking it unconscious before it blows out my ears."

"Woah, no need for that." Brendan said, raising his hands up. He hesitated. "Well, there is one thing, maybe. I remembered something when you asked about music. Loudred—Whismur's evolution—usually sing to their children to lull them to sleep or calm them down, so..."

"You're going to sing?" Astra asked, surprised. "I didn't know you could sing."

"It's not singing," he clarified, "Just—humming, really."

"Well get on with it before it decides to blow," May said, jerking her head towards the still whistling Whismur.

Brendan sighed, then gave a single nod. Taking a step forward, he kneeled down, closed his eyes, and began to hum. It was a simple melody, but the sound echoed strangely, giving it an unexpected reverb.

The Whismur poked its head out, its kettle-like wailing having quieted to a mere sniffle. Brendan kept humming, and after a moment of hesitation the Whismur padded closer, examining him curiously. Then it began to whistle again and Astra braced for an explosion of noise.

But it never came. Instead, Whismur lifted its ears off its head, and it began to play what sounded like bird-song from two small holes in its scalp. The tune warbled, its player unfamiliar with the melody, and yet even its fumbling attempt lent Brendan's humming an air of eerie wistfulness in the echoing tunnel.

"It's... singing with you?" May asked, surprised. "Wow. That's... adorable."

"I kinda wanna hug it," Astra admitted, peeling herself off the wall to get a better look. She pointed at the now swaying Whismur, grinning cheerfully. "Look at its ears moving about! Ah, I bet it's soft!"

"Down, girl. No provoking the supersonic puffball."

"Aw," Astra pouted, listening to the song. It was pretty good, and Whismur used the echoing tunnel to great effect. Very relaxing, almost enough... to...

Astra yawned, then blinked and shook herself awake. She must've been more exhausted from the run than she thought. "Wish I had brought my violin," she said, "I would've liked to play along."

Brendan shot them a glance and rolled his eyes. Eventually his little tune came to an end, and a moment later so did the Whismur's whistling. It had come within inches of Brendan at this point, and looked up at him happily.

"Whismur wis!" It said, waiving it's stubby arms. That was fun! Astra mentally translated. She smiled; it seemed the danger had passed, for now.

"Hey there, uh," Brendan examined the Whismur for a moment, then smiled. "Hey girl. Sorry about the scare, we're just trying to find someone else who came through earlier."

Whismur suddenly shrank back, anxiety springing up in full force. Brendan frowned. "Did you cross paths with him? Did he do something scary or hurt you?" His face darkened as the Whismur nodded to both of his questions. "Well, me and my friends over there are trying to make him leave the tunnels. I'm sure you and your family would like that, right?"

Whismur perked up at his words, and nodded frantically. Or, Astra assumed so; Whismur didn't have a neck, so this movement consisted mostly of her rocking back and forth a few times.

"Whismur whis!" the Whismur said, pleadingly.

"We'll do our best, then!" Brendan agreed. "Can you show us where he went?"

Whismur hesitated, but an encouraging smile from Brendan seemed to set her nerves at ease. "Whismur!" she chirped, then turned and walked down the tunnel, turning back to see if they were following. "Whis!" she called, urging them on.

May squinted at Whismur, then at Brendan. She blinked. "Did you just turn the sound mine into our tour guide?"

"Seems so," Brendan said with a grin. "Pretty cool, huh?"

"That was really cool!" Astra agreed, giving Brendan a thumbs-up. "Good job!".

May shrugged. "It was alright."

Astra looked at May, confused. "Only alright? He just saved us a lot of trouble!"

"He only hummed, it wasn't that impressive," May defended. "I could've done that."

"But you didn't!"

"Guys, guys, it's fine," Brendan interjected. He motioned to the tunnel. "We have other things to worry about, right?"

The two girls glanced at each other, then looked at Brendan and nodded. "Right," they chorused.

Brendan grinned, and turned back to Whismur. "Lead on, little buddy," he said.

Whismur chirped and about-faced, trotting down the narrow passageway. Only a few steps behind, three trainers followed her into the darkness. Whismur began whistling cheerfully, a sort of meandering tune with no greater structure resounding through the tunnel.

"Is she... supposed to be doing that?" May asked, glancing from Whismur to Brendan. "I thought we were trying to be quiet?"

"Well, we were, but this is her home, so... I'd say she can do whatever she wants?" Brendan replied, shrugging.

"I guess."

Something moved in the corner of Astra's vision. She turned, and saw a small side passage in the rock wall. In it, another Whismur was lurking in the shadows, turning to track them as they went. Astra stared back, a little unsettled. It tilted its head, listening to the whistle from its cousin.

Then it smiled, and waved. "Whis," it said, barely audible even in the silence.

Astra stared at it for a moment, then hesitantly waved back. The Whismur smiled even wider, and then vanished as the tunnel passed from view

But then a sharp curse made Astra look in May's direction. She was looking at another side passage, with two Whismurs inside. The Whismur stared at the group, waved, and then disappeared as the side passage fell behind.

Soon enough, another side tunnel appeared with three Whismur within. Then five. And then a dozen or more, watching from hidden alcoves, quiet susurrations filling the air as the group passed by.

"Is anyone else starting to get creeped out?" May asked, eyeing yet another passageway nervously. Several pairs of cross-split eyes stared back, unblinking.

"They were cute at first, but now..." Astra trailed off, shuffling toward the middle of the tunnel.

"It's okay, this is—everything is fine," Brendan said, though even he was glancing about warily. "People pass through here all the time. They're probably just making sure we're not here to cause any more trouble."

Were they? Astra glanced at yet another tunnel full of staring Whismur. Why were they all gathering here? Was it their tour guide's whistling? What did it mean? Frowning, Astra reached out and gently brushed against the Whismurs' surface thoughts.

New friends! Aid! Expel Noisemaker. Hungry. Brother sleeping! Sing!

The contents rushed into Astra's mind, and she blinked as she processed the concepts within. Huh. So their Whismur was just alerting all the other Whismur that Astra and the others were here to help? Thoughtful of her. Though, who was 'Brother'?

Astra abruptly noticed that the whistling had stopped. She blinked, refocusing on the situation. The Whismur they had been following had frozen, staring into the intermittently lit tunnel ahead. Astra looked around. The Whismurs that had been not-so-stealthily following them had fallen back, now cowering in various corners.

"What's going on?" Astra began to ask, but Brendan held up a finger and made a shushing sound.

"Listen," he said, frowning.

Astra listened. Echoing softly from further down the tunnel, the faint sound of grinding stones and cursing could be heard, along with the mournful squawks of a bird. Her eyes narrowed. That sound was coming from just around the bend.

"That must be him," she said. "Peeko too."

"So it seems," Brendan agreed. He turned to their guide, patting the Whismur on the head. Whismur sniffed and looked up at him. He grinned. "Thanks for bringing us this far. We'll take it from here. Stay safe, alright?"

Whismur sniffed again, then hugged Brendan's leg. He blinked in surprise, then smiled and patted Whismur once more. Releasing her grip, the Whismur backed up. "Whismur!" she said, giving him one last worried look. Good luck. Then she bounded away, to wait alongside the other Whismur.

Turning back, Brendan retrieved a pokeball and turned at May and Astra. "Right," he said. "Let's do this. Come on out, Mudkip!"

"Just what I wanted to hear," May said, grinning. "Let's go, Torchic!"

"Rise and shine, Treecko!" Astra called, tossing her own into the air. "We've got a bird to rescue!"

Three flashes of light heralded each trainer's closest companion. They looked around curiously, and Torchic squawked at the horde of Whismur lurking in the shadows. Mudkip and Treecko looked similarly unsettled, but when the Whismur made no motion to attack they relaxed and looked to their trainers for instruction.

Astra, May, and Brendan looked at each other one last time, nodded in unison, and began to walk, pokemon trailing close behind. The faint cursing grew louder and louder, as did the squawking of a panicked bird. A small barricade came into view, presumably set up to discourage any curious Whismur that wandered near. It was made of solid wood panelling that covered the entire tunnel, and bright light shone from under the door.

Astra grimaced at the frantic despair audible in the voice of the Wingull. It clearly was not happy about its separation. The man inside didn't seem too thrilled either.

"Wingull! Wingull wingull gull gull wing—!" Peeko cried out, muffled wing flaps beating against something hard and unyielding.

"Would you shut up, you stupid bird!?" A voice inside yelled, and there was the sharp clang of a foot hitting metal. Peeko yelped, then fell silent.

All three trainers narrowed their eyes, but it was May that took action. "So you wanna make some noise, bastard?" she said, striding up to the door. She lined herself up, raised a foot, and grinned.

"Then let's get this party started."

May kicked, and the door crashed open. Everyone rushed inside, with Treecko, Torchic, and Mudkip taking the lead.

"Let that Wingull go!" Astra roared as she charged in, then recoiled as a bright light briefly blinded her. Blinking the spots away, she took a quick glance around the room.

The site of the collapse was quite a bit different from the mostly clear tunnel before it. New, temporary support beams had been placed in the middle of the corridor, and tools and supplies were meticulously sorted on top of a few long tables. A pile of rubble embedded with scattered bits of shattered wood and metal had completely buried the passage, and there were signs there had been quite a bit more at one point, broken down and transported elsewhere by means unknown. A few yards before the blockage, a strange machine hummed and shook, feeding power through a few black cables and into the three powerful lamps that had blinded Astra, which thoroughly illuminated the entire work site.

And right next to the giant pile of rocks, the Aqua grunt was looking back at them, holding a thoroughly embedded pickaxe and looking absolutely flabbergasted. He looked absolutely dishevelled and reeked of dried sweat, and his eyes frantically looked over them, panic and fatigue roiling off him in waves. Next to him, an upturned wheelbarrow shook as Peeko flailed about within. A hole had been dug out of the rubble behind him; just large enough for a man to crawl through and surprisingly deep, but still far from finished.

"You!?" the Aqua grunt yelped, taking a step back.

"Us," Brendan confirmed. Mudkip, Treecko, and Torchic stepped forward, interposing themselves between the trainers and the grunt. Brendan waved, giving the blue-clad man a mocking smile. "Hello!"

"We're here for the bird and the briefcase," May growled. "Hand 'em over, now."

"Damn brats..." The Aqua grunt's hand inched towards the pokeballs on his belt. He glared. "Don't you know you're messing with the wrong people? You'll regret making enemies of Team Aqua!"

Team Aqua this, Team Aqua that, Astra was beginning to get sick of hearing that name. He kept spouting it off like it was some magic phrase that would let him get away with whatever he wanted.

"Yeah, well, there's nobody here but you right now," Astra countered. "And there's three of us, so don't even think about fighting back! We'll just thrash you like last time."

The grunt's hand stilled, and he glared even harder. "Fine. If I can't beat you like that..." His eyes dated to the side, and he grinned. "Then I'll just have to get my hands dirty!"

The grunt lunged toward the wheelbarrow and kicked it over. Now revealed, a moderately sized white bird squawked and burst into the air. In a snap, the grunt's hand closed around its neck in a vice grip. The bird screeched, wings flapping wildly as he interposed the flailing wingull between himself and everyone else.

"Peeko!" Astra gasped. He was really going that far? Were there no lows this guy wouldn't stoop to?

"You think a damn bird is gonna stop me?" May demanded, striding forward with a fist raised. "Come over here and fight me face to face, asshole!"

"Wingull!" Peeko croaked out, struggling furiously. The grunt's grip tightened and Peeko quieted with a distressed gurgle. The grunt grinned as May froze, Astra and Brendan gasping in shock behind her.

"No, I don't think I will. Can't do anything while I'm holding this bird, can you?" he sneered, waving the Wingull around a bit. "Guess this was a good idea after all."

"Coward," May growled, but lowered her fist.

"I can't believe a member of Team Aqua would do something like this," Brendan said, disbelievingly. He shot the man a pleading look. "Aren't you guys supposed to promote environmentalism? How exactly does theft and holding pokemon hostage protect the ocean? Hell, that's Mr. Briney's Wingull," Brendan stressed. "He's a regional hero! He advocated for your group in the past; how could you do this to him!?"

The blue clad man hesitated, then shook his head. "I suppose it is a shame that he got caught up in all this. I respect the man, but our goals are more important than one crusty sailor. Times change, and Archie's got a new plan that'll wash across Hoenn like a tsunami!" He grinned, teeth shining in the floodlights. "And if we gotta dirty our sails to see it through, well, I'm no stranger to swabbing decks. So how about all of you shut the hell up, or else this bird is gonna get it. Get it?"

No, Astra did not. She wasn't going to 'get' anything for this jerk and she didn't care for anyone who trampled on innocent old men to get their way! He had to go down. Peeko posed a problem, however. As long as he held onto the bird's neck, they couldn't do anything without risk of the man... escalating. May and Brendan didn't seem to have any ideas. May was just clenching and unclenching her hands, glaring at the grunt, and the thug had just shut down Brendan's attempt at talking. Torchic and Mudkip were likewise unable to help, as May and Brendan had no means of telling them to do anything without incurring the man's wrath.

But Astra could use Treecko silently. That could give her the element of surprise she needed. Maybe he could shoot the grunt's hand? She hesitated. From the way the man's eyes were flickering, he was closely tracking every movement their pokemon made. He would assuredly notice when Treecko made an attack.

So that just meant that she needed an opening. And she knew exactly how to make one. Astra stared at the man and focused, bringing the slightest amount of power to bear.

"Now here's what you're gonna do." The Aqua grunt continued, sneering. "You're all gonna stay right here, while I—"

PING

The Aqua grunt twitched violently and let out a strangled yelp, clutching his head as a spike of telepathic noise assaulted his mind. Astra grinned, and Treecko took a sharp breath.

Bullet seed.

Light shone, and a barrage of glowing seeds dug into the man's hand, causing him to jerk back with a scream. Peeko screeched and burst out of his grip, speeding past the trainers and crashing against the barricade behind them. Spotting the open door, she burst through and sped down the tunnel, cawing madly. May and Brendan looked after the vanishing Wingull, blinking owlishly. Slowly, everyone turned to face the Aqua grunt, who was staring at the vanishing bird in horror.

"I'm sorry," Astra said, cheerfully. "I didn't quite catch that. What were you saying?"

The Aqua grunt swallowed nervously as May and Brendan's gazes hardened. "Y-you little brats!" he growled, still full of bravado. But there was a hitch in his voice now, and the way his eyes darted wildly from Torchic to Treecko to Mudkip and back again made it clear what he was really feeling. "Once Team Aqua hears about this you'll regret-!"

"Torchic?" May asked. "Ember."

Astra's eyes widened as Torchic puffed up. She was going to set the grunt on fire? Wasn't that going a bit far!?

But before she could protest, Torchic let loose. The Aqua grunt yelped as he dove away from a jet of flame. "Wait, wait, stop! I surrender!" he pleaded, holding his hands up. "Stop the fire! Stop the fire you crazy bitch!"

"Then you shut the hell up about your stupid little gang!" May roared. She strode forward and grabbed the thug by his shirt collar, yanking him down to eye level. "Newsflash, idiot: they're not here, and judging by how weak you are, I wouldn't be worried even if they were! So go ahead, tell your buddies about how you got your ass kicked twice. I'm sure that'll go down just swell."

She grinned. "Oh, wait. Nevermind. You're going to jail, so nobody's finding out jack. Sucks to be you, huh?"

"Y-you..." The grunt gulped, eyes flickering between May and the faintly smoking Torchic eyeing him like his next snack. "You'll regret this." he choked out.

"So I've heard." May rolled her eyes and pushed him away. The grunt stumbled and fell to the ground with a yelp. "Light him up if he tries anything, Torchic. Now," She turned, looking around. "You guys get the briefcase?"

Astra and Brendan shared an uneasy look, but turned to search the tunnel without protest. A brief search revealed the stolen item located on the nearby table. Astra grabbed it, then almost fell over once it succumbed to gravity. "Oof! What is in this thing?" she complained, dragging it over to the door. "Ugh. You take this," she said, passing it to Brendan. "I can't carry that."

"Yeah, I got it," Brendan said, hefting it up with a grunt. "Woah, you weren't kidding," he said, letting it rest on the floor for a moment.

"Heavy, you say?" May asked, leaving the pokemon to keep watch on the grunt. "Ooh, new theory: it's full of gold bars!"

"I was really holding out for that soup recipe, personally," Astra admitted. She slumped. "But I guess it wouldn't weigh that much."

Brendan gave them a strange look, considered the suitcase for a moment, then shook his head. "Probably not. Devon doesn't deal in gold. Or, uh. Soup. I'd hazard a guess at... Hm. Parts for something." Brendan frowned at May. "Backing up a bit, May, you really shouldn't threaten people like that. What if he had actually gotten burned?"

"Pff. He would've been fine," May said, waving Brendan off. "Maybe he'd learn his lesson if he did."

That was... a bit more flippant than Astra was comfortable with. Brendan seemed to agree, and he looked at May with clear disapproval. "We're not the ones who get to decide how he gets punished," he chided. "Trainers like us aren't supposed to use pokemon against people without good cause."

"What, is assault and theft not a good cause?" May scoffed. "He attacked us, I'd say that's reason enough!"

"Self defence is fine, but threatening him when we've already won is a different matter," Brendan stressed. He sighed. "I know he hurt you, but please don't get carried away. It's... concerning."

"Tch. Whatever," May muttered. She looked away, stalking towards the door. "Let's just go already."

"Ah, yeah," Astra said, still unsure. She did agree with Brendan, but May did have a point. The Aqua member had nearly deafened both them and an entire street of onlookers. Some form of retribution was warranted. But she had expected May to punch the man in the face, not try to set him on fire.

She shook her head; there would be enough time to sort through all that later. For now, they had to get the briefcase back to the city. "Alright, you!" Astra said, turning to the Grunt. "We're taking you back to Rustboro. Get on your feet, you've got a lot to answer for!"

"Anyone got any rope, or anything?" Brendan asked, looking around. A pair of negatives had him shaking his head. "Drat. I would have liked to tie his hands up, at least. Well, walk in front and keep your hands in the air." He said, giving the thug a sharp look. "Don't try anything funny, either."

"Damn brats," The grunt muttered, raising his arms as instructed. He marched out of the room, followed closely by Treecko, Torchic and Mudkip. Astra, May, and Brendan brought up the rear, watching the thief carefully.

Astra blinked rapidly as they left the bright floodlights behind, the natural darkness of the tunnel reasserting itself. Her eyes adjusted quickly, and she noticed a Whismur, the one Brendan had befriended, was standing a bit further into the tunnel, poking her head out from behind a support pillar. Whismur shied back when she noticed the Aqua grunt walking towards her, but brightened as she spotted Brendan just behind him.

"Whismur whis!" she cheered, waving a stubby arm. "Whis!" She seemed to be saying, "You did it! I knew you could!"

Brendan waved back, and Astra smiled at the sight, a warm feeling in her chest. Mission accomplished. And once they left, the Whismur could return to their peaceful lives.

Or, at least, what counted for peace when humanity had apparently decided to expand a tunnel in the middle of their warren into a thoroughfare. That was... actually fairly alarming, now that Astra thought about it. She glanced at the tunnel walls, their surfaces noticeably smoother than the varied offshoots. It seemed that if humanity wanted a passage, they didn't much care about whom they disturbed so long as they got their way. More reason for her village to be wary, she supposed.

The Whismur edged around the Grunt, who shot it a narrow eyed glance, before waddling up to Brendan and chirping happily.

Brendan kneeled down and patted her on the head, grinning. "Hey, we're back. Everything went fine, and now we've gotta get this guy out of your hair and back to our city."

Whismur frowned and tugged at Brendan's pant leg. It lifted an ear and whistled a short tune, similar to the one Brendan had hummed earlier, then tugged at his pant leg again. "Whismur?" she asked, staring at him hopefully.

Brendan blinked, then shook his head and gave her a sad smile. "Sorry, Whismur. I can't stay. We've really gotta get this guy out of here, and I've got places to go as well. I might be able to come back some other time, but this is it."

Whismur drooped. Brendan thought for a moment. "You could see us out, if you want," he offered. Whismur perked back up, letting out a cheerful whistle.

The Aqua grunt made an annoyed sound. "Are we going or not?" he snapped, glaring backwards.

"Shut it, you," May said, returning the glare. "And keep those arms up!" She paused, then turned to Astra. "He's not wrong," she muttered, glancing at Brendan and Whismur chatting happily to the side. "I can't tell if this is still adorable or has transitioned into gag-inducing sappiness."

Astra just shrugged. She didn't have any issue with taking a bit of time to say goodbye. It was only a minor delay, after all. "Sounds like a 'you' problem."

"Tch." May snorted, hiding a smile. "Getting a mouth on you, shorty."

Whismur led them along the tunnel, tugging at Brendan's pant leg until he took the lead, leaving their prisoner in the middle of the group.

As they walked, a chipper hum echoed in the stagnant air, a quiet whistle following the rhythm. The side tunnels repopulated with the other Whismur as they passed, all staring at the visitors with trepidation. Their stares were still creepy, but at least they wouldn't have to deal with them much longer. Astra estimated they were nearly halfway out by now, and it would only be a few minutes until she could see the sun again. Thankfully the Aqua grunt kept quiet throughout the walk, but Astra didn't like how he kept shooting looks toward the gathered Whismur. Was he up to something?

"Okay, the sing-song clinched it. This is annoying," May decided, breaking Astra out of her thoughts. "Fuck, we'd better get out of here soon. The whistling is gonna drive me mad."

Astra tilted her head. "It's not that bad, though?"

"Well, maybe not, but the echo is messing with me," May grumbled, "Still not a fan of being watched like this either." She shot a glance at the horde of Whismur in the walls. When she looked ahead again, she paused. "Hey!" May snapped, causing everyone to tense. "I said keep your hands in the air!"

"My arms are tired, brat," the Aqua grunt shot back, turning to face them with a scowl. His arms had indeed been lowering, his left hand slowly inching toward his face. "And my nose itches. What, can't I scratch my damn nose?"

"Not on my watch, buddy!" May snarled. "Hands back up, now!"

"I just wanna scratch my nose," the grunt repeated. "It's not gonna kill you."

He smirked, and a flash of emotion thrummed through the air, and Astra's eyes widened. "He's lying!" she yelled, sending a frantic message to Treecko. "Take him down!"

Springing into action, Treecko spat a flurry of bullet seeds and leapt forward, bringing his tail around in an arc. Dropping his arms, the Aqua grunt blocked the bullets with his forearm, cradling his head as Treecko landed a brutal slam across his forearms. In response, the Grunt stared directly at Astra, grinned, then shoved his finger and thumb into his mouth. Then, he blew.

A deafening whistle pierced the air, echoing off the tunnel walls. It lasted only a moment before Mudkip tackled the grunt in the abdomen, sending him staggering backwards—only for Brendan to come in and shove the man to the ground and kneel on his back, throwing the briefcase past May and Astra.

"What are you doing?" Brendan hissed, pinning the grunts' arms to his back. "Whistling? Here? Do you want to bring the whole warren down on our heads!?"

"That's the plan, genius!" The grunt crowed. A sick grin crawled across his face. "And judging by little miss waterworks over there, well. I hope you brought earplugs!"

Brendan opened his mouth, then paused. His eyes widened, and Astra had just a moment to process the grunt's words herself before the first sniffle pierced the air. Every head in the room turned toward the crowd of Whismur in the side tunnel. They were shaking, tears pooling at the corners of their eyes. The one who had sniffled stood at the forefront, and their breath hitched when they noticed several sets of eyes had abruptly focused on them.

The Whismur shook violently, took a step back, and hiccuped. Their ears stood on end, and a piercing whistle began to sound.

"Oh shit," May whispered.

It screamed. The noise hit them like a wall. A wordless cry of pure terror and fear, reverberating endlessly through the entire tunnel. And then it was joined by another, and another, and then almost every single Whismur in the warren was crying out in panic.

Astra clutched at her ears, her very thoughts being shredded by the sharp knife of the Whismurs' collective cry. To her side, May had fallen to her knees, desperately trying to plug hers. Her mouth moved, but nothing could be heard over the piercing din. Brendan had fallen over, teeth grit and eyes clenched. The Aqua grunt had curled into a ball, hands on his head. Treecko and Mudkip were grimacing, but Torchic had collapsed to the ground, twitching.

Astra did not know how long their scream lasted.

But, after a seeming eternity, it came to an abrupt stop: a long, low howl from far away halted the Whismurs' cacophony. Astra looked around as it sounded again, closer. Next to her, May shook her head and stood, glancing about warily while Brendan took hold of the Aqua grunt once more The rock of the mountain trembled, the tunnel shook, and Astra felt the vibration in her very bones. A voice like the deepest of horns thundered from deep within the warren.

"I-it feels like the whole mountain is shaking!" Astra exclaimed, backing up against a wall. She could sense something approaching, its fury as prominent as an angry sun. "Wh-what is that!?"

"Best guess?" Brendan said, staring into the now silent crowd of pokemon. "The Whismurs' patriarch."

Red eyes glared from the darkness. The Whismurs parted, and from the shadows emerged a new figure. A hulking blue animal of nearly five feet, his light red eyes glared balefully at the intruders. His head was brutish, a lowered brow crowned with a ridge of seven cylinders and paired with an terrifyingly wide jaw. His three-clawed feet carved gouges in the ground as he stomped forward, and his three-fingered hands clenched at its side. A pair of tails that looked like pipes jutted from the creature's rear and shook as air passed through, striking an impossibly deep reverberation into the air. He stared, brows furrowed, considering the group of trainers arrayed before him.

He didn't look happy. Astra swallowed, mouth dry. "Brendan? What is that?"

"Oh," Brendan said, dumbly. "That's an Exploud."

"Bad?" May asked, voice hushed.

"Third evolution," Brendan confirmed, sounding faint. "Extremely."

"Maybe it's friendly?" Astra said, hopefully.

Her hopes were summarily dashed when the Exploud's eyes narrowed, and a low growl shook the air as he stepped forward. Astra heard the sound of scurrying feet, and she blinked when their Whismur interposed itself between the Exploud and the group.

"Whismur whis!" Whismur said, waving her arms frantically. "Whis!"

Exploud halted, considering Whismur for a moment. His gaze panned across the group again, and a bit of the building fury seemed to sputter. "Exploud?" he asked, a surprisingly complex series of whistles and horns accompanying his words.

For a moment, Whismur looked off balance. "Whis?" she asked, as if surprised that Exploud hadn't immediately brushed her aside. She brightened. "Whis! Whismur whis!"

Exploud grumbled, the accompanying series of whistles sounding quite annoyed. He seemed to be calming down, rage being slowly replaced by annoyance and suspicion. Astra shared a hopeful glance with May and Brendan. Maybe they'd still be able to get out okay!

"I cannot believe your little puffball is saving our ass again," May murmured, glancing at Brendan.

"I make good friends," Brendan said, smiling. May rolled her eyes.

"Yeah, no," the Aqua grunt interjected. He bucked, throwing Brendan off and twisting to his feet in one smooth motion. "I'm not letting my chance slip away that easy! Even if I can't finish the job, I can at least toss you brats to the sharks!"

Exploud's gaze snapped to the Aqua grunt. Treecko and Mudkip turned, already preparing attacks. Torchic, however, was still on the floor, dazed from earlier. The grunt eyed the bird and grinned. He sprung forward, dashing through a burst of seedshot and water, and snatched Torchic straight off the ground. The bird squawked, then began pecking wildly at the grunt's fingers.

"Torchic!" May screamed, scrambling to her feet. "Let him go!"

"Oh, gladly," the grunt said, smile widening. He turned toward Exploud. "Hey ugly!"

Exploud looked at the Grunt. The grunt drew back his arm.

"Catch!" he called, then hurled Torchic directly at Exploud's face.

May cried out, reaching toward her pokemon uselessly. Brendan tackled the Grunt again, trying to wrestle him to the ground once more. Astra reached out, reflexively calling on her power to snatch the bird from the air—

What if they see?

—then stopped, fear and hesitation halting her in her tracks. And then it was too late.

Torchic flew, and Exploud recoiled as the flailing bird bounced off his nose. A giant fist snatched the bird from the air, then hauled him in front of the giant, hulking face. Exploud growled. Torchic, frightened out of his mind, shot a burst of flame into Exploud's eyes.

Exploud roared, the cavern shaking from the sheer force of its outburst. He dropped the fiery bird and howled in fury, scratching at his face. Torchic scrambled to his feet and dashed to May, chirping wildly.

"Move!" Brendan bellowed, sprinting down the tunnel. Astra was a quarter-step behind him when May abruptly grabbed her arm and hauled her in the other direction. The Whismurs scattered, fleeing down the tunnels. Howling, Exploud charged blindly after Torchic and just barely missed Astra and May, crashing into the tunnel wall and blasting the area in a thick cloud of dust and stone shards.

"Holy shit!" May yelped, dragging Astra further down the corridor, Torchic and Treecko close at their heels. "That would've pancaked us! You're welcome, by the way," she added, looking at Astra.

Astra grunted, rubbing at her wrist as May finally let go. She stood up on shaky legs, brushing herself off. "Thanks, but did you have to drag me?"

"You're too slow," May replied, bending down to give Torchic a reassuring scritch. "Exploud would've run right over you. At least I got us to safety."

Something moved, and Astra's head snapped toward the dust cloud. "Not for long," she warned, staring at the rising shadow. Maddened red eyes turned sharply in their direction. Astra took a step backward, swallowing nervously. "Exploud's between us and the exit, and he looks really mad!"

"Where's Brendan?" May asked, standing back up. Torchic stood in front of her, feathers puffed.

Astra hesitated. She could sense the grunt's Zubat trying to take bites out of Brendan's Mudkip, and Brendan himself stood between the grunt and the exit. Astra felt like banging her head against the wall. Why hadn't they taken his pokemon!? "He was on the other side with the Aqua guy. If he's not here, he might have his hands full."

"Tch, so no help there. Well, dead end behind us, one hell of a monster in front, alone together." May reached back and tightened her bandana, staring at the figure in the dust. "I guess it's a fight!"

Astra looked at the huge hole in the rock and wished she knew where May got all of her confidence from. Personally, she would have felt a lot better if the tunnel wasn't so cramped. Being able to overwhelm Exploud with sheer numbers would have been nice, but there just wasn't any room for them to not get in each other's way. "He looks really strong. Do you think we can win?"

"Don't really have a choice, do we? It's do or die, Astra!" May grinned, looking just a bit manic. "Besides, we've made it out with worse odds, haven't we?"

Astra shot May a flat look. "I wouldn't really call that one a 'fight'. And we didn't win, either. But," she sighed, "I suppose you aren't wrong."

"That's the spirit," May said, cheerfully. "Try not to die."

The sound of heavy footfalls silenced their chat. Exploud emerged from the dust cloud, face contorted into a rictus of pure rage. "LOUD!" he roared, sound blasting through the tunnel.

Astra gulped, paling at the sight. She really didn't want to fight. Maybe she could still reason with him...? "Wait, please stop!" she pleaded, trying to form a link to Exploud. "It wasn't our fault! We didn't—"

RAGE. The connection broke. Astra gasped, reeling.

"LOOOUD!" Exploud screamed, louder, longer, and leaving Astra's ears ringing once again. He inhaled, all the pipes on his body whistling as they sucked in vast quantities of air.

"Fine then!" Astra snapped, pointing forward. If he wouldn't listen to reason, then she wouldn't hold back! "Treecko, bullet seed!" Aim for his throat!

"EXPLO—urk!?" Exploud gagged as a barrage of golden seeds flew into his gaping maw. He coughed and slammed his chest, the holes on his body letting out a wheezing bleat with each blow.

"Alright Torchic," May called, raising a clenched fist and sweeping it out. "Light him up!"

Torchic chirped, and a stream of fire scorched across Exploud, leaving a singed black streak up his leg and across his torso. The fur along the edges shone in a fiery gradient, creeping outwards at a painful crawl. Exploud gurgled, pawing at the burn mark. He coughed, spat onto the ground, and roared in pain. Eyes blazing, he glared at the two pokemon arrayed against him. Thin smoke wafted from his fur, and Exploud growled. He charged toward Torchic, arm cocked back.

Astra scowled, thinking rapidly. Exploud was large, and with the way he walked off that impact with the wall, she was betting he had toughness to spare. Physical attacks wouldn't do much; she'd have to focus on hitting weak points or bypassing his physical defence entirely.

"Treecko, climb on his back and use absorb!" Astra commanded a moment later.

"Torchic, dodge!" May shouted.

Torchic jumped backward. Exploud's fist descended, stone fragments scattering as the ground where Torchic had stood was pulverized. From the side, Treecko lept. He landed on Exploud's back and scuttled upwards toward his crown of horns. Holding on for dear life, Treecko slammed a needle-ridden hand into the back of Exploud's skull and pulled, siphoning away thin streams of verdant energy

Exploud jerked, twisting around and taking a wild swing at thin air. He turned around once more before realizing that something was clinging to his head. Bellowing in frustration, he awkwardly pawed at his back, the horns on his head preventing his arms from reaching all the way. Giving up on that, Exploud turned and slammed his back against the wall. Only a quick command and subsequent evacuation saved Treecko from being flattened against the now broken stone.

"Focus up, Torchic!" May ordered. "Hit him where it hurts! Ember!"

Torchic inhaled, and then spat fire across Exploud, scoring a direct hit against his lower abdomen. Exploud howled as the scorch marks spread, the air filling with the smell of charred fur. Attention now thoroughly grabbed, he set his sight on Torchic and bellowed once more, charging towards the diminutive bird.

"Shit. Torchic, dodge again!" May called, urgently.

"Treecko, Bullet Seed!" Astra added. "Distract him!"

Torchic squawked as he narrowly dodged between Exploud's legs, barely escaping as a foot stomped down where he had been, the heavy impact causing a small shockwave. Torchic tripped and tumbled, rolling a short distance down the tunnel before coming to a stop, dazed. Exploud turned around, the promise of brutal vengeance pounding with every step he took.

A few golden seeds whizzed through the air, battering Exploud across the arm and the side of his head. Exploud paused, gaze flicking to Treecko, who clung to the top of a support pillar. Exploud turned away with a growl, ignoring the potshots that Treecko shot at his back.

"It's not working!" Astra said, panicked. "He's ignoring Treecko!"

"Shit, I was hoping we could've kept ping-ponging him. I gotta get Torchic out of there!" May said, holding out Torchic's pokeball. A laser shot out and hit Explouds leg, dissipating uselessly. May hesitated, half leaning from side to side. Another laser shot out, but was interrupted by Exploud once again. A flicker of worry flashed across her face. "I— I can't get an angle," she said, paling. "Torchic, run!"

Torchic wobbled to his feet, shaking his head. He looked back, baulked at the giant barreling down at him, and fled, cawing wildly. His speed, however, was no match for Exploud's maddened speed, the beast catching up in four thundering strides and swiping at Torchic, clipping him in the side and sending him spinning into the wall with a dull thunk..

