Little Leavanny In The Big City [Pokémon, Reincarnation/Light SI]

Zoru, you make a great fic. I love it. Leah is adorable and Leaf is hilarious. Little Leavanny is so good and and you update so much I'm constantly checking to see if you've posted.

Can't wait to see how Leah does against pansear.
I see it going two ways: cooked bug or burnt but alive bug. Not optimal either way. I'm not too sure Burgh could manage to get past Chili without any water types, since Fire beats bug, and Fire also beats grass and that means it has quadruple type advantage over Leah.

On the plus side, if we're going with BW1 teams, Pansear is the big roadblock. Lilpup only should have bite as an offensive move, and Bug resists Dark.

I wouldn't be surprised if Chili's team got expanded + buffed, though!
 
Zoru, you make a great fic. I love it. Leah is adorable and Leaf is hilarious. Little Leavanny is so good and and you update so much I'm constantly checking to see if you've posted.

Can't wait to see how Leah does against pansear.

Thank you so much! These comments mean a lot!

Fire beats bug, and Fire also beats grass and that means it has quadruple type advantage over Leah.

Leah's dealt with fire at least once, though it will be fun to see how she and Leaf handle the different situation.

Love the comments! 🥰
 
Chapter 56 - Intimidated
~~~ Chapter 56 - Intimidated ~~~​

I tried to force a few leaves in my mouth, but they just would not dissolve. Not that I could tell, anyway: my tongue was numb. The waiter came, and removed our bowls of gross juice from the table. No one tried to force Leaf to eat, at least. I picked at the bowl of salad momentarily, before a new bowl, one with what seemed to be water, was placed in front of us. I drank that up, swallowing whatever was remaining in my mouth.

It was a while of us two just sitting there, under our dinner sunlamps, relaxing, when the numbness in my stomachs began to fade, and sound and scent began to return, if a bit muted. There were no clocks on the walls. No moving arms to tell how much time had passed. Not that I would be able to read it, mind. A red light flashed at Lanky and Kate's table. Lanky picked up the device and pressed a button, called out Leaf's name, "Fidget." Leaf jumped up and joined our trainer at his side.

Lanky called my name, though his voice was soft, almost trembling. I stood up, and waltzed over to him as Leaf disappeared in a flash of red light. Lanky took my shoes off, setting them down on his chair. Muffled, though I could hear Kate say softly "Good Luck!" He gave her a thumbs-up, then wiped his forehead with a napkin.

I looked up, noted him poking the pokeball on his waist. I could hear him mouthing, "sorry", before I, too, disappeared in a flash of light. I could hear a few shouts from the fight, but I didn't actually get to hear what was going on, despite the muffled sound of the announcer, the speakers bouncing around managed to come through both my numbness and the pokeball.

"The contestant and Chili have agreed—submission, recall, or ring out. Two pokemon versus two pokemon!" Which was a relief for me. I wasn't too worried. The announcer continued: "Will this be a routine battle, or will it be a show!?! We all know Chili always aims to please!"

Then it hit me. The dude's title was chili, as in, chili pepper. He had red hair. He's the fire-type member of the Striaton Gym leaders! I thought, kicking myself for letting the detail slip. Which meant… Which meant, the numbness of the chocolate would come in handy.

There was a minor gasp from the speakers. "Artemus' Leavanny pins Chili's rockruff to the ground with complete ease!"

As expected, I thought to myself. If Leaf could pin me down, a stupid ground-type puppy should be a cakewalk for him. Obviously. How I wished I could have been outside the pokeball to watch, though. He was probably riding high. I relished the feeling, the nostalgia of pinning that first rockruff to the ground with such ease.

"It seems, Artemus' reputation precedes him! Chili recalls Rockruff and… replaces her with… Arcanine!" The announcer practically spat that last word. "Looks like the two have agreed to put on a show! Artemus recalls his first leavanny, aaand"

Wait wha—I couldn't even finish the thought before I found myself under the bright stage lights, stared down by a massive arcanine, their fuzzy mane waving in the nonexistent wind, staring me down. Did it expect to intimidate me, a bug? Well, it fucking worked on me.

"--anny for his other leavanny! Leah! The dancer everyone's seen. Ah! I see now! We were mistaken. Artemus actually, double-checking these notes, it seems, already has one badge, the Nacrene City badge! Simisear would be too easy, and we're told Leah is quite the capable gal! How will she and Artemus handle this?"

I could hear quieter tones of Lanky speaking, but clearly not to me. Chili's mouth moved, across from me. I barely steel myself in time, Arcanine turns into a complete blur before me, blasting not into my frontside, but slams into my back, knocking me to Chili, three fourths across the ring. Arcanine was massive, easily more than twice my height and mass! The damn dog could probably carry adult humans! Bigger than fucking wolves! How the hell was I supposed to handle that!?!

"String Shot!" Lanky said.

"Ember!" Chili said.

Wait, that's like, tier one fire!?! I thought. It was a performance. They just wanted something interesting. For the dinner guests! And if it used a strong move, I'd probably just die. I thought, as spurts of flames shot my direction.

"Looks like Leah's a bit slow to respond! Could this be a side effect of the Occa Berry?" The announcer asked. I spun, side stepping each lazily-emit flame sliding through the air toward me. I wasn't free of the numbness yet, not enough to feel the vibrations in my abdomen responding to the other pokemon's power use, anyway. Pressure in my mouth built, and I took a shot. I wanted to aim for the legs, but Arcanine was too fast. There was no way I could actually rope them around. Not without the… sun. I aimed for its face and mane, hoping the goop would stick and distract the pokemon enough so that I could land a blow.

Would I be able to…? I thought about the anger, how bright the sun would be? The lights above were causing my leaves to photosynthesize via my Chlorophyll ability.

"The string lands! And Arcanine isn't too happy about it! Leah's silk is extra goopy! It would probably stick any pokemon to the ground!" the announcer stated.

But it wasn't enough, I thought, as Arcanine disappeared and then reappeared behind me, again. This time sending me flying back toward Lanky.

"Arcanine and Chili seem to be playing with their food!" the announcer added, unhelpfully. Was it just me or did the lights from up above get brighter? Not that I was complaining, mind you. I lost against the ampharos the first time because I took my attention off it.

"Flame…wheel", Chili said. I didn't glance at Chili. I didn't glance at Lanky. I didn't glance at the crowd. I would probably lose against this dog if they decided to take me seriously. But, if they just wanted to toy around? I can work with that, I decided, pulling some mana, splitting it into my four primary limbs as a pair of arcs of flame making their way toward me. It wasn't half-time, I wasn't under the midday sun. But, my mind speeding up under the brightening light as the first arc of flame passed by me, I managed to barely side step it, the second flame forced me to dive out of the way again.

The legendary breed of dog began to blur again. The moment they passed next to me, I took one step, lunged, reached out with pure reflex, and smacked the dog in the fore-legs. They came tumbling down with a quick yelp to my left. I pulled the mana, only partially used after empowering my limbs, coalescing it into my mouth, then held it near the front, ready to snap it and blast them with it, but my opponent was back on their feet already, bounding around the ring—conveniently shifting whenever I drew a bead right in front of them.

Flames dripped from Arcanine's mouth as I waited for them to take their strike, all other sounds drowned out as the world slowed and I waited for their bite of fire to smack me. Come on! I thought at the dog, holding the mana in my mouth, growing more and more annoyed, my abdomen vibrating. Then, a flash of red and black, and the dog bore down on me, and I was pinned on the ground, a small blast of ember dripping onto my midsection, and with a crack, I released a wave of silver, blasting the dog off of me. They yelped in surprise, again, before hopping—out of the ring.

The extra sun lamps that had turned on, flicked off. "Well done! Return, Arcanine!" Chili shouted, the announcer's voice replaced by his. Arcanine, clearly no worse for wear save for a few scuff marks and some disheveled fur bound toward his gym leader's side. A dull, roar of soft claps reminded me—people were watching.

"Leah! Return!" Lanky called, and I looked back toward him, feeling just… a little bit sour. I wandered over to Lanky's side.

That was it?

"Thank you for your patronage! Your pokemon have demonstrated basic competence and keeping their wits about themselves even under a natural type disadvantage with minimal need to shout commands! Fidget's ability to use its advantage over rockruff without overdoing it along with Leah keeping her cool, even against an intimidating opponent…" Chili laughed, Chili and Lanky both took a step down from their podiums, Lanky waving at me to follow him back out to the center, "...has shown you and your team are ready to move up a tier! I hereby declare you worthy for the Striaton City Trio badge!"

I faced down Arcanine, all battle focus and weight of power drained from his form, just staring at me. Approaching, no fire in his eyes. He gave me a sniff, before slobbering all over my face with a single, warm, long-ass lick, lights flashing as both Lanky and Chili shook hands. Lanky accepted the badge, then picked me up and carried me off-stage, a singular light from above following us until we walked off into the black.

Chili's voice then resounded. "Now, for our next challenger for the night, we have Kate! Who is looking for her fifth badge!"

I looked up and saw many small, red blinking lights up above—was that televised?!? With no way of actually verifying my assumption, I just clicked, and turned back, as Lanky and I entered a side passage, passing Sundre—I mean Kate—on our way out the back exit of the building.

I was tossed around and toyed with the entire time! And the one time I got an actually-good hit off, it was over? Just like that? Lanky smiled, holding me up, twirling me in the air of the setting afternoon sun, my antennae each picking up on the release of stress and trepidation. Lanky, after these exclamations, and taking breaths of air to control his excitement—went back to the exit we had come out of and pulled on it. It didn't budge. He sighed, and together, we made the walk of shame back around to the front of the large building.

~~~​

"Calm down you dumb lava moth," Lyra said, taking a puff of the last cigar in the Looker's case, sitting cross-legged on the ground, the volcarona rolling around in the dirt, heaving and struggling under the fading, divine flames. She held in her breath, then let out a puff of smoke. The flames faded, then the moth rolled on their ground, finding their way onto their belly, testing their six orange and black-dotted wings, one by one.

"So," Lyra said, stuffing the cigar into the dirt. Ho-Oh was flying around the nearby region, circling for food while avoiding causing further panic in the awakened being. The moth's face turned toward her, regarding her with its lack of expression. She rolled a piece of coal toward the moth. It waddled over to it, sniffing it before beginning to munch on it. Lyra continued: "I'm not sure what's going through your brain. But, take a moment to think. Some people forget a lot, under Ho-Oh's fire. Other people remember more than they should. I have no idea what it's like for you. This is a fresh start for you. A lucky new chance. Those fires do have a tendency to give a stronger body and a renewed mind, so the next few weeks are going to be particularly important for you. You can take Ho-Oh's gift, and wait for Alder"—volcarona shivered—"to return. He won't recognize you as his, though. I'm not accepting new team members, but you can follow me around for a bit, if you want."

Good, she thought. The volcarona understands some of this.

"Don't think too hard about this," Lyra said, the images of the Looker's face shifting back from their generic detective-face. She shook her head. "Humans brought back from Ho-Oh's flames tend to think they were chosen by Arceus or some bullshit. Ho-Oh and I have no clue what goes through pokemon's heads when this happens. We're all just following our feelings. Nothing more. Gimme a nod if you understand." Volcarona nodded. "Good."

"If you turn around and look back down into the hole I just dug—" Lyra said, pointing at the six-foot deep grave she'd dug up, Volcarona wiggling on all four of its stubby legs to follow her instructions—"in the grave, you'll see the dried out husk of another Volcarona in there. It didn't get carried over in the flame. Sometimes that happens. Fuck if I know what's going on. That half consumed body? Not yours. Not what you are now. What are you? Fuck if I know," she said. Volcarona's whole body just shivered.

"Anyway, that's everything I know. Got it?" Lyra said. Volcarona didn't turn to face her, but she caught its head nodding.

"You're probably still really hungry. I almost starved to death, myself back then. Not everyone's so lucky." Lyra said, pointing to a small pile of coal and a nutri-bar she dropped on the ground.

"Now eat your meal and get out of the way. I need to pack this grave back up," Lyra said. In her mind and soul, she knew everyone deserved a fair chance. Volcarona's wings fluttered, the moth squirming, trying to inch along the ground to get out of her way, nutri-bar in its mouth. She grabbed the shovel, struck it into the accumulated pile of dirt, and began to fill the hole in.

~~~​

Nimbasa City sits on a man-made lake, the beating heart of Unova's center peninsula. To the immediate north of Nimbasa city, is the great Lostlorn Forest. To the south, via Route 4 and Join Avenue, is Castelia City. Between the two largest commercial centers of the region is the massive Unovan desert, easily stretching for a hundred miles north and south. Only the odd river or stream passing through provided greenery. To the east, Route 16 connects Nimbasa to the Marvelous bridge, which leads to White Forest. To the west of Nimbasa city, is Route 5, which leads to the Driftveil Drawbridge, and from there, to Driftveil City and the rest of western Unova.

In the central outcropping of land of Nimbasa's artificial reservoir, the sun began to disappear over the western horizon. Commercial buildings, homes and apartment complexes housing the city's residents and tourists' places of stay, obscured the last visibility of the retreating sun from the sky. To the east, tourists, teens, and young adults percolated from their various summer afternoon activities—summer schools, sports programs, or simply vacationers looking for more to do as the attractions of the north began to close.

The local populace gathered peacefully, yet excitedly in lines, eager to spend their time at the theme park and experience some of the latest additions. As the last of the sun's rays disappeared over the horizon, the crowd went quiet. The sky shifted from blue, to orange, red, then violet. The first edge of the moon peeked over the horizon. The clock struck eight. The crowd's breath continued to hold. Then, from the front gates of the eastern island, housing Nimbasa's famous theme parks and coasters.

A row of teal and purple neon lights turned on and electronic dance music began to play. Every coaster, the ferris wheel, even the movie house began to glow with purple and teal neon. With the first drop of the building bass line, the crowd cheers. The booths then opened, tickets got checked, and people and pokemon began to flood into the newly-renovated park. There was a new gym leader running shows, along with a pair of new coasters and fresh coats of paint across the theme park portions of the city and its attractions in Nimbasa that night.

Outside of the park, away from the crowds and prying eyes, under a shadow too-dark for the early night, Darkrai emerged, paired with his partner. Darkrai stood tall, shadowy legs sticking down to the ground, hands held behind his back as he admired the surrounding area. Cresselia's face bore no trepidation. And yet, as Darkrai began to move forward, she hesitated.
 
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Chapter 57 - Jittering
~~~ Chapter 57 - Jittering ~~~​

