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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Phoenix
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Phoenix

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Mauville City
Stilettos rapped with some haste - irritation - down the unlit alleys and side streets of the affected portion of Mauville. The woman's dark curls bounced with some exaggeration. Her pantsuit slapped against her ankles immediately after a heel met pavement, producing a kind of graceful percussion in the, otherwise, silent district. Her arms swayed forcefully beside her, sustaining her pace - her near-trot. Her eyes didn't dart around. She knew it was futile trying to see clearly in the fading light. Her eyesight was never the best, anyway. But she'd learned how to process her peripheral vision. Her range of vision was impressive, just not its clarity.
A gasp, slap, and thud sounded to her left, somewhere. Her hearing was also keen when her sense were focused. Damn. I hope this kid isn't already causing trouble, she thought.
She took a sharp turn to see the alley, from where the noise came, now empty.
"Damn," she exhaled. Where'd he get off to?
Footsteps to her right, from behind. A flash of light, a beam. Shit
Her lips curled in and she pulsed out a staccato of high whispers, a chirping of a bird not native to Hoenn. She looked above her - the corner of the building next to her. The shadow of a beast who's eyes shone red with a sinister glower. Rangers walked right past her, not realizing there should have been an alley where she stood. They turned a corner and she snapped. The haze that formed before her fell back into the pavement.
The balls of her feet turned where she stood and paced quickly where this "Rhode" headed off. Though her pace was quick, it wasn't rushed. She was focused, had somewhere to be, someone to collect. Her hair never quite reached over her shoulders, bangs pushed back over her ears. Her trousers patted her shins as her legs swung through the pace beneath her. Her ears could pick up the faint scuttlings of her target as well as the lazy footfalls of a nearby Ranger about which she lacked concern.
The scuttling stopped and so did she - close enough to eavesdrop but not to be seen. That male voice must have been him, but he was with a girl. Or is that a woman? She must have been the one to release that Granbull and Scrafty to direct the attention of the Rangers away from them. Still, she was glad Finster was obsuring her figure and scent.
They seemed to know each other. Cute. She rolled her eyes and sighed silently at the "reunion." Haven was the girl. That could come in handy. But "Rai"? Was that another alias? It was ridiculous enough to name your Pokemon something to rhyme yours. But he could have been a child and at the age where rhyming names were "super cool." But it could have been an off-the-cuff alias. A lazy one, but it could work. But he said it so naturally.
Her musings continued as she followed them from afar as they reached the Sixth District, just west of the Eighth. She whistled again and her cloak was deactivated since she could blend in with the night and the crowds.
BOOM!
Everyone ducked, screamed, ran in reaction to the explosion that shook the ground and trembled up with their bones and over their skin.
___________________________________________________________________________

All of her attention was working with her brother to connect the gap between the generators where they had disconnected the converters. There was so much energy to focus, she couldn't hear the whirring of the exposed energy containers and the constant and deafening snapping between her and her brother. The powerful explosions from Manectric couldn't even break her concentration. She had done this hundreds of times before, but never to this extent. The city's power grid was virtually flawless and in place before even she was conceived. The massive levels of energy pushed her and her brother to the extent of their abilities. She couldn't even hope her trainer would finish them off soon enough.
Her cheeks burned and her eyes were buzzing - constantly vibrating. She could feel every bone in her skeleton tremble and her muscles spasm. Her mind was blank. The point to which the electricity sparked her nerves, she couldn't begin a thought or think to move. Until they could replace the converter, she was part of the system. She'd gain a new respect for the vastness of Hoenn's energy system when this ordeal was over.
___________________________________________________________________________

Flygon screeched following the explosion. He lashed out at the team of Electabuzz, making them fly every way from the exposed converters. He and Mr. Sturm's Manectric made a good team to hold them off until reinforcements could arrive. It was a good thing Medicham could still reach him all the way to Petalburg. Of course, Jeanne suspected her husband would, ultimately, not make it home for dinner.
Fuck me, Forrest thought. All I wanted to do was go home and have dinner. What the fuck is going on?
The fact Haven ran away didn't surprise him. Medicham wouldn't tell him why, but she was an adult and could make her own decisions. He just hoped she wasn't involved in the explosion, or got herself involved. Still, he was disappointed she wouldn't accept his help. I must be some ugly fuck.
Medicham teleported them close to the explosion - District Six. Crowds rushed to find cover while emitting a sound to rival the explosion. Forrest looked around to make sure there were no injured or casualties.
"Medicham, stay here in case you're needed. You too, Milotic," he said, unable to think clearly enough for them to read his thoughts.
"Shiftry, Breloom, Cacturne, with me."
Masquerain would go where she thought best. Banette would arrive when summoned. Forrest just wanted to get to the source of the explosion to help where he could.
The four of them sprinted toward the Seventh District through those fleeing away. Masqureain decided to join them. She fluttered high above and jetted from side to side to try and see as much of the affected area as posible and prepare in any way she could. It was difficult to see clearly from the contrast of the night and the bright sparks of explosed electricity. She chirped to herself in concerned fear.
What fuckers are trying to destroy Mauville?
It seemed to take too long to get there, but when they arrived, Forrest knew they couldn't have come any later. Five individuals worked to either syphon the electricity spraying across the ground into some kind of battery or defend themselves against the Manectric and Flygon.
"Go! Help Plusle and Minun!" he shouted at Shiftry and Masquerain. "Let's get 'em!" he told Cacturne and Breloom in a surprisingly sinister tone. Cacturne's mouth carved itself larger and in a more exaggerated curve.
Forrest went straight for the trainers, the terrorists, the thieves. Though the number of Pokemon at their command outnumbered him and Mr. Sturm three-to-one, Forrest just dodged the explosions of another Draco Meteor and watched them gunned down by Pin Missiles and Needle Arms. Breloom sent all he could flying past the boarder of Mauville or just straight up into the dusked sky. Forrest grappled and beat down who he could as fast as he could. Taking names and leaving survivors for interrogation was not a priority.
His right fist came down and smashed into a head on the concrete. The sound of skull cracking was deafened by a second, though much smaller, explosion. He then found himself on the ground, having rolled several meters from his previous location. His eyes couldn't see and his ears hummed unintelligible muffles.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by c3p-0h
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c3p-0h unending foolery

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A crack like thunder shook the earth, swaying the very buildings. What had been a quiet night immediately devolved into chaos. Screams reverberated through the city like aftershocks, their shrill echoes punctuated with more and more explosions. Smoke billowed from another section of the city. Alarms were drowned out in the cacophony.

Haven was death to it all. She stood tense against a wall, eyes unfocused and breath shallow.

Storms and fangs and fear–

There was the sharp sting of electricity in her arm. "Aah–!" Haven gasped out, snapping back to attention. She looked to the side to see Dagger, her heavy jaw lightly clamped around her shoulder. Traces of pink electricity crackled out of existence as the Granbull stared up at her with sharp eyes. Haven looked to her other side to see Cloak watching her just as intently.

She was ok. She wasn't being attacked. She was safe.

Another explosion rocked the city.

She was relatively safe. No one was actively trying to kill her, at least.

Her heart still hammering in her throat, Haven looked back to the smoke pouring into the sky. Panicked cries from humans and pokemon alike fought to be heard over the alarms. What had happened? Some sort of accident? Something to do with the blackout? People filled the street, most rushing away from the smoke. A few brave (stupid? Reckless? Noble?) souls were running towards it. The rest were standing stunned on the road like Haven, unable to do more than stare.

Her grip tightened around her bag strap against her chest. Whatever had happened, something had clearly gone wrong. Haven needed to do something. Run to safety. Run to help. But she was petrified. A voice in her head screamed at her over the ringing in her ears to move. To not just stand there like an idiot!

She needed… she needed to run. Last night was proof enough that Haven wasn't meant for these kinds of situations, no matter what the pit fighter had said. She'd survived because she'd managed to live long enough for someone else to swoop in and save the day – and then she'd run away from him and what protection he could offer. Haven had always only been good for causing problems. She could only hope to stay out of the way as someone else solved them.

She knew all this. The rational, cautious side of her assured Haven that the best course of action was to stay safe, avoid pain and fear that was already growing too familiar.

Unfortunately, her frustrated, reckless, spiteful side had a much louder voice.

"C'mon." Without another thought, Haven broke into a run towards the explosions. She hated that helpless feeling that made her feel like she didn't have a choice – she didn't have a say in what happened to her or what she could do. An angry desperation to prove she was more than some crying little girl pushed her forward.

Haven wasn't a fighter. But she could still help. And if she could help, then didn't she have a responsibility to?

She fought against the crowds, Cloak and Dagger following close behind her, forced reassurances that she had to do this circling in her mind.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Kymera
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Kymera Genetic experiment gone wrong

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Mauville City




Rai managed to wait until Haven was out of sight before stuffing half of a pillaged sandwich into his mouth and handing the other half to Kye. In all the excitement, he’d managed to forget just how hungry he was, but now his stomach was roaring with a vengeance. He was already biting huge chunks out of a second day-old sandwich, when the air suddenly became deathly still for a moment. Every hair on Rai’s body bristled and stood on end as the sensation raced up his spine. Instinct reacted before he even had time to process what was happening, and he’d scooped Kye up in both arms and ducked for cover when the explosion rocked the city.

The ground felt like it was rolling under his feet, and the way the buildings swayed in the wake of the aftershocks wasn’t helping either. Alarms from cars, shops, even the city’s grid were blaring in a deafening cacophony of sound that made Rai’s head buzz. People in the streets were screaming and running for their lives, while more were starting to stream out of buildings to run for safer shelter. Rai could still see the burning glow to the west of them, like the sun had suddenly decided to make a reappearance on the horizon, uncomfortably close to where they stood. He swore he could almost feel the heat rolling in from the initial blast, which only made the urge to turn and run all the stronger.

Rai got his feet back under him, and started to tug Kye along with him into the crowds of fleeing people. They needed to get out of here before the place was swarmed by Rangers. With any luck, this chaos would make his own task easier with their attentions directed elsewhere in the city. Hell, he’d barely been in the city for more than a few hours, and already he would have been content to turn and leave without a backwards glance.

”Mom would be ashamed of you.”

The fear and chaos around him was all but silenced as that single thought ran through his mind.

”You know damn well she would have been the first one on the scene with the rest of the Rangers trailing behind her, screaming that it wasn’t safe. She would have helped, not run to protect herself.”

“And look what that got her.” Rai argued back bitterly.

”You think she regretted any of it? She did it to make sure you and Sam had a world that was safe to grow up in.”

“And now Sam’s gone! Now here I am trying to fix everything because she didn’t know when to let others handle it!”

”Is that going to be good enough? When you find Sam, will you be able to tell her that you found her because others were hurt? Will you be able to face Mary in the end and justify leaving them behind-”

“Will you just SHUT UP?!” Rai snarled whipping around on the ball of his foot and charging against the crowd, “Kye! Stick with me until we know what’s going on!”

“Char!” Came the affirmative from alongside him, as they weaved through the throngs of people.

Arceus above, this was stupid, Rai scolded himself as he finally broke through into a smaller alley that headed in the direction he needed. What was he even going to do when he caught up to whatever had caused the explosion in the first place? He wasn’t exactly a calming presence, and the most he could help was some first aid and helping people evacuate when it came down to it. Still, it kept his irritating conscience from pestering him, and he did have to agree that it was marginally better than running away like a coward at any rate. Even so, it still felt as if he were running through molasses, and the buildings were stubbornly crawling past him as he forced himself to run faster toward the explosion, and the maze-like structure of the city sure wasn’t helping matters much.

More than once, Rai would start to duck down a street, only to have Kye call for him to run down a different path that reconnected with the main roads. The closer they got, the more Kye seemed to bristle, the flame on his tail glowing brighter with every step closer they took, until Rai could clearly hear the sounds of a fight happening over the sounds of crackling electricity. They were certainly in the right place, just judging by the damage done to the nearby buildings. Windows were blown out, and even the emergency lighting was nearly nonexistent. More than once the distinct smell of ozone and burning plastic was so thick in the air that it was hard to breathe.

It wasn’t hard to pick out where the chaos was coming from after that, and he almost had to yank Kye back from darting around the corner and launching straight into the fray himself, before they could even get a sense of what on earth was even going on. They didn’t know who was responsible for all the chaos, but it sure sounded like someone did. Rai put a finger to his lips as he glanced down at Kye, before peering around the corner to see the all-out brawl taking place. There were no less than a half dozen people and more pokemon than Rai could count as they threaded through one another on the urban battlefield. The focus seemed to be a massive piece of machinery that was throwing out sparks like mad, while the larger part of the group was attempting to overwhelm a mountain of a man in the middle of it all.

Right away, it was obvious that the numbers against them were too great for just two to take on, no matter how big or half-mad they must have been. Especially when one screamed for two of his pokemon to go and help others and not himself. It wasn't hard to see the larger group was working furiously to split the two off from one another and pick them off. Rai ducked back around the corner and dropped his bag off his shoulder and dug around frantically, until his hand closed around the cool metal cylinder he was looking for. It only took him another second to pull the can of spray-on deodorant free, and show what he had in mind to his partner. They needed to make an opening and clear the mob off the big guy or else he was going to get overwhelmed. Rai darted out from his cover and pitched to roll right into the middle of the fray, and started to rush the crowd.

“KYE! MAKE IT HOT!”

Rai didn’t even have to look back to feel the streak of fire that tore past his right side, and hit the can dead on, turning it bright red in a matter of seconds. It certainly wasn’t the explosion that rocked the city, but the sudden plume of rapidly igniting gasses made an impressive fireball that tossed most of the throng off one another, while others tried to put out the fire clinging to their clothes.

Rai dove to avoid the worst of the blast, and grabbed hold of the bigger guy he’d seen earlier in the fighting to drag him a little ways off. He cursed himself for not being more careful, seeing the man dazed as he was, but the quite literal heat of the moment wasn’t an ideal time for planning. He’d just have to hope the guy came back to his senses quick enough to help.

“Char!”

Rai whirled around at the sound of Kye’s sudden warning to see someone who’d managed to get back on his feet and charged him full bore while he was distracted with hauling a couple hundred pounds of dazed man-beast. Rai had barely enough time to duck under the wild swing meant for his head and rammed his own fist twice into the hollow of the thug’s neck. There was something immensely satisfying about the gagging, choking sounds that he made almost immediately while dropping to the ground, followed by the gurgling scream as Rai brought his heel down hard right into the poor bastard’s collarbone. The snap of the bone reverberated once, then twice up Rai’s leg as he repeated the process to make doubly sure that man wouldn’t be able to throw a punch at him in the near future, before a quick snap of his foot to the man’s temple had his whole body falling limp.