"Torchic!" May cried, reaching out. Astra grabbed onto May's shirt, barely stopping the taller girl from running directly into battle. May growled, nearly yanking Astra off her feet as she dragged the smaller girl forward. "Get away from him or I'll turn your skull into a fucking bagpipe!"

"May, stop!" Astra yelled, struggling to hold her footing. "You'll get hurt!" She looked at her own pokemon in a panic, "Treecko, stop Exploud! Bullet Seed! Absorb! Something!"

But though Treecko shot seed after seed, each one leaving dark bruises or shallow scrapes, Exploud ignored them all. Another booming step took him to where Torchic lay, and he raised a foot, intent on ending the threat once and for all.

Treecko scrambled forward, hands glowing green but far too slow and weak. Astra's breath caught. May reached out, eyes wide. Exploud's foot descended.

"Mudkip, Mud-Slap!"

A blob of brown muck shot into Exploud's eyes. The giant flinched, his foot missing Torchic by the smallest of margins as he bellowed in pain, wiping at his eyes. Then he roared once more as Treecko hit the back of his head like a missile. Slamming back into a wall to dislodge Treecko, Exploud scraped at the gunk covering his face. Torchic staggered to his feet and fled back to May, a parting shot leaving Exploud's back as scorched as his front.

"Torchic!" May exclaimed, scooping the bird into her arms and shaking off Astra's grip. "You're okay!" she said, exhaling in relief. Torchic chirped, and she flicked him on the head. "Dude, you really gotta stop getting into these bad spots."

"Hey guys!" a voice called. Mudkip came barreling into view, followed closely by Brendan. He gave them a tired grin. "Need some help?"

"Brendan!" Astra said, brightening. Maybe they'd stand a chance now that it was three on one! "Good timing! Now we can—" she paused, noticing a distinct lack of a certain blue jerkwad. "Wait, where's the Aqua guy?"

Brendan grimaced. "Had to let him go. You guys were facing off against an Exploud and it would have taken me way too long to deal with him. There just wasn't any way I was going to let you two do this alone!"

May let out a bark of laughter. "My hero," she said, rolling her eyes with a grin. She pulled out a potion and sprayed Torchic with it, the bird perking up and ruffling his feathers. She set him down and turned to Exploud, eyes blazing. "Thanks for the save. Now, let's kick this guy's ass! Torchic, Ember!"

"With you all the way!" Astra cheered. With all three of them here, fighting as a team for the first time, it made Astra giddy. It was a moment worthy of song, and Astra suddenly found herself dearly wishing she had her violin. Her fingers twitched, pressing down imaginary strings. "Treecko, Bullet Seed, then Absorb!" Make him choke, and drain him while he's distracted!

"If we keep him off balance and chip him down, our victory is assured!" Brendan said. He pointed at Exploud, voice firm. "Mudkip, blind him with Mud-Slap!"

Exploud had meanwhile wiped the last of the previous mud from his face and was inhaling deeply, the tubes on his body making a deep vibration. "EX—!" he screamed, but cut off as Treecko flipped off his head and fired yet another golden seed into his maw.

Exploud choked again, and then a fresh ball of mud slapped across his eyes. He wheezed, furiously scraping the muck away. Flickering light shone, and then flame burst across his back, scarring him further. The three smaller pokemon easily dodged the blind swipes that followed, and Treecko lept on Exploud's back to siphon off more energy.

"That's how you do it!" Astra cheered. "Now, just keep it going and—eh?" Astra cut herself off, uneasy. Something in the air had changed. Her eyes flicked across the scene, searching for the aberration. It took her a moment to realize that Exploud wasn't screaming. More concerningly, his fury was gone.

He was still mad; the depths of his loathing an incomprehensible, frightening abyss. But it no longer burned. It had instead crystalized into a dark, cold hatred. Exploud stood up, one giant hand digging into the mud caking his face and scraping it away. A deep, rumbling whistle began to emanate from his many horns.

"Hah, that trick again? Keep trying, windbag, I'm sure it'll work out this time" May cackled, unconcerned by the repetitive display. "Just do yourself a favor and give up, or else me and Torchic will turn your ass to ash! Ember!"

Another stream of fire raced across Exploud's side, and the reverberation intensified. Exploud turned and slammed his back against the wall, Treecko jumping off and narrowly avoiding getting squished. Exploud's arms shot up, blocking the retaliatory bullets and mud balls.

Red eyes glared in the darkness, and Astra was quite suddenly reminded that they were not fighting a novice. Exploud had, in fact, evolved twice. It had been defending these caves for what had to be quite a long time, against targets far stronger than they.

And it wasn't an idiot.

Exploud's eyes narrowed, staring at Torchic, then slowly drifting towards May. The humming stopped, only to be replaced with a deep, whistling inhale. His arms raised, intercepting the burst of bullet seeds destined for the openings on his head. He opened his mouth, and the world seemed to hold its breath.

May paused, grin frozen on her face. Exploud opened his mouth. May paled. "Oh shi—"

Exploud screamed. An explosive roar, more physical than mere sound should ever be, erupted from his horns. It shook the earth and sent a shockwave of dust blasting through the tunnel. It blasted into Astra, forcing her to her knees and drowning out everything with a cacophony of pain.

"Stop it..." Astra choked out, clutching at her head. The din reverberated, hammering her ears in an unceasing tide. "Stop...!" she begged, pleading directly to Exploud. The noise continued, heedless of her anguish.

"I... said... stop!" Astra silently screamed, eyes squeezed shut. Power surged, Astra pushed, and suddenly the noise ceased. She looked up in confusion, vision hazy and head pounding like a drum. Next to her, May was similarly incapacitated, and she doubted Brendan was much better. She thought she could hear May swearing up a storm, but Astra could hardly make it out over the sharp ringing in her ears. Their pokemon were doggedly rising to their feet, stubborn even in the face of overwhelming power.

Ahead of them, Exploud was yanking his head out of the wall. Astra blinked, thoughts fuzzy and scattered. How had that happened? Exploud turned, face twisted into a horrid snarl. He took a few steps forward, and it took Astra a second to realize he was coming for them.

She shot to her feet, but stumbled as the world tilted and found herself lying flat on the floor, cheek stinging. She blearily lifted her head and found the bulky pokemon staring at her. Exploud considered Astra for a long moment, then snorted dismissively and moved on, stomping toward May. The girl was kneeling on the floor and clutching her head, groaning in pain. Exploud's eyes narrowed, and he raised a fist—

"TOR!"

A blast of flame burst across Exploud's hand, scorching the fur. He recoiled as Torchic rushed forward, standing guard over his trainer. May looked up, wincing. "What...?"

"Torchic tor!" Torchic screeched, blasting another bolt of fire. Exploud blocked the flame with his arm and glared. He raised a hand, then brought it down and cleanly backhanded Torchic into the wall. Stone crumbled, and the bird vanished under a pile of rubble.

"Torchic!" May sprung to her feet, lamely reaching for the fallen bird. Her hand clenched and she jerked to face Exploud, then recoiled, a snarled expletive dying in a whisper. May stared at Exploud, so close that her hair blew back with his breath. Red eyes glared into blue.

Astra watched in mounting horror as Exploud once more wound back. She reached for her power, but the agony from the scream lingered and it felt like all she could grab was a fist of broken glass. "May!" she yelled, struggling as the pain in her head spiked. "Run!"

A second passed. May jumped back. Exploud lashed out. A dull thump, a sharp exhalation, and suddenly May was flying through the air, rolling across the ground and coming to rest in a limp pile. She clutched at her side, eyes wide. She choked, then wheezed, sucking in air with pained, heaving gasps.

"May!" Astra screamed. A mirror of her cry rang out behind her.

Astra turned and saw Brendan, staggering forward with a hand on the wall and Mudkip at his feet. Treecko was draped across Mudkip's back. Why was Treecko on Mudkip's back? Treecko looked at her, bleary eyed and a little embarrassed.

Dizzy, he thought. Well, Astra could certainly understand that predicament all too well. The two shared a brief moment of mutual commiseration.

Brendan stared at Astra, wide-eyed, then glared at Exploud with grit teeth. The giant had begun to plod towards May again. "Water Gun!" he yelled to Mudkip, making a staggered run toward Astra. "Aim for his feet!"

Astra raised a hand and Brendan grabbed it, pulling her upright and causing the world to tilt again. Astra staggered, leaning against Brendan for support. Her head was still pounding, but she would still fight with whatever she had. Astra focused, the mere effort of sending a message wracking her mind. "Bullet Seed!"

Meanwhile, a blast of water struck Exploud's leg, and he stumbled, falling to one knee as one leg skidded across the wet floor. A growl permeated the air as a few bullet seeds ineffectually dug into his back. Exploud punched the floor and removed a large chunk of stone. Turning around, he roared and hurled the rock.

Astra saw the rock fly as if in slow motion. She could barely hear Brendan scream out his own order as she begged them to move, but Mudkip was still stunned from the roar and Treecko was too slow at getting off his back and the stone was moving too fast—

There was the sound of rock hitting flesh, an all too horrifying spike of pain, and then silence.

"No..." Astra whispered, reaching out toward the fallen green form. She could see Treecko move, sheer grit overcoming the agony she could still feel ripping across their bond. Even Mudkip was still crawling forwards. After all of that, they still had enough determination to try? Astra would have been proud of them, if not for the despair that had swallowed her heart.

Exploud stomped toward the fallen trainer. May wheezed, slowly uncurling from the ball she had huddled into. She looked up, squinting at the figure towering above her.

Then, she laughed. A short, giggling thing bordering on hysterical. "Come on, big guy," she taunted, eyes wild. She stared, grinning maniacally. "Was that your best shot?"

Exploud snarled, and raised a fist.

"May!" Brendan screamed and let go of Astra, gently dropping her to the floor. He staggered forward, arm outstretched as if to simply pluck her away from danger.

Astra grit her teeth and desperately tried to gather power. An endless onslaught of sharp teeth gnash at her head, but despite all her effort, what little she could muster passed through her grasp like fog. She gasped in pain, abandoned the attempt, and looked at May, wondering if it would be the very last time she could.

May met her panicked gaze. Then, to Astra's utter bafflement, she smiled. Something pricked at the edge of Astra's awareness. A familiar feeling. And at the last second, she noticed that it wasn't dark anymore.

Exploud roared, and brought his fist down.

A pile of rock shifted, then was thrown aside.

Light filled the hall.

Talons scraped on stone as they raced forward.

Thud.

Exploud's fist stopped, a pair of clawed hands blocking its fall.

"Hey, Torchic." May said, swaying. She grinned. "Good to see ya."

Torchic stood before May, clad in a brilliant white aura. But he had changed. His legs were longer, half hidden by a covering of orange feathers and thick with muscle. His talons—larger, darker, sharper—dug into the stone as the halted punch pressed down from above. Yellow plumage covered his upper body, and two feathered arms sprouted from what were once bits of fluff. Now-orange eyes glared up, widened beak clenched in effort. His crest twitched, now dyed crimson and twice as tall.

Astra stared at Torchic, stunned. Ahead, Brendan halted his mad dash, awed.

"That's no Torchic..." he said, faintly, then with a surge of cheer. "He's evolved into a Combusken!"

Exploud peered down at Combusken. "Loud?" he said, confused and outraged at the continued resistance. "Loud!?" he roared, pushing down even harder. Combusken grinned, dug his feet in, and began to push.

"Com—" he said, taking a step forward and shoving Exploud's arm back. Exploud grunted, then redoubled his assault. Combusken's guard buckled, but did not break.

"BUS—!" he shouted, heaving Exploud's fist aside. Exploud stumbled, knocked off balance by the throw. Combusken crouched, and then jumped.

"KEN!" Combusken crowed, a taloned foot delivering a devastating front kick to Exploud's jaw. Still in the air, Combusken spun around and slammed his other leg into Exploud's face. Something crunched, and Exploud reared back, falling to the ground and clutching his bloody nose.

"Combusken!" Combusken declared, flipping backwards and landing in a crouch. He stood in front of May, taking a rough stance and poised to strike.

"Oh hell that was cool," May breathed, slowly rising to her feet. She gave Combusken a shaky thumbs up. "Good job, buddy."

Astra watched Combusken preen, but couldn't help the dread still creeping in her mind. Combusken, fresh off his evolution and ready for round three—would he be enough? Exploud was still monstrously strong; fatigued, yes, but still able to break stone and scream at will. If Combusken messed up once...

Exploud held his nose, now dribbling crimson, and blared, a sound that May would describe as a fog horn blasting through the tunnel. He rose to his feet and charged at Combusken, a whistling bellow screeching from all horns.

"Get ready Combusken, May said, wheezing slightly. "Don't get hit!"

"Ken!" Combusken said, crouching down.

Exploud came at them, feet falling like meteors. He roared, cocked his fist back—and then a burst of slick mud rocketed under his foot from behind, Exploud flailing wildly as he skidded through the muck. His legs shot out and he fell onto his back, groaning. Astra blinked. Where had that come from?

As if to answer, a voice called out from behind. "Marsh," it said in a familiar, if deeper warble.

Brendan stiffened, then turned around, gaping. "Mudkip?" he whispered. Brendan paused, then grinned. "No. Marshtomp?"

Astra followed his gaze and stared. Mudkip, too, had changed. Twice as tall, the gills on his cheeks had narrowed and lengthened into spikes, and his three fins had darkened and grown larger. He walked up to Brendan, front legs now much longer and thinner.

"Stomp," Marshtomp said, crawling up to Brendan and brushing against his legs.

Brendan reached out, trailing a hand across Marshtomp back. Marshtomp rumbled, leaning into the touch. Brendan smiled. "Heh. You were that close, huh? I should've known. Alright then." He looked up, eyes shining. "Let's finish this!"

"Marsh!" Marshtomp agreed, turning back towards the Exploud.

Astra, feeling a bit like a bystander, lifted herself up a bit, resting on her forearms. Mudkip had evolved too? But wait, if Mudkip had, then where was—? Had he—? She could sense him, he was awake, and moving! Astra grunted, heaving herself to a kneeling pose, head swimming. She blinked, took a breath, and heaved herself up. Her vision lurched, but she had to see, she had to know. She turned—

But her world blurred and spun, and Astra felt herself falling again.

And then she stopped. Long, thin, green arms hugged her, halting her descent. Astra stared at them, confused. What was...?

She looked down, but not as far as she expected. Yellow eyes stared back into her own, familiar, yet different, filled with worry and flicking around to spot anything amiss.

His head was sleeker, more angular, a wider mouth curved into a worried frown. Eyes embedded inside instead of sticking up. A long, long piece of grass sprouted from the top of his scalp and trailed down his back, curling up at the end into a spiral. She could see two more poking from his lower back, and three each newly grown from his wrists.

They looked at each other for a moment, and then Astra smiled.

"You got taller," she mumbled. "It looks good."

He looked at her smile and relaxed, the frond on his head uncurling in relief. "Grovyle," Grovyle preened, hoisting his master upright.

Astra wobbled for a moment, then held still. She closed her eyes and just breathed for a second. The fog in her head cleared, if only a little, and she looked at Treecko. Or, Grovyle now, was it? He really had grown, Astra saw, a bit more than half as tall as she was.

"I don't think I'll be able to carry you anymore," Astra noted wistfully.

Grovyle blinked and examined Astra, then looked down at his new, much heavier form. He drooped. "Grove..." he whined, disappointed.

"You're just too big," Astra explained. "I doubt I could support that kind of weight." She grinned, glancing at the arms still holding her steady. "But I guess it's you who's supporting me, now. Right?"

Grovyle blinked, then rolled his eyes and smirked. "Vyle."

A loud roar interrupted them. Astra turned to see that Exploud had gotten up again. Combusken was kicking him relentlessly, a flash of fire accompanying each kick, while Marshtomp fired bullet after bullet of thick mud at Exploud's face and body. Exploud looked to be slowing down just a bit. Had all the fighting finally begun to take its toll?

Astra shook herself loose of Grovyle's arms and propped herself up at the wall. She looked at Grovyle and gestured at the battle, grinning.

"Shall we?" she asked.

Grovyle smirked and held up an arm. Green energy flowed across his skin, and the leaves on his wrists suddenly straightened out in a brilliant verdant glow.

"Grove," he said. Power.

Astra stared at the inexplicably sharp leaves, then grinned. "Heh. Well, that seems handy. Alright then." Astra straightened, readjusted her hat, and pointed at Exploud as dramatically as she could manage.

"Let's give it all we got, guys!" Astra yelled, newly energized. "Grovyle, Grass Cutter!"

Grovyle bent forward, then shot off in a blast of dust. Past Brendan, who ducked back in surprise. Past Marshtomp, firing salvo after salvo of mud. Ahead, Exploud faced Combusken. The kick-happy bird jumped, delivering a flurry of blows to Exploud's face. Exploud grunted and staggered back, his guard blown wide open. Grovyle darted up, and lept.

"Grovyle!" Grovyle yelled, and slashed down across Exploud's back.

Exploud roared in pain as a deep gash opened across his back, crimson dripping from shoulder to hip. He turned, eyes flickering between Grovyle, Marshtomp, and Combusken, and in Astra's senses a new emotion surfaced. Above the pain, and steadily supplanting the rage and the hate.

Fear.

"EXPLOUD!" Exploud bellowed, fist thundering toward his new assailant. Grovyle jumped back—

"Mud Shot!" Brendan called.

—and a jet of thick mud flew past, smacking Exploud across his arm and face. Exploud missed Grovyle and stumbled, shaking and scraping the mud off. He stood, staring at Grovyle and Marshtomp with a newfound desperation. He inhaled, a sharp whistling filling the tunnel—

"Double Kick!" May yelled.

Combusken charged, coming up behind Exploud and swinging his leg out in a fiery arc. Exploud raised an arm to block, flesh torn and scorched as it withstood the brunt of the blow. The whistling wavered—

"Grass Cutter!"

A new line of red opened across Exploud's back, marking a weeping cross. Exploud gasped, then growled and threw Combusken back, swiping behind him to drive off Grovyle. Eyes flashing, Exploud shut his mouth and sucked, air funneling into his horns in a massive rush—

"Bullet Seed!"

"Mud Shot!"

"Aim for his horns!" Astra and Brendan shouted together.

—and then Exploud choked, sputtering and coughing as liquid dirt and piercing bullets shot down into his airways. He fell to a knee, coughing out lumps of mud and filth—

"Keep kicking him!" May yelled. "Go for the jaw!"

"Keep him down!" Brendan ordered, "Cover him in as much mud as you can!"

—only for more sludge to encase his legs. Exploud struggled to lift himself up, the thick ooze resisting his efforts. Combusken rushed in and spun, delivering a brutal roundhouse kick to Exploud's jaw. Exploud's head snapped around, eyes bulging and mouth loosely falling open.

He fell to the ground, landing upon the mud beneath in a disgusting squelch. But even as Marshtomp poured more and more mud over Exploud's body, Exploud struggled to dig himself out. He pushed himself up by one arm, still expelling globs of muck from his lungs and weakly shovelling the sludge away.

"Exploud..." he said, voice weak and the once deep whistles that accompanied it now faint and off-key. He looked up, staring at them all with wild eyes. "Exploud!"

Asta had to admire the Exploud's sheer grit. Even with a broken nose, blackened skin and fur, a diced back, befouled airways, and battered jaw, Exploud still had the tenacity to lift itself back up and keep fighting. She watched his gaze slide past her own, and she followed it. Then, she sighed.

In the alcoves, a few brave Whismurs remained, the friendly one among them. Of course Exploud would be fighting so hard. He had come out to protect his family. It was a cause Astra sympathized with. Was she not out here for the very same? But neither of them could do that while the other continued to fight. And while Astra had been perfectly happy to leave Exploud be, the Aqua grunt's actions had locked away any chance of a peaceful resolution.

That said, any sympathy Astra held towards Exploud himself had vanished when he blew their ears out and punched May.

"Grovyle," Astra said, resting against the wall. "Drain him dry."

Grovyle leapt onto Exploud's back, shoving the large pokemon back down into the muck. A glowing verdant spike bloomed from Grovyle's palm and he struck down, driving it deep into Exploud's shoulder. The submerged pokemon cried out in pain as streams of green energy were siphoned away.

"Ex..." Exploud rasped, still trying to push himself up. One hand weakly grasped at the mud. "Ex...!"

May staggered along the tunnel wall, hand clutching at her side. Coming up to the mud-soaked pokemon, she stared, eyes glinting.

"Combusken," she said, quietly. "Axe kick."

Combusken stepped around the muck piling around the fallen giant. Standing before Exploud, Combusken looked down at the larger pokemon. Exploud stared back, eyes hazy.

"Ex—"

Combusken swung his leg up, and brought it down with a resounding crack. Exploud's skull smashed into the ground, rebounding off the stone beneath the mud. The force lifted Exploud's gaze just enough to look at Combusken. Then, at last, his eyes rolled back and he went limp, head thudding to the floor.

Victory.

Astra exhaled, sliding down the wall. It was over. She heard Brendan rush over to May, worrying over her injury—

"I know how to take a fucking punch, Brendan! I'm fine!"

"Yeah, maybe from people, but that was an Exploud! What if there's internal bleeding?"

"Ugh."

—but their argument was somewhat indistinct. A rather distracting ringing sound persisted in Astra's ears, a remnant of all the impossibly loud pokemon she'd run into today. It seemed to be fading a little, which was good. Going deaf would likely ruin her plans, and her music as well.

She looked back at the fallen Exploud, seeing Grovyle yank his hand back, the spike retreating into his palm. Exploud was lying face down in the mud. Would he be able to breathe like that? She could just make out a faint whistling from a few unfouled horns, but it'd be safer to make sure.

She signaled to Grovyle, forming the message slowly to avoid a mishap. Flip.

Grovyle blinked at Astra, then shrugged, nodding. Calling out to Combusken and Marshtomp, the three dug the mud off Exploud and turned him over, freeing his gargantuan maw from the muck. He was still breathing, so Astra called it a win.

With Exploud no longer in danger of suffocating and May seeming as lively as ever—

"Does it hurt to breathe?" Brenden pressed.

May rolled her eyes, petting Combusken as he returned to his master. "I'm fine! Just... let me sit down for a minute, fuck."

—Astra leaned back and sighed, taking a moment to just... breathe. Take stock. She felt Grovyle sit next to her, and she absentmindedly reached out to stroke his head while she thought. The Aqua grunt had escaped, which was bad, but the briefcase was still here, lying on the ground and slightly muddy where Brendan had tossed it. Mission accomplished, she supposed, though Astra didn't like that the grunt had gotten away. Who knew what he would do next?

Idly, Astra noted that her illusions had fallen off at some point. She carefully began to weave them back into place, her head still a bit tender from the earlier din. She doubted either May or Brendon had noticed, but it wouldn't do to get careless. Astra had just finished her height adjustment when she noticed a faint sniffling.

She shot upright, eyes wide—when had she closed them?—only to see that the side tunnels had once more filled with Whismur, all staring at their fallen protector. Their eyes shone with unshed tears, and one brave Whismur had stepped forward and was weakly pushing at Exploud. Astra recognized it as the same one they had met earlier.

"Whismur...?" Whismur said, voice wavering when Exploud failed to respond to her prodding. "Whis...?"

Astra looked from Whismur to the small crowd in the surrounding tunnels, all of whom were drowning in a miasma of despair. That wasn't good.

"Guys," Astra said, urgently. "We've got a problem!"

"Hm?" Brendan looked up, having been hovering over May for the last minute. "What's—oh no," he gasped, eyes wide.

"Oh hell," May hissed, peering around Combusken. "It's the fucking Whismur? Now?"

"They really don't seem to like that we knocked Exploud unconscious," Astra explained. She gave Brendan a pleading look. "Brendan, you calmed them down earlier. Can you do something?"

Brendan hesitated, looking at the horde of Whismur in the side tunnels. Steeling himself, he nodded, expression firming. "I can try."

Quietly approaching the lone Whismur, Brendan hunched down and called out. "Hey, buddy," he said, causing Whismur to whirl around in shock.

"Whis?" Whismur stepped back, staring up at Brendan. Astra could see her shaking, fear and hesitation warring in her mind. Brendan paused, then shuffled backwards a step. Whismur stopped shaking, confused, then looked between Exploud and Brendan. "Mur?"

"Worried about the big guy?" Brendan asked, glancing at the fallen Exploud. "He... should be fine. Maybe his nose will look a bit weird, but I don't think there will be any permanent damage. He'll be up and about after a bit of rest."

Whismur frowned. "Whismur mur!" she said, pointing at him accusingly. Astra briefly considered peeking at Whismur's surface thoughts to translate, if only for herself, but she was having a hard enough time saving energy to maintain her illusion and talk as it was.

Brendan winced. "Yeah, we did beat him up pretty hard. I'm sorry it went that way, but he wasn't giving us much choice. If I had just held the man from Team Aqua down better—"

"Whismur?" Whismur said, looking at Brendan intently. "Mur Whis-whis!"

"Um," Brendan said, looking faintly lost. "Right. It was that guy's fault, for doing that. But we—" Brendan continued, motioning to himself, Astra, May, and their pokemon, "—had to defend ourselves. I hope you can understand that. And, maybe help calm down your, uh, extended family?" Brendan eyed the Whismur in the tunnels, who looked a hair's breadth from panicking once again. "We do need to leave, and I think they'd like that too."

Whismur stared at him, then back at Exploud, deep in thought. Seeming to come to a decision, she looked at him and nodded. "Mur, mur-whis."

"You will?" Brendan said. He smiled. "Thank you!"

"Are we in the clear?" May asked, still sitting by the wall. "What's happening?"

"The Whismur is going to calm the rest down," Astra answered. "Though, I don't know how—eh?" Astra went silent as a soft whistle filled the air.

"Whis mur-mur whis, whismur-ur ur-ur-whis~" Whismur sang. It echoed in the tunnel, gentle reverberations overlapping in perfect harmony. Unlike Brendan's song, this one seemed designed for the echoing warrens, and much improved for it. WhIsmur paused, giving Brendan a look.

Brendan blinked. "You... want me to sing with you again?" he asked. Whismur nodded. Brendan hesitated again, then shook his head and smiled. "Alright then, I'll try my best. Though, I'm still not any good at singing, I'll have you know."

Whismur giggled, then lifted her ears and inhaled. Brendan cleared his throat and began to hum. Then, they sang. Humming and whistling mostly in sync, their tune was a work that reminded Astra of cool, windy nights and the utter calm that came with it. A very insistent calm, one backed by Whismur's innate power.

'A lullaby?' Astra wondered, listening to it reverberate through the tunnel. It grew on itself as it rebounded, the notes and melody becoming more complex as past chords synced with the current. It was fascinating, and trying to figure out how it worked was all that kept Astra from falling asleep on the spot.

Astra yawned, heavy eyelids threatening to flutter closed. Once all this was over, she was going to take a long nap. Looking over, Astra saw May doing much the same, her eyes watering a bit as she yawned into her hand. Their pokemon had already succumbed; Grovyle having sort of fallen over and sloppily curled around Astra's side while Combusken had sat next to May and dozed off. The surrounding Whismur didn't seem to be sleepy at all, but they had stopped shaking, and a few were even poking their heads out. Apparently judging that good enough, Whismur brought her and Brendan's little duet to a close.

"Whismur!" Whismur cheered, smiling at Brendan. She turned and waved at the other Whismur, who cautiously emerged from the side tunnels, watching the three trainers closely. They began to stream through the corridors, skirting past the trainers and beginning to dig Exploud out of the muck. Astra didn't know what they planned to do once they excavated Exploud's comparatively massive bulk, but at least they weren't terrified anymore.

"Huh." Brendan blinked, watching the procession dig the mud away one tiny clump at a time. "Well, that works. Thanks, Whismur."

"Whis!"

"Ugh," May cut in, grunting as she stood up and carefully not disturbing Combusken. Shaking her head, she returned Combusken to his pokeball, then picked up the briefcase from the floor. She rubbed at her eyes, blearily looking at Brendan and Astra. "Well, we got the stupid briefcase back. Can we leave now?"

"Sounds good to me," Astra agreed, recalling Grovyle. She stood up, checking to make sure everything looked right as she rose. Finding everything in order, she joined May and Brendan, massaging her aching head with a wince. "Ugh, my head hurts..."

"I'm just glad the ringing stopped. Any more of that and I might've gotten tinnitus," Brendan remarked, calling Marshtomp back as well. He grimaced. "I wouldn't be surprised if it'd happened before. Those miners must get some serious hazard pay."

"If this thing doesn't pay for something, " May added, motioning to the suitcase, "I'm going to... to... I dunno. Fill that guy's mattress with gravel," she muttered, yawning again.

Brendan gave her a strange look. "That's... inventive."

May scowled and flipped him off, but didn't comment further. Astra wondered which 'guy' she had meant. Presumably the Aqua grunt, but she wouldn't rule out the Devon employee either.

"Whismur!" Whismur said, drawing everyone's attention. She was waving at the group of Whismur digging out Exploud. They all turned and stared. Whismur kept waving. "Whismur whis! Mur mur!"

The Whismur group looked—shocked? Sad? Astra couldn't tell. But, as one, they looked over the three trainers and waved at them, a goodbye whispered en-masse. "Mur!"

That done, Whismur ambled past Brendan and down the tunnel, turning back to beckon them forward.

"...What was that?" May asked, looking at Brendan.

Brendan blinked. "I suspect our new friend wants to finish her escort mission."

"She's been pretty helpful so far," Astra said, shrugging. "I don't have a problem with it."

"If she starts screaming, so will I," May warned.

"It probably won't come to that, but please don't," Brendan said, shooting May a flat look. Turning to Whismur, he smiled. "Lead on, Whismur! We're counting on you."

Whismur chirped, and the three trainers followed the softly whistling pokemon through the tunnel. Aches and pains made themselves known with each step, and the exhaustion was felt with every slow blink, but the promise of escape kept them marching onward. Soon enough, light blossomed in the distance and, finally, they emerged into sunlight.

Astra squinted at the sun, shading her eyes. It was still somewhat close to where it had been, marking the beginnings of mid-afternoon. Had it only been, what, twenty minutes? Half an hour? It felt longer. Astra scanned the area and sighed. No signs of the thief. She hadn't really expected him to stick around, but it would have been nice to tie up a loose end.

A cheerful squawk drew her attention. Turning to look, Astra yelped as a Wingull swooped over her head. It circled above them with joyful cries of "Wingull!" Astra stared at it for a second before she remembered.

"Peeko?" she asked.

"Wingull!" the bird cried out.

"She made it out alright," Brendan said, sighing in relief. "That's good."

"If she doesn't stop circling my head like she's about to lose some weight, she won't be for much longer," May grumbled, eyeing Peeko warily.

"Oh, there you are!" a voice called out. "Are you three alright?"

Astra turned, spotting Mr. Briney walking up to them. His brow was furrowed, eyes glancing over them and noting every scrape and bruise. After a moment he let out a relieved sigh. Putting two fingers in his mouth, he let loose a sharp whistle. Peeko wheeled around and descended, alighting on the old sailor's shoulder. He smiled, stroking the bird's head.

"Thank you so much for rescuing my darling Peeko. I dare say she owes her life to you three," he said, looking at the three trainers in turn. "I was worried when you didn't follow her out, and then all that racket started... That birdnapper left before you did, fled straight into the forest before anyone knew what was happening! I thought that something awful had happened."

"The thief caused some trouble with the Whismur, and escaped in the confusion," Brendan explained. "There was a fight with their patriarch and... well, we're pretty battered, to be honest."

"Oh dear. Well, I'm glad to see that you're all in one piece, at least." Mr. Briney grimaced. "I'd hate for a couple of kids to get injured on my behalf. That said, I'm not one to let a debt go unpaid. If you ever need anything, be sure to let me know!"

May squinted. "What would I ever need from some old guy? A bingo club ticket?"

Brendan rounded on May, but before he could say a word, Mr. Briney began to laugh.

"Do ho ho ho!" Mr. Briney smiled, a mischievous glint in his eye. "Ah, such spunk from youngsters these days. I will admit, I can't do much these days," he admitted, tugging on his beard thoughtfully, "But if I do say so, I am quite the accomplished sailor. By the looks of you three, I wouldn't be amiss to think that you're going around collecting gym badges for the pokemon championship, are you?"

"We are," Astra confirmed. "We just fought Roxanne the other day, actually."

"You did?" Brendan said, blinking. He groaned, facepalming. "The one day I don't visit the gym. Of course. Did you win?"

"Kicked her ass," May confirmed, smirking. She turned back to Mr. Briney. "Yeah, we're going through the gyms. What of it?"

"Well, there just so happens to be a gym down south on Dewford Island," Mr. Briney said, grinning. "I daresay you'll be hard pressed to find yourself a way there without buying a boat ticket. You could swim there yourself, of course, but those waters are awfully treacherous, especially near Winter's Eye."

"Oh!" Astra said as the pieces fell into place. "You'd be willing to take us to Dewford Island?"

"That I could, young miss," Mr. Briney confirmed. "That is, if you're amicable to the idea. Heck, I'll ferry you to Slateport afterward too. Anytime you want! For my Peeko, I'd say that's a fair deal."

"Gull, gull!" Peeko agreed, nodding wisely.

"Oh man, I could go sailing with Mr. Briney!" Brendan exclaimed with starry eyes. "It'd be an honor, sir!"

Mr. Briney chuckled. "No need to call me sir, Briney does me just as well. If you insist on being formal, well an old sea dog like me, I suppose Captain would do eh? Oh!" He blushed, suddenly looking contrite. "I've been so caught up in all the excitement that I've forgotten to ask your names! Care to trouble an old sailor with them?"

"My name's Astra!" Astra said, giving Briney a large smile, which he returned. He reminded Astra of her Grandpa, a bit. He was nice. "Thank you for the offer!"

"I suppose you didn't hear me earlier, but you can call me Brendan. Brendan Birch." Brendan said, offering his hand. Briney shook it, giving Brendan a firm nod.

May considered Briney for a moment, then shrugged. "Name's May. I suppose a free ride wouldn't be too bad. Sure, why not."

"Ah, that's good to hear!" Briney said. He bowed, with Peeko fluttering to stay balanced on his shoulder. "Once again, Astra, Brendan, May, thank you all. Should you want to take me up on my offer, you can find my house just south of the Petalburg Woods, on the beach. It's the one with the pier."

"Oh!" Astra said, surprised. "I think we saw that before, didn't we May?"

"Huh. Yeah, I remember that. That's your house?" May asked, receiving a nod in return. "Alright, got it. We'll see you there, I guess."

"Very good! I'll see you then. Farewell." Mr. Briney smiled one last time and turned to leave, but paused. "Oh, and Brendan? That little one by your feet seems to want your attention." He waved, then walked off, Peeko taking off and circling overhead with a happy caw.

"Eh?" Brendan blinked, then looked down. Whismur peered out from behind his leg, staring intently at the shrinking Mr. Briney.

Noticing his stare, Whismur looked up and smiled. "Whis!"

"Oh, hey Whismur," Brendan said, smiling. He knelt down, his tone a bit more somber. "I suppose this is it, then. Thanks for helping us out back there, it saved us a lot of trouble."

