I think people are calling it an SI story because its an Isekai where random dude from our reality gets reincarnated as a Pokémon, Isekai protagonists tend to be blank slates easily self inserted into. Doesn't help if the dude has meta knowledge too.
A good point, and I can definitely see where anyone who thinks it is comes from. It's one of the reasons I decided to limit Charlie's meta-knowledge.

"Slightly off-topic lil' rant"
From what I understand, it's a way to shortcut getting the audience to connect with the character. I think it only becomes a bad thing when you don't make the effort to make them an actual character.

I'm having a good time with how it is now, though. No need to rush.
Thanks for saying, I like slower stories where you actually get the chance to see who the characters are outside of the action.

I'll have the next chapter up in about two hours. Thanks for commenting, it helps motivate me.
 
Chapter 9
I can hear my wife waking up as I finish brewing her morning tea, the particular cadence in her breaths shifting ever so slightly. The breakfast I made for her isn't to my normal standard, but the small kitchenette in our hotel room doesn't allow for much more.

Knowing that she is unlikely to get out of bed this early without further prompting, I leave the table and stalk into the bed-chamber, silent so as to surprise her. She is turned away from me and facing the window, her once-red hair spilling from the blankets.

I reach the window and throw the curtains open, "Good morning, Dear," I say to my lovely wife.

She groans, "You always know, I'm not sure why I bothered today." Truth be told, on any other day I would have let her sleep in, but we have someone to meet today. My dear Maeve slowly rises, bones creaking, to her feet. "Ah, but I'm excited to see her. Did you make breakfast?" She asks me, sniffing the air.

"It's only oatmeal with fruit, miltank-milk, and tea I'm afraid," I inform her. "I didn't have the space, time, or ingredients for more."

She waves me off as she starts walking to the small eating space in our suite, "You spoil me too much anyway, love," She lies, I would never give her any less than my best.

We eat in relative silence before readying to move on to the day's affairs, she takes her medicine, and I take on a familiar façade as we step outside.

Neither of us like it. And though it took me a while to understand Maeve's talk about social expectations and the negative stigma against single mothers, I have stood by her for fifty years now. Even if the 'father' of our children would not.

We've been through far too much together to do otherwise. And even despite my nature, I will remain her guiding light until the end.

We begin the slow journey northwest of Vientown. we make no effort to rush, for Maeve's sake. Though Dialga's march has been kind to her, I fear the day she is found underfoot, and she shows signs of it's nearing evermore with each passing year.

I find it best not to dwell on such thoughts, lest my control slip. Yet it is a truth I cannot deny, and so I look to the world around us.

Almia is a blessed country, despite its history. There is a vibrancy to the world here, a lust for life that has… perhaps not been forgotten but has stagnated in many other places. The life that surrounds us stands in defiance of what was once inevitable. Now only memories, even of the worst disasters.

It takes forty-five minutes at this slow, meandering pace to reach our destination, but that time gives my wife and I the freedom to take in the life around us, the beauty of a land shattered and made whole again.

It can even still be felt in the air… No, this feeling is fresh, no more than two weeks in age. Interesting, perhaps I will need to watch for another such as Maeve.

In any event, we approach a small compound, the cyclic symbol of the Ranger Union displayed dominant and alone on the otherwise unremarkable red and black bunker. Entering, we are met with the view of a blue-haired Unovan man behind a desk as he glances up at us.

"Oh," He says, sitting up straight and turning to face us. "Sorry, we don't get many walk-ins and… Anyway, What can I do for you today?" He asks.

It is my wife who answers first, "Maeve Aisling and Liam Aisling, we're here to see our granddaughter." At that, the man's expression turns confused, but Maeve preempts his coming question, "Ryuko, dear. Onaga Ryuko."

The man seems thunderstruck for a brief moment, looking between us. "Okay, yeah just give me a sec," He tells us.

Standing, the man walks into a door to the right of his desk. Leaving us to wait. I almost cannot, I can hear my granddaughter three rooms deeper into the building, speaking to a different man about… ghosts?

"I wonder what she'll think when that man tells her we're here. Do you think she'll believe him?" My wife asks me.

"I believe she will be quite pleased to see us, even though she will try to hide most of it," I tell Maeve, kissing her on the cheek.

She flicks one of my ears, knowing exactly where it is despite my outward appearance, and we both smile. "We're alone dear, but you're right. What's going on back there?" My love asks.

I focus on the words I can hear coming from that room. "That man just told her we're here, she doesn't seem to believe him, but she's also rather excited," I describe to her. Her smile grows warmer.

"Oh, to have ears like these. Have I told you how I wish I did?" She says, gripping my ears and beginning to rub them. "Oh, but I suppose I do, bonny fox," She adds playfully as I lean into the touch.

"They're returning," I let her know, regretfully pulling away from her hands.

Ryuko practically bursts from the door, suspicion turning to shock on her face. "Oma? Opa?" She asks, staring at us. The man trails behind her, moving back to his desk.

"Little Ryu!" I say, readying my façade for touch as I step to bring her into a hug.

Before I can, however, a weavile plants herself firmly between myself and my granddaughter. "No, I don't know what you are, but-" She gets out before my wife's voice cuts her short.

"Later, please, Weavile. Right now we would like to see our granddaughter," She says, her tone familiar and unyielding. Weavile doesn't back down, but she remains silent for the moment.

I'm lost for words, in truth. Little Ryuko has found herself not only a loyal partner but a shadow. To engender such protectiveness in one of my type is not an easy thing, and I'm not certain I could be more proud of her. Though, that may be a lack of faith on my part.

I need to voice my thoughts. "I am so proud of you Ryu, to think you would grow into such a noble young woman, it warms my heart."

Ryuko has gone red at this point, hands covering her face. She steps around her shadow and into my embrace. "You're embarrassing me!" She says before sighing, "I didn't know when I'd see you again, Opa. Now's not the best time, but there probably won't be a good time soon anyway." Stepping out of my arms and into Maeve's, she continues, "You should have called ahead or maybe sent a letter. I might have been able to schedule time for us, then."

That's likely true, the Rangers are always busy. Oh, and I cannot describe the fear I felt when Ryuko first told me that she'd been accepted to become one of them. But she clearly proved herself worthy of them in time, the once deathly frail girl now a beacon of strength among humans.

"How long will you be in Almia?" She asks. Sweet child.

"We're moving to Pueltown." Replies my wife. "With Kanto's current situation and our age, we had to choose between Almia and Unova, and we decided that Almia would be the best place to live the rest of our lives. Most of our things were sent ahead, we just decided to drop in on you first." Maeve pushes Ryuko away a bit. "Have you heard from your parents recently? Liam and I haven't been able to reach them at all."

Ryuko shakes her head, "No, but I haven't really tried after…" She sighs, "Yeah, I haven't heard from them." Oh, I see.

I don't know where we went wrong with Killian. Though perhaps it was not us and instead Kanto's doing. Either way, if he's finally decided his daughter's career is worth ignoring this part of the family over… I may need to accept that we- I failed him.

"Let me go ask my boss if I can have the afternoon free, there's a situation though, and we're still waiting on someone, so I probably won't be able to today," She says, before turning and walking towards a door. "Love you, Opa, Oma! If I can't get today I'll try for tomorrow. Sorry, I can't stick around longer. Bye!" And with that, she's through the door and out of sight, Weavile following slowly after. Ah! She certainly hasn't lost her spark.

"So, uh, You haven't seen each other in a while then." The blue-haired man asks, speaking up for the first time.

I chuckle at that, and my love is smiling with me. "It is not easy to travel from Kanto to here, no. Especially now," I tell the man.

"Yeah, I get that. She was right though, the guy's an hour late already." The man informs us. Hmm, perhaps we should go and see the rest of the city, then.

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

It's getting close to midday, I should go check on the kid soon.

I just want to sit here right now though. I feel a few tears hit my legs.

Buizel's growing up so fast. He just found a—and he was very enthused by this—female friend and he's obviously interested in her.

I knew that was coming soon, he's almost six now. He's strong enough to make it on his own, it won't be long before he leaves for good. I just wish he would stay a child for a bit longer.

This isn't the first time I've been through this of course, not by a good length. It still isn't easy. But I've got Ryu and Charlie to keep me company when I need it, and the kid's going to need my help and guidance for now.

I'm just sitting on the shore. The first few times I went through this hurt, though now I'm not sure if 'hurt' is the right word anymore. My baby boy's all grown up again, and soon I won't be seeing him every day anymore… I'm happy for him, he's one of my stronger children, and he even has some of his father's sparks, but I'm still sad to know he'll be gone before too long.

I feel a few more tears fall.

I'm still just sitting here. Maybe it's just 'cause I don't want the kid to see me crying like this, but it's not like they're truly a child, too introspective for that. It's also not like they wouldn't understand, with everything I think they've been through. Not even like these are bad tears, just what's normal.

"C'mon old bones, we promised ourselves no more moping," I remind myself.

Sighing, I stand, if only to fall into the water a second later. I begin my swim across to the east shore. It takes only seconds to reach it and soon I'm moving down the path to what is now Charlie's den.

Shockingly, they're outside, with a look of extreme focus on their face.

Looking at the rest of the clearing around the old dwelling, I can see they've been busy practicing force and technique. There are gouges, craters, and furrows in the earth around the clearing. I can see the remains of several felled trees and even a spot where there's only shattered wood left.

I settle down, resting my backside and leaning my head on my hands, to wait.

…Well then. Deciding I've given them long enough to notice me, I start talking, "Looks like you've been busy," I observe, which seems to break them out of their focused state.

"Oh!" They startle, glancing at me. "Yeah, I…" The kid pauses to look around, "I guess so." They pause again, probably considering their next words. "I've been trying to figure out my gim- No, specialty? I think that's the right word. Anyway, I'm pretty sure it's my voice," They say.

'Specialty?' Hmm, Hmm… yeah, that makes sense with the other spooks I've seen.

Some were just balls of gas that kept releasing more gas, they're annoying but not all that strong, all it takes to dissuade them is a strong wind.

Every ten or so years the shedinja appear, and they're… strange. Usually doer, and generally best left alone to fade away.

There are the drifblim of course, but I'm not sure how much they count as ghosts. They've got the same feel to them, and they're friendly enough, but they aren't… dead.

And then there was that one spook that kept hurting others by hurting themselves, and that one I had to wear down enough that they decided to just leave. They kept screaming a name too, still not sure why.

How do they know about stuff like that, though? Curious.

"That makes some sense, with the way you sound," I acknowledge. "Are you doing okay otherwise?"

"I think so," They say, eyes trailing over the chewed-up earth. "Actually, yeah, I'm doing pretty well," they say, now looking down the human path. "Weaver and I talked about some stuff, it… felt good to get some of it off my chest."

Oh? Well, so long as it made them feel better, that's what matters. I am a bit curious though. "Anything you feel like sharing?" I ask them.

They look at me for a moment, "I…" They stop, blinking. "I said something while we were talking, and it turned into a much longer conversation," They tell me, before clearly thinking about their words again.

I guess they're just not ready to share that with me, probably only shared it with the weavile because it slipped out. "I'm… I don't think I'm ready to explain it to you yet, I don't know if I ever will be, honestly. It- it's a lot," They confirm my thoughts. I can't say I'm not a little disappointed to hear that, but I can understand at least.

"Um, are you okay?" They ask, now looking at my face. "You tas- You look like…" They stop, looking down. Wheel, why do you have so much trouble looking me in the eyes kid?

"I'm okay. Buizel's growing up fast, and it always leaves me feeling some kind of way. You don't need to worry about it," I tell them.

I can see the worry on their face anyway. "Are you sure you don't need anything?" They ask. They genuinely are the nicest ghost I've met, but I know I'll feel better eventually. I always do.

"Just some company," I tell them. And smiling, "You're helping enough right now." There's a short pause before I decide to check something, "You and weaver protect Ryu yesterday? Made sure she warmed up well enough?"

"I don't know If I'd say I protected her," They hedge, glancing back at the old structure. "I made sure she was warm though. I couldn't really tell how cold it was, but apparently, Weaver wasn't helping with that."

"That's just how she is. She can't get hot, only colder," I say nodding. "Though Ryuko should have known better than to be in that freezing rain for so long."

They let out a small laugh at that, "Weaver said something similar while we were in the city. She thinks Onaga is too selfless," They say.

Anybody who spends time with her would realize that. What was the other thing they said? "You went and saw the city?" I ask. I don't think I've been out that way for… I'm not even sure how long it's been.

"Yeah. Uh, Weaver thought I was developing a fear of humans. I'm pretty sure she was right," They say.

A fear of humans? Now that's unusual. Though… not unexpected with what they say happened to them, and it also feels uncomfortably familiar…

"Charlie, were you a capture or just a companion?" I ask them, and they freeze up. Yeah, that follows. I don't even wait for the answer, "If you're scared of a human- of anything hurting you like that again, of being caught or whatever else, the solution is just to get stronger," I tell them, now looking at the mess they've made while doing just that. "You're obviously trying already, but just practicing like this will only take you so far." I'm watching for a reaction, and I don't miss the slight wince when they realize what I mean. "I'm sorry kid, but this isn't some safe human city with someone to enforce 'laws' and all that. You're apparently a curiosity, and Ryu's warned me that there probably will be humans looking to catch you."

The kid slumps a bit in the air, "I figured, it's just… I never liked violence. I liked making stuff more," They say. Then in a tone low enough that I don't think I'm supposed to hear, "I miss having something to do."

I want to know, but do I pursue it instead of staying on topic with what they need to do? Hmm… getting to know them more is the better choice, ultimately, so I decide on that. I'll come back around to learning to fight afterward.

"What do you mean by that?" I ask them. They freeze, again.

"Um. W- Well, I…" They begin, sinking to the ground slightly. "I had a job, before I- You know? And I'm used to having things to do all day…" They sound uncertain, like they're afraid of how I'll react.

Why? I know humans will get us to help them with things, but why is the kid so twitchy about it? "Yeah? What did you do?" I ask them, trying to figure it out.

"I… put buildings together. Or fixed them, sometimes. It depended on the contracts we got. Everything from roofing, to plumbing, foundations, structural, and even electrical work." They look a bit less afraid now. Maybe it's not them but something they heard about me? I suppose if they are used to being around humans then hearing about some of the things I've done might do it.

"Hmm? You know how to do all that?" I ask, probing a bit.

"Y- Yeah, I do. I spent years doing it all." They're looking a little distant now, the way they do before dropping onto deep thoughts.

They've said some things I don't recognize, but that's no surprise. I do know one thing I've heard Luxray go on about, though, "You said, 'electrical work'? You know a lot about that kind of thing?"

"Hmm? Oh, yeah I guess I do," They say distractedly, and I can almost see the thoughts start churning in that head of theirs as they go still. They get that look a lot, and, while I'm tempted, I'm not going to try knocking them out of it just yet. I don't know what they're thinking of that needs focus like that, but its probably important to them.

Standing, I take a better look around at what they've been doing. Some of the destruction was obviously from sound attacks, the distinctive patterns clear in the loose dirt around them. Others though… they have the same shape as the smaller ones, but I can tell there was considerably more force behind them. The fact that I heard none of this happening means the kid has been controlling the focus and bleed of the forces very well.

I almost want to laugh when I see the clear spots around the ranger signs. They really must not want to damage those.

Walking over to the structure at the south end, I can tell they've been busy here too. There's a pile of creeping vines by the door and I can smell ash and the sticky paste I taught the kid about. Looking in through the front window, I can see the remains of a fire inside and surprisingly little else. It seems Charlie has been trying to make the space more comfortable for themselves. None of the other spooks that tried to claim this place did that, none of them were this friendly either. Makes me wonder why, frankly. It might just be an age thing since Charlie does come across as older than most around here.

Hmm, I might need to ask them about that at some point too.

A sound from down the human path pulls me from those thoughts. Turning my head, I listen closer.

"…told you it's legit. Got it straight from the institute. Right around here somewhere, according to the locals." Says a male, human voice.

"And I still say we should have just staked out the Lost Tower." Says another human, also male. "Not that I'm going to complain about a free vacation. Though I'd bet you overpaid for that leak. And the overnight train."

"Do you think I should go for tough or earnest?" Asks a third, rather croaky, female voice. "I guess… I just don't know what a ghost is going to be like." The voice finishes a moment later.

Oh? An object lesson for the kid? Whether I need to knock some sense into the humans or let Charlie deal with it, it makes a perfect example. Though if they're looking for an actual fight…

glancing at the churned-up earth tells me that the kid genuinely does have some strength, but the way they act is proof enough that they don't know how to use it in a real fight.

I continue to watch and listen as the group of three approaches, only one set of feet is unheard as they do.

"Hey, can you pass me a bottle?" Asks the second voice.

"Wait… guys? There's something off about-" The croaky voice, interrupted.

"Did You eat all the snacks?" The first voice, accusing.

"No. I've had exactly one pack since we left the city."

"Really? 'cause they're- Oh I put them in that pocket."

"Was that a- Never mind, you need to learn to pay attention. Stinger? What's up?"

"There's something big ahead." Says the croaky voice, alert and wary.

It isn't much longer before I can see them through the trees. Two humans, each wearing bags. And a croagunk, the amphibious pokemon is rare around here, but not unknown to me. She locks eyes with me before laughing hysterically.

It takes her a moment to stop laughing. "Ah! Mm. Oh, no, I'm… shutting up now," She says. Very smart choice.

It takes hardly a moment longer for one of the humans to notice me, they're almost in the clearing now.

"Dude, there it is!" Says the human with the first voice, pointing at Charlie.

Charlie, who hasn't even noticed what's going on. Honestly, kid, I get that you tend to drift off but there's a threat right there. Although, they've got a look on their face now…

"Brad, not the thing you should be focusing on right now." Hisses the other human, his eyes moving from me to the ranger signs and back again. With the way the croagunk has moved between myself and him, I'm guessing he's the trainer. Although I don't see any pokeballs, so it seems he's not an idiot at least.

"Yeah? What do you… mean…" The other human trails off when he notices me. "What the hell is that?!"

The trainer gives 'Brad' an incredulous look, "We came all the way down to Almia, and you don't know who that is?" The man asks, disbelieving.

"Man, I'm not a professional. What do you expect? That I know every mildly famous pokemon in a country I don't even live in?" The increasingly idiotic-sounding human retorts.

"Wha- Mildly famous?" the trainer says, now sounding like someone told him that water was dry.

There are only two of them, and one already knows about me. No need for theatrics or a show of force then. I look at Charlie for a second again, kid's still zoned out, and I'm going to need to talk to them about that. But first, the humans.

"You should leave," I tell the trio, then to who must be named Stinger, "And you need to do a better job keeping your partner out of trouble, okay?"

She simply nods before grabbing her trainer's hand and tugging, trying to move him back the way they came. The trainer looks at her blankly, before nodding and addressing the other human, "Brad, we're leaving," He tells the man.

"What? But the ghost is right there! We came all the way out here!" He protests with a slight whine to his voice.

"Yeah, and The Marshal is right there. We. Are. Leaving. Stinger and I are going to go have a nice, normal vacation, and we are not going to talk about this ever again. Got it?" The trainer says, tone brooking no argument.

"I- But-" 'Brad' stutters, looking between the other human, Charlie, and me. "Fine," He says after a moment, clearly unhappy about it. "Make me waste four-hundred-cred on top of the trip," He grumbles low enough it's hard to hear.

I see a look cross the trainer's face when he also hears that and I can see the risk and threat calculations pass across his face, behind his eyes, but with the way he's readied himself they're not about me. Then he shoots out a hand to grab the other human's bag, stopping him. "Brad, did I see what I think I did in your bag earlier?" He asks with a clear warning in his voice.

"Uh… I dunno. What did you see?" Brad responds. It's clear he heard the warning and knows he's outmatched.

"Brad" The trainer practically hisses, "Did you sneak a pokeball in?" The now blatantly smarter human asks.

"I thought we were here to catch a ghost-type!" The idiot defends himself, pulling away from the trainer's grip and facing him. "Don't we need a pokeball for that?"

"Catch?!" The trainer asks, incredulous. Then he takes a deep breath to noticeably calm himself before responding, "Do you know why I only brought Stinger with me, Brad?" He asks all too calmly.

"…Because she's your fir-" The weakling starts before being interrupted.

"Because she's my first, my Ace, Brad. My best representative." The trainer says, now likely unnervingly calm to the other human. "Do you know why I turned in her pokeball and didn't try to bring another, Brad?" He asks now.

"Well, I-" The idiot human says before being interrupted again.

"Because a happy pokemon of her size doesn't need a ball, Brad. Because pokeballs are illegal here, Bradley," He says, and I can see him visibly calming himself again. "Do you know what the second rule of competitive battling is, Brad?" He asks, tone now all too chipper. The other man opens his mouth before the trainer interrupts, answering himself again, "It's make sure your team wants to be there, Brad. Do you know the first rule?"

The fool looks around, seeming to wait for the trainer to answer again before realizing he won't. "Um, no?" He says, now a little frightened.

"IT'S GIVE THEM THE FUCKING RESPECT THEY DESERVE YOU MORON!" The trainer roars with a fury I can respect myself. "Just… give me the ball and leave," He growls, holding out a hand. Without a word, the weak human digs through his bag and hands the trainer a red and white sphere. "Thank you for the train tickets, but please try to make sure I don't see you until I'm back in Sinnoh." The trainer says, not bothering to look at the other human.

The thoroughly cowed human puts his head down and slinks back the way they came muttering to himself the whole time. The trainer just sighs and starts kneading his forehead with both hands.

"What… What happened?" I hear Charlie ask. Turning my head, I see them staring at the trainer, there's a look on the kid's face that tells me they at least know what could have happened.