Cresselia, after her initial hesitation, looks forward, eying Darkrai's patient and calm demeanor, floating in the shadows, waiting for her with patience. The night was young, and she glided slightly forward, staring at the crowd of humans walking forward, lining up to go through the queues to the Nimbasa theme park. Cresselia's heart buzzed at the excitement of the pokemon and humans which were running as they filtered through the entrance of the park. Her visage shimmered, the form of a twenty-year old woman with pink and yellow hair forming. Unlike her, Darkrai did not bother with using an illusion or transformation. Cresselia holds out her arm, Darkrai lowers himself to her, and they latch arms, before proceeding into the large group of humans, to find out for themselves, no dreams involved, what riding a roller coaster would really be like.

~~~​

The rest of the time in the gym-slash-diner, for me, was pretty uneventful. Leaf tried to wrestle with me again—still twitching from the post-fight high. Looking at Lanky, focused on the fight, and not wanting to potentially cause a public scene, I turned Leaf down, choosing instead to just rest under our sun lamp at our table as Kate's team fought Chili. They had a harder time versus him than Lanky and I did, based on what the announcer said. I felt pretty good when my little skorupi friend came out and the announcer even noted that he was wearing a leafy outfit! I would make more.

"Congrats!" Lanky told Kate when she returned from the battle stage, presenting her new Trio Badge, practically jittering.

"Thank you!" she said, before pulling her krokorok into a big hug, the pokemon responding to her in kind. Lanky looked at me, grabbed my arm and pulled me onto his shoulders, forcing me to shove my leaf-skirt out of the way while she embraced her pokemon. Our trainers retrieved their belongings from the lockers, Leaf was recalled into his pokeball and the four of us left the gym, taking a stroll and enjoying our time as we perused our way to the north of Striaton city. I wrapped my arm around Lanky's head so I could hold still.

"I feel so relieved," Kate said.

"Oh?" Lanky asked. "That's right, you only have three badges left! That's pretty great!" he exclaimed.

"Each gym I beat, it's a huge weight off my shoulders. I'm still a bit worried, though…" she said, her voice trailing off.

"Worried about stalling out?" Lanky asked as we passed a store. He paused. "Actually, I need to pick up some supplies. Leah and Fidget have both been eating more food lately, what I have won't last, even with foraging. These pokesanto nutri-bags of berries outdo natural foraging by miles."

Kate nods, our trainers turning to cross the street. "Yeah, I'm happy I'm making progress, but each time I get to my next gym, I'm worried my team will stall out." Kate said, before wincing as she looked at the store, krokorok following behind us in silence as they walked across the street, heading over toward the store. "Hopefully this won't be costing you too much…" she trailed off.

"It's not too bad! I still have plenty to last me to the end of the year, and worse comes to worse, once I get my third badge, I hunker down in Castelia and mooch off the food there for a couple months, they keep plenty of pokemon food stocked," Lanky said, his voice cheerful. "My birthday's in August, and when we get there, I'll get national income and have a tidy buffer. So, I'm not worried."

Kate's facial expression lightened up. "Well, that's good! In that case…" Kate's face turned into a smirk, "Leah sure is putting on weight!" she said, looking up at me hanging out on lanky's shoulders, smiling, giving my abdomen a poke through my skirt, forcing a chirp out of me. She laughs as I swipe her hand away, annoyed.

She just called me fat! I stared back down at her with as much vitriol as I could muster—which wasn't much, since I didn't have facial muscles for sneering or furrowing brows. Regardless, I stare into Kate's eyes until she diverts her attention back to her krokorok as we finally come to the curb, diverting to the small store.

"Careful with her," Lanky said, before turning his head to look at Kate, who's eyes went wide. Being on Lanky's shoulder meant that I couldn't even attempt to read his expression or lips. I held my mouth shut. I was not going to panic, no sirree. And yet, deep down, my doubts played.

Did he know I understood them? How? Ugh. I was practically kicking myself. I was the one who was bad at reading the cues. They would find out long before I would find out they knew, if they decided to keep the fact that they knew that I understood them a secret. Wrong. It was all so wrong! I didn't even WANT to understand them this well! I just wanted to be a damned pokemon! Being a pokemon was awesome! And yet, no, damnit, somehow it all just had to fall into place!

"Owch, Leah! That hurts!" Lanky said, pulling my arm off his forehead. I'd been pulling too tight. Oh gods, I was giving myself away.

"How, uh, how much has she been eating?" Kate asked, glancing up at me momentarily, before looking away.

"Leah's been getting at least three thousand calories a day—" Lanky began.

He's been tracking how much I eat?

"Holy shit," Kate said.

He continued, "And Fidget's been getting two thousand. Another couple months and he'll be where she is, though he's only a couple pounds behind Leah in weight."

The store's front door slid open automatically when we approached, forcing me to duck down as we went into the building. The ceiling and lights in the store were too low, my headdress and antennae rubbing against the roof of the store. The uncomfortable rubbing and vibrations forced me to hop onto the floor with a light, squeaky thwunk onto the tile. My amazing, fabulous purple shoes had caught me without any slipping, allowing me to strike a pose for the security camera TV combo, eliciting a chuckle from the clerk at the front counter.

"And yeah, not to brag but Leah's picked up fifteen pounds since I first got her back in Anville a couple months ago, it's all muscle too. Leavanny don't molt, so if she was getting fat, the 'dex says she should eventually self-regulate on her own," he said, lasering in on a rack that smelled thick of sugar and dried berries.

"Where do you think she'll top out at?" Kate asked.

"I don't know," Lanky said. "She's about fifty pounds right now—" we moved an aisle over and he grabs a spray bottle "—and full-height, competitive leavanny have been known to hit a hundred pounds. But Leah's nearly a foot shorter than Fidget and easily out-eats him, so who knows."

"That's heavier than Krokky is!" Kate exclaims, patting her krokorok in the head, before looking at his scorch marks, her face turning flush. "Actually… I need to take my team to the pokecenter to get checked," she says.

Lanky nods, grabbing a pack of candies that smelled just like the ones he'd been tossing me while we worked on language stuff. Together, the four of us walk to the front desk.

"Find everything you wanted all right?" the clerk asks, as I hear the beep of the scanner but can't see over the countertop.

"Yessir," Lanky says. I look at the krokorok, staying diligently by Kate's side, not complaining at all, its tail waving back and forth in patience as they waited for Lanky and I at the store's front door.

Stepping outside in the evening light of Striaton City, Lanky and Kate changed direction, heading back toward the Pokecenter. I continued to walk along, following our trainers.

"I'll follow you to the pokecenter. Enough about me and Leah though. You were saying, about having five badges?"

"Oh, yeah! I was just saying that I'm nervous. If I stall out here, I'm not sure what I'll do, I've already stopped school for a couple years just for it," she said.

"What about joining the rangers?" Lanky asked. On the ground, I was busying myself by skipping along, dancing over Krokorok's waving tail, making a game out of hopping over it with each waddle and swing under the fading light of the setting sun.

"My team? With the rangers? Are you kidding?!?" Kate said, huffing. "We couldn't do anything during the ghost outbreak at Castelia, during the Mount Coronet shitshow! We'd be less than useful! Maybe if either Venipede or Skorupi would just evolve already," she spat.

"Is it that bad?" he asked. Kate was about to answer, when his phone vibrated. "One moment," he said, pulling it out of his pocket. While he was checking his phone, I stumbled, tripping over the krokorok's tail, falling onto the sidewalk.

"Hmmm. Did you say you had the Nimbasa Badge?" he asked.

"Yeah," Kate said, shrugging.

"Well, apparently Lyra's taking a stop over there and says she wants me to meet her there."

"Uh, isn't that literally the way we came?" Kate asked. "Though I guess I needed to go back to Nacrene and hope Lenora had enough time to chill out anyway… But sheesh, that's like a four day trip from here!"

"On bike," Lanky said.

"Do you have a subway pass? I thought you didn't have the funds—" Kate asked, her face going red.

"Don't worry about it," he said, smiling. "Lyra's got connections."

"Ooooh, lucky," Kate said. "Are you going to meet her there, then?"

"I guess so," Lanky said. "But the last train of the night heads out in a half-hour, so I guess this is goodbye?"

"Yeah, good luck, and catch the train!" Kate said, and the four of us split in two, Kate heading to the west, and us heading off to the north, Lanky pulling out his bike, and tossing me into the basket, cycling along the street at full speed, the street lamps turning on as their sensors lose the last vestiges of sunlight.

As we biked through town, I heard a beep, and then saw a dark-skinned man resting on a scooter sitting under a street lamp ahead of us. As we drew closer, I heard a series of rapidly increasing beeps. The man looked about as we passed him, we heard the beeping growing slower and fading off as we sped through the streets toward the train station. Lanky pulled off at the subway station, I hopped out of the basket, and the guy we passed earlier shouts at us.

"Hey! Uh, I need to talk to you! Kid with the leavanny with purple shoes!" The dude pulled up to the curb as Lanky collapsed the bike to toss into his backpack.

"Uh, I've got ten minutes until the last train to Nimbasa comes, and I can't miss it," Lanky said.

"I'm an employee from the Aether Foundation and I was here on assignment and I think we can help you!" The guy said. Lanky looked down at me, accusingly. I had never heard of this Aether Foundation before, he shouldn't blame me!

"Then come inside, let's talk on the bench, I promised I'd be in Nimbasa ASAP," Lanky said.

"I just need ten minutes of your time," the guy said, as Lanky and I were speedwalking through the hall into the underground subway station, Lanky coming to the line of turnstiles, pulling out his phone. The light on the turnstile went from red to green.

"Then come on! I'm not going to get dragged around like this any more." Lanky said, the last part under his breath, and I was barely able to make it out under the echoes of the various machines and general rumble of the underground lights. Lanky and I walked ahead, leaving the guy fumbling at the front stop of the train station. I was worried, momentarily, that I would be slipping and sliding all over the smooth concrete, but I did not. Take a guess why. That's right. My fabulous, amazing, ultra-purple shoes.

Finally, Lanky sat down at the bench, and pulled out a piece of juicy, alluring candy from his pocket, smirking, and moves to toss one into his mouth. Before the candy made it into his mouth, my arm and leaf was there, blocking it from going in.

Bitch, that's bug candy. I clicked at him, annoyed, then held my own mouth open. He laughed, pulling my arm down, slipping the candy into his mouth. He was still smirking at his own betrayal when he pulled another one out, taunting me with it, then giving it to me. When the train finally pulled up, the guy that was chasing us barely stumbled into the station area, his hands and arms jittering.

"Come on then," Lanky told the guy as I stepped onto the train, my trainer only a couple steps behind.

"Wow, uh, Unova's train system's really expensive," the Aether guy said, stepping on the train.

"Yeah. There's a lot of reasons why Anville is a dying town." Lanky said. I hopped up onto a seat. It was so late, that no one else was hopping on. My legs dangled over the front of the seat, and I kicked my skirt out of the way, playing with my shoes as they glint in the subway light.

"She really likes those shoes, huh. You're Burgh, right? This uh, Leah? Dancing Leavanny?" the guy said.

Lanky sighed, "Yheawhp, that's us. And you are?"

I pretended like I wasn't listening, looking over my skirt, looking for scorch marks from the short battle with Chili.

"Oh, sorry, name's Alan," he said, sitting down across from us. Arcanine had deliberately gone easy on me.

"Welcome to the Striaton Route Battle Subway! We are now departing for Nimbasa City, ETA of three hours. We hope you have a relaxing and enjoyable ride. Your conductors for tonight thank you for your patronage!"

"Three hours!?!" the guy said, "The train will be going faster than a hundred miles an hour at top speed!" Alan exclaimed.

There wasn't a scratch on my thorax. No burns on my leaves, well, a little scorch from a dripping ember that the arcanine had landed on me while I was pinned. At least as far as I could tell, that was all there was for damage, though I couldn't see my back in the mirror, from when it played one-dog ping-pong with me as the ball. The doors of the train close. It was just us three in our train car.

Lanky just nodded at Alan's wonder, gently pushing me forward, then glancing at my back and giving it a light rub. "Leah, you look fine," he said, practically cooing at me. "Anyway, what was so important that you had to chase us down and hop on this one way ticket to Nimbasa?" Lanky asked. "I'm getting real annoyed with most of the so-called 'adults' in my life right now, so I really, really hope you're not here to jerk me around."

"Naw man," Alan said, "have you heard of the Aether foundation?" he asked.

"No, but I don't really care. Not unless your foundation's offering me a bunch of money, or can explain any of the events of the past couple months." Lanky said, looking down at me.

Alan's face lights up. "Well, okay, so I'll keep it brief—Aether's whole purpose is the preservation of Pokemon. Our HQ is back in Alola. It's what we do. But uh, as part of that preservation, we also look into strange phenomena, right?" he said.

"Go on." Lanky said, tossing me another piece of candy.

"So uh, I've got this sensor. It's designed to detect a type of energy called Z-Energy, right?" Alan said.

"Right…"

"Have you noticed any strange phenomena or behavior surrounding Leah, here? Strange, really powerful creatures that tend to follow her around or show up at odd times?" Alan asked.

Lanky looked back down at me. I clamped my mouth shut as hard as I could. I looked at the ground. He took a breath. "... yes, I have," he said.

My shoes were really pretty.
 
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Chapter 58 - Zed
~~~ Chapter 58 - Zed ~~~​

At the front of Nimbasa City's theme park, the crowd practically throbbed, the neon lights shining in the last of expectant park guests' faces as they filtered through the ticket lines, and the music boomed. A ticket attendant named Chris watched as the vestiges of the crowd pulled out their phones and had them scanned. Entry into the park with the latest upgrades has really sped things up, Chris thought. New scanners, new cameras, new sensors. The system knew everyone who would come to the park before they even had a chance to pull out their phone and scan their ticket.

They weren't required, yet—not everyone was convinced to use the digital ticketing system or the facial scan system, but it didn't matter. Thousands of people still managed to enter the park in the span of just a few minutes. Honestly, Chris wasn't even sure a ticket attendant was needed with the new system. All he had to do was help a few old-timers feel better about themselves, he supposed. As the crowd thinned, the stream of people entering the park or coming from the city began to taper off—they had deliberately limited the number of tickets sold for Elesa's opening night, per the new gym leader's demands.

A glint of pink and gold caught Chris' eye, drawing his attention to a woman stepping out between a pair of buildings. She swayed in a confident and demanding posture. His eyes instantly became magnetized to the young woman's face as she approached. Her eyes weren't empty, and her expression was neutral. And, if he was asked, he couldn't pin down specifically what was off about it, but her expression did not line up with her movement. Her arm was held out, as if she was walking with a boyfriend. But nothing was there but shadow.

Approaching Chris' gate, she paused. Chris kept his attention to her face, he had practiced this—despite the uncanny expression, it did no good to look anywhere else. The hair on the back of his neck stood on end, goosebumps on his arm stuck out. A light at his terminal shone in red. Face ID was not known. She had no ticket. "Uh, sorry ma'am," he said, "do you, uh, have a ticket? This is a limited event for Elesa and the Electric Meloetta's opening night, and tickets were sold out weeks ago…" His voice wandered off. The woman didn't even look at him, but past him. A chill rolled down his neck as the woman shook her head. Instead of going back the way she came, she disappeared in a void of black.

"We are tired. Remain silent, and we bid you pleasant dreams."

A more masculine, rhaspy voice whispered into his ear, and Chris stood straight up. "Ruin her night, and know the inverse for yourself, nights of perfect darkness that only she can break."

Chris dared to turn back, a single bead of sweat dripping down off his forehead. Behind him, and the gold and pink-haired woman was walking, not with a shadow in her arms, no. Chris turned back to the park entrance.

There was no need to alert security, not really.

~~~​

On the battle train heading to Nimbasa City, the stars were coming out. Burgh and Leah sat next to each other, across from a man they'd just met. Alan was his name. Burgh monitored Leah as she stared down at her shoes with uncharacteristic focus. Even so, it wasn't the focus that worried Burgh about her—it was her stillness that was on his mind.

Something about the conversation, or Alan, had made her anxious, and that worried him. She had clued into something that Alan had said. Or, on the other hand, she could be picking up something about Alan that didn't feel right. You didn't have to be psychic to get bad vibes. Another part of him was worried there was another piece of the puzzle-that-was-Leah that he was missing. He took a quick breath to calm himself down and clear his thoughts. It did no good to overthink things.

He considered his response to Alan and decided to test the waters a bit. "Even if we met some powerful creatures, I can't really disclose the specifics to you. I've already logged what I know with someone from interpol, so you'll need to get more info from them. Still, not sure how that all relates to either Leah or your sensor." He had wanted some answers, and didn't want to let this particular spark of hope get in his way, so it was best to give it a bit of skepticism.

At his question, Alan just waved his hand dismissively. "Don't worry about it, brother. All good if I wind back a bit, now that I've got your interest?"

Burgh just nodded, pulling off the pokeballs on his belt, releasing Fidget and yet-unnamed Silcoon. "Go ahead—" Leah hopped off the bench, moving with Fidget to the front end of their subway car, drawing both his and Alan's heads as she walked past "—but I don't want to spend all night talking about this." I was hoping to catch a nap, he thought to himself.

"Right on," Alan said. "Anyway, so the Aether foundation is looking into threats against both humanity and pokemon. Lusamine's our CEO. Heard of her?" he asked. Burgh just shakes his head. "Right, then, well, I'm betting you're kinda tired, so I'll keep the rest of this brief. We work with interpol and plasma group labs. A group of us were sent here on an assignment from Alola, and while here, I was looking for, or seeing if I could find, powerful creatures or Pokemon via this Z-sensor, right?"

"Right. That was the beeping? You sense this Z-stuff? Got it," Burgh said, and Alan nodded.

"So, I followed you around, because of the sensor, yeah? Normally we find humans with a bunch of Z-energy, but it seems the sensor's picked up both on Leah there, and on you? I'm not sure. Uh, do you have any Z-Crystals on you?"

Burgh frowned. "No, I don't know what a Z-Crystal is." He was starting to regret letting Alan follow him onto the train. He could move a car forward, he supposed, but he'd hear the guy out a bit more before completely deciding he was full of shit.

Alan just smiled, unphased, before his face lit up again, moving to look into his bags and pockets. "Right, right. Anyway, Z-Crystal, yeah? They're not actually crystals. They're more like… A metal. Here." Alan pulled from his pocket, a small, hard case.

"Is that case… made of lead?" Burgh asked.

"Yeah. Z-Crystals, they're safe. Not radioactive or anything, I just need to keep them in the case or else they end up messing with the sensor." Alan said, pulling the top of the case off. Burgh looked at the crystal, admiring its sheen, before sitting back and rubbing his temples.

"You know what?" Burgh said, "I just… Don't care about your Z-crystals or whatever these are, no offense. Unless you can tell me that this explains Leah being vastly more intelligent than her counterparts, or her strangely common encounters with really, really powerful pokemon, I don't care."

"Oh, uh, sorry man. Uh. Right." Burgh rolled his eyes at Alan getting flustered. "I'm just tryin' to say that you and her are covered in this Z-energy, yeah? Just like in this metallic crystal. Z-energy is building up, yeah? And we're trying to save the wo—"

Once more, Burgh rolled his eyes, cutting Alan off. "Stop, dude. Can you save me the save-the-world nonsense. Why does this matter to me? I'm a teen with two badges on my record. Tell me what I wanna know."

"Right. Well, uh. Where did that Z-Energy come from, yeah? Fallers have trace hints of the stuff. You're both positively radiating it."

Burgh was watching Leah's antennae twitching along with their conversation, growing more and more taut. She wasn't wheezing like a zebstrika with a punctured lung, at least. "I've already been through this with Lyra. Unless you're telling me Fallers are from another planet?" He asked, his question being both rhetorical and incredulous. Leah was shoved to the ground by Fidget. When Alan didn't respond right away, Burgh threw up his arms, and was about to call Leah over. But no, he decided not to. It wouldn't be fair to her.

Burgh took a breath through his nose, then released it out of his mouth. There was no need to cause panic for either him, or Leah. And, if Leah really was from another place, she had her reasons not to be more forward about it. Assuming she was pretending not to understand all their words, that was. She had paired up with him, and he had no reason to think she meant ill will, even if Alan's nonsense turned out to be true. Though, he definitely had questions for her.

If she was so smart, why hadn't he pushed her harder? Asked her more questions? The old man's voice echoed in his mind: "They're not human, no matter how much you think you understand them, they're still animals," the old man had said over and over again, in so many different ways during the few weeks they were allowed to stay at his home. Leah was definitely not human. Still, a few extra pieces were fitting together in Burgh's mind. The other option was some kind of abandoned genetic experiment. If he could convince someone to get the sequencing done, then that could be ruled out… Could he trust the local companies? If she was an escaped experiment, would they want her back?

Alan began to speak up again. "Uh, sorry man, I just thought—"

Burgh just waved his hand at the guy. "Don't worry about it. You're serious about this Faller stuff being from other planets?"

Alan didn't nod. Or shake his head. "Well, it's complicated, and we don't actually know right now yet. We're trying to find portals into Ultra Space and know for sure, but uh, if I'm right then Leah's a Leavanny from a planet, either ours or like ours, and she's got loads of Z-Energy just building up inside her. I'm surprised she's still alive to be honest. Z-Energy is like a magnet…"

"Hmmm", Burgh hummed, before his face lit up. "Actually, uh, put your crystal away. Leah recently had to have some metallic-like rocks removed from her insides. Can your sensor tell me if they're Z-Crystals?" Alan just nodded, as Burgh pulled out of his pocket a bag of the rocks the pokecenter had removed from Leah after she was body slammed by the scolipede during her panic attack in Nacrene City.

"Right, uh, they didn't clean those things off at all, now did they?" Alan said, eying the plastic bag. Burgh just shrugged as Alan held out his sensor, pointed at the baggie. When the sensor beeped, "Yeah, that genuine Z-stuff." he said, pulling back the sensor.

"Okay, so what's that tell me about Leah? She had this stuff inside of her. You're not about to tell me that aliens are abducting pokemon and stuffing these things into them, are you?" Burgh said.

"No, I don't know, we've never seen Z-crystals inside of a Faller before. Granted, it's not like we find Fallers every day, right?" Alan said.

"Right. So there's too many confounding factors. And we'll need more sensitive equipment to separate traces of Ultra-Space from Z-Energy on her, but for the Ultra Beasts, it shouldn't matter. They'll smell that Z-Energy from a mile away and come knocking." Burgh just waved his hands. His head was already hurting, and he wanted to have a conversation with Leah—who was laying face down on the subway train floor, motionless.

"I'll get the rundown on the rest of this Ultra-Stuff later," Burgh said. "For now, I've got a team member who needs my help. And uh, no offense Alan, but I'm going to move up a car and talk to Leah there, in private."

"Right man. I know how it goes. In fact, you know what?" Alan said, pulling out his own pokeball, releasing a Raichu, floating on their own tail. "Don't worry about changing traincars. Sorry about the uh, coming out of nowhere and chasing-you-down thing." Alan says, chuckling lightly. "Right. I'll just uh, I'll just give you my number here, and I'll be outta your hair. Call or text me when you're ready to chat more about this," Alan said, his Alolan-form Raichu reaching out and grabbing his leg. In the blink of an eye, they disappear without a sound, leaving a single card on the seat he was originally on.

Burgh just sighed, popping a piece of candy for himself. He looked up at the front of the car. Leah was still on the ground, moping. Fidget had decided to commiserate with her, though Burgh was sure it was more following Leah's motions in a consolation attempt, rather than a mutual understanding.

"Leah," he said. His gut clenched as she rolled over. If it wasn't for her drooping antennae, and the fact that she didn't constantly lay on the floor, there was no way he would know the way she was feeling in that moment. He got up from his seat, putting away the Z-Crystals. The pokecenter had only removed the ones that had actually punctured her organs. There were others or trace remnants of the rocks still inside her.

Burgh walked over to where she was lying down on the subway car's floor.

"So, uh," he said, picking her up. Her limbs hung, limp in his arms. "It's going to be okay, you know," he said, offering her a piece of candy. Her mouth opened, and he dropped it in for her. Fidget was right nearby, practically begging for one as well. Burgh smiled.

"You CAN understand humans, can't you?" he asked.
 
I feel sorry for Leah right now. The Aether Foundation guy basically guessed the whole situation except Leah previously being human. That must be playing hell with her emotions and fears. The next chapter is absolutely going to be heartbreaking to read.
 
Chapter 59 - Ferris Wheel
~~~ Chapter 59 - Ferris Wheel ~~~​

"You don't wanna go to Striaton?" Lyra said to Ho-Oh, who just stared at her. Talking to the bird was like talking to a wall. But they knew and understood each other well enough. She felt Ho-Oh's burning pull. Not that talking even mattered: as high up as they were, it was all at the phoenix's discretion where they would go. But, she had made a promise to Burgh, that tall teen, that she would meet him before they left Striaton.