He glanced up in time to scour the damages, when something from above dropped out of the skies and barreled him over in a shrieking mass of razor sharp wings and talons. White hot lines raked down his back, even as a great beak clacked and snapped just in front of his face. Even the flurry of “feathers” that danced around him tore and shredded at his clothing, leaving a hatching of bright red lines opening up across every bit of skin left exposed. It was only a jet of flame that caught the steel-type broadsided that knocked its weight off him. Rai felt like every bit of him was on fire, and his temper at the situation wasn’t abating at all as Kye stepped out of the darkness and stuck to his side.

He only got as far as his knees, before he saw the flash of silver start to gather itself and screech loud enough to make Rai's eardrums ring. It had to be a Skarmory, those damn things were like flying cutlery drawers with permanent bad attitudes and they were a bitch to knock out of the air-

A jolt of electricity shot from Rai's left and he could have sworn the steel bird lit up the surrounding city for several blocks, until it crashed back to Earth in a sparking, unmoving heap. Rai grimaced at the loss of his night vision, thanks to the sudden flash, and only made out the vague form of his rescuer stopping to check on his half-conscious companion.

"Can you worry about him later?!" Rai snapped over his shoulder as the other, less hospitable looking group started to recollect themselves in the midst of their warring pokemon.

"That depends! Can you keep them away from the generator? Or are you going to blow us to kingdom come again?!"

"Lose the attitude old man! They were trying to separate you! I bought you some time to regroup!"

"Well Forrest is going to need more time now than you bought! Keep them off that generator!"

"I'll do you one better..." Rai growled under his breath.

Rai scowled at the utter mess his clothes were in, his jacket and shirt were in tatters, and he was bleeding now from a dozen different cuts so that he was practically shining crimson in the unnatural light of the sparking machinery. He was fairly certain that he’d even received an impromptu haircut, thanks to the cool breeze that brushed against his head. Bad thing was, the group still outnumbered him, and he could really only hope that the big guy behind him would be on his side when he came around. He just needed to buy a bit of time, but he'd be damned if he wasn't going to make each and every one of them pay for every last second.

“Alright, so which one of you fuckwads wants to end up like your buddy here?” Rai spat, “I also customize my beatings, so if you’d rather lose the use of your legs, all you need to do is speak up.”



Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by c3p-0h
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c3p-0h unending foolery

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The scene was… definitely not what Haven had expected. The explosion was obviously no accident – not when people were fighting so viciously at its epicenter. Forrest was there. The way he moved, strong and ruthless, stilled her. It made her glad she'd been unconscious by the time he'd arrived to save her the previous night.

Then he went down.

"Shit." Haven, against all rational thought, ran into the fray. Forrest wasn't getting up. She skidded to his side, bending down near his face. His eyes were cracked open, blinking sluggishly. Haven's hands fluttered above him, wanting to help but not knowing how. There was another explosion too close to her. Haven let out a short scream, caught off guard. Heat drifted over her, flushing her skin. She looked back down at Forrest.

"C'mon, you need to get up!" She punctuated this with a slap to his cheek. His eyes seemed to blink more rapidly, but all that escaped him was a groan. Letting out a frustrated sound, Haven looked around at the chaos surrounding her. No one was paying them any mind, too caught up with the fighters still standing.

Until someone did notice them.

A man, red faced and sweating, paused to look at the scene. Then a smile curled his lips, taunting and vicious. Haven's blood froze.

"Well, loo–"

Dagger had pounced on him. As the Granbull mauled the man, Haven turned her attention back to Forrest.

"Help me!" she shouted at Cloak, grabbing Forrest's shoulder. Following her lead, Cloak grabbed the other, and they started the process of dragging him to the outskirts of the battle. Forrest should've been named Boulder. The man was a brick and Haven strained to move him more than a few inches at a time.

"Y'know, I'm really not enjoying this role-reversal," she muttered through her teeth.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Phoenix
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Phoenix

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Mauville City

Damn. Fucking piece of shit Raichu must have Thunder Waved me. Should have seen it coming. Ah, there's the little fucker. Ha ha! Yeah! Shiftry fucked your shit right up. Little bitch.
No, don't worry about me. Keep them away from the generator. Shaq'ti can help when she's ready. Im fine. Really. We gotta keep them back until the Rangers can get here. Then I'm out of here.
Gonna go home. Take a shower. Rest. Fuck. Work out. Train. I need a break after this shit. I'm getting too old to play hero. I should have just ignored it.
I hope Sturm's okay. I wonder how Plusle and Minun are doing. I can't believe they're channeling all that power. They've gotten strong.
Shit! Fuck...
Oo. That was close. Looks like they had some backup. Might have been how they beat up on that Haven. Heh. That bitch. She's got too much spunk and sass for her own good. She could really be something if she wasn't so self-depravating.
Whoa! Fire-types, too? Wait. Who's this punk? Trying to help, huh? See? I didn't need to intervene. They got other overconfident sons-of-bitches here. Wait. No! Don't bother with me. Fuck, watch out! Aw, shit, kid. Gotcha good. Wow. He's still up after that? Tough bastard. Ugh. Of course he has to give lip to Sturm. Thinks he's hot shit...
What? Huh? Who's pulling at me? Shit. Wait. Who is that? Ugh. Just let me be. I'll be fine. Wait. Is that Haven? What the fuck, kid? Go home. You should be resting. Heh. They can't even carry me together. Must have gained some weight.
Hm. Well, I'm not sure how this is supposed to be helpful, Haven. But you really need to go. You, of all people, don't need to be involved in this shit. Why are you trying so hard. Hmm...maybe...
I gotta focus to get to Shaq'ti.

Yes?
Come get us out of here. Rangers are coming and I need to get healed up.
Haven, too?
If she will...
Who's that? He needs attention, too. Damselrade's been trying to heal him.
Dunno.
I think he knows Haven...
He's down.

All right. Get him, too. Haven coming?
Yes.
Sturm okay?
Yes.
Get us out of this bitch.


Outside Petalburg City

Delicate and swift hands moved across the kitchen gathering wheat crackers and Mareep cheese. A small plate was assembled neatly and a glass of wellspring water poured. "Wait here," she said when she picked the plate and glass off the counter and began to make her way toward the den on the other side of the house.
Jeanne was surprisingly calm despite the situation. It was as if it'd happened before or she was simply countering the anxiety caused by the apparent dilemma. Of course,
caring for strangers was new, and the fact Forrest dragged two others down with him irritated her nerves. But, she enjoyed playing host. So this made up for the fact he'd missed dinner this night. She also didn't mind that it was past 1 in the morning.
Her feet traveled in silence across the wood floors and over the few area rugs along the way. "Is your sister up?" she asked a girl standing on the landing of the staircase who was rubbing her eyes. The girl shook her head. "Go to the kitchen and wait for me with your brother." Her voice was barely a whisper, soft and maternal.
She placed the glass of water on a side table and knocked on the door. "May I come in?" It was sweet and cautious. Considerate. Like the knock on the door. "Haven, was it?" she asked as she slipped through the door after grabbing the glass from the side table.
"Only if you're hungry," she said, implying the offering of crackers and water placed upon an end table pulled next to the daybed. Something as simple as crackers suggested she understood the possible trauma Haven may have experienced.
Her long brown hair was pulled tight into a bun meant to be slept in. The robe she wore was a kind of soft lime with some floral prints faded in creamy whites. Her hands were slender and lacked impurities, suggesting she took good care of herself. Her blue-green eyes were bright in the dull lamp-light of the room. She stood only a few inches taller than Haven, but her body was much more full, womanly, and held a kind of strength. The kind of strength required to bear four children at a relatively early age. Her face was soft, round. Her nose and chin, however, were pinched into elegant points. Her cheeks were high which provided the illusion of a permanent smile. Her lips were long and full. Without cosmetics, she seemed to have enough natural color to pass as "naturally pretty." Her skin was even and pale with a few freckles dotting her arms and legs.
She walked over to the small wood stove across the daybed where Haven positioned herself. A few small logs were placed atop kindling which was then lit with a long kitchen match. "You look cold," she said with a sympathetic smile. She was attempting to be as accommodating as possible. She had a knack for anticipating others' needs.
"There are extra blankets under the bed. We have a universal charger, here," she explained when she reached the large oak desk positioned stately before large triple-pane windows decorated with a simple valance and framed with matching curtains. They were left open, revealing the blue-black hues of the nighted forest just outside their home. It looked calm, serene. But Jeanne suspected Haven might have a different opinion and drew the curtains without a word. She didn't add anything about asking for anything else. Jeanne figured Haven wouldn't, anyway.
"The bathroom's on the other side of the house, across the kitchen." She'd already told her but had forgotten by this time. "Have a good night," she added with another sympathetic smile, enough to make a broken soul weep.
In silence, she slipped out of the den as she had when she'd entered. Her feet moved quickly through the living room styled in a modern country as the rest of the house. Despite being a log cabin, the high ceilings and uniform logs made the dark finish look almost industrial. Although, that was the point since Forrest was the one to build the house.
Family pictures decorated the walls with landscape paintings and cross-stitched, quilted, or appliqued pieces, all made by Jeanne. There were baskets all over the house full of games, toys, yarn, or tools. Most of the furniture was painted light neutrals since Jeanne believed there was such a thing as "too much wood." It was a modest home - adequate size for 6 people but still nothing so large that a fully decorated room would echo.
"Get some ice cream," she said when she reached the kitchen. Her tone was that of relenting permission from prolonged nagging. In fact, she was showing her exhaustion.
While the children gathered the items necessary for the midnight snack, she poured herself a glass of wine. "Don't tell the other two about this," she told them, knowing now she'd be too tired tomorrow to deal with the whining.
"Thank you, Jerr, for giving up your bed. That was very sweet," she praised the boy.
"Who are they, anyway?" he asked.
"I don't know," she confessed. "We'll find out tomorrow."
She took another sip of wine before continuing. "I'm going to need both of you to keep your brother and sister quiet. Your father and the other man need their rest. Shaq'ti needs to meditate, and Syressa and Damselrade need to continue their healing. They need to concentrate to perform their skills. Understand?" The two nodded with their mouths full of ice cream.
"I'm going to go pick some Cheris tomorrow before breakfast. I want Roh and Shel to help. You two start breakfast and check on our guests. I'll be checking on them tonight. After you're done with your ice cream, both of you need to go to bed. Jerr, please situate yourself quietly on the couch."

Jeanne woke up before even her children. She slipped on her robe and checked on her husband. The Masquerain had been hovering over him the entire night. Jeanne thanked her silently. She then used a static rod to check his nerve activity. They were now over-active rather than non-responsive, which was a good sign but the most difficult phase of working through paralysis. She knew how painful it'd be and didn't look forward to Forrest pushing himself. The Cheris would help alleviate the overactive nerves and hasten the healing process. Still, they'd have to be patient.
After checking on the other man in Jerrek's bed, she woke Rowan up without drawing any attention to the other bed where Jerrek should have been. Ushering him up and out quick enough would have kept all else in a fog for the boy. She then woke up Elizabeth and Shelynn, directing the eldest girl to wake Jerrek to start breakfast and then to check on the other guest downstairs in the den. Shelynn just knew to meet her mother and brother in the kitchen.
Jeanne explained briefly what the situation was. They had "visitors" and their father was injured and needed to rest to heal completely. So they were to pick as many Cheris outside to start preparing a homemade medicine to hasten the healing process. This made them feel important and helpful enough to where they didn't ask question and made sure to keep quiet, themselves.
The sun was almost rising. A faint orange mixed with the blue and purple of the night. The trees looked a strange blackened aqua color before dusk. The air was cool, fresh, but thick with wood and pollen. She led the two children to their Cheri trees and started to pick the ripest ones and put them into a basket Jeanne had brought with her. It wasn't long before the basket was full and their task complete.
"Roh, get these rinsed off. Tell your brother to help you set up the blender. Shel, go help your sister check on the guests and start breakfast."
When she made it inside, her children were focused on the tasks she'd given them. A sense of pride made her fingers tingle and her heart flutter.
"How's Haven, Ellie?" she asked.
"Still sleeping, I think," the girl said with most of her focus on mixing batter and keeping an eye on the mess her sister would make.
"How's your father, Jerr? And the other guest..."
"They're still sleeping. Haven't woken up yet," he explained with most of his focus on setting up the blender while Rowan worked to clean off the Cheris.
"Well, thank you, boys. I'll take over here and you two start setting the table for six." She then started to mix the berries in the blender with some juices, syrups, and herbs that would make the medicine tolerable as well as refreshing to some degree.
She carried two glasses with straws, one in each hand, up the stairs to the boys' room first. Instead of touching him, she placed a hand on the side of the bed and pressed down so he'd feel the slight movement of the bed against his skin, which would be massively uncomfortable if not painful. "I'm sorry to wake you, but you need to take this," she said in her voice full of sympathy.
She placed a finger over the top of the straw so the juice would remain in the straw as she lifted it and hovered it over the man's mouth. "Gentle, now. Your nerves are hyper-active and any slight movement will be very painful," she explained though he probably already found that out. "Please, try to open your mouth," she said next.
The straw lowered close to the man's lips and she lifted her finger so slightly that only a few drops would fall into his mouth. She didn't want him to choke if she dropped it right to the back of his throat, so she made sure to go slow and aim for his tongue. "I'm sorry, but this is going to take a while," she said. "Just a few more."
It took almost too long, but she was diligent and careful so as to not make the man any more uncomfortable than he already was. "Just keep resting. Syressa, here, will continue to soothe your nerves," she said and nodded to the giant serpent floating overhead, her body snaking across the entire ceiling almost covering it all.
After doing the same for her husband, she made her way down to the den and try to have Haven join them for breakfast, at least. Her knuckle gently tapped the wood and called patiently to her. "Haven," she started with a pause. "Breakfast is ready if you're hungry."
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Kymera
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Kymera Genetic experiment gone wrong

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Mauville City


There was a big difference between a Pit fight and one on the street.

No one wanted to see a bloodless Pit fight. No one wanted to see a fight that was over in a few short seconds. No one wanted to waste money betting on a fighter that skewed the odds too steeply in their favor. Sure, now and then they'd toss in some wild card obstacle or challenge just to keep things interesting, but for the most part, Rai had learned what to expect when he stepped into a pit. Two on two, nothing in but you and your pokemon, and brace for a lot of pain.