"You know," Says the trainer. "When Brad showed me that report he bought saying there wasn't just a calm but possibly friendly ghost-type I thought: 'Why not try?' I had a pitch and everything, battles, adventure, luxury, maybe even friends 'till the end," He sighs, putting a hand on Stinger's head. "Sorry to disturb you two, I guess. I hope you don't mind if I give Brad a bit so I don't run into him on the way back."

"Awful nice of you," I say. "But you need to ask them about that, this isn't my den," I continue, pointing at Charlie.

"I- Sure?" Charlie says, bobbing in the air a bit.

The trainer raises an eyebrow and looks at Stinger, who nods. He then shrugs before setting his bag down and sitting next to it, beginning to look through its contents. "No water, stupid mistake," He murmurs to himself.

"Nate's really nice," Says Stinger, speaking for the first time since she saw me, "I know it might not mean much coming from me, but he is. Brad can just be a bit… mmm… slow, he's harmless though." She squats down next to her human, leaning into him. "I kinda wish we got the chance to at least give you the pitch, but I can tell you won't take it now." She turns her head when the now-named 'Nate' pulls out a block of food and passes it to her. The two of them stop talking after that, content to wait in silence.

"I need to stop drifting off like that," Charlie says, eyes a bit wider than normal.

"You need to learn situational awareness too," I tell them, and I know they got the point. "So you and I are going to work on that, and how to protect yourself, right now. Follow me," I say.

They're quiet as they rise a bit, getting ready to follow, before they stop and look at the structure. "Um, you don't think there will be people in there when I get back do you?" They ask, still staring at the old place.

"Nah, between what the two of us have shown them the tourists won't be coming back out here for a few days. I'll give it another day or two before we see any more in numbers," I tell them. That doesn't seem to convince them though, as I see their eyes move to Nate and Stinger. "Those two, at least, don't seem to be idiots," I reassure them. "And once you get some real experience, idiots won't be a problem either." They think a moment longer before nodding and moving to follow me.

They don't try to resist as I lead them out across my lake. I can say a lot of things about the kid, sheltered, skittish, and like all ghosts even a bit unstable, but them being an idiot thankfully isn't one of them.

I do have to wonder what the kid's life was like living among humans. It's been a long time since I fought my way out of there, and from the little they've told me, I get the feeling they had a much better life with them than I did, even if the end had to be painful. But if they don't want to say more then I won't push it.

Sometimes, you just need to drown your past and move on.




AN: Liam started as something that made me chuckle, I swear. And then I just... kept going with, I guess.
 
Last edited:
They kept screaming a name too, still not sure why.

I guess ghosts being actual ghosts isn't the easiest thing to believe, hence the belief that they just form out of dead peoples and Pokémon essence and aren't actually the dead people. I really do hope ghost being actual ghosts is the case here, as them only being Pokémon born in graveyards is a little lame-ish tbh.

Like Yamask (my favorite ghost type) is significantly less cool if the pokedex entry about them caring dead masks of their old human face isn't true.
 
I guess ghosts being actual ghosts isn't the easiest thing to believe, hence the belief that they just form out of dead peoples and Pokémon essence and aren't actually the dead people. I really do hope ghost being actual ghosts is the case here, as them only being Pokémon born in graveyards is a little lame-ish tbh.

Like Yamask (my favorite ghost type) is significantly less cool if the pokedex entry about them caring dead masks of their old human face isn't true.
I'm going to put this in a spoiler for reasons
I don't know if I will ever find a way to explain it in context,so I'll do it here.
When it comes ghosts, it's a bit of both. A dead human/pokemon is required however. That's not to say they(The soul, animus, self, whatever you want to call it) won't degrade between death and return, or that it won't get mixed with others along the way, but an impetus is needed, usually a fresh death from someone trying to cling on.

Charlie is an exception, of course. He got yanked out of somewhere much farther away, and is mostly intact.
 
Oh cool, thanks for the response.

It's just you know the hints given though the chapters you have posted all support that ghost types are all previously dead Pokémon/humans which is neat as that's my favorite interpretation (it being a sliding scale from them remembering nothing to them remembering everything and anywhere in-between is cool too). Marshal makes a comment about one of the previous ghost types she's known repeating a name over and over.
I know that Charlie is an Isekai, but it makes sense for him to re-incarnate as a ghost, also both Isekai's and humans becoming Pokémon (even in the mainline games) are things that actually canonically happens in Pokémon and one of my favorite things about the setting tbh. I like that dead humans can become ghost Pokémon is all I'm trying to say I think. Also like how you made ghost Pokémon rare.
 
Chapter 10
AN: I don't know if I like this one, but I'll explain afterward.



Today has been… interesting so far. It started badly, but Oma and Opa dropping in made it better. Karlos can't give me the afternoon today though, as much as he might want to.

There just had to be something today. Sometime late yesterday, the Sienna government was informed of two leaked action reports involving the misdreavus. And since all the reports are by me so far, they effectively forced the Union to send a Top Ranger to interview me. Not that the Union thinks it was me, but politics are politics.

Our running theory here at the base is that it was a researcher who sold copies in either Kanto or Sinnoh. No one thinks Rowan would do it, he's very prominent, not stupid, and he has a reputation to protect. Now, Hikori might have given just how bad Kanto's general situation is right now, except that the first signs of a leak came from Sinnoh. They even shut the trains to Sinnoh down late this morning. Not that it will stop the information leak, things like that are done through computer inter-networking these days.

My problem now is that the big shot is late.

Karlos already took my testimony and I've finished a written report of everything I've done over the last week. And more frustratingly, if whoever was sent had been here on time I could be out there with my family right now.

Just- they're here to stay! Disregarding a—singular—phone call, the last time I'd seen them was before I entered the academy. I missed them more than I thought I would, especially after what dad said, the bast-

…I'm making myself angry.

Karlos obviously notices, "I'm sorry-" he starts again before I wave him off.

"It's not you, it's just this situation and my grandparents showing up at the same time," I tell him.

We're in his office, 'patiently' waiting. Karlos has even started scanning more papers into the computer it's been so long, the man was supposed to be here more than an hour ago.

Weaver's vanished somewhere now as well, she's never been the patient type though.

I've actually grabbed my deck of cards, and I'm halfway through a game of Nickit before the phone rings.

"Karlos Monte, Vien-Forest West Ranger base, to whom am I speaking?" The man himself says in a perfect customer service voice after picking up the phone. "Ah, yes sir. Yes, I have an account and transcript of her testimony. I see, should I assume the situation has been resolved then, sir? Yes, thank you for letting me know. I should be able to send copies in by tonight, yes. Understood sir." He speaks into the phone before hanging up. Then he gives a long suffering sigh, running a hand down his face, "You want the stupid news or the regular news first?"

Just from his half of the conversation, I can guess what one of those is. "The news," I say, making him sigh again.

"So, as soon as Rowan heard there had been a leak he essentially tore the entire Sinnoh Research Institute apart. He found the man who did it too, not even a researcher, just an administrator who wanted some extra cash." Karlos says, cracking his knuckles. "The stupid news is that the higher-ups just got around to calling the 'interview' off, but the Top Ranger wasn't even going to get here for another hour." He shakes his head, "They didn't say why of course, but I have my guesses.

Karlos sighs again before getting to what I want to know, "With us having been sitting on our asses the last two-and-a-half hours I can't give you the afternoon. What I can do is put you on duty in the city for the rest of the day, and if you happen to run into your grandparents then that's just a happy coincidence." He stops, grinding the palm of his hand into the bridge of his nose for a moment. "I think we both know you'll be pretty busy if I do that though. Do you still want me to?"

Emil and Maya are both already in the field, and I'd be out there with them if it wasn't for the order to remain at base. Which means, "Everyone's going to be in the field today." I observe.

He nods, "One of those days." He says sagely.

"You'll be handling the extra load up north then?" I ask the hefty man.

He snorts, "I will. It's a great excuse to stop doing paperwork and get back to my actual job." He says. Cracking his neck and leaning back in his chair, he levels his gaze at me, "You're taking the city today, then." He states.

"Obviously," I say.

"Finally!" He almost leaps out of his chair. "Let's get going. I bet Francios' got quite the list for each of us, and we're going to be at it all day." Karlos 'complains' happily as he opens the office door.

Stretching, I make my way out of his office, down the central corridor, out through the lobby, and finally make my way outside.

A bright, slightly cloudy day greets me, a breeze moving the world as it passes. I'm still in uniform, I made the mistake of taking it off before dinner once, never again. Now I just need to find two energetic old people with red-ish hair while on the job. Shouldn't be too hard.

Setting off at a light jog, I start heading for Vientown.

Oma and Opa are moving here… I think the weight of that just hit me. I was wholly expecting to never see any of my family again and now I'll at least have them. I mean, I would like to see my brother at some point, and Uncle Finn, but it's hard enough to find personal time as a ranger. Let alone enough vacation time to head back to Kanto. Although if I wanted to see Kouta again I'd need to deal with Dad…

Continuing to move at pace, I can see the edge of the industrial district. All the civil services—including the civilian police—are closer to the south end of the city, so I maintain my pace to reach them as quickly as possible.

Nine times out of ten, any missions that happen in Vientown involve the police, firefighters, or medical services as they lack the training—and to be honest, the trust—to deal with pokemon the way we do. So it's best to head there first.

It's why we all hope for quests instead.

Three chimes sound from my radio. Well, Karlos did say there was probably a list of things to do.

Honestly, it's been a while since the last big emergency. Season's grace, please don't let that be today.

Stopping and looking around before I grab my radio, I'm happy to see Weaver being her usual self. She stops mid-motion, comical pose and all as she looks as though she were a cartoon villain attempting to sneak up on me.

Smiling, I Switch the radio from idle to operator, and acknowledge the hail, "Onaga Ryuko, responding." I say into it.

"Th- This is student o- operator Francios Lumio, Vien-Forest West, transmitting." Fran still sounds nervous, as he has since he started doing real work as an operator. "We've got a few requests for aid from local services pending, none are emergency requests, thankfully. The first is at four-fourteen Alto Street, talk to Officer Kent when you get there, he should be waiting." The line goes silent, and I Start jogging again, waiting for him to remember the required line for something like this. "R- Right, This is an o- official mission. Do your best! Ending transmission." He says, and the line dies.

I mean, the 'official mission' statement was required, but I don't think I've heard the end transmission line from an operator since I made rank. Katie might be messing with him.

I continue my pace, Alto is pretty close to the center of the city, so it won't take me long to get there. I get the normal amount of waves and stares in passing as I blitz down the wide path past a few food packing facilities.

It takes a surprising amount of work to ready food for transit, though I can see quite a few 'bored' grass-types next to their actually bored partners. Rounding a corner, I can see why. Surprise! It's construction. Looks like Vien-Greens is rebuilding something.

…I haven't taken a good look around in almost two months, again. I hate this time of year sometimes.

Doing my best to ignore the horrors spring always brings with it, it takes me only a few minutes to reach Alto, and seconds from there to find the address, though I have to move through a small crowd to get to it.

Oh. Yeah, that would do it.

"Hey! I'm Glad you finally made it Ranger…" He pauses, probably to glance at my badge, "Onaga. We… need a little help. Clearly." Says a man wearing a police uniform. He must be Kent, but I'm not looking at him. No, I'm looking at the mafia of murkrow coating the building at four-fourteen.

"Weav…" Whispers Weaver. Yeah, whatever that was, that was my thought too.

They're all over the roof, on every windowsill, on every balcony, and even in the building. A mass of black feathers, red eyes, and yellow beaks.

They only gather like this for two reasons- well, five, but three of those shouldn't happen both in the middle of the day and inside the city.
So, the first: Someone did something incredibly stupid and made the whole mafia angry. And if that's the case, I hope whoever it was wasn't in there when they all got here.
The second: One of them just evolved into a honchkrow and they're all making an appearance at the new leader's nest.

I hope it's the second. Honchkrow tend to be smart and reclusive. Although, if someone made the whole mafia mad… things get a bit harder.

"How long have they been here?" I ask Kent, finally taking a good look at him. He's clearly a native Almian, with fair skin and blue eyes. His uniform says C. Kent on the left breast.

"About an hour, no one's inside, or at least no one is responding, and we haven't tried to move them beyond asking." He informs me. Good, never attempt to escalate with a group like this. The time frame is also good, one hour is still within the expected window for a family gathering for the honchkrow.

"Did you try to ask them anything? Try to figure out why they're here?" I continue. I need more information before I decide to walk into that.

"They're not responding at all, they've been creepily silent, really. I called the station to try and figure out who owns the building but I haven't gotten an answer yet." The man says. And that's probably about the point they called us in.

Silent could be good or bad. If it's reasons one or two they could be silent as respect for the new boss or as an intimidation tactic. The fact that it seems no one is here to be intimidated makes me feel more confident about there being a new honchkrow in there.

Do I use my RED? There are a lot of pokemon in and around the building, and getting through to them quickly would be a massive help. But, the empathy device is also exhausting to use, to the point that it's more of an only-when-needed measure. Though, counterpoint, there might be a body inside.

Before doing anything else I need to make sure base knows, and then ask why they didn't tell me.

Flipping a switch and raising a hand, I begin, "Francios, Are you aware of the situation at my location?" I ask the trainee.

The line is silent for five seconds before I get a response. "No, no information was given. Is it bad?" Says the nervous voice.

I need to turn to Kent here, "Did you call us, or did the station?" I ask the officer.

"The station." He says. "I told them what the situation was, if they didn't tell you anything then I don't know why."

Right. "Okay Francios, the police should have said something. There's an entire mafia of murkrow here. They're remaining silent and only observing people, I'm about to approach. Going radio silent." I tell him.

And I do just that, silencing the radio so that it doesn't disturb the pokemon. I approach, relying on the general respect pokemon that live near humans have for the rangers here to let me get closer. And they do let me, still silently watching.

Murkrow are uncooperative at the best of times, so I'm surprised when, before anything else can happen, there's a shrill cry of "Krow!" from deep inside the building and all the murkrow stiffen. Question answered, and with the better outcome too. Not wanting to be any more impolite, I wait for the pokemon to make their appearance.

After a few seconds, the murkrow begin to part, admitting a form twice the size of the largest of their number. Both Officer Kent and I groan at seeing that. Never mind, This may be a more complicated situation than I'd thought. They have a pokeball in their beak, and even at this distance I can see that it's brand new.

"I'm going to assume you stole that from a visiting human, right?" I ask the large avian. To my surprise they- actually he, based on his plumage, turns his head back and forth twice before turning around and gesturing with a wing to follow. I don't think I like where this is going, and even less the fact that he was probably waiting for a ranger to show up.

Well, let's see just how bad it is then. Stepping after him, I need to stop for a moment as Weaver puts herself in front of me. Unlike with Opa earlier, I can understand her wariness. As we enter I can tell that while this is an expensive home it's not been recently lived in, either by humans or pokemon. Though murkrow are everywhere, there's no furniture, and dust sits where the birds haven't stirred it up. I also don't like the way the murkrow are watching everything, even in here. They're all on edge and only being kept in line by the presence of their honchkrow.

Honchkrow leads us from the entryway through a living room and into a back hall, where he gestures into a door.

It's a bit too dark without the lights on so I unhook my flashlight before entering the room, it's empty apart from two unconscious men and a rather shaky espeon.

So, reason number four that murkrow gather like this then: Guarding vital assets. That… that means there has to be more. And as if to confirm that, the honchkrow caws to bring my attention to the next door down before he enters it himself.

Following him, I enter another mostly empty room. This one however contains the most concerning items yet, even beyond what may be hostages, or more likely, prisoners. Three shipping crates, one of which has been pried open to reveal pokeballs.

"Did you just find these today?" I ask Honchkrow, trying to keep my emotions in check. He bobs his head once. "I assume you want something for taking care of this?" Another bob of the head. He knows he and his mafia will be rewarded for bringing this to our attention then. "Thank you for helping with this then, genuinely," I tell the poofy pokemon.

"H'krow," He says, tipping his head at me.

I need to keep my frustration down, but it's been boiling up since this morning. Being told your government suspects you of spying is not a good way to start things.

And I explicitly asked for there not to be something like this today. Okay, how about Kimetsune? Great spirit of fire, Please let this be the worst of it today. I silently pray to the nine-tailed deity, hoping that even without a shrine or offering she'll hear me.

At least I now know enough about the situation to call it in. Sighing, I un-silence my radio, "Francios, I need you to put Barry on duty. That's an order." I tell him. I can feel my anger rising again.

"Um… Yes ma'am." He responds. "But, if it's okay to ask, why?"

"Because you're still a student and you don't have the clearance to make certain calls yet," I inform him, attempting to maintain a steady tone.

Not waiting for him to grab his senior operator, I take a better look at the crates. Originally shipped from Kanto to Sinnoh judging by the labels, but a line on one of them makes me stop. 'SLP-PKB-BLN lot #0090471.'

Well, I guess this is still part of 'the worst of it' then.

I don't bother looking further and rip the top off the crate. Blank pokeballs, they don't even have shells yet, the complicated engineering inside plainly visible. That alone implies some serious smuggling.

"Okay Onaga, Fran just told me you said he doesn't have clearance for something. How bad is it?" Barry asks through the radio, his tone all business.

"Three crates of pokeballs. One of them is a crate of blanks." I tell him. I can't quite keep my anger out of my voice now.

It takes him a second to absorb that. "…Okay, I'm getting on the line with the Union. Standby." He says, and the radio goes to static instead of silence.

Why here though… The only reason I can think of would be to get them to Orre through The Haruba without dealing with the current Indigo blockade. But why blanks of all things?

Blanks are a problem for several reasons. From what I understand, they don't have any safeties, extra functions, or checks installed yet, not even a resonator for re-capture prevention. They aren't even as good as most handmade balls at the moment, so why?

"Vile." I hear from behind me. Weaver is standing back in the hallway and pointing to the makeshift prison's door. Right, there's an espeon in the building that's probably not a sanctioned capture.

Turning around, I make my way back into the room with the presumed smugglers and take a closer look at the feline pokemon. They're male and not yet mature, which is concerning for an evolved member of the eevee line. Their gem is dark, fur matted, flanks a bit thinner than they should be, pupils a dim gray instead of glowing white, and he's still shaking, even harder now, unfortunately.

Moving out of the doorway and to the side of the room, I crouch down and try to put my anger at whoever brought all this here aside. Worryingly, the espeon's eyes aren't tracking me.

"Can you communicate at all?" I ask gently. No response, not even any eye movement. "Can you even hear me?" I ask louder, though remaining gentle. Still no reaction, no eye or ear movement whatsoever. What could it be? Shaking, clearly tired, likely hungry, unresponsive, and it's getting worse…

Espeons are natural empaths, so a negative emotional feedback loop seems likely. Trying to touch him is out of the question until I can gauge his state of mind. Looking around the room, I see what I both hoped I would and wouldn't resting between the men. A pokeball, powered on.

I hold in my sigh as I rise to pick it up, practically stalking over to the unconscious men. As I reach for it, however, one of the men suddenly moves, trying to grab me and pull me down. He doesn't budge me, but my fist impacting his face knocks him down again.

Bad reaction, should have grappled, deal with consequences later, handle hostile.

"Place your hands behind your head," I order as he scrambles to his feet, giving me plenty of time to un-holster something.

"What the hells is wrong with this country?" He mutters in perfect kantonian, interesting.

I reply in kind, "Stand down, hands behind your head, this is your final warning." I say as calmly as I can.

His eyes dart around for an instant before landing on the shivering pokemon. "Espeon, disa-"

My blow lands lightning fast as he's calling for the pokemon, the shock-rod delivering enough charge to knock him out. He goes down hard, but I just can't bring myself to care. If he's hurt… Well, I did warn him.

What an idiot. Did he think he could win there? What would he even have done if he took me out, try to take Weaver out with Espeon? Fought the murkrow with him?

He probably would have tried to use me as leverage, except at that point Weaver would have attacked him, enforcer registration or not. I'm not entirely sure what she would have done to him, but she's a dark-type so… odds are good there would have been one less criminal in the building.

Reaching down to pick up the pokeball again, I watch the other man the whole time. I think that one's actually out cold though.

Now with the ball in hand, I move closer to the espeon and crouch again. This next part won't be pleasant for me, but that doesn't matter, it's a sure way to break a negative spiral without risking any further harm. Once more trying to put my rage away, I instead focus on how I feel towards the shaky pokemon, then place one hand on the central inductor crystal of my RED and the other on the trigger of the circular device. I ready myself, then pull.

There are no words that can describe how utterly enervating using an empathy device is. There's even an old story about how the original creator dropped dead when he first made one, though, given that Professor Hastings is alive and well, and has apparently taken students, I'm fairly certain it's just a story. But anyone who's ever used one will tell you they don't doubt it can kill the user.

I don't use it for long, about a second, but it still leaves me feeling drained. I can see Weaver has a warm grin on her face, more importantly, however, Espeon's shaking a bit less and his eyes are focusing on me now.

Important questions first, "Do you need sunlight?" I ask him. I already know the answer, but I need to know how aware he is right now. He starts to shake his head before seeming to actually parse the question, then nods. Okay, that's a good answer. "Did those two hurt you in any way" I continue. Another nod. "Are you originally from Almia?" An unsurprising shake of the head. "Were they the ones that caught you?" That question gets a bobble, so I'm assuming it's a bit complicated. "Can you communicate once you have sunlight?" Again, a nod. "Okay, I'm going to carry you outside then," I tell him, opening my arms so he can climb in.

He does, and I can tell how underweight he is now, still shaking in my arms. I start moving, slowly and calmly, back out to the entryway. Weaver is following me, as is Honchkrow while the two seem to chat away. I don't need to worry about the two prisoners in there right now, as there are more than a hundred murkrow guarding the building at the moment.

As I exit the home, Officer Kent notices me. "Station finally got back to me about…" He stops, looking at the pokemon I'm carrying, then back at me. "Sorry, about who owns this building. It's some man named Allister Arlow. It'll take longer to get more than that." He says, then takes a better look at my passenger, "Are they okay? Is that why all the murkrow are here?" He asks.