Later in the afternoon, she landed in Lostlorn forest, to the northeast of Nimbasa city and just north of Route 16. They followed the warm pull of lingering desires. Again, she released Meg, as they strolled about Lostlorn forest. It was an hour or two of walking about—a decade ago, Ho-Oh would have just burned down the forest.

Unfortunately for Ho-Oh, not everyone who was burned rose back up. In the more modern times, destroying large portions of a region in order to fulfill their primal urges were largely frowned upon. Lyra had, with varying degrees of success, taught the phoenix that being a bit more surgical was better for everyone's health, including his. Not a lot of people or pokemon really enjoyed waking up and finding their homes and regions burned down. Being bonded, she knew how strong that feeling was.

They stumbled onto the target, following that primal pull. A pair of dead zoroark lay unceremoniously on the ground, smelling of burnt plastic. Lyra frowned. The corpses were surprisingly fresh. There was only a scorch mark across the ground, and the two had died. There had been no fight, whatever it was hadn't even given them a chance to fight. Whoever or whatever had done it, had struck fast, and with immense electric force. Had likely been paralyzed then struck until they'd died, then had their bodies on top of each other unceremoniously and left to rot. In the little grotto, there were a few marks here or there, but no boots or human footprints. No clear prints.

"Ho-Oh," she'd said. "I found the source of this one." Then as if on cue, the bird landed, and a radiant sacred fire burned the bodies lying on the dirt.

As Ho-Oh's fire got to work, Lyra released the volcarona from the johtoan ball. The bug startled at the sight of the rainbow fire, and the zoroarks stumbled as they got up, untangling themselves. Lyra took a seat on a large nearby rock, jutting out.

"Look, Volcy," Lyra said, as the volcarona fluttered along the ground, putting away the hand-crafted pokeball back into her bag. As she fished from the pack, she pulled out a piece of coal and a nutri-bar. Volcarona inched across the ground to where she'd tossed them.

"You're going to hurt yourself if you keep trying to fly like that," she said, watching it eat. "Now, I've raised a number of birds and bugs from egg to adulthood, and I think the common denominator is time. Or working until you get exhausted and break one of your wings. Then I'll have to take you to the pokecenter."

Meg returned from her foraging, watching as the two Zoroark finally regained their bearings, staring at them. She pulled out a cigar, the second-to-last one from the Looker's pack, lighting it up. She would be sad there wouldn't be any more.

"You're both probably starving," she said, taking a whiff. She let out a puff of smoke. "I know I was, when Ho-Oh burned me up. I've got a couple nutri-bars for you. Didn't think to bring any meat, sorry," she said as the zoroarks, both turned to one another, pressing their heads next to one another.

"That's very touching, and you're probably about to remember that you got whiffed by, I dunno, Thundurus, Zapdos or maybe a wandering Raikou—" both zoroark snarled, their eyes going black and ears tucked behind their heads. "—Right. Raikou it was, then," she said, tossing them the pair of generic nutri-bars with her free hand, ignoring their posturing.

"Before you run off for revenge, let's have a talk. See, Volcy here's like you, or something," she said, motioning toward the moth that was trying to re-learn to fly.

One of the Zoroark shifted into the visage of a woman. "Do we have a choice?" the illusion asked, the nutrient bar in its hand disappearing behind the illusion in a single bite.

"Look, if you two want to run off chasing revenge, go for it," Lyra said. "But, this is a new lease on life for the both of you. And the speech will only take a couple minutes. Hear me out?" Lyra asked. She knew zoroarks were smart, and their illusions strong, but she didn't know that they were strong enough to mimic human voices. The face of the girl just nodded.

"Then, gather around," Lyra said, sliding off her rock, into a cross-legged position. She smiled, smooshing the cigar against the dirt, putting it out. "And you get over here too, Volccy. I know you can't talk, but we'll figure something out." The volcarona wobbled on the ground, fluttering, getting closer to achieving full flight again. Ho-Oh took off, flying in lazy circles. Meg scoot forward, the Meganium, one zoroark, the other maintaining its human illusion and Volc and Lyra sitting a good ten feet from one another in the Lostlorn forest grotto.

"Welcome to lingering regrets anonymous. I am Lyra, and I'll be your guide this afternoon." She smiled. It had been a while since they had this many pokemon for a session.

~~~​

Cresselia stood, her form shimmering in the middle of the park, the assault of the sounds and cacophony ringing in her head. She could feel the waves of electric sound beating from inside a large, black building, as most of the humans in the park filtered inside. The mission was simple: ride a roller coaster. What Cresselia hadn't expected, was to actually find a meloetta in the park. It didn't matter. Darkrai's form coalesced next to her, pointing. The large, round, mechanical structure.

It moved slowly, deliberately. The Little Dreamer had told them, roller coasters stood there, out in the open, inviting, challenging all to ride them. She and Darkrai proceeded to the line, her partner following by her side, dropping his shadow form in the thin crowd. Waltzing up to the queue for the ferris wheel, the line of couples, teens and young adults who chose not to go on either the more exciting rides or into the concert stage grew hush and stiff as they walked forward.

They were not making noise or attacking, though a bipedal cat with dark pink irises and purple pupils sitting on a young teen's shoulders stared at them. The espurr did not hiss, instead just continuing its stare. Cresselia and Darkrai paid it no mind, waiting in the queue. The boy and girl noted their pokemon's head turned, glanced back.

Multiple people murmured, glancing back. More than one couple decided to exit the line for the ferris wheel. The nervousness they had when Darkrai was next to her never changed. One reason among many why they chose to keep to themselves, as did their cohorts. A slight nudge and promises of pleasant dreams, and complete panic would be avoided, though the espurr continued its stare at them.

There were only a couple people until the front of the line, and the individuals running the ride had their hands to the communications devices on their belts. The guy in front of them turned back to her, and looked her in the eyes.

"So, uh," he said, "I take it you two don't come here often?"

She held silent for a moment, her face unmoving, "No. We don't," she said.

"Yeah, uh, well," the boy said. "With that disguise, I can tell you don't get out much."

"Tyler!" the other girl said. The girl's heart was beating rapid-fire. Her stress would override the comfort Cresselia had given soon.

"Serene! It's fine! See, it's plain as day they're just a pair of zoroarks that came out for a night on the town!" the guy said.

"Tyler!" The girl said again, her face completely red. "What if a trainer hears you!" she said.

"I, I uh, didn't think about that." Tyler looked back at the pair, his face going flush. "In that case, uh, you two need to work on your choice of illusions."

"Forgive us then," Darkrai rhasped, "for clearly we are but young pups. What should we do?" The group all took a step forward as the wheel progressed. The espurr on Tyler's shoulder continued to stare at Cresselia.

"Well," Tyler said, "like I said, your uh, your illusions need more practice. If you don't want to deal with pokeballs being thrown at you when you don't expect it, that is… You know that there's no laws protecting from out-of-season catching in cities, right?"

Tyler had clearly never met a zoroark before. Navigating in and out of human society with ease was one of their fortes.

"I was not aware," Darkrai said. Cresselia was content to leave this communication to her partner.

"Uhm, also uh," Serene spoke up, twirling her finger of her shoulder-length hair. Her heart was still beating. Cresselia made the conscious decision not to peer into their minds. It was more… interesting that way. The girl continued: "Don't let your long hair get caught in the rides. Wrap it around your waist or something!"

"Good point, Serene!" Tyler exclaimed. "And one recommendation for you, miss," Tyler said, giving Cress' human form a once-over. "You chose a pretty illusion, yeah, but uh, your expression gives Espurr here a run for his money." he said, scratching the staring cat behind the ears. It still hadn't blinked.

"So, you recommend that we: rely on illusions that look like humans, to work on our facial expressions, and to ensure our hair does not get caught in the machine," Darkrai stated. Tyler and Serene both nodded. The pair in front of the four were waved onto the ferris wheel, the attendant doing their best to not stare at Darkrai as he floated in the line.

They were here to ride a roller coaster, not a ferris wheel, so they weren't about to let their night end early. Though they had ways of ensuring the night would remain young. Ones which didn't rely on threats. Agreeing, at least partly with their assessment, Darkrai's visage shimmered, as he took on the appearance of a zoroark, before his form shifted to one of a human male. Darkrai and Cresselia stepped apart, a pokeball sailing through the air seconds later, landing right where they had been, moments before.

A kid, not fifteen years old, saw that his throw had missed, and immediately ran. Cresselia glanced down at the ball. A small ripple, wave in reality and the ball imploded in on itself, beeping, a puff of smoke coming out. A small orb of black, about the size of a ping-pong ball homed onto the teen, who tripped, falling to the ground, their momentum carrying them into a single roll, asleep. The lights and noise of the music kept any shouts or gasps from making it too far.

Tyler frowned, staring down at the pokeball that had exploded, seemingly of its own accord. "Uh, have fun you two," he said. Serene's heart still pounded, but as they climbed into their cab on the ferris wheel, it immediately began to calm down. Tyler and Serene weren't scared of the two after all, Cresselia concluded.

They had been worried.

~~~​

"Leah," Lanky had said, calling me by name, as I had stuffed my face on the metallic floor. I couldn't, wasn't going to hyperventilate. I rolled over, my eyes staring into the ceiling of our train, feeling the metallicity of the ground through my antennae as the train rushed over the tracks like a silent, speeding bullet, the light whistle and consistent hum gentle reminders that we were on a train.

What was my name again?, I thought to myself. I could remember my past life—faker that I was—I could remember pokemon. I had gone to college. I had ridden roller coasters. I had even graduated college! But—my name was—

Lanky got up from where he was sitting, moving to put the bag of the rocks I'd accidentally eaten—Z-Crystals, whatever those were, they had vibrated reliably any time I used my magic or another pokemon used theirs. Lanky moved over to where I was lying down, stepping over Leaf. My compatriot had apparently decided to do the same thing I was doing, when he realized I wasn't in the mood for play.

I wanted, so badly to open my mouth. Take a deep breath. Hold the inhaler up. Put on the anti static tube so the aerosolized steroid wouldn't stick to my throat. Take a deep breath and feel the sweet release as my lungs would finally expand again. But no, I couldn't. I couldn't—wasn't going to fall back on those habits. No nightly CPAP machine helping me keep breathing through the night.

"So, uh," Lanky said, picking me up. My arms were limp, moving about like a puppet whose arms were cut from their strings. "It's going to be okay, you know," Lanky told me, pulling me onto his lap, sitting back down on the bench, fishing a piece of candy from his pocket. Her mouth opened, and he dropped it in for her. Leaf—no, Fidget—walked up to us. I could tell he was getting anxious too, but couldn't turn down the chance for some candy.

Lanky gave Fidget one, before turning to me. As he opened his mouth to talk, I prepared for the worst—Yes, I am an imposter! I am not actually a leavanny! I don't even know what I am! I sure look the part, don't I?!? I thought to myself. Not that it mattered. I wasn't going to be able to talk to him anyway. Through a miracle of my last couple nights' nightmares, thanks Darkrai, my mouth clamped shut, even as the layers of saccharine sugars melted down.

"You CAN understand humans, can't you?" he asked.

Oh, gods, I thought! That was his question? I was—I wasn't going to bite. No. I wouldn't lie. I'd resolved this one long ago. No lying. Just… There was no need to give anything away if they didn't ask for it. I wanted to rub my blades together. I wanted to run. I wanted—to just live and enjoy life. If that meant being the strongest pokemon I could become, I could bite that pill. I could swallow it. I could crush it up between the ridges of my mouth, savor the shitty taste of the bitter pill and swallow it with a smile.

The spark of hope dangled in front of me, bidding, its sugary scent calling me forward. No, I wasn't about to mash too hard on that fruit, only to find out I didn't wait until it was ripe enough. So instead, I just nodded. The smile was one that was permanently etched onto this body's face, but there were no frowns from this girl, none on this train.

"Thought so," Lanky said. Leaf had gotten bored, and moved down the train car, back to where Lanky had originally sat by the silcoon, relaxing on the ground. Lanky's eyes lit up. "You're a leavanny from another planet, then?!?"

I would swallow this bitter pill with nods and smiles. Even if I just wanted to roll over and die.
 
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Chapter 60 - Fun
~~~ Chapter 60 - Fun ~~~​

Cresselia and Darkrai both stepped into their cart, slowly moving with a consistent certainty. The cart wobbled with their weight. The cart door closed shut, and the attendant they'd ignored took a breath of relief as the door was shut. The way it wobbled as they moved in was disconcerting to both—forcing them to rest on the bench, as their levitations caused them to slip in unnatural ways. Cresselia, aware of additional attention they'd garnered as the would-be capturer had been tended to by others, held her human form as the duo's carriage was pulled up into the air with mechanical confidence.

The experiment of their lives—live a little in the moment, soaking in the experiences for what they were or would be. She could feel the budding excitement of their so-called followers pushing themselves into her realm. As they always did any time either of them were spotted publicly. Putting those thoughts and feelings away as they were lifted out above the water, her human form, with its full neutral, unpracticed expressions, leaned over to Darkrai, resting her head on his shoulder, feeling his dark, shadowy form through his illusion. The park would send someone, who would be waiting for them when they disembarked. That was for future Cresselia.

Lifted up above the city, up above all but save two attractions of the park, the wheel extended, carrying them further out, overlooking the water features of the lake. The light of the moon reflected off their human-like forms, leaving a glittering yellow-gold spattering in the waves of the watery lake. The gold glinting off the water met the shining neon and rippling water of the reverberating bass of the concert hall. They managed to tune out the vibrations of the carriage window and the waters.

The bass drops and blasts of beats over the air disturbed the water of Nimbasa's artificial lake as they admired the sight of the waning moon. They were lifted up, reaching the crest of the rotation of the man-made contraption, before being pulled back. Sliding away from the moon and the lake and taking their descent, the carriages of those who had gotten on the ride after them rose up and entered their view. As it had carried them up, the mechanical certainty of the rotating wheel also carried them down.

The beat of the concert hall grew somewhat stronger, though it was felt more than heard. For a minute, they had rested undisturbed, the constant turn of the wheel felt as inevitable as the progression of time. The door was latched open by an attendant, and they were beckoned out, where they stepped, taking a split second to reorient themselves on the stable, unmoving ground once more.

Darkrai had held his illusion—the form of a fit, twenty-something-year-old man, not unlike an amalgamation of some of the older fellows they had seen walking into the park earlier, stepped off their car first. Cresselia, still in her form of a pink-and-gold woman of approximately the same age, followed behind her partner, stepping down the platform, off the ride departure section. Cresselia noted that both Tyler and Selene had their arms locked, walking slowly, aimlessly out to a small line of food stands. The other couple was taking their time.

"I hope you two enjoyed the Nimbasa Ferris Wheel," said a tall, light-skinned man with broad shoulders and a goatee, meeting them seconds after they walked off the platform and down the steps. Emblazoned upon the man's suit, was the badge of Nimbasa Gym. Three pokeballs sat on the belt around the man's waist. There was a lack of pulsing static in the air of the beats from the concert hall that had been there a half-hour prior.

Cresselia turned her face and looked over at the guy, practicing the human emotion of surprise in her somewhat-unfamiliar human form. She chose to speak this time. "My partner and I did enjoy the ride, yes," she said, her face transitioning into a smile. She'd not felt the need to assume a human-like form in order to interact with humans. Not that she had ever felt the need to interact with humans directly.

With confidence, the duo strode off, away from the ferris wheel. The man, despite his calm demeanor, had an incredibly high heart rate. Far higher than Selene's had been. "Can we help you?" Darkrai asked, goosebumps popping out of the guy's neck as he spoke.

"Name's Jacob. And you can help me, actually." The man spoke. His voice held firm, despite his heart rate. I have been assigned to help you, and uh, as someone who's followed your uh followers for a whi—"

"We brook no followers," Darkrai said, cutting the man off.

Cresselia feigned a look at Darkrai for being so "harsh". She didn't play it up, her face quickly reverting to its more neutral form. She was, and would be careful—as fun as the masquerade was, lying, even if they were fun lies, she didn't care to experience first-hand the results of mixing too much of her own cultivations with dark matter. She'd already seen what happened to others. Instead, she dipped into the man's surface. A soft touch of her psychic power as both her and Darkrai began to walk in the direction of their next challenge.

"I knew that you both rejected active followers," the man said, his thoughts complaining about getting his hopes up, internally cursing his leaders who had issued their warning to him. The guard was under no compunctions about who he was dealing with.

"Anyway, I'm a staff member that's been sent here to help you navigate the park. And hopefully prevent anyone from making any… untoward or distasteful decisions," he said, looking about for kids who may or may not have had a pokeball in their hands. He waved a few along who had taken to staring. The concert hall had, for all practical purposes, consumed all but a few hundred residents that were capitalizing on the reduced number of guests in queues for each of the rides.

"You know that following us is not necessary," Cresselia said, as they wound around the ferris wheel, passing an ice cream stand, approaching their next conquest—a tall, three-sided, silver tower. The ride was currently operating. Four rider's legs dangled out from above, extending from their seats. The ride was not anywhere near its maximum capacity, and the line was even shorter than when they'd passed it earlier. The ride paused, slowly inching their way up, before pausing at the very top.

"Are you sure you want to ride this one?" the man asked. Standing at the end of the short queue, Cresselia and Darkrai held one another close, the ride completed its pause, the riders dropped in controlled freefall, one girl's voice screaming from above. Selene and Tyler rounded around the corner, forcing themselves not to stare, though that did nothing for Tyler's espurr, fixated on Cresselia once again.

"We are sure," Darkrai said, the voice he projected much smoother than his typical verbalizations. This "roller coaster" presented them with the kind of open challenge they had been promised. They would not leave that night, until they had the opportunity to conquer all said challenges. Nor would Cresselia send Darkrai away so that some children would receive better sleep. Children were prone to nightmares. They had made enough decisions in attempts to help others to afford a night of indulgence.

"If you are to protect your guests," Cresselia said, "then we suggest teaching them not to ruin other guest's nights."

The man's face went pale. "Dear Cresselia," Darkrai said, his human face smiling into hers. "Whatever do you mean? They simply found themselves asleep. I'm afraid they may have a bit of trouble getting a restful night until they learn proper manners," Darkrai said.

Cresselia's human form threw her hair back behind her face, laughing at Darkrai's joke. Tyler and Selene both laughed nervously, frowning in realization. It was nice to have the recharge from having a vanity night of their own for the first time.

"Forgive us, Tyler and Selene, for my crass joke," Darkrai said, turning his head to the young couple, ignoring the man who'd tried to follow them along.

"I don't think I've had a night on the town," Cresselia confided.

"Looks like it's our time to get on, Love," Darkrai said, before waving at both Tyler and Serene, who were a lot more intrepid than before. "Come, join us." Darkrai demanded. They shuffled forward, Tyler pulling out a pokeball, tapping his espurr with it, as Selene's heart practically pounded in her chest.

"Come now, Selene," Cresselia said, her smiling creeping larger, her eyes still as empty as the espurr's stare. "We don't bite. That's a promise."

"It is so much more fun in person, isn't it, love?" Darkrai said, turning back to Cresselia as they sat down in their seats on the ride, pulling down the straps, cinching them in together. Attendants' eyes lingered on the couples as they took seats on the same side. Selene and Tyler nodded in each other's eyes.

"It is nice to be in person for once," Cresselia said, as the carriage inched upwards. She waved at the man. She estimated about four or so trainers who had found themselves asleep. Granted, they were either in the process of sneaking up to them with a pokeball in-hand, or attempting to throw one at them from some unseen direction. Before the night was done, there would be more. Her grin was natural. The feeling—the excitement in her chest as her temporary legs dangled in the air.

For the first time in her life, Cresselia could say she was having fun.