This was a world apart. The smoke from the explosion stung his eyes, and people and pokemon alike seemed to just keep materializing out of the shifting haze. Every time Rai landed a punch, two more rebounded right back at him. He heard the whistling of something swinging through the air and turned just in time to catch a pipe with his hip. He blindly grabbed for the improvised weapon out of instinct and ripped it away from its owner, but not before ramming it forward into what he hoped was their gut.

His first swing connected too solidly to be anything but someone's, or something's, skull. Rai felt the hollow ringing, almost more than he heard it. He saw a familiar jet of flame cut through the jumbled chaos, and panicked scream as smaller flames dropped erratically to the ground near him. Rai blindly stomped down hard, in the center of the flickering fires, and was rewarded with the "whumph" of air leaving lungs. The satisfaction was short-lived, however, as something lunged at him from the smoke and clamped down hard on his arm.

Rai screamed in pain as the bones in his arm started to creak under the pressure, and brought the pipe down over and over onto what he hoped was the head of the furred pokemon that had his limb locked in its jaws. One solid blow finally freed him, as the pokemon let go with a high pitched cry. His entire arm throbbed mercilessly and suddenly felt far heavier than he'd recalled a moment before. His fingers refused to curl back into a fist on that hand, even as someone else's collided with his own jaw hard enough to send Rai sprawling to the ground.

A boot sank into his middle, and the rush of air leaving his own lungs brought the metallic taste of copper to his mouth. Rai smashed the pipe hard into the side of his attacker's knee and heard the bastard join him on the ground with a pained howl. Rai had to swallow more than once to keep his stolen dinner down while his innards rebelled at their violent treatment, all the while trying to refill his lungs with air. He could still hear more of them around him too. He'd only counted a handful of them, but it felt like there were dozens now. Adrenaline was only helping so much to keep him going too. The shot to his hip made it hard for him to do much more than get back to his knees, and with one arm hanging uselessly at his side with the other still clutching his makeshift weapon... His bruised guts twisted into hard knots as the creeping realization settled in that he wasn't going to come out on top of this.

Rai grit his teeth in a last bid to get upright once again, when he heard Kye bellow a warning. He only just saw the flash of golden yellow out of the corner of one eye, and the halo of fire that surged toward it. His muscles twitched in vain to move his body out of the way but only succeeded in pitching him forward into the ground, as their urban battleground lit up with unnatural light.

Rai tried to scream as his every nerve suddenly came to life at once, but nothing obeyed him anymore. He was a passenger in his own body, unable to do anything but ride out the waves of static that overloaded his nervous system. He was vaguely aware of the smell of something burning nearby when it finally stopped. He couldn't stop the tremors in his muscles or force them to relax from where they'd locked themselves in place. Kye's snout dropped into his field of view, frantically nudging at his head and shoulders. He could just make out the vague outline of a bolt shaped tail laying limply alongside the still smoldering body laying a few yards away, as Kye planted himself protectively across Rai's own prone form.

He wanted to tell his pokemon to run, leave, do anything but stay and fight a losing battle. But the shallow, wheezing breaths Rai was able to take barely filled his lungs and left nothing for him to call out to his pokemon. He tried frantically to shove Kye away, or at least get his attention, but it was like trying to get his attention from the other side of a brick wall.

"Don't worry. You're both coming with us."

If he'd have been able to move his head, Rai would have tried to find where on Earth the crystal clear voice he'd just heard came from. Judging by the way Kye above him tensed ever so slightly, his pokemon had heard it too. Panic and fear set in all at once at the very notion they were being taken anywhere until the voice calmly spoke again as a bizarre tingle swept across them both.

"It's ok. We'll be safe."

It was a strange sensation, that his body suddenly felt weightless, even if he couldn't move it himself. Someone certainly was, because the chaos that had enveloped them moments before suddenly seemed so very far away. Rai felt the edges of his vision starting to darken and fade, even as he felt the ground slip away, and had no way to fight off the encroaching blackness that threatened to overwhelm him.

Wherever "safe" was, it would have to be good enough for now.

Outside Petalburg City


"I warned you about going outside without a jacket, Raiziel..."

Rai groaned. He just wanted to sleep. The blankets piled on top of him were doing nothing to help warm him up, despite the shine of sweat that continued to bead across his face. He couldn't stop himself from shivering, even though his every muscle ached and his very skin hurt from the shifting contact with his covers.

Yet somehow, the gentle brush of fingers pushing his sticky bangs off his face was soothing. They were pleasantly cool and brought a strange measure of peace to his ailing body. It was enough to coax him to open his bleary eyes, even through the dim light of the room still hurt to look at. Even through unfocused eyes, he recognized his room. The posters on the walls, the mess of carefully sculpted clay pokemon mixed with store bought toys scattered across the top of his dressers, even the disarray of clothes peaking out of his closet where he'd carelessly tossed them instead of hanging them up. Even his pillows smelled faintly of sea salt and the must of ocean air. He scanned the room looking for the source of the gentle voice, quietly chiding him and hiding amusement all at the same time. He found her perched delicately on the edge of his bed, hazel eyes that matched his own looking over him, while errant strands of fell out of the tight bun her uniform demanded to frame her face.

"M...om?" His voice creaked through his sore throat, as a small smile crossed her face.

"I'm sorry to wake you, but you need to take this."


Something wasn't right. Her voice wasn't the same. It had the same calming presence as hers, the confidence, but it wasn't hers. Rai blinked slowly again as the illusion fell away to be replaced by reality. Hazel eyes were really a clear blue-green, and even though her hair was a risher brown, it had been pulled into the same bun he used to be so used to seeing. The room had to belong to a young boy, but it certainly wasn't his. The familiar bungalow walls were really made up of sturdy wooden logs with handmade hangings decorating them. The smell of wood and cooking food were in the air, rather than the metallic tang of the sea.

It all came rushing back to him at once. He'd been in Mauville, not playing in the rain in Olivine. The pain and tremors weren't from a fever, but the aftermath of the fighting that had laid him low. He'd had his ass soundly beaten, and even the subtle shifting of the covers made a pained groan bubble in his throat. He hadn't just been beaten, no, they would have killed him if he hadn't had had someone come to his rescue. Rai could almost taste bile as the twin realizations of where he was and how he'd gotten there hit home.

It was pathetic, but he felt hot tears start to gather at the corners of his vision despite himself, and the most he could do was grit his teeth to hold them and the pain at bay. He wanted to turn away from the woman alongside the bed, but the most he could convince his treacherous limbs to do was twitch and send a fresh wave of pain straight to his brain.

"Gentle, now. Your nerves are hyperactive and any slight movement will be very painful," She cooed softly, pulling a stawfull of liquid from the glass in her hand and holding it to his lips, "Please, try to open your mouth,"

Rai wanted to scream with how helpless he was. Whatever measure of comfort his dazed brain had found in his conjured image of home only amplified the feeling until it might as well have been a fresh wound all over again. All those years lost to the Pits, lost to the single-minded purpose of being able to find a measure of peace in revenge, and here he was being fed medicine a drop at a time because he couldn't even life his damn head.

"I'm sorry, but this is going to take a while," she said. He couldn't tell if she had picked up on his frustration or not. "Just a few more."

He saw Kye's head around the foot of the bed come into view, concern etched into every line on his pokemon's face. He was careful not to crowd around his caretaker, but the fire-type was practically dancing around her to find a spot where he could get closer to check on his trainer. At any other time, Rai might have been impressed with her patience as she finished with him, but the worry on his pokemon's face only served to sour his mood even further. Not even the sweetened syurps of the medicine still coating his tongue were quite able to mask the bitter taste in his mouth now.

"Just keep resting. Syressa, here, will continue to soothe your nerves," She said, easing herself off the bed as slowly as possible, and out of the room to allow Kye to set his snout a few inches away from Rai's elbow. The practiced ease in finding a suitable spot to be as close to Rai as possible without causing him any discomfort made Rai suspect that he'd held vigil for most of the night.

Had he been in control of his body, Rai might have destroyed the bed as his frustration reached a boiling point. Every breathe was sucked through rigidly clenched teeth, as he went to war with his own muscles. He wanted out of this damn bed. He wanted out of this damn house. It didn't matter where he was, but anywhere would be better in that moment. Except, muscles that had been locked in place all night would not be so easily persuaded to move, and his every nerve still felt raw as if it had been left exposed to the air. Just the feeling of the blankets shifting around him was like hot sandpaper against his skin. He could hear Kye chattering and moving hurriedly between the bedside and the door, unwilling to leave Rai's side even as he felt he should get help.

Not that it mattered at all. Rai managed to get a single elbow under him, before his entire body trembled like a leaf caught in a maelstrom, and collapsed back to the bed with a pained groan forced through his nose. Two more attempts got him no further until he had to lay still against the pillows to catch his breath, listening to the faint sounds of the house below.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Utrax
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Utrax 𝕰𝖝𝖙𝖗𝖊𝖒𝖊 𝕭𝖎𝖗𝖉

Member Seen 1 yr ago

Meanwhile...

Petalburg City


A soft breeze blew through Petalburg City, ushering in the coming of a beautiful day. Theo sat upon a blanket at the edge of one of Petalburg City's lakes. The crystal clear waters, soft whispering of the wind, and the gentle warmth of the rising sun all made him feel like falling back asleep. When he yawned his Jigglypuff, Melody, shifted from her comfortable position on his lap to stare up at him. Theo looked down and saw himself reflected in her big green eyes then smiled. "Oh don't worry, I'm not too tired to practice-- you'll get to sing this morning as usual," he reassured her, "And you too, Harmony." He watched the Whismur's ears perk up at the sound of his name. Harmony had been lounging on his side, staring toward the lake but, upon hearing his name, he rolled over to face Theo. With a surprised brow raise, Theo asked Harmony, "Have you finished your berries already?" While Theo knew that Harmony's appetite was large, he hadn't quite expected him to finish off three Pinap berries in under half an hour. As Harmony wiggled his nubby little arms as excited confirmation, Theo began to wonder what exactly the implications were of Harmony's increased appetite. Was Harmony getting close to evolving?

Theo tilted his head to the side as he rested on this question, which didn't last long, due to Melody's sudden moving about. She skittered over to Theo's backpack, which contained the remainder of berries he'd purchased this morning, then pulled another Pinap berry out. While he didn't move to stop Melody from giving the berry to Harmony, Theo still sighed helplessly over the fact. "Well, if you think he needs it," Theo said as he got to his feet, "Who am I to stop you?" Shrugging, Theo gave Melody an approving thumbs up, then moved toward a set of heavy saddlebags. Idly he wondered where their carrier, Nick the Skarmory, had go off to. A thoughtful hum left him as he kneeled down to the bags, most of which contained extra sets of clothing, music supplies, and miscellaneous souvenirs, then began unclipping his instrument case from the lot. Both Melody and Harmony made noises of excitement when Theo began walking toward them with his violin case in hand. Jokingly he told Harmony, "Now now, don't talk with your mouth full."

Truth was, Theo was just as eager as they were. His two favorite things in the world were his Pokemon and music-- he would die for both of them without regrets. He unzipped the padded violin case, then unlatched the inner hardshell case, revealing an old but well taken care of violin. Theo stood up, violin and bow in hand, and immediately began playing a few warm ups. Theo watched Harmony gobble down the rest of his berry, as Melody seemed to urging Harmony to finish. A smile came to his lips as Melody began to warm-up alongside Theo. Harmony wasn't far behind joining in. After a brief moment of making, what seemed to be noise, the three halted abruptly on Theo's mark. He took a moment to take in his surroundings, listening to the distant calls of Bird Pokemon for a moment, feeling at peace. After a long quiet moment passed, he put his bow to the strings, waited a moment more, then counted the three of them in.

First came Melody, singing out in place of a piano lead-- the song chosen from memory. Once Theo got a hold of which song she wanted to start, he joined her on the violin. Harmony joined in soon after, rather cutely beat-boxing in places where percussion should have been, or singing notes to complete a particular harmonic structure. Together they played, standing before the lake in Petalburg City, the music greeting the ears of passerby and Pokemon alike. A few Taillow landed nearby and watched the concert with interest that was, until Nick the Skarmory came speeding across the lake.

The waters parted as Nick flew just above the surface. With a sharp turn upward, Nick directed himself into the air above Theo, sending the Taillow scattering in the updraft. Heavily, Nick landed in the soft grass before Theo, with a light thunk and rending of the soil. As Nick lifted his head and glance about in a jittery avian manner, Theo played out the final note of the song, arching his brow curiously. Sun gleamed off of Nick's golden polished body with every turn of his head, flutter of his wings, and shift of his posture. "You're anxious, Nick," Theo pointed out needlessly as he lowered his violin, "What's the matt--" An off pattern gleam caught Theo's attention. Clutched in Nick's beak was a cord attached to a small blue metallic device-- a memory chip.

Holding his hand out toward Nick, Theo beckoned him forward saying, "Who gave that to you?" Melody and Harmony bounded forward to stand at Nick's feet, chattering anxiously to him as if filled with questions. Without response, Nick lowered his head and deposited the memory device into Theo's hand, then straightened his posture back out. Quietly, Theo turned the memory chip over hin his hand, then stared up at Nick. There had obviously been some urgency in Nick's approach but, that only served to make Theo a little anxious. He knew Nick wasn't one to rush unless something was truly urgent, so all sorts of possibilities rushed through Theo's mind as he turned to retrieve his computer.

It was times like these when Theo wished he had one of those Trainer Gauntlets. With one of those, he wouldn't have to lug around a laptop computer, and could easily plug things like this into it to read them instantly. Sure, he could probably just walk into a Gym and earn one, but that wasn't exactly something he was keen on doing, no matter how much his Pokemon always urged him. While the three of them wanted to compete-- even Melody who was known for her fearfulness-- Theo wasn't too keen on the idea. Why would he needlessly place his Pokemon in danger? Now, there had been times when, over the course of his wandering, that they were all in danger but, Theo was in danger with them. Putting them in a Gym and making them fight was different.

Heavily, Theo sighed as he placed his violin down atop the blanket, then moved to retrieve his laptop from Nick's saddlebags. He was content to keep them from Gyms and engage them in safer activities. Matter of fact, all three of them had won a few contests, and Nick had won a race in the Kanto region. Why they constantly pushed him toward Gyms was a mystery-- wasn't winning in other ways enough? Answerless and confused, Theo opened his laptop up, then plugged the memory chip into it. After a moment of loading, the chip became accessible. "The news?" Theo mumbled as he opened up a file. The first headline read:

Mauiville Blackout!
Terrorists Lay Siege to City!