"No, and no," I say as I gently place Espeon on the ground. "It looks like smuggling, so this is going to be sent up the chain on both our ends. The honchkrow has two prisoners. One of them even tried to over-power me." I inform him.

He winces, then rolls his eyes, "Yeah, bet that worked out for him real well." Sighing he continues, "So we're both on standby now, then?" He asks.

"Pretty much," I reply. He just nods and pulls out a pack of cigarettes. He offers me one, but I just shake my head. Shrugging, he lights it and starts looking across the small crowd that's still surrounding this building.

An alien feeling worms its way into my head. Gods, psychic communication always feels weird.

_ra_itu*e. Joy. L_*e. Ang_r Co*fus__n.

They all flood in at once, but I'm not so inexperienced as to stagger from it. Don't fight, let them in, and feel them for what they are.

Crouching down again I idly stroke Espeon behind the ears, "I'm happy I could help, but don't use energy you don't have right now. Okay?" I tell them.

Und*_stan*ing. Gr_ti*u*_. Harmony.

Trying to make much sense of an exhausted psychic is not going to get me anywhere, though from what I know of espeons specifically, that last feeling means they've probably bonded to me. I suppose I did give an empath a big dose of positive, directed emotions they likely hadn't felt in a while. It… was a known possibility, so I just keep petting him while waiting for base to get back to me.

Three minutes go by, and Kent is now talking on his own radio.
Five more minutes and a second police officer shows up, a boyish-looking man whose uniform reads M. Hamill.

Another five minutes go by before my radio finally sounds out something other than static, "This is Union Operator Kory Meyer contacting fifth-rank Area-Ranger Onaga Ryuko, requesting an update on your current status and any necessary information." Says the unfamiliar voice.

I stand. "Status is nominal, situation is stable. RED and stun-stick deployed, I have likely been bonded by an espeon in the process of deploying my RED. Two humans, likely smugglers, at least one from Kanto, are currently being held prisoner by a honchkrow and his mafia. Three crates of pokeballs were found at the location. It seems Honchkrow discovered the situation earlier today and would like a reward for the aid rendered. Local police are at the scene." I quickly rattle off the most important information.

"Understood, a ninth rank Union-Ranger is en-route. Please continue your standby until they arrive." The line goes completely silent after that. Ninth-rank and Union, so they're sending someone from way, way high up then. At least that means we won't have to deal with all this ourselves, because this is a huge problem.

"Eifirr."–Gratitude. Purrs Espeon, standing and stretching. I inspect him again now that he's gotten some more sunlight. His gem is now a bit more red than black and his eyes have brightened a bit. His fur is still patchy and matted, and he's still a bit thin, but that's going to be fixed in time.

"Vile weavile." Says Weaver, speaking to Espeon.

Espeon cocks his head before replying, "Eispur." Weaver just shrugs and they descend into silence again, Espeon knocking his head into me so I'll keep petting him.

"You two think you can get along?" I ask them. Weaver shrugs again.

"Eisp…"–Uncertainty. Says the dark-lilac pokemon.

"As long as you try," I tell them.

Crouching again, both my hands become occupied by the two pokemon. Both of them trying to help with my mood as much as I'm trying to comfort Espeon.

"Did you have a trainer or partner before… that group?" I ask Espeon. Mostly because, well, espeon.

He nods. Affirmation.

Hmm, that's going to complicate things. "Do you want to go back to them?"

He takes some time to think, then shakes his head.–Negation.

I want to know more, but I also don't want to stress him too much right now, so I drop it for the moment. Even if that pause has me concerned.

…I've done too much waiting for my liking today, but sometimes that's the job. Just actively making sure things don't happen. Though the top ranger doesn't take long to arrive, only eight more minutes before I can see a staraptor carrying someone flying in from the north. The large bird is obviously a ranger mount, with a high-visibility streamer trailing behind them.

I get Kent and Hamill's attention and we quickly make a clearing in the watching crowd for the incoming ranger to land. Standing inside the new clearing, I start flagging the big shot down. Once they're close enough I back up to the edge and wait for them to dismount. A violet-haired woman in her late thirties, wearing ranger attire and a rather large bag steps out of the saddle, and after patting the staraptor and removing her goggles, she starts walking towards me.

"Onaga, I presume." She says. "Ninth-rank Ranger, Marianne Holt," She continues, holding out a hand to shake, which I do. "And this is Blake." She introduces, gesturing to the staraptor. "Nice to meet you. Has the situation changed from your last call-in?"

"Nothing, though the prisoners may have woken up by now," I inform her.

"Understood. I assume there's no point trying to separate the espeon from you at this time?" She asks me.

I look down at the near-purple feline and they match my gaze.–Harmony.

"No, probably not," I admit.

She nods, giving me a knowing smile. "Then you are relieved to resume normal duties." She orders me, then moves to the two police officers.

Kneeling, I focus on Espeon. "As much as I know you'll want to follow me today, you need rest and food," I tell him, making his ears go down a bit. "So I'm going to carry you back to base and have one of our operators feed you, give you a warm bath, and find you a bed. Understood?" I ask.

"Eispon."–Understanding. He says.

"Good," I say, scooping him up. "Everyone at base is going to love you." And I've got to do some reading up on the latest psychic research.



AN: So, most of the chapters before twelve saw medium to large changes. This one is one of two exceptions, the other having already been posted. I liked this one enough to not want to make huge changes, but I also feel it's one of my weakest. There's no buildup to things in Vientown or establishment of how pokemon will help keep things in order, everything just happens.

But I still like it all enough to want to keep it, so I hope others will like it, too. It's simply part of learning how to word-good better, since everything before a point was just me rambling at the page.

I hope everyone reading this enjoyed, at least.

Edit: I don't know if anyone saw this before I fixed it, but SV did something weird to the formatting.
 
Last edited:
since everything before a point was just me rambling at the page.

No shame in that, I don't have anything posted aside from a few one shots on AO3 but that's how I write too.

This chapter wasn't bad its either a look at the human protagonists job, a lead in to some sort of larger plot, or maybe both.
 
There's no buildup to things in Vientown or establishment of how pokemon will help keep things in order, everything just happens.
I... disagree? This chapter hits the nice middle point of show-don't-tell. We have hints of a main plot starting to surface, but the chapter is primarily a good view of several levels of structure within the world: The Union administratively, then their associates (Rowan's mention), then the base itself, then the city and its emergency services, then the Ranger rookies, then a whole Pokemon species, then a little bit about smugglers, and then some more Ranger Union. Hell, then arguably a little bit of Psychic-type workings, as a treat.
And I mean, that is a rough dissertation of the chapter, but my point is that sure, you didn't downright explain things, but the world did a good enough job of showing its workings in a live scenario.
 
I... disagree? This chapter hits the nice middle point of show-don't-tell. We have hints of a main plot starting to surface, but the chapter is primarily a good view of several levels of structure within the world: The Union administratively, then their associates (Rowan's mention), then the base itself, then the city and its emergency services, then the Ranger rookies, then a whole Pokemon species, then a little bit about smugglers, and then some more Ranger Union. Hell, then arguably a little bit of Psychic-type workings, as a treat.
And I mean, that is a rough dissertation of the chapter, but my point is that sure, you didn't downright explain things, but the world did a good enough job of showing its workings in a live scenario.
Thank you for saying so. I'm aware that a lot of my negative feelings towards some of what I've written is just the Authors Curse, I look at my notes, read the chapter, look at what comes next, re-read, and can't help feeling I didn't do as well as I could.

You saying all that helps, especially the show don't tell part, as that is part of my intention with some things.
 
Chapter 11
It doesn't take me long to return to base even while carrying a pokemon. Though that might be the dead sprint more than anything. Only mildly winded, I open the front doors to see the familiarly empty lobby. Well, it was nice while it lasted but Francios goes back to the academy tomorrow, so it was going to return to this soon anyway.

Still carrying Espeon, I enter the central corridor and move to the radio room. Entering the empty doorframe, I see all three of our current operators seated and at work in front of the large comm-units. And Katie looks like she needs way more sleep with how dark the bags under her eyes are. Also seems like Fran is back to observation only, while Barry, as always, is every bit the professional operator on the job.

Three sets of eyes turn to me for a moment before the people attached to them start having a conversation in signs. After which, I see Katie flip her all-receiving switch.

I have the presence of mind to mute my radio before she starts talking. "This is Katie Vane, hot-swapping operations to Francios Lumio." She states, before standing and making her way to the door. Though she stops halfway. Turning to sign a question at the other two operators. Barry holds up two fingers before pantomiming taking a drink, continuing to talk the whole time, and Fran does the same after raising one finger, already making sure the sudden changeover is smooth.

Nodding, Katie starts moving for the door again and I step out to make room for her. "I heard you ran into something exciting in town." She says, heading for the kitchenette. "Best time for it really, while we still have Francios."

I follow her. "Looks like smuggling, but a big shot is in charge of that now. You doing okay?" I ask the slightly frazzled-looking woman.

"I'm heading to bed again as soon as I finish taking those two their coffee and whatever you came back for." She tells me as we enter the cooking space. "But that's not all that important right now. What's with the adorable espeon?" She asks me while rinsing the coffee pot.

"I'm ninety percent sure he bonded with me after I had to use my RED to snap him out of what, I assume, was some kind of feedback loop," I say, setting the espeon in question down on the counter in front of us. "He needs a warm bath, a warm meal, and someplace in the sun to sleep. And I'm going to need whatever we have on espeons, along with the latest research on psychics." I continue while giving Espeon ear rubs. "Also, this needs to be dealt with," I say, placing the confiscated pokeball on the counter as well. "I checked, and Espeon is linked to it."

"And you don't have the time to do all that because you're headed right back out there." She finishes my explanation for me. "Yeah, I can do that no problem." She tells me as she finishes pouring the water into the coffee maker. "Even gives me a good reason to leave Francios back on duty." Then she looks at Espeon, "You gonna be a good boy for me?" She asks him, then staggers and shakes her head, "Swords, that feels weird."

"First time's always the worst," I tell her. "Just ride it out. I need to get going, hopefully the rest of the day goes a bit smoother." I say, turning around and heading for the front entrance.

"You should know better than to say that," She calls after me. And she's right, but I'm pretty sure the worst is over anyway. If it's not… well I'll deal anyway, that's the job.

***​

I never did find my grandparents, but I can still try tomorrow. Sometimes there's just too much to do, be it important, unimportant, an emergency, or…

"I'll admit, this is a nice change of pace after my last few missions," I tell the wizened old farmer while listening to Weaver mutter about something.

"Hmm?" Asks the farmer, a friendly man named David. "Bob and Phil break somethin' again?"

"Yep," Is all I say. Although it was technically their partners.

He chuckles, "Yeah, they been rarin' to go th'last few days."

We both turn back to the scene in David's barn. "So, what happened?" I ask the old man.

"Well, we got some new hands last week," He starts his explanation in entirely the wrong place. "Which is nice, havin' more young blood around for the new season. And they're all good kids too, strong arms, listenin' well enough. But Mr. Kenz- Ah, sorry Mr. Masaki there wanted to play with the newborn pokemon on his break." David starts stoking his beard at this point, "And to be fair, he's great with them, and their mothers don't mind, they've been letting him. I think 'cause he's got a good heart in him-" I'm starting to tune the old man out. I've got a decent idea of what happened now.

I raise a hand to quiet David, "Masaki?" I call into the rafters.

"I'm in here." Says a slightly pained, despondent voice from the barrel lodged in the roof, eight meters up.

"Do you know the name or number of the tauros that launched you?" I ask him.

"Uh, green tagged, so one of the breeders." He replies. "Why?"

I whistle. "You weren't joking about him being new." I chuckle to David. "Did you warn him, at least?"

"Sure did." The older man responds. "But like I said, we've still been lettin' him. The mareep especially seem to like him."

"Okay…" I nod. "But I'm not entirely sure why you called the rangers about this."

David laughs a bit awkwardly. "Well, when I called, Stamps was still ragin' around, I think he's calmed down now though." He says apologetically. "Can you at least help get Mr. Masaki down?"

I shrug, this was the last call from the civilian line today. "Do you have a ladder anywhere?"

"Hmm, I think there's one over at building C, might be one at the property-house, too. …No, that's it, they're all at Bob's ranch. I loaned 'em to him 'cause his old wooden one was too rotten. And I'd bet you know how he gets with his aviary." David over-explains.

I can only shake my head, then check my rope and start searching for a good way to climb. It's an old wooden barn, so there are plenty of hand and foot holds to reach the joists with.

Sighing, I make my way to the best spot I see and start climbing. It's easy enough for me, and I'm stepping along the joist beams shortly.

"Mr. Masaki?" I ask as I reach the barrel. "Are you able to climb down a rope?"

"I… I don't think so," He says, prompting me to take a look into his hiding spot.

"Ooh." I wince, "Yeah, I don't think you are either." He's got a nasty bruise on his entire right side. "Can you hold a rope with your left hand?" I ask.

"I think so…" He says tentatively.

I nod, hitting a switch on my radio before starting to tie handholds into my rope. "Barry, I need you to get a medical caravan to my location, building D. It doesn't look life-threatening, but he'll probably be recovering for a bit," I say, finishing the first knot.

"I got it, what exactly is the problem?" Barry asks after a few seconds.

"Massive contusions, possibly fractured or broken ribs. A man named…" I look to the man in question, prompting.

"M- Masaki Kenzo." Hey says after a moment.

"Masaki Kenzo," I repeat to make sure Barry heard. "Attacked by a raging tauros, he was smart or lucky enough to get something between himself and the tauros and got launched instead of trampled."

After thirty seconds and a finished foothold, Barry responds, "Okay, they're on their way." And that's that.

"Okay," I turn my focus back to the injured man, "I want you to put your foot in this loop and I'll start lowering you, once this loop-" I indicate the handhold, "Is on the same level as the joist, I want you to grab it with your left hand. Do you understand?" I ask him. He shudders, then winces and nods. "Okay, I'm going to lower you slowly, if anything happens, if your pain gets worse, or if you think you feel something slip let me know immediately," I tell him, sitting and wrapping my arms around a ceiling truss.

Masaki steps down slightly into the foot-loop and I start slowly feeding more rope. There's a slight jolt as he goes from holding the wooden beam to putting all his weight on the rope, but it's manageable. Slowly, second after second, meter after meter, I release the rope until the weight lessens and he's on the ground.

Looking down, find a good spot to toss the remaining coil away from him and do so, before jumping down myself. Masaki gasps when he sees me jump, but his look of shock when I land unharmed is priceless.

"So, fresh off the boat from Indigo?" I ask him.

"Uh- Um, yeah. Kanto." He supplies, still looking shocked.

"You came here for better work?"

"Y- Yeah, pretty much." He says. "It's gotten worse recently, back home I mean…"

"I've heard," I tell him, starting to coil my rope back up. "But I don't actually know how bad it is."

"From what some o' the new hands are saying…" David joins in, "It seems things between- what do ya call 'em?" He almost asks, then snaps his fingers, "The Dragon Clans are gettin' worse." The farmer finishes, taking off his hat and running a hand through his thinning hair.

"Y- Yeah, nobody back home would say it out loud, but it's bad." Masaki confirms, lying himself flat on the ground with a groan, "It's what made some of us decide we'd rather leave while we can."

"That figures, and if I know my history…" I mutter, before shaking my head to get my thoughts back on track. "How are you feeling? Any sharp pains?" I ask Masaki.

"Yeah, but I don't think anything's broken at least."

Before the conversation continues, a woman pulling a stretcher appears around the open barn doors, shortly followed by… Ranger Holt? The EMT looks at Masaki, then at me. "Ranger Onaga?" He asks.

"I am."

"And this is Masaki?"

"He is."

"Can you stand?" He asks, head turning to Masaki.

"I think so?"

"That's good, don't. Ranger, please help me get him onto the stretcher." He orders.

I comply, lifting under his legs and arms to set him as gently as I can on the mobile platform.

"Thank you." The EMT says, before starting to drag the man out—presumably to an actual transport—while asking him for the specifics of what happened.

David sighs, "Ah well, you two rangers have a nice day. I need to go sort some things out, what with being down a hand for the moment." He says, walking out of the barn. "Don't hang around too long now." He adds, as he rounds the corner and disappears.

I make my way to the doors myself, noticing that Ranger Holt is holding a decent-sized file folder.

"So, this is the 'interview' that was put off earlier?" I ask her.

"No," Holt shakes her head, "If the Sienna government wants to accuse a ranger of anything after what they pulled with the-" She waves a hand, "Never mind. Suffice it to say, Chair Erma isn't happy with them." She beckons me to follow her, "This has to do with why it took me so long to get down here after your supposed 'spying.'" She still hasn't opened the file as we begin walking down the path off the farm and back to the city, "Since all bases are low on staff, the brass are 'handing out' incentives and benefits for the high-achievers. You, for example, are receiving a fifteen percent pay increase over the next six months.

"That's nice to hear, but then what's in the folder?" I ask gesturing to the item in question.

"Personnel files on your base." Holt says, waggling the folder, "This was announced to all bases a few hours ago, but then, you've been in the field the whole time and your operators have been busy dealing with our operators." She taps the folder, "Union HQ is conducting a thorough review of all area rangers in Fiore and Almia, some of it is just politics, but the rest is a need to know how things are running." She explains.

"Aren't reviews typically handled by the lead Region-Ranger?" I ask, before expanding, "What I mean is, why is a Union-Ranger doing this?"

"Well, you may have noticed the lack of region-rangers since the expansion debacle." She sighs rubbing her forehead with one hand, "We're even short-staffed at HQ, the only thing we have a surplus of is mechanics, and there's been talk of moving some of them to area bases permanently to help ease the strain a bit." She sighs again, "Can I be frank with you?" She asks, turning her head to me.

"If you want to be," I say, half-shrugging.

"The whole thing has been a shit show." She says, exasperated. "It's good that there are rangers in Sinnoh and Hoen now, but they're also spread thin. And sure, it'll get a bit better once the current students graduate, but it won't be enough. This is going to last at least the next two years, and even after that it won't be great for a while." She stops talking, now rubbing her temples.

It's Weaver who breaks the ensuing contemplative silence. "Weave." She says, waving at me as she starts walking west.

Holt blinks, "Where do you think she's going?"

"I don't know…" I say, thinking. "As far as I know there are only two other pokemon she gets along with out there." At Holt's inquisitive look I elaborate, "She's always been friendly with Marsh- The Marshal, but I heard some people around town say they saw her with a ghost last night."

"Ah, the misdreavus." Holt says, nodding. "Were they calm the whole time?" She asks curiously.

"Honestly, they've been strangely placid from what I've read about ghost-types," I tell her. "And they only acted aggressively when provoked."

"Interesting." The woman says as we step into the city proper. "Well, I have to get back to reading through these," She waggles the folder, "While I wait for the federal investigators to finish with the smugglers." Holt frowns, "There are some other things that are happening, but I just need a drink right now." She mutters, prompting me to give her a look, we are still on duty after all. "Not like that." She waves me off, "Something cold and sweet, preferably with chesto, coffee, or both in it."

"I can't help you there." I tell her, "I normally just drink whatever is at base."

Holt laughs, "Figures you're one of those people." before shaking her head a little, "Well, I know you have things to do, so I'm relieving you of non-emergency duties. You head back to your base, I'm going to find a good tea shop."

***​

Approaching the base, I can see a pile of blankets on the roof in the dimming light. Well, it was in the sun. Stepping inside, I'm immediately met with a pair of glowing eyes. "Hey." I say, bending to pet Espeon, "Looks like Katie cleaned you up."

And he does look better. Fur lying straight and dirt-free, even if I can see spots where it will need to re-grow. His eyes are significantly brighter now too, and the gem in his head is the crimson it should be.

"Espeon esp, espo."–Affirmation.

"That's good. Did you see Katie put a stack of paper anywhere?" I ask him.

He nods. Affirmation.

With that, Espeon starts walking to the central corridor. Following, I see him headed to the rec room. As I enter after him, I see the small pile resting on a side table by our one sofa chair.

I call it a rec room, it's more of an everything-else room. There's a TV with a VCR, a bookshelf that even has books on it behind the single chair, and the much more well-used weight-training equipment scattered around.

Skirting around the exercise equipment, I fall into the soft seat and Espeon follows, though he jumps onto the side table.

Checking the papers, there are three separate sets, Katie having stapled them together in their top-left corners. There's also a note from Katie, saying I now owe her one for how long it took her to get the network working so she could get the information from Sinnoh.

Near instant cross-region information exchange, the wonders of modern technology. When it feels like working, at least.

Now looking at the unexpected third set of papers, Katie also apparently decided to help me get Espeon registered. I can only sigh, I'd hoped to avoid the monthly hassle of an evolved partner. But most of the registration is already filled in at least. So that's two I owe her.

I decide to look at the psychic research next, as, while I will need to know more about caring for an espeon, it's what I currently know less about.

It's… not all that revealing, frankly. Katie compiled the relevant parts of several articles published in the last two years, but most of them are of the duplicate-findings type, instead of anything truly new. Odd emotional responses, increased average logical-index placement to the degree that many may be more logically intelligent than humans, often empathic, sometimes telepathic, always telekinetic, and so on, and so on.

There is an article on how pure psychic-types tend to be physically weaker regardless of exercise, which is interesting, as it also found that their muscles don't seem to atrophy in the same way as others either. And there's one on the difference in behavior between the more empathic psychics and the more telepathic psychics, in which espeon is used as an example for the former.

I glance at Espeon as I set the set of papers down. He also glances the way I did before he stops himself. "Can you read?" I ask as it strikes me that he may have been trying to read with me.

He shakes his head, ears flattening.

"I'll see if I can find the learning materials soon, and ask Weaver to help too," I tell him, picking up the next set of papers.