"Yeah!" Astra agreed. "If it weren't for you, we'd have been in real big trouble with all the other Whismur. You've been a big help!"

May yawned. Everyone waited a moment. May rolled her eyes. "Mhm. Sure. Thanks," she muttered, dryly.

Brendan shook his head. "Heh. Well, I'm still not much of a vocalist, but singing was kind of fun. Take care of yourself—huh?"

Brendan paused as Whismur puffed up and angrily waved her arms about. "Whismur whis!" she said, glaring at him.

"You're not saying goodbye?" Brendan asked confusedly. "Er, Whismur, I know you liked singing with me, but we do have to leave—wait." Brendan paused, looking even more confused. "Do you... want to come with me?"

"How did he get all that out of 'Whismur mur' and a bunch of flailing?" May muttered to Astra, who shrugged. This was unexpected, though. Why would Whismur want to be captured? Didn't she know that she'd be fighting? Whismur, as a species, seemed particularly disinclined to seek power for power's sake. So, what reason could there be?

Whismur nodded, leaving Brendan looking bewildered. "Why?" he asked, echoing Astra's musings. "It can't just be because you liked singing with me. I mean, you do know what you're asking for, right? A trainer's pokemon needs to be able to fight. If you want to come with me, you'd have to learn how to battle."

Rather than deterring her, this appeared to reaffirm Whismur's resolve. "Whis!" she said, looking Brendan in the eye. She pointed back to the cave and started waving her arms around a lot. "Whismur whis whis! Mur mur whis! Whis!" she said, miming a punch and a kick, the latter of which made her fall over. She scrambled back up and pointed at Brendan. "Whismur!" she finished, nodding in finality.

SIlence.

"Did... anyone get that?" May asked, looking from Brendan to Astra. Astra shrugged, feeling as lost as May looked.

"I think I have a theory," Brendan said, examining Whismur carefully. "Because we beat Exploud, Whismur has lost confidence in Exploud's ability to defend the cave." Whismur started nodding, encouraging Brendan to continue. "So, I think Whismur wants me to train her, because we're stronger than Exploud, so she can become an even better guardian for the cave. More or less?"

"Whismur!" Whismur chimed, nodding rapidly.

Astra stared. Well, she could understand the motivation far too well, but wasn't there a huge problem with that plan!? "How would she defend the cave if she's stuck with you?" she asked Brendan, confused.

"Well, when the time comes, I could just release her," Brendan said, thoughtfully. "It's not like I have to keep her forever."

"Oh," Astra said. She hadn't known that trainers could just... let pokemon go. The concept hadn't even occurred to her. But now it seemed obvious. If Astra had caught something that was so totally hostile or uncooperative as to be a danger to herself, she wouldn't want to keep it around either. She supposed that would apply to more mundane reasons as well, such as a permanent injury or... a deal, as the current situation was going.

She thought about it for a second, then shook her head. Leaving home to protect it—a familiar story. So similar. Yet... so different. "I hope you know what you're getting into," Astra told Whismur. Joining up with the first human she met, or one that could beat her? Personally participating in all these fights? Left under the whims of whatever random person had captured her? Such a plan never would have worked in Astra's favor. She could only wish the smaller pokemon luck.

"I can't promise that you'll find exactly what you're looking for, but I'll do my best to try. But it will be hard," Brendan said, bringing out an empty pokeball. "Are you sure about this?"

"Whis!" Whismur declared, puffing up to her full height. Which wasn't much, but Astra couldn't deny the determination in the Whismur's eyes. That was impressive, considering Whismur's eyes were basically a few slits where proper eyes would be.

Brendan looked at Whismur for another moment, then nodded. He grinned. "Alright then. Hello, Whismur, I'm Brendan Birch. We'll be partners from here on out. Glad to have you."

Brendan tossed the pokeball. Whismur chirped, jumping to catch it. The ball bonked her on the head and Whismur vanished in a swirl of red light. The ball chimed thrice and fell still with a soft click.

"Neat. Now in a month we'll have a personal ear-breaker," May grumbled as Brendan stashed it away. "Can we go back to Rustboro now? Getting out of bed this morning was a mistake." May rubbed at her side for a moment, wincing.

Astra gave her a worried look. "You okay?"

"I'm fine," May said, waving Astra off and confidently striding towards the road. "Just gotta— erk!" She halted, holding her side with grit teeth. "...gotta walk it off," she finished, muttering.

Astra and Brendan shared a look. "Well," Brendan said, watching May carefully. "I should probably tell the miners what went down, but yeah. Let's go back to Rustboro."

...

"What do you mean you 'knocked out the Exploud'!? It'll take weeks before we can go back in there without it trying to assault us!"

Incidentally, the miners weren't happy.




A/N

This took a while. Hope it was worth the wait.

No one decent place to link it, so have an image made by Dex here in the AN!



Thank you for reading my story. Please tell me what you think!
 
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Hyphen 24 - Concern
Hyphen 24

Concern



The afternoon sun shone down upon the three trainers, passing clouds occasionally granting cool relief and shade. To Astra, the walk back to Rustboro felt twice as long as the trek to Rusturf Tunnel, and though they were getting close it still felt like the city was hours away. The mad sprint earlier in the day, the endless jog that followed, and the utter mayhem in the tunnel itself had exhausted her meager endurance. It was only by grace of the group's frequent breaks that she could still stand at all.

Despite the difficulty their group had imposed upon the miners, they had graciously allowed them to access their supply of water, and Astra had even managed to scrounge up a few Oran berries from clean-picked bushes along the way. That had kept her from collapsing on the spot, but every step she took was harder than the last. Astra wanted nothing more than to go back to the hotel, take the longest, hottest shower she could, and go to bed.

May, walking to Astra's left, looked haggard and worn. Her hair stood out every which way, her clothes had scratches and bits torn off on the edges, and she occasionally winced and rubbed at the spot Exploud had punched her.

Brendan was walking on May's other side, pulling his bike along and notably less exhausted than either of them. Astra eyed his bike sullenly, a little resentful that he hadn't had to deal with all the running she'd done today. Stupid, lousy, helpful Brendan. Now on the way back, no one was using the bike at all. Brendan refused to ride ahead—the bike couldn't hold all of them without crashing, and leaving just one person behind was unfair, he said. But Astra thought he just didn't want to leave them on their own right now. So, he'd chosen to slowly trod the path back alongside them, bike handle and briefcase in either hand.

It was a decent chance to catch up, though. And if it distracted them from the fatigue, all the better.

"—and then I had Treecko fire one last Bullet Seed right before the rocks fell on him," Astra said, smacking her fist into her palm. "The seed ricocheted off three other rocks and flew straight into Nosepass's ear! That was the last straw, and Nosepass fell over, completely unconscious! Treecko fainted too, because he got buried under a giant pile of rocks."

"Really?" Brendan asked, eyes wide. "Three times? That's insane."

"Wouldn't've believed it if I hadn't seen it myself." May added. "It was crazy."

"Heh." Astra grinned tiredly. Her victory over Roxanne yesterday was still fresh in her mind, the Stone Badge a shining proof that her goal was possible. "Roxanne almost declared it a tie, and I would've lost if it was. But luckily, I still had Slakoth! That meant I was still in the fight, and since Roxanne was out of pokemon that meant I won! Got the Stone Badge and everything," she said, grinning proudly.

"Well done," Brendan said, giving Astra a congratulatory smile and thumbs-up. "I'll have to ask Roxanne if I can see the tapes next time I see her. And you did all this while playing your violin?"

Astra nodded. "Yeah. It's kind of my thing, now."

"It's kinda nice," May said. "I haven't had a single fight without background music since Petalburg. Except for my gym fight, I guess." May side eyed Astra and gave her a light shove. "Dirty rat cheated me out of boss music."

"Not my fault!" Astra protested. "I was indisposed!"

"So how did your fight go, May?" Brendan asked. "I imagine you did well, 'boss music' aside."

"Amazing is more like it!" May boasted, puffing up. "I knocked out her first Geodude with Lotad, then beat up her electric one with my Poochyena, finishing it off with Lotad again. Then I basically blasted Nosepass back into its pokeball, finishing it off with an awesome aerial water gun!"

"Which you totally stole from me," Astra accused.

May sniffed. "You're just mad I did it better."

"You still had to copy me, so I win!" Astra blew a raspberry. "Nyeh."

"Believe whatever you want," May said, waving her off. "I'm still the one who made it look good. So Brendan!" she continued, abruptly switching tracks. "How'd your fight go?"

Brendan blinked, caught off guard. "My fight?"

"Yeah, with Roxanne. You were at the gym too, right?" May asked, looking at Brendan curiously.

"Ah, right. Hm." Brendan pondered the question, looking at the sky as he walked. "When I fought her... it went smoothly, I suppose. Unlike you guys, I fought a bunch of trainers at the gym beforehand, so I had a bit of practice fighting rock types. It wasn't easy, but I managed to plan around her moves and take her pokemon down without any unexpected results."

"... is that it?" Astra asked after a moment of silence. That wasn't a fun explanation at all! "I mean, I'm glad you won, but that's pretty vague."

"Yeah, c'mon," May goaded, "You tellin' me nothing exciting happened?"

"Nothing like you two," Brendan admitted. "It was mostly just, you know. Dodge until there was an opening, Mud Slap so they couldn't see, then Water Gun until they fell over. It was about as routine as a fight can get."

"Hm. I dunno. It is pretty impressive that you managed to turn a fight against her into something so totally planned out." Astra observed. She had been on the back foot several times during her encounter, and May hadn't gotten out unscathed either.

"Heh." Brendan scratched the back of his head, grinning sheepishly. "Well, if you say so. Thanks. You guys sounded pretty amazing too. We'll have to spar sometime. Maybe I can see this fabled music of yours, Astra. Or, hear it, as it were." He chuckled. May rolled her eyes.

Astra nodded determinedly. "Of course! I'm a lot stronger now, so you better prepare yourself!" she declared, pointing at him dramatically.

"I will. And I'm glad you finally learned how to actually give your pokemon commands, too," Brendan added, giving Astra a wry grin.

...eh? Astra looked at Brendan, confused. What was he talking about? "But I've always given my pokemon commands?" she asked, questioningly.

Brendan frowned. "No you haven't. Remember when we fought in Petalburg? You just let your pokemon fight without saying anything."

Oh right, Astra remembered that. The fight outside the Petalburg Gym. She hadn't started using her violin to 'order' her pokemon around yet. And Brendan had stayed behind, so he didn't know about the cover story Astra had told May either.

May snapped her fingers, lighting up like she'd just found a whole bush of Leppa berries. "Oh man, I totally forgot! He doesn't know!" she said, echoing Astra's thoughts. May whirled on the smaller girl, grinning madly. "Astra, do the thing!"

"What, now?" Astra asked, blinking again. She'd thought May would've wanted to wait for a more opportune moment.

May just grinned wider. "Yes, now! C'mon, it'll be hilarious!"

"What thing?" Brendan cut in, cautiously glancing between the two. "What's going on?"

Astra glanced at Brendan, considering. Well, he had gotten off pretty lightly... "Hey, Brendan!"

Brendan looked at Astra, thoroughly lost. "...yes?" he asked, warily.

Astra grinned. "BOO!"

The 'sound' rang out from behind Brendan's head. He yelped, swivelling around and jumping back, briefcase interposed between him and his assailant like a shield. Silence followed, broken only by Brendan's bike falling to the earth.

His head turned, frantically scanning the area. Spotting nothing, he slowly lowered the briefcase, confused. "Who... what?"

Laughter was his only answer. Astra held a hand over her mouth, hiding a wicked grin and giggling incessantly. The way he had jumped, priceless, but the way he had screamed, oh it was the best thing she'd heard all day.

Next to her, May was openly cackling at Brendan. Cackling which abruptly transitioned into pained wheezing. "Augh, ugh, laughing hurts, ah fuck," May gasped, clutching her sides. "Still, your fa~ace! Gahaha—ow!"

Brendan, for his part, seemed torn between worrying over May's pained heaving and his irritation. He watched May for a moment, then shook his head and stared at Astra, scowling. "What was that!?" he demanded.

"Oh not much," Astra said, grinning, her voice still coming from behind Brendan's head. The boy flinched, and Astra had to stifle herself. "I'm just throwing my voice, is all."

Brendan looked confused, then his eyes widened in astonishment. "Wait, that—you were—but..." he sputtered, looking back again, astonished. "That came from behind me!"

"Yep," Astra said, smirking. "Pretty great, huh?" she continued, every word coming from a different direction. Brendan twitched with every one, and Astra had to fight down a snicker. Ah, messing with him was as fun as ever~ May really had the right idea.

"Knock it off!" Brendan said, glaring at her for a moment. Then his eyes widened in realization. "Wait, that's how you were doing it..." he breathed. "You weren't letting Treecko fight on his own, I just couldn't hear you. Oh man," Brendan exclaimed, snapping his fingers. "Is that how you made the Aqua grunt drop Treecko?" He paused, frowning. "Wait, no."

"You mean Peeko?" Astra asked, her 'voice' returning to the proper source. She turned back to the road, the group setting out once more.

"They sound so similar!" Brendan complained as he picked up his bike. "Anyway, yeah. Is that how you made the Aqua guy drop Peeko?"

"We really should have gotten the bastard's name," May groused. "I never know what to call him."

"I know, right!?" Astra said, gesturing at May emphatically. "I keep calling him stuff in my head and it's all so messy! And yeah," she continued, turning back to Brendan. "It was. All I had to do was wait for an opening—", she formed an L with her thumb and finger and 'fired' it, imitating the lady from the berry shop, "—and pew pew! Peeko was free!"

"Fantastic work, I'd say." Brendan said. "He really had us in a rough spot. If it weren't for you, well, I don't want to know what would've happened. Mr. Briney would've been devastated if anything had happened to Peeko, not to mention whatever the costs of losing this briefcase was. I'm glad it all worked out, even if he got away."

May hummed, nodding along. "It was pretty lucky he sort of spazzed out right then, too. What was the deal with that, anyway? Did a bug crawl up his pants or something?"

Astra eyed May. Sometimes she wished the taller girl would stop being so observant. Did she know how hard Astra was working to keep up this facade? "I dunno," Astra said, shrugging. "I just saw an opportunity and took it."

"Hm. Maybe he was about to sneeze...? I doubt we'll ever find out." Brendan sighed. "A bunch of weird stuff went down back there. All the Whismur, the Aqua guy, the Exploud; it's been one heck of a day." He hefted up the briefcase, looking it over with a weary frown. "Honestly, I'm still worried about this thing. What's so important that Team Aqua would resort to theft?"

"Who are those jerks anyway?" May asked. "You know them?"

"Not personally, but in passing, yeah," Brendan said, lowering the case. "Team Aqua is an oceanic wildlife preservation group. They do things like advocate against overfishing, build artificial coral reefs, and protect endangered sea pokemon. They're actually fairly popular; the news loves to talk about them."

Astra frowned. That didn't sound bad at all. "So if they're such good guys, why did that guy do all that?"

"That's what I can't figure out." Brendan pinched the bridge of his nose, frustrated. "As far as I can remember, they've never done anything so blatantly illegal. This is way out of character for them. All I can think of is that 'plan' the guy said 'Archie' made. If I recall, Archie is the name of the man who runs Team Aqua, but I've no idea what sort of plan would need to do all this. Heck, for all I know that guy just stole a uniform and tried to frame them."

"Well, he certainly said their name often enough," May muttered.

"We could look inside the briefcase," Astra offered, partially because it could be a clue, and partially because she just really wanted to know. "Maybe seeing what's inside would help?"

Brendan considered it for a moment, looking down at the shiny silver case. He shook his head. "No, this is still Devon property. We shouldn't snoop on private property just to maybe find a motive. That's... I'm pretty sure that's illegal."

"Aw." "Lame."

"Mmm." Brendan sighed again. "I guess it's just another thing that'll go unanswered today." He shook his head, exasperated. "Heck, nevermind the spasms and Team Aqua, I still can't figure out how Exploud got his head stuck in the wall!"

A moment of silence. May blinked. "Wait, he did what? When was that?"

"When Exploud was screaming." Brendan clarified. "Or more precisely, when he stopped. His head was stuck in the wall." He grimaced. "I didn't see how it happened, but I saw the aftermath. It was bizarre. One moment, screaming, the next, embedded."

Astra and May looked at each other, confused. Well, May was confused. Astra's mind raced. Had she done something back there? Her memories of the scream were fuzzy and painful. She had really wanted Exploud to stop, and then...

Had she thrown Exploud hard enough to lodge him in solid stone? Wow. Uh. Hm. Probably best not to confirm that. "I think I saw that?" she ventured. "I was pretty out of it, though."

"Must have missed it," May muttered, pausing to take a swig of water. "Mmm. Only thing I remember was Torchic getting bitchslapped into evolution."

"So nobody saw anything?" Brendan asked, crestfallen. "Dang, that was eating at me. I just can't figure it out. Our pokemon were mostly down, we were incapacitated, and..." Brendan paused, floundering. "It just doesn't make any sense," he finished, drooping.

"Eh." May shrugged. "Can't say I care too much. Bastard punched me; I'd have shoved his head into the wall myself if I could."

"Sorry we couldn't help," Astra apologized. It wasn't like she could actually tell him what really happened.

Brendan sighed, then gave Astra and May a tired grin. "It's fine, I guess it isn't important now anyway."

"Mmm." "Hn."

SIlence fell, the conversation petering out. They continued to walk, aches and pains making themselves known with nothing else to focus on. The road stretched on endlessly, the city still tens of minutes away.

Astra's feet hurt.

"So!" she eventually chirped, turning back to Brendan. "Find anything interesting back on 102?"

Brendan perked back up, and started to ramble about odd things like 'Population Metrics', 'Berry Replenishment Rates', 'A Disappointing Lack of Ralts Sightings'—much to Astra's relief—and 'This Cool Rock I Found.'

They looked at the rock. It was a usual sort of greyish oval, but it had a smooth hole in the middle. Astra, comparing it to her own collection of cool rocks back home, thought it was rather nice. No points for coloring, but the shape was rare enough. Incomparable to her shiny green one, of course.

May, unconcerned with the deeper lore of rock collecting, tried to see if her finger would fit through the hole. It did. It also refused to come off again.

Distractions, but much needed ones. Astra giggled, watching Brendan frantically try to pry the rock off May's finger over a litany of expletives. It was good to have everyone in one place again.



Rustboro came into view fifteen minutes later, the tall, gleaming spires a beacon of hope to the beleaguered trio. They passed the city limits shortly thereafter, signified by the road abruptly transitioning from packed dirt to pavement and an actual sign reading 'Welcome to Rustboro!'

And across the city, the Devon buildings stood near the docks. The trainers stared at the distant buildings for a moment, and the several long, long roads between them. Then they looked at a much closer building, a hotel that Astra and May happened to book a room in a few days ago.

Ten minutes after that, May was manhandling the lock to her and Astra's room. The door slammed open and the three trainers trudged through, collapsing upon any surface within reach.

"Uuugh," May groaned, spread-eagle upon the bed. "Someone buy me a casket, I'm never moving again for the rest of my life."

"I think I've got sores on my sores," Astra said from the floor, poking at her nubby feet (Subtly, of course). She grimaced at the raw, red tips. Her robe was caked in sweat and dirt too, the grimy cloth leaving a swath of minor abrasions as it more-or-less sandpapered her coat. Astra was starting to understand why May had been so upset back in Petalburg. "I feel disgusting."

Brendan slumped into the armchair in the corner, the briefcase thunking onto the end table. He stared at the ceiling, eyes lidded. After a moment, he sighed despondently. "...We still gotta take this thing back."

May and Astra groaned in unison. "It's been hours already!" Astra complained. "Can't he wait one more?"

Brendan seemed conflicted on the matter, biting his lip in thought. After a moment he rose from the armchair with a grunt and reached for his pack. "I should at least call—" Brendan started, then stopped when May reached back and clamped her hand around his leg in an iron grip.

"If I have to walk again in the next twenty minutes," May warned, staring at the ceiling placidly, "my legs will literally fall off. If that happens, I will pick them up and pummel you with them."

"Alright, hour break it is!" Brendan yelped, snatching his leg back. He sat back down, grumbling. "I suppose I could do with a breather myself." He frowned. "But I want you to see a doctor about that punch Exploud hit you with. You were wincing the whole way home, and you've been breathing weird."

"Fine, whatever! Just lemme lay do~wn," May groaned again. She turned over, burying her face into the sheets. "Ugh."

"Yeah, that sounds like a plan." Astra agreed. It wouldn't do to leave an injury unchecked, and those second-hand throbs of pain she could feel were starting to worry her. May, it seemed, was able to tolerate such things a lot better than Astra would have.

In the meantime, Astra dearly wanted to take a nap. But she wasn't doing it coated in grime. Laboriously, she got to her feet and shambled toward the bathroom. "Hey Brendan, I'm gonna take a shower. Could you put my clothes in the washing machine down the hall?"

"Hm? Oh, yeah, sure."

"Thanks!" Astra said, slipping inside. Sighing in relief, she slowly began to peel her filthy robe off.



Brendan blinked as the door opened and a pile of black cloth shoved its way onto the floor, a sunhat placed neatly on top. The door quickly shut, clicking as the lock was set. Soon after, the sound of falling water filled the air.

"Guess I'd better take care of that," he mused, grunting as he stood.

"Mmm. Take a good look before you put it in." May said, voice muffled by the sheets.

Brendan furrowed his brow, confused. "At what? Her clothes?" he asked, gathering the bundle in his arms. "Why?"

"You'll see."

"Uh. Okay?" Brendan said, raising an eyebrow. Shrugging, he left the room, pausing to set the hat on the table.

He came back a few minutes later, looking thoroughly poleaxed. May, now sitting upright, raised a single eyebrow.

"You saw?" she asked.

"Her cloak? Yeah," Brendan said, baffled. "What was that? Is she really just wearing an entire roll of plain fabric?"

"Yep. It's all she brought with her, apparently," May said, idly swinging her legs. "Held us up for a good hour yesterday because she ran it through the wash once we checked in. Weird, right?"

"Right..." Brendan looked at Astra's bag, as if seeing it for the first time. "Is that... grass?" he muttered, frowning. He eyed Astra's hat as well, before shaking his head. "She really doesn't have anything else? Not even underwear?"

"Yeah, that's exactly what I want to hear: you, asking about girls underwear." May snickered at his pained expression, then paused, grimacing. "Well, now that you mention it, I guess not. I didn't think to ask. I only found out myself back in Petalburg; she didn't have a place to stay, so I let her share my room."

"Well that's... certainly peculiar," Brendan tried, looking uncertain. "Did she say why?"

"Yeah, but you should ask her yourself. Not something she wanted me sharing." May snorted. "And just peculiar? Try flat out bizarre. I had to make her wear towels to bed instead of her nasty robe. Did you know she had no idea what toilets were? She asked me why there was a chair full of water in the bathroom."

Brendan stared at her, eyes wide. "She didn't know what a toilet was!?" he exclaimed, incredulous.

May rolled her eyes. "Plumbing, you dork. Of course she knows what a toilet is. They probably have like, outhouses out there, or something."

"Oh. That... makes more sense, I guess." Brendan paused, thinking. Slowly, he rounded the bed and sat back down in the chair, leaning back into the plush with a sigh. He glanced at the bathroom door, brows furrowed.

With a grunt, May twisted around and snagged a pillow, falling stomach-first onto the bed with the cushion under her chin. "So," she said from the foot of the bed, "What's eatin' you?"

Brendan blinked, looking at May. "What makes you think something's bothering me?"

"Your forehead's all creased up and you're biting your lip," May said. "You do that when you're thinking. See? You're doing it now!" she grinned, poking him in the leg. "Hah, score one for May!"

Brendan stared at the ceiling. "Ah," he said, a light dust of red coating his cheeks. He coughed, then sat up straight. "Well, uh. I was just thinking," he said, averting his gaze, "Astra doesn't seem very... knowledgeable, does she?"

"What tipped you off?" May said, dryly. "The bikes, the lights, or the toilet?"

"The books, actually," Brendan corrected. "Back in the tunnel, Astra said she didn't know what a textbook was. Doesn't that seem... strange, to you?"

May hummed. "Yeah, kinda. Honestly I've just started ignoring all the weird questions. Again, toilet. Hell, she asked about concrete earlier and yesterday she, uh..." May grimaced and shook her head. "Nevermind. I swear, I've never appreciated the expression 'Living under a rock' as much as I have this week."

"That's another thing." Brendan sat up frowning. "Apparently she lives in a cave with her grandpa, right? Which is, you know, not unheard of. People use pokemon to build secret bases all the time. But doesn't the whole thing seem off? I mean, she only has one piece of clothing, she doesn't know a bunch of really basic stuff, at this point I'm doubting she ever went to school—heck, you've stayed with Astra these past few days. I'm sure you've noticed more than a few things."

May looked away for a moment, grip on the pillow tightening. "...She didn't see a problem with wearing dirty clothes to bed," she said, quietly. "Or eating soup with clumps of fur in it."

Brendan made a face. "She ate what!?"

"Well she picked it out first, but it was still nasty." May sat up, stretching her arms out. She sighed. "So, what, do you think something shady's going on back home? Haven't you heard her gush about her grandpa? She loves the guy."

"I wouldn't go that far, but it's certainly strange. Perhaps her community is part of a fringe belief group," Brendan mused. "Like that isolationist Pokemaniac group over in Orre. If she was homeschooled by her Grandpa, and their whole community shunned modern life, then I could see where the lack of general knowledge and strange habits came from." He frowned. "Only problem with that is I don't recall any prominent groups like that existing around here. So they're either very small, remarkably secretive, or it's something else."

May bolted upright. "Maybe she's in a cult!" she exclaimed, eyes wide.

Brendan stared at her. "... A cult?" he asked, squinting.

May blinked, then coughed and looked away, hands fidgeting with the corner of the pillowcase. "She dresses in a black robe, carries a swirly knife around, and can whisper in your ear from a room away." Brendan kept staring. Her face turned red. "W—well it makes sense!"

"That's not—" Brendan started. He stopped. Hesitated. "Cults don't really..." he paused again, thinking. "Well... maybe? I guess those groups can qualify as cults, but the robe-and-dagger thing is a bit much, isn't it?"

"Yeah, but wouldn't it be kinda cool?" May countered, eyes sparkling. "Hell, her name even fits. 'I am Astra," she intoned, pulling her bandanna over her face and wiggling her fingers about. "'Mistress of voice and verve! Now that I've gained your trust, I can carve out your hearts with my star-metal knife! OooOOooOOoo~'"

Brentan snorted, covering his mouth with a fist. He took a moment to recover, then shot her an annoyed glare, though the smile didn't quite leave his face. "Alright, now that I sincerely doubt."

"Heh." May grinned, pulling her bandanna back up. "Had to liven this chat up somehow. It's kinda depressing."

"Well it's not exactly the best material for jokes," Brendan said dryly. "Still, it's the best theory we have so far. Cult aside, a niche primitivist group makes the most sense, though without confirmation it's still just a theory. It might explain that weird time limit Astra mentioned back in Petalburg, maybe they don't want her to get too 'attached' to civilization," he muttered, stroking his chin in thought.

Mays brows furrowed. "Time limit? What time limit?"

Brendan blinked. "Wait, you don't know? Uh, Astra told me she has some sort of... deadline, back when we first met. She told me herself she didn't know how much time she had, only that she wouldn't be able to be a pokemon trainer at the end."

"The hell? She never said anything about—wait," May's eyes widened in recognition. "Is that why she got mad at me for booking the room for a week? She never did get around to explaining why; what with the huge explosion and all."

May sighed, rubbing at her eyes. "Shit. So, what, Astra's trying to speed run the entire gym challenge before... what? She has to stop? Fuck that." May punched her pillow, scowling. "If she thinks she can just leave for no reason she's got another thing coming."

"She may not have a choice, though I can't say for certain. She was awfully vague about it." Brendan drummed his fingers on the table, considering the matter. "She didn't seem to want to explain it either, but it might be worth another ask."

"Mmm," May grunted, shooting a glance at the bathroom door. The shower was still running, its constant, surprisingly loud drone filling the background. "So what now? Do we gotta interrogate her about it all? 'Hey Astra, are you in a cult?'" May snorted. "I'm sure that would go down well."

Brendan hesitated, then shook his head. "Nothing that extreme. We still don't know if things are bad. All we know is that Astra lacks clothes and a... traditional education, plus some strange habits. For now we just need to... probe a bit. Ask her about her home life, figure out what that time limit is, and, well, just get to know her better. Be her friend." He frowned. "Get her some more clothes while we're at it. I still can't believe she only has one set."

"I was planning on taking her to a store at some point, yeah." May agreed. She flopped back onto the mattress, letting out a deep sigh. "So just, be her friend? Tch, as if I'm not doing that enough already. Nothing else?"

Brendan shrugged. "It's the least volatile thing I can think of. Unless you can think of anything else?" May grunted a negative. Brendan nodded. "Then that's the plan."

"Mmm."

A moment passed, silent aside from the sound of the shower. Brendan hesitated. "Now that we're talking about her, there was this strange thing I saw in the cave..."

"Hm?" May said, sitting up. "What?"

"It's... probably nothing. It's just... for a moment, after Exploud screamed, I saw Astra laid out on the floor. Her face was..." He paused again.

May stared at him, suddenly extremely focused. "What about her face?" she asked, cautiously.

Brendan shook his head. "It's... I was probably hallucinating from the shock or something. For a moment, it looked like her eyes took up half of her face."

"Ah." May said, frowning lightly. "Yeah that... it's nothing, I think." she shook her head, glancing off to the side. "I mean, it happens to everyone, right? Sometimes things just look weird for a moment. Eyes are too big, mouth is too wide, sometimes their nose looks higher than yesterday. Crazy, right?"

May grinned weakly. Brendan looked at her, perplexed. "May, what—"

The shower turned off. The two trainers jumped apart, as if shocked. Glancing toward the bathroom door, Brendan and May looked at each other and nodded. Settling back, she nonchalantly grabbed the TV remote, the screen on the wall opposite the bed flickering to life.

Eventually, the door opened.



Astra tugged at the interwoven towels atop her head one last time, then smiled at her reflection in the mirror. It had been much easier to clean herself this time; her skirt didn't get in the way as much as her dress had done, and there was much less underside to wash. Her hair had been a small malus to that calculation, being nearly twice as long as it was before. It had required a much larger volume of shampoo, but it was worth it to feel this refreshed and, dare she say, shiny?

That said, the number of towels she had needed to finagle together had also increased, not helped in the least by the ones here being a bit smaller than the ones in Petalburg. Still, she'd adequately managed to cover up, and a little psychic power would do the rest. Maybe she should acquire a more permanent solution that didn't involve completely depleting the hamper.

Letting out a contented sigh, she walked to the door—gingerly, because her feet were still quite raw—and pushed it open. A loud noise immediately assaulted her ears, and she walked out to see May sprawled on the bed, lazily watching the TV. A quick glance showed a cartoon involving some sort of ship on an ocean, a man with tentacles for hair shouting orders from its prow. Was this a sailor?

Brendan was on the same chair he had been before, head resting on his palm and yawning. The boy did a double take when he saw her covered head-to-toe in towels, but other than a curious squint and raise of the eyebrow said nothing.

"Hey guys," Astra said, hopping on the bed and scooting over to her half. "I miss anything?"

May and Brendan glanced at each other. May shrugged. "Not much. Bit of talking, I guess."

"Your clothes are still in the washer," Brendan added, taking a moment to raise his arms and stretch. Astra heard a faint pop-pop-pop, and the boy let out a relieved groan, limbs loosely falling to the armrests. "Should still be another few minutes before they're ready for the dryer."

"Oh, thank you!" Astra said, smiling. "I really appreciate it."

Brendan hummed in agreement. "No problem, but speaking of," he leaned forward, frowning slightly. "Is there any reason you only have one piece of, uh, clothing?"

Right. That. "Oh, heh." Astra laughed weakly, averting her gaze. She had been half-expecting this, but held a slim hope that he wouldn't notice. "Um, May didn't tell you...?" she asked, looking at the laid-back girl.

May shrugged. "Meh, not worth the breath I'd spend on it. Figured I'd let you deal with it."

Astra stared at her for a moment, then shook her head, smiling. She didn't really want to have this conversation either, but she couldn't begrudge May for not spilling her 'secret'. "Thanks, I think," Astra said, before turning back to Brendan. "I didn't really have anything else back home that would cover me as much as that does," she explained. "So it's just...what I have."

"Cover?" Brendan asked, leaning forward, examining the fabrics Astra had wrapped herself in intently. "You need to completely wrap yourself up? Is that why you look like a walking towel rack?"

"Ah, yeah." Astra shifted around, anxiously crossing her legs together. Once again, she had to hide herself behind a blatant lie. She sighed, nothing else to do but to get it over with. "I have albinism," she said, biting the words out. "Sunlight doesn't agree with me, and it's a larger problem out here than back home, which is why I don't have anything else."

"Oh," Brendan said. His widened eyes darted about, closely examining Astra's face and eyes. He sat back, visibly stunned. "Oh," he repeated, looking as though he'd come upon a revelation. "I—well! That makes sense, I suppose. I always thought you were pale, but I... I guess I never really put it together."

"Mhmm," May chimed in, eyes on the TV. "Seems real obvious in retrospect."

"Yeah." Brendan shot an irritated look at May. "It kind of does." May smirked.

Astra looked between them, somewhat confused. Had something happened?

"Well, that aside," Brendan said, turning back to Astra. "Thank you for telling me. I can't imagine what living with that is like. Though, do you have to cover your whole head indoors? This room doesn't even have a window—"

He cut off as Astra shook her head. "I'd rather not take it off. Being exposed..." Made it much harder to maintain the illusion. But people seeing her true form was also a nerve wracking concept, so the grimace on her face wasn't faked in the least. "I don't really like it," she finished, hugging her legs to her chest.

Brendan's face briefly cycled through panic and regret before settling on concern. "Hey, it's fine." he said, voice soft. "If you don't want to, I'm not going to make you."

Astra gave him a small smile. "Thanks. And, don't worry about it. May asked me the same thing. I just... back home, how I look wasn't a big deal. But out here it's unusual. People would stare, or ask me questions, and... I don't like that sort of attention."

Brendan still looked a bit uncomfortable, but he nodded, returning the grin. "I can understand that. Maybe one day, then."

"Maybe," Astra replied, relaxing back into the pillows. It would be nice, not to worry about all of this. But not today, nor anytime soon.

"We are going to visit a clothing store after we return the briefcase, though," he said, giving Astra a flat look.

"Heheh..." Astra scratched her head awkwardly. It still wasn't her fault she had such a limited wardrobe! Still, that'd probably be for the best. Silently, she gave him a nod. Brendan nodded back, smiling.

"Y'all done?" May asked, fiddling with the remote. "The good part is coming up." With that said, the volume on the TV, having been turned down at some point, abruptly returned to full blast.