~~~​

I started to nod—saying I was an alien would work. Kind of. But halfway through the nod I stopped. I didn't even bother looking at Lanky to see his expression. I still couldn't read. I still probably couldn't write, so putting out a complicated answer was out, but I wanted to answer with the most accurate answer I could. At first, being an alien seemed like a decent, true-enough statement. No? But mid-nod, I realized there were problems with that. But I was committed, and despite my trepidation, finished the nod after the awkward stall.

First, I kinda liked Lanky, and I figured I had a really good roll for what human I managed to pick up as a trainer. You could do worse than be the star pokemon of a gym leader, I figured. And while he was still a teen and I was likely just going to wind up using whatever special abilities I had in order to steamroll us through whatever the next sets of gyms we were going to take on… He still deserved a little better than a guess up the ass, yeah?

So yeah, I did nod, though it was a half-hearted one. Lanky's question was—it was too vague, and had too many assumptions. If I was really covered in Z-sauce or whatever, did it come from how I became a Leavanny, or did it come from that freak battle-dream-hell-time-thing that came from startling Lebi? Those rocks were covered in Z-sauce energy woo.

Was this body from a leavanny who didn't exist beforehand? One that had died and I was somehow inserted into? Was I commanding this leavanny's body as the original pokemon watched from the side? Was that what I called instinct really was? When I went to work on the leaves, sewing and weaving and using silk to patch them together, was that me, or was that the actual leavanny getting a chance to be in the front seat again?

If I said I was an alien, and then somehow, found out that wasn't the case? Were Leaf and the swadlies this body's children? Were they this body's siblings? If I said no, and then they did some kind of test—actually, that was a better question— Lanky would know if they had sequenced my DNA—assuming pokemon had DNA and not some magic other stuff going on—did they not sequence my DNA at the professor's lab or at any of my visits to the pokecenter? And if I said yes to this question, and that turns out to be wrong?

My mouth cracked open. Lanky was silent. Patient. Waiting for me to think. It wasn't just a lie of omission. Would Lanky know that I had lied and was just making shit up? The Z-stuff the quack was talking about? I swallowed that shit in some kind of time-space nightmare hop by complete accident because Alder's fiery moth of death from hell in a thing I still am not sure if it was a dream or timehop or reality hop or fucking what could melt fucking rocks, and that Z-shit came with me! Would I have had that Z-Energy-Stuff without that? How would I know? I didn't get attacked by or meet any powerful pokemon until after that!

My mouth was open and I took a breath. I clamped it shut. No need to start the panic even worse… I could feel the frustration building. The desire to roll around on the floor and just fucking struggle as the pressure was building in my head. All I had to do was nod or shake my head! Being an alien bug was as good an explanation as any. I could roll with it! I pulled my arms up, pressing the leaves together, beginning to rub them in a circular motion, like one sanding down a rough piece of wood.

If I actually was special… Visions in my mind flashed by, of being a leavanny, strapped down in a bed and getting dissected by nameless surgeons. What if I wound up sent to some pseudo-scientific mad labs? If mewtwo existed in this world, and I was pretty sure he did—it wasn't that far off of a fear, was it? Would Lanky leave me to some nameless lab coats when he learns this stuff out? I just needed to pick one! It shouldn't have been this bad for me!

Lanky's hand reached up and pushed my arm down. Stopped the anxious arm-rubbing before it could happen. I just wanted to live like a normal leavanny, go out and visit humans once in a while, and see the pokemon world. I wanted to be important. I wanted to—I wanted—I just wanted a friendly bean. Someone I could just sit next to and silently make stuff for! To grow a garden with—to have a little family of sewaddle and swadloon—to have a little fun! I could fight, I could be in a pokeball once in a while. I could team up! And yet, this pill. This particular pill was so, so, bitter.

I was still sitting on Lanky's lap. No, I had to remind myself. I had been under the scope and scanned multiple times. If there really was something wrong with my anatomy or truly alien about it compared to other leavanny, it would have been discovered by that point! Okay, I thought. I can work with that. Unfortunately, I still didn't have an actual answer for him. Wouldn't a leavanny from another world be different? So instead, I just clenched my gut and finished the nod.

I hoped, I prayed that this would be close enough. But then, as I was about to finish the nod. Then, the deal with the devil was signed, Lanky spoke up again. "All right, though I was starting to wonder if you might have forgotten… Because Lyra did say that Fallers lost their memory… And if what Lyra said about Fallers losing their memory was true… You might not even know what you are or what happened!" Lanky said.

My abdomen clenched, my jaw was getting sore, and my arms hung limp by my side. The amnesiac card. I nodded. There were certainly things from my human life I couldn't remember. Like, uh, my name as a human. Every time I thought about it—every instance of someone saying my name, all I could remember was Leah.

The pit in my stomach curled and shuddered at the thought. My actual, human name had felt so close in my mind but so far away. As far as the transition went, from human to pokemon? I only remembered the world turning gray. Other than that, I woke up as a Leavanny after closing my eyes in a hospital bed with instruments beeping.

We were working off of yes/no answers. Sue me for not trying to explain more. Yeah. Not my fault. Lanky can blame whatever god put me in this position for this. Even if all this turns out to be completely wrong somehow, it's not my fault. I just want to have fun. I just wanted to enjoy the extra lease on life. Whoever was at fault for this is to blame. They were the ones that had to make this pill so bitter. I swallowed medical issues, doctors visits, hospital stays my entire human life.

Try it. Blame me for trying to pretend to be a normal pokemon, whoever you were. Being a pokemon is great, being a human was just stress and nightmares and not knowing if a single panic attack was going to put me in the hospital. I could be the best, I could—no, I would be the best pokemon. I would eat up Darkrai's training nightmare curse, chew them up and spit them out. I would hop in front of every battle.

The air was getting warmer, the train car emitting an uncharacteristic stream of ultraviolet light. That's what it meant to be a normal partner pokemon, right? In and out of a fucking pokeball every day of your life, being thrown up against pokemon you don't know and fighting them and not knowing if they'll cut you down permanently? Grinding until you have the level and the skill to cut gods down? Beating up wild pokemon on mountains until you reach nirvana?

Lanky's hand was waving in front of my face in slow-motion. The world outside the train cars was moving a lot slower, and sounds were coming in a deeper tone. I wanted to punch something. I wanted to cut it apart. To chop it into pieces. The heat inside my thorax would not go away. My abdomen—the z-rocks were humming. I needed to release this energy, this building heat. I needed a punching bag. And Leaf—No, Fidget was staring at me from the other end of the car.
 
FWIW, I'm not completely happy with Leah's section, and may rework it somewhat.

eh... this chap. she really gonna go full fighter bug? Tanya levels of self sabotage now.

But yeah, even with a rework of this section, she's still thinking this stuff.

Luckily, Burgh is a good bean and genuinely cares about her.

Even so, I wouldn't say anyone learning to handle panic attacks is in a great spot to make commitments when they run out of tools and the panic hits them anyway.
 
So I just watched this video.

View: https://youtu.be/JB8haBcBUR8

Taking insperation from the video and this quote from chapter 36.
In terms of physical limitations, leavanny are considered to be sharply limited by their physical mass, though they easily make up for it with their surprising speed as well as their crafting and creativity. The league allows leavanny to use their own crafting and creations in battle. For example, many Leavanny make their own Razor Leaves, rather than "summoning" them. [...]
With a bit of rules lawyering, Leah could totaly use a plant mecha in a battle.

It would be very usefull if Leah and Burgh ever challange the Elite Four. Leah could pull an Athal-ka and come out of the pokeball in a gaint plant mecha.

Going even farther than just a giant plant mecha. Leah could use the techniques that the Tournament of Roses use for the parade floats. So instead of just a giant plant mecha, Leah can use a giant realistic (from a distance) plant mecha of Groudon.
 
Chapter 61 - False Binary
~~~ Chapter 61 - False Binary ~~~​

Art's left hand twitched, grabbing Leah's pokeball off his belt. He'd had his hand on it the moment the lights grew brighter. But he'd wanted to try and talk her down and out of the anxiety. Running was no answer to problems. Nor was beating up on the people around you.

"H-Hey, we have a lot we need to talk about!" Burgh had said the moment he realized she had stopped paying attention to him. Her antennae had gone from droopy, and her moping to a kind of twitchy movement. She was about to get herself into trouble, he thought, watching her walk over to Leaf. He hoped for a moment, that it would be another, normal scuffle. But something in the air just didn't feel right.

But he'd seen the tell-tale sign of her panic attacks, and had instantly reached for the pokeball. And, when Fidget hopped off the chair to greet her challenge… Burgh was dumbstruck, and for a half-a-second, thought about letting the fight play out. But when Fidget went flying back into the reinforced door, with a loud crack, Leah had been recalled back into the ball before she had a chance to follow up.

He was already checking over Fidget's head and body, trying to find any sign of damage—that hit looked like it hurt. But no, no visible damage. Just a dent in the door at the end of the train car. No missing leaves or gouges in Fidget's thorax or issues in his abdomen. Fidget yanked himself out of Burgh's arms, and started to rub his own blades together, shearing off layers of leaves with reckless abandon.

What is it with Leavanny and self-harm this way? hHe thought to himself, before recalling Fidget into his pokeball. Looking around in the cabin, by Burgh's bag, was the Silcoon. Putting Leah and Fidget both onto his belt, before sitting down on the bench next to the metamorphosing bug, Burgh threw his hands over his face, as he hunched over. The professor's voice played in his head.

They're pokemon. Animals. The words resounded in Burgh's head, again, and he groaned.

Even if she was radically smarter, letting Leah fight her cohort was… Not the best idea. If she was from another world, then her rules of engagement might have been different? Perhaps in the world she was from, Leavanny were less rare? She'd gotten morose and mopey when he'd asked her too many questions. An anxiety attack when asked to point at pictures with the detective. Then they'd used Fidget as a control, and that had turned into a disaster.

No, she was still hurting from something, and in his excitement, had ignored the warning signs of her own anxiety. Something in the questions she was asking had caused her to act up. Would probably continue to cause her to act out. But why would she choose violence? Fidget had nothing to do with the questions. And Leah had never chosen violence to start any interaction. She'd even avoided wrestling and playing with the swadloon.

Really, even with the effects of Sunny Day still in full swing, Burgh's mind was running… No, he'd heard about it before. Most pokemon with a full diet and good nutrition grew larger and stronger. Or their magic power grew more potent. But what about pokemon like Leah, who didn't change their physical shape or size? She wouldn't molt, and she'd be three feet tall for the rest of her life. Looking around, he picked up his bag, pulling it up off the ground, fumbling through his pokedex.

And found nothing. There were no known nutrients which caused an explicit increase in aggressive behavior. Not for Leavanny. But there was a general note with regards to the generic diet article, where he found the original note he was looking for.

Most pokemon in the wild are able to survive on a thin slice of the recommended diet. However, it is recommended to present a wide variety of food options and allow them to choose what to eat, as they will naturally gravitate toward meals which will contain the missing nutrients. He skimmed ahead—Even humans had some factors like that. Pregnant women, stories of his drama teacher's wife who had sent them on a midnight run for pickle juice covered ice cream or the one time she'd made herself an avocado covered and jelly sandwich. All of which had gone away when he'd bought her a pack of nutri-bars.

Pokemon with full diets are more likely to be willing to mate—

He skipped a bit further ahead. Burgh was not ready to even think about her laying eggs. Not until he at least had an actual sequence of her DNA. In fact, he made a mental note to double check Leavanny mating habits and ensure he wasn't making a big mistake by having her out and about with Fidget all the time. At the very least it shouldn't be a concern until winter. Was he going to have to give her the birds and the bees talk?

Art shook his head. He was on a mission here. And if she could understand human speech, she probably wouldn't need one. Though… perhaps he should at least tell her he isn't exactly able to guarantee support for kids. He wanted to check his hunch and find an answer for her aggression. Not a new vector for causing her panic.

Some trainers may find their pokemon tend to be more aggressive when their pokemon overeat.

He frowned. Leah wasn't overeating. By definition, as he understood it, anyway. The Leavanny article had said she should be self regulating before it got bad enough that she was getting fat. But that was due to pain as her inflexible body…

And yet, the behavior was still uncharacteristic of her. She was always propositioned for the fight first. This had been the first time she'd ever initiated an actual act of aggression of her own volition. Well, there was one time, on the docks where they met Aurea, that she pegged the bird with a razor leaf. Even after the first time he'd had to protect Fidget.

If a pokemon is hungry… Was the real reason why Leah had left for the city because she wasn't getting enough calories? If she was from another wo—no, he sighed. There was no point in further speculating. At least not until he could get an answer directly from her.

Burg held, in his hand, Leah and Fidget's pokeballs, feeling the extra weight his companions added to them. As much as he thought the Professor was an old hardass who hadn't kept up with the times; the old man was right about one thing, though maybe for different reasons. Because, well, sitting there in the train, with just his thoughts as company, for the first time since leaving the Professor's house a month ago, Art was lonely.

~~~​

Darkrai, Cresselia, and their two new human "friends" sat in the ride car. Which went up. And then it went down. As soon as the ride began, the experience was over. Tyler and Selene took deep breaths, releasing espurr from the pokeball and picking his cat up, putting the one-foot tall bipedal staring feline on his shoulder. Darkrai looked over at Cresselia. He didn't frown, though he was watching Cresselia's passive and pleasant face.

"Not your favorite?" Cresselia asked him. She knew him well enough by now she didn't need to ask. They tended to understand one another shortly after each cycle. Dreams had tendencies of reminding them what they lost each time.

"It is an impressive machine," Darkrai said. "However, for going up and down, it leaves a taste of what could be." Cresselia's passive levitation meant she would never actually fall unless another being pulled her down. And Darkrai's levitation effectively kept him on the ground. Their tainted Latias friend could recreate the experience of going up and down with speed.

"Uh, did the security guard run off?" Tyler asked, espurr once more upon his shoulder.

"Yes, he did," Cresselia stated. Darkrai couldn't hear or sense heartbeats. Not like Cress. But, he didn't need to. He smiled.

"We have one more target before the finale of the night," Darkrai said. Pointing up at the park's single in-air roller coaster. It was, all told, a simple steel-type rollercoaster which had been painted in color neon pink and greens, with a dash of yellow.

"Ty, I think they're closing up the park. All the people outside the concert hall are getting ushered to the front."

"It doesn't close until midni—oh," he said, taking an awkward glance at the gods walking in front of them.

"Should we leave?" Selene asked.

"I'd feel bad leaving those two here…" he said.

"They can clearly handle themselves, Ty," she told him. Then she spoke up, holding her hand up to her face, apparently not able to decide if she was embarrassed or frustrated. "I think it'll be okay," she whispered. They grabbed each other's hand and ran back up to Darkrai and Cresselia, both of whom smiled.

"A friend has told us that a roller coaster is an open challenge. A challenge of self-identity, I suppose. Yet, one learns a bit about themselves, on the approach, on the ride, and then after, when they get off." The four of them walked up to the beginning of the roller coaster's queue. All but a handful of guests seemingly left the park, but neither god was in a rush.

"Huh," Tyler said. "I suppose it makes sense. Do you two agree with it?"

"Relatively speaking, I suppose. Any choice one makes defines them, and tells who you are and what kind of being you are. You either rode the roller coaster or did not. In the sense that any daunting, or difficult choice defines us."

"I just think roller coasters are fun," Selene said. "Better than losing my eardrums in that concert hall, anyway." The concert hall had been banging and there were cheers here and there. They proceeded at a leisurely pace through the queue.

"We certainly agree with that," Cresselia said. "We much prefer quiet to the loud. One wonders how Groudon doesn't arise from this infernal banging." But, it was the cost of admission. Were it not for the banging, others would arrive too soon for the Lunar Duo to have a full night.

They climb up the metal steps, and find themselves back in the queue again, though they stop a good ten feet away from the last person in line. Tyler and Selene both look confused, before noticing Cresselia's finger pointed ever so slightly at the person in front of them. The park had been largely evacuated in silence. The only people who would remain were those who had a problem with authority, or those looking to cause trouble.

The man had hid his hands, but had been slightly too slow. Selene's face drooped and Tyler frowned. "More than one individual with a poor mindset tonight," Darkrai said.

"It seems our disguises aren't up to par, dear." Cresselia told him.

"You had me fooled," Tyler said. Darkrai's uncannily articulate illusory face raised an eyebrow. Tyler's face went flush.

"I do not know whatever you are referring to. We are but average human beings madly in love with each other and perform many gratuitous actions, just as any other madly-in-love pair of humans do," Darkrai said, smirking.