Some of this I'll already know, but it never hurts to brush up, especially when I'll need to give Espeon a physical later to check his overall health.

I start reading, the paper having seemingly been written by one Dr. Oak. Interesting, why didn't Katie find something written by a professor? Regardless, it was at least certified by both the Kanto College of Pokemon Sciences and the Sinnoh Research Institute.

An average adult shoulder height of just under ninety centimeters with an average weight of thirty-eight kilos. Eevee in general are slow growers, taking about six years to reach maturity, but espeon are even slower when they evolve young, taking nearly thirteen years in the worst case—that being an evolution within their first year, although that information isn't in the paper.

I look at Espeon, trying to gauge his age properly. Hmm… he's only about fifty centimeters at the shoulder. I'll need to ask him when I'm giving him the physical.

Apparently, and entirely unsurprisingly, espeon are extremely sensitive to their environment, though I'd thought them being able to predict the weather was an old wives tale, interesting. They need a consistent amount of sunlight, but I already knew that. Carnivores, but their diets can be supplemented, already knew that. They're… truthfully rather tough when they have energy, as most things that would debilitate other pokemon don't affect them, that's certainly interesting.

I glance at Espeon again, now wondering how long he'd been without sunlight.

I go back to reading, only to almost laugh at the next line. 'Espeon are not recommended for inexperienced trainers or caregivers, as they require a high level of care and commitment, alongside a generous amount of mental and emotional enrichment.' Honestly, I know why it's there, but most pokemon can and will care for themselves if given the freedom.

There is an explanation for Espeon's fur falling out buried among a list of things to look out for, stress. And he has been stressed, I can absolutely guarantee it.

I reach the end not long after, the breakdown on caring for espeon leaving me a bit better prepared than I was before.

"Good reading?" Asks Holt, stepping past the weights, large tourist mug in hand.

"Some of it. I'm just making sure I'm read-up." I tell her, glancing at Espeon, who seems to still have been trying to read with me. "What about you," I say, looking back at her, "Found a good tea place?"

"I did, got myself a chesto-tea with coffee. And in a fancy take-it-home mug too." She says, looking around for a place to sit. "Is that the only real chair in here?" She asks after a second.

"Yeah, normally we only come in here to exercise," I tell her. "If you want a place we can both sit down, that's either the dining room or Karlos' office."

"Not the barracks?"

"There's a desk with a chair in there right now, but I'd be sitting on my bed, and I'm pretty sure Katie is still asleep," I answer, shrugging. Then, looking at her mug, "Prepping for an all-nighter?"

She nods. "Unfortunately. Were you planning on doing anything else tonight?" She asks.

"Giving Espeon a physical and writing out my reports, mostly," I tell her. "Why?"

"Because, while I'm not going to interrogate you for selling classified information," Holt rolls her eyes, "I am going to go over everyone's files with them, though not all tonight." She says.

"I thought you were handling the smugglers?"

"Yes, well," She scowls into her mug, "The federal team is waiting on someone higher-up on their end to get here before they'll let me interrogate those two myself. They'll be here around midnight." She informs me, sounding bitterly amused.

"Red tape?" I ask.

"Always." She confirms with a sigh, face twisting resentfully before she continues, "Not that it doesn't make sense. Still, it doesn't help make my life easier."

I nod in understanding, thinking over the day, "Did you manage to get what Honchkrow wanted?" I ask my superior.

"That's on your base's mission roster." She replies, taking another sip of her drink. "Medium priority, but he won't wait forever."

Makes sense. We settle into silence for a time as I continue to organize my thoughts. Eventually, my gaze shifts to my newest responsibility and I focus on the bare patches of skin for a moment, wondering if he'll need specialist care.

"Will you be able to wait on the review until after I check his health?" I ask Holt, my eyes staying on Espeon.

"Of course, and we can push it to tomorrow if need be."

Nodding, I stand and beckon the sitting pokemon to follow.

Curiosity. Apprehension.

"Like I said, I'm going to give you a physical. Have you had a checkup before?" I ask.

He cocks his head, eyes narrowing,–Affirmation. Suspicion.

I suppose if he's still young any he might have had before probably all involved needles. "I'm not going to poke you with anything sharp, I just want an idea of your health," I tell him. He looks away from me for a second, then stands and hops down to follow me.

Holt stands as well. "I might as well join you." She explains at my glance.

"You've finished reviewing our files?"

"No. But I'm most of the way through them, and I am still reviewing you." She says. And smirking, "No pressure."

An audience, great. And she outright confirmed that she's judging me.

Sighing, I make my way to the best place we have to do this right now, the dining room, with both Holt and Espeon in tow.

Grabbing two chairs, I unfold them and gesture for Espeon to wait, Holt taking one of the seats. It only takes me a moment to spray and wipe the table before I give Espeon the go-ahead to hop on.

"I did notice the lack of any real medical room." Holt smiles. "Brings back memories." I give my senior a raised eyebrow. "I wasn't stationed here, but all three bases in the forest have the same layout." She answers my unspoken question.

"We've made do so far." I half shrug. "Although you'll have to give me a moment to get everything." And with that, I head back out the door and down the hall to the utility room.

The room is, as always, well organized. It takes me a bare moment to grab everything I'll need and return to where I left my two companions.

"No scale?" Asks the top-ranger as I re-enter the room.

"And no pressure cuffs, we aren't a clinic after all," I respond, before turning my attention to Espeon and leaning down, "Can you lie on your right side, please."

He does so without complaint, and I squeeze the crook of a foreleg with a hand, counting. After a full minute, I stop and do some quick math. eighty feels a bit low, but he might be forcibly calming himself.

Placing the disc of my stethoscope low on his chest, I say, "Could you please take a few slow, deep breaths."
Again, he complies, and I listen, changing positions between breaths. No rattle, no whistle. That's good.

"You can stand up now," I tell Espeon, standing straight myself, holding a short, glass tube in front of him. "Can you hold this under your tongue?" I ask the skinny pokemon. "Trust me, it's better than the alternative."

Espeon grabs the thermometer with telekinesis, looking a bit bemused. As he's doing that, I take a closer look at the bare patches on him. There are no wounds, and no bleeding or crusting. It genuinely does seem like the fur just… fell out.

As I start feeling for muscle, fat, and anything unexpected, I ask, "Are you in any pain? Have you had any that seems to come and go?" I don't like how skinny he is.

Negation.

That almost seems strange with what I suspect he's been through. Frowning, I finish the hand-check before unwinding a length of measuring tape. Checking it against his shoulder, I see my earlier estimate had been slightly high, as it looks like Espeon measures forty-six centimeters.

"Can you let me know how old you are?" I ask him. And after a second of thought, he taps a foot four times. "That's four years?" I ask.

Affirmation.

"And how old when you evolved?" He flinches—definitely evolved under duress—but offers another four taps. I stop what I was about to do, "How long had you been… with those men?" He thinks, then scapes the table, gives four taps, another scrape, and then six taps.

Holt has perked up now, "Was that months, then days?" She asks him. He doesn't visibly reply, though he obviously answers, as Holt starts nodding, "I was going to bring it up later, but I am going to need you to answer more questions, although it can be put off for a day or two while you settle in."

Sighing at that, I look at the thermometer still in his mouth. "And thirty-eight-point-five, perfect," I say. "Other than being distinctly underweight and needing to regrow some fur you seem healthy enough."

Espeon spits the thermometer out and floats it to me. "Espe,"–Surprise. Acceptance,–He murmurs.

I don't know what to say to that, his tone and being surprised don't paint a good picture. He's looking at me, likely at least somewhat aware of what I'm thinking, but he remains still.

As I reach out to start petting Espeon, Holt speaks up, "You will be taking him to see an actual doctor, yes?" She asks me.

"Of course, but I was a bit busy today," I say, looking over the small kitchen wall. "...And I just remembered everyone was in the field today."

"There's always field rations," Holt sing-songs with a slight grin.

"No. Just- No, gods no." I say, rubbing the bridge of my nose. "I'm here, so I'll figure something out." I was raised in Kanto, It's not like I can't cook.



AN: The note is, 'There is no note.'
Edit: single phrasing correction suggested by ptbptb
 
Last edited:
Chapter 12
This world is bullshit, in a good way, but it still seems like any physics I once knew means nothing. I haven't seen other pokemon use real Moves before now and Marshal is proving just how weird a place I'm in. I mean, yeah I have psychic powers, but she's literally just creating water, and I don't think it's some 'condensing it from the air' idiotic kind of thing either, it's just… flowing off of her.

"Okay," Marshal says, stopping the flow and rolling her shoulders, "You want to start with the fighting or not getting distracted?"

"Um…" That's a great question. …I want to put off the fighting though, so, "Maybe start with the second one," I say, perhaps more sheepishly than I'd hoped.

Marshal snorts. "I should o' figured. Can you tell me what you should have done when you knew you were gonna go blank like that?" She asks, giving me a raised eyebrow.

That's not how I expected her to start. What does she mean? …Oh. "Moved to the not-space," I tell her, wanting to slap myself. It's much safer for me there, I think.

"Not space?" She asks, more curious than confused.

"That's what I've been calling it, it's where I go when I'm invisible," I tell her.

"Huh. Why d'ya call it that?" She asks, scratching her chin.

"I guess it's hard to describe, but it's just… not space. I- it's…" I flail for words. How do I describe the innate certainty that something just isn't? "What do other ghosts call it?" I ask her instead, pulling my arms back from their unconscious movements.

"I don't know," She says simply, and—probably seeing my disbelief—continues, "Even the friendlier ones I've met before just didn't talk as much as you do. Weren't as put together," She elaborates.

"You… do remember-"

Marshal cuts me off, "Yeah, and you were in a lot more pain than any of them were, but none o' them were as 'all-there' as you are," She says, shrugging.

And ho boy if that isn't part of the existential hellhole Marshal pulled me out of. I've had a while to think about it since then too, and I'm honestly not sure I would have been okay without her help. But yeah, once I wasn't bouncing between frustration, terror, and trying not to think about things, I started to honestly feel really good about my new still-not-sure-it-counts-as-life.

Although the sudden realization I had earlier, about the fact that I'm- not ready to deal with this right now, maybe later, when I'm alone. Was an experience. Marshal made that comment about knowing stuff and it was the best worst thing she could have said. Especially after Weaver's comment about it being easier to focus last night.

Anxiety? Anticipation? I look at Marshal and she's watching me. What's she expecting? The Anxiety's vanishing, now there's curiosity. What was she worried about?

As 'all-there' as me. Oh.

"I'm fine, Marshal. I'm not going to freak out about having died anymore." Probably not, at least, given my reaction to internalizing… Anyway.

A bit of relief shows on her features—though I don't taste it—and she raises an eyebrow. "I- sorry. I know I need to learn to pay attention…" I sigh and drift closer to her. "I think it's going to take some work, I wasn't this bad before I- You know. So…" I trail off. She's smirking.

"That's why we're going to work on it." Her smirk shifts to a smile, "I don't think you have trouble focusing." She says, sitting down, "I think you have trouble focusing on what's in front of you." She pats the ground in front of her, beckoning, "You've plainly got some heavy thoughts in that head o' yours sometimes, and that's not a bad thing." She breaths deeply, and the taste of joy that's always around her… shifts? "Believe me, I understand. Hmm, maybe not exactly, but ya need to keep the here and now in mind too." She's looking at me like she wants to see something.

What is it though? Hmm, she said 'here and now,' and that shift in taste was strange. In fact… her emotions have been in flux since she found me earlier, but the undercurrent hasn't. Why? Or maybe, why not? She said she understood, but even when she was talking about…

…Right, she's old. As in, outlived all her children old, isn't she? And she hasn't become detached or callus despite that, the love and melancholy I could taste earlier is proof enough. How has she managed to stay so- Oh, that's what she means. 'Here' and 'now.' And obviously, she'd have learned how to deal with it because she probably has several times the life experiences, good and bad, than anyone I've ever met.

I look up from my thoughts to see Marshal's face, kind eyes, wet nose, and a frown, now shifting to a satisfied smile. "See what I meant did you?" She asks.

"I don't know, maybe? I mostly just realized that you're probably right," I admit.

She chuckles. "Naw, you did. Now, I want you to just focus on the trees, the smells, the wind, the sky, anything, everything that's around us right now," She says.

That seems too easy, "That's it?" I feel the need to ask.

"Just don't try to force it," She says. "This is about being present, aware, lookin' at and being here, now," She tells me. "Helps make everything clearer in my experience."

That sounds too simple to me, but I've already decided to trust her. Looking around, I try to take it all in. The now bright green forest, with both its odd and familiar trees, the strange bark patterns now clear to me as markers left by grass-types.
The amazingly blue sky, barely a cloud in sight today after the storm yesterday.
The fresh air, smelling of plants, earth, something more floral, and an almost rain-like scent from Marshal.
The sounds of life, various bird calls, pokemon cries, insects buzzing, and the world swaying in the slight breeze.
The taste of joy, along with my still unknown sense buzzing directly from and at Marshal.
And Marshal herself, still surrounded by water, seemingly just enjoying the moment.



I feel an urge to do something, but I push it down, trying to follow Marshal's advice.



It's a good while before Marshal starts talking, seemingly out of nowhere, "I'm not tryin' to tell you to stop thinking about stuff." She says, not looking at me. "But from what I've seen o' ya, you're in your own head a lot." She breathes deep, eyes closing, "I get that you've probably got some heavy things, some deep or maybe dark thoughts right now, ya just need to keep what's around you in mind, too. All that stuff in your head might be important, but so is right now."

Marshal's silent for a bit, clearly thinking, before she starts again, "Maybe I do understand better than I'd like, how it feels to be lost." There's a burst of something in her emotions, something complex. But she keeps talking before I can figure it out, "So I think it's good to take some time every day, just bein' alive." She frowns, "Maybe not the best way to put it, but I hope you get what I mean."

Marshal stands, still gazing around, "Just- When ya start thinkin' like that, make sure you're safe. And if you're not either try to save it for later or get safe, okay?" She says into the air. "And remember to take the time to be," She adds after a second, turning to face me.

That's… a lot. But do I feel better? I don't know, but I think she was right about clearing my head. "Thanks, Marshal," I tell her. "And I'll try to keep all that in mind, and do this every day too."

"All I ask right now. You're doin' well anyways, just need to stay that way," She says, stretching. "Now, how much fight d'ya have in you?"

Oh, Right. Marshal wanted to teach me to fight. "Um…"

She laughs, "You really don't like confrontation do ya?" She opens her hands, and I can't help noticing just how sharp her claws are. "Right now I just want to see how capable ya are, see what you need to learn. So I'll start slow and see how you do." She announces.

Then she mo- JESUSTAPDANCINGCHRIST, DODGE!

That buys me a fraction of a second before I realize the obvious. You can't hit what isn't there. Following that thought, I vanish. Ah… AHH! That's what all the water was for! I need cover, fast! Wait… THE TREES!

Slipping inside a tree, I calm down for a second. It looks like Marshal knows something is up though, because all the water… How the hell is the water here?! Fuck it, doesn't matter right now, but it has all stopped spinning.

I didn't think she'd start immediately, or that she'd be so fast… Why are her eyes red? Oh, moving now.

As I move from that particular tree, Marshal body-slams it low and even topples it. Then, instead of stopping, she keeps moving to let it fall onto her shoulder before she turns and… IT'S HEADING RIGHT FOR ME!

I'm still phased out though, so it just sails through me without doing anything. Okay, stop, stay calm. I'm pretty sure I'm somehow even less vulnerable to anything physical while I'm here.

Except the water, for some reason. And now she's starting the whirlpools up again. Can I stop those? One way to find out, I guess.

Quickly phasing in, blasting one with sound, and phasing out shows that, yes, I can. And Marshal's eyes are red again… Wait, that's another color I can name here, coo- FUCK! MOVING NOW!

Marshal's waterborne charge should miss now, barely. I need- WHOOP! Did she just try to bite me on her way passed? IS THAT FROST?!

Am I enjoying this?

***​

Oh, this is familiar, though also not as disconcerting as before. At least I'm not out there this time.

It's also much easier to think than last time. Even if everything is a bit blurry… No, it's coming back into focus. Oh hey, there's Marshal, big glowing sphere and all.

I feel scattered, almost hollow? … and hungry. I'm already filling up again, though, so that's good.

Everything's a blur, what happened? …Oh, I think Marshal hit me. Yeah, it's coming back now. One hit, ouch. Was I unconscious or just very disoriented? Mmm, no gaps in my memory, I think, so that's a thing.

Wow, she really did just hit me that hard. Amazing.

Well, let's see what she thinks about what just happened. Phasing in, I-

Phasing in-

…I can't move. Uh, is this how a ghost faints, then? How's my body doing?

Oh. Well, on the bright side, I'm still not definitely-dead. Although I can absolutely put any thoughts I had about my body behaving anything like a regular flesh-and-blood one out of mind. And I guess I shouldn't be surprised because I'm not- ready to think about this again right now.

Back to the present, think about it later.

So, I'm in two places at once. Except that it's still the same place? Explains why I feel scattered, at least. I'm hanging, bodiless, on the ground where Marshal's attack threw me and also sitting, not-quite-bodiless, on the ground where Marshal's attack threw me, but I can't feel things.

I have no idea what that means.

So, important question, how do I not be in two places? Hmm, What feels like the right thing to do here?

Ah, I think I just found my ghost-powers, it barely feels anything like the psychic stuff at least. Time to put myself back together, I guess.



This is going to take a while, isn't it? How do I even move this- Wait, I should just keep pushing now. That feels right.



I can still see Marshal. She's been getting more and more anxious since she hit me and I'm starting to feel bad about it, but using an entirely new power thing while not being able to move anything else at all takes time.

Also, I think my 'body' is almost intact again? I'm not sure anymore since I think I have two, now. Except that one feels more like a body and the other… Am I just puppeteering myself? I really, really need to learn more about ghosts.



"Ow," I groan, finishing the process of literally putting myself back together by taking control of my maybe-body. It feels excessively weird.

And all this was just her figuring out what I'll need to work on?

"Oh! Oh, you're moving again. Sorry, didn't mean ta hit you so hard." Says Marshal from one side of the brand-new, and thoroughly flooded, clearing. You know, I'd been wondering where all the random clearings came from.

"No, I- I think I'm fine, strangely," I tell her. "And, uh, sorry."

"Oh, ya don't have to be," She says, "Don't suppose ya met any other spooks before?" At my head-shake she continues, "Yep, you're all awfully fragile and extremely hard ta actually harm at the same time." She laughs, "Makes me feel better about teaching you when I can't accidentally maim ya."

Yeah, Marshal, saying that isn't scary at all.

"Um, how'd I do?" I ask her. I'm both dreading the answer and hoping I somehow did well.

"Hmm…" She starts, scratching an ear. "You're good at dodging, only seen one other spook vanish to dodge when a real fight started, and ya hid inside stuff too. You didn't panic when I started speeding things up, that was good." She stops scratching her ear and starts tapping her chin, staring at one shattered tree in particular, "You've clearly got decent instincts and a good head. You had a great sense of timing, too, but…" She trails off, looking around. "Ya barely fought back?" She asks, giving me a questioning look.

"I've uh, never fought like this before?" I didn't mean for it to come out a question! Goddammit, get it together Charlie!

"Naw, really?" She asks with a chuckle. "I imagine you lived in the middle of a big human city too? Never had to fight for somethin'?" The question sounds genuine.

I wince. "I… Well-"

"It's not a bad thing!" She waves a massive paw. "Just means you had things good." She settles to the ground, eyes roaming over the wreck we left in thought.

A thought occurs to me as I look over what we just did, "Why are you teaching me? I- that's not a complaint, I'd just- you know?" I say, turning my eyes on the otter.

Marshal shrugs, "Does it matter beyond 'just because I wanted to,' in the end?"

We fall silent for a stretch, I'm not sure what Marshal is thinking, but my thoughts turn back to when I was human and the times I almost got into fights then. And the few times I did.

"I don't like hurting people," I say into the quiet air.

"I can tell, but you still need to be able to," Marshal responds, not bothering to look at me.

I almost ask her if that's genuinely true but… I think she's right.

"I didn't think this would be so fun," I admit.

Marshal laughs. "I knock you out like that and ya still say that after," She says once her laughter eases. "I like that attitude."

"To be fair, you didn't knock me out," I tell her. "I was conscious the entire time, I just couldn't move."

Marshal Snorts thoughtfully, "Ain't that a meaningful difference. Well, ya got a lot to work on." She scratches her neck, her yellow line inflating and deflating a few times as she stares at the sky. "Normally, I'd say we keep going until you tire yourself out but…" She looks at me, "You're not gonna get tired, are ya?" She asks.

"I don't think so, not with you here. Maybe if you weren't…" I can't exactly gesture to the massive amounts of energy she's feeding me. "…Yeah," I finish lamely.

She chuckles, "Explains some difficulties I had when dealing with spooks before." She stretches her whole body, groaning in relief at a few pops I hear, "Mmm, you go ahead and get, I've got to…" She sighs, and I start tasting a bit of that same mix of love and melancholy she had hanging around her earlier, though now a bit less… something? "I've got ta make sure Buizel knows what's coming to him soon." She says, her voice somehow conveying even more than her literal emotions.

I don't know what to say to that. Marshal didn't tell me what was going on other than that Buizel is growing up. Maybe he's hitting some kind of pokemon puberty? I don't know, but I don't feel like asking for more about it right now. So with a wave that Marshal reciprocates, I start drifting back towards my cabin.

Some things about today have driven home the point that I really need to start learning about this world. That means I'll probably need to find a library given the seeming lack of modern technology, which either way means I'll need to learn to read again, which means…

I'll need to go look for Weaver at some point. Although she's probably busy during the day. Who else do I know around here?