Astra's attention was dragged to the screen, and she let out a gasp when she saw the squid-person from earlier turn into... a squid made of ink? "What is this?" she asked, watching the squid-man jump out of an inky puddle, turn human and slam into a different, non-squid human.

"It's a spinoff of one of the most popular shows on the air," May answered. "About a dude who can do a bunch of squid stuff, like turn into them, grow tentacles, cover things in ink—which is like, acidic sometimes?—and even travel through that ink really fast. Travels a world-spanning ocean with his crew, getting up to all sorts of stuff."

"Oh," Astra said, watching intently as the squid-man pulled out a barreled device that let him spray ink across an entire crowd of people. "That sounds cool!"

"I've never been into these sorts of shows myself," Brendan said, eyeing the screen curiously. "I suppose you haven't seen a lot of these either, Astra?"

Atra shook her head, eyes glued to the screen. "We had something similar using shadows and fire, but this is... something else."

"Shadow puppets...?" Brendan wondered.

"We watched Treasure Galaxy last night," May offered. "She's never seen King of the Amulet either."

"Huh. That's interesting," Brendan murmured, sharing a glance with May. "I haven't seen the former either, but my dad loves to put the latter on for movie night." Shaking his head, he leaned back into the seat. "So, do you watch a lot of these, May?" he asked, motioning to the screen

"Eh." May shrugged. "A few. This one isn't as good as the original, so I've skipped a few here and there. Now that one is the best; same basic concept with the ocean but it's just so good! There's this guy with a talking snail—wait, I should start at the beginning. So, it all started with this pirate—"

Astra sat back, a sense of contentment filling the air as May started to chatter about her show, most of the finer details flying right over her head. To her side, Brendan split his attention between the screen and May's ramblings, interrupting every now and then to ask a question or two.

On the table, the Devon Suitcase waited. They'd have to deal with that sooner or later. But for now, a little relaxation was all she needed.

...

Also her robe. The towels here were even itchier than the ones in Petalburg!





AN:

Three months come and gone, and another chapter out into the world! This one gave me a hard time, specifically the entire back half. You know the bit. Seems Astra hasn't been as careful as she thought, eh? It's much shorter than my last few as well, isn't it? Heh, maybe that's for the best.

As for the very end, I had a revelation recently. I can put whatever the hell I want on TV. Fanfic ideas I wont get around to? Three seasons and a movie. Hell yeah. The one featured here is a small idea of 'Hey how would an Inkling do if it were in One Piece?', alongside a shoutout to a fanfic I re-read recently.

Art, as always, is by my good friend @Dexexe1234. Read his stuff!

Side note, if you wanna come hang out on discord, here's a link: Join the Dexworks Conglomerate Discord Server!

Next up: A meeting with a CEO, a Doctor, and a clothing store. You excited? I'm excited.

Thank you for enjoying my story, and please tell me what you think.
 
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Hyphen 25 - Business
Hyphen 25

Business




Clothes washed, showers taken, and relaxation complete, the three trainers headed down to the Devon Towers, pace slowed by lingering fatigue and injury. The two spires shone in the afternoon skyline like beacons, and as the base of the buildings came into view the trio blinked at the sight before them.

"Damn," May huffed, rubbing at her side. "That's a lot of police cars."

"There's only three," Brendan said, peering at the parking lot in the distance. "More than I thought there'd be, but Devon is pretty high profile, the theft must have kicked up a panic."

Astra squinted, staring down at the cars. Quite a few humans were scattered about the area, all but one had matching blue uniforms and turquoise hair. The sole exception was a familiar Devon employee. He was speaking with one of the uniformed people and seemed downcast if his slumped stance was any indication.

"What's up with all the blue?" Astra asked. She'd never seen humans go without some form of individualism; this swarm of identical people was a startling departure from the norm. Even their hair was the same shape. If Astra didn't know better, she would have thought she was looking at another pokemon species.

"You don't...?" Brendan paused, and when Astra turned to look, she found him sharing a concerned glance with May. Had she asked something weird again? He shook his head and turned back to her. "Those are police officers," Brendan continued, frowning in thought. "Uh, they're a group of people who enforce the laws, and protect people when dangerous things happen."

Astra nodded thoughtfully. So they were the human equivalent of the guards back home? Why hadn't they been the ones to—wait, the Devon employee had said the 'police' were occupied by the disaster in the forest, hadn't he? Another hot flash of shame roiled though her; yet another way her experiment had caused chaos and panic. Well, that explained who they were, but not why they looked so similar. Wait, hadn't she seen something like this before? "Are they like Nurse Joys, then?" Astra asked.

"Yeah, same sort of deal," Brendan confirmed. "They all dress the same so people can recognize them. Though, if you ask me the hair and the names are a bit much." He shrugged. "Still, they're always first on the scene when there's trouble afoot, so if you have a problem, a Jenny is always a good choice to call!"

"Good choice my ass," May snorted. "Any time I ever met one of them, they were only interested in giving me hell. Fucking bluejays."

"May!" Brendan exclaimed, giving her a scandalized look. "You can't call them that! That's disrespectful!"

"If they wanted me to respect them, then they shouldn't have gotten on my ass for the most petty of bullshit!" May scoffed, glaring down at the uniformed humans. "Seriously, who the hell gives out a misdemeanor for a little bit of spray paint under a fucking bridge—!" She abruptly cut herself off with a hiss, clutching at her side.

"Uh," Astra said, coming to a halt. "You okay?

"I'm fine." May bit out, grumbling as she poked around her ribs. "Just—got too excited."

Brendan frowned. "We could still go to a clinic first. The briefcase isn't going anywhere."

May rolled her eyes. "It's just a stupid bruise with ideas, I can handle it." She shouldered her way past Brendan, speeding a few meters down the road. "See!" she called, turning back. "I'm fine!"

She held her hands out in display, giving them a flat look. Brendan sighed. "Alright, alright." he said, waving her on. He glanced at Astra. "She really likes making things difficult, doesn't she?"

Astra shrugged and gave him a wry grin. "You don't even know half of it. I hope she's okay..." She frowned, looking back at May. Externally, the other girl looked fine, but Astra had sensed May's pain flare up a few times now.

"We'll know for sure after we bring her to a doctor," Brendan replied. "Come on, we don't want her getting too far ahead."

"Right." Astra nodded, and sped up her pace to catch up with May. Something May had said just now had piqued her interest. Falling in line with her friend, Astra looked up at her curiously. "You were painting on a bridge?" she asked, tilting her head. "You never told me you could paint."

May's eyes flickered to Astra, and she sighed. "...I used to doodle at school," she grumbled. "It sort of translated over. Wasn't any good, but it didn't look like shit, I guess."

"I'm sure it looked great!" Astra said with a grin. "What'd you draw? Something cool, right? Actually, knowing you, it was just rude."

May looked at Astra, eyebrow raised. "Rude?"

Astra shrugged. "I dunno. Maybe you drew your dad with a stupid face?"

May snorted and looked away, lips upturned. "Heh, maybe I should have." She was silent for a moment. "...I drew a beach, and the ocean."

"Oh!" Astra exclaimed. "That sounds nice!"

"But not something you'd get a misdemeanor over," Brendan chimed in from their left, having caught up to them. He frowned. "That'd get you a warning at worst, especially since we're minors."

"There may have been shouting." May shrugged. "I guess they didn't like what I put on the beach."

"...What did you put on the beach?" Brendan asked, slowly.

"Oh, nothing much. Just a lighthouse on top of some boulders." May said, staring straight ahead as they walked. The corner of her mouth twitched. "Alongside a few... interestingly shaped clouds firing off from the tip."

Astra squinted, confused. What was a lighthouse? And why would it matter if clouds were emerging from it? She leaned over to ask Brendan, but paused when she saw the deep, deep exasperation etched into his face.

"Really?" Brendan asked. "Really?"

Astra looked between her friends, bewildered. "Really what? What's wrong with clouds?"

"I also drew a sun. The clouds might have been travelling into it." May added, her voice shaking with constrained laughter.

Astra peered at her. Was May joking? But what was the joke? Brendan looked like he got it, so maybe it was some human thing? Were they hiding it from her? Astra, undeterred, spoke up with what she did know about. "Why would a cloud go into the sun? They go across the sky. And sometimes fall down and get everybody wet."

May twitched, her entire face curling upwards in a demented grin. "Boy, they sure fucking do!" she crowed, then burst out cackling, doubling over with a pained wheeze. Astra stared at her.

Brendan's hand hit his face, a tired sigh escaping through his fingers. "That is the most juvenile—why am I friends with you again?"

"My amazing sense of humor, obviously," May grinned, leaning on Brendan's shoulder. "C'mon! It's hilarious! Just imagine it, a giant—"

May broke off and whispered a few words into Brendan's ear. Whatever May said caused him to quickly cover his mouth with a fist, muffling a sharp snort. He shook his head, wiping the smile off his face and replacing it with a peeved expression. "Alright, maybe it's a little funny. But it was still inappropriate!"

"What is!?" Astra yelled. She glared at both of them. It was definitely deliberate that time! Why wouldn't they just make sense? "I don't get it! What's so special about a lighthouse and the weather!?"

"Nothing, Astra," Brendan sighed, shoving May's arm off. "Just a crude joke. Don't worry about it."

"Well you did laugh, so I'd call it a win!" May cheered. Then she blinked, expression souring. "Even if those Jennies didn't. And speaking of the devil..."

"Hold it!" a voice yelled. Astra turned, and blinked as she found herself surrounded by a parking lot. Had she been so focused on the conversation that she hadn't noticed herself walking in? Argument sidetracked, she looked over at the Officer Jenny that had called over to them, who was now briskly walking over.

"Uh, we're not in trouble, right?" Astra asked her friends, nervously eyeing the approaching "police officer". Their accounts hadn't quite left her with a solid impression; the officers were supposedly protectors, but they also gave May trouble just for drawing?

"We're fine," Brendan said, standing to attention. "We just need to explain ourselves and everything will turn out all right. And don't antagonize them, please?" He gave May a pointed look.

"Yeah yeah," May huffed, waving Brendan off. "Just wave the briefcase and get us through."

"Mhm. Ah, hello there Officer Jenny!" Brendan called, waving his free hand as the officer drew close. "What seems to be the issue?"

The Officer Jenny came to a halt in front of the trio, eyes glancing toward May and Brendan's pokeballs. "Hello, trainers," she said, adopting an apologetic smile. "I'm afraid there's been an incident in the Devon Towers, and these buildings will be off limits for another few hours for investigative reasons."

"Ah! Well, I have good news for you, then." Brendan said, lifting the briefcase. Officer Jenny glanced at it, confused. Brendan smiled. "We happen to have been involved with—"

"You did it!" another voice exclaimed. Everyone blinked, turning to see the familiar, green-suited Devon employee nearly sprinting toward them, a joyous expression on his face and a confused Officer Johnny abandoned mid-conversation behind him. "You got it back! You really are great trainers!"

"Mr. Kennedy?" Officer Jenny asked, looking off balance as the portly man—Kennedy, as Astra now knew—came to a stop next to the group and beamed. "Do you know these trainers?"

"Know them? They're the ones who've been saving my bacon recently!" Kennedy exclaimed. He hesitated. "Well, those two, at any rate," he said, motioning toward Astra and May. "I'm not sure about this fellow here. Friend of yours?" he asked, eyeing Brendan curiously.

"Yeah!" Astra said with a nod. "Brendan helped us get the briefcase back. We couldn't have done it without him."

"It was no big deal, really," Brendan laughed, scratching his head.

Kennedy smiled at him jovially. "No need to be humble, boy! You—all of you—deserve nothing but the highest of praise! That briefcase contains incredibly important material, and if it had gotten into the wrong hands, why, I don't know what could have happened! Speaking of which...?"

His eyes flicked to the briefcase, and Brendan obligingly handed it over. "I don't think it's been opened," Brendan said, flexing his hand a bit with the weight finally gone. "So whatever's inside should still be in one piece."

"Hm." Balancing the briefcase on his arm, Kennedy unlatched it and peeked inside. Nodding once, he latched it shut again and grinned. "It's all there, exactly how I kept it! Superbly done, the President will surely be glad to hear of your success. Oh, he might even want to thank you personally!" He brightened, looking at the trainers happily. "Please come with me, I'm sure he'll want to see you as quickly as—"

"Hold it!" The Officer Jenny barked, making everyone jump. "Nobody's going anywhere!"

May snorted. "Here we go," she muttered, sullenly kicking at the ground.

"Oh, uh, is there a problem, officer?" Kennedy asked, looking perplexed. "These three trainers just saved us a lot of trouble; surely everything is sorted?"

"There's still a thief at large, Mr. Kennedy," Officer Jenny reminded him. "If you are sure that the missing property has been recovered, then we can release you and the briefcase. But as for you three," she continued, turning to Astra, May, and Brendan, "I'm afraid I need you to answer a few questions about the events of the past few hours."

"Oh, is that it?" Astra asked, relieved. She had thought something had gone wrong for a moment. Answering a few questions didn't sound too bad. "Sure, we can do that." Brendan nodded in agreement, and while May didn't look happy, she didn't voice an objection.

Kennedy huffed. "Well drat. Well, once you get done with all this, talk to the receptionist in our lobby. I'll tell her to send you up."

"We will," Astra said, giving him a grin. After recent events it was nice to have solved a problem instead of creating one. Even if it was one she had indirectly enabled.

"Right then. I'd best get this back where it belongs." Kennedy said, patting the briefcase. "Don't tarry too long! We'll be waiting." He shot them one last smile, then spun about and walked off back to the tower.

"You know," May said, watching him leave, "I was halfway expecting him to somehow lose the thing before he got in."

Astra snorted. "What, like he'd trip and send it flying into a bush?"

May merely hummed. "A girl can dream."

A clap drew their attention. "Alright then!" The Officer Jenny said with a friendly smile. "If you could follow me, this won't take long at all."



The questioning took a long time.

Well, longer than Astra had expected. Officer Jenny hadn't seemed fazed by their attempt to catch the thief, but she was concerned about their battle with the Exploud and had proceeded to give them a lecture about challenging pokemon 'above their weight class'. It mostly revolved around 'knowing when to run away', which May had scoffed at.

A full hour later, Astra, May, and Brendan finally entered the Devon Towers, and were now in a waiting room near the top of the building. The elevator had made Astra a bit nauseous, and she wondered exactly how high up they were. Higher than even the tallest of trees she had climbed back home for sure, though it was hard to tell without a window to look through.

Apparently the Devon President was in some sort of meeting, or so the receptionist had said. The harsh lights embedded into the ceiling shone through clouded glass, revealing a wide lounge with a red-tiled floor, faded green walls hosting a few posters, and a small assortment of chairs, tables, and magazines.

"Right away my ass," May drawled, reclining on the sole sofa in the room. She stared at the ceiling, sprawled across all three seats of the sofa. "If we weren't held up for an entire hour, I bet we could have been outta here by now. Seriously, I swear we told the damn story twenty times! They didn't even believe us when we told them it was an Aqua dude!"

"It was only twice," Brendan said, flipping through a magazine with a sleek looking vehicle on the cover. "It just took longer the second time because we had to answer questions and sit through a lecture. And it's a reasonable doubt! I still have reservations about it and I was there." He looked up at the door, frowning slightly. "As for the delay, the President can't just drop everything on a moment's notice. Time is incredibly valuable to a man in his position. We would have had to wait no matter when we came in."

Astra, meanwhile, was examining a magazine of her own. It was the same one about grass care that she had seen in the pokemon center, but with a lack of anything else to do she had finally taken a look just to see why anyone could possibly want to read it. It was dull, but did deliver on its premise. She hadn't known that clover, of all things, could be so important to healthy soil. Though, what exactly 'nitrogen' was and why it needed fixing still escaped her. Maybe the gardeners back home could make use of this?

Astra tuned back in upon hearing about the President of Devon. She asked, "Is his time really that important? Back home, I'd be hard pressed to keep busy all day." Though, she supposed that was when she was still a Ralts. There would be more to do now that she was a Kirlia. She couldn't recall a time when the Guard wasn't supposed to be at the gates, or the gardeners at the garden. Even her Grandpa spent a lot of time on drawing, preparing pigment, or making specialty food like jam.

"It's a little different for men like him, Astra," Brendan said, flipping another page. "I'd imagine his every waking hour is spent dealing with some aspect of his company or another. The sheer number of people—"

"Blah blah big guy big problems," May summarized. She scowled, glaring up at the ceiling. "When you get too 'important' you don't have time for anything. All they do all day is 'work work work' and there's jack all you can do to drag them away from it. This guy's no different."

"That's a little reductionist," Brendan said, raising an eyebrow. "They aren't all workaholics; even a company president takes a day off now and then."

May scoffed. "Yeah, but only when they feel like it," she said, gesturing toward the door. "Try to get a guy like him to take a day off to do something for you and ten thousand bucks says he'll be 'too busy'. Same shit every time." May sighed, her glare softening to something more listless, as she trailed off. "Every time."

May was silent for a moment, then scowled. "Ugh, that break earlier was not enough. Whatever, I'm taking a nap. Wake me up when it's time." She then rolled over to face the sofa's backrest, ignoring them.

Astra and Brendan shared an uneasy glance. Was she still talking about the Devon President? Brendan looked back at May and opened his mouth, then paused, looking uncertain. He grimaced, then looked back at his magazine.

Astra considered saying something herself, but followed Brendan's lead and kept quiet. The Devon waiting room was probably a bad place to air out grievances, anyway. She fiddled with the edges of her cloak, peering at the fraying fabric. How old was this thing anyway? Maybe it wasn't surprising that it was starting to fall apart.

Sighing, Astra turned back to the discarded lawn care magazine. She considered it for a moment, then shook her head. She had been curious about it earlier, but even the small tidbits of useful information were terribly dull. Astra glanced around the waiting room, desperate for something to occupy herself with when her gaze alighted on the large Devon Corporation logo on the wall. She stared at it for a moment before wondering, what exactly was Devon anyway?

It was a company, Astra knew, and she had sussed out that that meant it was a group of humans that did things in exchange for money. Sort of like if the Smith back home—if a group of Smiths had banded together and demanded their weight in fish before they made anything.

Actually, now that she thought about it, the Smith probably did do that, what with being one of the only Kirlia able to shape metal. It occurred to Astra that once all this was over she could use the exotic berry seeds she had to much the same effect. Just wall off a part of the garden, grow and pick off a few handfuls of rare berries and then trade them off for entire baskets of Magikarp. Now that was the easy life!

Astra fantasized about unreasonable quantities of fish for a moment longer, then shook her head. Right. Devon. It was a company that did...things. Things that involved briefcases. And were led by the President, presumably. Alright, she didn't really have any clue what they did here. While she had peeked at a few sets of computers and other machines on the way up, their use hadn't been obvious. How lucky, then, that she had such a convenient guide sitting a few feet away.

"Hey Brendan," Astra asked, idly swinging her legs. "What does Devon do?"

"Hm?" Brendan looked up, blinking. His brow furrowed a bit. "Devon? Uh, they research and develop new technology. A lot of it focuses on Pokemon but I don't think there are many areas they haven't had a hand in. They're pretty big, actually. I think they're only a little smaller than Silph Co, and they operate nearly worldwide."

Astra nodded thoughtfully. New technology, huh? Astra could already hardly believe all of what humanity had come up with. Amazing medicine, awe-inspiring entertainment, mouth-watering food; they had even gone to the moon! Though all of this had come at a price as the light-drowned night sky had clearly shown her. Astra hadn't even seen everything yet, and there was yet new technology to be made? Baffling, truly.

"What kind of things have they made?" she asked, curious. "Anything that would fit in a briefcase?"

"Well a lot of things could have been in there," Brendan said, giving her a wry grin, "so I couldn't really say. Things they've made though..." He considered the question, idly biting his lip and staring at the ceiling. "Hm."

He cast his gaze around the room in thought, then paused to look at a poster on the wall. Astra followed his gaze, and saw a stylized, featureless depiction of a grey-suited, steel-blue haired man. He was posing dramatically on a cliffside and holding a variety of pokeballs in an arc above his head. There was some text proclaiming the superiority of the company's goods, but Astra was distracted by the caricature. He bore a strong resemblance to the man she and May had met in the forest. Why was he on a poster here?

"Well," Brendan said, interrupting Astra's thoughts. "I suppose they've come out with a couple of niche pokeballs recently."

Astra gazed at the poster a moment more, then shook her head and turned her attention to Brendan. "Niche pokeballs? Wait," she said, remembering the events that had occurred when she and May had arrived at Rustboro yesterday. "That Kennedy gave me a Great Ball the first time we saved him. I guess I forgot about it. I think he said it caught pokemon better than a regular ball, but I'm not sure how that all works. And now these 'niche' ones...I'm a little confused. What's different about them all?"

"Oh, that's easy." Brendan said, setting his magazine down. "Dad told you how basic pokeballs work, right?"

"Something about stasis, I think?" Astra hazarded. She shook her head. "I still don't get how they do what they do, though."

And wasn't that the question? The one that set this whole adventure off way back on Route 104. That green-haired child—Wally? May had been there too—had thrown a pokeball at her, and she had avoided capture by the most narrow of margins. She had found it and discovered how it could change size and shape, and then she had wanted to know how.

At long last, was that initial mystery about to be answered? Astra leaned forward, focusing intently on Brendan's words.

"Neither do I, really," he confided, dashing Astra's hopes. "The first pokeballs were made from apricorns, and to be frank it's downright baffling as to how a fruit can transform a Pokemon into pure energy and data."

"Apricorns?" Astra asked, confused. Then she gaped at him, because what? "Pokeballs are made from fruit!?"

"Weird, right?" Brendan said, nodding, sharing in her confusion. "They just hollow the things out, then do...something, and boom, Pokeball. You won't find them in Hoenn since apricorns don't grow here, but they're still around in other regions. Devon makes theirs out of modern materials so unless you import them you're mostly using metal and plastic."

Astra just stared at him, speechless. Fruit. Pokeballs were made out of fruit. How did—what—why? How!? She made a mental note to look into these apricorns later. If she could figure out how they were made and get a few seeds, then...well, maybe her home could put up more of a fight than she'd thought.

Brendan shook his head. "Crazy stuff. Right, so, Pokeball variety." He paused, gathering his thoughts. "So," he started, leaning his elbow on the chair, "You know about the regular pokeballs. Cheap, red, basically just puts your pokemon in a virtual bed and calls it a day. But other pokeballs, the more expensive ones, do something else.

"For example, that great ball you mentioned. Great balls are one of the three standard pokeballs, one step above the regular and surpassed by ultra balls. What great balls—and most non-default balls—do is create a sort of virtual space inside for the pokemon to live in, about... two or three times the size of this room?" He hazarded, looking around.

Astra blinked, wide-eyed. Pokeballs could do that? The room wasn't too spacious; so two or three times that would be... a little larger than the main cave back home. All inside that little ball? "Wow. How does it all fit in there?"

"Well it's all just data, so—uh." Brendan stopped, thinking for a second. "The room doesn't really 'exist', so to speak." He said, raising his hands and making a strange, doubled two finger gesture. "Just...the idea of a room, I guess. And the pokemon inside can, uh, 'shape' the idea however they like once they're linked to the ball."

Astra gave him a flat look. He was dumbing things down, wasn't he? She couldn't really blame him, but it was still aggravating! Still, an entire room that shaped itself to the inhabitants whims? That sounded intriguing; almost enough to make her want to check it out herself.

Almost.

"What do the other types do?" she asked, leaning forward.

"Well, ultras are like greats, except a lot bigger," Brendan said, folding his hands on his lap. "I don't know the exact measurement, but they have nearly five times the capacity of a great ball. They're one of the most expensive types since that much compact, durable storage needs a ton of expensive electronics, but all that space means pokemon are generally twice as likely to let themselves be caught."

"Wow!" Astra exclaimed. Twice as likely? Well no wonder, with all that space they could make an entire house! Well, she would; she didn't know what, say, a Wurmple would do with it all. Maybe she should upgrade her occupied pokeballs if she happened across the funds. "What are the weird ones like, then? Tell me about those!"

"Well, there are quite a few types," Brendan began, smiling. "The most common are pre-shaped ones, which have hard-coded 'spaces' suited to a certain pokemon type, like water or bugs—"

The door clicked open, causing Brendan to fall silent. A woman looking down at a clipboard walked in, reading something off it before looking up and addressing the room. "Would you three be Brendan, May and Astra? The meeting—" she cut off, blinking at where May was still curled up on the couch.

Brendan glanced at May, who hadn't reacted yet, and rolled his eyes. "Yes, that's us," he confirmed, standing up and redirecting the woman's attention. "Is the meeting starting?"

The woman blinked again, then straightened. "Yes. Mr. Stone will see you now. If you would...collect yourselves, I will take you to see him."

Brendan nodded, sidling up to the couch. "Right. I'll just..." He grabbed May's arm and yanked.

"Gah!" May yelped, flailed wildly, then collapsed in a heap on the floor. "The fuck!?" she yelled, glaring up at Brendan.

Brendan turned to the woman, smiling politely and ignoring May entirely. "We're ready."

Astra snickered. May glowered at them both, waving away Astra's proffered hand.

The woman stared at them. "...Very well," she said, "Please, follow me."



They were led to a grandiose set of double doors down a long hallway. The secretary opened it and ushered them inside with a slight bow. The first thing Astra noticed about the Devon President's office was how big it was. It could have fit at least six of those waiting rooms inside and had room left to spare. A large table took up the central area, surrounded by a great many black seats and couches, and the walls were sparsely decorated, save a few photos and framed documents of some kind, and a few oddly colored egg-shaped objects in display cases were scattered here and there.

The second thing Astra noticed was the gigantic window that took up nearly the entirety of the wall across the entry. Rustboro stretched ahead of her, a grand vista of the buildings below and the forest beyond from on high. The tiny people and vehicles traversing the streets, the dazzling variety of stores and structures in neat rows, the lush green trees in stark contrast at the far border; it would have been beautiful...if not for the eye-catching pillar of sickly yellow skyline in the distance.

Astra stiffened, staring at the distant haze before taking a breath and looking away. Dark memories threatened to resurface, the faint echo of senseless rage murmuring at the back of her thoughts, but she forced them back down. Grimacing behind her robes face-covering, she mentally shook herself and turned to face the Devon President, who sat behind a large wooden desk at the far end of the room.

The man was old. His hair, while still full and styled in a number of soft mounds, had clearly faded into a stark grey-white, shades of what must have been the original dark blues of his youth still visible near his neck. His square face looked down upon some papers on his desk, grey eyes creased somberly. Upon their approach he blinked and looked up at them, expression lightening slightly.

"Oh, the heroes of the day! Welcome!" he greeted, standing up and smoothing out some faint crease from his striped blue suit. "You three must be May, Astra, and Brendan, correct? My name is Joseph Stone, president of the Devon Corporation. Please, call me Joseph. I hear from Kennedy that you have done me and my company great services these past few days. It's a pleasure to meet you."

He held out a hand and tried to smile. But to Astra, the air of deep exhaustion she could sense around the man made the expression more haggard and worn. Astra vaguely wondered if he had been having trouble sleeping when what he'd said caught up to her.

Joseph Stone? Wasn't that..? Astra shared an unsure glance with May, who seemed to be having similar thoughts. After a moment, they shook their heads. Surely it was just a coincidence. Right?

Brendan stepped forward while they were distracted and shook Joseph's hand firmly. "Brendan Birch," he said, smiling in return. "The feeling's mutual. We appreciate the opportunity, even if the events leading to it were unfortunate."

"Hm! Yes, yes, the Aqua business." Joseph sighed, sitting heavily into his chair. "What a nuisance all this has been. First Kennedy gets assaulted outside his own home, and now some goon steals from us in broad daylight? Madness, I tell you." His lips thinned, tone turning bitter. "Aqua denies it all, of course, but I doubt it was some imposter or lone actor. The number of people who would have use for what was stolen is very, very small."

"Wait, wait," May interjected, "Back up a bit. 'Assaulted outside his home'? You mean that guy we helped out yesterday?"

Joseph blinked. "Kennedy? Yes, he said you two helped him out of a scrape—"

"Oh that's a load of Buuu—" May cut off and glanced at Brendan, who was giving her an intense, disapproving stare. "—nk." she finished, rolling her eyes. "Load of bunk. We were in 104 when that happened."

"Yeah," Astra chimed in, confused. Had Kennedy gotten his own story wrong? "We were just coming into the city. Kennedy was looking for a Shroomish when we found him, and we were attacked right after."

Joseph stared blankly at them. "Oh," he said, and something about his flat tone sent a chill up Astra's spine. "Is that so? Well, far be it for me to tell a man what to do with his free time. But he had the briefcase with him at the time, correct?"

"Y-yes?" Astra said, hesitantly. May also nodded.

"I see." Reaching over, Joseph pressed a button on his desk and an odd crackling filled the air. "Lily, could you schedule Kennedy another meeting with HR?"

Astra heard an exasperated sigh from a weird mesh inset into the wood. "Again, sir?" a voice said, crackly and distorted but heavily exasperated all the same. Astra blinked. Did this desk have a phone inside? Did people call him on it? That seemed inconvenient; what if he was away? He couldn't drag the thing into the bathroom, could he? The voice—which she suddenly recognized as the secretary—continued, unaware of Astra's intrigue. "Details?"

"Operational security, maximum. Tell the accountants to dock his pay as well."

"Ouch. Very well sir." Another sigh. "Damnit, Ken..."

The crackling stopped. Joseph sat back and huffed. "It's a damn shame it'd take a score of men to replicate what that buffoon does on his lonesome," he grumbled, "else I would have fired him ages ago."

"Um," Astra said, hesitating. Fired? Like, set on fire? Surely not; it must just be another weird human saying. "Is he going to be okay?"

"Oh he'll be fine," Joseph said, waving her off. "Some time with our chief of security will set him straight. Or so one would hope. Anyway!" He folded his hands on his desk, looking at them intently. "Enough about all that, let's talk about you three. You've done Devon a great service by thwarting that criminal's brazen acts twice over, and at great personal risk as well. For that I'd give you my most sincere thanks and perhaps a few tokens of appreciation. However..."

His eyes glinted, the thin line of his mouth turning up at the edges. "I also find myself in sudden need of a few trustworthy individuals to perform a task or two for me. And what luck that some would reveal themselves just as the need arises."

"A job? Your big thanks is to give us a job?" May asked incredulously, and Astra tilted her head, squinting at the man with echoed confusion. How did doing someone a 'great service' lead to more things to do for them? It clearly wasn't a human thing, because even Brendan looked surprised.

"My 'big thanks' is the opportunity to do the job," Joseph replied, leaning forward. "If you wish, I could merely send you along with my gratitude and a trifling reward. But do this errand, and I will ensure you are justly compensated."

The three trainers looked at each other uncertainly. Astra wasn't sure what to make of the offer, personally. A reward could be useful, she supposed, and the spark of greed she could see in May's eye told her what way she was leaning. But what was he asking them to do? Would it attract more attention their way? How long would it take?

Brendan seemed to share these thoughts, and he turned back to Joseph, brow furrowed. "What would this 'errand' be, exactly?" he asked, folding his arms.

"A simple delivery," Joseph answered. "The exact details of which will only be revealed upon your acceptance."

"Can we at least know where?" Brendan pressed.

Joseph stared at him for a moment, then inclined his head a fraction. "Two items, one to Dewford and one to Slateport." he said. "If this is out of the way—"

"Oh!" Astra exclaimed, relieved. "Dewford? We were going there in about five days. I think Mr. Briney said he'd ferry us to Slateport too," she added, thinking back to the old sailor's offer.

Joseph blinked, sitting up in astonishment. "You're travelling with Mr. Briney?" he asked. "A remarkable stroke of fortune; Briney is one of the best sailors around and much more discreet than a regular passenger ship. Slateport afterwards, you said? It seems that my request wouldn't even have you go too far out of your way."

"I guess so," Brendan agreed, hesitantly. He turned to May and Astra, unsure. "What do you two think? It doesn't sound that hard, and we'll probably benefit a lot."

"If it's on the way, I don't really see why not." Astra shrugged, then hesitated. Maybe there was something more to this. "I mean, is it going to make the trip more dangerous?"

Joseph shook his head. "If I were to announce the delivery by seeking experienced couriers, it very well could," he revealed. "I certainly couldn't entrust these to the usual channels if certain groups feel comfortable attacking our headquarters in broad daylight." His face turned thunderous for a moment, before returning to a placid neutral. "Your actions have shown me that you can be trusted, and your relative obscurity will keep attention down. If all goes to plan, nobody of ill-intent will even think to bother you."

"And what if they do, huh?" May asked, folding her arms. "We gettin' paid extra? What are we getting for doing this anyway?"

"Your compensation can take many forms," Joseph started. "Money is, of course, a simple option. I could also give you license to beta test certain equipment we are in the process of developing—"

"Do you have better maps!?" Astra interrupted, very nearly teleporting to the desk. "Because the one in the pokedex is really, really bad."

There was a moment of bewildered silence.

"A map?" Brendan asked, peering at Astra with a strange look. "That's kind of..."

"I mean," May said, slowly. "It wouldn't be my first choice, but we did get pretty damn lost with that piece of crap."

"I see." Joseph blinked, rallying his thoughts. "An unusual request, but one we are more than capable of fulfilling. Our next generation of PokeNavs are in just the right place for some rigorous field checks; I could certainly requisition a few for you three."

"I'm in," Astra announced. Not knowing where she was had been awful; avoiding that in the future was worth any sort of trouble.

May snorted. "Right. I'm more interested in the cash myself. Alright, fine. I guess we're doing this. So," she said, looking back to Joseph, "What are we carrying anyway?"

Joseph smiled. "I'm glad we could come to an agreement. Now, the package to Slateport is one you're already familiar with."

With that said, he reached under his desk and plonked down an item: a silver briefcase, presumably the one they had returned a mere hour ago. The three trainers blinked in surprise.

"This again?" May asked, frowning down at it. "Didn't we just bring it back? Why are we taking it away?"

"It's probably because it got stolen," Brendan guessed. "If they can do it once, they can do it again."

"Precisely so," Joseph confirmed. "We would have sent it along soon enough anyway; it was always destined for Slateport, but these incidents expedited the situation."

"What's in that thing anyway?" Astra asked, tilting her head. "...it's probably not soup, is it?" she added, putting on her best disappointed voice. She was rewarded with the sweet sound of an exasperated sigh and the soft clap of hand-meeting-face.

"Really?" Brendan and May asked in unison, giving her a flat stare. Astra just smiled.

Joseph peered at them, bewildered. "No," he said, after a long pause. "It's not...soup. As for the actual contents...hm." He paused again, seeming to stare down at his desk in thought. Nodding to himself, he looked back at them, expression firm. "Very well, I suppose letting you know won't cause any further harm. Someone already leaked that info to Aqua, so the Skitty's out of the ball, as it were."

Astra shared an excited glance with May. They'd been theorizing about it since they'd arrived at Rustboro and now they'd finally have an answer! She and May leaned forward in excitement, and even Brendan seemed to edge forward in anticipation.