"Yes, yes of course. He's so dreamy." Cresselia said, grabbing her partner's hand, her facial expression emoted approximately as much as a mannequin. "Neither of you could dream how good he is," she said, looking into Darkrai's eyes. Cresselia never fully figured out facial expression, though she had tone nailed down pat.

The line moved forward, and another group got off, and they were next in line, so this time, the four and the espurr stepped forward, prior to the loading area. Even if the rides themselves weren't anything to speak about, he did have to admit—he was having fun. Though, when they got off the coaster, one last show, then the night would be over, the vacation, the departure from their norms done.

Cresselia was keeping an eye on their companions. But, he returned to the original thought. One may make a decision. And one may learn about themselves. But what did you learn if it was just a single binary decision? Nothing. Because there was no such thing as a binary decision. What happens when one gets on a roller coaster and they are already uneasy, for unrelated reasons? Do they enjoy the roller coaster ride? Or do they not?

A recurring bad dream about roller coasters could color a human's perception of any activity for the rest of their lives. All without them ever having to need to actually ride one. One either gets onto the roller coaster, or one does not, it is true. But it was a limited framing, Darkrai would conclude. Seeking to immerse oneself in the dream worlds without invitation was a choice, and ones their false followers not knowing that by their very presence, did not care for the consequences of their actions.

They stepped on the roller coaster. They would have fun. They would get off the coaster. And they would have fun again. They would share their gratitude to the Dreamer, later, one whom they willingly invited. On the coaster, they fiddled with the buckles, before an attendant, clearly sweating and nervous—the night really had come close to being ruined.

They had fun. Were having fun. Will have fun. There was nothing to do, on the ride, for Darkrai. He enjoyed it because he knew that Cresselia enjoyed it. At first, he'd been curious, but when it was the best the humans could do, he was unimpressed. But he knew it would happen. Cresselia did too. Even on the ride, the air whizzing past, his illusion held.

They proceeded off the ride. He had fun. He smiled at Cresselia's human visage, holding her hands as they got off. And he knew, despite her awkwardness at imitating humans, that she would be concerned about Tyler and Selene. He did enjoy the mask he wore. And he enjoyed knowing Cresselia enjoyed it too.

After being released from their restraints, and finessing the buckle system, they stood up. They hopped off the roller coaster ride.

"I must admit," he said, pausing on the exit ramp. "I am hesitant to cease having fun like this, or what will come."

"Sorry for interrupting," Tyler said, "but, uh. Why do you have to stop? Do you uh, work a job somewhere?"

"Ride's closed! Please exit the off-ramp completely," the attendant shouted from above, but did not approach the quad to shoo them off.

"One may call it such, but only insofar as being a pokemon and pairing with a human to fight, is a job," Darkrai said.

"So… No one is paying you?" Selene asked, after building up her courage to speak.

"Dear," Cresselia said, "many Pokemon living with trainers are paid."

"Not all, of course," Darkrai added.

"Of course not," Cresselia said, as the duo stalled, sitting together on the metal off-ramp from the coaster. Electricity crackles through the air.

"Shall we go forth, and embrace dramatic defeat?" Darkrai's rhasping voice returned as the god of nightmares cast away his illusion. In shock, or worry, Darkrai didn't care, Tyler grabbed his staring espurr off his shoulders and held her to his chest.

"Oh dear," Cresselia said, her body morphing back to the pink maiden of the moon, the last half of the words of her voice turning squeaky.

Thank you for helping to make this night wonderful for my partner, Cresselia told the duo, as they paused for a few more moments.

"You're… welcome?" Tyler said, hugging his espurr with one hand, holding Selene's hand with the other.

Please proceed ahead of us and leave the park. Walk briskly, but do not run. You will find three women and a Meganium.

"Inform them, they will find an electric god in the park, doing battle against Darkrai and Cresselia, who are losing." Tyler and Selene both nodded. The trio would arrive at the park if only because of the commotion that would start in the next few minutes. Though their premonitions weren't terribly accurate with respect to timing, the Duo had learned to bake in a bit of a margin for error.

They let both Tyler and Selene leave, who followed and would follow their instructions to a T. At least within the allotted margin of error.

Without humans to say anything to, or to perform for, Darkrai and Cress sat in silence. The park really was empty. No one new had entered the queue, and the music, while still thrumming, had turned from a bombastic set of electric, to a more relaxed, cool beat. They did not know how, exactly, but their location was known.

They both step off the ramp, out into the park. Booths had been closed, though the warm food in them was still cooling off.

There is a crackle in the air, and a meloetta stands in front of them. Little sparks of electricity, its movements erratic. It does not stand still.

"I was wondering what it was that drew you two here," a woman's voice began, "on my big opening night and everything. The concert was going great. For all of thirty minutes until I got a notification that forced me to rely on a backup. My backup dancer! On my opening night!"

Meloetta continued to zoom around, glitching and twitching across the ground, the musical notation on the bands that fell from her head were short, but they rapidly swapped with each time she ran.

"If Melly didn't catch your beat, I would have ignored it. She's been itching for some real fun for a long time. Not a lot of legendaries want to fight her these days."

Darkrai said, turning toward the woman, who was dressed in yellow and black, the electrified meloetta continuing to zap around with reckless abandon. "Unfortunately, Cresselia and I are out of practice."

"Oh. Damn," the young gym leader said. "Well. Melly wants a fight. She'll keep to some rules if you want."

"It's you we're concerned with." Darkrai said.

"Me?" Elesa said, thinking for a moment. "Don't worry, I won't catch anyone," she said.

Darkrai nodded. He was pretty sure they had the margins he was looking for by now.

"One last thing. For real though," Elesa said. "Why the fuck on my opening night?"

I wished to ride a Roller Coaster.
 
Chapter 62 - Fillet
CW: Gore, traumatic injury, blood

~~~ Chapter 62 - Fillet ~~~​

When I had been recalled into the pokeball, back on the train, I was frustrated. I had all that pent-up energy in my chest, and it wasn't going away. Annoyed. I wasn't really thinking straight, well. I was thinking less straight than normal. A lot less than normal, all right? The heat, that pressure, it had only gotten worse.

The…disappointment? Left a sour taste. A sour, bitter, numb feeling. All was welling up inside. I felt the crystals minimized and inside me also vibrating, for what I had thought was a response to the annoyance. The desire to let it all go, to beat on my target. The desire. It wasn't anger.

It wasn't the same as when Fidget had bit my arm, stealing my berries and fruits back in that forest. The only thing I could think of, when recalling that emotion, was when I'd fought off the rockruff. Anticipation. But also, the disappointment of the short fight with the Arcanine from earlier that night. The fire, that energy smoldered inside me.

Every last fight since the rockruff had been either disappointing, left a bad taste, or just was a one-sided stomp. Okay, there were a couple good ones. When I fought the unfezant while back in the professor's town, practicing with Lanky. A few other fights we'd had while practicing in the woods before we took Lanky's demonstration-test-thing before we were taken to the Castelia city gym.

Aside from that, nothing, not even saving Oust from the torture-room in the torture dungeon on the mountain had left a similar feeling. Which, mind, was still a separate feeling I could not place. It was as if I had a heavy weight in my chest.

In my thorax, where my human heart would have been, if I was still human, I had burned. The fire, the desire to let out the building energy and tension within me. In the pokeball, it was burning, screaming to escape, and in the pokeball, I had nowhere to go. Nowhere to go but to sleep. At that point, I had an outlet, anxious and fidgety as I was despite whatever numb form my body took.

There was nothing to listen to except the mute hum of what I could only assume was the train and the rhythmic hum of the moving our traincar. Thus, I made the calculated decision to attempt to pre-empt Darkrai's "gift" and enter their realms. Pulling my anxious, angry pokemagic, the pull was the same. My entire body, in the miniaturized, possibly-ethereal form quietly hummed as I pulled myself into the dream world.

Kael. My older brother.

My grip, my pull wavered, not quite finishing the maneuver, a massive jolt shocked me, and the world around me didn't go black, didn't go pink. It had gone gray. Falling through the abyss, I would have screamed, but could not. For a moment, I was on the floor of the train, booms echoing through the air, with the slightest hint of static.

But no, I wasn't going to be able to battle on the battle sub. I tried again. My abdomen hummed. The pull felt different, but I continued anyway, vision turning grey again. I needed—

"I'm not going to wait… on a list for ten years for a transplant."

The pull wavered, shocking me again. But this time, back in the new, third? Dream world? I fell through the floor. Like, physically? I was also physically shocked. My world lurched. I spun and fell. Like, literally fell, and I hit the ground with a thud, knocking me out of my vision, yet again.

My antennae twitched, bounced, no something was poking at them, playing. The lack of light told me whatever dream I was in, it had been night. But most problematically, the pressure was still there. I smelled new things in the air. Though, I was instead assaulted by the smell of carbon and greasy corn in the air. I sat up, straight into the air, inviting a hiss from what I could only assume was a meowth. Some dog-like pokemon was barking up a storm from behind a chain link fence, whining, rattling against it in the night. I didn't even look.

"Mom and Dad are worried about you, sis."

"Well aware, Kael."

I knew this street. I didn't smell any pokemon. Or see any, either. Letting my eyes adjust to the night, picking up the light emit by the few street lights. Wisconsin didn't have grass. It was more like a moss, really. Flat green stuff. The dirt smelled like ass. The air smelled like asphalt and oil and gas and tar. I looked up at a few trees. They all looked… Useless. I was, frankly disgusted.

I thought I had left all of this behind. But no, these dreams reminded me. I'd been a pokemon for two months, and not even thought of my home state. I looked down at my arms—the dream left me as a Leavanny. I was still a shortstack—the dogs were still pushing and banging against the fence, though they had quieted down.

"You're self-isolating again."

I looked around. The dream recreation of Kael's neighborhood was eerily accurate. I hadn't dreamt of this place, not once. A nearby street lamp illuminated me. I examined my leaf-blades in more detail. They were a bit scuffed. I flexed my arm, the blades were as sharp as ever and as flexible as ever.

"I don't need you to tell me that, Kael."

I awaited for the usual cries and screams which accompanied these draining dreams, the thumping and burning in my thorax still eating away. The dogs hadn't even crossed me as potential opponents, in a similar way that fighting Lanky hadn't.

He didn't live in the biggest of houses, and our whole family lived within a half-hour of the Packers stadium. Wisconsin was a flat state. Taking a glance behind me, the dogs were actually a pair of very large animals—Tibetan Mastiffs. I could never remember their names, but I loved them and they were super nice when I was a human.

"We're all worried about you. You don't have to si—"

I had always worried they would bust out of their containment. But, watching them climb the fence with a practiced ease… at more than twice my mass, they cleared the fence and human-Leah had proven correct. Well, this was a nightmare so it only made sense they would escape.

"Shut up, Kael. It's my decision, not yours."

I set my legs apart. Raised my leaf-blades, as the two dogs circled me. Tails wagging? Sniffing me? Which was fine. Even with the pressure, the desire to release… It felt wrong? Though one did sniff too close to me, and I did get a good whack for the trouble. I was not a chew toy.

Ignoring the two dogs, now spooked enough to keep their distance, I was not going to let this dream just be yet another piece of bullshit. I pulled the mana inside me, as much as I could. I stepped across the lawn, crossing a driveway. The concrete was impressively tactile, for a dream. Not a single house's lights were on. On the street I stood, my brother's car was parked in front of his driveway.

I gathered up the mana, the dogs following behind me. He and Trisha didn't have a lot of money. Most people on the outskirts of Green Bay didn't. But he had enough to have a house and keep nerding out on pokemon during the harsh winters. The mana inside me warmed my thorax, and I focused as much of it as I could, I could at least get some of the tension out. I was a good twenty feet away from his car.

"It's just, you know, an experimental procedure…"

"I'm an adult, Kael. Fuck off."

The pressure built, and I gave both dogs circling me again good whacks, sending the massive bears running with a good whack. They were not worthy opponents. At all. There, in the dream, I still waited for the inevitable crisis, glancing at Kael's car. Sitting there, in his driveway. My antennae tasted oil. I tasted aluminum. I tasted far, far too much fertilizer. Remnants of booze cans, probably from the Sunday ritual that was the state's obsession with football.

There were no stars in the sky. Well, I didn't actually have the vision to tell. But there was no moon. I had to be rid of this one somehow, so I did the only thing I thought to do. I pulled on my mana. I pulled on the refreshed memory of that old conversation, the two of us, sitting at the starbucks. I felt the heat rising up in my body. I grew more warm from the broiling piece of mana inside.

"But it's not prov—" "Kael. Are you my doctor?" "No" "My surgeon?" "N—" "—Credentials? No? Gee look at that. Fuck. Off."

The now-familiar writhing, spinning and screaming sun-like energy in my mouth, rapidly rotating, threatening to tear itself out in a massive explosion. This was my life. I would live it how I pleased. I cracked the flat ridges of my V-shaped mouth apart, pulling the energy from the thorax again, only to release it, feeling my limbs go slightly cold, holding it in, the vibration in my abdomen of the remnants of the rocks that remained inside.

"Look, Kael," I had said. "I already feel bad enough. But I will not be held hostage by their, or your feelings. Not for a chance of something better. Not because it makes mom and dad worried."

"I know. Just. They do care about you, you know."

I tilted my head ever-so-slightly up, the beam screaming out into the air, just skimming above the roof of his shitty Toyota Prius. Instead of blasting my brother's car, the screaming solar beam illuminating the street, the beam crashed through the roof of a house at the other end of the street.

"Fuck, Kael! I know, damn it! Sometimes… Caring means giving space. If you care about me, you'll stop guilting me each time we have these coffee lunches."

Sparks and flames arose, the beam shooting across the sky into the distance. When smoke rose up from their roof it had definitely been a dream. My solar beam had never set anything on fire. Merely left scorch marks. The second point I knew it was a dream was when no one's lights turned on.

With the solar beam gone, I pulled my mana again, the dogs watching me from a distance, I was sure. I had, against Lyra's Meganium, and Alakazam—the dream I was in rippled—I had managed to summon leaves in those fights—beewooop. It was worth the time to practice those again. I tasted distortion.

It wasn't every day that a nightmare turned out to be so low-key. Would be nice if I didn't have to fucking use the leaves—beewooop—on my leaf-jeans. I wasn't about to check up on—BEEWOOOP—Unfortunately, the house I'd hit, now smoking—BEEWWOOP—audibly angry, and—BEEEWOOOOP—emitting flashes of light from the rising flames, screaming at me in anger with each obnoxious BEEEWOOP.

I hated fire types in these dreams, but at this distance, I could throw some leaves at my opponent. But before I could step closer to my rising opponent, my brother's house, his door opened, I turned, and say his face, peeking out—and I was on the floor of the train again. Not seconds later, Lanky's arms around me, pulling me off the ground. A boom rolled over our train, rocking it, static and crackling filled the air.

Thanks, Darkrai, for the wonderful dreams and memories. Really what I needed.

A wave of distortion rolled over me—Wait. Was that Oust?—"Leeeee!" I cried, I yanked my arm out of Lanky's embrace—"Ach!"—I was shoved to the ground—Oust's fake leavanny form disappearing behind a closing hole in reality. He was gone. The smell of iron touched my antennae. "You cut me!" Lanky cried. I turned to see him, kneeling on the ground, a stream of blood dripping down his left arm. Leaf stood a short distance from me, a leaf-blade flat over his mouth.

Lanky grabbed the bag on the train floor next to him. He was cut deeply, right at the elbow, a sizable chunk of skin hanging down. "Tourniquet!" Lanky called. I stepped closer to him, not sure what to do—there were no leaves nearby—no, Leaf wasn't gasping, he was pooling silk on the flat of his leaf-blade—Lanky needed a tourniquet, not a bandage. I didn't want to get in his way, but I pulled together my silk, recalling the way I had mixed it back at the gym for specific consistencies. Thick, yet strong. "Shit, shit, shi," Lanky exclaimed, shuffling through his bag. He turned to me.

"I need"—he took a breath—"a Tourniquet." He stared at me, for a half-second, pulling his right hand over his bleeding left arm. "String… shot?" he asked. I was already working on it. I held my blade over my mouth as I slowly released the beginnings of a thin, yet strong rope, with only minimal stick. I needed to pull it tight—the cut was right at the joint of the forearm.

The air was filled with the scent of iron. I looped the string out, cutting off about a three-foot-long rope. I wrapped the first loop around his thin lower bicep, which he picked up the end of, having to massage the silk a bit. With my other arm free, I looped the opposite end around.

"Pull it tight," he said, gripping the other end of the silk-based tourniquet in his teeth. My silk was strong enough to hold a human. I pulled tight. There was a crack. "Gah!" Lanky cried, practically guttural.

"You're so strong that you don't even know," Lanky said, dropping his side of the silk into my leaves. Keeping it tight, I tied the loose ends of the makeshift tourniquet together. Lanky flexed his hand, the blood dripping out of the chunk I'd accidentally tore from him.

"That was almost quite the fillet," he said. I took a step back, and immediately fidget took my spot, Lanky letting out verbal winces as Leaf smothered Lanky's forearm in his own gooey silk.

"Uh, thanks, Fidget," he said, taking deeper breaths, a light shining through the front train car door's window before opening, a tall, burly figure stepping through.

"The hell happened here?" A sneasel stepped out from behind the man.

Leaf was already in between Lanky and our newcomer.

"Sorry for the mess," Lanky said, fishing through his bag with his right hand, his left arm going pale. More flashes, more screams, and sharp chirps, booms in the distance rattling our windows. They weren't made of glass, and didn't break.

"You gonna tell her to stand down? I know this is the battle sub but now's not a good time for battles."

"Fidget, c'mere. It's the conductor."

The man kneeled down. "Show me that arm."

My part done, and not really sure what else I could do to help Lanky, I turned away from them, instead watching the windows. I took a first aid class once in highschool as a human, but anything I knew with medicine revolved purely around my… breathing condition… If Oust had shown up, that meant—"leavanny silk. Clever. But you'll need a week's round of antibiotics. And a visit to the hospital. Those nutribars are miracles, and potions help if you're well-bonded, but you still don't want this healing in-place, kid." —if Oust had shown up, that meant—

"Name's Burgh."

"Burgh, then. Name's Korbin."

The sneasel hopped up next to me, looking out the window, as if to try and see what I was looking for. The lightning storm seems to have stopped. How much time had it been? Five minutes? Ten?

If oust had shown up—the dream had felt too real, even with the ripples—it meant the dream wasn't just a dream.

Just like the Volcarona.

I'd nearly nuked my brother's car.

Outside the train, screams of pokemon, mostly flying, continued to flutter about, judging by their silhouettes moving through the window. It was quite a night, little pings and echoes bouncing off the windows as they passed over us, fleeing what had been the epicenter of the electrical storm in the distance.

"Well, kid, you'll be fine for now. But you need a hospital in the next couple hours. The train'll reboot but we might have to wait for the Noibat flock to calm down a bit. Damn pests."

"Why'd we lose power? I thought everything on the grid was hardened against EMP bursts."

"It is, but after a certain threshold, EMP protection won't matter, so the grid and trains have emergency shutoffs."

"Like the pokeballs, I suppose."

Lanky's breathing was still coming in short breaths. I had cut the one person who was sticking with me. Nearly killed him. He deserved better than that. Better than me. I dropped, sitting back in the chair.

"You're self-isolating again."

Slouching, I splayed my arms out. It was useless. Why? Why did it have to be that specific memory? At that specific time? Thanks, Darkrai? But that hadn't been a dream, and dreams were his wheelhouse. Instinct? Wouldn't memories be under another god's wheelhouse?

Sneasel sank down next to me, mimicking my exact movements, complete with the slouch and splayed arms.

"You need water, kid. That's a lot of blood. Don't move too fast." The items in Lanky's bag clinked and clanged as he pulled out a bottle.

"Leah! It's okay!"

Lanky, still sitting on the floor, made to stand up. "Whoops, that was a mistake," Lanky said, sitting back down.

"Take it easy, kid. But I gotta go. Looks like the grid's coming back online," the conductor-guy said, pointing out the windows. Sure enough, little lights blinked on in the distance."

"It's going to be okay!"

I turned my head to the one mocking me. She stared into my eyes, her mouth mimicking the exact shape of the leavanny-v. I reached out. To her. And she mimicked my exact movement, reaching out with her arm. It was so stupid. She was so stupid. Why would a pokemon even do that? I waved my left arm instead. She waved her right arm, the motion following mine with uncanny reaction speed.

"Come along, sneasel."

Sneasel hopped off the chair, leaving me with simultaneously too much, and too little to think about. They'd apparently decided Lanky didn't need lifeflight, at least. Or, it had been too dangerous for lifeflight.

With the conductor-man gone, the three of us sat in silence. I didn't have anywhere to go. The lights for the train turned on, the intercom crackling to life. "Testing… One… Two… Three. Normally, we would have to wait for the Mass Outbreaks to calm down, but there is a passenger who needs hospital assistance."

Lanky looked at me. I looked away. The scent of iron was still strong in the air. Leaf had taken to poking at the Silcoon, sitting unmoving on their chair three seats down.

"It's not your fault, Leah," Lanky lied. "Look at your blades. They're sharper than knives. I didn't even let you catch your bearings after Minitina pulled you from the hole! You play with fire, and you don't respect it, you get burned. I… got a bit too comfortable."

The train started moving, fires sparking up in the forests in the distance. I just sat there, on my chair. Lanky pulled himself up onto the bench with a groan. The train began to pick up speed. He had a pack of berries in his hand, holding them out for me. His other hand not exactly operational, I sliced the top open, letting him dump them into my mouth.

"You know," Lanky said. "I was just so panicked, when all of the pokeballs released with that first surge, when you didn't come out of your pokeball, I thought your pokeball was busted… At first, I laughed. It was like, 'here we go again'. But then, the thought hit me just now. Something had happened, with that surge. These Z-crystal-things? The ones inside you. The ones the crazy guy was trying to tell us about? Did you go back? Back to your real home?"

I held up my arms, making an X, but I didn't shake my head.

"Is that a no?" Lanky asked.

I shook my head.

"Well, that's not a 'yes' and you already know what nodding and shaking your head are. So I'm going to say you don't want to talk about it." I nodded. "Well, Leah," Lanky said, sighing, scooting a couple chairs up from me on the subway bench, laying down. "That's fine by me" —he pulled a pillow out of his bag— "I could use the sleep. But promise me that one day, we'll talk all of this through." Lanky laid down, letting his head come up to my spot. The train's velocity had stopped increasing, maintaining a steady pace, blowing its horn for the first time in the trip, alerting pokemon to get away from the rails. The train's progress was at a snail's pace.

Oust had drawn me back. Back from hell. And yet, I couldn't help but think of Kael. My human, older brother. The one who'd gotten me playing pokemon in the first place. His wife Trisha, who put up with his posters and pokemon plushies adorning the shelves and the walls, and even learned enough pokemon to talk with us when we nerded out about it.

Leaf and Lanky were both asleep. If I fell asleep again, would I fall back? Back into the nightmare world? Back into the "real" world?

I'd once joked with Trisha that she had an old woman's name. Who was still naming their daughter Patricia in 1989 anyway? Turned out, her driver's license? Yeah, her first name was literally just "Trisha". She got that joke a lot.

I sat on the train, looking at the window across the way. Had I run from the nest? It seemed like such a simple decision to make. Leaving the nest. Like it had been obvious.

Even if I did return to the real human world, I still couldn't remember my actual human name. Would I knock on their door, say, "hey, I'm a pokemon now, wanna be my trainer, and come to the pokemon world with me?" No, No, because I couldn't even read, i couldn't even write—But hearing words had somehow clicked. It had clicked. Not the least the problem would be I would be leaving Lanky behind. I couldn't do that to him.

Lanky deserved better than that.
 
Chapter 63 - Rescue Mission
~~~ Chapter 63 - Rescue Mission ~~~​