Startled at the words, Theo moved to sit back on his blanket. He read the report, looked over the pictures of Mauiville City's damage, then shook his head. Melody moved to squeeze herself onto his lap and get a better view. She made a curious noise, looking from Theo's concerned expression and back to the laptop, then poked him several times. "Yesterday Mauiville was attacked," Theo told her, "Which means... none of you are getting massages from the Pokemon Reflexology center." Sighing deeply, Theo moved his glasses out of the way, then pinched the bridge of his nose. He hated when big changes happened to his plans and if the power in Mauiville city was out? Well then obviously all of their services would be canceled until further notice. Then there was the fact that, more than likely, the city itself still wasn't safe-- terrorists? No way was Theo going to put himself so close to danger like that. Sighing, he opened up an E-mail application, then began to type out an apology letter to the Reflexology Center as he canceled his appointment.

Now what was he supposed to do? Theo closed his laptop then looked up to see Nick staring back down at him. "Well. Up for a trip to Rustboro City? I hear it's nice there at this time of year," Theo spoke up. Without a noise in response, Nick leapt toward his saddlebags, landing lightly, then began to lift them into place upon his back. Harmony squeked and wiggled toward Theo, begging his trainer to pick him up. Melody, being the responsible one, picked Theo's violin up then went to put it in his case. "Guess that's a yes, then," chuckled Theo. After a bit of packing, they would soon be headed to Rustboro to... do what, exactly? While Theo didn't actually know, he also didn't particularly care. More than anything, the journey was the activity itself, and he looked forward to the trip. After all, he'd only just made landing out of Route 105 last night. Hoenn was one of his least explored regions as well, so it was ripe for adventure, as far as Theo was concerned. He couldn't wait to see what adventures he and his Pokemon would have here.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by c3p-0h
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c3p-0h unending foolery

Member Seen 0-24 hrs ago

Haven's eyes snapped open, her breath catching in her throat. She was frozen, her muscles unwilling to move save for the fluttering up and down of her chest. Blind panic fought with Haven's senses, struggling to overtake them.

She couldn't see anything – it was night. Something was wrapped around her arms and legs, tangling with them – a blanket. Lingering memories of pain seared her arm and back, and Haven almost missed its absence. Without it to anchor her she was adrift – disoriented. She could hear the sounds of her sleeping pokemon on either side of her, cocooning her.

She was safe. She was in a bed. It was just a dream.

Haven forced a deep, shaking breath. Finally, her arm moved. It was a hesitant motion. Then her other arm. Slowly, tentatively, she brought her hands to her face. They were clammy, hot and slick with sweat like the rest of her body. Her cheeks were wet.

Another breath.

Haven lay there in the dark, quivering like leaves in a storm.

She was safe. She was in a bed. It was just a dream.

Haven couldn't even remember the dream. Just flashes of white and red, terror like venom in her blood, poisoning her.

Just a dream.

She dropped her arms to her sides on top of the blanket. Familiar vines found her left hand and began curling around it, twining with her fingers. Haven tightened her grip around her new anchor. She closed her eyes again.

Sleep was a fitful, elusive thing.



When Haven awoke again at 4:16 in the morning she finally gave up trying to sleep. It was easier to reorient herself this time. She'd had enough practice throughout the night getting her bearings after dropping out of her nightmares.

Giving a heavy sigh, she forced herself to sit up. Blink's vines had curled all the way up her arm through the night, clinging to her like he was afraid she'd be pulled away from him. Lace opened her bleary eyes at her movement, but soon enough she was back asleep. Dagger was still snoring, curled protectively around the mysterious egg. Cloak was sitting up, watching the dark room and pretending he wasn't focused intently on Haven.

With little else to do, Haven reached across the bed to grab her tablet. She had four more missed calls. All together that totaled to 46 calls from her mom, Rose, and Carol. Rose had apparently sounded the alarm after Haven’s last phone call. She couldn’t say she was surprised. Not after she’d nearly had a breakdown in the middle of the conversation. Haven curled her fingers into a loose fist over the screen. Then she reached out with one slender finger, and hit the green button next to her mother’s picture.

Dialing…

Ringing…


"Haven?" Her mother’s exhausted voice crackled through the speaker.

"Hey M-"

"Do you have any idea how long I've been calling?" Haven opened her mouth to speak but her mom beat her to the punch. "Rose said you were in trouble and then what? You screen our calls? Do you know how worried we were?"

Haven had taken to playing with the tip of a clump of her hair, brushing the ends over her finger as her mother scolded her. Guilt ebbed over her, slow and thick.

"I told her I'm fine. And I haven't been screening your calls, I've just been crazy busy. I only called because–"

"What time is it over there? Isn't it the middle of the night?"

"It's like four in the morning. Couldn't really sleep. And… I dunno, I just missed you guys." This, at last, quieted her mother. She wasn't used to the hesitancy in her middle daughter's voice. "I was thinking about you so I called. And then I heard Rose's voice and I… I guess I just missed you more than I thought."

"Honey… are you sure you're ok? You wanna come home?" Haven breathed a small laugh to herself. Her mom was always looking for reasons for her to come home.

"I'm fine Mom. I'll call more often, kay? It was good to hear your voice. I… I needed it." Warm tears started pooling in her eyes, but her voice didn't break. "I gotta go though."

"…Alright. I love you Haven."

"Love you, too." Haven clicked the red button to disconnect the call. She lifted a hand to run her fingers through her tangled hair. She glanced around the bed. The rest of her team was awake, blinking drowsily in the dark. Haven having a restless night meant so did they. She reached out to scratch behind Dagger's ears, the Granbull lowering her head to nestle back over the egg. "Good news," Haven murmured, "Mom didn't have a heart attack." She would if she ever found out what had actually been going on with Haven over the past couple of days.

Haven had resigned herself to a sleepless night. It was close enough to sunrise – she'd just kill time until them. She turned her head to look at the window, curtains drawn against the night sky. Quiet fear of what – who – might be lurking out there stuck in Haven's throat… and dared her to venture out into the dark. Her fingers curled into a loose fist against Dagger's fur. Pulling back her hand, she forced herself to turn away from the window and tapped at her tablet with her finger. A search engine popped up on the screen and Haven typed.

mauville blackout explosion

The first page was filled with dramatic headlines about what happened last night.

Explosions Rock Mauville After Blackout

Mauville Blackout! Terrorist Lay Siege to the City!

Electrical Attack on Mauville Still Unclaimed

Dozens Injured and Six Dead in Wake of Mauville Attack

Haven's brow furrowed as she tapped through the different articles. Photos of the aftermath littered the different articles, shaky videos and shaken witnesses giving their perspectives. No one knew who was behind the attack – or if they did, it hadn't been released to the press yet. Haven sifted through different articles for the rest of the night until grey dawn stretched over the horizon and birdsongs filled the air.

She'd moved on from news articles to mindless internet videos by the time a knock came from the other side of her door, along with a warm voice inviting her to breakfast.

Forrest's wife was… kind. Accommodating. Almost doting. If Haven had been anyone else she might've reveled in it. But as it was, she just felt… overwhelmed. She wasn't used to someone going to such lengths for her. No, she was used to being the family burden, more trouble than she was worth until she started pulling her weight.

(Whether or not that was what her family actually thought was irrelevant.)

Haven needed to leave. It was what was best. She wasn't great at being confined to a single building, (or town, or region) she'd inevitably do something stupid to inconvenience or upset them, and she was apparently on the run from egg snatchers. Forrest's wife was probably as badass as he was, but she had four kids and two invalids to worry about. She probably couldn't afford to babysit Haven's delinquent ass on top of everything.

"Thanks, I'll be right out," Haven called.

Leaving was really the best option. It was the smartest. It was the safest for them.

Forcing herself out of bed, Haven gathered her long, messy hair to put it up in a bun at the top of her head. She inspected her bandaged left arm, unraveling the gauze to tighten it against the scars. Haven looked down at herself. Messy pajamas, messy hair, messy life. Sighing, Haven moved to the door and opened it. She stepped out into the hall, following the smell of food.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Regitnui
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Regitnui Lorespinner

Member Seen 2 yrs ago

Keoni filtered off the ship along with the rest of the queue. More than a few people needed to travel between Mossdeep and Lilycove on a regular basis, it seemed, and the process of getting to the immigration booth took longer than he expected. The attendant was an older, dumpy woman who reminded him of an overweight Persian. "Name and License please?" She asked, in a surprisingly high-pitched voice.

"Keoni Mahiki," he answered, handing over the card.

She scrutinised it for a moment. "Three pokemon?" He nodded. "Please present them for inspection at the Centre after retrieving your luggage but before leaving the terminal." The card got sent through a machine, which took just long enough to register his details that Keoni got a little nervous. "Alola?" He agreed. "Enjoy your stay."

The luggage seemed to already be on rotation by the time he got there with a trolley. Not that he'd packed heavily, but he wasn't lugging a flygon saddle around without some assistance. The locals seemed to have their pokemon running around. He'd already seen one of their ninetales; it was definitely yellow, just like Asuna had said. Other, smaller pokemon ran or flew freely, giving the otherwise clinical building a wild air. He made his way to the pokemon centre, where he was greeted by a pink-haired nurse.

"Good morning, sir!" She smiled brightly. "Please release your pokemon for inspection!" She pointed him to a wide area, roughly halfway divided between a shallow pool and open tiles.

Keoni did so, releasing Sirocco, Kathrine and Robin into the tiled area. Both of the former immediately rushed towards the fence to grwwt him, while Robin flew up to a perch and fell asleep again. "Yes, yes, I missed you too!" He hugged both Kathrine and Sirocco, who had ended up leaning over the ninetales to get his scratch. "Now be good and we'll be outside faster."

"First..." The nurse entered the pen. Kathrine shook her coat, sending snowflakes everywhere, and sat primly before the nurse stopped at Sirocco. With an offended bark, she glared at Keoni. He shrugged, and she decided to make the best of it by settling next to him for a scratch. "Flygon, Sirocco." The nurse gave the flygon a once-over, asking him to spread his wings, fly up and down, open his mouth, all the usual things. Sirocco bore it with good grace. "Do flygon normally have four wings in Alola?" The nurse asked Keoni.

He shook his head, still idly scratching Kathrine. "No, that's just Sirocco as far as I can tell. They never dropped off after his Vibrava stage. They're fine, as far as the vets back home said. He's just got an extra pair of wings." Sirocco buzzed the two pairs against each other, a short snatch of song. "He also has big lenses and four tail fins."

The nurse nodded. "Other than those, I don't see anything wrong with him." She read her clipboard. "He has a flight license? May I see the saddle?" Keone fetched it, drawing a cry of annoyance from Kathrine. He entered the pen as well, securing it on Sirocco's back. The nurse nodded, satisfied. "Your ninetales, Kathrine?"

"Little princess," Keoni warned the nurse, who seemed to find the ninetales' fur and colouring interesting. "She's an Ice-type. That is normal for ninetales there."

The nurse looked up. "I know, but it's the first time I've gotten to meet one." She ticked off the sheet, giving Kathrine a scratch, before looking up at Robin, who'd chosen a high perch. "Decidueye, Robin. Could you get him to come down?"

"He's asleep," Keoni explained. "Robin gets grouchy if I wake him up before 4pm. Unless it's for a battle."

The nurse sighed. "Well, I have to make sure he doesn't have mites." Robin opened an eye, hooted, then glided down onto the floor. "Thank you," the nurse said, getting a faint hoot in response before Robin closed his eyes again. She plucked a dead leaf from his wings before ticking off the last sheet. "Well, your pokemon all seem to be in good health. Please note only one pokemon is allowed out outside the clinic."

"Thank you," Keoni returned both Robin and Kathrine, and letting Sirocco walk alongside him. "Could you point me to an information booth?" The nurse did so, and after a brief enquiry as to the legalities of flight and the purchase of an accurate map, Keoni and Sirocco walked out into the sunshine. "Three hours to Lavaridge, the bloke said, Sirocco. Think you can do that?" The flygon crouched, thrumming his wings. "Alright," Keoni lifted himself into the saddle. "Let me know if you need a rest."
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Phoenix
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Phoenix

Member Seen 3 mos ago

Attack on Mauville City!

At about 1 AM this morning, Mauville City suffered a major attack. An estimated one-hundred twenty-seven casualties, both human and domestic Pokemon, have been reported at this time. An additional five-hundred twelve are reported injured, resulting in an overfilled Fairfax Hospital. Many have been sent to nearby clinics or the Lavaridge Medical Centre. Officials request the friends and families of those who may have been in Mauville City at the time of the attack to contact the Fortree Ranger Headquarters for further information at 3-37-10012. You may also contact the Fairfax Hospital at 3-71-40000, the Lavaridge Medical Centre at 3-71-41107, or the Pokemon Ranger Headquarters at 3-71-10012. However, reports indicate the hold times can reach up to an hour.
Reports have revealed the attack was made on the power grid of Mauville and has yet to affect other areas of the Region. The entire city is still in the process of evacuation. Access to the city is strictly prohibited while investigations take place. Access will be delayed further as repairs take place immediately thereafter. The local Gym Leader, Mr. Johnathan Sturm, estimates repairs to take at least a month to reach a functional state and for the repairs to be finished sometime into next year, which gives us the only idea of the damage the city sustained by the attack as air travel has also been denied in the areas surrounding the city.
Some victims of the attack claim terrorist activity. However, until official reports are released, we cannot definitively conclude that such is the truth as there are no international records of terrorist activities. Regardless, Hoenn seems to hold its breath, mourning those lost and mentally preparing for another attack to take place, despite the lack evidence of another attack upon the Region. Additionally, the region is currently exercising national security measures. Pokemon Rangers have been deployed across the Region ad many from other regions have been imported to aid us in this time of crisis. The Pokemon Rangers suggest staying in the city you currently reside until otherwise instructed. Those traveling between cities are suggested to travel with a Ranger Escort.
We will be providing updates as they come in...