Joseph quirked an eyebrow. "I'm afraid it's not quite as exciting as you think it to be. In so many words, you will be delivering a collection of precious materials, machine parts, and documentation relating to the construction of a new, cutting edge engine for a submarine. Captain Stern in Slateport will be the final recipient, delivered to his hands only."

"...huh," Astra said, confused and disappointed. She had hoped it was something more...more. Not parts to some machine. What was a submarine anyway? Something to do with water...?

May huffed. "Well, that's boring."

"I told you guys it wasn't going to be a case of gold bars, or whatever." Brendan levelled a flat stare at May, tone dry. But even he seemed a little disappointed.

"Whatever," May muttered, turning back to Joseph. "Yeah, we can take that thing to Slateport, easy. What was that other thing?"

"Your other package is a letter, destined for Dewford," Joseph explained. "I'll give it to you, along with the briefcase, on the day you depart."

"Alright, sounds good," Brendan said with a nod. "We shouldn't have any problems with either of those."

Joseph nodded back. "I should hope not. It's vital that these reach their destinations intact and undisturbed."

"Who's getting the letter?" May asked.

"It's addressed to my son, who's busy in Dewford. It should be easy to find him; I'm sure the gym leader over there would know where he is."

He had a son? Who was now in Dewford? An uneasy feeling pooled in Astra's stomach. Surely it couldn't be who she was thinking of, right? Her thoughts were interrupted by a sharp jolt of surprise from Brendan, and Astra turned to see him staring at Joseph, slack-jawed.

"Y...your son?" Brendan asked, stumbling over his words. "You mean, we're delivering a letter to Steven Stone?"

Astra stared at Brendan in shock, and she could feel the sheer panic erupt out of May as she did the same. Steven Stone? The same Steven Stone that had casually annihilated them back in the forest two days ago? The man with the strange, pressure-filled gaze? The one that May had so thoughtlessly pissed off with her reckless, immature posturing and insults? That Steven Stone?

"Yes, that would be him." Joseph confirmed.

"Steven Stone." Brendan repeated. "As in, Steven Stone, the Champion of Hoenn?"

All of Astra's mental faculties promptly shut down.

HE WAS WHAT!?

Joseph nodded. Astra stared at him, mind whirling. The Champion. She was going to deliver a letter to the Champion. The Champion who was that Steven Stone guy. The one human she needed to defeat in order to save her home. Whom she had already been horrendously outclassed by. And she was just...going to go give him a letter. What kind of insane situation was this? And what was a letter, anyway!?

Behind her, Astra could feel May's sharp shock give way to a tide of horrified panic. "Oh, fuck," May breathed, and Astra could only dimly agree over the rising terror that had suddenly overwhelmed her thoughts.

"Ah," Astra echoed. Fuck.

"It'll be an honor, sir," Brendan said, with sheer excitement roiling off him and completely blinding him to their alarm. "We'll be happy to get the chance to meet him!"

"I'm sure," Joseph agreed. "You said you'll be leaving in five days? Come back then, and we'll work out the packages and compensation. I expect this entire affair to be discreet, you understand."

"Uh." May said.

"Um." Astra echoed. Was it too late to back out?

"Of course!" Brendan nodded.

"Good." Joseph glanced at a nearby clock. "Well, it seems we're out of time. I believe we've covered everything, so we'll reconvene on the day of departure." He stood up and shook Brendan's hand, nodding firmly at May and Astra. "Thank you once more for your assistance, and I look forward to our future endeavors. Lily will see you out."

They were escorted outside by the secretary from before. Brendan cheerfully strode ahead. Astra and May hung back, shooting panicked glances at each other every step of the way.

"Isn't this great, guys?" Brendan asked once they were back outside. "We're going to meet the Champion! Man, I never expected this to happen so soon. Steven is one of the youngest champions in the world, you know and—um." He paused his rambling, looking from one stricken face to another. "Guys? You okay?"

Astra and May glanced guiltily at each other.

"Um..." Astra began to explain, "about that. We sort of...already fought him...on the way over..."

Brendan stared at them blankly. Raising up a hand, he slowly inserted a pinky into one ear and twisted it around. Pulling it out, he stared at the tip for a moment before refocusing on them.

Astra and May shifted, looking away.

Brendan blinked. "...you did what?"





I have reservations about this chapter. It doesn't move forward very far for how long it took to come out. That bit in the middle wasn't even supposed to be there, I just had an idea and swirled everything around to make it fit. Story of my life.

Next time we're definatly doing neat things. Like an outfit change! The design of which I am still unsure about.

Credits to my betas Ironyowl and @Oh I am slain! , without whom this would be much worse.

Reminder that, while it's not 'just' for Hyphen, I am part of a conglomerate discord available for all. Link in my sig.

Please tell me what you think, and thank you for enjoying my story.
 
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Hyphen 26 - Cover
Hyphen 26

Cover



"...and then Tentacool shot a rainbow at him, and he started getting covered in ice!" Astra exclaimed, splaying fake fingers in emphasis. "I realized that if we could get him completely frozen we might have a shot of winning, so I had Marill use a Water Gun. That really sped things up, and it was only moments before he was nearly coated!"

"May's Tentacool knows Aurora beam?" Brendan asked. He leaned back and rubbed his chin, the hospital's lounge chair creaking beneath him as he shifted. "Interesting; if I recall correctly, they can only learn that through hereditary means. He must have had a—oh what was it...Shellder! A Shellder or Cloyster in his ancestry." He nodded, looking pleased with himself. "That's pretty rare outside captivity; May got really lucky to get a wild cross-breed."

"Hey!" Astra reached over the small table and whapped Brendan's head with a sleeve, pouting. "I'm telling a story here!"

"Sorry, sorry!" Brendan said, a hint of laughter in his voice as he raised his hands. "Unusual pokemon distract me! I'm a bit interested in them, see."

Astra crossed her arms and huffed. "You're the one who asked me to tell you! You could at least pay attention."

"I have been!" Brendan protested. "You used a combination attack to freeze Steven's Skarmory. Brilliant maneuver, by the way," he added, giving her a grin. "If it had been anyone else I bet it would have worked."

Astra shot him a sullen glare. "You say that like it didn't."

Brendan gave her a blank stare. "Did it?"

"...no," Astra grudgingly admitted. She sighed. "He did this whole thing where he went 'I'm actually not even trying!' and, well, he hadn't actually told Skarmory to do anything the whole time."

And wasn't that illuminating? Steven had been so far above them that he almost didn't even need to bother fighting. Astra's team had gotten stronger since then, but she doubted Grovyle, Slakoth, and Nincada would've made much of a difference.

"He had Skarmory use 'Steel Wing'," Astra continued, her tone subdued. "Skarmory glowed white and shattered all the ice at once. A few moments later Tentacool and Marill were both down, and we lost."

Brendan hummed, nodding. "Well, you two did fantastic considering who you were up against. Steven's considered a bit of a genius even amongst Champions, so pushing him that far is pretty impressive!"

"Didn't feel very impressive," Astra muttered, idly kicking the air. She sighed and looked at a clock on the wall. It had been quite some time since May had vanished into the depths of the medical center, and at this point it was looking to not be a 'quick in-and-out' as May had said.

Had something gone wrong? Or had their fears been validated? Were May's injuries worse than she had claimed? Astra did another check and sensed that May was still deep within the halls, unchanged from the last time she had checked fifteen minutes ago.

"I don't think losing will ever feel impressive," Brendan said, jostling Astra from her thoughts. "Doesn't mean it isn't, though."

Astra snorted, turning and giving him a flat grin. "Why don't you go pick a fight with him then? I'm sure it'll be majestic."

"Hah. I'm a ways from doing anything like that. Not everyone can just walk up and challenge the champion; you've gotta go through the Elite 4 to even try." Brendan paused, brows furrowed. "Well, professionally, anyway. Most people don't just randomly run into Steven Stone on the road."

"Well, we weren't exactly on the road," Astra clarified. "Me and May got lost in the woods and had an argument, Steven overheard us from the trail and helped us out. He said he'd just been taking a break while flying to Dewford. Then May got mad at him for...well, she was being kinda dumb and rude for no reason, really."

"Eesh," Brendan winced. "And you guys didn't know—oh dang. That's not a good look."

"Yeah. So May challenged him to a fight, and, well, we fought." Astra hesitated. "I mean, he was nice enough before the fight, but once May challenged him...well, he was kind of a jerk after that. He sort of said sorry at the end, but—I dunno. I don't like him very much."

That weird pressure she felt...Astra wasn't sure what to think about that, either. It wasn't likely to be anything good.

Brendan bit his lip for a moment, thinking. "Well, that kind of tracks, actually," he said, nodding. "From what I heard, the man is very intense about training and battling; even champions in other regions have expressed admiration for his drive. I suppose you'd have to be pretty extreme to become Champion at seventeen."

"Doesn't excuse him smashing my team into the dirt when I wasn't even part of the challenge," Astra muttered. She blinked, frowning at the last thing Brendan had said. Was that how many years he'd been alive at the time? "Is seventeen young?" she asked, still unsure how age correlated to evolution. She assumed it was at least Kirlia-adjacent. Steven was clearly not either a tiny hatchling or Ralts and he didn't show any signs of being an Elder.

"Ehh, depends," Brendan said, waggling his hand. "Most long-term champions tend to be in their mid-to-late thirties, but it's not unheard of for younger trainers to defeat them. The thing is, there hasn't been anyone else below twenty to hold a championship for more than a year in a long time and Steven's been holding it for eight."

'Alright but is seventeen years like a Kirlia or what?' Astra didn't ask.

"Wow!" Astra said instead, sounding impressed. She paused. "Still kind of a jerk, though."

"Saving you from being lost didn't win any points, eh?" Brendan asked, giving her an amused look. "Well, if he acted like that I wouldn't blame you. Hopefully he'll be nicer when we deliver that letter. But that's a while off in any case; what else is new with you two? How about that violin, when did you get that?"

Astra perked up, happy to talk about her other new hobby. "Oh, did I never tell you? I actually got it right before we met in Petalburg—"



It took another twenty minutes before a sour-faced May emerged from the depths of the hospital, marching stiffly and holding some papers and a small bottle. Astra abandoned an interesting tangent about how she played during fights and ran over, Brendan not far behind.

"May!" Astra called, giving the taller girl a worried look as she came close. "Are you okay? You were back there for—"

"Broke a rib." May interrupted, shrugging. Astra stared at her, speechless.

"Sorry, you what?" Brendan asked, blinking.

"Broke a rib," May repeated, slowly. "What, do you need proof? I've got a cold-as-shit ice pack strapped to my chest and scans of my bones." She shivered, grimacing. "Seriously, this thing's freezing."

"You broke—oh no, are you going to be okay?" Astra asked worriedly. "How bad was it? You're not—I mean, will it heal?" Broken bones didn't happen too often back home, but they could leave even the sturdiest of Kirlia bedridden or hobbled if they weren't treated properly.

"Jeeze, relax." May rolled her eyes, a small smile gracing her features. "I'll be fine. Just gotta take some pills and take it easy. I'll be all healed up by the end of the week."

A week? That was...only seven days? Astra blinked, astonished. Wow, that was fast. Then again, should she be surprised anymore at this point? She'd seen the effectiveness of potions first hand, and the array of different cures available in the Pokemart. If they had medicine that incredible for pokemon, what wonders had humanity made for themselves?

"End of the week? It's Saturday," Brendan pointed out.

"Well whoop-de-doo, would you look at that? I'm fuckin' cured," May deadpanned. She slapped Brendan's shoulder and glared. "You know what I meant, jackass."

"Hey, I thought you were supposed to take it easy!" Brendan complained, rubbing his shoulder. He paused, then gave May a smile. "Still, I'm glad you're okay. I was starting to get worried."

May stiffened, then turned away with a scoff. "Tch, as if a lousy Exploud could keep me down. You shouldn't underestimate me, you know!"

May's cheeks were turning a very interesting shade of red again, Astra noticed.

"I know, I know," Brendan said. "Say, you said you had x-rays? Can I take a look?"

May blinked. "What? Why?"

Brendan shrugged. "X-rays are cool?"

"Ah. Yeah, sure," May pulled a shiny piece of paper from the folder, but paused before handing it over. "Hm." she murmured, smirking. "Are you sure you aren't just after a peek of my chest?"

"I—" Brendan froze, one hand halted mid-grab. "Uh?"

"Oh man," May drawled, fanning herself with the sheets. "Should I be worried about this sudden desire to see under my shirt? Didn't think you had it in you~"

Brendan exhaled, slowly deflating as he held a hand to his head. "You are impossible," he grumbled, utterly unimpressed.

"Can I see?" Astra asked. From what little she could peek at, they looked like a picture of bones, which was really weird but also kind of cool. "Please?" she added.

May gave Astra a blank look. "Wait, the pictures or my chest?"

"Eh?" Astra said, confused. "The pictures. Why would I want to see your chest again?"

"Aga—!?" Brendan let out a horrid wheezing noise. "What?" he choked out. "What is this conversation?"

"Fuck if I know but holy shit is it stopping." May shoved the bundle of pictures—x-rays?—into Brendan's hands with a huff. "Here, have the stupid pictures. Go nuts. What time is it?"

"Four-thirty, last I checked," Brendan said, as he fanned the pictures out on the table.

"Let me see!" Astra said, sidling up and peering at the photos in fascination. They were completely monochrome, a collection of thin white lines forming a cage set against a pitch backdrop. This was May's skeleton? How morbid. And cool! How did they get a picture of that? Some clever machine, no doubt.

Brendan tapped on one of the bones, and Astra noticed what looked to be an almost invisible line running through it. "Oh, here it is. That's...barely a fracture. When you said break I was imagining—well, you'll need some bedrest in any case. Speaking of..." He looked up. "Where are you two staying? It's been a day and a half; we should turn in early."

May shook her head. "Nuh-uh. There's still a bit of daylight left and I am not going another night without you getting some actual clothes!" she declared, pointed at Astra.

"This again?" Astra sighed, exasperated. "My robe is fine!"

"A shopping trip?" Brendan asked. "Really? After all of this?"

"Yes, after all this," May said, firmly. "Look, today's just been shit after shit after shit. Even the whole Devon thing is kinda sour now. All I wanted to do today was hang out, have fun, and get this girl some clothes so she doesn't spend all morning in the bathroom."

"Hey!" Astra protested. It didn't take her that long! Maybe an hour, max. Getting all the cloth situated so it covered everything and wouldn't unravel took time! And the wash took a while sometimes! And...it was kind of boring sitting in the bathroom for so long...

Alright, maybe she did need a more convenient disguise.

"And I haven't done any of that!" May continued, throwing her hands up. "Instead, I had to—well, you were there, you know." She sighed, arms dropping to her side. "I just want to do something and not have it turn to shit, alright?"

May's tone was defensive, but to Astra's senses the gloom hidden behind her words was obvious. She really wasn't wrong, either. Astra sighed, scratching the back of her head. "I suppose getting a new outfit had to happen at some point." she admitted.

"I mean, I get what you're saying, I really do," Brendan interjected, looking hesitant. "But, May, you just got treated for a fracture. I really don't think you should be putting it under any more stress—"

"Brendan, it's clothes shopping," May stated, annoyed. "I'm not even going to be the one trying them on. How is that stressful?"

Brendan paused. "...do you want me to answer that honestly?" he ventured.

"No." May clapped, abruptly putting on a cheerful grin. "It's settled then, let's get moving!"

"Wait, I still didn't agree to—hey, hey!"

"Why are you—wait you don't need to—ah!"

Grabbing Brendan and Astra's arms, May summarily dragged them both straight out of the hospital, to the relief of everyone else in the lobby.

She grinned. "Time to get you some new gear!"



Supe's Styles was a rather spacious building, as wide as some of the skyscrapers had been long. It was situated around where Rustboro's multi-story buildings started to transition into one to two floor houses, surrounded by what Astra thought was an excessive amount of parking space. It boasted of fair deals and an incredibly varied selection of fashion from all over the world, but to Astra it was notable only in that she had heard they were going to 'Supe's' and had been briefly confused as to why they were shopping for clothes at a soup store. Apparently the name was 'Kalosian', whatever that meant.

"Kalos is another region," Brendan explained, leaning against a pillar in the middle of an aisle crossroad. "They're known for being fancy and beautiful, so people like to name things in their style to associate themselves with those concepts."

May snorted. "Kalos is fancy so I gave my thing a Kalosian name to make it seem fancy. Doesn't mean it is. Mom's got a drawer full of crappy cosmetics with hoity-toity names and it's all hot garbage." She frowned at the rack of shirts before her, then shook her head and turned away. "Tch, too thin. Astra, are you gonna do anything or am I gonna do all the work here?"

"I don't really know what to look for," Astra admitted, hovering uncertainly at the entrance to an alley of pants. The sheer variety was overwhelming; so many colors and styles and varieties of cloth—what was she supposed to do here? "There's so much. How do I even start...?"

"Well, maybe we can start with what you like," Brendan suggested. "What kinds of outfits did you wear back home?"

Absolutely nothing, Astra wanted to say. Seeing as she had yet to see a single human go without clothing at all, even during sleeping hours, she suspected this would not be a good answer. But what did she like? She was fond of her current cloak and hat, but they were more a means to an end than anything.

There hadn't been anything akin to human fashion back in the village. Any sort of personal decoration was inevitably made of plants or animal parts; A flower in the hair here, a necklace of teeth there, the occasional attempt at dyeing a coat with ash or pigment, or even a painting by her Grandpa. Everything else had been limited to scavenging things humans had left in the outer edges of the forest, like her mother's red hair clip or a peculiar arrangement of colored glass spheres one Kirlia swept behind them as a prismatic cape on rare occasions.

Astra had never given thought to the matter, even when she had been preparing to leave. Looking nice had never been a consideration when her main goal had been—and still was—the avoidance of anyone looking at her at all. That said...she didn't oppose looking nice, and it seemed that looking terrible was counterproductive. Well, best to start with what she needed and work out the rest from there.

"Nothing like what I have now," Astra answered, picking at her robe. "But I still need what this gives me. Full body coverage and all. Maybe something that can work with my hat?"

"Sounds like we need to look at the big dresses," May murmured, sighing. "Damn, and this one looked cute, too."

Astra looked at the jacket May held up. It was a rather fetching dark blue, with long sleeves and two columns of gold buttons running down the center. Astra blinked. That did look pretty good, actually. "It's nice," she agreed, "but it doesn't cover my legs at all."

"Well, yeah, but that's what skirts and shorts are for," May pointed out.

"Maybe, but I prefer things like what I have now." Astra said, swishing the lower folds of her robe around in a twirl. "I like my clothes billowy, and in one piece."

A separate lower garment would have been acceptable if Astra hadn't grown one of her own yesterday. Her new ruffles wanted very badly to flare out around her waist, and while she had been able to manage them in her voluminous robes, an actual skirt would be either obviously hiding something or very, very uncomfortable. Not to speak of shorts or pants.

"Fair enough." May shrugged, hanging the jacket back up. "I guess that's more wintery anyway. C'mon, dresses are over there."

"It might not be a bad idea to get something wintery," Brendan said, pushing off the wall and following suit, Astra close behind. "We'll be passing by Winter's Eye on the way to Dewford and things get cold near there."

"That's the second time I've heard that," May said, frowning. "Winter's Eye. What the hell—oh!" She snapped her fingers, eyes widening. "Now I remember. Is that that weird fucking island that drops, like, a mile of snow on you guys randomly?"

"Wait, an island does that?" Astra asked, astounded. The weather had always just been a fact of the world. The sun shone, rain fell, and sometimes a sweeping blanket of white covered everything in ice for a few days. That there was a reason behind the snow, and even humans found it unusual? It blew the mind. "I thought that just happened! How can an island blast snow everywhere?"

"Nobody knows," Brendan said, shrugging. "It's one of Hoenn's great mysteries, actually; just like the Ferrous Forest and Mirage Island. There have been a ton of theories but it gets absolutely glacial near the island itself so there's not been much hard research."

"One hell of a national landmark," May muttered, wrapping her arms around herself. "Shit, maybe I should've brought my coat. I hate the cold. Even thinking about it...ugh." She shivered.

"I always liked it," Astra said, gazing as they passed into an aisle full of long dresses. "The cold never bothered me, and everyone always had fun with the snow. The bonfires always looked lovely too. Oh, what's this?"

Astra broke off, stopping to look at a piece that had caught her eye. It was a narrow thing, long sleeved and divided into red and white halves like a pokeball. The waistline even sported a black line with a circle in the middle. She blinked at it, taking it off the rack and examining it at arm's length.

May peeked over her shoulder. "Eh. Kinda tacky, isn't it?"

"Yeah," Astra agreed. It was certainly a bit silly. Who would want to wear a pokeball? Though, maybe in her case it would be a bit clever. Pokemon in a pokeball dress. Heh. Maybe a bit on the nose, but good for a laugh, at least. In any case there wasn't enough room for her skirt and she didn't think she'd look very good in it.

Astra shook her head and put it back. "I do not choose you," she informed the dress.

"Terrible." May snickered.

"Maybe something like this would be better?" Brendan asked.

Astra turned to see him proffering a bright yellow sundress. It bore a thin black sash around the waist and a white collar sporting a few buttons, but was otherwise unadorned. She hummed; it was certainly wide enough, and the sleeves long enough to hide her hands within, but it left her face and neck woefully exposed. Maybe if she fashioned her current black robe into a scarf of sorts...

"This looks nice," Astra hedged, "but I'm not sure about the yellow. Also, it's a bit thin." She eyed the sheer fabric. With all the new chaos in her life, a thicker or tougher cloth would probably be best. Better to hide her legs, too.

"I think yellow would look good," Brendan said, smiling. "As for the thinness, it'd be good for those hot summer days. Breathes easily, I bet."

"Brendan," May called out from the other end of the aisle. "Just a heads up: Astra needs a whole wardrobe so we're using the bulk outfit discount. No side picks, we don't have the money!"

"Oh! I didn't—right, that makes sense." Brendan sighed and put the sundress back on the rack. "We'll have to find something that works everywhere, then. I didn't realize you guys were strapped for cash," he commented, turning to give Astra an inquisitive look.

"Mhmm," Astra hummed, pulling out another red and white...thing. Gosh that was a lot of frills. And why were the shoulders missing? Wouldn't the sleeves just fall right off your arms? She shook her head and put the dress back. Human fashion sure was...was. "Well, we do have a bit, but we have a lot of mouths to feed now, even more so after today. Plus all the time May booked at the hotel, and, well, we're running low."

"You have been fighting other trainers, right?" Brendan checked.

"Curb stomped everyone from here to Petalburg," May confirmed. She grimaced. "Mostly," she amended. "but they didn't pay out much."

"Random encounters don't tend to," Brendan agreed. "You should see about doing some minor exhibition matches or a small tournament. Failing that, a few wagered matches at the gym would keep you guys afloat."

May's reply was lost to Astra as she discarded another unsuitable garment and found herself staring at the next one on the rack. It was a wide, leaf-green dress, sporting a blue sash around the waist from which a faint swirl of pale-lime spiralled a third of the way down. The hems were decorated with waves of the same pale-lime, less intricate but still present on the ends of the long sleeves. And importantly, sitting atop the neck was a navy blue scarf-collar thing, which covered the shoulders and looked to be able to conceal the lower face as well.

"Ooh..." Astra marveled at the garment, pulling it off the rack and holding it up to herself. It wasn't a perfect fit, slightly too big for her frame, but that wasn't a problem. Beneficial in some respects, even, considering her plan to ramp her illusion up to her actual height over the next few days. It didn't seem exceptionally suited for travel, but it wouldn't have any more problems than her current outfit. On all accounts, this was exactly what she was looking for. She had to try it, and according to May, clothing stores came with an area to do just that.

"Guys," Astra called out, grinning. May and Brendan looked up, curious. "Where's the dressing room?"

A handful of minutes later, Astra emerged from the rather cramped booth in high spirits, newly clad in the spacious green dress. It fit a little oddly, not designed for a Kirlia's proportions, but wow it was so much less irritating than her robes! The cloth—cotton, apparently, and she'd have to look into what that was later—felt very smooth and nearly didn't itch at all. Marching proudly up to her friends, she spun in place and spread her arms wide, striking a pose.

"Ta-da!" she cheered.

From the bench, May and Brendan examined her in quiet contemplation.

"I like it," Brendan decided, giving Astra a hearty thumbs up. "Very elegant."

"It's kind of old fashioned," May said, nodding along. "But it works." The corner of her mouth turned up in a wry smile. "Buuut there's just one piece missing. Here," she said, reaching back and tossing a green hat at Astra. "You said you wanted it to match, right? Try this on."

"Ah—!" Astra started, fumbled the catch, then awkwardly grasped the headwear by slamming her hands together on both sides of the head cavity. Shooting a snickering May a dour glare, she held up the hat, giving it a once-over. It was large and colored the same shade of leaf-green as her dress, with a wide brim and a giant blue bow attached to the trim.

"Huh," Astra said, blinking at it. A quick illusion to hide her head—and using the new hat like a shield regardless—she donned the headwear and smiled. It fit over her horns pretty well! Turning, she admired her reflection in a nearby mirror. "Wow," she said, twisting herself around to see all the angles. "It fits perfectly! Thanks May!"

"No problem," May grinned, flippantly brushing a hand through her bangs. "I wasn't gonna leave a job half finished, don't even mention it."

"She rushed off to find it once you got in the booth," Brendan mock-whispered. "I think she was excited—ow!" he yelped, rubbing at his shoulder.

May withdrew her fist and gave him an annoyed look. "Enough out of you. So," she chirped, turning back to Astra, "we're settled on this?"

"Yeah," Astra confirmed, twirling around again. She grinned at her reflection. Wearing clothing wasn't something she thought would ever become enjoyable, but she had to admit she looked a lot better now. "I think we're good!"

"Great!" May said, clapping her hands. "I already have the tags, so we can get copies from the front. Now, how's your shoe situation?"

Nonexistent, Astra thought. "Could be better," she said. She shifted from leg to leg, wincing at the painful sores on the tips. Chasing after that Aqua grunt on human pavement had really done a number on her. "A lot better. Are we getting those too?" She wasn't sure human shoes would work but today had made it very clear that something needed to change.

"Might as well," Brendan said, pushing off the bench. "Good shoes are a lifesaver when you're traveling this much."

They travelled over to a section of the store filled with a massive collection of boxes. Astra eyed the shoes on display, feeling as lost as before. Her feet—or rather, the lack of them—made choosing even more difficult. Shoes were designed for human extremities, and from what little she'd observed of May's, they were shaped like if someone tried to sculpt a hand but screwed up the thumb, made all the digits way too short, and then started to panic. In comparison, her legs just...ended.

A peculiar shape caught her eye, and she stopped at a fancy looking pedestal. A pair of weird black shoes were on display, the soles very nearly vertical and accompanied by what looked to be a long spike on the heel. Astra picked the footwear up, confused. Humans wore this? Weren't their feet flat? She thought shoes were supposed to make walking more comfortable, not less. And why was this heel spike so sharp?

Was this honestly designed for a human? If anything, it seemed better suited to a Kirlia. It'd look a little silly, but her feet would fit in the hole much more comfortably than a human's would. How much did it—?

Astra stared at the numbers on the placard. She put the spike-shoe back with a huff. Well! It looked flimsy anyway! It'd probably break the second she did anything faster than a jog. Turning around, she caught sight of a baffled May squinting at her.

Astra tilted her head. "What?"

May's eyes darted between her and the spike-shoes for a moment before she shut her jaw with a click and shook her head, looking disturbed. "No," she sighed, "Just...no. C'mon, the actual shoes are over here."

Finding footwear that wasn't designed by a madman was fairly quick. The issue of size came up, but a glance at a chart and some quick estimation let Astra confidently pick one that looked to be a size or two below May's. Brendan then handed her a box of decent travelling shoes, light blue and covered in odd geometric patterns. Astra retreated to the dressing booth, then immediately ran into the rather urgent question of how exactly she was going to wear these.

Luckily the solution was the same as many of her recent troubles: Psychic Tomfoolery. The shoes came prefilled with several scrunched up paper balls for some reason, and Astra could simply psychically manipulate them to lift and turn the shoe in time with her footsteps. A package of long socks had also been obtained and provided a buffer of cushioning around the tip of her leg. It'd look odd if anyone actually saw her walk for a bit but the dress's length made that unlikely. She'd have to see about finding some way to remove the need for her power later; the number of things she was doing with her powers at all hours was growing concerningly large.

Standing up, Astra took a few hesitant steps around the booth, grinning at the sensation of soft padding. Wow, she really should have done this earlier. It was like miniature beds strapped to the ends of her legs! No abrasion at all. This should stop the sores from showing up again in the future.

Striding out of the booth once more, Astra grinned at her friends and gave them a thumbs up. May had been absolutely right to bring them here, Astra thought to herself as they headed to the register. With all the chaos today, she really had needed a good, solid win.

After Astra—and May, because Astra didn't have enough—paid, the trio stepped out of the store and walked back toward the city in high spirits.

"Well," Brendan said, hefting up the bag of clothing he'd been tasked with carrying. "I'd call that a success."

"I'll say!" Astra exclaimed, spinning in place again. She watched the edges of her new dress flare out again, a giddy smile on her face. "This is amazing!"

"I'm glad you like it," Brendan said, returning her smile. "It's very elegant."

"Much better than before," May said, nodding. She smirked, then broke out into a cackle. "At long last!" she proclaimed, stretching her arms out to the world at large. "The shower will be mine in the morning!"

Astra rolled her eyes. "Oh, go stuff a rock in your face. Just for that I'm going to take even longer on purpose."

Astra paused as a yawn overtook her, and she rubbed at her eyes as a postponed weariness finally made itself known. She looked up at the sky, noting the faint orange of the sun rapidly vanishing behind the skyline. The stars had yet to make an appearance, though many likely wouldn't show while she was in the city, even in the depths of midnight. She never had made that complaint back at Petalburg, had she?

Another yawn answered hers, Brendan's eyes scrunching closed as he covered his mouth. He blinked sleepily. "Well, let's make it to the morning first," he said. "I'm done for the day; gonna drop these off at your place and head back to mine."

"Sounds good," May murmured, scratching at her bandages. She yawned as well, looking annoyed. "Damnit, you got me doing it too."

Astra huffed in amusement, which triggered another yawn. Brendan followed up with his own once more, and May finished out round two with great annoyance.

"Alright, stop that," May groused. "It's getting irritating."

Brendan raised an eyebrow. He yawned.

"Motherfu—hu—huaaaawker!"



They arrived at the hotel, the modest lobby and hallways absent of their usual bustle. Brendan had taken his leave after dropping Astra's new clothes on a table and had promised to meet up in the lobby the next day. May collapsed on the bed with a groan, kicking her shoes toward the door and stretching out with a bevy of muffled pops.

"Well that sounded nasty," Astra commented, while frowning at her own backpack and digging through its contents. She'd have to do some rearranging to fit her new clothes inside. "Feeling better now?

"Sore as hell, but glad to get off my feet again." May sighed and rubbed at her bandages again. "Tch, this is gonna annoy the crap out of me."

"Just get some rest and you'll be better in no time!" Astra said, humming a small tune as she jostled some jars around. "It's only a week or so, right?"

"Something like that, yeah." May shifted around, then pulled herself upright. "Ugh, I should probably change."

"Mmm." Astra still didn't have any proper sleepwear, so she'd have to finagle something with the towels again. "Wouldn't want to ruin that soft bed with dirty clothes, right?" she asked, wryly remembering her first night in Petalburg.

May snorted. "Yeah, right. I still can't believe you didn't have a problem with that. What, have you been sleeping on a pile of straw or something?" she joked, discarding her shirt on a nearby chair.

"Grass, actually," Astra absentmindedly corrected, delicately folding the dresses into a newly created space in her backpack. A silence broke out as she finished putting her clothes away, and Astra turned to see May staring up at the ceiling with a strange expression, lips thin and brow furrowed.

...she'd said something weird again, hadn't she?

Astra quietly excused herself to the bathroom, silently berating herself as she turned on the faucet and splashed her face with water. She stared into the mirror and saw a face, tired and frustrated. A human face, with too-small eyes, a too-wide mouth, and a protruding mass of a nose. It melted away with a thought and Astra stared at her own features. They weren't much happier, but at least they were hers, free of lies or misdirection.

"It's hard," Astra told the mirror. "It's hard, and nobody understands."

The mirror didn't reply. It held no answers that Astra didn't already know herself.

May had slipped under the covers while Astra readied herself for bed. Astra flipped the light switch, plunging the room into darkness, and slid under her side of the sheets. She snuggled in, resting her head on the pillow, and sighed.

It really was soft.

After a while, when Astra had started to drift off, May spoke up.

"Hey, Astra?"

Astra cracked an eye open. "Mmm?"

"Did you really sleep on a pile of grass?"

Astra stared at the ceiling. "...Yeah."

"...Did your grandpa?" May asked, a hint of a steel lining the question.

"He covered his with fur."

May considered that. "...Huh."

"I was going to get my own cover, at some point," Astra elaborated. "He says I have to make it myself."

"Hm. From what?"

"I think he made his from Poochyena?"

"If you skin my dog I will end you," May said, voice flat.

Astra let out a huff of laughter. "No promises."

May scoffed, then fell silent. A few moments of quiet passed and Astra had just begun to wonder if May had fallen asleep when her voice rang out again. "Astra? You've...never really left home a lot, have you?"

Astra stared at the ceiling. May was fishing for something. Had she grown suspicious? Well, at this point, maybe it wasn't such a surprise. Her ignorance of the human world was too pervasive—perhaps it was inevitable that something would have to give. But how miserable was it that she hadn't even lasted a week? Ugh. She didn't regret befriending May, or Brendan for that matter. But man, they made things complicated.

But what was May fishing for? The only thing Astra could sense was concern, curiosity, and an underlying hint of...envy? She was envious? Of what?

"No," Astra finally admitted. "I'd never been very far, a few hours of walking at most. I guess that's not much of a surprise, is it?" She chuckled nervously.

"A little obvious, yeah," May said, a dash of humor in her tone. "You ask a lot of weird questions."

"I guess I do, huh?" Astra sighed. "Thanks for answering them all the time."

"Hey, if you don't know, you don't know." May shrugged. "Can't say that I know everything either. Camping would have been pretty shit if you weren't around. Hell, you even taught me to start a fire. That was pretty cool."

"Oh! Well, you're welcome!" Astra grinned, feeling warm. "It was nothing, really. Everyone learns that super quickly."

"Everyone, huh?" May pondered. "You mean people back home? Didn't know you had neighbors. Not just you and your Gramps holed up in a cave, then?"

Astra thought back to the night before her departure, facing down the congregated masses of her home. How many had there been? Hundreds at least, maybe thousands. "We have a few, yeah. Their homes are made of wood, though."

"Hm." May twisted around, fiddling with the pillow before settling onto her side with a sigh, facing away. "What's it like out there, anyway? Living out in the woods, I mean. I can handle roughing it for a few days, but I don't think I'd ever want to stay out there."