In a universe where the total disorder of matter, or energy, is increasing, Ice Type pokemon are endlessly fascinating. These creatures seem uniquely adapted to pulling the energy of the world into themselves, perhaps acting as natural temperature regulators. We find their fossil records, ironically, dated from the warmest eras of the planet's history. Periods of unnatural warmth for when they are the least adapted.

There have been experiments confirming some suspicions—Ice Types tend to absorb more energy faster the warmer the temperature is (within certain bounds based on species, expressed in the table below). They express physical agitation and restlessness when doing so. To the point many experiments had to be terminated early, but the data gathered was still valuable.

Still, we ask the age-old question. For Fire Types: Whence does the heat, the energy, disorder arrive? For Ice Types: Whence does that energy go? A Frosmoth brings a notable chill to an area of cold, but do not be fooled, "cold" is merely the absence of the chaos of heat. There is, only in the unscientific mind, an absence of energy. In this chapter, we will build on the basic physics from chapters one and two, and then the basic biologies we learned in chapters three to five, and now, we will critically examine the various organs within a subset of pokemon's bodies and attempt to explain some of these peculiarities.

Though this text will elucidate much of what we do know, do not be fooled—we are yet far from comprehensive understanding.

- Dr. Anton Colress, Mechanics of Pokemon Biology, Second Edition, Sixth Chapter


~~~​

Jacob's hair stood on end, the water and moisture in the air was proving to be terrible for the gods his religion revered. He'd had a bit of hope, actually, that they would prove as powerful as they were clever. But no, Elesa's Meloetta friend had waltzed through his endless dark voids. He was lucky to be awake, really, having been caught in that first wave of black. His noivern's uproar had not yet worn off.

The moon had dimmed and with one last crack of electricity, Meloetta drilled Darkrai in the chest, the static in the air causing Jacob to wince. He frowned- Darkrai was knocked out of the air, Meloetta practically dancing around as she flashed over the earth. Cresselia was about twenty feet away from her compatriot "god". She had been taken out first—her Moon's Blessing and general psychic ability to recover, her own body mending itself, had kept them in the fight for far, far longer than they should have been.

Watching them both, passed out on the ground, seeing Elesa congratulate Meloetta, Jacob's stomach was more than a bit sour. But also, it was kind of nice to see the gods—who hadn't even bothered to learn his name—actually lose a fight. But also, there was bitterness. The two gods had a group of people who were more than willing to help them fight and to train. He'd rationalized it away. They were gods. Top dogs. Why would they bother with the rest of the church?

Jacob thumbed his empty ultra ball, rolling it around in his hand, pressing the front button. Now, he was asking himself—Why had Elesa and Meloetta any better? A mega absol would tear holes through Cresselia's psychic defenses with ease. A mega lucario would give Rai a run for his money. And yet, their attempts at paying respect were spurned at every opportunity.

"Melly, it's over. Down time!" Elesa said, encouraging meloetta to drop the bursts of electricity.

As a good security guard and gym member—though he had no electric types (the writing was on the wall for his future employment at the gym)—he'd watched the battle from afar. Now, he was waiting for the electronic devices in the area to recover from the meloetta's EMP blasts. He'd even taken a few stray shocks, though managed to avoid any paralyzing static. He knew his fellow gym members slash security guards were on the sidelines. Rai and Cresselia were his gods, non-practicing though he'd been since he'd had his daughter.

Three women waltzed into the park, lights still out, illuminated only by the moon. The city had known Elesa had an electric meloetta and yet the grid still hadn't been appropriately hardened. The engineers in the power stations were probably being called in. Jacob shook his head, clicking on the pokeball repeatedly, waiting for its circuitry to reboot. He cursed the protection laws—strong-enough electric pokemon still managed to make pokeballs useless. Not everyone had been so lucky to put their teams in pokeballs in their hardened lockers, he was sure.

One more press, and his pokeball finally blinked, armed. Elesa had said she wouldn't catch them, but there the lunar gods were, in the middle of the park, paralyzed and knocked out. Pokemon had no catching laws, but the promises were off in the cities. Couldn't have the animals running around. Covered in electrical burns, both silent, the remaining static electricity caused the gods' muscles to twitch and occasionally spasm. What had they been thinking, fighting an electric type? Both gods would be considered supports in a more conventional battle format anyway.

Weak. Made a joke by a fucking two-foot tall meloetta. Gods vaunted, and worshipped, by his family and friends for their prophetic abilities. Sitting there, writhing on the ground. He watched Elesa turn, meloetta pointing in the direction of the newcomers. His gods had lost the fight. Elesa had every right to catch them. And yet, sitting there, the twenty-year-old gym leader did nothing, her face glowing under the light of the minor god that she'd convinced to tag along.

"Eeeuuuuueeee" Cresselia verbalized in her high-pitched, squeaky tone, craning her neck before falling back down to the ground. If Elesa wasn't going to catch them, someone else would. The two were not going anywhere any time soon. The three women who'd entered the park, had been followed by the duo with the espurr. A meganium was following behind them.

"Sorry ladies," Elesa stepped forward, blocking their path—were two of the women growling at her? "But no catching."

Jacob looked around, the city's lights beginning to flicker back on. Even if he did catch one of them, Elesa wouldn't let him get away with it. Even if he hadn't left noivern in his pokeball, anticipating a mass-release event… And if he did catch one, and managed to get away from the meloetta or the rest of Elesa's team, what would he do? He'd have the other one after his ass. Most pokemon you could train or make friends with after catching. But gods? You made friends with them first, then you asked them to join. He knew the stories when that protocol wasn't followed.

His frown deepened—Elesa wasn't tending to the challengers at all.

"Not here to catch, we just heard there was an electric god in the area, and wanted to check… These two have business with a particularly troublesome electric cat." The meganium was looking at Jacob, who sighed, sitting down on a chair from behind a cart, pulling up his bag.

Even if Darkrai or Cresselia had less firepower, and relied instead on sleep and dreams, making either of them mad would be far, far worse than a pokemon that would just kill you. Darkrai had a bit of a… sadistic side, at least in myths. Though meeting him that night didn't do anything to dispel the natural unease. The choice should have been obvious. Catch the god, put the ball into a box so the sensors wouldn't open them when it detected water—then throw the ball into a lake. Wait for the egg to show up, then raise the new-hatch.

Unregistered pokemon had no rights in the city. Elesa was still a new gym leader. She had no clout with the local justice system yet. But seeing them both lying there on the ground, passed out… He might have thought to catch one of them. However, with the meganium staring at him… neither the newcomers nor Elesa nor any of his co-workers, of whom there were at least three still watching, waiting to see what was going to happen. None were making moves to heal either Darkrai or Cresselia.

He'd brought a few potions, and had begun to carry anti-paralysis potions on him at all times. Jacob pulled out a few single-doses of both. They wouldn't be enough to heal them from the damage completely. He stepped out from behind the shadows, looking around. A fellow, newer gym member stepped out.

"You know, I think we're kind of lucky the digital pokeballs have timers on them," she said, Katrina. One of Elesa's new recruits, her Raichu following by her side. She held an ultra ball of her own.

"Elesa said no catching. Put the damn balls away," Jacob said, walking up to the gods, pulling out his four vials. Cresselia's eyes fluttered. Administering potions and paralyze-heal on powerful, fainted pokemon was always a risky endeavor. Well, at the very least, he wouldn't be falling asleep for quite some time.

"I saw you holding that Ultra Ball, don't tell me you weren't thinking of catching them."

"Can it, Katrina," he said, pulling the plug off the top of his spray. Electric damage was usually internal, and needed the pokemon to ingest it. "I suppose you're right about the timers. Forces trainers to actually have space for their pokemon. Not going to train an onix in a tiny apartment if it gets released from its pokeball in the middle of the night."

"Yeah, exactly!" Katrina said, smirking. "I'm impressed you're not catching them, honestly. I didn't know you had a soft spot for wild pokemon," she'd said, stepping forward, her raichu trailing by her side. He frowned, glancing over at Elesa and the three women talking, the meloetta, the glitching and sudden movements and dripping electricity now gone. He wasn't about to fuck with that demon any time soon. No rock types on his team. The note-like elements adorned Melo's were the only things flashing any more.

If this was what the new league's gym leaders considered an honorable after-battle victory, then—No, Elesa was just young, he told himself. Or she didn't bring any potions of her own. Not like she could take them to a pokecenter without catching them.

Jacob knelt down in front of Cresselia's form, passed out, her eyes occasionally fluttering. The smell of burned fur wafted into his nose.

"Give these two to Darkrai," Jacob said, thrusting out his free hand to Katrina.

"Uh, no? I'm not getting any closer to you. Hey, Tait! Jacob's getting buddies with Darkrai and Cress."

"Yo, Jake, what you doin'? You know they're free catches in the city if Elesa's not gonna take 'em. You're not gonna take Darkrai? Would be nice to send 'em off to a scientist and see if they could put a damper on that passive nightmare field. I bet your daughter's tossin' and turnin' tonight if the storm didn't wake her up. My ears are still ringing!"

"No, we're not catching them," he said. Fine, I'll do it myself, he thought, ignoring Tait's jabs. He popped a potion into Cresselia's mouth, using one hand to hold her lips closed so it wouldn't drip out. The bottle empty, he pulled it out, holding her mouth closed, tilting her head up, keeping her mouth closed. She was surprisingly fuzzy, even behind the electrical burns… His daughter would probably love giving Cresselia a hug. He knew she'd swallowed it when he saw her mouth muscles move, pushing the liquid down her throat. The potion down, he repeated the same process for the paralyze-heal.

Both potions gone, he waited a moment, watching her breathing return to regularity, her eyes fluttering and the random body twitches settle out. Once the ribbons extruded from her body stopped twitching, he knew she would awaken soon, so Jacob turned to Darkrai.

His… religion had had debates over and over on catching the lunar gods. They'd been caught before. His passive nightmare… field was different from the daywalkers and such trying to petition for dreams of bad futures.Darkrai seemed to be in better shape, at least visually, were it not for seeing the god get pile driven by a flying two-foot-tall missile, he would say Darkrai was probably fine. Jacob sighed, pulling up two more bottles. Darkrai's face and head was set so far back that he had no mouth. How the creature spoke would be anyone's guess.

If a pokemon had no mouth, protocol meant finding the next closest thing. Despite having no mouth, Darkrai clearly had many, many ways to scream. Darkrai only had his eyes. Cresselia just had a mouth and her eyes. Cresselia was lucky in that regard. Would Darkrai ever be able to eat, or taste? For the potion application, it had to be the eyes. Jacob poured a small splash of potion first, on the god's eyes. Then, the paralyze-heal. Jacob stood up, the waning gibbous moon, high in the sky emitting midnight light growing stronger than before. Cresselia's head turned to him as she hovered in the air. Was she smiling?

Darkrai's eyes weren't even open and he'd begun to float once more, his body righting itself. Jacob looked around for his fellow gym-members—both Katrina and Tait were gone. Cowards. He sighed. In front of him, the world shimmered. A hole tore open, a… red and black leavanny? Stood behind, the world warping, as distortion escaped, rolling through reality.

Darkrai's eyes open. "Excellent timing, as always, dear Oust," Darkrai said, his voice rhasping. Elesa and the three women went silent, watching as Cresselia also began to float. "We had fun, Jacob" —Darkrai gave a curt nod toward the guard—"And you as well, Selene, Tyler." Darkrai said, waving at the couple with the Espurr staring at them. "Unfortunately, we are on a strict schedule once more, I am afraid. Please, accept Cresselia's gift for the wonderful night. Adieu."

Darkrai had remembered his name. The lights of the city, the park, all coming back online. Jacob put his hand back into his pocket, and, under the light of the moon, twirled a pink, crescent-shaped feather. Well, he had something to give his daughter, at least. Katrina and Tait both returned from the shadows.

"Cowards," Jacob muttered under his breath, Darkrai and Cresselia both limping—if hovering in the air could be considered limping—into the distortion world.

"Well, with the power back on, and the Lunar gods gone, I suppose we should let the concert attendees out," Elesa said. "It was a pleasure to meet you three, Lyra, and?" Elesa held her hand out, smiling. The model/star's dance outfit had had no room for potions, likely not even a communicator.

"This one's Sam. The other one's Tiffany. Sorry, they're not much for shaking hands." Elesa held her hand out to shake Sam and Tiffany's hands, but they declined.

"So, uh, Jacob," Tait said, pulling his attention away from the gym leader.

"What?"

"The battle kinda stirred up a flock of noibat and noivern the size of a city."

"And? What am I supposed to do?"

"Well, you're the noivern trainer, and they're not native to Unova…"

He turned to Elesa, who waved at him, her meloetta following as they proceeded back to the concert hall. It had probably had energy for a few more blasts, but he wouldn't be surprised if Elesa's partner had burnt itself out from the excitement of a high-powered battle. Still, a blast of electricity would probably pull most of the screaming flock out of the sky.

"Why can't we just let the mass outbreaks die off? The battle, if you want to call it that, was ten minutes long." The moment he said it, realized how terrible the logic was. The size of mass outbreaks had far less to do with the length of a battle, than the total power and resulting noise.

"They've got a kid stuck on the train. Needs hospital evac. Told the conductor to take it slow because of the mass outbreaks of panicking pokemon" —a train's horn blared in the distance— "and so we could land on the roof and pick the kid up."

Jacob grit his teeth. Rangers would be busy deterring pokemon from the cities and stopping cascading stampedes through the entire area. And he was the only trainer there with two fliers that could hold a human. It was also convenient that they were both Noivern—not likely to get attacked by the noibat and noivern flock if they were still fluttering about.

"Fine," Jacob said. Everything Tait said was grating on him, and Katrina wasn't even willing to look him in the eyes. He picked up his trash and bag and headed back to the locker room where he'd left his pokeballs. He grabbed a stretcher-tie that he could use to secure the victim. It could be tied to either of his noivern's back, or his bat's legs; they'd been trained in both. Pulling his pokeballs out of the locker, leaving the pink, crescent feather instead, he went outside and released both of his beloved bats.

Jacob had decided he wasn't going to get sleep any time soon that night. No one deserved to die just because gods decided to have a fight in the middle of a city.
 
Chapter 64 - Famous To A Seven Year Old
~~~ Chapter 64 - Famous To A Seven Year Old ~~~​

We were sitting on the train, when we heard scrapes over the rooftop of the carriage. For a moment, I thought it was just one of the bats or pokemon flying around taking a landing. Well, I was half-wrong. The burly guy came through the door, but Lanky hadn't fallen asleep. Lanky's arm had turned pale. The conductor had joked that the tourniquet had cut the circulation.