***​

I'm not surprised to find Leaf sunning himself, the leafeon resting on his side in a very sunny patch of forest. He's glowing slightly, but I've seen a lot of grass-types do that. I take a quick look up and down the trail running North-South through this section of the woods, but I don't see anybody else.

"The Grotles not with you today?" I ask him from a safe distance.

He cracks an eye open, staring at me a moment before closing it again. He might try to hide it, but I can taste the contentment and joy, although there is some lingering anxiety. "They wanted a day to themselves. Are you just going around bothering people now?" He asks without heat.

"Sometimes," I say, floating to rest next to him and feeling a prickling sensation on my what-the-fuck-are-you sense. "Anything going on?" I ask, disregarding the sensation for the moment.

"The rain helped a lot of us regrow and regenerate, stopped the beedrill for a bit, too," He says with a flick of his long, leaf-like tail I've come to realize is the Leaf version of a shrug. "I'm still tired from all the humans that have come through." He cracks an eye again, "A swellow told me Marshal dragged you off somewhere earlier," Leaf doesn't quite ask.

I sigh, at least I'm not aching all over. "Dragging me off is a bit exaggerated, but she wanted to teach me how to fight."

Leaf actually starts, ears as long as his body twitching, "Really? And you're still in one piece?" He asks, head up, both eyes now open and staring.

"I wasn't for some of it," I halfheartedly joke, unable to suppress a shiver.

Leaf stares for a moment longer before flopping onto his other side, eyes closed again, "Eh, you're weird, why not."

After a bit of silence, I start searching for something to say. "So, uh, what are you doing?" I ask.

"Synthesizing," He yawns. "All the cleaning up after humans is exhausting. How'd you get the rangers to put signs up around your den?" He asks.

"I um, took Marshal's advice," I tell him. "I'm pretty sure having one place they could put the signs helped though."

He cracks an eye again, "Mmm, she really must like you." He yawns again, " You know, sometimes I wish they would just stop letting other humans into the forest." He says, flicking an ear this time. "But there are some nice ones too, it's just luck, frankly. Have you been doing anything else? It's been quiet the last day-and-a-half." he asks.

"You're hilarious," I deadpan, before explaining, "I've been trying to focus my voice more, if you haven't heard anything then that's why."

"Good progress then," He says, closing his eye.

Again I need to find something to say, at least Leaf seems to want me to stick around right now. "Why are you right in the middle of a trail if you want to avoid humans?" I ask him.

"It's where Maya usually looks for me," He says simply, before yawning once more.

"Are you okay? You seem like you're going to fall asleep."

"Mmm," He groans. "I don't want to. But this is the time of year I always come closest to needing it," He says sullenly.

"You don't need to sleep either?" It makes a kind of sense, Leaf being part plant.

"Figures you don't sleep," He mutters. "But no, not if I get enough sun. I go into stasis over winter, but I haven't needed to otherwise since I evolved." He yawns again, "I don't suppose you could make it sunnier? I haven't been able to figure it out yet," He asks. It's sunny already—even if the sun is starting to set—but I'd bet it would help him out if he's asking about it.

"I… can't, sorry," I tell him. "You said you hadn't figured it out yet? Is there someone around here who knows how?" I ask.

"Yeah, my sister, a couple of the cherubi, Torterra, and Shiftry. Why? Do you want to get one of them to do it? Teach it to us? Good luck." He informs me, rolling onto his other side.

"Why couldn't you get your sister to use it, or even just teach you to use it?" I ask. …Ah, well there's no love lost there, damn those are some complicated emotions. But the one rising to the top is pain?

"My sister is…" He says, clearly searching for a good way to put his feelings. "A bitch," He finally finishes. Wow. Also, is that a translation thing again? "Have you seen her? She's always by that forretress up north."

Now that he mentions it… Yeah, that leafeon was giving off some serious hostility. "Yeah, I've seen her," I confirm.

His tail slaps the ground, agitated, "I don't know what kind of deal she and the beedrill have, but she's got free reign in their territory!" He says angrily. "And you know what the beedrill are like, right?" He asks, actually sitting up and looking at me.

"I haven't seen them, but everyone seems to have a problem with them," I say. And, reminded of a different terrifying bee, continue, "I did meet a vespiquen yesterday, Prime-Daughter-Two."

"They're a lot nicer, right?" Leaf asks, likely rhetorically.

"I guess? I still haven't seen a beedrill." I tell him. "Although the one I met was calling me…"

Am I an apprentice to Marshal? Huh, I suppose I kind of am, aren't I.

"Was calling you what?" Leaf asks, apparently curious.

"She… They were referring to me as 'Apprentice-Of-Order-Bringer,' and I just realized they were right," I say.

"…Why is she so interested in you?" Leaf seems to think aloud. "Sorry. I didn't mean it like that, I'm just- She doesn't usually teach anybody like you said she did."

"I have no- Well, I have some ideas, but I don't know why either," I tell him. "Not that I'm going to complain when I'm almost certain I would have had a very bad meltdown if she hadn't helped me."

"Meltdown?" Leaf asks.

Uh, how do I put this? "Leaf, I wasn't making all that noise for fun. I was alone, frustrated, and doing my best to think of absolutely nothing to do with being dead." I sigh, "Thinking about it, I was at most two or three days from snapping and having Marshal deal with me." And given today, it wouldn't have been hard for her.

"And you're just… okay with that?" Leaf asks me.

"No?" I reply, looking at him. "But I'm not going to obsess over it, I know why it happened, and I'm not going to let it happen again."

"I wish I could do that sometimes." The green pokemon says. "Just decide not to worry about something."

"It's not that simple," I laugh. "But I know talking about things helps. So, what are you worried about?" I ask him.

"Who said I'm worried?" He asks defensively, and I start tasting anxiety again.

"You effectively admitted you were," I tell him. "And I can taste it coming off you."

"I- You- Taste? …Fine, just promise you won't laugh."

Interesting. "Leaf, if something is bothering you that much, then I promise I won't laugh at it," I say.

"I miss my brother," He blurts out, face going yellow.

"…Why were you worried I'd laugh at that?" I ask him, now actually intrigued.

"Because I shouldn't!" He cries. "He decided to become a vaporeon and swim off and leave me behind with- and I…" Leaf sniffs, "And I just wish I knew he was okay." He slumps, "I miss him, we used to have so much fun tearing around the woods. And W- When I think I might never get to see him again I- I… And I don't even remember-" He stops there, staring at the ground.

This feels like it's been building up for a while, long before we met.

"Have you talked to the Grotles about this?" I ask him.

His response is timid, "Yes. But they're younger than me and they just laugh it off… and you…" He glances at me before dropping his gaze again. "You asked, and you've… you know?" He stops again.

"I listened? I haven't laughed?"

"Yeah," He says, sniffing again.

"Um, Leaf. I don't want to sound condescending or insensitive, but… how old are you?" I ask him.

"Eight?" He says, blinking to… hold back tears. Ah, that's grief I can taste now.

Jeez, kid's going through thoughts like this at that age… Wait, is that how Marshal feels looking at me? Leaf truly does come across as an adult most of the time and I just thought of him as a kid. Oh, that's definitely how Marshal got there, wow. Am I going to end up like- Focus, remain here.

"I don't really know what to tell you, Leaf," I say, trying to be comforting, "I know exactly what you're going through, but I don't have some easy way out." He glares at me, obviously getting ready to say something. So I stop him, "Leaf, do you think I didn't leave people behind when I died?" I ask as gently as I can.

His glare loses most of its heat at that, then he blinks twice. Jesus, he's an emotional wreck right now. He looks at the ground again, "Sorry." he says in a small voice. "It's just… H- how are you so c- calm about it?"

I- Has he not been paying attention?

"I'm… not?" I answer slowly. "Remember all the screaming I was doing?" I laugh. "I just have nearly five times the life experiences you do to help me, and even then I'm not doing a great job." I sigh and look around us, "It hurts, it's going to hurt, and there's nothing you can do about that part except keep going. I went down the road of trying to push it all out and that just made it worse. To the point that Marshal had to help me." I look back at him, "If you're really afraid of never seeing your brother again then go look for him, that's what I intend to do for my old friends and family. Even if I'm not sure I can ever see them again," I tell him.

He's silently crying now, and I'm starting to wish I wasn't constantly aware of his emotional state, I'm too focused on him to tune it out even though I want to. And uh, I guess what they say about crying is true, since Leaf is effectively drowning the area in emotions.

I feel awkward, floating here while he's crying right next to me. But I don't know what else to do or say except to try and supply silent comfort.

I don't know when he stopped synthesizing, but the glow has faded from his skin. He's sitting on his haunches, eyes streaming tears and staring at the trees around us.

I feel guilty. It's probably a good thing that he's letting it out, but I can't help but feel I pushed him into it.

"What are you doing to my precious Leafy-Boy!" Someone cries.

I'm not riding one of my own strange emotional fluctuations though, so I just turn to look down the North path at the voice's source.

"N- no Maya, th- they're helping." Says Leaf, raising his head as I finish turning around.

The woman, a ranger and presumably 'Maya,' has darker, kind of gold-chocolate skin, curly black hair, red eyes, and has the same hard, compact muscle as the other two rangers I've seen, though she's a bit shorter and wider.

"Are you going to leave him alone or not?" She asks, scowling at me.

"No Maya, really, they-" Leaf stops, then he gets up and leans into me. …Wow, he's a ball of anxiety on the inside, isn't he? Actually, what determines when I start tasting- Deal with it later.

The ranger's scowl lessens to a glare as she looks between us, and sighs, "Okay, can you at least get across why you're crying Leaf?" She asks the plant that's currently trying to bury himself in my side.

He thinks for a second before flicking his tail a bit, shaking his head, "Not r- really, sorry," He says, voice still a bit choked. "Um, c- can you, Charlie?"

There is something I've been wanting to try, but it's still a bit too sunny right now. "Maybe if it was darker out," I tell the leafy lamprey, shrugging with a few arms.

"Th- then no, sorry Maya," He says, shaking his head at the human again.

She was watching our exchange, and, once we finish, she sighs again before sitting on the ground cross-legged. "Is Misdreavus helping?" she asks him. He doesn't bother responding verbally, just nodding. "Would you like me to pet you a bit?" Leaf slowly pushes off me when she asks, moving towards her lap. Once he settles in Maya looks at me, "You want some as well?" She asks, raising an eyebrow. When I don't respond she just shrugs, "Yeah, you don't look like you enjoy being touched." She examines me more closely. "I didn't know what to expect when I finally saw you, but Onaga and Emil weren't kidding, it's like you're deeper than you should be. And that's not actually fuzz, is it?" She asks, outwardly calm.

Looking at the two of them, I realize something about Leaf. He's big. It looks like if he stood on his hind legs he'd be as tall as the woman currently stroking his ears. Is that normal? He's only about the size of a large dog, but my mental image from the games keeps being proven wrong.

"Uh, w- what's with the staring?" Leaf asks.

"Sorry, I just noticed something I hadn't before," I say apologetically, looking at the ranger now.

She's running her fingers along the leaf-like veins in Leaf's ears, but she also tastes stressed out, so I think she's using Leaf to help herself with that.

"I don't know what happened, but are you okay, Leafy?" The ranger asks.

Leaf is still crying, although it seems like he's starting to calm down. "Maybe," He says, leaning into the woman so much that she falls back.

I sigh, considering what to do now. Leaf has his ranger friend, and I'm not sure what I want to do now.

"I um… Do you mind if I float off, Leaf?" I ask him. "I might go talk to Prime-Daughter-Two, or possibly Weaver. I think I need a new perspective on a few… things."

"No! I- Please stay a bit longer, a- at least until Maya leaves. You're easy to talk to," He says, pleading with his eyes.

I can't help it. "Yeah, okay, I can stay," I say. And the immediate wave of joy he gives off lets me know he's feeling better.

Actually… I could follow Maya to wherever Weaver probably is couldn't I? Hmm, that's not a bad idea.



Edit: slight formatting correction.
Edit 2: ptbptb the mvp with the spelling again.
 
Last edited:
Chapter 13
The ranger was really stressed about something, or maybe Leaf isn't a great emotional support… I still don't know if he's closer to a fox or a plant. Maybe a wolf? In any case, Maya stuck around for a while, just petting Leaf and complaining about 'stupid, uneducated, rich, arrogant, idiots.' …I'm pretty sure she had a bad day at work.

It had taken me perhaps a tad too long to notice the turtwig watching from the north path. Our interaction afterward had been interesting.

"So… who are you?"

"Partner."

"And are you going to join them or…?"

"Watching."

…We mostly ignored each other after that.

Leaf and I have been quiet for the most part, listening to the ranger complain. Though we did share some commentary about the complaints.

"I've met some electrike before, they're very friendly." Leaf lazily says.

"-And, yeah, it's what we were expecting, but I don't understand how some people can be so disrespectful-" Maya continues her tirade.

"I don't get why someone would keep trying after the first shock," I comment. "Seems pretty obvious she'd up the voltage from there."

It's a pretty good time all together, but it's also starting to get late. Maybe I should just leave, and try and find Weaver some other time.

And of course, right as I think that, Maya carefully moves Leaf off of herself, "But I think that's enough, it's getting late and I've got to head back to base. I'll have to see you later Leafy," She says. Standing, the woman gives me an appraising look before nodding slowly, "Thanks for helping him, I know he doesn't have a lot of friends." And with that, she starts walking.

Hmm, Leaf not having a lot of friends makes an unfortunate amount of sense. He's not mean or anything, just a bit high-

I had a plan. Right. "Do you mind if I also take off?" I ask the leafeon, raising myself in the air slightly.

"Oh, no. Uh, sorry about all that earlier," He apologizes. "I didn't really- I mean, I don't want to be a burden…"

"Leaf, it's fine. So I'll see you at some point soon, yeah?" I say, waving as I start to fade out.

"Oh. Yeah!" Leaf says brightly, relieved about something.

And then I'm gone, completely within the not-space. Now I just need to catch up with the ranger, and it won't be hard, as I can see her rather clearly 'here.'

I follow, Maya heading north at the moment. However, as soon as we reach a split she starts heading east, clearly familiar with the paths. I follow her for around twenty minutes before I almost miss someone. A 'someone' who was the entire point of doing this.

Focusing, I can just pick out a silhouette against the not-space.

Weaver's near-invisible form seems to give the ranger's bright one a wave before she breaks the silence of this place, "Hey Smokey, are you doing anything special?"

I don't think I've tested if she can hear me while I'm phased out, so I give it a shot, "Following her to find you," I say into the void.

Weaver doesn't respond, though whether she's messing with me or she genuinely can't hear me I'm not sure. She is still tracking me, however.

I look at the ranger for a moment before deciding I'd rather she not know I was following her. So I float close enough to Weaver to touch her and then start drifting away a bit. And she seems to get the idea, moving to follow me.

Maya doesn't seem bothered by the weasel-cat's behavior and simply continues jogging.

Once I think it's safe, I phase back in. "I was looking for you," I tell Weaver.

"Oh," She says. "That kind of makes sense, we are pretty close to the base right now." Then she exaggerates suspicion, stroking her chin, "But why would you be looking for me? Hmm?"

"Because I have questions that I don't think any pokemon would ask? Also, I need to learn to read," I try not to mumble the last part.

"So you want to hang out, basically," She says. "Sure, I've got some things I need to say too."

"Oh?" I'm interested.

"Oh yeah. Come on, I'll show you the base." Weaver says, beckoning me to follow her.

"So what kind of things do you need to say?" I ask as I float beside her.

"Well, I just learned that Ryu was partly, maybe mostly, raised by her grandparents," She says, almost angrily.

"Okay?" I don't see where this is going.

"Yeah, but one of them is a pokemon, a zoroark." Weaver looks at me, "Please tell me you know what that is because he refused to say anything beyond species," She pleads, but there's something hostile in her eyes.

I feel my own eyes narrow. I do recognize that one. "Uh, black and red, foxy looking, long hair?" I ask.

"How should I know, I never actually saw him, just his illusion," She huffs.

"Then yes? I remember that being a thing they could do at least. Actually…" The sun's gone down enough let's see what Weaver thinks.

I gently push my cloud out, twisting and molding it until fuzzy, indistinct characters can be… sort of made out. Honestly, it looks more like a gray mist than anything, though I'd been trying to shape it into 'Can you read this?'

Weaver gives me a raised eyebrow. "That's a neat trick, looks like you need to work on it though," She says in a slightly teasing tone.

"I know, and it's part of why I want to learn to read… whichever language I can," I tell her.

"Well," Weaver says, and suddenly there's a building in the woods before us, "I can help you with that, I'm an expert in humans."

"More so than me?" I say dryly.

Weaver rolls her eyes, "Maybe not you, but I like reading their books at least. And the shows are good too." Then she looks between the building and me a few times. "Did you not want them to see you?" She asks.

"I just didn't want her to know I was following behind," I say. "If you're with me I doubt they'll put much thought into why." Then, backing up a bit, "Can we go back to Onaga being raised by a zoroark?"

"Only partly, from what I gathered. He was mostly focused on making sure I was taking care of Ryuko, being a good 'shadow', as he put it," She answers, frowning. "They asked me not to let her know, too."

"Okay, but uh, is he actually her grandfather?" I ask Weaver, thinking about the sheer difference between other humans and the rangers in the not-space.

"No? Yes? I think it depends on what you mean." Weaver says, running her claws through- Oh, she's grooming herself. "The two certainly acted like bonded humans. Though if you meant it like Ryu being part pokemon, no." Weaver says, sounding slightly disappointed.

"You are referring to the adequate one, yes?" Says a new voice, prompting me to look up, Weaver rolling her eyes.

Sitting—more perched, really—on the roof of the building is a staraptor, gazing rather indifferently down at us.

"Yes!" Weaver snaps at him, "Her."

He hums, gaze shifting from Weaver to me. "I am Blake. Do remember it," He says, before dismissing us both with a wing.

Now that is a level of pompous asshole I wasn't expecting. So no, I don't think I'll be remembering his name. …Okay, I will. But not by choice!

Weaver sighs. "So!" And she's happy again. "Inside! Let's give you the tour," She chirps, starting to move us around the structure.

"This," She starts as we reach a set of double doors, "Is the lobby," She then wiggles her fingers before very deliberately—and unnecessarily—reaching up to grab the long handle.

"Are you still enjoying thumbs?" I ask her, teasing.

"Yes," She says with a very large smile, pushing the door open.

It's… a rather small, plain lobby. Lightly patterned tile floor, light beige walls, a reception desk, an odd lack of seating, a door leading back somewhere, and a single picture of a team of people hanging on the wall to our left.

"Yep, that is a lobby," I say, continuing to tease Weaver.

She chuckles, "Yeah, I know, I've seen better in the city. Anyway!" She says, turning to face me and beginning to walk backward, "It's home. And it's a lot better than any den I could dig."

Weaver walks to the door at the back and, still facing me, bumps it open. Following her, I'm met with the sight of a wide hallway with seven more doors, four on the right and three on the left. Several of the doorways don't even have doors.

There's also a hum, a thrumming feeling on my still unknown sense coming from down the hall to the right.

Weaver points to the first door on the right, "That's where we all sleep," Then she points to the first on the left, "Shower-room, storage and utilities, relaxing room, operator room, office, and eating room," She continues, alternating right and left. "And speaking of eating…" She sniffs the air. "I smell food."

Weaver takes three steps down the hall before her entire posture shifts, becoming alert. "Oh, that's where they went," She says, voice flat, before stalking the rest of the way down the hall.

Following her and looking into the room, I'm met with the sight of nine people, three I recognize, three in uniforms, and all eating at two folding tables. There are also two pokemon in the room, a dragon-looking one that I can't think of the name of, and an espeon.

For her part, Weaver is staring daggers at an elderly man, with graying-black hair, fair skin, dressy clothes, and with his back to us.

I'm guessing he's the zoroark since Weaver is glaring at him. He's also seated next to a woman who has to be Onaga's grandmother if I'm assuming correctly.

My attention is more drawn to the espeon though, since he's the source of the humming on my holy-shit-I-wish-I-knew-what-it-is sense. Oddly, his eyes are always looking at whatever Onaga's are and it's a bit weird. Especially when they both lock onto me at the same time.

Onaga doesn't say anything, looking between Weaver and me. Nobody else seems to notice, all too engaged in their dinner conversation, but she does raise an eyebrow at Weaver.

Weaver just sighs, grabs one of my left arms, and starts pulling me back down the hall.

"Why-" Weaver cuts me off with a gesture.

It's not until we're outside that she starts talking. "I don't like him," She says simply, her expression twisting.

"Okay…" I start, a little confused. "That kind of answers why you dragged us away. But why don't you like him, then?" I ask.

"He's lying to her," Weaver growls. "Directly to her. And I don't think he would have told me anything if I didn't figure it out."

"Uh, how did you?" I ask, slightly concerned with the look on her face. "Figure it out, I mean."

"I heard him," Weaver says. "I caught the tail end of him speaking normally and paid more attention when I could see him," She preens a bit, "It was obvious after that." Then her eyes go cold again.

I don't think this is something I want to get in the middle of. "So, uh, was there anything else you wanted to show me?" I ask her, masterfully changing the subject.

It looks like she grinds her mental gears for a moment before managing to get back on track. "Yeah, but mostly inside. You want to see the runner calling area?"

"Sure," I tell her, happy she doesn't look ready to eviscerate someone anymore.

"It's around the other side, come on," She says, gesturing for me to follow along again.

"I still have some questions about other things," I say as I move after her.

"Go ahead and ask," She responds, not turning to face me this time.

I glance at the roof of the building, feeling a bit better when I don't see the bird from earlier, "So, um, are Moves a thing here?" That one's been starting to bug me.

"Depends on what you mean," She says, stopping at a tall, chain-link fence. "I know the humans named some of our more common powers 'Moves.' And that trainers will call just about everything a Move," She answers, turning to face me with a thoughtful expression. "How human do you consider yourself?" She asks. "I've been thinking about that all day."