...that was the third question about her home in a row. Was that what the worry was about? Maybe the apparent lack of normal human amenities was a bigger cause of concern than Astra had initially thought. May's concern had started to ebb a bit with every answer she received, and it occurred to Astra that by asking about all the things humans had, she may have been implying certain things about what her village lacked. Maybe May thought they didn't have anything at all; no wonder she was worried.

"It's not as…complex, as this room is," Astra began, considering her words. "There are no lights, or plumbing, or tv, yeah, but it's still home. A bonfire can cook food and keep you warm. The compost helps keep the garden healthy, and growing your own food makes it way tastier. Though sometimes the fruit gets too big and ends up mostly water," she confided. "Soggy food is kinda gross."

May let out an amused huff. "Remind me to tell you about cereal," she murmured.

"Sure," Astra agreed, "but I haven't even told you about our stories yet! We've got tons of legends and songs, and there's even a few people who can form silhouettes from a light or even shape the fire itself to act them out! The tv is pretty cool, but I'll always love the shadow plays the best," she finished, nodding firmly.

"Shadow puppet theater? God, you sound like such a hipster." May snorted, turning back over. She looked at Astra, brown eyes meeting crimson in the dark. "But if you like it that much, I suppose it can't be that bad," she allowed, giving Astra a hint of a grin. It faded quickly. "...Do you miss it?"

Astra frowned at May, confused. "My home? Of course I do. Don't you miss yours?"

"What's there to miss?" May asked, fingers drumming on the pillow. "The house? I didn't even spend a full day there before I left; hell, the closest thing I did to unpacking was set the clock. Mom's a phone call away in the fuckin' unlikely event I wanna talk to her, and dad—" May paused and made a face. "No."

"Oh," Astra said, lamely. "Er. Well, did you have anyone back in...Johto...?"

May's lips thinned, and she gave her pillow a sullen glare. "Not since grade school," she sighed, and rolled back to face the ceiling. "...You know, I take it back; I might've liked it better spending a decade in a single tree than all those fancy houses put together."

Astra gave her a melancholic smile. If only it were so simple. "I know a guy who'd put up some walls for cheap if you ever wanna move in next door," she joked.

"Heh, right," May mumbled. "...Do you think I could visit, sometime?"

Astra paused, turning the question over in her mind. "I don't know." she replied after a moment's thought. Disregarding the layers of issues to even reach that point, the villagers would freak out if May showed up out of the blue. "Maybe someday. But we've got a lot of Hoenn to cover, still."

"Mmm. You know, I—"

"Preferably while well rested," Astra hinted.

"Tch, fine." May grumbled. She yawned and twisted away, pulling the sheets up higher. "Night, Astra."

"Night, May," Astra replied, pulling her side of the beddings closer to herself.

At long last, after a hectic chase, a thunderous battle, and myriad lesser incidents, she could lay down and recover. She hoped with all her heart that the rest of the week would not be nearly as eventful as her first few days in Rustboro.

As for tomorrow...well, she'd have to bring her team up to speed. A new member, and an evolution...maybe they could play some games again? Or she could decompress with her human friends. Both at once? She wondered if she could find that 'ice cream' somewhere as well. Ah, so many options.

Astra closed her eyes, shut out the human world's uncontrolled flood of emotion, fixed up her illusion to last the night, and finally let the faint sounds of the city carry her away.

...

"One last thing, where exactly—?"

Astra hit her with a pillow.





I'm a little late! Sorry.

Planning on having the next one or two chapters go through the rest of their time in Rustboro, then it's off to Dewford!

What the actual hell do teens do for fun all I know is internet, reading and games.

I mean, I am accepting suggestions for leisure activities!

And in any case, thank you for reading, and let me know what you think!

 
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Hyphen 27 - Recess
Hyphen 27

Recess




Astra scrutinized the park carefully. It was a nice, wide open area lined with trees, filled with soft grass and even a good sized pond. A number of odd structures littered the far side of the field, tubes and rods and even some sort of small fort, and Astra guessed they were meant to be an obstacle course of some sort. To the side a couple of rectangular arenas had been marked out and culled of grass, leaving packed earth ready and waiting for combatants.

Thankfully, the park was also much emptier than the last three Pokemon Parks they had visited, with only a few kids—and a lot of bugs—taking turns in one of the arenas and a woman by the pond playing fetch with a Surskit. The others had been packed to the point of annoyance, with barely any room to spare. She wanted to spend time around her friends, not random strangers!

"I think this is as good as we're going to get, guys," Astra said, turning to May and Brendan. The three trainers had met up and set out from Astra and May's hotel lobby only a short while ago. With five mostly free days to burn and hopefully no more catastrophes lurking in the foliage, the first course of business was some good old quality time with their companions, new, old, and changed alike. With a solid eight hours of bright sunshine ahead of them, it was a perfect time to do so.

Astra breathed in, the cleaner air and faint whiffs of the morning's dew leaving her feeling refreshed and ready for the day. "I have to say," she added, "It's not bad."

Brendan nodded in agreement. "I'm surprised we found one this empty," he said, taking a moment to stretch his arms over his head. He twisted from side to side, then let his arms fall, smiling. "Seems perfect for a few hours of fun!"

"And you wanted to use the gym," May accused lightly, smirking.

"It would have been faster!" Brendan defended. "But you're right; it would have been a shame to miss out on all the sun."

"So what should we do first?" Astra asked. Her only ball was broken, and she couldn't really play Rebound in the open anyhow.

"Best way to start things off is to get everybody out in the open," Brendan decided, plucking a quartet of pokeballs from his belt. "I've caught two other pokemon since Petalburg, and I'm guessing both of you can say something similar?"

"You've got that right," May affirmed, drawing out her own set of four.

"Seems like we've all got four," Astra observed, her own pokeballs falling neatly into her hands. "All together, then?"

"Sounds good to me," Brendan nodded, grinning. "One..."

"Two!" May continued, rearing back.

"Three!" Astra shouted, throwing her pokeballs high into the air. "Come on out, everybody!"

A brief wave of electronic noise washed over the park as a dozen pokeballs opened simultaneously. Astra smiled as Grovyle, Marill, and Slakoth shimmered into being, and she gave a nod of acknowledgement to Nincada. Marill and Slakoth immediately noticed Grovyle's new form and congratulated him in their own ways—Marill enviously stomped her feet and uttered declarations of war, while Slakoth gave a very firm thumbs up with a smile. Grovyle received all this with a proud grin, puffing up and nonchalantly brushing aside the singular, long leaf that made up his 'hair'. Nincada looked on from the side curiously, but made no move to join them.

To Astra's side, May let out an enthusiastic, drawn out "Hey~!" as she scratched around Combusken's large frill. Her other hand found its way to Poochyena's ears, the dark hound's tail wagging furiously as he rubbed his head against May's leg. May laughed, then paused and looked around. She winced.

Astra followed her gaze to see Lotad ferrying a rather sour-faced Tentacool toward the water. "Ah fuck," May muttered, then broke out of the scratch session to run over and help.

Shaking her head, Astra turned toward Brendan's selection of cohorts. She recognized Marshtomp and Whismur, the former prodding at the latter curiously as Whismur clutched onto Brendan's leg in shaky wariness. But the other two were new.

One was a pokemon Astra had seen many times before: a Shroomish, a tannish bulb on two wide, stumpy feet. But the normally green underbelly and spots on her overcoat were instead a striking shade of orange. Her voice was airy yet excitable, and a flurry of excited demands in the form of rapid fire "Mish-mish!?" filled the air as she plodded up to her trainer.

Brendan's last companion was a creature Astra had never seen before. A roiling mass of bubbling burnt orange lurched across the ground, leaving charred black grass in its wake. A large ovoid head sat atop the blob, staring at Brendan with two wide, unblinking eyes surrounded by great, flaming eyebrows.

"Slug," it intoned, low-pitched voice eerily calm as it inched towards Brendan. "Ma, slugma slug. Ma."

Astra blinked rapidly. That was...quite a lot of wrath percolating around the creature. A quick check of her Pokedex revealed the creature's name as 'Slugma', and while she didn't know what magma was—(...molten rock? Rocks could melt? Well, metal could, so...)—apparently it would solidify and shed its own skin in even moderately chilly weather.

"What an...interesting pokemon," Astra managed, frowning at the small black flecks she could see forming in Slugma's skin. "Hey, Brendan, is your Slugma going to be okay out here? He's starting to, uh," she paused, searching for a word. "Congeal."

Brendan looked up from reassuring Whismur, blinking. "Oh, Slugma? Yeah, he'll be fine. Not that you'd know from how he tells it." He shook his head, smiling as Slugma came closer. "He's a big whiner, that one. It's not dangerous for Slugma to go about in normal weather for a few hours, but he goes on like he'll freeze rock solid in minutes if he doesn't get some fire flakes."

"SLUUUGMAAA!" Slumga suddenly erupted, his eyebrows flaring a foot into the air. "SLUUUUUG—!"

Brendan rolled his eyes and pulled a small bag out of his pocket. "Such a drama queen," he said, sprinkling a few golden-red squares over the molten blob.

Slugma quickly snapped the drifting flakes out of the air, crooning contentedly. Astra blinked as his emotions flipped from wrath incarnate to utter contentment in a single instant. What a volatile personality.

"I see you've gotten yourself some good pokemon," Brendan said, looking over at Astra's group. "A Marill, a Slakoth, and...did you get that Nincada yesterday?"

Astra nodded. "Yeah, it was part of a small swarm. It managed to take out Marill and wanted to come with, so I figured I might as well."

"Fair enough, fair enough," Brendan said. He paused as a loud splash rang through the air, followed by a litany of curses. "Oh dear," he said, gazing past Astra. She turned and saw that Tentacool had pulled May into the pond, and she was now treading water and ranting furiously at his quietly smug visage. The woman with the Surskit looked quite shocked.

"She really should have released him over the water," Astra commented as May scrambled to pull herself over the surprisingly sheer edge onto land.

"She seems to cause a lot of trouble for herself, doesn't she?" Brendan agreed, sharing a grin with Astra. He paused again, looking past her. "Not that you don't have your own problems."

Astra blinked. "Eh?"
"I think you forgot to make an introduction," Brendan informed her, nodding in the direction of her team.

Astra turned to see Marill advancing upon Nincada, expression thunderous and tail already winding up to strike. Her eyes went wide. "Oh shit—Marill, stop!" she shouted, running over to her team. "I said stop! He's with us now! Marill!"

Behind her, Brendan chuckled and crouched down to pat Shroomish and Whismur on their heads. "It's never going to be boring around May and Astra, huh?" he said, fingers rubbing the small bumps atop Shroomish's head.

"Shroom?" Shroomish asked, voice light and airy with a hint of a rasp.

Brendan laughed and stood back up. "You'll see soon enough. Now," he said, stretching his arms above his head, grinning. "It's a free day, so let's all have some fun!"

The remaining pokemon unoccupied by spats raised their voices in unanimous agreement.

And so the day began.





Marill bobbed on the lake's surface, eyes narrowed in determination. On her sides, Marshtomp, Tentacool, and Lotad mirrored her, tense and ready to spring into action. May, the lone supervisor and referee of the water-type race, stood above them, eyeing the participants critically.

"All right!" she announced, arms folded. "It's race time! The first one to three laps wins! Ground rules: no attacking each other! This pool's like twice as big as a olympic one, so no 'accidents' either! Everything else is fair game, are we clear!?"

A chorus of agreements answered May's proclamation, Marshtomp's enthusiastic bellow nearly drowning out Lotad and Tentacool's more subdued cries. Marill merely tensed, ready to spring forward.

"Good." May nodded. She raised an arm. "On go! Three, two, one—!"

Her arm had barely dropped when Marill sprang forward. Her tail thrashed in a calculated frenzy as her rotund body undulated, her efforts propelling her through the frothing waters at a most furious speed—

Tentacool pulsed past her breezily, one tentacle giving Marill a lazy wave before he quickened his pace, easily doubling, then tripling the distance between them. Marshtomp passed by a bare second later, flippers heaving great troughs behind him and fins parting the water as though it were air.

"Marsh!" he cheered happily, before diving down and shooting forward.

Marill stared for a moment, then growed. "Riiiiillll!" she screeched, outrage fuelling her to ever higher levels of—

Lotad shot by in a reversed position, a jet of water spraying from his mouth. He caught Marill's eye for a split second. "Lo," he said, smugly. And then he was gone.

From the sidelines, May quirked an eyebrow as Marill froze in place, then frowned as the blue pokemon abruptly sank like a stone. She leaned over the edge, peering into the artificial pond's depths.

"...why did she curl—oh fuck!"

May sprang backward as a blue cannonball erupted from the depths. Marill, spinning like an ornery bowling ball, skipped on the surface once, twice—then caught fast, kicking up a spray of water as she rocketed forward.

May watched with wide eyes as the blue blur shot past a startled Lotad and Marshstomp, winced as Marill ran right over Tentacool and launched the squid into the air, before grimacing as Marill finally hit the pond's edge and went flying into the distance.

Marill groaned, sprawled upside-down in a self-made ditch. One eye cracked open as footsteps drew near. She squinted upward and saw May holding her rather dazed Tentacool. "Marill?"

May stared down at her, unimpressed. "Disqualified."

"...rill."





Over at the assortment of park equipment, a new emperor laid claim to his dominion.

"Keeeeen!" Combusken crowed to the heavens, a jet of fire spiralling into the air. Victory at last, via divine right of 'dibs'. He surveyed his newfound holding from the peak of his mighty three-level wood and plastic fortress, grinning smugly. A flicker of movement caught his attention, and his eyes narrowed as he spotted two approaching interlopers. "Bus..." he growled, fingers gripping the wooden railing tightly.

Turning around, Combusken kicked at his snoozing underling. "Combus!" He ordered, pointing at the approaching invaders.

Slakoth yawned, cracking an eye open. "Slaaak...?"

Combusken pointed even harder, glaring. "Ken."

"Koth..." Slakoth grumbled, staggering to his feet. He poked his head over the railing, blinking at the semi-distant challengers below. He sighed. Another prime nap opportunity, interrupted. Best make this quick, then.

Down below, Grovyle and Shroomish peered up at the fort. Grovyle had seen Combusken race to the top not a minute before, dragging a limp Slakoth behind him.

"Grove," Grovyle commented, frowning at the structure curiously. He turned to Shroomish and jerked his head toward the fort. "Gro?"

"Shroom," Shroomish agreed, ambling forward. "Mish-mish shr—"

Shroomish was cut off by a high-speed pebble abruptly shooting into the ground by her foot. She fell backward with a shocked cry. Grovyle's eyes narrowed, and he looked up at the fort.

Up above, Slakoth gave him a lazy wave. Combusken grinned next to him, staring straight at Grovyle. He pulled down an eyelid and made a face. "Bus kiiiiin!" he crowed, laughing.

"Vyle!" Grovyle shouted back up, sharpened leaves erupting from his wrists. He turned his attention to Slakoth, glaring. "Vyle, grovyle!?"

Slakoth, draped across the railing, just jerked a thumb at Combusken and shrugged.

Grovyle glare faded into exasperation. "Gro-vyle..." he sighed.

Shroomish shook herself and stumbled to her feet. "Shroomish!" she yelled, stomping the grass with puffed cheeks, each thump raining orange spores upon the dirt. When this only provoked Combusken to laugh harder, she turned to Grovyle and pouted. "Miiiish!" she whined, big, lumpy tears forming in the corner of her eyes. "Shroomish miiiish!"

Grovyle smiled and pat Shroomish on the head. "Grovyle!" he said, giving her a thumbs up. Turning back to the fort, he looked up at the two defenders. Combusken smirked and pointed down. Slakoth raised his arm.

Grovyle crouched. Then, he moved.

A flurry of pebbles sent puffs of dirt into the air where Grovyle had just been. The leaf on his head fluttered madly in the wind as he sprinted up to the fort, darting left and right as handfuls of stone rained from on high. The few stray pebbles that managed to graze his face and shoulders were not nearly enough to stop him.

Combusken squawked as Grovyle reached the base of the fort and jumped up to the first floor. How dare he invade his tower! Face twisted in righteous anger, Combusken leapt over the railing, spitting fire.

Grovyle jerked back as the embers fell down around him, leaping back off the structure as Combusken delivered a solid kick through where his head had been moments before. A further flurry of cinders and pebbles forced Grovyle even further backwards, only ceasing when he returned to where Shroomish was waiting. Her disappointed gaze bore into Grovyle like a solar beam.

"Shroom," she said, tone flat. As if to punctuate her statement, a cavalcade of boorish jeers rang out from the fort.

"Vyle," Grovyle muttered, giving her a disgruntled frown. "Vyle grovyle?" He pointed at her and gestured toward the miniature keep where Combusken was still laughing. "Grove."

Shroomish turned up her nose, and would have crossed her arms if she had any. "Shroomish shroom; mish shroom-shroom!" she said, haughtily.

Grovyle contemplated this for a moment. "Grove..." he said, nodding slowly.

"Mish," Shroomish agreed. "Shroom mish-mish—!"

Grovyle placed a hand on her head. Shroomish paused. Her eyes widened.

"...Shroom?" she asked, breaking out into a cold sweat.

"Groooo..." Grovyle drawled. His other hand gently grabbed her waist. "Vyle-vy?"

"Mi—!? Mishmishmishmish—!" Shroomish cried out, twisting around in Grovyle's suddenly vice-like grip.

"Vyle vy-vy-vy!" Grovyle cackled, bodily lifting Shroomish over his head and charging at the fort.

Combusken, currently pantomiming exaggerated impressions of his victory to an impassive Slakoth, looked up when a loud wailing suddenly filled the air, rapidly gaining in volume with every moment. He and Slakoth looked at each other, confused. Combusken turned back to the railing and looked down, muttering to himself. "Busken ken, Com—ken!?"

Combusken only had a moment to comprehend Grovyle jumping back up the tower before the leafy pokemon whirled around and threw a screaming tan fungal ball at his face. Shroomish smacked into Combusken's beak with a pained cry, sending both pokemon tumbling to the floor of the fort.

Scrabbling to his feet, Combusken shook his head, scowling. He looked at Shroomish, the confused, dizzy look on her face doing nothing to quell the fire in his eyes. "Combusken!?"

"Mi-i-i-ish..." Shroomish slurred, wobbling around in a daze. Slakoth, lying nearby, gave her a curious look and poked her in the back. Shroomish jumped, crying out in shock. She shook herself, vision clearing just in time to see Combusken winding up for a kick.

"Com-busk—!" Combusken roared.

Shroomish shrieked and exploded into a cloud of spores.

The fort's crown vanished into an orange fog. Grovyle blinked up at it from the second landing, eyeing the flickering yellow lights that sometimes arced through the haze. He sniffed. It smelled like a thunderstorm made of fungal citrus. Well! That had worked better than he had hoped. After waiting for the wind to blow the spore cloud away, Grovyle hopped up to the crown of the structure.

The first thing he noticed was Combusken lying on the floor, twitching as sparks of electricity shot off his body at random. Grovyle let a smug smile cross his face as he knelt next to his rival. "Grovyle~!" he taunted, flicking the large trio of feathers on Combusken's head.

Combusken, fully paralyzed, didn't reply. Grovyle chuckled and stood up. Victory! Now this fort was his! Grovyle didn't really know what to do with it, but he had usurped the previous king and would take his prize nevertheless!

"Shroom."

Grovyle wilted. Ah, right. "Grovyle!" he said, whirling around and smiling, forcing cheer into his tone. "Grovyle grove?"

Shroomish stared at him with a blank face and lidded eyes. "Shroom."

"Vyle..." Grovyle said, sweat beading on his face. He looked down at the still twitching Combusken, then gave Shroomish a shaky thumbs up. "Grove! Vyle vy!"

If anything, Shroomish's face got even more blank. Then, it turned absolutely thunderous. "Shroomish. Mish," she accused, puffing up.

Grovyle paled. "Grove!" he protested, holding his hands up and taking a step backward. "Grovyle vy—!"

"Shroom!" Shroomish yelled, then exploded.

The tower vanished in an orange spore cloud once again. When it blew away, Grovyle was lying across Combusken, the two convulsing as arcs of electricity raced across their bodies.

Shroomish observed her handiwork and gave a satisfied nod. Then she jumped up and stomped on their backs for good measure. "Mish!" share said, triumphantly. That'll show them the price of disrespect! Now, how to get down—

"Koth?"

Shroomish jumped, whirling around to stare at Slakoth. Slakoth looked back from the floor, fur coated in orange dust. He raised a hand in greeting, if only slightly.

"Slak."

Shroomish scowled. This was the guy that threw rocks at her! Cheeks puffed out, she marched right up to the prone figure and leaned over, unleashing another burst of spores right in his face.

Slakoth blinked, now coated in orange. His face screwed up. He twitched, violently, then sneezed.

Shroomish stared at her very unparalyzed target, aghast. Slakoth shook his head and sniffed. He frowned.

"Ack. Slakoth," he said, giving Shroomish a reproachful look. "Koth."

"...shroom?" Shroomish tried, giving him a nervous grin.

"Slak..." Slakoth warned.

Shroomish immediately bowed in supplication—or, at least, tilted forward a bit. "Shroomish-mishshroom," she apologized, the words coming quickly and evenly.

Slakoth looked at her. He nodded.

"Koth. Slakoth," he said, a sense of finality engraved in his tone. Then he flopped around, put his head in his arms, and laid still.

Shroomish stared as snores began to fill the air. She opened her mouth, then paused. She closed her mouth. She gazed into the sky.

...

Well, she was the last one standing, so...victory?

A loud scrabble of feet erupted behind Shroomish, the stun powder finally wearing off. She sighed, turned around, and puffed up.

Some wars were never done.





Astra riffled through her violin case, quietly ignoring the infrequent buzzing to her side. Introducing Nincada to her team had gone well enough, aside from needing to stop Marill from extracting retribution for her now-healed eye. Astra herself hadn't quite forgiven Nincada for the injury—Marill would have been a very helpful backup in the Whismur cave, after all. Grovyle and Slakoth had been reasonably amicable, and Nincada's acceptance of their welcoming was short and polite.

Nincada then completely ignored the others in favor of following Astra around, to her mild discomfort. She had hoped to push off their new association for at least a little while longer. Nincada in general had the peculiar ability to cut through a psychic's defences—and shortly after, their flesh—with unusual ease. They were also physically creepy as hell, as May would put it, with minds far more ruled by instinct than other pokemon of comparable intelligence.

All this was to say: Astra was a bit leery of Nincada. He was creepy, his mind was structured weird, and he'd nearly gouged out Marill's eye yesterday. Had he not been a surprisingly capable combatant and apparently genuinely dedicated to joining her upon his defeat, Astra would have passed him over without a second glance. She would have to work on integration to the team at some point, but for today she'd rather just relax. At least he wasn't bothering her at the moment.

Now if she could just find—aha! Astra pulled a collection of sheet music from the violin case, grinning triumphantly.

"Found them!" she announced, turning to a nearby tree where Brendan was waiting. He was sitting against the trunk, Whismur in his lap and Slugma under one arm. The magma creature was burbling contentedly, occasionally nudging Brendan for another fire flake and somehow not searing the flesh off his arm. He looked up at her voice and waved, beckoning her closer.

"Are you ready for some amazing music?" Astra asked, closing the violin case and striding over, giving Brendan a proud grin as she brandished the instrument. Nincada, who had been scurrying after her, decided to start burrowing into the dirt a bit away. Astra recalled his pokedex entry saying they nibbled on tree roots and supposed he had gotten hungry.

"Sure am," Brendan agreed, rubbing a spot at the base of Whismur's ear. She let out a whistling trill and nuzzled into his hand, one foot rapidly stomping the ground. "I'm glad to finally witness these vaunted tunes you've been talking about so much."

"I'll have you know I'm not just talk," Astra informed him, carefully lowering herself onto the grass next to Brendan with the violin on her lap. She twanged on the strings and listened to the note, then twisted a knob on the head slightly. "I'm just happy I've finally gotten a chance to look through these sheets Trevor left me."

"That was the man who gave you the violin after a few hours of lessons, right?" Brendan asked.

Astra twanged a string again and nodded, both in answer and in satisfaction with her tuning. "Yep. Told you about it yesterday, remember?"

"Just making sure," Brendan said. He sighed. "A sad tale, but I'm glad he found happiness despite his condition. So, what's on the sheets?"

"Let's see," Astra held up the surprisingly large collection of papers—they were all bound together by a few large metal rings—and flipped to a random page. Then she backed up a few because this piece seemed to be rather long and very complex.

"Uh..." she said, staring at the bars so covered in notations such that they were nearly black. "This one's called...the Death Waltz? What the..." she trailed off, perplexed. What was with these instructions? Was it asking her to play five separate notes on the same string? Five times over? Why did she need to release a hoard of Empoleons onto the audience halfway through? A little message in the corner dedicated the composition to an 'unknown girl', declaring that the 'blood-sucking devil' could go rot in a dank cellar.

"I think this one is a joke," Astra concluded, staring at the bit where she was expected to light off explosives.

"Is it a good joke?" Brendan asked, leaning over. His eyes scanned the page, brows furrowing. "...I don't play any instruments," he started, slowly, "But I'm pretty sure none of them need an infusion of legumes."

"I figured. Let me just find a simple one," Astra said, flipping through the collection at random. "Oh this one looks simple, it's called—"

A panting sound interrupted her. Astra looked up and—red eyes framed by yellow, gnashing teeth and rustled brush, howling in the night

Astra froze, eyes wide. She made a sound not unlike squeaking wood.

"...What?" Brendan asked. He looked up. "Oh, hi Poochyena."

Poochyena barked in Astra's face. She shrieked and hurled herself backwards, violin tumbling onto the grass. Scrambling to her feet, Astra fled behind another tree a dozen feet away and slammed her back against the bark, heart thumping loudly in her ears.

"...Astra?" Brendan ventured, sounding doubly confused and concerned. "You okay?"

Astra swallowed, then shook her head and took a deep breath, letting out the air slowly. "I'm—I'm fine!" she called back, shakily. She edged back out from behind the tree, flinching back when she saw Poochyena sitting by her violin. Why wasn't he with May? Poochyena could swim, couldn't they!? He could have at least gone with the others to the playground! Ugh, today was supposed to be relaxing, damn it! She didn't need a nightmare dog that she couldn't sense to scare her shitless out of nowhere!

"You sure?" Brendan asked.

"Y-yeah. He just, um. Startled me, is all," Astra stammered. She eyed the distance between herself, her violin, and Poochyena. The hound didn't seem inclined to move, having taken to sniffing the instrument. Astra...didn't quite feel like getting close, at the moment.

Noticing her extended pause, Brendan carefully removed himself from his pokemon and walked over. He looked at Astra, then at the confused Poochyena sitting next to the violin, then back at Astra.

Astra plastered an awkward grin across her face at his stare. Her eyes flickered about, searching for something to say.

"...hi!" she failed, raising a hand and giving him a weak wave.

"Hi," Brendan replied, raising an eyebrow. He glanced back at Poochyena, then gave her a searching stare. "...would you like me to get the violin?" he asked, casually.

Astra looked down, face turning a light red. "Yes please," she murmured.

Nodding, Brendan went and retrieved the violin and sheet music, stonefacedly handing them to an embarrassed Astra.

"Thanks," she murmured, looking at the ground. Astra watched Poochyena look about then run over and curiously sniff at Nincada's dirt mound. She grimaced, then shook herself and sat down, once more perusing the sheet music. Hopefully Poochyena would find something else to do.

Brendan sat down beside her and gave a fond smile towards Slugma and Whismur, who had formed a cuddle pile at the old tree in his absence. "Cute," he said. He fiddled with his hands and looked at Poochyena, then back at Astra. "...do you want to talk about it?" he ventured after a few moments.

"Talk about what?" Astra asked, determinedly ignoring the aura of concern hanging over Brendan. The only thing she wanted to do right now was to find a decent piece to play.

"It's just—" Brendan paused, unsure. "...you seemed to react a bit...strongly, right then."

Astra closed her eyes and sighed. "I'm not the biggest fan of Poochyena," she muttered, putting the bound papers down. Seems like she wouldn't get to try any of them after all. "All of them, not just May's."

"Ah." Brendan shifted, turning to look at the dog in question. He watched as Poochyena started to dig into the dirt. "...Might I ask why?" he asked, carefully.

Astra stared down at her lap. How did one explain that, to her senses, Poochyena didn't exist? Poochyena was nothing. Less than nothing—a void that utterly rejected her very nature, an area of null thought and emotion. You couldn't talk to them, yell at them, deaf to even your screams until the air was forced from your lungs—

All Poochyena were like this. Complete and total psychic immunity. And unless one were careful, a psychic like her became easy prey. One week ago a pack of them almost ran her down and had a Ralts-shaped dinner. A gargantuan, evolved one had played a central role in her parents' deaths. This one had growled at her before May told it off, and she wasn't sure if it was inclined to do more with the absence of his trainer.

"I've...had some bad experiences with them," Astra said. "It hasn't really come up before. Usually he just sticks around May and doesn't bother me."

"So it hasn't been an issue before?"

"It's not an issue now," Astra insisted, frowning. She'd been…tolerant of May's Poochyena in the past, and even other trainers' Poochyena when facing them down in the past few days. She would actually very much prefer it never came near her, but that didn't mean there was a problem. "Like I said, he just startled me. No big deal."

Brendan glanced down at the violin. Astra glared. The corner of his mouth curled up for a moment before he schooled his face into a neutral expression. "I'm...well, I've heard stories of some who would do a lot more than hide behind a tree in similar circumstances. Is it stressful to be around one so often?"

"Maybe a bit...?" Astra glanced at the dog, eyeing it warily. She certainly wasn't relaxed. "I don't know. I'd just...rather not be near one. Why are you pestering me about it so much?"

"Because it is bothering you and, well..." Brendan scratched the back of his head. "I don't like it when my friends are upset. If there might be a way to resolve it, I feel like I should at least bring it up, right? I'm not asking you to, say, hug every Poochyena you see, but I think it'd be easier if May's didn't make you scramble behind a tree." He shrugged. "At least, that's my opinion. Have you considered interacting with him at all?"

She stared at him, silently wondering, again, how to explain that Poochyena were deaf to anything she said. "The wild ones back home weren't very receptive toward anything we tried," she said, after a moment. "I don't see how it would be any different now. May only captured him, what, a week ago?"

"Ah!" Brendan exclaimed, "but none of them had me around to help out, did they?" he grinned. "I'm sure that we could figure it out together. If you're willing to try, of course."

Astra kind of really didn't, but Brendan's earnestness was hard to turn down. She sighed. Might as well go along with it for a bit. He'd see how pointless it was and drop it, then she could finally find something to play.

"All right," she said. "I really don't think it's going to work, though. I'm not interested in being friends."

"You don't have to be friends," Brendan replied. "I'm more aiming for...'neutral'. I'm going to call him over, all right?" At Astra's nod, he turned and let out a yell. "Hey Poochyena—" Brendan paused. "What the heck is he doing?"

Astra looked over to see Poochyena torso-deep into an excavated pile of earth. Her eyes widened. "Wait, wasn't Nincada down there!?"

As she spoke, Poochyena let out a loud yip and abruptly reversed course, scrabbling backwards out of the hole in a small plume of dirt. He sat up, a rather bewildered Nincada clamped onto his back in reverse.

"Nin?" Nincada asked, staring down at his new furry perch.

"Yena!" Poochyena barked, panting excitedly and seemingly ignorant of his new passenger.

The two trainers stared. Brendan raised a hand.

"Uh. Poochyena?"

Poochyena's head swiveled around, ears perking up as he spotted Brendan. He leapt up and bounded toward Brendan, heedless of the wide-eyed insect clinging to his back. "Yen yen!"

"Ca-a-a-a-a-a!?" Nicada warbled from above, bouncing off Poochyena's back in perfect tandem. A second later Poochyena, coming in from the side, impacted Brendan's lap with an excited yip and launched Nincada straight into Astra's face.

Astra shrieked at the sudden face-full of horrible giant bug, quickly pulling the scrabbling Nincada off her face and just barely stopping herself from hurling him into the distance. That hurt! But, not as much as she had expected. Nincada was surprisingly light. She held her pokemon at arm's length, breathing heavily as her heart slowly stopped pounding. The two looked at each other. Nincada wiggled unhappily.

"Cada!" he complained, pointing at Poochyena. He sounded weirdly offended, like his brief ride had dashed his dignity against the—well, fur.

Astra snorted, the petty complaint doing much to reassert her sense of calm. "Oh, you're fine," she said, setting him down to the side. She frowned, brushing away some soil clinging to his head. "A bit dirty, maybe. Well, whatever. Just...sit here, okay? Maybe you'll get to listen to some music." She glanced over at Brendan, who was fending off a ferocious puppy assault. It looked rather wet. "Eventually," she groused.

Nincada still felt unhappy but complied, folding up and resting against Astra's leg. Astra looked down at him, hesitating. Nincada was still—she still had issues with him. But he wasn't too bad compared to Poochyena; at least it was possible to talk to Nincada. Perhaps...a small bit of contact. As a start.

Slowly, she reached a hand out and stroked across Nincada's head. His skin—chitin, Astra supposed—felt eerily smooth and a bit stiff, as if she was touching some sort of flexible glass. It was an intriguing sensation. Warm. Kind of nice, actually. Nincada shook her hand off after a few more strokes, his tiny wings buzzing irritably. Ah, maybe he wasn't a fan of being touched.

"Alright, alright!" Brendan said, laughing as he pushed Poochyena away. "Down boy! Geeze, he's an excitable one isn't he?" He grinned, looking over to Astra. "Friendly as can be. Worst that can happen is a face full of slobber."

Astra grimaced, leaning away from the pair. "I see..."

"C'mon, you can say hi at least, can't you?" Brendan asked, moving Poochyena so he faced Astra. The dog turned his attention to the disguised Kirlia. He stopped his excited panting and tilted his head, as if confused.

She really couldn't. Astra sighed. "...hello, Poochyena," she said, waving. As usual, she spoke with a well-practiced telepathic broadcast. It brushed against Brendan's mind and imparted the message, as expected, and then the emission broke against Poochyena's body like a breeze against a tree and absolutely failed to do anything at all, also as expected. He did appear to notice her hand at least. Poochyena seemed to almost frown, his bushy tail slowly flicking back and forth as he tilted his head the other way.

Brendan blinked. "Huh. That was...kinda tepid."

"Told you," Astra said dryly. "Are we done now?"

"Um. Maybe you could try petting him?"

Astra grimaced. Now she had to touch him? "Fine, but we're dropping this whole stupid thing afterward, okay?"

"As long as you try!" Brendan assured.

Astra sighed again—she was doing that a lot lately—and looked at Poochyena flatly. Hesitantly, she reached out for Poochyena's ears.

Her hand passed near his nose. Poochyena sniffed. He froze, ears perking forward and eyes widening. His lips pulled back to show a set of very large teeth, a muted rumble coming from deep within the throat—

Danger.