Despite lying down, Lanky hadn't fallen asleep. I didn't really see what happened next—all three of us—me, the silcoon and Fidget, were all recalled. Inside the pokeball, my senses blurred once more. And I tried twisting, I tried churning, pushing, nothing worked. I could feel the mana inside me, even. But I could not get that last image of Kael, staring back at me in his black pajama sweatpants and tank top blinking back at me.

Or the feeling that I'd hurt Lanky. Or the feeling, the longing of emptiness that came from not holding a sewaddle or swadloon in my arms. Or carrying them in my sash. I'd wanted to help the kid. But I couldn't. I couldn't even decide on a plan and stick to it. Become the strongest battler ever? What a joke. I couldn't even remember my human name. Running away wasn't exactly working out, now was it? If there was one thing I could work on, to solve… It would be that one gap. Why could I remember Kael's name? Trisha's? Okay, I couldn't remember his kids' name, but I assumed that was mostly because was a terrible aunt.

Falling through the dream realm and finding me in a world that felt like a fake reality. It had to be fake. A dream. A world constructed just from a glitch with my dreams. I didn't have powers to open wormholes. That Z-Stuff? No fucking way did it drag me back home just because I lost my grip. I needed to talk to Darkrai. Or Cresselia. The falling had to be a fluke. A small part of me was only a little excited at the thought of seeing Oust again. If I were to, hypothetically fall through the hole. I only knew him for a few days, but for those few days… Oust was my kid.

I would try again.

~~~​

Burgh was sitting up, cold sweat dripping off his face in the waiting room of the Emergency Room. He smirked. He'd never had to wait to get a nurse's attention at a pokecenter before. But when he was in the Emergency Room, all of a sudden there was a line. He pulled out a nutri-bar. The damn things were miracle bars, when you were just tired and your muscles needed a boost. He didn't look forward to having the doctors fix his arm if it healed badly, but he needed something to chew on.

Despite the pain, and the headache, Burgh's thoughts had turned to Leah while he'd been tied, carried by the Noivern from the train car—he'd be stuck in the hospital for a day, just with the nasty cut in his arm. Probably a couple more just to make sure the silk didn't cause an infection. He'd already considered seeing if Lyra could help her work out her aggression. That was a no. Lyra was extremely competent, but he didn't exactly trust her methods. Lyra would probably beat on her until Leah had to go to the pokecenter and call it training.

Leah was already a bag of anxiety. He'd entertained letting Leah stay in the hospital's daycare area. But Jacob had said it was just an indoor kennel. And then, seeing how many people were in the ER that there was a wait time, there would be too many pokemon for a nurse to give one on one attention to. Leah would get into trouble inside. Especially when unwatched.

Leave her alone? Something would go wrong. Basically a law of physics. He loved her, but trust her? He did not. She would go stir-crazy and cause problems. Of that, he had no doubt. Confined spaces, the way she looked at pokeballs, her habits of escape artistry. Leaving her in the hospital would be a disaster. Her face never showed any emotion, always the permanent smile. But he could tell by her antennae and the way she tracked the poke—

"That's a bad break in your arm, kid," Jacob said. "And you let your Leavanny silk touch the open wound. The doctors are going to put you in bed for a few days. They'll isolate you until they know you're not infected."

"And?" Burgh coughed, his head throbbing, his left arm tingling, most of the blood gone and numb. He'd just be in the hospital for longer, causing the doctors more work.

He had already thought all that through, and didn't need to be told—he'd known what he'd signed up for when he made the decision to have Leah and Fidget help stop the bleeding and apply the tourniquet. Leah probably wasn't full of bacteria, but growlithe mouths were only so clean because their body heat killed most bacteria and viruses.

"What are your pokemon going to do? Sit in the chain-link kennels the whole time? Look at all these people. There's not enough staff in the hospital to take all the pokemon outside each day."

Even through the throbbing pain and growing pressure in his head, he turned to face Jacob, a man in his early thirties, scruffy beard with a lighter complexion that came with his choice of star pokemon.

"You want to take Leah?"

As much as Lyra was dragging him around, she was doing her own thing. He'd only let her drag him around to Opelucid because then the trip back to Castelia was a single straight shot south. Even if he was glad she'd mentored him for a couple days. Well. Even if he could let her stay with Lyra and Ho-Oh, he couldn't do that to his best friend.

"Yeah. I'd take the other Leavanny too."

Burgh felt his pulse in his forehead, watching the small crowd of people passing through, with various pokemon-or-accident-related injuries. The mass-release of pokeballs from Elesa's EMP blast had not been kind. But at the same time, the hospital was more organized and orderly. No one was yelling at the nurses or staff on duty, though one girl was crying quietly in the corner. Otherwise, his fellow patients seemed to be in good spirits despite the various broken arms and other traumas.

Not that he was complaining. School had trained him in what to do for basic First Aid, and seeing the priority and urgency queue in action? He'd be tearing up in joy if he weren't half-numb and half-headache. Sometimes, humans could be pretty cool, even when things didn't work out. For a moment, he considered saying no. It was risky—but, as much as he was loath to admit, he didn't really have any other options.

"Fine," Burgh said, looping his right hand to the left side of his waist, grabbing Leah's pokeball. He couldn't leave the ER in case the next operating room was open. "Leave me your phone number."

A lot had gone on, and she'd been panicking more and more frequently, no rhyme or reason. It hadn't been a week since he and Leah had seen a donut shot practically mowing down a slew of bugs. And he still needed to research what was going on with her surprise aggression against Fidget on the train. She was smart, yes, but Leah did not have a surprise streak of sadism, anxiety-driven or otherwise, that much, he was sure.

"Here," Jacob said, handing Burgh his gym card, picking up Leah's pokeball in exchange. "My personal's on the back."

There were only a few other people in the waiting room now. Well, everyone else left had come in after them. More than one with nasty-looking electrical burns. He didn't want to leave Fidget in the hospital's kennels, so he'd probably give Aurea or Alder a call depending on what the doctors actually said. He doubted they would really need him to be in quarantine, judging by how nonchalantly he had been guided to the waiting area.

"Arty-muss?!?" a nurse called.

"Here, take her shoes. And make sure to talk to her and tell her what's going on. She will panic if you don't. I'll call as soon as I can." Burgh said, scrambling to toss the Nuvema gym member Leah's shining purple shoes as he walked into the back hallways.

~~~​

"Sure thing, champ," Jacob smirked as Burgh was ushered to the back. The nurse had been run ragged, already rattling off questions before the door behind them closed shut. Jacob rolled Leah's pokeball in his hand. On the top red side of the leavanny's pokeball was a silver L with a silver heart, the paint scraped off down to the metal.

Jacob smiled. A lunar feather from the goddess of dreams? And now, getting to babysit the dancing Leavanny his daughter had spent the last few weeks obsessed over? He wasn't one to believe in karma. But helping people and pokemon out wasn't so bad. Walking out, he checked the clock— 1 AM—iIt was earlier in the night than he'd expected it to be, honestly. Not that he hadn't had experience pulling true late-nighters. He left the building, Leah's pokeball in hand. He stopped on the grass in an area well away from the entrance.

Macie was going to give him hell for being out so late when he got home. Assuming she was awake. No one else would be there to put her to bed. But, he needed to do one last thing first. If Leah could understand them, then he needed to avoid a scene. He clicked Leah's pokeball. The Leavanny emerged, before falling face down onto the grass.

He frowned. He wasn't a bug specialist, but most pokemon were brought out of the pseudo-stasis of the pokeball in their neutral stance, able to keep standing with ease. Or lying down. Both Leavanny had been fine when he watched as Burgh recalled them, back on the train. He wasn't super excited at the prospect of a surprise trip to the pokecenter, especially with how busy the hospital had been.

"You all right, buggy?"

~~~​

I had gathered up the mana. Then felt around, before using that same instinctual pull—my vision faded from a gray nothing, to black. I didn't question myself, instead, surfacing on Darkrai's ocean of nightmares, standing in the grey twilight of his realm, the blackness rippled under me, some splotches of it sticking to my body, leaf-blades and dress. The twilight ocean zone was empty. And I had questions. I was tired of panicking just because I had gaps.

A crystal dot of red floated in front of me. Before two red crystals, which then coalesced into a pair of blue triple-pronged tails, the crystals embedded in each. Staring at me with her two yellow ey—eee was yanked, back out of the dream realm, my body forcibly plunged under the sea of black.

I fell to the ground, lying outside in grass, feeling the outside of a large building. I opened my mouth, getting a good taste of the over-fertilized soil. The vibrations of the large city had returned. I'd just wanted to see Oust again. Or ask a question about my name!

"You all right, buggy?" A man's voice spoke. "You understand our language. Yeah?"

Standing up in the soil, grass and dirt, I turned to the man who was talking to me. The half-pokemon I'd seen was not Darkrai. Or Cresselia. Yeah, no, fuck that shit. I just wanted some answers. Not dragged on more tentacruel games. My eyes slid into place, and I was wholly awake again. I was in a small grass field, thick cover of trees, the vague hint of water and moisture in the air. I would rather take a month of— the man reached his hand out, snapping his finger in my face.

"Burgh said you understood language."

Towering over me, was a three-story concrete building, lights glowing. Presumably, a hospital? Lanky needed someone to patch up his arm, at least. It made sense.

"Well?" the man said, rolling my pokeball in his hands. "Do you?"

I nodded.

"Good. I'll cut this quick, because it's been a long night, my daughter's probably tossing and turning at home."

Lanky was—"Burgh's in the hospital. You cut his arm up pretty good, but said it was an accident. That true?"

It wasn't intentional, even if it was my lapse of judgement. So, I nodded. If I shook my head, what was he going to think? That I'd attacked a human? I could smell the Noiverns. The two pokeballs on his waist. My pokeball in his hand. This was the guy who'd picked us up on the train. Had Lanky given me away? I didn't see Leaf or the Silcoon nearby. Or smell, for that matter.

"Here's the deal. Your trainer's in the hospital. I work for the gym. The hospital will try to treat you well, but you'll be sittin' in a kennel with a sun-lamp. Since I recognized you both from the news the last couple weeks —damn paparazzi— you can stay with me for a few days until your trainer gets out. I've got a yard and some trees you can play in during the day. Burgh, your trainer, said that your mate" —I jolted upright. Leaf was NOT my mate— "not your mate?" —I nodded— The guy chuckled.

"Anyway, Burgh let you come with me. Your fellow leavanny will hang out at the hospital in the meantime. What do you say? Come, stay with me? He'll call in the morning, assuming he's not hopped up on painkillers."

The choice was between sitting in a kennel for a couple days. Or coming to the guy's house. It was only a couple days, right? Lanky had trusted this guy enough to give him my pokeball. I could trust Lanky. I nodded. If he was a part of the gym, I could practice my mana control. Or just fighting in general. I… wasn't about to pull myself into the dream realm again. That was just asking for more trouble.

"Excellent. Macie will be stoked to play with the 'dancing' leavanny. She's been watching videos of you dancing on that Castelia street nonstop for a good week, now."

Wai—I was sucked into the pokeball—he'd asked me to come with him just because he wanted to introduce him to his daughter? No.

I was famous?!?

Did being famous to a seven-year-old girl count?
 
Chapter 65 - Preparing For The Party
~~~ Chapter 65 - Preparing For The Party ~~~​

"We're here, Buggy," Batty said—look, if he wanted to call me Buggy, I would call him Batty. Not that he ever gave me his name.

My sight flicked on. It was still night. We were in a backyard with a chain-link fence. The street was lit well by a few LED-white lamps. The synthetic tastes in the air of Kael's "neighborhood" weren't present here, even despite the cars. Pokemon world except for anville town seemed to have moved off of oil. Right. There were cars! Cars! On the street! I felt a puff of air by my face, and turned, hopping back, greeted by the face of a purple bat with giant speaker-like ears giving me a sniff.

"Arn," —the noibat perked up, but didn't turn to its trainer— "don't spook her."

Arn huffed, using its two black and purple wings to prop itself up as it walked onto the medium-sized lawn. It was smaller than Professor Juniper's, who seemingly had a whole acre of land for property, but the lots were still twice as large as the compact housing I met Lanky near.

"So, here's the deal, Buggy," Batty said, scratching the other noivern on the red v-shaped crest that adorned its head. "Macie loves pokes. She might cry, or she might be all over you. But, if you make her cry or hurt her, accidentally or otherwise, Arn and Orn" —the smell of thick berries registered on my antennae, and I turned to the source, a berry bush— "ch of you left for the pokecenter."

The noivern duo both walked in front of me, standing up. With one solid leap each, they jumped onto the nearby trees, climbing up onto its big extended limbs, before positioning themselves upside down. They extended their arms down onto the tall berry bushes, plucking a large berry each, eating it, before wrapping up their wings for the night. If Kael's neighborhood had an empty, artificial smell, these berries were on the opposite end of the spectrum.

"You didn't even hear that last bit, did you? Well, whatever. I guess I shouldn't have expected much from a bug. I'm going to bed. Keep her out of trouble, boys." Batty gave a wave before going back inside his house to the two bats giving him short chirps.

Two trees for two noiverns, who had their eyes closed. But as I twitched and moved, I could feel one or the other, adjusting their ears or head. I didn't want to sleep on the ground, in the open air, but I also wasn't going to risk a tussle with the large dragon-bats. Instead, I nestled under the bush.

Waking as the sky was turning from black, to a dark blue, sleep was uneventful. Nice and short compared to the prior nights' poor sleep. Dreamless. Not that I was complaining. I was still physically, mentally tired. The chain link fence around us was a little more than twice my height. I crawled out from under the bushes. I did a bit of a wiggle-dance.

A clunk on a window on the side of the house caught my attention. A small shadow visible, my eyes adjusted. I was greeted with the vague contour of a kid's face, pressing eagerly into the glass. I raised up my leaf-blade and waved good early-morning. The shadow of the girl — Macie? — disappeared from the window, leaving a fading fog from her breath and a smear from the oil of her face and nose.

Did kids really get up that early?

Well, I had— I would wake up before the sun, before my parents— grabbing a spoon of Not-Butter, taking a big gob and licking at it like a popsicle before running off to play. What kind of silly things would kids in the pokemon world get to?

I picked a couple berries off the bush, the noivern duo's eyes closed in the brightening morning sun, sleeping on their separate trees, before finding a place to chill.

Another skim over the patchwork battle-skirt, no real holes. I looked over my blades. There were a few thin patches, so I took the time to use my silk stores and some bush-leaves to patch them up, thickening the blades. It was mostly cosmetic, but it gave me a bit to do. The fence in the yard was chain-link, but most of it was in shadow. Only the roof of the house or the neighbor's yard would have much sun until the midday or afternoon sun. I looked up at the roof. It was at least four times my height, possibly five.

I didn't exactly want to find out if neighbors had pokemon of their own. Taking a step back, I noticed the girl was standing, watching me through the mostly-glass door, a hyper-colored rainbow pony/horse pokemon with an absurd amount of fur or feathers along its head and mane. Like a rainbow Keldeo? Printed all over her pajamas. Macie's hands pressed against the window, staring down at me. Again, I waved at her.

The girl was taller than me, I could already tell. She disappeared again, the curtain knocking against the window. I took a step back, my back brushing into the bush again. Refocusing on the side of the house— trying to get the best sun I could— and ran forward. I stopped, halfway through the yard, kneeling, and jumped, letting the momentum of the run carry me forward, putting most of my strength to jump up, my arc was good, almost — a thunk — my vision and hearing was noise, I held out my arms but failed to control my descent, hitting the ground, landing on my abdomen, my leaf-dress protecting me from being pinched.

At least it wasn't a faceplant.

Dazed, I stood up, and looked back behind me, the noivern that had been quiet up to that point were chirping to themselves, one of them opening their wings. The girl was staring at me through the door again, eyes wide open. The noivern flapped behind me, as I returned back to my task. I wasn't quite able to jump to the roof yet, but I was getting close.

If I had more sunlight, I would have had more spee

"EEeeey!" I cried, a burst of air rushed around me, and I felt a strong pull in the crest of my leaves. The Noivern flapped their wings, and I was lifted up off the ground, flailing, my headdress in the Noivern's claws— I was being up above the roof! A half-second later, the other noivern was chirping even louder, and I was standing on the roof of the house.