I wasn't prepared for that. "I… um, don't know. The first day I was here, I thought 'I'm a pokemon now,' and then immediately panicked because… Well, I'd died and then woken up as something else," I explain. "And I'd be lying if I said that becoming this wasn't part of that, but it wasn't a large part. And then there was-" I cut myself off. I'll think about it when I'm back home. "Something I'd rather not talk about yet," I finish.

Weaver considers, then nods and turns back to the fence. "Okay. So anyway, this is the runner station. We shouldn't go in right now, but it's not like the fence could stop us," She says, waggling her eyebrows.

Past the fence is something that looks a bit like a stable, but somehow wrong. For starters, it's only mildly enclosed and I don't see any gates except the one in the chain fence. The stalls, such as they are, are too tall and square as well. The saddles I can see hanging at the back of the roofed space clearly aren't meant for horses, and there's a horn-looking thing sitting on a bench.

"I'd rather not," I admit. "Maybe if there was a dodrio I would, but I came here for other reasons."

"That's a disappointingly reasonable answer." Weaver pouts.

"I still have more questions about Moves, or… powers, I guess," I say, drifting right up to the fence. Let's see if she notices what I'm doing. "Like, I've got these- I don't know, things sticking in my head. Is that normal?"

Weaver narrowed her eyes when she saw how close I got to the fence, but she still answers, "Maybe? I don't know how I'd describe them myself, I just… know how." As a demonstration, she lifts a claw and I watch as it's near-instantly coated in something so dark it's almost like looking into a void. And then a particularly unpleasant taste reaches me, one I don't even have a name for yet, too. "Like that."

How helpful. Also, fuck that tastes nasty. What is that?

"Yeah, okay," I say, watching as the darkness dissipates. "But… I've only got a few real days of experience, so I don't know what I'm doing. I suppose what I'm actually trying to ask is, how?" I tell the oddly feline weasel.

"Normally you'd learn through fighting and experience, but I can see why you wouldn't want to," Weaver says, prompting a snort from me. "What?"

"Marshal might have removed a lot of the fear I had around that," I say, then shudder, "Also she's horrifyingly fast."

"Wait." Weaver says, eyes widening, "She started teaching you to fight?"

"Yeah, and then she… disabled me? I guess," I say. "It felt weird, and it didn't hurt that much either, which I think is strange."

Weaver takes a moment to inspect me better before speaking again, "When was this?"

"Earlier today. Apparently, ghosts are really hard to maim. According to Marshal, at least."

"Huh, and you're already recovered?" Weaver seems almost skeptical.

"Marshal was feeding me a lot of energy at the time." Then I remember something, "Actually, I think I have a new power to use after that, and I'm pretty sure it's ghost-type," I say, thinking about how I used it to pull myself together.

"Yeah?" Weaver says excitedly, before pulling back a bit, "Maybe don't try it here."

"Probably smart, yeah," I say.

"So," Weaver says after a moment, "How much do you know about our- this world?" She asks, tapping her chin.

"I'm not entirely sure…" I trail off, thinking. "Less than I want, but more than I should? If that makes any sense. I'm not even sure how we knew about any of this, to be honest. But if I came here I don't see why something couldn't go there." We both fall silent for a bit after that.

"So, next question. What year is it?" I ask after a bit.

"Year?" Weaver blinks, "Nineteen-eighty-one. Why?"

"Some curiosity, and some desire to figure out what my world got right," I say. "It was twenty-twenty-one on my old world, and vaguely remember something about the year twenty-ex-ex." Or was that Megaman? Wait… "We even used the same calendar?" I ask.

Weaver shrugs, "Sure? Seems so, anyway." She looks at me, considering, "If your old world didn't have pokemon, how did humans even survive?"

So this is what we're doing then. And what a question too, hmm. "Uh, a little too well, actually," I tell her. "I don't know how many humans are alive here, but we had nearly eight billion."

Weaver's jaw drops. "H- How!? That's… so many…" She trails off. "You go again, that's not what I was expecting."

"Um, I have a new sense that I can't figure out. Maybe you could help?"

"Sure!" She says, clearly glad to be moving on. "How does it feel, I guess?"

"Let me think…" When has it gone off? "Marshal was the first thing I felt with it, then the clouds yesterday, Leaf earlier today, and that espeon inside was setting it off too," I tell her. "Marshal and the storm kind of… buzzed, Leaf prickled a bit, and Espeon felt more like a hum. I think I'm starting to become more sensitive with it."

"Huh." Weaver says, stroking her chin, "Weird. Wait! How about this!" She starts-

Oh, yep, there it is, a weak buzz. And Weaver has an ice block now too. "Yeah, that did it," I say. "What is it then?"

"You can sense energy use!" Weaver says excitedly. "What's the range? Or- Hmm…" She trails off.

"Uh, I can't feel Espeon right now, but I could definitely feel Marshal at a distance," I say, thinking about the sense again.

"Yeah, Espeon wasn't doing anything earlier, so maybe it's not energy use, then. Is it concentration? Or…" She has a thinking pose on now.

"I mean, I couldn't feel your claw-thing, either," I realize aloud.

"That's probably just because it was dark-energy." Weaver waves a hand, "We're better like that."

"And evidently humble."

"Ah, you understand, good," Weaver says, nodding Regally. "My turn. What was it like, being human?"

Ho boy. "Which part? Because I don't honestly know how to answer that," I inform her.

"Uh, the human-only parts?"

"Very specific," I chuckle. "I guess… it started well, quickly became exhausting and stressful, only a few good parts after that, barely worth the price of admission, four out of ten," I summarize the last thirty-odd years of my previous existence.

"Really?" She asks.

"Hey, it's my turn now," I say, making Weaver squint at me before she smiles again. "Anyway, yeah. But I'm fairly certain I had some form of untreated depression, so I can't be trusted on that. I was mostly just going through the motions." I frown, "I think I was still in that head-space before Marshal pulled me out of it. As for the 'human-only parts,' I don't know what to tell you, genuinely. I haven't been here long enough to say."

Weaver gives me a look, before nodding. "If you say so. I don't know what kind of answer I was expecting." She pauses, seeming lost in thought for a moment, "Uh, your turn."

"So, I'd like some information on this world in general, but that's not a question…" I trail off. I know I had some more specific questions, but they aren't coming to me right now.

Before I can say anything else Weaver turns her head and I hear someone else speak, "So, what are you two up to?" Onaga says from the corner of the building.

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

Seeing Weaver drag the misdreavus out of sight had been hard not to laugh at. She had such a serious look on her face and Misdreavus just looked lost.

I may have eaten faster than I should have to follow them. And, after confirming they weren't inside, I found them by the runner station, Misdreavus halfway through the fence.

"Showing them around?" I ask Weaver.

She nods, glancing back at Misdreavus, before doing a double take. "Vile vile, weavile!" She seems to accuse the other pokemon.

Misdreavus smirks at that, replying, "Dreav, misdreavus." Causing Weaver to cackle in turn.

I knew Weaver's social circle was going to expand soon. While sneasel as a species are typically asocial, tolerating at most one other close connection, Weaver had been almost aggressively friendly by their standards. And, now that she's a weavile—which form mid-size packs—she might start looking for members without realizing it.

I can't help frowning. That might become an issue.

"Weavile?" Weaver asks, pulling my thoughts back to now.

Looking at her, she seems concerned. "It's nothing much. Just thinking about the near future," I tell her, even as I watch Misdreavus glance between us and then edge ever so slightly farther through the fence.

"Vile," Weaver says, seeming to accept that. Turning her head back to Misdreavus, she pauses, her pupils becoming slits as she observes the innocent expression on the other pokemon's face.

"Have you already eaten?" I ask, mostly to Weaver, but I am a bit curious about the ghost-type.

Weaver equivocates with one hand, " Weav weavile, Weav vile," She says, and Misdreavus' eyes widen. I'm assuming that she hunted something then, though probably not something big.

"And how about you?" I ask, now directly addressing the ghost.

"Mis…" They say, eyes darting around before landing on Weaver. "Mis misser, misdreaveus misser?" They ask my partner.

Weaver's brow furrows as she points between Misdreavus and I, "Weav?"

"Misser. Mis misdreavus."

Weaver thinks about whatever was said, before pointing at me and miming chewing. Then she points at the now moonlit sky, waving her arm back and forth while still making chewing motions.

The chewing has a fairly obvious meaning, the sky-pointing is something she's used to indicate time passing before too, but the pointing at me seems a little- Ah. "You're eating now, so you're eating me right now?" Weaver nods, but Misdreavus seems alarmed. "And you're always eating, too?"

Weaver gives me a thumbs up, she's been a bit enamored with the gesture since her evolution. Misdreavus, on the other hand, seems a few seconds away from panic. "I'm not angry or anything like that," I tell them. "I know what you eat, but now I need to ask. Are you only passively feeding?"

"Mis…" Misdreavus says, still looking slightly flighty. Then they shrug.

Maybe I should have phrased that better, a pokemon as young as they are won't know about all the ways we categorize things. "Sorry. Anyway, it's fine so long as you don't start actively feeding on anybody in town." That makes the pokemon's eyes widen further.

"Moonlit walk?" Asks Holt, having just stepped out of the base. She's still holding that mug.

Switching my focus from the pokemon to the woman, I gesture to the duo I was just addressing, "Figuring out what my partner was up to," I answer, looking back at… the now singular pokemon. "And one of them left."

"One of them?" The woman asks, making her way to the corner I'm at. "I thought Espeon was still inside?"

"The misdreavus, the one from the forest, was here all of five seconds ago…" I trail off as I see Weaver start pointing and poking at nothing. "Scratch that, they're still here."

Holt hums as she observes Weaver's antics. "Freshly evolved weavile, makes sense she'd start socializing."

"Socializing more," I correct. "She's always been social."

Holt snorts, "Good luck to you, then." She chugs the last of her drink before sighing, "I take it you'd prefer to review your file tomorrow?"

"I'd prefer tonight, honestly," I say. "Things have just been a bit odd today, between waiting all morning, the smuggling, Espeon, you, and my grandparents showing up. Twice."

Holt nods, "That seems a fair assessment I suppose. Maybe you should see your family off then?"

"Yeah, I'll do that," I say, giving Weaver one last glance before heading back to the entrance.

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

"Hey, Smokey, they're gone. Feel like coming back?" Weaver asks, poking me again. I definitely overreacted, but I was also freaking out over another new thing to worry about, so someone else joining the group was a bit much.

I'd assumed that the ranger wouldn't appreciate me eating her emotions. And I'd been wrong on that, thankfully. Except then she mentioned 'actively feeding.' I need to wind down, maybe take Marshal's advice.

I move back to real-space as Weaver somehow pokes me, again. "Sorry, I was just…"

"Panicking for weird I-used-to-be-a-human reasons?" Weaver supplies.

"Sure," I sigh, "Let's go with that. Anyway," I say looking at the wall of the building, "That is definitely a zoroark, I couldn't see him, but his silhouette was clear enough, and his illusions look weird when I phase out. Although, I think you should be more concerned about the woman," I tell Weaver.

"Because…" She says, prompting.

"I could barely see anything else. She is by far one of the brightest things I've seen while invisible," I say.

"And what does that mean?" Weaver asks.

"No idea!" I cheerily reply. "I don't want to keep worrying about everything though, so I'm going to put it down as weird but probably nothing special. On a broad scale at least, since Marshal is even brighter."

"Just… that." Weaver deadpans. "After telling me to be more concerned about her than the one actively lying to my partner?"

"I mean, I was only letting you know," I shrug. "I thought you would appreciate it."

Weaver follows my gaze to the wall, silent in thought for a bit. "I do," She says eventually. "I just can't shake the desire to run in there and start a fight."

"If it helps, I think they were getting ready to leave," I say.

"Yeah, that Top-Ranger said something similar." Weaver nods. "Feel like heading inside after they're gone?"

"I'd need to find something to do tonight, anyway," I tell her. "…Probably fixing my cabin," I continue after a little thought. "There's a lot to do there."

"And you sound happy about that?"

I shrug, "I like having something to do, especially since I can enjoy doing things again. And it's something I know how to do, rather well, even."

Weaver gives me a long look, "You said you had been depressed earlier. What does that actually mean?" She asks.

Um, what? Does she- No, obviously not. Where do I even start? I know I'm not an expert, but maybe just describing it will be enough. "So," I start. And immediately stop to rephrase my words. "When I look back through my memories it's obvious, but at the time I just… didn't notice. I don't think I could notice. At some point I just stopped feeling hap- No, happy isn't the right word." I stop to think again. "Content? Maybe even alive? I don't know, it's not just that I was barely able to enjoy myself, but that I wasn't all that interested in trying, and the worst part is… is that I hardly noticed," I sigh. "It's like I said earlier, I just kept going through the motions. And," I say, feeling a strange mix of emotions, "It took not only dying and becoming this," I gesture at myself, "But also Marshal forcefully yanking me out of my fugue!"

"That doesn't sound great…" Weaver says after a long pause, glancing away from me. "But you said you were happy?" She asks, looking back.

"I'm feeling much better, although I'm not entirely sure why," I tell her. "I've had flashes of possibly unreasonable fear and anger, I was even afraid of telling you anything. And even just now, I shouldn't have been as frightened as I was. But I'm not the way I was before, or at least I don't feel like it."

"But you're also not okay," Weaver says. It's not a question.

"I think I'm doing better than I could have hoped, honestly. And I've felt better about things in general since last night," I say, pulling myself out of the fence. "Just… thanks, I guess, for pushing me."

"Well…" Weaver starts, "I have heard a few things about ghost-types recently…"

"Yeah? I'm guessing the word unstable came up a few times?" I ask, feeling myself smile a bit.

That seems to catch her off guard, "Uh, yeah, actually. How did you know?"

"I heard that myself a few times, the day when all the tourists were walking past my cabin," I tell the weasel. "It does make some sense to me, although I'm sure there's more to it than having died."

Weaver's eyebrows scrunch together like she's trying to figure it out as well, before she just shakes her head, "Anyway, inside?"
 
Last edited:
Chapter 14
AN: Just two more chapters to go until I'm caught up. I hope everybody has enjoyed the binge, but posting every day is mentally draining.




"Your head took off rather fast." Holt comments, readying Karlos' office for our one-on-one.

"I think seeing my grandparents made him want to go see his own family," I reply. "His wife will be happy… if she can manage to pry their kids off him."

Holt gives a genuine smile, "I don't know if I should feel bad for her or happy. Two children, and her husband is working ninety percent of the time. Of course," She gestures to the room we're in, "He's doing well enough to support them, and it's not like he doesn't do what he can."

That makes me give Holt a questioning eyebrow, "How much is in those files, exactly?"

The woman's smile turns knowing, "Wouldn't you like to know? And on that subject," She finally sits behind the desk, "We can get started." Holt sets a small stack of papers on the desk between us, "To start, please read through this and point out any inaccuracies you find."

This is a strange start, the two other reviews I've been through went very differently. Picking up the papers, I can immediately tell they're records from when I was in the Ranger Academy. Which prompts the question, "Why? If you're allowed to answer."

"We've already found issues with some of our current Ranger's school records. Minor ones, but we need to check." Holt says, moving to look at another paper. Right, just to check, sure.

Well, It doesn't take me long to read through them, both of us remaining silent throughout.

Setting the records down, I can't help tapping the desk a few times with a finger, "I see." I say, mind turning over. "To start with, my weight was wrong, and Weaver followed me back to the academy on the second, not the ninth."

"Really?" Holt asks. "Nothing else? No defending yourself?"

"I did the right thing. Weaver thinks I did the right thing. And the Union does too, or I wouldn't be sitting here." I flatly state.

The corners of Holt's mouth twitch up slightly, "I won't disagree." She steeples her fingers, "It does read as a glaring black dot on an otherwise rather normal academy record, however. Of course, the Hia Valley base has their own record of various incidents during 'hazing,' so it's rather par for the course overall." The Union-Ranger leans back, "Still, you do seem to have a record of resorting to violence when humans are involved. Though, you've also never done more than inflict mild injury."

"I'm aware of how badly I could hurt someone."

"Yes, I can see that." Holt sighs, "I understand the urge to strike with force, especially when there's an injured pokemon nearby." She looks at another set of papers for a second. "I know you've had this talk before, so let's move on. After you graduated you specifically requested not to be placed at Hia Valley, which is understandable. And, Though you were originally slated to be placed at the Boyleland base, you were instead placed here to accommodate your partner, correct?"

"That all sounds accurate," I say, realizing what's going on. She isn't the one who normally handles our files and she hadn't finished reading through them, so she's still trying to familiarize herself with them. Or rather, us.

"Good, now let's see…" The older woman says, rifling through the tabs on a folder. "Ah yes, here." She continues, now pulling a small set out. "Tell me, did you know the Sienna government had you listed as a security risk as soon as you were granted a student visa?"

I can't help sighing, though I do resist the urge to roll my eyes, "No, but I'm betting they do that to any Kanto native." What with the various clans' proclivities for spying.

"You'd win that bet." Holt chuckles. "But don't worry about me thinking that," She says, eyes moving back over what she's holding. "Hmm, how did you end up applying for the Ranger Academy? That's not on here." She asks, still looking at what is now clearly a breakdown of my background.

"Luck?" I hazard. "I worked up the nerve to apply one day because I thought 'Just mail in the application, it's not like you'll get picked.'" I laugh at the memory, "I wasn't looking forward to being a secretary or worse, a housewife for the rest of my life."

My superior looks confused for a second before she seems to remember that we're talking about Kanto. And that traditional doesn't even begin to cover its social climate about everything.

"Right, explains the cooking skills." She murmurs, pulling out a pen and noting something. "And now I'm wondering how you came to have that opinion of your home country?" Holt half asks, looking back up at me.

That honestly makes me smile a bit, "You just met them. They made sure I wouldn't blindly accept rhetoric." I lean back, resting the side of my head against a hand, "I didn't realize everything they'd done for me until after I'd left, it's easy to notice it all, in hindsight."

Holt nods, clearly thinking there's more to it as she shuffles many of the documents back into their folder before inspecting another one. "Oh, that. Do you recognize this?" She asks handing me the pap- picture.

Looking it over, I'm very familiar with the image, though not the sheer quality of it. And there's something about the background…

"Why are you asking about this?" I ask looking up at Holt.

"There's going to be a foreign researcher near her soon, and you've looked into her yourself. So?" Holt replies, eyes uncomfortably intense.

"Yeah, I've seen this before," I say, looking back down at the photo. It's black and white, probably re-developed from the original material. And it shows what happened to the last logging crew that entered Vien Forest. "Do you mind if I keep this picture?"


Holt thinks for a second, "…Sure, I'll get it to you before I head back to the Union. But my point," She says, tapping the desk, "Is we don't need something like that happening to Rowan when he gets here, so he will have an escort because he is definitely going to take a look at The Marshal while he's here, no matter what we tell him."

I nod, handing the photo back, "Yeah, that sounds…" Wait, Rowan? "Rowan is coming here? Himself?" I can't help asking.

"As far as he's told us, yes." Holt nods, reaching a hand up to rub her forehead. "He won't be like most people, thank Holy Sinnoh, but we don't need any kind of bad press from him being hurt right now." Holt sits like that a moment longer, then brings herself back on track, "Right, sorry. I just need to let you all know that before I leave, and you have a good relationship with the alpha. Now," Holt picks up what looks like a performance report, "I just need to finish reading through some of these, give me a few minutes."

It's quiet for several minutes while Holt looks over the last few things, and I find myself trying to read small snippets of what is scattered on the desk. I've seen Karlos' signature more than once.

"Okay," Holt says, breaking the silence as she sets the last paper down, "It seems you've had an excellent record, in my opinion. High quest clear-rate, no FUBAR missions, your personal reports seem accurate and readable, registrations are mostly up to date but you have a few days leeway for that, and you evidently have a good relationship with your first partner." She says, looking at another document. "And even providing aid to other bases. Which, I remind you, you are not obligated to do without an official request." She nods again. "You're one of our better rangers, overall."

I blink, "That was the simplest review I've had." I say, bemused.

The corners of her mouth twitch up slightly, "Your last review was only five months ago, and I don't see any other new issues or sticking points. These are supposed to happen every two years after all." Holt shakes her head, "This was only because of pressure from our government. I could go over all your reports since then if you want to?" She gives me an inquisitive eyebrow.

"I think we'd both rather not if I understand the situation correctly," I reply, giving her my own eyebrow back.

Holt nods, almost smiling again as she continues, "You do. And now we move on to why I'm actually sitting here. So, what the Union wants to know is how well our bases are operating, given the staffing shortage." She leans forward in her chair, eyes locking onto mine, "So tell me, how well do you think you're doing?"

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

"How do you know where to move those?" Weaver asks as I continue to adjust the bunny ears on the CRT box.

"Practice," I quip, finally getting the static as far gone as I can. "These were mostly out of style when I was growing up, but we still had one."

Entirely unsurprisingly, TV shows are a thing here, and Weaver wanted me to see them too. Although it's still hard to tell if her excitement is real or not, she is a really good actor.

"Great! Now watch this," She says, as she clicks a button on the front of the box and text appears on-screen.

"Captions? Please tell me this isn't how you want to help me learn to read." I groan, turning my eyes on her.

"No? Someone will need to find the tapes if we want to do that." Weaver responds with a shrug.

"And we can't just try a book?"

"I can't make the noises," Weaver says sadly, sitting down in front of the TV. "And I've tried. A lot."

That doesn't bode well for future communication, but that's also why I've chosen text as my first attempt.

deciding to take her explanation at face value, I turn to the TV. "So… what are we watching then?" I ask. It looks like your typical, if old-fashioned, news desk.

Weaver cocks her head for a moment, watching the screen, "Something from Sinnoh. It looks like a news break right now, though." She nods.