Outside Petalburg City
Credit: @c3p-0h, @Kymera
"Please," Jeanne said, gesturing to the seat closest to the living room, from where she came.
When Haven sat down, the kitchen was to her left, which is where Jeanne returned to continue placing food onto the table with the children grabbing and eating with typical eagerness expected from children. The boys were both shirtless and only wore boxers and each girl only had a belly shirt or a training bra with shorts. It was evident the lack of clothing Forrest practiced seemed to be the practice of his children as well. Jeanne was the only one in a full bathrobe with a proper nightgown underneath.
"This is Jerrek, our oldest," she explained, beginning the introductions. The boy had some memory of the woman, but she looked vastly different now than on the side of a route broken and bruised. He nodded like his father would have, though, in greeting while his mouth was full. "And this is Elizabeth, our second."
The girl with dirty blond hair looked the same age as Jerrek despite being two years younger. Her limbs were long and her hair tied back into a braid that fell to the middle of her back. She took a sip of juice and waved her hand with a "hi" in a surprisingly confident tone for an 8 year old.
"Rowan is our third," Jeanne continued.
The smallest boy with messy brown hair, thick and curly and longer than his chin and masked his rich green eyes. It would have been difficult to tell his sex if he wasn't dressed like his brother. He then rose his face from the bowl it was hovering over to pull at half his bangs, revealing one of his emeralds and showing off a smile, crooked and half-missing but ultimately adorable.
"[color=fruitsalad]Nice to meet you![/color]" he said with a light as warm as his mother.
"And Shelynn is our baby," the woman said and placed a soft hand upon the smallest child sitting next to her.
Her hair was similar to Rowan's, but longer and knotted from being unkempt. Her eyes were a bright blue-green like her mother's and her face round with baby fat. She simply giggled and waved.
Haven gave small waves to each of them in turn.
"I hope you got some sleep last night," Jeanne said as she sat down at the other end of the table, across from herself. "I can't imagine what you went through. You're welcome to stay here as long as you need to rest up before heading out on your own," she offered.
"I slept fine, thanks," Haven lied. "The bed was perfect." She picked up her fork and began poking at the food in front of her. "I'm feeling better. I'll go as soon as I can – after breakfast, probably."
The bags under Haven's eyes told more of the truth than her words. But Jeanne didn't pry. And it could have been from a number of things other than lack of sleep. So she took a couple bites of toast and eggs and then looked back up at Haven.
"What of your friend?" she said, impling the man upstairs in a state similar to her husband, though much more healing due to the physical injuries he sustained.
"I… just met him yesterday. Right before the explosions. We're not really friends." But to call them strangers wasn't quite true either. Not after what Rai'd seen last night.
Jeanne picked up on Haven's seeming to know or to care about the man to some degree. The night before showed that quite well. Haven was certainly surprised to see the young man when they'd teleported to the house.
"What was his name again?" Jeanne asked, having forgotten in the chaos of the moment.
Haven glanced up. "Rai."
"Ah, yes. And you don't wish to make sure he's okay?"
Haven felt the guilt trip before the words had even left Jeanne's mouth. Jeanne didn't need to play the guilt card with someone so clearly mentally traumatized, but she couldn't help it. Jeanne had the tendency to enforce her Hoennese culture, the strong sense of hospitality and care toward strangers.
Haven looked down again, prodding her food around her plate with the fork. Shit. She owed him that much after he'd sat through her breakdown yesterday. She owed Forrest too, for saving her life. At least a hello. A thank you. A moment of her time to check in on them – to see if they were ok.
"Yeah, I was planning on checking on him and Forrest before I left," came the murmured lie. Haven stabbed a piece of egg with her fork and forced herself to eat it. After she swallowed, she said, "But after that I really should go… It's the safest option. And you and Forrest have been really good to me, but I don't wanna take up space when you've already got enough to worry about."
"What makes you think it's not safe here?" Jeanne began. She then realized that may not have been her meaning and worked to backtrack enough for the question to be ignored.
"I'm sorry, I shouldn't pry."
"You're not going to stay and play with us, Miss?" the littlest girl whined with sad, disappointed eyes. "Can I at least pet your doggy?" she asked, not knowing the species name was referred to as "Granbull."
Haven glanced down at the girl, the corner of her mouth quirking up. Her eyes flicked to Dagger, who was trying to look gruff and annoyed.
"Sure," she answered. The girl uttered a small squeal of excitement."Careful though: she drools."
Dagger let out a huff. Sly smile growing, Haven leaned down to the girl and whispered, "Her favorite spot's above her nose." Shel followed Haven's advice and clumsily began brushing her hand over the Granbull's snout with a grin and a prolonged coo.
Dagger gave Haven a betrayed look, which went completely ignored. The Granbull, for all her brutality, loved attention and being fawned over. And she adored playing with kids, as much as she tried to hide it. Her tongue lolled out of her mouth as her face relaxed. Cloak sniggered next to her. Dagger snapped back to attention and elbowed him so hard he toppled over. Shelynn giggled all the while.
Haven rolled her eyes and turned back to her half-eaten food. "Are either of them up yet?" she asked Jeanne.
The woman supressed a giggle as Shelynn and Rowan ran off to futher fool around with the Granbull and Scrafty, leaving half of their food untouched and seats pushed out. She rose from her own seat after patting her lips with a napkin and directed the older two to clean up after all of them before preparing for the day.
"No," she said, with some grimness in her tone. "And they shouldn't be before tomorrow," she added more as a warning to the men upstairs than an assessment of their conditions. "It'd be best to let them rest for now."
Jeanne glided across the hardwood floors, stained slightly lighter than the walls. She stepped around the table in almost complete silence until she reached Haven. Her airy hand alit upon her shoulder, soft and calm. "Come," she told Haven, inviting her to help administer their medication.
Haven glanced at Blink and Lace, eyebrow raised. Then she nudged her chin to the abandoned plates. Her two pokemon nodded. Haven pushed herself up from the table to follow after Jeanne as Blink started stacking plates atop Lace's horns.
Jeanne moved to prepare two more glasses of the Cheri juice, showing in silence which ingredients and how much were used to Haven. She handed both glasses over to her "aide" and ushered her up the stairs where it fell back into the darkness from the night before. The shades were kept pulled so the men could sleep more soundly.
"Rai," she said, as if practicing the name, "is in here." She opened the door.
The man's Charmeleon continued to fret over him. "It's okay, dear," she cooed to the Pokemon, trying to alleviate whatever worry she could. "He'll be fine. It's just going to take some time," she added. Haven followed in after her, eyes darting over Rai's form.
His newer injuries were healing well, though most were still angry red lines and fading ugly green bruises. They criss-crossed his back overlaying a veritable roadmap of scars that left his flesh a patchwork of hollow divets, gnarled welts and stitched smooth skin where he hadn't had the benefit of a pokemon's healing touch. Even still, his newest injuries were begining to scar and become new additions to the already extensive collection he had on display.
So this was what it was like to see someone else injured and bedridden. It was a nice change to not be the one in the bed.
He looked miserable. Empathy bubbled up in her chest.
"Here," Jeanne continued and offered to take one of the glasses to demonstrate how to administer the herbal remedy. Haven handed it over.
She turned to face the man and noticed he was now on his front as if he had tried to lift himself out of the bed. She let out a small sigh and rolled her eyes with a smirk.
"Rai," she said in a soft half-whisper. "We need to get you turned over so you can take some more medicine. After that, you need to rest."
Jeanne placed the glass she held onto a small bedside table and gently manipulated the man to roll over, despite the amount of pain it caused. Haven, unsure of what else to do, put down her glass and tried to help.
Rai could have been quite content to be left alone. Moving hurt, breathing hurt, and even thinking gave him a headache he had no way of getting rid of. Being forced to roll over, no mater how gently, made white-hotspots dance in front of his eyes and left him sucking air through clenched teeth until the persistant ache abated.
Jeanne tried to calm him with only her words, since that was all she could manage given the lack of equipment in order to roll people over in a state of ending-paralysis.
She then worked the liquid in the straw as she had before and gestured for Haven to take over while she would administer the same medicine to her husband. Jeanne left with her glass, leaving the two of them alone.


Mauville City
Name: Raiziel Alexander Kurin
Age: 22
Address: 41 Lantern Lane, Olivine City, Johto

"Hm..." a low hum passed through her chest. "Certainly the bastard."
She sat at her desk with Finster curled up next to her on the floor feigning sleep. One of his eyes peeled open at the comment, not sure if his trainer was speaking to him or to herself. He shifted a little to fall back into a meditative rest.
I don't understand why Dicky didn't just tell me it was him, she thought as she passed through some other papers, documents and rosters of Pit Fights across the Region. It's even stranger he wanted me to take him along to Mauville Island for the drop off. There must be something else going on here.
It was a good thing she'd followed him to the scene of that attack, last night. He'd sloughed off his backpack and then got his ass handed to him and was then Teleported away by some Medicham. If the Rangers had confiscated it and taken it in for evidence, his time here wouldn't get much easier. However, with just his Trainer Card, she knew Dicky was up to something and that her own life was probably being toyed with.
"Samantha," she said into a device attached to her desk. "Come in here, please."
Without a response, a young woman entered the underground office. "Yes, Lady Shade?" she said with coldness and a flat face.
Her hair was a light brown and perfectly straight, falling just past her shoulders. Her face was a clean oval without any notable features. She stood at a relatively tall height for a woman, and the heels she wore only exaggerated this. She dressed in a business suit, as that is what Lady Shade required of her employees. However, hers was a light gray and she wore a pencil skirt rather than trousers. Her legs were wrapped in pantyhose, evening her skin-tone and darkening it slightly. Her arms remained by her sides, attentive and disciplined.
"Do you know this man?" Lady Shade asked and handed her the trainer card.
The woman walked over to the desk and glided her hand to grasp the card without resistance from Lady Shade's hand. She looked at it, her face keeping flat and seemingly unable to show any emotion. However, the look was long - longing - surprised.
"This is my brother."
"Would you like to meet him?"
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Utrax
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Utrax 𝕰𝖝𝖙𝖗𝖊𝖒𝖊 𝕭𝖎𝖗𝖉

Member Seen 1 yr ago

A brief conflict...
Route 104 North


"Now now Nick," Theo said with a shake of his finger, "There's no need to be so grumpy." While Theo didn't look over to see it, he very well knew the feeling of Nick's heavy intimidating Leer when it was aimed at him. "I told you, go ahead to Rustboro if you want, I just think we could all use a bit of fresh air and exercise," Theo continued with a click of his tongue. Chirps and warbles of agreement came from Melody and Harmony, who were both seated on Nick's back. Again, Theo could feel the grumpy stare coming from Nick, and simply laughed it off. How long ago had they set out from Petalburg, where Nick's grumpiness all began? Looking down at his wristwatch, Theo noted the hour-- it had been at least twenty minutes since they'd started walking. When Theo first suggested they should walk, Nick had flapped his wings to blow a breeze of disagreement-- then followed the snorting, stomping, and cawing. While Theo generally didn't many disagreements with Nick, there were usually numerous disagreements about travel means, especially when it involved walking. Of course, most trainers would probably give in to their giant-metal-bird Pokemon's demands to fly but, Theo figured that Nick could learn a little patience if he didn't always get his way.

"Plus, I hear the forest nearby has lots of good berries--"
Harmony interrupted Theo with a loud cry of excitement-- causing the rest of the crew to wince slightly from the volume-- Harmony made soft apologetic noises soon afterward. "Ah-- Yes. As I was saying-- lots of berries! Don't pretend you don't like berries, Nick," Theo continued with a chuckle.
"All Pokemon like berries! As a lot of them like battles!"
The voice made Theo stop in his tracks and look over his shoulder. From the looks of the man, Theo immediately assumed he was probably a Backpacker or some sort, and most definitely a trainer-- the pokeball in his hand said as much. For a moment, Theo was rather confused as to where the man had come from, seeing as he hadn't been back there before-- must have been hiding in the thick bushes nearby.

"Never seen a Skarmory in that color before! Show me what it can do, huh?" And before Theo could protest, the Backpacker threw a Pokeball then shouted, "Go Nidoking!" Theo pinched the bridge of his nose then turned to Nick, not bothering to watch the Nidoking emerge from it's Pokeball. Nick bowed his head in acknowledgement but, it was Harmony that hopped from Nick's back, then confronted the Nidoking first. Melody slid from Nick's back as Theo quickly moved to unhook the saddlebag quick release.

"Huh? Looks like this Whismur want's to take you on, Nidoking!"
Theo glanced toward the Backpacker and his Nidoking as the both of them started laughing. Nick turned to face the Nidoking but Harmony, trembling, shouted out then stomped his feet adamantly. "Harmony? What are you doing, pal? Come here-- Nick's going to fight this battle," Theo spoke up worriedly. As Melody moved to hide behind Theo's legs, Harmony made another shout, then shook his body in disagreement with Theo. "What? What kind of lousy trainer are you-- little Whismur won't even listen to you! Oh well, let's teach that Whismur why he should listen to his trainer-- Nidoking, use Megahorn," shouted the Backpacker. "Kiiiiing," shouted the Nidoking as it began charging toward Harmony, feet pounding into the ground heavily, and their horn glowing brightly with energy.
"Oh no, Harmony move-- Nick help--" Theo looked to Nick for help, but found that Nick was simply watching the coming fight attentively. Theo looked back toward Harmony--

A swift sweep of Nidoking's horn caused dust and a powerful wind to kick up yet, their target went unharmed-- Harmony had smartly dashed between the Nidoking's legs. Now at the Nidoking's back, Harmony opened his ear cuffs, then shouted loudly-- with power of a building Echoed Voice attack-- so much so that the Nidoking found itself off balance. Taking a few steps back as the Nidoking fell toward him, Theo found himself surprised, mirroring the facial expression of the stumbling Pokemon. "Poison Tail, Nidoking," urged the Backpacker. Without missing a beat, the Nidoking tilted himself onto his forearms, and his tail began to glow a sickly purple hue. With power Theo didn't predict the heavy beast would have, the Nidoking propelled itself toward Harmony in an arc, tail first. Harmony ran backward, trying to dodge, but was still hit by the very end of Nidoking's tail, the ground rumbling heavily beneth the crashing weight. This time, in a more pained tone, Harmony shouted his cry-- louder-- with enough force to cause the Nidoking to stumble ever so slightly back.

Theo watched the battle with wide eyes. From the last attack, Harmony had clearly been injured and, if he wasn't mistaken, Theo could wear that Harmony looked a little sick. A bright red bruise was already forming atop Harmony's little pink skull but, a rather determined expression was still on his face. That was when Nidoking swung his tail again, charged with power still, and the Backpacker shouted in approval.