Astra snatched her hand back with a cry of alarm, lurching away from the very not friendly dog in a surge of panic. Nincada buzzed angrily, darting out to put himself between his trainer and the sudden threat.

"Woah!" Brendan exclaimed, wrapping his arms around Poochyena. Thankfully the dog didn't lunge after her, but that did little to quell the thundering beat filling Astra's ears. Still on the ground, she inched away until Poochyena's growling subsided.

"Hey boy, settle down!" Brendan urged, one arm holding Poochyena in place as the other stroked his head perhaps a bit too rapidly. "It's okay, it's okay!"

"It is most certainly not!" Astra yelled back. She watched as Poochyena gradually settled down at Brendan's urging and shook her head, scowling. "All right, I'm done. One scare was already enough, I didn't need another! Can you just—just send him back to May or something, please?"

Brendan looked at her, his knee-jerk protest dying as he saw her face. He glanced down at Nincada—still interposing himself between them and buzzing in righteous anger—and his hesitant expression melted into resigned defeat.

"Alright," he said, quietly. Brendan turned and murmured a few words to Poochyena. The dog perked up and looked around excitedly. Spotting the distant figure of May—who seemed to be having some sort of exasperated fit near the suddenly orange playground area—the dog scrambled off Brendan's lap and bounded away, yipping excitedly.

Astra watched him go, exhaling in relief as his yips grew inaudible. "Not doing that again," she muttered, shaking her head.

Nincada returned to her side and buzzed, an aura of quiet satisfaction rolling from his mind.

Astra looked down at him, a small smile finding its way to her face. "Eh? Do you think you scared him off? Heh, nice work, Nincada."

"Nin," Nincada said, his tone regaining that odd formality.

"Well, I suppose I'll dedicate this first song to you then!" Astra cheered, to Nincada's mild bewilderment. She turned to the sheaf of papers, expression falling. "If I can ever find a playable one..."

"I'm sorry!" Brendan blurted.

Astra looked at him. He looked back, an aura of shame and guilt hanging about him like dreary fog. He was sincere, yes, but the reason was just as important as the regret. She tilted her head, silently demanding elaboration.

Brendan seemed to pick up on this. He looked down, biting his lip. "I...I shouldn't have made you face Poochyena like that. Shouldn't have tried to rush the process—no, I should have taken the hint before all that. You told me you were uncomfortable and then I just... brushed past it."

Astra hummed. "Yeah, you kinda did," she said, turning to face him fully. "Brendan, you like helping people, right? You said it yourself. But I didn't ask for help with Poochyena, I just wanted my violin back. I didn't ask to try to make an acquaintance—let alone pet him. I wanted to keep my distance. Heck, Poochyena isn't even your pokemon. If I was going to try something like this, I'd at least bring May in on it. But I won't. In the end it just...really isn't something I want to deal with."

"Sorry," Brendan repeated, staring at his hands, which clenched and fidgeted. He grimaced. "I just wanted to...I..."

"Good thoughts, bad clarity," Astra said, nicking a phrase from her Grandpa. She reached over and prodded at his temple. Brendan looked at her, confused. Astra smiled. "Some problems just aren't yours to solve, okay?"

"...okay," Brendan said, returning her smile after a moment.

Astra nodded. Good. "Hey, if you really wanna help me with something, can you help me pick a song out?" she asked, proffering the collection of sheet music.

Brendan laughed. "Alright, I suppose I could do that! Let's see here...oh, how about this one? 'Radiant Prelude'?"

He pointed out the sheet. It didn't look too complicated. Astra grinned.

"Sounds good!" she exclaimed, and, at last, set bow to string.

To her side, Nincada perked up, first in curiosity, then in wonder. From the cuddle pile under the other tree, Whismur poked her head up and stared, much to the grumblings of Slugma.

In the pond, a grand roughhousing came to a fleeting standstill. On the playground, an orange-tinted May's irritated tirade against a castle of motley misfits was brought to a brief halt.

The sun shone brilliantly, both in the heavens above and the passage of song.

And so, for a time, Astra played.





Many things could be said of what happened at the park. Games and music and (an admittedly small) lunch came and went. But the most relevant thing to say is that their grand day out was coming to a close. The sun dipped low in the sky, and soon everything and everyone had packed up, ready to call it a day.

With one last stop, at May's insistence.

Once more, Astra found herself travelling toward Rustboro's harbor. The Devon towers passed by with an uneasy but thankfully uneventful silence. May led them through the streets and eventually the trio arrived at the shore. The smell of ocean salt wafted through the air, the distant water colored in interesting hues, and the sky above darkening towards a deep purple. The docks themselves blocked most of the horizon—a grand maze of brightly-colored rectangular metal boxes and a few rather large flat ships, attended by a small number of workers. A shame, as the harbor's contents—while mildly interesting in their own right—weren't nearly as beautiful as the skyline.

When Astra voiced the opinion, May just grinned.

"A better view? Lucky for you that's just what we came for," she said with a wink.

Astra and Brendan looked at each other and shrugged. They jogged after May, who had sped up in excitement. A scant few moments later, they were ascending a steep hill at the corner of the harbor. Atop the hill was a circular tower, colored in a spiraling red and white pattern and holding some large glass artifice at the top.

They reached the base of the building—deserted, without even a vehicle in the driveway—and May spun around, grinning brightly.

"Ta-da!" she announced, presenting the tower. "We're here!"

"The lighthouse?" Brendan asked, looking up at the building bemusedly.

"Oh, this is a lighthouse," Astra said, understanding dawning upon her. May had mentioned them a few times before; it was interesting to finally see one. She peered up at the contraption atop the tower. If this was a house for light, maybe that's where it stayed? "Neat."

"If you think this is neat, just wait," May said, strolling up to the door. She tried the door, frowning when it failed to open. "Damn, they locked it again," she grumbled, kneeling down and taking a few long, thin bits of metal from her bag. "Gimme a sec."

"Wait, you know how to lockpick?" Brendan asked, alarmed. "Are we breaking in?"

"Whazzit look like, genius?" May grumbled, squinting at the keyhole. "We're not breaking anything, as long as you two don't trip or something. It's fine, did this last Friday and no-one gave a shit. Ah!" she exclaimed, withdrawing her tools as the lock gave a tiny click. "There we go!"

"Was there anyone around to 'give a shit'?" Brendan asked, exasperated.

May ignored him, swinging the door wide open and striding inside. "Come on!"

The interior of the lighthouse seemed to act as some sort of storage area, storing numerous bits and pieces all relating to what Astra assumed was general maintenance of the structure. A winding spiral staircase led them to a roof hatch and May pulled a cord that lowered a ladder. May, bursting with excitement, practically flew up the ladder with Brendan not far behind.

Astra took up the rear, and she clambered to her feet, brushing out the wrinkles in her dress. She took a moment to examine the odd construct that took up the central area. It was a baffling amalgamation of glass, plastic, and steel that seemed to be on a rotating dais. Was this where the light came from? Shaking her head, Astra joined her friends at the railing and was abruptly left breathless.

She could see everything.

The sun was nearly touching the horizon, dyeing the sea and sky a burning orange. The clouds, taking the form of rolling waves in the heavens, were similarly bathed in fire. The harbor and city below glowed an intense russet, and she could see people and vehicles scurrying to and fro like ants. Astra stared at the gently rolling waves, the scent of brine filling the air as her gaze tracked the myriad motions of life before her. In the distance, a flock of Wingull cawed and swooped down to nibble on some presumably tasty bits below.

"It's...beautiful," she said, awed.

"Wow," Brendan agreed, wide-eyed.

May's smug grin outshone the sun. "Told you," she sing-songed. She hopped up to sit on the railing, bringing one foot up to lay flat on the thin metal bar and resting her chin on her knee while the other leg hung loosely to the side. "Every time I've moved, I always seem to end up in a coastal town. This is one of the first things I always check out. Used to spend hours just sitting up on these babies watching the tide roll in. "

"I can see why!" Astra exclaimed, stepping up the lower rung of the railing. She leaned out, eagerly drinking in the vista before her. The view from up here was leagues better than the one she'd had on that beach. The patterns on the water as the waves flowed in and out—mesmerizing. "This is amazing!"

"It does not disappoint," Brendan agreed. "I gotta say, I didn't take you for the type to enjoy something like this, May."

May frowned. "What's that supposed to mean?"

"Well, you know," Brendan started, hesitantly. "I've always gotten this 'energetic' vibe from you. I figured you'd be more likely to go surfing than stare out at the sea. Not that it's bad!" he added, smiling awkwardly. "Just unexpected, is all. It really is nice," he finished, looking back toward the horizon.

May huffed, crossing her arms. She sat her feet on the ground and leaned back against the railing, staring out at the waves over her shoulder. "I guess," she said, after a moment. "I dunno. Seeing everything from high up like this, seeing the ocean go in and out like that...it's, I dunno," she repeated, sighing. "I guess I just like getting lost in it all."

"How did you start?" Astra asked, having sat down on the floor so her legs could dangle over the edge, below the railing. "Were you just curious, or...?"

May looked into the distance, frowning. Eventually, the other two realized she wasn't going to answer. Brendan shook his head and slid down to sit next to Astra. All three stared at the warm skyline, simply enjoying the view.

"Have you ever seen the ocean like this, Astra?" Brendan asked.

Astra shook her head. "I wasn't allowed to go south enough to see the coast there. A few of the—my neighbors have, though. Sometimes they brought back seashells and things. My grandpa's gone a few times to get special shells for paint and brought me back some cool rocks."

"It was a letter," May butted in, abruptly blurting the words out. Astra and Brendan looked at her in surprise. May scowled and turned her head away, a faint blush on her cheeks.

"...you started breaking into lighthouses because of a letter?" Brendan asked, lightly baffled.

Astra hummed. Letters were a sort of message you wrote on paper, weren't they? "What was the letter about?" she asked.

May didn't answer for another few moments. When she did, her words came out haltingly, unsure. "I...had a friend. Back in...fuck, what do you call it here? Kindergarten?" she looked at Brendan, annoyed.

He nodded. "I understand the time frame."

"I don't," Astra said, because she didn't.

"My first year of school. Whatever," May huffed, blowing a stray bang out of her face. "She was—I—," she stumbled, grimacing. "Well, it doesn't matter. We were both six and were friends, I guess. And then I had to move. We promised to write, cause we didn't have shit for phones back then. Used to get one every week, but the time lag was a bitch. Then I got less, and less, and then basically nothing at all. Last one I ever sent was one asking for her to come visit.

"Last one I ever got back said she'd come in a week or two," she continued, downcast. "Even told me what boat they'd be coming in on, the big one her sisters owned. Never told me a day, but I knew what it looked like."

"So you went to where you could see all the boats coming in," Brendan finished, tone somber.

May gave a hollow chuckle. "I went up there every day for a month." she said, sliding down to sit next to the other two. She rested her head against a pole and looked up, sighing. "Never saw the boat. Never got another letter. Thought they might've crashed or something, but they just never left."

"May..." Astra sniffed, a bit teary eyed.

"Oh," Brendan said, a note of sorrow in his voice. "I'm...that's rough. I'm sorry."

"Beh, whatever," May muttered, waving their concern off. "It's fine. I was getting along with—well, someone else at the new place I was at, at the time. Didn't do the letter thing with her, though.

"Still, it was kinda shit, sitting up there all those days waiting for nothing," she murmured, twisting around to face the sea. "But I still went up there now and then, even after I realized. Even when I moved. Something about being up here, above everything else...anytime I got too angry at something, or my head got too full of piss, I climbed up here and it'd all just drain away."

Silence fell, none willing to speak after the somber fragment of May's past. Brendan looked down at the docks, observing the people below with a distracted curiosity. May stared listlessly out at the sea, eyes seeming to take in everything at once and go blank simultaneously. Astra looked at her, sensing the usually turbulent flow of thoughts and emotion in her friend's mind settle into the depths like sediment in a murky pond. Eventually it became so still that it was like she was hardly thinking at all.

It was a slightly familiar sensation, and it only took Astra a moment to put a name to it: Calm Mind. A sort of trance that a few elder Kirlia could put themselves in that would briefly enhance their power and control. What May was doing felt similar, but...there was no power to it. Of course there wasn't; Humans weren't psychic, and May was no exception. Astra felt a bit foolish for even giving the comparison that much weight. Still, it was interesting that such a frame of mind could be achieved, even without power.

Astra turned away, following May's gaze toward the skyline. The sun was setting, causing ever more of the sky to turn a wondrous gloom of violet. Astra imagined sitting up on this tower every day for a season, searching the horizon for a friend that would never come. Then she stopped. It wasn't very fun. Not much of May's life had been, it seemed.

That would have to be changed, Astra decided.

Shifting over a bit, she knocked her shoe against May's. The girl started, looking at Astra in a confused haze, as if she had awoken from a nap.

Astra giggled, and smiled at the other girl. May blinked, frowning.

"...what?" she asked.

"Thanks for bringing me up here," Astra said, knocking May's shoe again. "It's lovely."

May stared at her for a moment longer, her confusion melting into something warmer. "...Yeah," she agreed. "No problem. Glad you like it."

"We'll have to do this again sometime," Astra said.

"Yeah," Brendan concurred, giving May a wide smile. "Anytime you want! Heck, I bet you'll have more memories up here with us than you ever did alone soon enough!"

May stared at him for a moment, then burst out laughing. "Wh-what kind of cheesy ass—" she shook her head, giving him a wry grin. "Dude, I've been doing this for ten years, how the hell are you gonna match that?"

"If that's what it takes, I'll just have to do it for twenty," Brendan said, raising a fist in determination. He stared at May, the sunset seeming to spark in his eyes. "You're not allowed to do it alone anymore; every time you climb a lighthouse, I'll be right there with you! It's a promise!"

May recoiled in shock, eyes wide. "Wh—ugh," she grumbled and turned away, face matching the rose-hued horizon.

Astra giggled. How cute.

"Idiot," May muttered, "that's way too long, who the hell—why the hell—agh!" she yelled, clutching at, then running her fingers through her hair in agitation. She extricated herself from the railing and jumped up, face still red. "Damnit, I can't just sit here and listen to this nonsense! I need to burn off steam. Hup!"

"Woah, what are you doing!?" Astra exclaimed as May hoisted herself onto the railing, watching as her friend began to walk along the very narrow metal strip circling the tower's edge. Both she and Brendan scrambled up, equally panicked at May's sudden spike of recklessness.

"Hey, hey, be careful, you could fall right off the lighthouse doing that!" Brendan called out, rushing over with arms extended as if to catch May when she slipped.

May scoffed, casually strolling along the bar—albeit, very slowly. "Think I don't know that? Re-fucking-lax, I've done this tons of times."

"What, balancing precariously over a hundred-foot drop!?" Brendan asked, a note of hysteria entering his voice. He hovered at the rail with Astra following close behind, both inching along as May walked the circumference.

"Yep!" May replied, sounding far too cheerful for being one misstep from horrible injury. "Sometimes wave-watching got boring, or it was cloudy, or I just couldn't sit still. Not much you can do up here other than think about your footing."

"What if you fall?" Astra asked, watching her warily.

"I won't," May stopped, turning to face outwards. Astra followed her gaze.

They'd circled halfway around the lighthouse, and Rustboro City lay spread before them. The sun was well on its way to setting, but the faint glimmer of light still let the city shine in a dim glow. The Devon tower stood tall in the center, and beyond that the sky was slowly lighting up with street lamps, office lights, and the brightest of stars. A faint breeze blew by, the somewhat dirty scent of the city momentarily overpowering the ocean's brine.

In the distance, a faint pillar of yellow haze marked Astra's biggest regret.

Astra tore her eyes away, shaking her head. "But what if you do?" she pressed, turning back to May. "Maybe the railing is slippery, or the wind knocks you over, or—"

"I won't," May stated again, the sheer certainty in her voice taking Astra aback.

"How can you be so sure?" Brendan asked, confused.

"I have decided that I won't," May replied confidently. "So, I won't."

Astra stared at her friend. That was a really weird line of reasoning; neither the wind nor the railing would heed her choices if they decided to be difficult. Astra peered over the edge, grimacing at the sheer drop. She didn't know how May could be so steadfastly calm while declaring all that.

"I think I'd still prefer it if you came down," Brendan hinted. Astra suspected he was about to just yank her right off, consequences be damned.

May rolled her eyes. "Fiiine," she drawled. She hopped down, lightly punching Brendan in the shoulder as she passed. "Worrywart. Alright, the sun's basically set, let's get going."

"Thank you," Brendan sighed, both in relief and exasperation. "Calling it a day, then?"

"Eh, maybe. Kinda got a sweet tooth," May mused.

Astra perked up. "Can we get ice cream?" she asked hopefully. The taste of that half-eaten morsel she'd gotten when she first wandered through Petalburg was still crystal clear in her mind, an avalanche of wintery sweetness followed by a swift case of brain-freeze. If she could avoid the latter...

"Hell yeah, ice cream!" May cheered, leading the trio down the ladder and into the stairwell. "Let's go!"

"All right, I can get behind that," Brendan agreed, then paused. "Wait, I thought you guys were out of money, how—"

"Ice cream's on Brendan!" May cheered again, much louder.

"Ice cream's on Brendan!" Astra echoed gleefully.

"Wait, what?" Brendan protested. "Guys I'm not—wait, wait—!"

A short time later, Astra ended up with a gloriously soft mass of oran-flavored heaven in a waffle cone. She licked it happily as Brendan stared glumly at May and her bowl of light green 'mint' confectionery.

"Well, at least yours is a bit healthy, I guess," Brendan sighed, looking over at Astra. "Oran is high in vitamin B, you know."

Astra hesitated. "...what does the 'B' stand for?"

"Broke," he spoke, calmly biting into a sea-salt popsicle.

May burst out laughing. Brendan smirked, then winced as Astra kicked his leg. Astra huffed, then chuckled as she ate more of her cone. Well, all right, she couldn't be mad at him for that one.

Jerk.






It's been a while, hasn't it?

... so yeah! Hope you enjoy. Parts of this really put me through the wringer.

My boy Dexexe has put out a new quest over here: Ravenous Corps. Illustrated, as usual. Just started. You're some sort of reanimated thing in a cavern and you're hungry. Check it out! (Content warning: Blood and Body horror.)

Another friend of mine, Runa, has another fully illustrated quest right here: Bronze Heart. You're a statue who's just woken up in a park. Time to flirt with the local druid. Check that out too!

Also we still have a discord so come say hi.

Smell ya later.
 
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Hyphen 28 - Roxanne
Hyphen 28

Roxanne



A yawn escaped Roxanne's mouth for the third time in five minutes, and as she pored once more over her lecture notes all she could think was that, for once in her life, she truly understood what motivated some students to skip school. She rubbed at her eyes and took another sip of horribly bitter coffee, trying to dredge up any energy she could. Sitting up to stretch her arms out, she took a small respite from the papers to glance about the familiar environs of the lecture hall.

The classroom was comfortably large—multiple, tiered rows of desks able to hold up to fifty students in total, walls colored in a uniform white with a bit of sky blue trim along the bottom, and three large windows lining the wall opposite the entrance that bathed the room in natural sunlight. The large chalkboard behind her was mostly empty, waiting for her to draw upon it to accentuate whatever teachings she would provide her listeners.

Said listeners had started to trickle in, and Roxanne glanced at the clock to see that there were only a few minutes left before it was time. She could only hope she had retained enough sense to do it right, do it properly, but the past few days had run her more ragged than any others she could remember.

After all, it wasn't any weekend that an explosion large enough to register a magnitude of five annihilated a great deal of forest right outside city limits.



"It's getting better around the outskirts," one man says to another, reading from an unfamiliar device near the epicenter of the blast zone. "Slowly, very slowly, but the effects seem to be dissipating. But it's getting worse here at the center. Maybe the whole thing is contracting?"

"It's getting darker and darker," the other man notes. "The shadows are cutting deeper," he continues, gesturing toward his abnormally pitched silhouette. "I wonder, if it were any more severe, would even a single photon be able to exist? Our next experiments will surely be fascinating. What do you two think?"

"I think I want to know what bombed my forest," Roxanne bites out, more acidic than she intends. "Or if it will happen again."

The two scientists look uncomfortable at her retort, and Roxanne can't help but sigh when they too don't have any worthwhile information.
She has been out here for two days, watching for any signs of the perpetrator, regularly interrogating nearby personnel for new information. Two days of panicked questions, hurried inquiries, a great flood of messages. From the public, her colleagues, the media, the mayor, and everyone in between. Roxanne has not slept for thirty-six hours and it is becoming very, very obvious.

She kneels down and sifts a hand through the cold grains of the sand, their chill leaving her fingers slightly numb. There shouldn't be sand here, or so say the people Devon had rushed out. An explosion of this magnitude should have left the ground scarred and devastated, yes, but it absolutely should not have transformed the whole area into
desert.

Something is wrong. The sun shines weakly, sound doesn't carry, and at times she swears she can feel something watching her through the yellow haze. Roxanne doesn't know what happened or how to fix it but this is an unprecedented catastrophe and she
needs to find out what did this so she can stop it from happening ever again and what if it's in the city next time

She spirals like this for twenty minutes then nearly calls out her Steelix at an unfortunate reporter after they had slipped through the exclusion zone and snuck up on her, and this is when Head Officer Jennifer finally pulls her aside and tells her to go home. Roxanne collapses into bed and worries endlessly until she finally shuts down at three in the morning.



Another yawn threatened to escape, but Roxanne stifled it with another sip of coffee. She looked back over her notes one last time, then gazed over the growing crowd of attendees. Some of them were shooting her curious looks, and she could almost read their thoughts aloud. She'd even been asked outright, once.

'Why are you here?'

Why was she still having this lecture? Why was she not still out there, searching for answers? Talking to the public? Was this the best use of her time?

Questions with multiple responses. One was that Roxanne had already done what she could. No country, organization, or individual had come forward to claim credit for the incident, nor had some heretofore unknown mythical pokemon emerged to lay blame upon. For all that she loved her school and thrived in the educational realm, she was no investigator, no sleuth, nor a researcher in anything but Rock pokemon and fossils. All she could do was wait for someone to give her an explanation or target. One of the primary roles of a Gym Leader was to act as their city's primary defender, after all. Even if she hadn't had to act out that particular aspect of her position before.

The other was that this was genuinely her best idea to get back into the swing of things. Roxanne had given all the press conferences and phone calls that she could. She had no more information to give, no action to take but to give shallow reassurances. All that could be done was return to normal business—with the caveat that she was absolutely prepared to sprint through the emergency exit and take flight on her Aerodactyl at slightest notice—and what could be more normal than a school lecture? She, too, desired a return to everyday routine; just entering the building had calmed her nerves. Surely seeing her here would help reassure others that things were alright?

Perhaps that was a bit optimistic, but Roxanne was willing to believe it would work.

As the clock continued to tick, Roxanne scanned the classroom intently, searching for a certain individual. Noting a distinct lack of straw hats and odd black garments, she let out a disappointed sigh and shuffled through her notes again. There had been a third, quieter reason why she hadn't at least delayed the lecture, and she had hoped...well, maybe they'd left early. A lot of the transitory population had, in recent days.

Someone garbed in a nice-looking green dress hesitantly entered the room, looking around in curious puzzlement. Roxanne nearly dismissed the arrival as yet another new student before she abruptly recognized the pale face and red eyes peeking out from under the stylish sun hat. Apparently Astra had upgraded her outfit since she'd last seen her. It looked brand new and suited her rather well. Had she gone shopping recently? Roxanne was glad that at least a few people had had a relaxing weekend.

Astra met Roxanne's gaze a moment later and the girl broke out into a grin, giving Roxanne a cheerful wave. Roxanne returned her smile and gave her a nod of acknowledgement. Astra looked around the room once more, then darted for a seat in the back row.

Times had been difficult, but at least something was going right. As the last minute ran out, Roxanne took one last drink of her coffee and cleared her throat.

"Welcome everyone to today's lecture!" she called out, her voice ringing clear and true through the room. The minor chit-chat among students quieted as everyone turned their full focus to Roxanne. She smiled; her audience was on the younger side, and it was always invigorating to see fresh faces eager to learn. "It's been an intense few days, but that's no excuse to slack off! I'm sure your heads are all stuffed from last week's lesson on ancient Hoenn history, tumultuous and tragic as it is, so today we're going to be talking about a more exciting topic: Pokemon Typings! A set of seventeen distinct categories with unique properties for both Pokemon and their abilities, attributes, demeanor, and diet. This lesson will go over them all in moderate detail; both to give you all general information and to give those looking to specialize a small preview of what is available."

"A fair warning for those who didn't look at the schedule too closely," Roxanne said, "this is an all-day lecture delivered over the course of eight hours. A twenty minute break will be provided at the top of every hour, with thirty for lunch at one. We have a lot of ground to cover, so prepare yourself for a lengthy lesson!"

"Now, Pokemon Types!" She turned, picking up a piece of chalk and writing on the blackboard. "These Typings are: Normal, Fire, Fighting, Rock, Water, Poison, Electric, Dark, Dragon, Ghost, Psychic..."



"Normal types can best be described as the baseline to describe all other types from. The most common type known, they can be found in nearly every non-extreme habitat. Their main characteristic is in their relative neutralness; no particular strengths, but very few faults. It could even be said that the average person falls under this category.

"However, just because they're Normal doesn't mean they can't be extraordinary! Some of the most powerful known Pokemon attacks are Normal typed. A well timed Explosion can decimate whole teams of enemy pokemon, and I've personally seen Hyper Beams tear apart even the sturdiest of foes.

"They're also notable for having mutually null interactions with the Ghost type. As for weaknesses, Fighting type pokemon will do more damage to Normal type pokemon, and Normal type attacks are weakened against Steel and Rock types. Common Normal species include—"



"Fire types are known for their affinity for heat. Usually found in high temperature areas, this type of pokemon thrives in places like our own Mt. Chimney. Some are even made of living flame or magma! Contrary to initial appearances these pokemon can regulate their temperatures extremely well, allowing you to hold even a Slugma in your bare arms.

"Though, I wouldn't recommend subsequently making that Slugma angry. You'll get some nasty and well deserved burns for your trouble. The natural weakness of fire is, of course, water—"



"...and that's it for Rock types." Roxanne finished. She may have taken a few dozen extra minutes just for her favorite type, but who was counting? She scanned the room, smiling. "Before we move on, are there any questions about the Rock type?" A hand raised, and Roxanne nodded in their direction. "Yes?"

"Is it true that if you feed an Onix gold and then evolve it, it'll turn into a golden Steelix?"

Roxanne stared at the girl. "...No," she said, after a pause. "Golden Steelix only come about when an Onix burrows through pyrite rich soil for most of their life. They are not made of actual gold, and suffer from a variety of difficulties due to their composition. Please do not feed precious metals to pokemon." She paused. "Most pokemon," she amended.

Taking a sip of water, Roxanne cleared her throat. "Next question, if any?" Roxanne asked, plastering a smile back. It became a bit more real when she noticed Astra holding her arm up. "Yes, you there, in the back."

"What's the difference between Rock and Ground?" Astra asked, and Roxanne couldn't help but notice that her voice seemed to lack an echo. "Aren't they the same thing?"

Roxanne broke out into a full on grin. "Good question!" she said, silently thanking the girl. "While Rock and Ground can be viewed as superficially similar, they are actually very different when we examine them together. While both refer to what lies beneath our feet, Rock is typically defined by sturdiness and solidity, while Ground exemplifies a more granular approach.

"To put it simply, Ground is more like sand, silt, and clay, while Rock refers to large, aggregated solids like granite and basalt. Loose particulates to concrete mass. There are some that take this comparison a step further and include Steel into the equation as a sort of refinement of Rock.

"Of course, all this is metaphorical when we apply this to Pokemon. The energies of Ground, Rock, and Steel are all mutually distinctive and we call them by what they most often represent. One could ask the same question of Water and Ice and get a similar answer. I hope this answers your query."

Finishing her explanation, Roxanne looked around for any confusion in the audience. Finding none, she nodded. "Speaking of Ice, our next Pokemon Type is a bit chilly..."



"Ghost pokemon have a rich history in myth and legends. Malevolent spirits, haunting phantoms, even mischievous apparitions—Ghost pokemon are known far and wide for their connection to the spiritual side of life. Some even claim that certain Ghost types are the remnant souls of those who have passed on.

"These pokemon tend to favor environments both dark and macabre, such as caverns or cemeteries. One notable example is Mt. Pyre, which is nearly entirely inhabited by Shuppet and Duskull. Despite the negative reputation Ghost pokemon have, they're just as capable of forming heartfelt bonds as any other Pokemon group.

"Just make sure you train them with discipline. You wouldn't want your Gengar to think that giving you nightmares is funny, would you? A few honest conversations, a healthy dose of love and attention, and a bag of ectoplasm-infused treats will go a long way to a happy partnership.

"Speaking of ectoplasm, this mysterious substance is a foundational part of Ghost type biology. Under certain circumstances it has the ability to become incorporeal—"



"Dark types are another group with sinister stereotypes. Similarly to Ghost types, they are often depicted as vicious creatures, bringing portents of fear and doom where they go. Some even prefer to call this pokemon typing by another name: Evil. This is of course wildly inaccurate. While pokemon of this type do indeed fight in ways that one may deem 'dirty', they are wholly undeserving of the extremely poor moniker of 'evil'.

"Let us take the common Poochyena as an example. Poochyena are some of the most loyal and devout pokemon one may come across. Be it darkest caverns or highest peaks, a Poochyena will follow its master into the worst disaster without hesitation. Its evolved form, Mightyena, exemplifies these traits even more; for if a well and truly loved Mightyena's trainer should fall, this Dark type may choose to guard their resting place until it joins them.

"That said, do not take this group lightly; if unprepared, you may find that wild Dark types can and will live up to their fearsome reputation. Fighting type pokemon can typically handle a Dark type with little issue, but for those who favor Psychic types, beware: the Dark type completely nullifies all Psychic abilities and will obliterate the user besides."



"...and that's the shocking conclusion to Electric types!" Roxanne cheered. "Quite an eclectric bunch, aren't they?" she chuckled at her own joke. "Now, are there any questions?" A hand rose, and Roxanne nodded toward the student.

"If I feed my Pikachu a lot of pancakes before I evolve it, will it turn into a psychic Raichu?"

Roxanne blinked. After a moment, she managed to find her voice. "Excuse me?"

The student shifted in his seat, looking very bothered by the stares the rest of the class was giving him. "I heard that was how it works in Alola..." he said, quietly.

Roxanne pinched the bridge of her nose and sighed. "In general," she said, voice raising to hammer in the point. "Do not put your pokemon on ill-planned diets just because of a rumor. They are not playthings, they are friends and companions and should be treated as such. How some pokemon develop halfway across the globe does not affect how pokemon grow here."



Roxanne paused her lecture to take a swig of water, breathing out slowly as she set the bottle down. She watched her class diligently finish taking notes and copying the scattered drawings on the blackboard behind her. The sight of so many students admirably engaging with her lesson was a balm for her tired soul. She smiled warmly at the myriad sounds of scratching pencils, pens, and in one case a rather oversized keyboard.

Nevertheless, Roxanne's eyes drifted up towards one student in particular. Astra had not brought any such utensils with her; neither pen nor pencil nor keyboard, nor even any paper to record notes upon. Instead she had just attentively watched the lesson. Roxanne wondered if people with Astra's capabilities had better memory. It certainly seemed like it would be in their wheelhouse.

She had also not taken off her hat, which was a bit odd. Well, Roxanne couldn't fault anyone for adherence to their fashion. Even exhausted as she had been this morning, she'd still found the time to style her own hair. Though, if what she suspected was true, maybe it made sense for Astra to keep her hat on at all times.

Public attention was easier to ignore if you just pulled the brim down, after all.

The sound of writing gradually dwindled, and Roxanne swept the blackboard clean. Onto the next segment.

"Psychic," she announced, and it was only her close attention and suspicion that let Roxanne notice Astra's subdued flinch. Ah. Well. It was what it was. She would deal with it when the time came.

Until then, there was a lecture to deliver.

"The Psychic type is perhaps the most well-known esoteric group of Pokemon. Known for a variety of capabilities, they specialize in all things relating to the mind. Telekinesis, telepathy, teleportation, clairvoyance, even the ability to alter dreams. Psychic pokemon are perhaps the most versatile companions one can have.

"Despite all these abilities, one of the most important, yet most forgotten attributes is their innate sense of empathy. Many Psychic pokemon will reflect or react to the attitude of the ones who approach them. A friendly attitude will often get better results than hostile intent, which will usually have the Psychic pokemon make a quick escape via teleportation. Abras are particularly well known for this tactic, as many delvers of the sprawling Dewford Granite Caverns can frustratedly attest to..."



The clock ticked steadily, light slowly following the sun as it crossed the sky. Keeping an eye on the time, Roxanne finished the last section of her lesson a bit earlier than planned. She had enough material for another half hour at the very least, but enthusiasm didn't make up for the faint rasp edging its way into her voice.

"And with that," she said, "I believe we are nearly out of time. I will open the floor to any last minute questions." A hand raised, and Roxanne nodded in their direction. "Yes, you near the window?"

"Are there really only seventeen types?" the student asked. "Could there be more?"

Roxanned hummed. "As of now, yes, there are only seventeen pokemon types. Contrary to many popular stories, Pokemon types like Light, Bird, Fairy, or Sound are not recognized by the scientific community and are either complete fabrications or old variations that have been folded into the current framework. I can't say that there won't be new types discovered in the future, as we are still discovering new species of pokemon every day. But, as they have not been discovered with the vast numbers of pokemon we already know of, it is rather unlikely."

The student slumped in disappointment. Roxanne resisted the urge to shake her head. There were always a couple pupils who had gotten engrossed in a few too many stories. "We have time for one more question," she said, looking around for the final time. "How about you in the middle?" she asked, gesturing to a younger student.

The indicated teen stood up, the stylized M on his red shirt briefly glinting in the light. He stared at Roxanne intently, then took a deep breath. "What really happened out east?" he demanded, slamming his hands on the table.

"What?" Roxanne asked, taken aback. She frowned, glaring at the student disapprovingly. "Young man, that is hardly relevant to my lesson—"

"Don't try to deflect the question!" the boy interrupted, glaring right back. "This is Hoenn's biggest environmental disaster in years and nothing about it is natural! I know you're hiding something out there!"

"I most certainly am not," Roxanne snapped, the dull ache of her throat lending her voice the beginnings of a harsh rasp. "If you wish to know what I've said on the topic, the local news can certainly provide—"

"What was it?" the child interrupted, a sharp gleam in their eye. "Some secret weapon? A mythical pokemon? Was it—"

Roxanne slammed her hand on her podium, the sharp clap bringing an abrupt end to his tirade. "Enough!" she commanded, pinning the student with an exhausted glare. "I am not talking about this topic, and further prodding will only get you a well-deserved punishment. Are we clear?"

A look of pure indignation crossed the accuser's face, and there was a tense moment where it looked as though he would continue regardless. The school's bell chose that moment to ring. He looked away with a scoff, grabbing at his things.