"Anything interesting?" I ask her, inspecting the captions. They're blocky, being captions on an analog TV, and I don't recognize the symbols. Weaver mentioned Sinnohan last night, so I'm guessing that's what this is.

"Not really… apparently, the next tournament season starts in two weeks, but I think it's too late for anything important. It's still snowing a lot there, though." Weaver sounds almost wistful with those last words.

"I'm almost afraid to ask…" I hesitate, glancing at her.

"There was always snow, where I was born," Weaver says distantly. "I haven't been there in years."

"It snowed a lot where I grew up too." I empathize, letting the nostalgia from making snowmen and igloos wash over me. "Only In the winter, but there hasn't- hadn't been as much recently."

Weaver blinks, then turns to look at me, "Are you trying to comfort me?" She asks.

"Maybe, I'm not all that sure." I shrug.

She shrugs back, "Well, I won't complain about it. Thanks, Smokey."

Further conversation is stalled by the TV changing programs. The screen now showing what looks like a typical, small, home-styled set, complete with a man, woman, and a lopunny.

That's… a very fluffy, very large, and oddly bipedal rabbit. They aren't standing or moving like the one I've seen in the forest, interestingly enough. Otherwise, though, I don't know how invested I can get in this show without being able to understand anything.

"So, what is this?" I ask a now frowning Weaver.

"Not what I was expecting…" She replies, staring at the screen. "I think it's new."

"What were you expecting?" I ask with a raised eyebrow.

"'Private Detective: Bolt.'" Weaver shrugs. "It's fun, seeing him solve things." She taps her chin in thought, "It's normally on around now."

"We could try…" I trail off as the humming feeling I haven't truly been able to ignore moves from where it had been sitting one door down the hall. Turning, I'm in time to see th- Espeon poke his head around the doorway.

"I-" Espeon falters for a moment, glancing at me. "Weaver, do you know what the humans did with my pokeball?" He asks. His voice is surprisingly young-sounding, but it's almost a monotone.

Weaver, who had followed my motion, scrunches her face up a bit, "Let me think… Broke it down, most likely. Or tossed it in storage for now, why?" She asks.

There's a brief instant where something flashes across Espeon's face, but it's gone before I can tell what. "Idle curiosity." He says, stepping past the door and farther down the hall.

"Do you have any kind of read on him?" Weaver asks in a low voice once the other pokemon is far out of sight.

"No? I've only seen him twice, and it's not like-" …That is strange, now that I think of it. "He's not shedding emotions," I tell Weaver. "I mean, you don't either, but I'm starting to think that's because you're dark-type." Something strikes me about her question, "Why did you want to know?"

Weaver glances at me, "Ryu just adopted him earlier today." She says, looking back at the doorway. "There's something wrong with him and I can't quite figure it out." She sits there thinking for a bit, tapping a claw to her chin before she seems to have a light-bulb moment. "You," She says, pointing at me, "Can get a better look at him, right?"

"Yeah…" I slowly say. "And you want me to?"

"Please?" Weaver cocks her head. "I'll teach you to read?"

"You already said you would, though," I say flatly, prompting my friend to stick her tongue out at me. "Sure, I'll take a look." I chuckle, beginning to phase out.

"Thanks, Charlie," Weaver beams as she fades from sight.

Okay, let's see. Casting my gaze around, it quickly lands on… Well, that has to be Espeon, but he sure looks different than other things here.

Unlike other pokemon I've seen so far, Espeon looks almost solid himself, instead of a ball of not-light with a vague shape inside. He looks like a shining statue made of colors, with transparent skin and solid sections both inside and around him, almost like armor. The most striking part about his appearance, however, is in his forehead. That red gem isn't a gem here, it's a bright ____ eye, screwed up in concentration.

It's easy to see what he's concentrating on, too. For starters, he is, in fact, shedding more emotions than I've seen even humans do, they just aren't leaving his orbit. Instead, they're being… sorted, I think, and forced into shapes that are tethered to him, floating along behind.

I have no real idea what he's doing, but it's probably real psychic power. …I need to practice more and start experimenting.

What is he doing? Not with his emotions, but in the real world. He's looking back and forth over… Isn't that where Weaver said the storage room was?

Shaking myself, I transition back to actual-space and see Weaver changing the channel on the TV.

"See anything neat?" She asks, glancing at me.

"Yeah," I say, still trying to figure it out, "He's doing something with his emotions."

Weaver rolls her eyes, "I could have told you that just with the way he's acting," She sighs. "What was he doing to them, though?" She asks, turning to face me.

"Uh, sorting and storing them, I think," I tell her. "He was shedding a lot, though. And I mean a lot, almost as much as two humans put together."

"Mmm," Weaver combs her claws down an ear-feather, thinking. "Is that unusual?" She asks after a moment.

"I have no idea," I say, glancing back in the direction Espeon had been in. "He's a lot more defined than most people."

"Defined?" Weaver asks with a head tilt.

"Uh," I say, looking for the right way to put it. "So, most pokemon look like spheres of color that give off not-light, with their actual shape somewhere inside." I say, gesturing vaguely, "You're extremely hard to see at all, and I need to be looking to find your silhouette. Most humans are… uncomfortable to look at-"

"Why?" Weaver cuts me off, genuine seeming curiosity in her tone.

"I'm pretty sure it has to do with how their 'light' doesn't even cover their entire bodies, but I don't know why," I explain.

"Okay, but just a few minutes ago you said that 'Maeve' human was very bright?" She asks, tilting her head in the other direction.

"I also said 'most humans.'" I point out. "The Rangers aren't like that either."

"Huh." Weaver looks at the floor for a moment. "Uh, right. What makes Espeon so different then?" She asks, looking back at me.

"Well… like I said, he's defined. He's not just a sphere around a silhouette but an actual shape with limbs, a tail, and a head. Even an eye."

"Ah. And as you said," Weaver nods, "You don't know if that's normal for a psychic," She says, running her claws through her fur in that weird cat-like way again.

"Yeah."

We fall silent, and that leaves me with the uncomfortable truth that I really, really want to get at those shapes. I know it's probably a ghost-type instinct, but it's still a bit unsettling. Although, they're shed emotions, right? Why is he collecting them?

…Maybe because if he doesn't they'll just drift back into his orbit. And since he's a real psychic I imagine he'd be sensiti-

"Hey, need you moving, Smokey." Weaver pokes me. Again.

"Sorry. What is it?" I ask the weasel, glancing around.

Weaver grins wide, gesturing at the TV, "Lily of the Valley recap."

"Um… I have no idea what that is?" I say, glancing between Weaver and the screen.

Weaver gives me a blank look, "It never happened in your weird games-shows-things?" She asks, actually looking a bit sad.

"I wasn't all that into the shows. Or the game's stories, either." I admit. "The last movie I watched involved a lucario trapped in staff, I think? It's a bit fuzzy." A half-truth, in all honesty, since I do remember the staff-scene fairly well. It's odd, the way some of my memories hadn't degraded.

"Oh." Weaver seems a bit unsure. "Okay. Well, it's a big festival with lots of competitions and an elite tournament. It's fun to watch live, and I'm pretty sure they're doing the recap because the new season's coming up…" She explains, looking back at the TV. "I thought you'd like to see it."

…I don't think she's pretending right now. She genuinely is getting sad at the thought I might not want to see something she clearly enjoys.

"I didn't say I don't want to watch," I say, trying to be reassuring. "I just didn't know what it was. Though I still won't understand anything being said."

Weaver blinks, then grins, "It'll be obvious, trust me."

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

"We still need to tell her at some point, Liam." My love continues her effusive—for her—requests, easing herself onto the hotel bed. "Finn and Killian, and even the rest of their children I understand, they're normal humans. But you saw Ryuko, I certainly felt her, she's different now. And she's an adult, one sworn to protect pokemon, she'd understand."

Maeve is right, of course. And I know she's right, but, "That doesn't change the fact we've been lying to her her whole life." I point out again. "I agree we should tell her, but we need to find a time and place. She's going to have questions."

Maeve leans back in the bed, sighing. "She still thinks you're her real-" Maeve pauses, "Sorry, you are her real grandfather. What I meant was, she thinks you're her biological one."

"Human languages remain such fascinating things," I say, getting a pillow halfheartedly thrown at myself for the effort. "You can always speak true if you wish." I tease her a moment longer, before returning to the issue at hand. "I'm not even certain that she won't learn on her own, soon enough."

"That weavile…" Maeve groans, "She made how you were as a zorua look tame."

"I appreciated that about her. And the personal sentiment." I inform my wife, who makes a tutting sound at me. "I'm entirely certain she will put Ryu's health before her own, it speaks well of both of them."

"I know." Maeve sighs, though a smile graces her face, "It's reassuring if nothing else. But a sneasel… I don't know where that girl gets it from."

It's my turn to smile, as I know exactly who our granddaughter gained her nature from. The woman has always had a way with us.

"How do you think she'd react if we simply invited her to our home and I happened to… forget to apply my façade?"

Maeve puts a hand to her face, eyes rolling, but she can't hide her amusement at the thought. "And we just kept acting as if nothing were strange? It would be a fun way to do it, but we definitely shouldn't. Would she even know what you are?"

"I don't believe so, no," I say, curling myself into the bed beside Maeve. "At the very least, I don't believe the world at large knows of our existence yet. Though she might have access to things most don't."

"Summer, when the load on Ryuko eases," Maeve states after another moment's thought. "We need to plan how to do it before then."

And so it is decided. It almost makes me wish Maeve brought Kiera with us, the reniclus always having had the ability to maneuver a situation. Alas, her lust for battle led her to our son, Finn.

The feeling of Maeve's fingers running through my mane signals the end of the discussion, it is after all, time for her to sleep.

"Tomorrow will be busy," Maeve muses, "There's quite a bit to do around here."

"By design, I suspect," I whisper back to her, sending a pulse of energy to flip the light switch, Bathing the room in comfortable darkness. "Do sleep well."

"You're here, aren't you?"

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

Where was this kind of thing in my old world? It's mesmerizing, even just the clips that were shown… Wow. The fact that I know it's all real made even the low-fidelity broadcast so much more.

There were a few people highlighted with a talent-show type thing. One was a dancer with a team of birds and I honestly think the TV made it less impressive than it should have been since everything was reduced to visual noise. There was a guy making music with his two raichu only using electricity, that was pretty cool. Another was a woman doing a whole fight-choreography thing with six pokemon, all machoke. The last one though, and the one the recap held on the longest, really caught my attention.

I can even understand why they held on him for so long since ghost-types are seemingly so rare. The man had done a truly jaw-dropping fire show with a lampent. Even through a screen, my first time seeing another ghost felt odd, and It took me a bit to realize it was the way it moved that was bothering me. Maybe it's just my own bias, but bobbing around like that isn't fun. …on third thought, yeah, that's just me preferring smooth motions. Still, it made me wonder if I'd ever get to meet another ghost.

Probably a matter of time, when I think about it.

All of that was swiftly swept aside when the battles were shown, though.

Oh my fuck, the battles. They only showed three, but these are what was held on the longest, with good reason too.

Watching a garchomp go head-to-head with an aggron… Damn. That fight ended with the garchomp being thrown out of the arena when the steel-type—who had been losing—hurled its entire weight at the dragon, both of them shining in swirls of power.

And a crawdaunt masterfully dodging everything the giant spider kept throwing at it, all the while firing very familiar-looking beams of water from its claws? That's just plain cool.

And then seeing that same aggron from before tank fucking lightning, the ampharos fighting it calling down what can only be called an excessively biblical amount of the stuff. Which still wasn't enough, the aggron taking the fight literally one step at a time until the arena exploded. The ground erupting spectacularly.

Amazing.

I'd be disappointed that it cut back to a studio broadcast if I weren't still running the whole thing over in my head.

"That happens every year?" I ask as Weaver keeps flipping through channels.

"Around mid-Autumn, yeah." She responds, seemingly deciding the TV isn't worth flipping through anymore as she turns it off. "I'm hoping I can get Ryuko to take me at some point." Then she flicks an ear, "You know," Weaver turns to the bookshelf, tapping her chin in thought, "Maybe I should go look for those tapes myself."

"Uh, yeah. Not to sound ungrateful but that is half the reason I-" I cut myself off as I feel Espeon bolt from one side of the building to right back in front of the next door down.

Weaver and I share a look, "Any idea what that's about?" My semi-feline friend asks.

"What did you say was through that-" I scan my memory and want to slap myself. "He's standing in front of the office door, so I'm going to assume he knows something we don't."

"Ryuko is probably done with whatever they had to talk about." Weaver assesses. "And I'm hoping Espeon isn't just using Ryu for some psychic thing."

"What do you mean?" I ask.

"You haven't been watching them, but he changes when he gets near her," Weaver murmurs. "Come to think of it, there was supposed to be some stuff on espeons Katie left around here." She continues, eyes narrowing as she looks around.

As Weaver locks onto a stack of papers left on the only table in the room, there's a yelp and my eyes move back to the doorway, landing on a blonde, red-eyed woman in plain pajamas. "Oh hey, there she is." Weaver's voice is flat, but glancing at her I can see she's smirking even as she grabs the papers.

There's some shock and surprise but no fear as the apparent 'Katie' pinches the bridge of her nose, muttering, "Too damned tired for this." Then louder, "Weaver, you know you're not supposed to bring wilds in here, right?"

"To be frank, we don't know the natural range of any ghost-types." Says the voice that caught me off guard earlier as Onaga steps into view around the blonde woman. "Eight kilometers isn't even that large of a range for most scavengers. Or predators."

"You're saying the base is in her… its- whatever, the ghost's normal range?" The person I'm still going to assume is Katie until proven otherwise asks, looking to her right.

Onaga has a concerningly similar smirk on her face to another I've seen a lot recently as she steps into the room, followed directly by Espeon. "She's saying that we don't know what a 'normal' range is, but we're fairly certain the true-ghosts can fall under the definition of both predator and scavenger." The ranger says, walking over to Weaver.

"And beyond that," Says the ranger I don't have a name for, stepping into view, "How would we stop something invisible that can move through solid matter? Without resorting to guard pokemon, I mean."

Katie stares at the other woman blankly for maybe a bit too long, slowly blinking several times before she throws her hands up, "Okay, whatever. I haven't slept enough for this and I need to wake up enough before things start happening." She half grumbles, trudging up the corridor.

The unnamed ranger—who I just noticed has quite a few chevrons and a globe on her sleeve—watches the blonde leave with a thoughtful look on her face. "You weren't exaggerating." She says after long enough that I'm pretty sure Katie left the hall. "You said both of them are hitting their limit?"

"Yeah." Responds Onaga, with a frown. "Tonight's probably a bit worse for her than normal, but she obviously liked having a third operator. Barry's doing a better job of keeping a lid on it, but I've known him long enough to read the signs."

The other ranger nods, "I imagine that's going to be a common theme through most bases." She sighs, "Well, we'll see what the Union does to try and fix it soon enough. I'm going to go check on Blake before heading back to the local police." She starts moving down the hall, "You have a good rest of your night," She calls.

Turning myself back to the others in the room, I see Weaver reading through whatever she found with a look of bewilderment on her face. Onaga and Espeon on the other hand, are looking at me. The ranger with curiosity, if the taste is anything to go by.

"Stop doing that." Espeon suddenly says with authority, prompting Onaga to look at him. He hunches down when she does.

"I don't think they can help it, Patchy." Weaver comments, then frowns as she glances at Espeon, "Maybe Patches works better? Eh, I'll think about it, but you can't think Charlie is worse than me."

Espeon doesn't respond, simply turning his eyes on Onaga before his ears droop at her expression. The woman is concerned, probably for him, her brow furrowed.

Then she glances at me again before looking at Weaver, "As much as I'm sure you like having a friend over, they shouldn't be here overnight, okay?" At the dark weasel's distracted nod, Onaga nods back, "Right, it's getting late and I still need a shower. You three have fun. And you," The ranger points at Weaver, "Try to Make Espeon feel welcome." With that said, She stalks—and it is a stalk—out of the room.

Weaver sighs, putting the stack of papers down, "So, You're not messing with Ryuko, are you?" She asks the lilac cat.

"Me? Why aren't you asking them?" He retorts, pointing a paw at me.

Instead of responding herself, Weaver just raises an eyebrow. At me.

Okay then, if that's how she wants it. "Because I was up-front about what I eat, and that I'm only taking cast-offs after the fact. And probably because I've shared some sensitive things with her, too." The cat's eyes widen a bit when I say 'eat'.

Weaver makes a there-you-have-it gesture at me, "Charlie made an effort to be friendly, even if they're weird about some things," She tells the psychic. "And they don't seem like they're purposefully avoiding something. Anymore."

Espeon stares at Weaver, he almost looks uncomprehending, "I see. And no, I'm not doing anything to the human." The monotone is back.

"Good!" Weaver smiles. "So what are you doing, then?"

Espeon is silent for a long moment, "Nothing," He says, and I almost want to roll my eyes as he gives us a blank look.

Never mind, I do roll my eyes, "Okay, sure. Anyway," I say, turning to Weaver, "You mind if I head out? Because this has been fun, but I've been avoiding things I need to think about."

The pokemon I'm addressing gives me a questioning look, before glancing between Espeon and me. Then she shrugs, "You go do your thing, Smokey. I've got to take care of him anyway." She says, prompting Espeon to focus on her.

"I can take care of myself." He… insists? I can't tell.

"Uh-huh." Weaver remains unconvinced. "Ryu asked all the wrong questions earlier. Have you ever even had to hunt for yourself?" Weaver asks him.

"…No," Espeon admits, slowly.

Weaver waves an arm at me in a shooing motion as she struts past Espeon to the door, "Right, Ryuko asked me to make you feel welcome, so come on."

That seems to surprise the three-eyed cat, as he blinks a few times before cautiously steeping after the feathered feline. Leaving me alone in the room.

I can see a bit of what Weaver meant about Espeon now. He's odd, and I can definitely tell what she meant by 'he changes.'

Anyway, I orient myself in the general direction of my house and drift up and out through the wall.

It's past time to think about some things.



Edit: Once again, ptbptb proves that I should build a psycho-shrine to him in my basement by catching literally this first word of the chapter.
 
Last edited:
First word of the chapter, that was rather unfortunate. :p
Should be "your".
I'm up way later than I should be, I check this just to see if anything has happened, and I read this.
Jesus Christ, how can I catch 99% of my typos, and have literally the first word be a misspelling.

When I'm done uploading all these I'm going to take a week and just binge trash-fic, try and make myself feel better about missing things like that.

Thanks for catching it.
 
I love the out-of-context knowledge that Charlie has, it's going to be either a very funny moment, or an incredibly dramatic one when they show off that Misdreavus does in fact have an evolution. One that is actually notably powerful by two-stage standards, and with some interesting lore.
 
Chapter 15
AN: I was up way too late last night, so I didn't bother reading through this one last time before posting.
Enjoy.



This might be the most relaxing thing I've found so far. Just drifting above a sea of trees, no tastes or disturbances on my extra senses, feeling the wind pass through my only mildly tangible body. I can see for miles, and not for the first time I'm struck by how compact the cities I can see are.

And I just remembered some of the questions I had for Weaver. Ah well, not like I won't get another chance later.

I'm floating higher than normal right now, higher than I've ever done before. It's peaceful, serene even, as I let my eyes roam over everything. The mountains in the distance are beautiful, I'd even say breathtaking if that applied to me anymore.

Turning my gaze farther up, I see the moon, it's similar, but not the same as the one from my old world. It's the first full moon I've seen since arriving here, and I'm now convinced magic is entirely real. I can feel the moonlight, feel its power soaking into me, healing me. It feels comforting in a way I've never felt before.

I'm on the final stretch to my cabin now, so there's no point holding it off any longer. I make gravity affect me, and I start drifting downwards. I don't know how much I weigh now, but it isn't a lot.

Landing on the roof of my house I give one last look at the sky before descending into the building. Once I'm fully inside, I phase into the not-space.

So, the thing I've been ignoring all day. It started when Marshal made that offhand comment and I couldn't help diving into it.

I'd had so many questions building in the background and that just added to them: Why are my thoughts so much more insistent? So much louder? Why are my memories almost the same as they've always been, except that I can tell when I can't remember something? Why when the memory fails do I know what I'm filling in? Why does my memory have functions that a normal human's doesn't?

I'd already answered those questions, I just hadn't internalized it. Then I remembered what Weaver said last night, about her evolution, and it hit me.

My brain, if what I have now can even be called that, isn't the same as before. I knew I was a ghost, a misdreavus, I'd even panicked over it when I first woke up. Then after Marshal made that comment it finally, truly hit me that I'm not human and…

Nothing.

No panicking, no feeling of vertigo, no emotional outburst. Nothing.

The fact I didn't break down was and is stressing me out more than the thing I thought would've left me a mess. And what makes it worse is that I don't know if it's me or something new because I wasn't that prone to freaking out as a human. Fuck, I don't think I was even panicking when being stabbed to death, just tired and- I'm not going keep thinking about that. I might be starting to not feel as… honestly, I still don't know how I feel about it, but I'm not ready to focus on that particular memory.

And, in the end, Marshal was right when she pulled me out of my spiral, I still feel like me. I still have all my memories and they are, in fact, easier to parse through now.

The ones from when I was human are relatively normal, I am, however, certain they aren't degrading further, so that's nice. While the memories I've been gaining since dying, on the other hand, are clear but incomplete. Though they're rather easy to reconstruct fully, even if it takes a bit to go through them.

And yet I still don't know why and how I can make them 'sticky.' It's definitely a pokemon thing, but I've got no other ideas on that front.

I sigh, the sound oddly flat in the empty not-space. I shouldn't dwell on all this, I know I shouldn't, it's a surefire way to end up screaming at the walls again. What else happened today?