"You have to jump--" Theo cried and Harmony obeyed. As Nidoking's tail swung harmlessly under Harmony, Theo urged his Pokemon to, "Up the pitch, Harmony! Don't let him hit you like that again!" Quickly, Theo slammed his hands over his ears, then Harmony unleashed his cry. The note was high-- almost too high for human ears to perceive-- but there was a soft ringing in Theo's ears anyway as Harmony screeched at Nidoking. In response, Nidoking stumbled away from Harmony, momentarily distracted, with his large hands covering his ears. Heavily, Harmony landed, then stumbled about slightly, panting. Theo could definitely see it now-- Harmony had truly been poisoned by Nidoking's attack. All of the blood drained from Theo's face upon this realization and he suddenly felt faint. For a moment, Harmony looked as if he were done but then, he tilted his tiny body upward, toward the Nidoking. A breath, deep, through the stores in Harmony's ears, was taken in a moment and next, Harmony let out a sound so loud, so powerful, that Theo could see the energy of the power clearly-- bright blue circles of sound. This was the attack that had brought down an Onix, Theo realized with sudden surprise-- Harmony has just used Hyper Voice.

Nidoking's feet were driven backward several inches before being lifted another few inches off of the ground entirely. Once Harmony landed, on his feet, he soon fell down and to the side, whimpering pitifully. Theo rushed toward Harmony as the Nidoking landed heavily on his feet before his trainer. As Theo scooped Harmony into his arms, he could feel the heavy fever heat wafting from Harmony, the toxins causing him to draw up in pain. Angrily, Theo looked toward the Backpacker, as he cheered and congratulated his Nidoking. "Nick-- we have to fly after all," Theo spoke up, his voice cracking with emotion, as he held Harmony in his arms. Melody shouted and screamed at the Nidoking-- clearly throwing some choice Poke-words at him. In response the Nidoking seemed to stop celebrating and, Theo thought, it almost looked sort of guilty. "Hey! We ain't done-- I wanna see your Skarmory battle," yelled the Backpacker. As he seated himself upon Nick's back, Theo shook his head at the man then said, "Why? I'm just a lousy trainer, remember?"

"Who cares-- I'm sure that Skarmory compensates for ya! No wonder it's a shiny-- I bet you're one of those rich folks, huh? You just gonna leave? Not even the courtesy to give a prize?"
Heat went to Theo's cheeks and he clenched his jaw tightly. He stared down at the smirking Backpacker as Melody climbed up then dug around in the saddlebags. Soon, coins were flying all about. "What the-- what kind of Jigglypuff uses Payday-- wait a second," the Backpacker spoke up in confusion.
"Take your damn prize!" Theo barked with more fury than he expected-- his shout even surprising him a little. "Nick, we have to go to Rustboro-- fast," commanded Theo in a gentler tone. "Sore loser," the Backpacker shouted. At that, Nick spread his golden wings, then treated both the Backpacker and the Nidoking to a dust-filled and very unnecessary gust of wind, before taking off.


Licking the wounds...
Rustboro City

Though Nick couldn't reach top speeds, he still managed to get Theo and the rest of the gang to Rustboro quickly. A few moments of circling eventually brought them down near a PokeStation. Theo dismounted, Melody reached into his Saddlebag and withdrew a hand-sized metal device. To most, it was likely an antique looking object, but for Theo, it was his only means of giving his Pokemon medicines. In the Johto region, where he'd picked up the device, it was called a MediPush, and acted as a medical-only placeholder for people that didn't posses the usual Pokemon storage equipment. Melody followed Nick to the PokeStation, keeping up with his jog. Theo took the MediPush from Melody and brought the device into the PokeStation with him. Immediately the systems recognized Theo's identity, based on the presence of the MediPush, and he was prompted to select from a list of medications. Once a poison Antidote was loaded into the MediPush, Theo pressed the device to Harmony's side. Concern etched itself into his face. Midway through the flight here, Harmony had stopped trembling entirely, and it seemed like his fever had rose. Part of Theo was worried that the medication wouldn't be enough-- that Harmony would be gone for good-- but that was ridiculous wasn't it?

Pokemon could survive far worse beating than that but, then again, Harmony didn't battle as much as most Pokemon. He wasn't supposed to, as far as Theo was concerned, and he wanted to keep things that way. Battles only resulted in his Pokemon getting injured-- worrying him-- and he couldn't stand the though of a knocked-out Pokemon never waking up again. People liked to talk about it as if it didn't happen that often, but that fact that it could happen at all was enough risk in itself. How could other trainers stand to see their Pokemon hurt so terribly like this? A heavy sigh left Theo as he selected a stronger medication-- one that would give Harmony enough of a jolt to at least wake and move, perhaps. As he applied the MediPush again, he felt Harmony wiggle around a little, then let out a sigh of relief. Theo's head was starting to hurt. Suddenly feeling exhausted, Theo turned and walked out of the PokeStop, saying to Melody, "He's moving again." She immediately perked up, then followed Theo toward a nearby bench, where Nick assumed he should be waiting, it seemed. With a shake of his head, Theo sat down behind the bench, in the soft grass, then finally noticed the city.

Thoughts of exploring had eased their way out of Theo's mind for now. Here, he was going to sit in the grass, and wait until Harmony had a bit of rest. Giving a nod to Nick, Theo watched as Nick began removing his saddlebags. "Feel free to go as far as you want and--" Theo shot Nick a firm stare "--Don't go harassing that trainer and his Nidoking, Nick."
Nick snorted and made soft clicking noises with his tongue.
"I mean it," Theo replied tiredly, stroking Harmony's head reassuringly, "Leave them alone."
Nick snorted again, then spread his wings, ran briefly, and gently took off into the sky. Theo stared after him and sighed. Melody hopped into his lap to snuggle up with Harmony and, Theo included, began to take a nap.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Regitnui
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Regitnui Lorespinner

Member Seen 2 yrs ago

Route 112


"Head for the giant steaming volcano," Keoni repeated the advice they'd been given by the tourist centre. "Well it's certainly hard to miss, isn't it?" Sirocco ducked his head in agreement. He'd been flying for two hours, with a short break Keoni practically had to force him to take. Only the sight of the desert had persuaded Sirocco to stay down long enough to rest, listening to his fellow Flygon in the sandstorm. But now they were finally almost there. Keoni, if he sat up in the saddle, could already see Lavaridge Town. Asuna had been right about the hot springs. It seemed every house had one. He'd have to put a little effort into finding her house.

Crouching back down, he noticed a convoy travelling towards town. "Wonder what that is." Keoni rubbed Sirocco's flank. Despite the flygon's unusual stamina for his size, he could tell he was getting tired. "Head for that open square," He told Sirocco. "That seems large enough to land in." Acknowledging with another duck of his head, Sirocco pushed on. Keoni found himself with time to think, now that the destination was in sight. He had told Asuna he was coming today, right? Maybe he should have called her from Lilycove. It could be awkward if he just showed up randomly right?

Thankfully, Sirocco touched down shortly after, and saved Keoni the trouble of heading any further down that line. A scream and a flail of red hair knocked him over and ruined any other thoughts he might have had. "I was so scared! I didn't know if you were coming on foot and going through Mauville and getting caught in the blast and getting hurt and then I have to see you in hospital and that would be a horrible way to meet my grandparents. Hello, Sirocco. And you should have told me you were safe and that you were flying here and I didn't have to worry about you and I'm so glad you're safe!"

Keoni coughed, and gently put his arms around the woman with her face buried in his chest. "I missed you too, Asuna." He levered Sirocco's pokeball out and returned the tired pokemon. Well aware of the looks he was getting, he looked down at her. "Can I get up now?" She shook her head with a muffled refusal. "Wouldn't you rather have me trapped like this in a hot spring bath?" Her head popped up, brown eyes wide and lips in a rapidly spreading smile. Her face was narrow and sprinkled with freckles, as if she'd been sneezed on by a gastrodon. Her hair was bright red, and even though it was loose, spread out wildly from her head like a cloud.

"I told you I'd show you the family onsen, didn't I?" She kneeled back, letting him get up. "But first you have to meet my grandfather, and my grandmom, and you can see how big Keni's getting." He stood, dusting himself off as she explained, "Keni's the Litten you gave me. I don't know if she's evolved into a..."

"Torracat," Keoni supplied.

Asuna grabbed his hand and started almost pulling him along the streets, continuing with her chatter. "Yes. I don't know if she's evolved, but she is getting really big, and she wanders around a lot so she might have evolved when I wasn't looking and come back and I don't know if a Torracat is really different to a Litten or just bigger. So you'll have to tell me if she's evolved and what I have to do if she starts coughing up bigger fireballs..." Keoni pulled her into his arms and kissed her. It was one of the few ways he knew to quiet her down, and by far the most satisfying.

"What are you doing with my granddaughter?!" A cloud of mist billowed out from one of the nearby houses, and Keoni looked up to see an old man with a cane frowning at him as a Torkoal blew smoke. Keoni was suddenly very aware that his hands weren't quite on her hips anymore. Despite his tan, he started to blush like a schoolboy.

Asuna, her hands on his chest and a small smile on her face, defused the situation. "Grandpa, this is Keoni. The boy from Alola. I like him and you should be nice to him. He also kisses really well." She kissed him again, a quick peck. "And he's nice."

"Sir," Keoni greeted the old man with a deep bow. Or he would have, if Asuna pressed against him had given him enough space to move. The movement was really more of an extended nod. "Keoni Mahiki, sir." The old man regarded him with some suspicion, likely because Asuna had started gently walking fingers up Keoni's chest, despite his attempts to look serious.

The old man tapped the Torkoal, which stopped hissing steam and turned around. "Well, you both better come inside. Asuna! He's staying in the guest room. No shenanigans." Asuna nodded, but her mischievious smile made Keoni wonder how strictly she would follow that decree. He mouthed the word 'shenanigans' at her, and she responded only by sticking out her tongue a little. "And get him to bath before he gets into the onsen!"

Asuna pulled Keoni indoors, leading him through a traditionally decorated home, with wooden floor and paper walls. He wished he had a little more time to examine the various curios on the walls, or even do more than wave kindly to Asuna's grandmother, but she had a mission in mind. "We sometimes have guests who come to visit the hot springs, but they're usually old people who think the heat heals their joints or pains or something, so I like it more that you're going to be sleeping in the guest room."

They finally came to a stop in a room on the ground floor near the back of the house. A kotetsu took up one corner of the space, a low bed the other, and a sliding door open to the back yard. Asuna had fallen silent, chewing on her lip and looking at him oddly, so he asked, "Can I let my Pokémon out? Is there a space for them?"

She nodded, stepping out into their garden. The hot springs were set back from the building, a few trees artfully arranged and trimmed as screens. Most of the area leading there was grass, but a small stone outcropping, the same orange-red as the volcano overhead, struck Keoni as the perfect place for Kathrine to nap.

Freeing them all from their confinement, Robin immediately flew up and perched in one of the trees, disturbing a few taillow. Katherine was a little clingier, intentionally coming between Asuna and her master, who she promptly began begging for a scratch. Keoni was occupied though, unstrapping the bags from.the sleeping Sirocco's saddle. "Later, Kathrine. Go find a spot, and I'll come find you later."

Asuna regarded Kathrine with almost the same expression the ninetales did her, and Keoni was only faintly surprised to hear the fox growling quietly as Asuna came to his side. "Sorry about her. I thought she would have gotten over that." Asuna smiled and planted a kiss on his cheek, drawing a soft bark from Kathrine.

They unpacked, and spent the rest of the day catching up. Asuna's grandparents turned out to be pleasant folks, especially happy when Keoni told them about his parents being rangers. "I trained in Almia, you know," her grandfather began, and a long discussion of ranger stories took over dinner. Finally, as the stars rose over the little valley, they bid her grandparents goodnight.

Asuna disappeared upstairs, and brought back two white towels. "Now we go to the onsen and I know it's not like your beach and your village adventures, but I think you'll like my onsen more, because..." She giggled, taking his hand and leading him to a small building near the pools. "Now go in a booth and wash properly all over before you get in, because an onsen isn't like a bath."

She headed into her own booth, and he did as he was told. After a good scrubbing, he reached for a towel and... "Asuna?" He called. Her face appeared at the door. "Can I have a towel?" She shook her head. "Why not?"

In answer, she opened the door completely. "Because you don't go into an onsen with a towel on, silly. The towel's for after, when we're walking back and my grandpa's watching." For once, Keoni hadn't heard a word. He was entirely distracted by her chest. Not that he hadn't seen those before. He'd grown up with older sisters, after all. But Asuna's were... "Hey!" She snapped her fingers. "Focus on what I'm telling you, not what I'm showing you."

"I was," Keoni, with difficulty, looked up at her eyes. He stood up, and it was her turn to be distracted by the eye candy. "I thought you said focus."

She grinned a feline grin. "You weren't saying anything with your voice, so it's okay when I do it. Now come and let's get in and play." She turned, and after a moment's contemplation, Keoni followed. "By that rock over there is the best place for sitting in the pool, you go sit on the ledge there and I'll join you and we can finish what you wanted to do on the beach."

Keoni put an arm around her waist. "That wasn't just me."

Asuna folded her arms. "And unless you want it to be only you now, you go sit on that ledge and I'll come sit on your lap and we can be distracted all we like and..." She kissed him deeply. "And I wanted to do this with you ever since I got on that plane. Now come on and let me do what I want to do with you."

He did as he was told. She did as she promised.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by c3p-0h
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c3p-0h unending foolery

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"So, Glass Jaw, what happened?" Haven said in a gentle voice at odds with her words. "Run into another 80 pound girl?"

Rai's eyes flew open at the sound of the familiar voice. He thought, or perhaps hoped, he'd simply been hit hard enough in the head that the face in front of him belonged to someone else besides Haven. But when several long moments passed without the illusion fading, every line in Rai's face creased into a snarl.

"What the fuck are you doing here?" he croaked out, despite his sore throat.

Haven's eyebrow lifted. "Playing doctor." She grabbed the glass from the table and held it out to Rai, the tip of the straw poking at his lips. "Drink."

"Find someone else to nurse." he spat back, trying to blow the straw away from his face.

The corner of Haven's lips quirked up as she kept maneuvering the straw to prod him. "Y'know, I would but it seems like you're the only one delicate enough to need nursing. So I guess I'm stuck with you." She probably shouldn't have been harassing an invalid. She continued anyway.

"I'm not fucking curled up in a damned alleyway, am I?!" Rai would have been screaming if he could have forced his voice loud enough. Just because they'd had half an hour of conversation gave her the right to think she was better than him? "So what's that make you? Now get the fuck away from me."

Haven flinched back like he'd hit her, looking down at him with wide stunned eyes. Her lips parted. She looked down at him for a long moment, something fragile in her eyes. Then her mouth snapped shut into a thin line and Haven slammed the glass on the table. She'd turned and started to march towards the door before droplets of medicine had even finished spilling from the glass' rim. In seconds she'd reached the door, wrenched it open, left the room, and slammed the door shut again with a heavy thud.