Roxanne glared at him as he stormed out, then sighed. "Class dismissed," she called out, redundantly. "Make sure you don't leave anything behind. If you have unanswered questions, please refer to the usual self-study materials. Next week we'll be covering Pokemon Breeding and the various Egg Groups; if you're under eighteen years of age, pick up a permission slip by the door and have your parents or guardians fill it out. Have a good day."



A stream of chatter and clatter rang out as the students packed up, though a few lingering pupils got busy talking to their seatmates. Roxanne waited patiently until a certain bundle of green descended the stairs.

"Astra," Roxanne called, slightly amused at the jumpy startlement this caused. "Would you come here for a moment?"

Astra blinked at her, confused. She looked around nervously, eyeing the students who had briefly stopped to gaze at a potential spectacle, then hurried over to Roxanne's desk.

"Hello?" Astra asked, sounding confused. "Um. What's up?"

"A couple things, actually," Roxanne admitted. "But first of all, I wanted to see how you found my class. I recall you saying that you've had to figure things out on your own, so I hope you found it informative."

"Oh!" Astra said, brightening. "It was, actually. Particularly the bits about Ghosts. Are they really weak to themselves?"

"Indeed, a trait they share with Dragons," Roxanne confirmed. "Though a better counter would be the Dark type. Are you interested in Ghosts, Astra?" she asked, curiously.

"Only in how to make them go away," Astra said. She tilted her head. "Are they really the spirits of the dead?"

"A question for the spiritualists, I'm afraid," Roxanne said, smiling. "I'm more of an expert on Rocks, myself." Sitting up, she refocused herself. No more distractions. "As glad as I am to hear that you enjoyed class, there was something else I wanted to talk about."

"Alright?" Astra asked, blinking.

"A few nights ago, when I was reviewing those recordings of our battle," Roxanne started, then paused, frowning.

She eyed the students still hovering around the classroom. They didn't look like they'd be leaving anytime soon, and the room was designed to let her voice carry to every corner. Overhearing would be an issue, and Astra did appear to be trying to hide. Best to be circuitous, she supposed.

"Sorry, just had a thought," Roxanne apologized, returning to the conversation. "The recording. I was studying it due to some errors when I noticed a certain...peculiarity." she hedged.

"A peculiarity?" Astra said, looking puzzled.

"About you, specifically," Roxanne clarified. "A...unique quality of yours, you could call it."

Astra squinted at her confusion before a look of comprehension dawned over her features. "Wait, do you mean...?" she asked, waving a hand around her head.

Roxanne smiled; it seemed she'd got it. "Yes, that," she said. "I apologize for being vague; I didn't want anyone to overhear." She nodded over at the lingering students.

"Oh!" Astra said, nodding gratefully. "Um, thank you. " She paused, looking at Roxanne uncertainly. "Er, what about it?"

"Concern, mostly," Roxanne admitted. "I've met many individuals in the same situation, and I even count two among my colleagues. But none I've met have either expressed or hidden it quite as you have. It made me curious as to why someone would." She sighed, expression turning gloomy. "Only recently have I learned that those in your position can experience some...backlash, just for being as they are. Forgive me for prying, but have you experienced anything...upsetting, like that?"

"Upsetting?" Astra asked, a troubled look on her face. Her gaze flicked down, hand reaching up to touch at her hat as she considered Roxanne's words. "Um. Nothing bad, I guess. But people give me weird looks, or act really awkward. There was this cashier at a Pokemart that asked for a picture. Trevor was nice, but it was still something to deal with." She paused, then gave Roxanne a tired grin. "It's just...easier, if they don't notice. Even May and Brendan were kinda weird about it for a while after they found out."

Brendan? Did she mean Birch's boy? He'd visited the gym a few times in the past week. Roxanne couldn't imagine him being anything but supportive. But then again, her worldview was taking a few hits lately. "I see," she said, levelly. "Are they still 'weird' about it?"

"Oh, no!" Astra denied, shaking her head. "It was only at first. They've been great; I couldn't ask for better friends."

"I'm glad," Roxanne told her, finding the brilliant grin on the girl's face infectious. "Both for your experiences and relationships. Good friends can help through even the worst of times. Keep them close and I'm sure you'll never face a problem you can't overcome."

"I will!" Astra agreed, still smiling.

Perhaps there was nothing to worry about after all, Roxanne thought. She didn't seem to be lying about her lack of trouble—minor incidents aside—and by her account she had some excellent friends in her corner. Still, something seemed a bit off, though Roxanne was having a hard time putting her finger on what.

"Um," Astra said, fidgeting with her sleeves. "Was there anything else?"

"One more thing," Roxanne said, reaching for a small card she'd printed off earlier that morning. "Have you had the opportunity to meet others who share your...quirk?"

"Um." Astra hesitated, seeming to think for a moment before looking at Roxanne with a curious, uncomfortable frown. "No, why?"

"While close friends are nothing to scoff at, I find it helpful to occasionally talk to people that understand what issues you face on a more personal level." Roxanne said, sliding the card over. "My colleagues said that if you ever want to talk about it, you can call this number."

Astra took the card, looking at it curiously. It was mostly unadorned, save for the promised phone number and an accompanying symbol: A simple black eye on a purple background with a crescent moon for a pupil. It was the traditional symbol for the psychic type, though Roxanne preferred to use the newer spiral pattern in part due to how terribly she drew eyes.

An uncertain look crossed Astra's face for a moment. Then it vanished as Astra slid the card into her bag. "Thanks, I think." Astra said, a bit awkwardly. Roxanne didn't blame her; this was an unusual conversation for both of them, she imagined. "I'm not super invested in meeting others with, um. This." Astra continued, gesturing to her head again. "But, uh, I appreciate the thought?" she tried.

Roxanne nodded. "Better to have the option than not. But I imagine you'll meet some along your journey in any case. Just remember, should you encounter those who would take issue with who you are, you are not alone."

Astra stared at her. Astra smiled, though for some odd reason it seemed rather sad. "Thank you."

"I wish you luck on your travels," Roxanne said. "Maybe one day I'll see you in Ever Grande Stadium. Until then, keep learning; you'll never know what small bit of information will lead you to victory."

"I will," Astra said, giving her a final, resolute nod. Astra hefted her bag—was that...woven grass?—over her shoulder and headed for the door. At the threshold, she looked back and waved. "Thank you for the class!"

Roxanne smiled as the girl left, then let out a sigh and leaned down across the desk. What a messy talk. Was it even appropriate of her to bring the subject up? Well, she'd rather be awkward than apathetic. If there was a next time, she'd do better. That was what learning was all about.

Still, she couldn't help but feel like she had missed something. Hm. Maybe she should have invited the girl to have a rematch sometime; the musical accompaniment, misleading as it was, added an exciting flair to the battle.

She yawned, rubbing her eyes. What a week. Maybe she should call it early. That sounded nice. Pick up a tub of ice cream and rent out a documentary. Bliss. Oh, and call Steven. He'd been out on vacation in the Granite Caves; maybe he'd found something interesting. She was sure he'd be interested in this fascinating new psychic trainer too.

Packing up her things, she left the school with a hum.

And, to nobody's surprise, went home with a carton of Rocky Road flavor.



Astra headed out the front doors, emerging into the burgeoning evening lost in thought. She hadn't intended to talk to Roxanne again, aside from maybe a passing greeting or farewell, and it was even more of a surprise when the gym leader had drawn her into such a heavy conversation. It wasn't like they knew each other, after all. Still, Astra felt that the older woman had her heart in the right place.

Astra still would have rather avoided the topic of her supposed albinism. Apparently her fake ailment carried more weight than she knew. Though, considering the reassurances Trevor, May, and then Brendan had given her once she had delivered her lie, perhaps it shouldn't have been. People like that Aqua member who had called an Exploud on their heads existed, so the fact that there were those who would dislike her just for being sick...

Well. She hoped she never found out what they'd do with the much more extreme truth.

Probably a beating, then a pokeball.

Astra sighed, pulling out the card Roxanne had given her. There wasn't much explanation on who it would call; supposedly someone else with albinism, but with little context. The eye symbol was also a mystery. Maybe it was just a logo; she'd seen stranger on the various buildings around the city. As for using it? Talking to someone who actually had this ailment? No, she didn't think so. It felt wrong to claim she had it in the first place; saying so in front of an actual victim?

Astra grimaced, then shoved the card into the depths of her bag. As she reached the street, a gloved hand waved from atop the giant sign on the school's lawn and caught her attention. A figure detached from the sign and raced over.

"Hey!" May shouted, jogging up. Ske skidded to a stop, giving Astra an annoyed look. "The hell took you so long? I saw a crowd leaving ages ago."

"Sorry," Astra said, scratching the back of her head. "Roxanne wanted to chat after class."

"Eh? What about?"

"She just...wanted to know how I liked the class." Astra said, smiling weakly. She perked up. "Actually, it was really informative! Apparently Ghosts are weak to themselves! Also they don't hurt Steel types much. Also apparently you can turn an Onix golden by feeding it pyrite?"

"Alright, I get it," May said, holding up her hands. "Glad you enjoyed your snoozefest. Now c'mon, I smashed a couple trainers at the gym for a hot wad of cash and I wanna do something fun! Brendan's already on his way, so let's go."

"Oh?" Astra asked, falling into step with May. "Where are we going?"

"Oh, this is gonna blow your mind!" May cackled. "Listen, have you ever heard of an 'arcade'?"



"...and there was actually a really interesting set of caverns that opened up recently," Steven explained, talking animatedly through the speakerphone. "Rather unexpected formations inside, I had no idea there was magmatic activity here this far back. No fossils yet, but there's a beautiful series of extruded sills and di—er, vertically-oriented igneous intrusions throughout the network."

A pajama-clad Roxanne chuckled from her couch, idly feeding her Nosepass another scoop of ice cream. "Using formal language on that one, are you Steven?" she teased, idly watching an avalanche of Golems on her television.

"You know very well the shorthand for that is unfortunate." Steven huffed. "Still, they're fascinating. The local Abras are using the sills as makeshift resting areas, lining the shelves with leaves and soft grass. Incredible, really. They are quite creative with their Psychic skills."

Roxanne perked up. Oh, that had reminded her. "Speaking of Psychics, I met the most interesting trainer recently—'"

"Oh, was it Astra?"

"...Steven, how the hell—"




AN:

This underwent heavy beta revision. Theres a whole 1k section that was excised with a scalpel (Maybe I'll share it sometime), parts were rearranged, shoved around, and planted inside whole new bits. And even then...well, I worry. Is this what people expect from a school episode? At least it's done.

Mmm.

Anyway, This got too long so I put it out as it's own interlude. Again. I need to stop doing that. or...continue???

Next time is definitely the end of Rustboro, no matter how long it ends up being.

Check out my friend Carni's art quest There Are Only Three Levels!

I also hang out in this discord!

Also, I don't know if anyone cares about the place anymore but I do have a neglected Trope Page...

Thanks for reading, and tell me what you think!

Have a thanksgiving!
 
Hyphen 29 - Arcade
Hyphen 29

Arcade



Astra grimaced as she followed May through the arcade. Strange machines blinked with searing lights and belted out high-pitched music, many of them accompanied by humans screaming emotion into a void only she could hear—along with the occasional regular scream. Noise had been a new and uncomfortable aspect to city life, but this place seemed to amplify the worst qualities of each variety to new levels.

"It's kinda loud," Astra complained, wincing as one machine let off a flurry of chimes. "Are we going to be here for long?"

"Aw, come on!" May cajoled with a grin. "Just relax, you'll get used to it! We haven't even played a game yet. You'll forget all about it once you find one you like."

In the distance, someone lost a game with extreme disgrace. Astra flinched and rubbed at her ears, grimacing. May looked at her and hesitated.

"Tell you what, how about I just buy like, a handful of tokens; if you still wanna dip after I run out then we can go, alright?"

"Thank you," Astra said, quietly. "...what are tokens?"

"The games don't work unless you put a few coins in, and you buy those from token machines."

"Ah." You had to pay to have fun too? Well, she guessed that made sense. Sometimes her Grandpa wouldn't let her go play without doing a few chores first, maybe it was like that? Astra watched May fiddle with a large red box with a golden inscription reading 'TOKENS' lined across the top. Coins clinked against a metal basin, and May turned around and showed Astra a small bronze disc covered with intricate engravings.

"Behold," May proclaimed, holding it aloft. "A token!"

"Neat." Astra said, eyeing the circle. Hopefully she didn't get a lot of them...

"Don't worry, these'll vanish quick." May grinned, shoving the lot in a pocket. "Now, where the hell is Brendan?"

They found Brendan at a small area in the corner filled with a few tables next to a window where a yawning man was handing out food. Brendan looked up while swallowing a bite of some kind of meat tube half-wrapped in bread. He waved, beckoning them over.

"Oh hey! I was wondering when you'd get here," he said with a smile. He nodded at Astra. "How'd you like class, Astra?"

"It was really interesting!" Astra said, brightening. "I learned a lot. I kind of want to go again, but Roxanne's next class isn't until next week and we'll be gone by then."

May snorted. "Do it five days a week for nine months a year and the charm will wear off real quick."

"I didn't go to school for too long myself," Brendan said. ("Are you gonna finish that?" Astra asked. Brendan handed her the rest of his hotdog.) "I was exempt under apprenticeship when I started working for my dad's lab after I turned twelve."

"Not the Trainer exemption?" May asked. "Coulda got out two years earlier."

Brendan shook his head. "I'm a decent trainer, but I wasn't enough of a prodigy for that. They only give out around a dozen of those a year on average anyway. Did you try?"

"No."

Astra popped the last bit of hotdog in her mouth. She chewed, pondering the food thoughtfully. Bread was still a relatively new experience, the crushed and baked grains coming in such a wide variety that it was impossible to generalize. In this case, it merely served as a soft, somewhat dry cushion to hold what lay inside. The meat tube was a bit chewy but serviceable enough, and the dull yellow sauce on top was delightfully tangy.

"This is pretty good!" she decided. "What was that yellow stuff?"

"Mustard," Brendan answered, smiling. "You can get ketchup, relish, and mayo too but—"

"Alright, enough yapping!" May said, clapping her hands. "Let's play some games!"

May led the trio over to one of the cabinets that littered the arcade floor. The screen flashed vibrantly, the title of the game—Back Alley Blitz—displayed proudly above a side scrolling array of strange characters. She put a few tokens into a dimly glowing orange slot and the display flashed, presumably allowing them access.

"This is a game, right?" Astra asked, uncertainly. She was familiar with the animated screen due to her exposure to the TV—even if the drawings looked like they were made of squares rather than smooth lines—but the tilting rod and packed array of buttons were a mystery. "What do I do, exactly?"

"Oh here, let me show you," Brendan said, leaning over and pointing at the controls. "Use the joystick to move around and select your character—"

Astra ended up selecting a tall man with a massive circular ball of bifurcated hair who moved like he was dancing. May picked a roughly dressed guy with what looked like an upside-down pokeball for a head and Brendan chose a regal girl who seemed to emanate blue-tinted fire from her hands.

"Alright, I've, uh, selected my character," Astra said. She watched her character bopping to the music curiously as a number on-screen counted down. What strange moves. "What happens next?"

"Now we fight with them!" May cheered.

"We what? How!?"

"Hit buttons and find out!"

Informative. The countdown reached zero and suddenly the screen switched to show some dingy street. Their characters entered the scene in a ball of sparkling light, an explosion, and a whirl of blue flame respectively.

"CLEAR THE STREETS, A NEW BOUT ROCKS THE ROAD! BEGIN THE BLITZ!"

A whistle sounded and May and Brendan's characters, by an unspoken truce, ignored Astra and began to battle each other. Astra examined them for a moment, glancing between the fighters on screen to her friends' rapid button-mashing and stick-waggling. Tentatively, she tilted her stick left.

Afro-man moved left. Astra stared. She hit a button. Afro-man struck out with a brief, whirling kick. She could control the characters on screen? Interesting. Television had reminded her of how the illusionists or the Smith could arrange images with the aid of lights and flame, but it was a rare day they let the audience dictate where the story went. This game went much deeper than simple dictation. What else could be done with it? Could the player go on an adventure from the safety of their home? See fantastic sights and interesting people without risking anything real?

May's character exploded, sending Brendan's flame-wielder directly into Astra's Afro-man. The two were knocked down, but recovered swiftly and 'stared' at each other.

"Ready to join the fun, Astra?" Brendan asked. His character inched closer, threateningly.

Astra blinked. Oh. Right. They were using the game to beat each other senseless. In that way it reminded her of pokemon battling. Issuing commands and watching another execute them.

It always seemed to come down to fighting, didn't it?

"Are you ready?" Astra shot back, re-focusing on the game. Best to pay attention, she had a brawl to win. "Take this! Hya!"

Despite her boast, Astra didn't manage to win any of the following rounds, even with her friends taking it easy on her. Part of this could have been her absolute naivety in the realm of video games, it could have been her unpracticed twitch movements and unfamiliarity with the controls, or it could even be that the buttons were so close together that her giant non-human fingers kept hitting two of them at the same time.

The last game ended with her accidentally sliding into an attack and getting blasted off the screen. Astra glared at the controls, then huffed and stepped away, rubbing at her eyes. The displays were really grainy and the unnatural brightness wasn't doing her eyes any favors.

Astra heard the whoosh of flame, and turned to see Brendan's character spewing enough azure fire to blow May's character out of the arena.

"Woo!" Brendan cheered, raising his arms in victory. "That was a tough one! Good game!"

Brendan raised a palm, looking at May expectantly. May looked at him, eyes lidded and mouth thin.

"Tch," she scoffed, grudgingly returning his high-five. "You just got lucky."

"You're just mad that you got PWN'd by my leet skills," Brendan said, grinning ear-to-ear.

Astra blinked and looked at Brendan, confused. "Pawned?"

"Absolutely not!" May screeched, pulling Brendan's hat over his face. This did nothing to stop his uproarious laughter. May shook her head. "No, just...no. Nevermind him," she said, looking at Astra. "How was your first time with one of the greatest games ever made? I know you kinda got your ass beat—"

"I don't like it," Astra cut in, giving the machine a glare. "If that was the best one then I'm not sure I'm up for more."

"Aw, c'mon. Don't be like that!" May gestured to the rest of the Arcade. "There's tons of different games around; they're not all fighters. Hey, maybe you can choose the next one, eh?"

"Fine," Astra sighed, rubbing her head. "But I'm not sure what to pick. Plus my head is pounding like a...drum?" she trailed off, frowning. She looked around, confused. "Wait, that's not my head. I hear drums, and...a flute? Where is that music coming from?"

Brendan shrugged. "Probably the dancing games."

"There are dancing games!?"

It was called Dragon Dance: Revelation, and it was not about dancing. Unlike the graceful artform her village practiced, the game seemed to be about stomping on one of the dance pad's eight arrows in time with both the arrows on screen and the music.

"They don't even do anything with their arms!" Astra complained, exasperatedly gesturing at the two strangers currently competing against each other. They seemed to be doing well by the game's standards, but to hers they were abhorrent. "No spins, no flips, they barely even cross-step! You can't call this dancing! They're just—just throwing a tantrum on a beat!"

The mere thought of the concept of 'dancing' being applied to this ugly, static stomping of feet makes her want to tear the two off the stage and dunk them in an offal pit. Hatchlings had more grace than this!

"Well, the game isn't really made to see those kinds of things," Brendan explained. "Rhythm games aren't about cool moves, just timing. There are others where you strum on a guitar or tap keys on a keyboard, but none of them are that, uh, thorough."

"Just because you don't need to doesn't mean you shouldn't try!" Astra argued, fuming. "Following a rhythm is easy. You could at least liven it up a little while you do it."

May chuckled, her calculating gaze roving over the game in question. "Big words for a girl who's never even played one," she said. A gleaming eye turned on Astra, accompanied by a predatory smirk. "Got the moves to back them up?"

Astra raised a fist and clenched it, giving May her own combative smirk. "Wanna find out?"

Brendan chuckled behind them, scratching the back of his head nervously. "Already competing, huh?"

Astra and May stared each other down, the air between them positively crackling with energy. It quickly ran down into awkward, impatient shuffling as they all waited for the current players to actually finish. Once the two players left, Astra and May stepped up in their place.

Astra looked down at the dance pad. Eight arrows pointed out from the center and even her light steps were enough to make one light up when she tried it. Mindful of her dress, she tapped a few in quick succession and found that her new clothing didn't noticeably hamper her movement.

"Ready?" May asked, hopping in place. She looked at Astra, eyes fierce.

"You know it!" Astra replied, grinning back.

May inserted a token and hit random. Artwork and song titles spun by before the screen flashed, revealing twin sets of eight arrows atop a rapidly changing background of abstract shapes, musical notes, and...piano keys?

Then the music began, and Astra had no more time to think.

Piano strings intertwined with a spark of electricity, a frantic, hyperactive stream of energy. Arrows rose in time with the notes, not quite in the massive flood the last players had been facing, but formidable in scope all the same. Astra's feet skipped around the platform, her legs seamlessly flowing from one pad to the next. She was right, this wasn't hard at all! Well, keeping her eyes on the arrows was annoying, but just hitting the right ones was simple.

"I don't see much arm movement there, Astra. Game too hard?" May taunted, even as she missed a few notes herself. "What's wrong? I thought you were gonna show us how to dance!"

Astra smirked. "Don't worry, I'm just learning the rhythm. This is the first time I've heard this after all. But if you're that impatient..."

She'd almost gotten it. If she was right, the chorus would repeat right about...!

"I guess I'll just step it up!"

Astra spun. Her arms bloomed outwards, the song guiding her hands through strange and flourishing displays as her feet sprung from step to step. This wasn't the graceful dancing of her village; it couldn't be, not with this hyper-energetic music and her own lack of experience. But this wild and frenetic alternative came to her just as easily, as natural as the music flowed from her violin.

"Woah," May exclaimed, a flurry of miserable 'POOR!' and 'MISS!' flooding her screen as she did.

"Damn," Brendan said, barely audible over the music. "She's actually doing it."

Astra grinned, her eyes tracking the screen even as her motions spun her to-and-fro. They thought mere stomping to a beat could compare to this? This was the epitome of style, the beating heart of rhythm! A connection between body and sound, refined into art!

But alas, it could not last forever. She could hear the song winding down. As the final berry on top, Astra jumped, spinning around once in midair before falling on the last two arrows in a perfect curtsy.

Then she bent double and gasped for air, clutching at her head. She may have gone a bit overboard. Just a tad.

She heard clapping. Taking a deep breath to even herself out, she turned to find a half-dozen people—Brendan among them—had gathered around to watch, all of them either clapping or whistling appreciatively. Astra flushed red and waved, chuckling nervously.

Shaking her head, she turned to May, who was looking at the screen contemplatively.

"How was that?" Astra asked, folding her arms and smirking.

"Hm?" May blinked. She looked at Astra and gave her an approving smile. "Pretty damn amazing! Sure showed those guys. Apparently you can do a whole ass jig while playing DDR."

"Hah!" Astra laughed, holding her head high. "I knew it! Those lazy fakers wouldn't know what dancing was if it bit them in the—"

May coughed. Astra paused, eyeing her friend curiously. May jerked her head toward the game screen. Slowly, Astra turned to look.

"ABYSMAL! INSERT TOKENS TO PLAY AGAIN!" The screen cheered.

Astra stared. Her head hurt.

May snorted, giving her a wry grin. "Yeah. You missed like, three-fourths of the notes. Turns out you gotta keep your eyes on the screen and actually step on the arrows to score good!" She shrugged sarcastically. "Who knew?"

Astra held her face in her hands and groaned. May patted her back.

"You did look pretty cool, though," May said. "Wanna go again and kick my ass legit?"

"Just hit the fucking button."

They played another round. Astra didn't find it nearly as engaging without actual dancing; oh, sure, timing everything right was kinda fun, but it just really didn't satisfy the need to move properly. Nevertheless, she hit all the buttons exactly on time and scored a perfect game.

In celebration, the game let her enter a three letter abbreviation of her name on the leaderboards. On May's advice, Astra contributed to the grand tradition of arcades worldwide, and thus the song was crowned with a new champion: ASS. Somehow Brendan didn't find it quite as funny, and his sigh of exasperation only served to set off a round of giggles.

Stepping away from the tantrum simulator, Astra stumbled as her developing headache made itself known once more. She rubbed her eyes, the pressure relieving the ache for a moment.

"I think I'm going to get a migraine if I stay here any longer," she said, squinting at her friends. "All these flashes and buzzes are really getting to me."

Brendan frowned, concerned eyes flicking across Astra's face. "Ah. Yeah, of course we can. Do you need water?"

May watched on as Brendan fussed over Astra, her own frown showing shades of annoyance and disappointment. She pulled out her remaining tokens and looked them over before sighing.

"Hey," she said. "I've only got a few of these things left, and I can't really get a refund. If you're up for it, we could just dump 'em in—" she paused, looking around. She pointed to a machine. "—A crane game or something. Get a souvenir before we go."

May smiled uncertainly, half-shrugging. Astra looked over at the machine, which was simply a glass cage filled with prizes and an overhanging claw-like mechanism. Astra considered it. She had come here at May's urging, and the other girl seemed a bit stung by how poorly the night was going. If Astra could help her walk away with a happier memory...well, it didn't look too stressful.

"I guess I could give it a go," she agreed.

May brightened, though Brendan looked uncertain. He'd seemed ready to pull them all out of the building.

"Are you sure?" He asked as the trio made their way over to the machine. "You don't have to push yourself if you're feeling bad."

"Hey, if I can salvage even a little bit of tonight, I think it'll be worth it." Astra said, giving him a strained grin. "May was really excited to show me this place; even if it didn't work out, I don't want to end it on a sour note. Besides," she said, looking at the glass box filled with stuffed pokemon dolls. "This looks easy. How do I play?"






"Why won't it just grab the thing!?" Astra yelled, glaring at the limp-wristed robot arm as it once again dropped a plush Treecko doll halfway to the prize hole.

"That's how they get you," May said, leaning against the case. "These things are always soft-gripped fucks, so you gotta dump cash into it to get the thing you want. But people still get shit from them, so I think they're programmed to grab harder every so often."

"No, no, that's crap," Brendan said, shaking his head. "Look, you gotta line it up right, get some good leverage, maybe spend a pull or two nudging it around so you can go in for the kill."

"Well either way apparently I suck at it!" Astra grit her teeth, glaring at the collection of prizes. She was tempted to just telekinesis the things out, but this situation was not helping her headache! "Screw it, there's only one token left so I'm just dropping this somewhere random."

"Last chance luck!" May cheered, casually slamming a fist on the glass. "C'mon you stupid box, cough up the goods and end us off on a high note!"

Forgoing the Treecko doll, Astra maneuvered the crane over the middle where an assortment of awards had been piled up. She didn't particularly care what she grabbed at this point so she dithered the crane around the area a bit and then hit the button. Astra stepped back and folded her arms, giving the claw a stink eye as it descended into the plushy depths. She blinked when it perfectly grabbed onto something white and tugged it straight into the air.

May whooped and pointed at the prize. "Look, you got something!"

"Finally!" Astra exclaimed, throwing her arms up.

"Nice!" Brendan said. He looked at the prize as the machine dropped it in the hatch. "What is it?"

"I'm not sure, but it sure is soft!" Astra said, reaching into the chute and pulling the doll out.

It was a Ralts.

Astra stared at the vacantly smiling figure. Ten inches tall, the doll's glassy eyes were hidden under a dome of green cloth and a pair of plastic red horns embedded into a head about a third larger than it should be. Two stubby arms protruded from the solid robe, and though there were two legs the robe didn't actually have an opening for them at the bottom, instead having them be formless white pillars with a small coat tail.

"...huh."

May blinked. "Oh hey, it's that pokemon I saw on 102. A...Ralts, I think? Neat."

"Is it?" Brendan asked. "Oh, that's what they look like. Neat."

"Neat," Astra echoed, still staring.

It was neat. Also terrifying, for a number of reasons. She'd known, abstractly, that there were probably Ralts and Kirlia elsewhere in the world; her Grandfather had said the village had only been made with the totality of the population on Hoenn alone, after all. But apparently her kind were so well known elsewhere that humanity had made plush effigies in their image.

She wondered, for a fleeting moment, what they were like. Without the safety and knowledge of the village, vulnerable to Humans the same as any other pokemon. Would they still be like her? Or would they be...

Her head hurt.

"I'd like to leave now," she said. This time, nobody objected. Astra felt the pressure fade as they exited the building, the triple-layered din vanishing into the background. Incandescent lights still flooded the city streets alongside unrestrained emotions from every passing human, but none of it was nearly as aggressive as before.

"That's better," she sighed, glancing up at the sparsely starry night sky. "Nice and—well, not quiet, but...yeah."

"We should probably get you back to your apartment," Brendan said. "Rest easy for a bit. Do you need any water? I can grab a packet of headache medicine if you need it."

"Water sounds nice." Astra agreed as the three began to walk back. "I'm already feeling a bit better, so I'll hold off on the medicine unless it lingers."

Behind them, May stared at the sidewalk sullenly, arms folded. "Can't believe this was such a bust," she mumbled, glaring a hole in the concrete. "Barely played two games. Great fucking idea, let's just throw her into a mosh pit next time you moron—"

Brendan looked back at her, first in confusion, then with a melancholic smile. "Hey," he said, cutting May's tirade short and putting a hand on her shoulder. "Just because there was a problem doesn't mean you have to beat yourself up about it. It was a fine idea; maybe a little premature, but neither of us knew Astra would be so uncomfortable in an arcade."

"I still dragged her in," May argued, scowling. She sighed. "Whatever, it's done with anyway. Just gotta figure out something else to do now that gaming is off the table..."

Astra frowned. "I mean, it's not like the games were the problem," she said, "It was just...all the people, the flashing lights, the constant noise...it was too much. I felt like I could barely think."

"Arcades can be like that, yeah. Especially the big ones," Brendan agreed. He looked at Astra, a sad smile crossing his face. "I'm sorry that things turned out like this. Did you like what you got to try, at least?"

"I mean, the rhythm game was...alright," Astra allowed. "Just named wrong. I could see myself trying it again. And the doll is nice." A bit weird, but kind of endearing in a way.

May's lips twitched. "Not a fan of the fighter?" She asked, shades of her usual teasing bluster returning to her voice.

Astra rolled her eyes. "Maybe if I knew what I was doing! You guys ran circles around me the whole time and I kept messing up the controls."

"Think that means you need to 'get good'," May jabbed, smirking. Her amusement was quickly replaced by disappointment, and she sighed. "Not like you're likely to get any practice in, I guess."

"Didn't you say you were going to try to get your Pokedex to play Tetris?" Astra asked, recalling their conversation on the day they'd arrived in Rustboro. "Could you do the same for the fighter?"

May's face scrunched up. "Maybe, but they aren't really built for that. You'd need to get an actual handheld console, and they aren't cheap."

Astra rolled her eyes, exasperated. "Geeze, everything has to cost something, doesn't it? I still need money to restock my food, how am I supposed to buy—uh, that?"

May shrugged helplessly. "Don't look at me, I barely have more than you do."

"Wait, you're both broke? Is that why you guys have been making me pay for all your food!?" Brendan asked, astounded and a little irritated.

Awkward silence filled the air, both girls looking away in embarrassment.

May chuckled nervously. "I mean..." she trailed off, coughing into a fist and refusing to meet Brendan's gaze.

Astra scratched the back of her head, face red. "Well, we've been kinda busy, with all the Devon stuff, and the class today, and, well, my new clothes cost a lot, you know!" she pouted, pulling the brim of her hat down and swishing her dress from side to side.

A hot flash of guilt settled in Astra's stomach as soon as the words were sent. Well, that was all true, but if Brendan hadn't been here she and May could have still gone fishing or picked berries, and breakfast at the hotel was free. They really hadn't needed to burden him like that; she could blame May for instigating it most of the time, but she didn't exactly rebuke her. Well, she'd make up to him somehow. Food for food? He'd like her soup, surely.

Brendan looked at Astra and sighed, folding his arms and glancing away.

"Yeah, I guess that would do it," he muttered. He shook his head and refocused. "Well, if you're short on cash then you could always enter a battle competition; you don't pay for losing so bare minimum you'll make enough for a week of cheap kibble. There's always one or two happening somewhere, and I'm pretty sure the Gym is hosting one tomorrow afternoon." Brendan raised an eyebrow. "Unless you wanna do some odd jobs like catching a dozen Shroomish for a pharmacy...?"

"Fuck the pharmacy, that competition sounds right up my alley!" May exclaimed, pumping her fist. "Can't go wrong with a good fight. How about it, Astra," she asked, grinning at the smaller girl. "Wanna go beat people up and take their lunch money?"

"Please don't phrase it like that," Brendan sighed. "We're trainers, not grade-school malcontents."

"Just lunch?" Astra asked, smirking at May. "I'll beat them so hard they'll only be able to eat dirt for a month!"

"You too, Astra?" Brendan asked, shooting her a look of mock betrayal. He shook his head, muttering to himself. "Playground bullies, the both of them..."

Astra giggled at his put-out expression, then winced as her headache pulsed again. Not out of the woods yet; she'd have to lie down for a while once they made it back. Still, she couldn't help but be a bit excited for tomorrow. It felt like it'd been forever since her last proper battle, and the money was fresh jam on the fish. A few expected thrills were just what she needed, and she couldn't pass up a perfect opportunity to train her team and practice her music. After that, she'd restock her supplies, grab the stuff from Devon, meet up with Mr. Briney down south, and set sail for Dewford.

Astra smiled, squeezing the Ralts doll to her chest. Tomorrow was going to be fun!






Last chapter I promised that I'd 'get the hell out of Rustboro no matter how long the chapter got!'

This...actually happened! I wrote up until they left the city. It was nearly 12k words long.

It was also, very unfortunatly, kind of a disjointed, rushed mess, so I had to split it up into three parts anyway.

The good news is that the other two parts are already mostly written! Hopefully it wont take months on end to polish them up for posting.

Hopefully you're not too sick of what I consider slice-of-life yet. This section was supossed to be offset by the 'rest of the chapter' but whoops.

Next time we'll have a bit of pokemon action, and after that is a trip to Devon and out of Rustboro!

Onto personal news, started college in January and it's kicking my ass. Also I had to put my cat down in February which—alongside college and the giant problems in the text—just absolutely shattered my will to work on this for a while.

Also other authors are hogging my beta's free time—

Ahem.
Go check out Human Heartstone! It also stars a Kirlia disguising herself as a human, and I believe it's due for an update soonish.

Also Profit Majin, another artquest by my man Dexexe. You're a new employee at a megacorp, and your first day on the job you're handed a sword and get shoved into a dungeon to get materials for your corporate overlords. What do?

Also also There are Only Three Levels again, because it's amazing. `A level three villain has reduced the entire world to level one. A lone heroine embarks to stop her.`

Anyway, hopefully you enjoyed. Tell me what you think!
 
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