Oh yeah. I have the being in two places at once thing, and I'm still just mostly confused on that one. I think what looks like me is just something I'm moving. Except that I can feel through it, see, hear, smell, all that stuff. What really struck me about that, though, is that I don't think I would have noticed if Marshal hadn't destroyed my second body. It feels entirely natural to me, it's just… my body. But apparently, it's not.

I try to move back to what I think might be my 'actual' body, and- I can't? I can't even feel it anymore, but I know it's still near me, somewhere. Or maybe it's part of me?

I miss my mirror, it was nice to be able to stare at myself while wondering about this stuff. It's fine though, I choose to believe I'll get a new one at some point.

Hmm, what was next? Right, there's the taste thing that I only realized when Leaf leaned into me.

When do I go from tasting the broad outer emotions to everything underneath? It isn't touch, since I don't need to be touching Marshal, though she might be an outlier given the sheer saturation around her.

Hmm, you know, I think Onaga of all people gave me the start of an answer: Active-feeding. That's still not everything, of course, as I'm nearly certain that even when I'm tasting the undercurrents I'm still only taking what's shed.

Mmm… I'll have to figure that out when I can find someone who'll let me try something.

Which puts me back to thinking about Weaver. Since she's the only person I've met that I'd call a real friend at this point and the only person I feel even slightly comfortable asking these kinds of questions.

Except now I'm on this whole series of trains of thought about me and my body and I can't help thinking: Did she change when she evolved?

Granted, we only met three times before then. First when Onaga came out to take a look at me, then when she came to see me two days later, and finally when the signs were put up.

I think she changed? But as she said, it didn't change her so much as how attentive she seemed.

I blink. That's good, I think? But it makes me wonder how much my body affected and affects my thinking. 'Probably more than I would like' sounds about right.

Oh. Now that I think of it again, evolution is still a thing that can happen to me, isn't it? Fuck. How about I just deal with it if it comes up. After all, it can't be a bad thing, right?

Right?

But what if- I need to get out of my head.

Checking around, I don't see anything to worry about, so I transition back to real-space. I had wanted to work on this place, so it's time to make a list.

***​

The walls need fixing, cleaned, and either re-sealed or painted. The glass door needs fully replaced, and the front door, too. The roof is in surprisingly good condition—meaning it only needs a slight amount of a lot of work—and the ceiling crawlspace is nasty, but at least it isn't leaking down. The floor is, of course, a lost cause and needs new flooring over the foundation. Of the several gouges made in the doors, walls, and trimming when the tourists decided to be assholes, I've already 'fixed' most of them. And thinking of trimming, everything at floor level needs to be replaced.

The kitchen is in better condition, having been more isolated from the elements. The countertops are fine, just need to work on the floor and exterior walls. And paint, can't forget that.

The bedroom is in great condition, truthfully. Walls and floor again.

The balcony… I'm shocked it's still attached. The whole thing needs rebuilt.

But what I'm most surprised by is the condition the foundation is in. Truly, it's in a surprisingly good state for an old stone-and-mortar foundation on a building with no gutters, but it's not the first time I've seen something like it happen. I got lucky with that.

Overall? A fixer-upper, but one I can see working out well. No idea where I'll get what I need though.

Also, I hadn't realized how useful seeing inside things would be. I'm starting to give off more not-light for whatever reason, so all I need to do to check a wall, section of floor, singular board, anything really, is to float up to it and focus. I don't think it's the most accurate view but I can at least tell that the whole west wall needs re-enforced. Some of those two-by-sixes and four-by-tens—wow, I'd say overkill but they've obviously held up—inside the walls need to be replaced.

Also, those larger lumber dimensions can't be standard, right? Then again, if the material was locally sourced- Eh, I'm not being paid to think of those kinds of things anymore.

I look back at the fireplace and the scars of the uncontrolled fire that evidently happened there at some point. It's the reason most of the floor and some of the west wall need replacing. The open fire plan and relatively small brick shielding and arch go a long way to explaining what happened. If- When I get to that point of fixing this place, I'm getting an enclosed stove. They're just better.

What was I thinking about? Right, actually acquiring things. Something else to ask Weaver about.

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

Darkness. Everywhere I turn, only the vague impressions of shapes.

Trying to move is like wading through quicksand. But I need to! I- I need to? Why?

There was something right over there just a moment ago, wasn't there?

It had looked like-

"Weav." Something pokes me, cold and sharp. Familiar.

"Mmghh, slp," I say, batting at the offending appendage as everything starts going gray.

I hear a snickering, and some part of me knows I don't want what's about to happen. Grudgingly, I listen to it.

Opening my eyes, I see a pair of gold irises looking down from a fur-covered face, the back of a frost-coated claw held a short distance from my stomach.

"Weaver." I greet, half-smiling at her usual behavior.

"Vile." She supplies, backing the claw off.

I turn my head to see the clock at the end of the room. Oh-five-forty.

Sighing, I lightly shove Weaver off myself and watch her make a show of trying to regain her balance as I stand and stretch.

"Eeon." That makes me pause, my mind taking a second to catch up to yesterday.

"Espeon." I greet with a yawn, glancing to the end of the bed.

He looks tired, though not in the same way as when I first saw him. That should get better once the sun is up.

Looking around the rest of the barracks, I can see I'm the first up, as usual. Most of the pokemon are awake, though unlike my partner they're content to let the others sleep a bit longer.

I quietly make my way to the door, my two partners falling in step behind me, Weaver with her normal confidence and Espeon with less certainty.

Passing by the operations room, I give a wave to a bored-looking Katie.

"Is it morning already?" She asks, glancing at the room's digital clock. "Oh. You mind grabbing me a bowl of cereal?"

"Sure. Toasts, granola, puffs, or bran?" I reply.

She seems to have an internal debate before, "Bran. With some granola."

I nod, resuming my walk down the hall. On reaching the kitchen, I grab a glass and a bowl before Weaver hands me the box of bran flakes.

"Still enjoying that new dexterity, huh?" I say looking at her. She's already going for the granola as well. She doesn't verbally answer, giving me a bright smile as she hands me the box. "Thanks."

"Alright, planning time. Espeon," I say, looking at the pokemon in question as I go for the milk, "You need to be seen by an actual pokemon clinic." His ears droop. "I know, but we need to be sure. So we're going to drop you off on my jog." He doesn't look enthused, but he still nods. "Before then, I'm going to find the reading tapes and Weaver can help you start learning while I work on weights." Both my partners nod. "Now, before we get started," I say, pouring milk into the glass I'd readied, "If either of you are hungry, eat now. I'm only going to have a light snack before I get started."

Espeon gives Weaver a nervous look. My best friend sighs, rolling her eyes as she walks to the fridge where we keep pokemon food. They'll be fine. After Grabbing a spoon, I quickly pour a bit from both cereal boxes into the bowl, before putting them away. Picking up the cup and bowl, I head to the operations room.

"Hey, thanks," Katie says when I present her the food. "Sorry if I was a bit grouchy earli- uh, last night."

"Don't be." I wave her off. "You're working harder than you should need to, we all understand."

Katie doesn't respond, merely nodding as she digs into her meal.

Heading to the storage room, I make a quick detour to the laundry and snag a clean sports bra. And it doesn't take me long to find the literacy tapes buried under a few movies we haven't touched in ages.

After returning to the kitchenette, I set the small stack down on the table. "Here they are you two," I tell the pokemon, both of whom have opted for what look like magikarp fillets. They glance at the stack and then at me before returning to their food, although Weaver seems to be throwing the occasional glance at Espeon.

A light snack of granola and water later, I'm in the rec room, my partners having already started the lessons.

Moving through various stretches of my legs, spine, chest, and arms, I'm in a toe hold as I watch Weaver pause the video to explain something again. Her attitude on Espeon shifted rather fast last night after I saw her reading the info I'd left out, so I'm a bit more optimistic about them getting along now. Mmm, enough stretching, time for the weights.

Deciding to make today about endurance, I only set the weight to one hundred kilos.

***​

"You're going to be late for your run," Karlos comments from the doorway, a yawn escaping him as he finishes.

"Hmm?" I query, standing from my cooldown stretches. "What time is it?"

"Seven-fifteen." He says.

"That's plenty of time," I tell him, making my way out the door.

"You scare me sometimes." He chuckles. "At least you put that drive towards something good."

"Why wouldn't I?" I step past him, moving towards the locker room and showers.

"I'll have the usual ready when you get back." He says behind me, and I give him a thumbs up over my head.

While quickly rinsing under cold water, I realize that Karlos never came back last night. Good for him, he deserves to spend time with his family. Moving out of the showers, I pull on some civvies, though I still use my work boots and clip my radio to my belt. The first because they're practical, the second because I'm leaving the base while not on leave.

As I exit the lockers, I find both Weaver and Espeon are waiting outside the door.

"You two ready?" I ask them. Receiving two nods.

"Wea."

Affirmation.

"Okay. Like I said, we're headed to a clinic. I'm going to say…" I think about it, giving Espeon a once over. "Vientown Central Pokemon Clinic, since they're an all-hours clinic." I nod. "I can carry you if you want, Espeon?"

The pokemon shakes his head. Negation.

He's going to collapse, but it's his choice. "Okay. If you have issues, let me know," I say.

"Esper."–Affirmation.

"Good. Let's get to it." I say pushing the door to the lobby open, beginning my 'jog' towards town.

I'm not surprised when Espeon falters shortly after reaching the north road. He's too skinny and a psychic to boot. Though I wouldn't have known that second part before last night.

Strain. Urgency. He doesn't say anything. He can't, not with how hard he's panting. So I turn around, scoop him up, and continue.

Regret. Strain. Gratitude. P_i*,– He informs me empathically, panting against my shoulder.

"This is why I'm taking you to a clinic," I tell him. "And why I asked if you wanted carried."

Acceptance. Regret.

Given what just happened, I increase my pace to a sprint and reach the clinic quickly.

It's a large, cream-colored building near the center of town, plain-fronted and three stories tall. Anybody from a League country would think it's just a hospital, which it is, just not for humans.

Coming to a stop, I reposition Espeon before walking in. One of the women I vaguely recognize at the front desk giving me a double-take, while the other seems to immediately pin me as an off-duty ranger.

"Is this an emergency?" The one who caught on asks. Her name tag says 'Tanya.'

"No," I reply, gently setting Espeon down. He wobbles slightly but stands. "Dropping off a potential partner for a check-up."

"Okay, I assume no known history, then?" She asks, already grabbing a clipboard and several papers.

"Yeah," I tell her, and she sets most of the paper aside.

"Right, I'm betting you know the drill, too." I nod and she hands me the forms. Authorization of release, authorization of records, statement of ranger authority. The standards.

"He's not registered yet," I tell the woman after signing. "I'll need a statement of safety, and of consent, too." She nods, and, after trailing over a few sorting boxes, hands me the last two.

"A wild Espeon?" The second woman, whose tag reads 'Zera' asks.

"No." I do my best to prevent more questions with my tone. They both seem to take the hint. "You're alright with being looked at and treated without me here?" I ask Espeon, glancing down at him. "I'll need visual confirmation."

Espeon nods. Reluctance. Understanding. Affirmation.

I glance at the receptionists, who both nod in turn. "Okay, good."

With that, I pass the forms back. "I'll get them taken to our waiting area." The second receptionist says, standing to step out of the station. "Will you come with me? It shouldn't be longer than ten minutes." She asks Espeon.

He glances at me, then back at the woman before nodding once and carefully stepping after her.

Beginning my jog back to base, I'm a little surprised to hear Fran's voice over my radio, "Short-range test. Repeat, short-range test. Am I coming through okay?"

"Loud and clear," I respond. "Are you receiving?"

"Yes, all clear. Changing to relay test." He says, the line falling silent for a moment. "Vientown relay test. Repeat, Vientown relay test. Can you hear me?"

"I can. Receiving?"

"Crystal clear."

"I thought you were headed back to the academy today?" I ask, checking to see if Weaver is still behind me. She isn't, oh well.

"I am," Fran says. "Katie figured I should at least do a manual comms test before I leave, and you're always out jogging around now."

I don't sigh, merely dropping the conversation as I make my way back to base.

"Karlos says your breakfast is ready." …I decide to increase my speed a bit.

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

I'm getting that feeling from when I first tried using Moves again. Like I'm missing something that's right in front of me. I can see the emotions, even taste them, but I can't get my psychic-whatever to interact with the fucking things.

Espeon was moving a massive amount of emotions around and I can't even manage a… whatever you'd use to measure them. It's frustrating, but not all that surprising. I'm not psychic despite having psychic powers.

And voice powers?

Oh, and ghost powers now, too. How many things can one pokemon do, exactly? The four-move limit is clearly not a thing.

Deciding it's time to stop trying this for now, I pull my cloud in and let myself enjoy the taste of fear. I still don't know why it tastes so good, but I don't care at the moment as I return to normal reality.

I'm so fucking bored.

What do I have to do all day, and all night now, too? Practice with my new powers? Sure, that's one thing, but it gets monotonous fast. Go looking for food? Great, but unless I feel like engaging with someone that mostly involves drifting around unseen, picking up spare emotions along the way.

And, sure, Marshal visits every few days and there are friendly enough people to talk to out here, but those are only occasional things. I have so much time and nothing to do with it. Maybe- I'm sitting in the open while I do this, aren't I? Wasn't I about to do something else?

God, I'm so fucking bored.

May as well try the ghost thing now. Leaving my cabin, I see a few grass-types on the north edge of the clearing. They do that sometimes, so I ignore them. Instead, focusing on the new-old feeling of what I think is ghost stuff, I bring it to a single point to get a feel-

And it explodes with a quiet 'thup', dragging me towards the blast. That wasn't what I expected. Does it dragging me closer make it an implosion? Except there's a small crater from the explosion… Weird.

Let's try that with less focus. Shaping the forces into a sphere works if I create it over a wider area, which leaves me with a small orb flickering with ____, red, ____, and teal light.

…Wait a second, what? I blink and rub my eyes. Nope, still those nameless colors. In the real world. From something I just made.

What the fuck did I just make? Um, and does it do anything? Can I make it stop changing colors?

It feels unstable for some reason- No, that's not right. It feels like it's losing stability, so I'm going to try stabilizing it. Adding just a small amount of constant power to it, it stops flickering, the colors shifting to start cycling through red, blue, teal, and green. And now it feels empty? It's like I need to add something else…

I should try launching it at the ground first, I guess?

It, uh, flashes and disappears. Okay, at this point I'm pretty sure this is going to be well outside my previous mortal—and now post-mortal—experience. At least it gives me something new to do.

▲▲▲

▼▼▼​

"One of the trail guides just reported several downed trees along the lower Leol trail," Katie's tired voice says, nearly making me lose my count of the budew in the area.

I finish counting and note where and how many down before responding, "I'm about eight minutes away from the cliffs right now. Is it an immediate problem?"

"For us? I doubt it, but the guide says they can't easily go over or around them. And you know how some people can be." The operator responds, not quite cutting off her sigh. "You're in the area though, so could you help him out?"

"No one on a runner is close enough?" I check.

"No. Emil could probably be there in fifteen minutes, but he's scrubbing the showers right now."

"Yeah, tell the guide I'm on the way, then," I reply, stowing my notepad as I quickly orient myself. Snapping my fingers to get Weaver's attention, I beckon her with a gesture before setting off at a light jog. "Did he say if he knew why the trees fell?"

There's some silence as Katie presumably checks with the guide. "They were chewed down." She finally answers.

Bidoof or bibarel then, though more likely bidoof if the trees haven't been moved. Either way, I probably won't be moving them either.

I slow down when there's a flash to my left, bright enough to be concerning. And taking stock of where I am, that had to be the misdreavus' doing.

I share a look with Weaver, "Do you think that's something to be worried about?" I ask her. She shrugs.

We both try looking through the trees to where the ghost's den can be made out. Misdreavus is hanging in the center of the clearing in front of the old building, impossibly still. Then they start moving again, a glowing sphere of energy appearing and being launched at the ground, flashing briefly again. The pokemon seems to huff, then go still again.

I can't be sure if there's a purpose behind what they're doing, but it seems harmless enough. After a glance down at Weaver has her shrugging again as well, I decide to leave well enough alone. Instead, I keep heading for the first bend in the cliffs.

Hmm, I should note the misdreavus on the population survey. Reaching the cliffs, I stop and do just that, noting only one member.

Glancing down the cliff face, I briefly consider jumping down here but choose to keep moving along the top of the south-running cliffs.

It's only a few minutes later that I see the beach-bound group below me, on their way back along the trail. So I decide to head down now, landing a good distance away from the group. Who's the guide? Ah, Richard.

Rich is a good guy, he's a volunteer rather than an employee of the city, and he does this because he enjoys helping out. He also makes sure to listen at the meetings leading up to tourist season, which is great because not everyone does. And I'm including myself, there.

"Rich." I greet him as I near the group, "They decided not to wait?"

The man makes to respond before one of the others beats him to it, "No, thank you very much. And I don't understand why you don't keep these paths cleared!" The woman snaps.

I give her a glancing once over. The over-done nails and hair are all I need to see. "Because I was doing my job," I say, coolly. When she looks like she's about to say something else, I continue, "And my job isn't to please you, it's to make sure the area stays healthy. In all likelihood, I won't be moving the fallen trees. Or cutting them, or whatever it is you thought I should do." I tell her, feeling Weaver growing colder behind me. "Keep them out of trouble, Rich," I say, turning to the man himself. "I'm going to go take a look."

"Will do." He confirms with a two-fingered salute.

I nod, and start moving before any of the rest of them try to engage me in an argument.

The trees end up being a few minutes jog farther down the path, past the old Emmer's Fall bridge. Which I stop to take a look at, as it's still a nice sight. The bridge itself is old pokemon-work, slick, smooth stone with arched, half-meter walls stretched across a wide river, rough stairs carved haphazardly out of it. Emmer's Fall looks as majestic as ever, A white churn rolling off the top of the cliffs and into the bowl below, feeding half the river. I also remind myself that I'll need to check Inside Emmer's Cave for the population survey.

Before I can turn back to the path and step off the bridge, a head pops out of the water. "Ebui?" The eevee questions.

"I'm checking the path down this way," I answer what I assume the question was. "Trying to evolve?"

"Eeve," They nod and dip back below the water.

I turn my head to look back down the path since I can see the trees from here. That's a barricade, plain and simple. Oh, they look like fallen trees, but they're too big for this part of the forest and placed too close together to be a coincidence.

Making my way over, I step off the path to see chewed ends. Obviously a bibarel's work, the teeth marks are too big for a bidoof. I look down across the trees to see that they still have most of their branches and foliage.

This is clearly meant to stop, or at least slow, human passage. Why? Yes, the tourists are annoying, but to a pokemon? Relatively harmless.

Except I have a bad feeling about something else that happened recently. Especially considering that there aren't any other rivers close enough for the bibarel to care save the one on this side of the half-wall.

I unhook my radio, "Katie, the fallen trees on the Leol trail were put here, likely by bibarel. I'm going to keep heading down the trail and try to figure out why."

After half a minute without a response, I decide to start walking. When Weaver starts walking in front of me, I know something's up. The air around her is frosting, her steps leaving patches of ice behind us.

I learn why when we reach Nabiki Beach. It's a scenic little spot, trees giving way to a small stretch of white sand, the cliffs continuing past to bend slightly where I know the entrance to Nabiki cave is. And there's a large pokemon and its recent catch sitting at the center of the beach.

I don't approach on seeing the pokemon, opting to hang back and report, "Katie when was the last time anyone checked Nabiki?" I ask in a low voice.

Her response is fast this time, "I'd need to check the records, but probably sometime last winter." There's a long pause, "Sorry. Why are you asking?"

"There's a samurott here. Relatively small, likely juvenile, and very sick looking."

"That's very strange. Sorry again, I can't focus on you right now, Maya is dealing with something in the central forest." The line goes dead.

That leaves me to keep watching the non-native pokemon. Samurott are rare, even in Unova, so seeing one here is a shock. It also means the bibarel likely blocked the path to protect anybody trying to head to the beach.

The pokemon is unhealthy-looking. Cracked armor, split scales, bruises, frayed whiskers, and a distinct lack of fat layer point to a lack of self-care and food. But the look in their eyes is proud and defiant. And they can evidently feed themselves since they're currently eating the remains of a wailmer with an unhappy look on their face.

The samurott sniffs the air, turning their head towards Weaver and me. I don't make the mistake of quickly backing off, since that could make them think I don't belong here, instead I make smooth motions as I turn my radio off and unhook my RED.

Samurott watches me, making no move to rise as their gaze passes between Weaver and me. Then they slowly take another bite of the carcass. That's good, it means they aren't readying for a fight. I glance at Weaver myself and see that she's not ready to freeze something anymore. That's also good.

"Samurott," I begin, and their eyes sharpen on me, "I'm not here to start a fight, or to try and harass you. I'm going to do something to get my feelings across, and then I'm going to ask if I can come closer." I say, all in a calm, unhurried voice.

Samurott continues to watch me, blinking nictitating membranes once. "Rott" They nod after several moments of stillness.

Okay, now, from what I remember samurott are proud, so I need to focus more on being open and friendly rather than concerned or trying to help. I won't be able to put them out of my mind, but I don't want those to be the main feelings.

I hold the trigger, the enervating feeling washing over me, and after two seconds I see Samurott blink. Moment of truth. "Is it okay if I come closer?" I ask the small, for their species—and still rather large, pokemon.

They seem conflicted for a moment, eyes moving between me, the carcass, and the horizon a few times before they nod. "Rottur." They say, chucking their chin to beckon me closer.

"Okay." I sigh, turning my radio back on and stepping closer. "I'm back on Katie, I just needed to keep things calm for a bit." There's no reply.

"How did you get here?" I ask who I'm starting to think is a 'her.'

She snorts, raising a claw to point behind her to Nabiki Cave. Following her claw I can now see a small transport boat, floating in the high tide at the mouth of the cave.

I also see an awful lot of what looks like dried blood.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top