Rai seethed furiously, straining to force his body to behave. Delicate? Did she have any damned idea?! He wrestled with his limbs to wrench himself away from the pillows, pushing the way his nerves screeched in prostest to the back of his mind. Where ever the hell he was, he'd been here too long already. He didn't need nursing, doctoring, or whatever anyone wanted to call it. He'd survived this long without their help, and he sure as hell didn't need it now.

Sweat was practically pouring off of him, as his arms and legs shook with the amount of effort it took just to push himself away from the surface of the mattress. His teeth ground together hard enough that he could feel his jaw creek, and the faint taste of copper hit his tongue. He refused to let himself drop back to the mattress and shoved himself to one side, and tried to swing his leg off the edge of the bed to start the arduous process of getting to his feet.

Without finer muscle control, however, it was llike he was slinging a 30lb weight off the edge of the bed. His precarious position balanced on his elbows, quickly dissolved as the rest of him followed his leg to the floor. He hit the hardwood with a dull thump and a small scream, as the pain burst back through the dam he'd placed and lay panting on the floor.

Haven stomped down the stairs, through the kitchen, (Blink and Lace gave her concerned looks as she passed them) and back to her room. She picked up her bag and turned back around. As she stormed through the house, she began tapping away at her tablet, shifting through different screens.

Soon enough, Haven found herself back in Rai's room. The door slammed shut again behind her as she marched towards him. She didn't react when she saw him on the floor, nor did he even lift his head to acknowledge her.

"Y'know what I find really helps people heal?" she asked in a clipped tone. She dropped her bag on the bed. "Motivation." Haven rumaged through her bag, grabbing different tubes of paint and a brush. Medical equipment in hand, she walked to Rai's side and knelt down so she was close to his face. He turned a single bleary eye on her, wishing he had it in him still to shove her away.

She gave him a sugary sweet smile.

"You're welcome in advance." Haven straightened up and opened a tube of bright purple paint. Then she turned it over his back and squeezed. Cold paint plopped onto Rai's skin.

Muscles still tense from their evening locked in place suddenly turned to stone under his skin as the first blob of paint his his back. For a moment, the sudden shock of it was red-hot, not cold. In that split second, his scrambled nerves couldn't tell the difference. His breath stuck behind his Adam's apple and refused to move one way or another despite how hard he tried to swallow. He wanted to flinch away from her, but fatigue had been replaced with conditioning, and his body was locked in place on the floor. It didn't stop him from starting to tremble.

"H...ha..ven. St..op." Rai wheezed quietly, as cold sweat broke out across his forehead, still pressed into the floorboards. It was ok. He was fine. This was harmless, right? "I've... I've seen better shit on the side of...railcars than what you draw... Don't scribble on me."

Haven had written off his trembling and sweating as the leftover strain from apparently flinging himself out of bed and onto the ground. She paid it little mind as she moved the paint around his back to start making flowers.

"You want me to stop," she said, "make me. Should be no problem since you're so tough." She knew she was being a brat, but her spite was stronger than her sympathy. Plus, in theory, this might help him to get some movement back. (It definitely wouldn't. Haven didn't care at the moment.)

Rai let out a groaning breath of pure frustration, as both fists balled into the rug just in front of his head, as if it would offer some leverage against the force of gravity holding him in place. He managed to scoot himself a few inches along the floor, before his arms gave out again and he came to a halt still well within the reach of Haven's brush. Frustration was slowly starting to give way to anger. At Haven, himself, and the whole messed up situation.

"I'm...putting up with you... aren't I?" He snapped back in between gasps, "Go paint with the rest of...the preschoolers. You'll fit...right in."

"Can't. The teacher said I don't play well with others."

He knew damn well he wasn't going to get her to stop now any time before she got bored. He couldn't do anything more than lay there on the floor as she dragged the paintbrush through the glob of paint in the middle of his back. He was better than this! People had been scared of him, some even refused to set foot into the Pits back home when he was on the dockets! He'd spent 9-goddamned-years, 9 long, painful years, to become someone who didn't have to lay sniveling face down in the dirt, and yet here he was now. No better off than the first day he'd been tossed into the Pits, at the hands of a fucking street artist armed only with a paintbrush.

Haven had finished the third childish flower when she paused to look down at Rai. He was an unmoving purple lump on te floor. It seemed like he'd given up, resigning himself to her paint.

Huh. I broke him.

Her anger began to drift away as guilt mixed with sympathy and bubbled up in her chest. Why had she wanted to see him? Out of a sense of gratitude after he'd helped her through a panic attack or something?

Haven closed her eyes and sighed. Standing up, she carefully placed her brush on the table so the purple bristled hung off the edge.

He thought he'd be happier about the swirling bristles that felt more like steel wool against his back finally stopping. Rai could hear her shifting around somewhere outside of his field of vision.

She picked up the glass of medicine and took out the bendy straw. She turned it upside down so the short side was dipped in the juice and the long side came over the glass' edge. Haven kneeled down again by Rai's face, placing the cup on the floor and holding the end of the straw towards his mouth.

"Drink," she repeated. "Before I pick a different color."

"I'm partial to blue..." Rai muttered more to the floor than to Haven. "If you're gonna go paint by numbers on me.. might as well be with my favorite color..." The venom in his voice had faded almost entirely, until the muffled words fell flat to the floor with him. Haven rolled her eyes.

He didn't want to even look in her direction. He had no idea where they were, or even why the hell Haven was there too. He could only guess it was just some new cosmic joke Arceus had decided to play in the ongoing series of them that made up his existence. It was already bad enough he'd had to rely on a bunch of strangers to pull him and Kye out of a no-win situation, but for someone to see him unable to even sit up under his own power just rubbed a handful of salt into the proverbial wound.

"Why the hell are you even here?" Rai finally asked, "I don't want your help. I'm sure you could be doing literally anything else right now, so why don't you?

Haven sighed again and stood, leaving the glass where it was, the straw still hovering close to his mouth.

"I'm here," she said, turned to her bag and grabbing an old sweater and a half-full water bottle, "because I apparently suck at avoiding trouble. I got teleported last night with you and Forrest from Mauville. I'm the only one of us who can actually move, so I'm helping Forrest's wife –" babysit "– look after you while she takes care of him. Don't worry, I'll be gone soon." Haven grabbed a sleeve of her jacket and gently as she could, started to wipe away at the paint. "Sooner if you drink."

"Nnngh!" Rai hissed, as the cloth touched his back again, "Just leave it! You want to play doctor, but your bedside manner sucks..." Haven had to stop herself from just shoving the jacket into his back.

"Good thing I'm not a real fucking doctor then, huh?"

"You're certainly better at throwing a punch, in my opinion."

He looked back at the glass sitting near his head disdainfully. On principle, his first instinct was to tip it over right there, simply because she was demanding he drink it. Or bribing him to. His tongue darted out to wet his cracked lips, as he worked to uncurl his fingers one at a time from the grip they had on the rug and drag his hand to the glass. He scooted the cup a little closer and took a small sip of the medicine, grimacing at the taste now that he was awake enough to "appreciate" it. He reluctantly took another small gulp, before he set his head back against the floor. Haven kept her mouth shut, though a small drop of satisfaction rose up in her.

"Don't suppose I could convince you to help me get out of here too, eh?" Rai managed a half chuckle, suddenly feeling far too tired for doing so little. "Don't really like being 'doctored' all that much..."

"Do you like being dragged around by someone half your size? Because unless you can walk around like a real boy, I don't think we'll get that far."

"I didn't say I'd thought it through. I just... I need to get back to Mauville." It made him nauseous to even think about heading back after the previous night, but it didn't change the fact that whatever Dicky's errand really was, it wouldn't get done laying in some cottage bed (or on its floor).

But Haven had a damn good point. He really wasn't going to go anywhere without being able to put one foot in front of the other, and right now, the best he could do was a crab crawl for a foot or so. Whatever was blended in that glass made his joints and muscles a little less tense, but he wasn't going to be up and sprinting through Hoenn for a while yet. Certainly not before Haven was planning to leave by the sound of things.

"Look, dunno where you're headed in such a hurry, but you think you could do me a favor? Just keep an eye out for someone? She'd be about 17 by now. Don't have to do anything, just... tell me if you see her?"

Haven was quiet for a moment before saying, "Sure. I'll be sure to look for the only 17 year old girl in all of Hoenn so I can telepathically let you know when I find her." Haven rolled her eyes and sat back on her heels. "Come on. Specifics?"

"I..." Rai stopped midsentence. How did someone describe a person they hadn't seen themselves in close to a decade? "If it helps, she's from Johto. Her hair was too damn culy for her own good last I saw her, had to keep it back in a bun or it'd end up caught on something. You could lose her against the sand cause of the color. Got eyes greener than a damned Bulbasaur too, and she's not afraid to use 'em to get into trouble. Or out of it." Haven was quiet as he watched him – as she listened. Something changed in Rai as he spoke about this girl. His anger melted away until all that was left was something small and sad. Something delicate. Haven felt like she was intruding on something far too intimate. Whoever this girl was, he missed her. He loved her. He opened his mouth to keep going, and found the lump was back in his throat. He felt like a complete fool grasping at straws. "Sorry. Don't know anything more than that."

Rai reached for the glass again, and shuffled himself experimentally. "Look, I'll-uh, finish this and get back into bed. You can tell Forrest or whoever I'll be out of here soon too. Don't want to overstay my welcome." And just like that, Rai was back.

Haven looked down at her hands, one clutching her stained jacket, the other wrapped in gauze. She wasn't sure what to do with herself. Haven pressed her lips together before she forced herself to speak.

"What's her name?"

"Samantha," Rai said slowly, before adding, "Samantha Kurin."

Haven gave a small nod. She looked from Rai to Kye to the bed. They'd figure it out. She'd… done enough. Standing up, Haven started the process of putting away her things, wrapping her wet brush in paper towels before throwing it in her messy bag, and capping her tube of purple paint. She rumaged around in her bag for a blanket.

"I'm gonna get you back for the mural, you know." Rai grunted, struggling to sit up with Kye's help.

"Some of my best work," she said as she laid the blanket out on top of the bed. It probably wouldn't do to get paint all over Jeanne's sheets. Haven reached in her bag again for a loose scrap of paper and a pen. She scribbled on it and dropped it on the table. "My number's on the table," she said, looking back at Rai. "Text me and I'll let you know if I see her." The chances of Haven running into one girl in all of Hoenn were slim to none, she knew. But oddly enough, she meant what she said. She lifted her bag onto her shoulder.

"Try not to get yourself killed, yeah?"

"I won't if you won't. Gotta make it fair, right?" Rai gave Haven a small grin as she started to leave. "You're the self proclaimed trouble magnet after all." Haven hummed a small laugh as she passed him.

"I can usually walk away from my troubles, though."

"Smartass."

Haven opened the door and gave him a wink. Then she left the room, closing the door behind her.




Haven rapped her knuckles on the door to Forrest's room, before grabbing the doorknob and tentatively turning it. The door cracked open, her head peaking through it. It seemed Jeanne had returned downstairs, most likely to tend to her children.

Forrest was lying in the bed, eyes closed. His chest rose and fell slowly with a slight quiver. His body was slightly damp with sweat. The sheet only covered his legs, keeping contact with his skin to a minimum. Because, of course no cloth could ever touch his chest. A physique like his apparently demanded to be constantly shirtless. His face was still, stony, and seemed stuck in a slightly pained expression. It was clear he was still unconsious, though possibly by choice in order to rest so he'd sooner heal from his paralysis. His skin was blotched with reds and whites. Some veins were sunken and others were pushed out against his uneven skin. He may not have been physically maimed like her, but it was clear that the internal damage was quite severe. But, then, she'd never been struck by a Thunder Wave, before.

The ends of his hair were pulled to the side and away from his body. Something had happened. The tips looked white, ashened. The length was much shorter than Haven remembered. Was this an effect from the attack?

Haven pushed the door open a bit more, creeping into the room. Her steps were quiet as she approached the bed. She looked down at her constant savior. Her eyes glanced around the room. Finally she opened her bag to pull out another loose piece of paper and a pen.

Placing it on the bedside table, she began scribbling a hasty goodbye note. It felt wrong to just leave without at least saying goodbye… again.

Note completed, Haven straightened back up to look at him one more time.

"Well," she murmured, "See you around, I guess." Actually, she really hoped she didn't. Because if she did then it meant she was probably about to die.

Haven turned and tiptoed back to the door. She left the room and walked down the stairs, towards the kitchen.

Elizabeth, Haven remembered, was helping Rowan, Lace, and Blink clean and put away the dishes used for breakfast just a few minutes ago. It seemed he'd finished playing with Cloak and Dagger, probably at the behest of his mother. The children seemed to pay little attention to Haven. She suspected Jeanne told them to not pester her. Out the window to the back yard showed Jerrek watching over Shelynn play with Cloak and Dagger and some other Pokemon, though she couldn't quite see its form as it faded in and out of existence.

Blink and Lace paused what they were doing to look up at her. Haven raised a hand slightly to let them know they could continue helping the kids for now.

"Hey Rowan," she said to the boy, "we're gonna leave pretty soon. Do you know where your mom is?"

His head turned and rose to face the woman, but his hair still blocked most of his face. "I don't know," he said with a wondering that mimicked Haven.

"I think she's in the den," Elizabeth clarified as she turned to place a cleaned dish onto a towel for Blink to then dry.

"Thanks." Haven made her way there.

The den was so much brighter. The curtains were drawn exposing more of the field that was apparently all their own. The group of Pokemon around the two children seemed to increase and the positivity among them almost contageous - almost.

Jeanne was tidying what little of the room she may have percieved as "messy" with a bundle of clothing in her arms. At a second glance, Haven could tell they were her own from the other night when she hadn't the time to wash them herself so she could flee her husbands aid, only to find herself now in hers. "Is there anything else you'd like me to wash before you go?" she asked in her persistently joyous tone that could make any cynic sick.

"Oh, no you… you don't have to wash anything. I'll take care of it in town." Why was hospitality always so hard to escape? "Thanks, though. For everything."

"Oh, nonsense," she said with a playful scoff. She began to walk around the truly enormous desk and toward Haven. "Now go upstairs and take a shower before you kill my houseplants," she said with a tone that betrayed the playful smile on her face.

"That's not the smell, that's just a natural talent I have." Damnit, this woman was gonna trap her here with motherly care.