Thanks? I waved at the Noivern who'd lifted me up into the sun as their squeaking giggles cooled down. I was in the sun, at least. I pulled out a few leaves I'd stuffed into my cuff-links and got to work, making a little toy I used to make as a human kid.

~~~​

"Dad! Dad! Dad!" Macie cried, running to her father's bedroom. "Wake up, dad!"

"Hnaaagrgblbrgl" her father said, as his daughter climbed up onto his bed.

He let out a "Hmmmm?", opening his eyes just as Macie— "Gach!" he cries— piledrives him in the gut with her elbow. "Urrgh," he blurgles, sitting straight up. "I'm up, I'm up!" he glances at the clock, and his eyes shoot open.

"By the gods, Macie, it's Five-Thirty in the morning!"

"You missed it dad! The leavanny! She tried—" Macie exclaimed, her face lighting up "— jumping! Thought! So cool! She tried! The leavanny —" she broke down laughing, giggling to herself "—Then she —" Macie cried, stopping to take a breath between fits of laughter, tears in her eyes "— then! CLUNK! —" she continued in her laughing fits. "Then Arn—" she tried to speak, falling into fits of laughter as her dad laid back in bed, smiling.

Jacob, not understanding at all what Macie was saying, just sat, smiling at his daughter bouncing around, pantomiming flailing and jumping and dancing around on his bed in complete nonsensical fashion.

Eventually, when Macie calmed down, he asked, "Do you want to play with her?"

Macie's eyes went wide. "Yes, I want to play!" she huffed. "What kind of question is that?"

"You've been watching too many television shows when I'm not home," Jacob said.

"That sounds like a personal problem to me," she said.

"Definitely too much television, if you're picking up words like that." He reached over to his nightstand, pulling up his cellphone. "Have you had breakfast? Brushed your teeth?"

She was silent.

"Well, I'm up now, let's get ready for the day."

She was still silent.

"What?"

"No milk, dad."

He held his palm to his forehead. "You can make eggs or oatmeal without milk."

She stuck out her tongue. "I can't eat oatmeal without milk!"

Jacob rubbed the sleep from his eyes.

"And we don't have honey or tea! Bugs like Honey and Tea!"

"What? How did you—" she smirked at him "—where's my pokedex?" He looked around his bedroom, not finding it.

His eyes opened wider.

Her grin grew wider.

"You little shit! I told you—" Macie was gone before he could get out of bed. She could hear him groan. She wasn't allowed to play with her dad's pokedex. At least not since the last time she tried cooking Arn and Orn new noivern berry recipes. Putting it in the dishwasher had cleaned all the sticky berry juice right off!

"Macie, fine," he said from his room. "I'll go to the store. What do you want?"

"Yes!" She whispered-but-not-really, grabbing a piece of paper she had already been writing on. Her letters were large and blocky, though she'd ensured every letter ended in "little" curls and hearts.

Her dad stumbled out of his room, barely throwing on a T-shirt. He held out his hand as she shoved her shopping-list at him. "Markers, sticky notes. Tape. Drawing paper. Purple food dye, two gallons of milk, three 'things' of.. eggs?" he looked at the seven year old, incredulous.

She smiled. Innocent.

"Honey, oran tea, orange tea, cherry tea, pudding, cherry birthday cake mix, cherry sprinkles, two things frosting… a bag of fertilizer?"

His eyes rolled down the list. It kept going. "How long have you been awake?"

"I'unno," she said, shrugging.

Jacob sighed. "Fine, but I'm not getting everything on this list. The leavanny's only with us until her trainer's out of the hospital."

Macie frowned.

"Leah," she said, pouting.

"Hmm?" He asked.

"Her name's Leah!" she cried.

"All right, all right! Leah."

"And she's gonna stay with us and we're gonna dance and we're gonna—"

Jacob just lifted his girl up, and gave her a hug. "Leah is a strong pokemon, and she needs to fight or she'll go stir-crazy. We can't keep her."

"But Arn and Orn—"

"Honey, just try to enjoy your time with her, okay? Let her be your friend? You haven't even got out of your pajamas yet, or been outside to play with her."

"... Okay," she said, tears in her eyes.

"I'll go get some of this stuff so you can have your little party with her before I take the bats and go to work."

"Kay," Macie said, wiping her eyes as her dad went to the backyard, calling for Arn. She ran into her bedroom to change and get ready for the day. She was gonna have a party.

And it was gonna be the best.
 
Last edited:
Finally caught up.
I´ve started reading this story before the extensive editing, decided I´ll wait till the editing is done and reread from the beginning. It definetly flows better reading through again than the first time.
A question: Will the gym leader face any consequences? She essentially caused a city wide outage, a mass-outbreak of pokemon and then didn´t even bother cleaning up behind her? She just went back to her concert?
 
The bit with the Zoroark makes me wonder: are they used in-universe as human-Pokemon translators? Your one scene with them in Chapter 59 explicitly states they can speak through them.
 
Chapter 66 - Hugging Knives
~~~ Chapter 66 - Hugging Knives ~~~​

Can you feel that excitement in the air? The air is heavy with mana, the pokemon, human society included, all bristle in anticipation! Their voices grow slightly louder. The spirits are fat with their blessed sustenance! Their beloved distortion!

I am filled with such dreams of delightful excited expectation!


— Wrenn, Leader of Unovan Covenant Commune of the Dead​

~~~​

"The Galarian hatenna moved about on stage in perfect harmony as the conductor barely had to guide them through the performance. See how their locks of blue twirled about with precision!"

The door to the hospital room clicked open.

"You're supposed to be sleeping, Burgh! Doctor's orders!" Lyra said, materializing out of the air, illusion overlapping with the real. He rolled over, away from her, glancing through the blackout curtains. The sky outside wasn't even light blue yet.

"Couldn't sleep," he mumbled, before his tired face turned into a smirk. "And I'm not supposed to have visitors," he said from his hospital bed, muting the television. He waved at Lyra and the… guests she had brought along.

Lyra's grin was wry. The medications for potential infections were not kind. She would know that as well as anyone else, and the doctors and nurses had all told him as much.

"Separation blues, eh?" she asked.

Burgh just turned his face to her.

"You look like complete shit," she said. "Get them to bring your leavanny in for a few hours. It's not even been 24 hours. You've had her for what, a month?"

"Two."

Lyra rocked back, before rolling her eyes. "Fuck, kid."

"I know," he said, shrugging. "She's from another world."

Lyra rolled her eyes.

"Get her into your hospital room, kid."

"They said I needed to be quarantined—"

She thought I was joking, he thought.

"Not from your own damned pokemon!" Lyra said. "Seriously! Have you seen yourself in the mirror?"

He waved her off with his operable left arm. "Fine, I'll ask the nurse to bring Fidget up."

"Leah not down there too?"

"No, she's not down there! She's just a magnet for trouble in hospital buildings…"

"You're not sleeping because you're thinking about her."

He looked back at Lyra, then at the clock. It was seven am. Restless and frustrated on the train, he had to put her into the pokeball, but when the power went out and the pokeball safety mechanisms kicked in and unlatched, and she was gone… he shook his head, then laid back in his hospital bed.

Lyra held up her hand, stepping a little closer into the room. "Burgh, you there?" She paused, watching his face until he nodded.

"Being a trainer is stressful. You've got living beings you're taking care of, more than anyone cares to admit."

"Whatever," he said, waving his good hand dismissively. If Jacob's kid was as big of a fan of Leah as the man had made her out to be, then he could at least take some hope that Leah would be fine.

"Seriously though, shit's weird, Burgh. You've only been separated for six hours,"

"Eight."

"Eight hours? Crap on a stick, that changes everything," she said, rolling her eyes. "No, it doesn't. This stuff shouldn't hit you for fucking days. You sure she's not a Mew pretending to be a Leavanny?"

"Uh, yeah," he managed to get out.

~~~​

After Batty had flown off, I'd drifted off to sleep, sitting on the warming roof, soaking up the wonderful sun in my leaves. My vision had turned black. When it had returned, gobs of black boiled off, up into the air. I smelled smoke in the air, but no fire. Another nightmare.

"Lee leee leee aaaa vvveee" a voice said. My arm swung of its own accord— I yanked it back— "eeep!" the voice cried. I jerked my head to my right. The girl— Macie looked at me, her face sad. She cradled her hand, a black ooze coming from the palm.

Before us, stood a large, white building. The hospital. I was covered in sticky notes. Sparks of gold came from the girl's hand, spreading over her face. Sparks of fire spewed across the ground, as the girl turned to gold dust, reforming into a vengeful volcarona.

I was tired.

Tired of these dreams.

There were only so many nightmares where your loved ones died, or you were attacked by a flaming ho-oh or a vengeful spirit of a volcarona you had accidentally killed in what you thought had been a dream, before you stopped caring. At least, that was me.

The volcarona's six wings glowed white, and the nightmare world faded to pink.

The world tilted a bit, vibrations not quite in tune, the scent of the berry bush hit, and my swimming senses calmed. The faint hint of cherries. I was standing in the grass. My vision clicked into place. The bat-guy was standing over me. Batty. Macie's dad.

In his hand was my pokeball.

He had used it to get me while I was asleep on the roof. How much range? He hadn't flown up to the roof, nor used a ladder— on second thought, there were already enough persistent horrors in my life.

My leaves had immediately reactivated. Even mostly in the shade, the morning, beautiful morning sun was getting brighter, though the sun was only just barely peeking over the outline of the neighborhood's houses.

"I've gotta go to work, and your trainer hasn't called yet." The guy looked back at his Noivern, both with wings wrapped, though I could tell, with the vibrations in the air, and the slight scent behind them, their annoyance. Probably because of the hour of the day?

Though they weren't exactly hiding in a cave…

"He's probably high on drugs, or passed out. Unfortunately, I can't wait forever. I'll be back a little after noon. We can call him during lunch if he doesn't call me first. In the meantime, just in case…"

He held his phone out, pointed at me. A quick sha-shink sound, and it was back in his pocket.

"I'll send him a quick pic to tide him over. Seems like the anxious type, so this should help him feel better."

He looked back over at the purple, dragon-type bats, again, then back at the porch-door. Their ears blurred, vibrating on-cue with my own antennae. Where his daughter was ostensibly doing… something inside? If she never came out and played, I wouldn't begrudge her for it, but I had made a little toy for her.

The thought of her not getting the toy—the man looked back at me.

"Just. Stay safe. And keep her safe, all right?" He pled.

I nodded, my antennae and the leaves behind my head wobbling a bit back and forth in the cool morning air.

"Lets go," he said, then emitting a high pitched click-clock-click. Then, a second, slightly separate pitch, he did the same. Both hopped down from their spots on the trees.

"No going into the house," he said, pointing at a silhouette in the door. On the same cue, his phone started to ring. He pulled it back out of his pocket, looking at the screen. Half looking at me, half, looking at his phone, muttering.

"Noivern and Noibat are fruit eaters," he sighed into the phone, "no reason to attack anyone." He mumbled, grabbing one of them around the neck, the trio flying off, the blast of wind of the wings pushing me and my leaves back.

Leaving me, standing there, just barely re-woke up, standing in the grass. So, this bat-man, whom I still didn't know his name, just… left me there? A total stranger pokemon? And left me in his backyard? To play with his daughter? Whom I still hadn't met, was inside?

I could have practiced a bit, some of the pokemana. I supposed. But what would I do? She was seven years old for Pete's sake. I wasn't in either a dream or suburban Green Bay. So it was probably best not to practice solar beaming random homes.

A quick skim of my surroundings and he'd even dropped my pokeball to the ground. The sun was out, over the treeline, and I could feel the world beginning to reduce in speed. At least, I could rely on the girl's shyness from earlier that morning. Judging by her earlier behavior.

At least, that's what I thought.

My blades, newly-repaired and reinforced yet again— leaving a kid alone with me felt like a terrible idea.

I thought she was going to be a bit awkward at first.

I thought she was going to be shy.

I thought she was going to be timid. I'd even made her a little present to show her I wasn't scary.

Then, the porch door burst open. My mouth fell, agape. All else forgotten. The seven-year old, moving ever-so slightly slower than realtime, stepped out onto the porch.

No, what greeted me. What greeted me was a pokemon attack. A walking purple polkadot A surprisingly-tan girl with purple hair, and occasional blurs of blonde, intermingled with sparkling, glittering purple.

"Leeeeeee" I let out, watching her do a twirl in front of me.

It wasn't the kind of purple you'd expect from a toddler, no. It was messy, and uneven that you'd get from a kid. But she clearly had been trying to think about her style, and just hadn't quite gotten a grasp of color patterns.

This girl rocked her purple. Each was a different shade. She did another twirl. Little flecks of purple flaking off her. Glittery sugar falling to the ground.

Purple of different colors and shades. Glitter in her hair with purple streamers. Her shirt? Purple. With purple beads embedded in it. A pair of jeans. But covered in purple glitter. In her hands? Purple shoes. On her feet? Purple flipflo—she had had my purple shoes in one of her hands.

She walked up to me and I just stood, eyes following the purple blob. Then, she stopped, looked around, back at the trees. Tears began to flow.

"He left!"

I wasn't really sure what to do, to be honest. Seven year olds… When I was seven, I was an emotional wreck. But I thought it had been because I couldn't ride a bike, or run, or go on a scooter, like the other kids my age. Not without being a heaving mess. She was a head taller than me, at least.

"N-No goodbye hug!" She cried, tears beginning to stream.

When you're cutting with a knife, you keep the blade angled away from your flesh. This girl had missed the "do not launch yourself at walking knives" lesson in school. At least I was in the sun, even if it was still medium-early in the morning.

My machete-like leaf-blades were down after her first step. Her second, I'd angled them away from her. Third step, she was airborne, a veritable blob of purple, glitter and sparkles diving at me.

My legs apart, I'd braced for impact. Macie's arms wrapped around my neck. There was no hope of safely staying upright without dodging. I had to tilt my head slightly so she wouldn't cut herself on either my headdress or hit her head on mine.

Leaf had taken that hit to the subway door and won. A kid's head meeting mine? I was either going down or she'd get a concussion. Crumple zones in cars were for safety. I kept my arms tilted away from her, but wrapped them around her. "Nneeee" I cried as we both tumbled to the ground.

She was squeezing me, and I wasn't sure what to do. I couldn't really close my eyes, it wasn't the best time for torpor or sleep.

Even without the sun, I was faster than any human I had met. Provided I was paying attention, I shouldn't have any problems, assuming I didn't get distracted.

We had never even met, and Macie already decided she was on a hugging basis with me. I just. I just tried not to turn her into mincemeat, staying as still as I could. The last thing I wanted was two hospitalized casualties in less than 24 hours.

When Macie's sobbing stopped and her tears finally slowed, I gently wiggled, trying to push her off me. There was a slight pause as the girl rolled off of me, and internally, myself and my instincts collectively sighed in relief. Humans, young and old, just shouldn't be hugging me.

When one of your defining features is literally having knives for arms, physical contact just wasn't very comfortable. Standing back up, relaxing, not needing to be quite so worried about ensuring that my blades always pointed away from her. I gathered my bearings a bit again, then reached down to my cuff-links.

Macie watched in silence, wiping her tears off her eyes. I had to remind myself that seven year olds were definitely volatile little buggers— that age where they had insight about the immediate world around them, soaking in every little thing with and without the appropriate context, but also as emotional and ready to cry at the drop of a hat. I pulled from my cuff-links, the little toy I'd made, her eyes going wide.

She stuffed her fingers in it, playing with the fortune teller- it was pretty stiff and still sticky from silk. You can't just fold leaves, like you can paper, and I doubted my ability to manipulate paper like the little origami shapes I learned as a kid. It was kind-of dumb—

"Thank you!" she cried, then ran to the backdoor of the house, dropping my pokeball on the ground, leaving it there with me, in the backyard. I stared at it. Then back at the open doorway. What was I supposed to do?

Lanky would probably be in trouble if it was lost, or stolen, I couldn't exactly just pick it up. When it was armed— which it was, I could feel it— I didn't need to touch the button to get sucked in.

Macie had left the door open, and I could hear her voice, but not her words. I mean, I wasn't exactly excited about leaving the sun. But I also didn't want to leave her on her own. Should a parent leave their kids alone with magical murdermonsters?

Well, I wouldn't leave her alone! I couldn't! Kids needed help and tending! But how?!? All my ideas included copious amounts of leaves, and the line adult said I wasn't allowed inside!

I was starting to rub—A light squeal followed by a series of crashes and bangs, and I was inside, staring at the girl, purple glinting glitter falling off her all over the floor, onto the pots, and now grinning at me.

"Haha, now you're safe!" she said, standing over a pile of pots and pans she'd pulled out, onto the kitchen floor. I just looked at her, eyes unblinking. Unfortunately I was still bad at reading more nuanced tones and facial expressions, but if I still had facial muscles or could move my eyes, I was sure that I would be giving the girl a look.

"Dad always says Arn and Orn aren't allowed inside the house, but he never got mad when they came in because I tip the pots over! Now he can't get mad at you!" She said, picking up a kettle and filling it with water and putting it up on the stove.

I opened my mouth and stared.

When I was a seven year old human kid, did I have thoughts like that?

Yes. When I was not a leavanny. Right, when I was a human instead. Seven? (ish?) years old I could maybe microwave ramen, though? Maybe? Mom had always followed me around, babying me and doting on me because of, my, well. Troubles.

"It's teatime!" Macie announced. She had pulled out a purple box, popping it open, pulling out not one, not two but three packets of tea and putting them into the kettle. I don't ever remember being a tea girl. In fact, I couldn't even remember making tea.

"Dad says you only need one, but I like three."

It wasn't a super sweet smell, not really, but I could tell those tea bags had something good. Reaching forward, I tried to scoop the box off the counter—

"No, we can't eat it until the tea is ready!" she said, slapping her arm down onto the counter, swiping all the bags and the box that had fallen out, out of my reach.

She saw me looking at the box of tea packers and the sugar bag and the spilled bits of sugar and possibly the little bit of bug-drool that I was DEFINITELY not drooling, before she let out a kid-like chuckle. Then, she looked back over at the pile of sugar. Climbed up onto the counter, took a bunch of sugar scooped with her bare hand.

"Sssshhhhhhh!" She said, "Don't tell. Dad!"

I nodded vigorously. No one would know. Then she held her hand over me, I opened my mouth and let the sweet sugar flow.

"NO MORE. Until Tea is ready!"

I followed her as she basically pranced around the kitchen, with that excitement that kids get when a new friend is over at their house. But even as she ran around the house under her pure adrenaline, she was stacking the pots. And leaving a healthy dose of purple glittery stuff all over. I wasn't exactly complaining, though the pile of sugar and the increasing smell of tea in the air was ever tempting.

Overall, the house from the inside was smaller than it seemed. A single floor. Though it was as tall as any other in the neighborhood, which all seemed to be at least two floors.

I did, eventually, get tired. Mentally, that is. As cute as she was, all my mental power was still going into trying not to accidentally remove a seven year old's limbs. If she decided to hug me again, without warning, and I wasn't ready. I clamped my mouth shut again, with a click.

I turned around, miss purple glitter violet was right behind me, the sparkles glinting. I'd lost track of her in my own thoughts.

"No no, not yet!" Macie said. "We hafta stay out here." She looked at me, who was holding my arm-blades together like they were glued.

Objectively, this was the safest spot to keep them when faced with a being that had no concept of self-preservation. Folded flat together.

"Were you gonna wash up for the cupcakes and tea?" she asked. Unceremoniously, yet slowly, she reached out to touch my blades, I moved extra slowly to drop one arm, proffering the other, holding the blade facing away from her, my entire concentration focused on keeping Macie from accidentally losing a chunk of skin.

Her voice dropped far too low, "Pokies don't need to wash with soap," she said, mimicking her father.

The dried white of my silk on a few seams of my leaf-blades that hadn't quite managed to fully dissolve/integrate from past patches looked like it could handle a quick rinse.

"Come here" she said, ripping off a piece of paper towel without regard for its seams. Then she dabbed it in water and reached out her arms. "You don't grab pokemon. They come to you!" She said, smiling.

Humans shouldn't grab pokemon without asking first. I offered her my leaf blades, and with her half-ripped paper towel, cherry-smelling tea and oven practically burning, purple glitter all over the floor, with surprising level of care, she wiped my leaf-blades off.

That's right. Don't grab pokemon without asking first.

"But hugs aren't grabbing!" she said when she wrapped up, an evil glint in her eyes as she threw herself at me.

Darkrai's "gifts" were less cruel. I was getting stronger, even if I hated them, and I hated fighting. Yes. Those dreams. The ones of nightmares, the ones with my nests burning at the behest of ravenous birds of fire and moths of lava and flame.

Those were less cruel.
 
Great chapter! I'm glad to see you updating again. I am eager to see the result of Darkrai's so very generous gift nightmares.
 
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