Jeanne just giggled as the only response to the witty quip. She then began to guide Haven back out of the room and toward the stairs, tantilizingly close to the front door. " You'll find all you need in there. I'll start your laundry while you're in there."

"I really do need to get going though. I was supposed to meet a client for a painting." Haven understood how this worked. First she was gonna put her laundry in the wash, then she was gonna start lunch, then she was gonna ask Haven for help cleaning something, and reason after reason was going to pile up to keep her in the house until Jeanne thought she was good and cared for. "I already pissed him off once. I'm probably gonna lose his business if I'm late again."

Jeanne stopped and looked into Haven's eyes. Prying. Her brows tilted down slightly and a gloss formed over her eyes, somehow making them shine even brighter. She could clearly tell how desperate Haven was to leave here, leave their home, leave their protection. Jeanne remembered how Haven mentioned 'it'd be safer.' She now had a better idea of what that could mean.

A tender hand rose to wrap around Haven's unbandaged arm, but she immediately flinched back. Jeanne continued to gaze into Haven's soul, it seemed. She could percieve more than Haven felt comfortable.

"Why are you so frightened?"

Shit. Time to evade.

"The guy's a real prick with a lot of connections."

"No," Jeanne said, interrupting the lie. She shook her head slowly as if still interpreting Haven's inner being, assessing her mannerisms and posture to figure out why it was she was seeing Haven's fear.

"You're frightened," she repeated as if revealing to Haven her own state of being. "Why?" Her tone was softer, now, sympathetic but without pity.

The empathy Jeanne possessed made her curious. She moved her hand to, once again, touch Haven's arm, but stopped short, anticipating the gesture to further rile an already frantic mind.

"Please, sit down with me a moment," she asked in a somewhat demanding tone.

Son of a bitch, Haven was about to get Consoled. And Mothered. She almost would've prefered the Mauville explosions.

She hesitated before following Jeanne's command, stiff and still. She didn't look at her. Jeanne sat at the other end of the couch, giving Haven plenty of personal space. Her brows furrowed as Haven's attitude shifted slightly.

"What's wrong?" she asked, hoping the vagueness would allow Haven to respond with almost anything Jeanne could use to help in any way she could. She hoped the tone was tender enough, considerate enough for Haven to share something of value. Haven's eyes darted up to meet Jeanne's before quickly shifting away.

What isn't? Haven gave a quiet huff to herself, hating her own self-pity. She glanced back up at Jeanne.

"I…" The words caught in her throat. She closed her mouth and tried to swallow. When had her throat become so dry? Her mind worked to try and say something, anything to satisfy Jeanne so they could stop talking and Haven could leave.

"There's an egg," she finally said. She wanted to kick herself. Really? That's what she could come up with? "I have to…" To what? Sit on it? Throw it off a cliff? "I don't know if anyone's still after it… but people have gotten hurt over this egg. You have four kids and two bedridden men. You don't need this, too." She didn't need Haven causing more problems.

Jeanne took a moment to consider Haven's concerns. It was a valid concern. "How many people have gotten hurt?" she asked, almost rhetorically, but with genuine interest.

Haven gave a small shrug. "Four, that I know of. More if you count the pokemon."

"Including yourself?" she asked, noting the distance Haven put between her and her injuries, or, rather, what caused them.

"Including the two guys your husband put in a coma." It was a half-hearted mutter, avoiding Jeanne's question. Something was tightening around her throat.

"Ah, so that's what happened," Jeanne said to herself. "Do you remember what happened?" she asked, hoping Haven would at least tell her what her husband was up to instead of having dinner with her and their children.

Haven's eyes were glued to the floorboards peaking out from under the rug. Lightning flashed and venom burned her blood.

She shook her head.

"He probably remembers more than I do." He probably wouldn't break down into a crying mess if he talked about it. The lump in her throat grew harder, straining her voice. Something hot sat behind her eyes. Her nerves itched under her skin, begging her to be anywhere else, anywhere but here in this conversation.

Jeanne hummed. Haven shifting in her seat was more than enough to tell Jeanne how uncomfortable she was. "I'm sorry," she hushed. There was a lot Haven was holding back that wouldn't come out easily, if at all.

"It's safe here," she tried to reasure Haven. "We're a mile from the closest city. We're in the middle of the woods. My husband wouldn't leave us alone if I didn't know how to take care of us," she confessed, almost boasting. "But, if you think you need to be elsewhere, at least let Syressa Teleport you to wherever you need to go. The Petildale Forest isn't the safest place to be traveling."

Haven gave a small nod. "Thanks." She glanced back up to Jeanne. Her muscles felt locked in place. She forced her hand to move, and it cracked to life like it had to break through a layer of mortar and stone to even lift. She pushed her hair behind her ear.

Her still spell finally broken, Haven stood.

"I left my number with Rai," she said after a moment of hesitation. "If… I dunno, if anything comes up. You can get it from him."

And see the purple mural she'd painted on the recovering paralysis patient's back, she realized, eyes widening.

"He's sleeping, though," she said in a rush. "Probably shouldn't… be disturbed for a while."

Jeanne's brows twitched in confusion, not quite understanding why Haven was repeating back her own instructions as if she hadn't given them. "Very well," was all she said and rose from the couch. Her tone was understanding, level.

She walked back to the den, Haven's clothes still clutched in her arms as if carrying an egg. She folded them quickly with surprising neatness and placed them back where she found them, spotting the egg in Haven's bag as she did.

"Ah, so this is the culprit," she said with playful accusation. "I'm sure it's brought you some resentment."

She placed a sympatheic hand on the egg. It was warm, well cared for. But, if she interpreted Haven's behavior correctly, it could also be a large part of her panic.

"I wouldn't mind taking care of it, if you're not comfortable," she offered. "I'm not Mrs. James, but I've hatched a few Pokemon in my life. We can contact you when it hatches, if you're interested."

"Thanks, but…" Haven looked at the egg. She thought of everything she'd been through for it. She remembered the sense of responsibility she'd felt for it that'd sent her out into a storm twice. This egg was a pain in her ass. But that responsibility still lingered.

This damn thing was gonna get her killed.

"I can handle it." Besides, running because she was afraid people hunting for the egg would come after her, but leaving the egg with this family seemed counterintuitive. The idea was to get the egg (and herself) away from them, afterall. "I'll text you a picture when it hatches." If Haven didn't get it smashed before then. Or she didn't die.

"I wish you the best, Haven," Jeanne said in response.

Her entire body wished to embrace Haven, to exude positivity. But Jeanne kept to herself, respecting Haven's personal space.

"Just think to Syressa," she started, pointing above them in the vague direction of where the boys' room was, "where you want to go and she'll take you there."

Jeanne's eyes were full of sadness. Sadness for her own failure to help Haven and sadness that someone so broken refused any kind of help. But there was a strength in her that was shattered. So she wouldn't compromise Haven's broken ego, which proved more devastating than her physical wounds.

Jeanne left the room in silence and without a word.

Haven let out a breath she didn't realize she'd been holding when Jeanne was finally gone. The pity in the older woman's eyes… the sadness when she looked at Haven…

Somehow Haven felt even worse after that conversation. Like a broken, hopeless thing Jeanne couldn't help. Like she was a disappointment somehow.

How in the hell had that happened?

Guilt mixed with frustration, and finally, annoyance. Memories flashed in her mind of her mother crying at the kitchen table to her older sister, asking what she was supposed to do with a daughter like Haven? Why she couldn't just be manageable, for her mother's sake, for once?

Haven was sixteen years old again hiding in the hallway as she bore witness to the heartbreak she caused. Why was she here again? After everything she'd done and everything she'd been through, why was she on the verge of tears because she felt guilty?

Her breath came too quick – too shallow. Tears burned behind her eyes, fighting to escape. Haven squeezed her eyes shut, her lips pressed in a thin line as she tried to calm herself. Her hands clenched into fists at her sides – but her left hand could barely curl without shaking.

With a frustrated sound Haven dropped back onto the sofa, bringing her palms up to press into her eyes. Something touched her arm. She jolted upright, hands dropping.

Her entire team was standing around her, worried, conflicted looks on their faces. She hadn't even noticed them enter the room.

Blink's vines hovered above her arm before slowly moving forward to curl around it. Her own fingers moved to grab him and she hung her head. Haven closed her eyes and tried to slow her breathing again.

"I'm–" what? Fine? That obviously wasn't true. Her team deserved more than a thin lie. They deserved more than to be brushed off.

She looked up and opened her mouth again. But she couldn't make the words come out. Haven let go of Blink and dropped into the back of the sofa.

"Life kinda sucks lately." Dagger lifted Lace off the ground to place her on the sofa next to Haven. The little Corsola scuttled into Haven's lap, the weight keeping her grounded. Haven looked down at her. Lace's horns were still broken pink stumps, slowly growing back after being shattered in the attack. Haven wasn't the only one still recovering.

With a quiet sigh she leaned her head back to look up at the ceiling. She was exhausted. A stray tear finally managed to escape, trickling down her cheek. She glanced to the side to see the egg peaking out of her bag.

"We need a break." They needed to put themselves back together and figure out what they were doing. With the attacks, with the egg...

What was even the big deal about this egg? It sat innocently in her bag, peaking out under her clothes.

Haven lifted her left arm and slowly reached out. Her bandaged hand came down to touch it. First her fingertips. Then the underside of her knuckles. And finally her entire palm, the cloth of her bandage a thin layer between skin and shell. It was smooth and warm and still.

Then it moved.

It was the tiniest flinch, a minute kick from inside the shell, but Haven jolted upright like it'd shocked her. Lace gave an alarmed chirp at the movement as she scrambled to not fall from Haven's lap. Dagger jumped up on the sofa, pressing her nose against the egg to sniff at it. Cloak and Blink stared with wide eyes. The egg was still again.

Haven looked between her team members. Then a slow, stunned smile began to find her lips. She huffed out a small laugh.

"Guess we haven't killed it yet," she murmured. That was no small wonder. Haven looked to the egg again. She had no idea how to hatch an egg. Hell, she barely knew how to take care of herself. But maybe... maybe she could do this. They could do this.

An idea started forming in her mind. They needed some quiet and the egg needed somewhere it could hatch peacefully. Haven didn't know much about Hoenn's geography, but she did know about one place that'd be perfect for just that. Haven looked to meet Blink's eyes again before saying a single word.

"Lavaridge." Light surrounded them and in the next moment they were Teleported away.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Kymera
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Kymera Genetic experiment gone wrong

Member Seen 5 mos ago

Somewhere Ouside Petalburg



Rai was sick of laying in bed. This was the sixth time that morning he had found himself staring up at the sky while trying to remember the proper way to refill his lungs with air. The Taillow overhead were soaring past without a care in the world, save where their next meal came from. The ground underneath his back would tremble every now and then with the activity of ground-types trundling on about their day. All the while, the calm was puntuated with constant updates of the deloping situation in Mauville that were all too effective at reminding Rai just how close a call they'd had.

He was going to break something before the day was out.

Coming outside was supposed to help him blow off some built up steam. It was easier for him to think when his body was preoccupied with the familiar steps of practiced exercises. An old wrapped post in the yard - it freed his mind to wander and piece together the shattered remains of what should have been a simple plan: get to Mauville, figure out what Dicky had wanted done on "Mauville Island," get back to Slateport. Now he'd been stuck somewhere near Petalburg for close to thirty-six hours. The Rangers had all but locked down travel to and from Mauville, and even if they hadn't, Rai could barely manage a stiff hobble on his own. He could count on maybe fourty-five minutes or so of aching, but cooperative muscles. Then something would suddenly cramp hard enough that his vision would turn white for a moment, and he'd be looking at the sky.

It was all he could to not to scream in frustration out to the sky. Just because he'd managed to find the one blind spot in the universe's cosmic gaze didn't mean his pokemon was just as inattentive. Forrest had somehow managed to coax Kye from fretting at Rai's side and into training along with his other pokemon. But that hadn't stopped the fire-type from checking in on him. He couldn't fault Kye for being so worried, but it was the way his own pokemon watched his every move as if he were going to break into a thousand pieces that bothered him the most.

Rai forced himself to roll upright and dig his fingers into the spasming muscle of his calf, just trying to get his entire limb to stop shaking while he rode out the charlie horse from hell. How Forrest was able to power through his own regimen with barely more than a sweat was not just infuriating, but Rai couldn't wrap his head around how the other man wasn't still tottering around like an invalid. The envy that welled up in his chest only served to stoke his frustrations higher as he used the post next to him to claw his way back to his feet.

Like hell the old man was going to out do him.

"Stretch your calf. Use the post," a voice commanded Rai from behind.

”You have some secret stretching technique?” Rai deadpanned, turning just enough to cast a withering glare at Forrest over his shoulder. ”Because I’ve been stretching all morning, and if it hasn’t helped already, I sincerely doubt it’s going to now.”

"Well, I'm not the one who thought I could get over paralysis in a few hours. I listened to my body and rested," Forrest said, almost condescending but, ultimately, paternal.

Deep down, he knew Forrest was probably trying to help. But he didn’t want any more help. Not from Forrest, not from Jeanne, not from any of them. It was bad enough Mauville had even happened in the first place. He couldn’t muster the anger to be upset that he’d decided to step in, instead of running like a coward. But the feeling of being entirely useless was orders of magnitude worse.

He already owed Forrest for pulling them out of Mauville, not to mention Jeanne for helping him recover as much as he had. He felt like he owed them something and didn’t have a vanillish’s chance in hell at ever being able to pay them back. And coming face-to-face with Forrest, who by all rights should have been struggling every bit as much as he was, only to see that he was in enough health to even be instructing his kids? It was beyond infuriating.

”I don’t need your help. I’m fine.” Rai snapped, when Forrest didn’t move.

If he was being honest with himself, of the two of them, Forrest wasn’t the one who needed to be convinced of that.

" If not my help, then you need someone's. You're clearly not fine. You shouldn't still be seizing like that if you'd rested properly. Here," he said and was immediately behind Rai, somehow.

For someone so large, he seemed to be able to move in silence.

"Lay down," he instructed, anticipating the groan of aggravation for having just gotten up. "Lay down," he repeated, his brows raised, threatening a reprimand as if Rai was one of his own children.

Rai bristled at Forrest’s sudden proximity. In any other scenario, he might have appreciated how someone as large as he could move that quietly. As it was, it was another reminder how far Rai still had to go to recover. He didn’t want to lay down, to stretch, continue to take it easy, or any other clichéd advice people often gave in place of actual medicine. What he wanted was to be in Mauville, or at the very least, back on the road to Mauville. Not wasting time waiting to just be able to walk properly again.

Still, he could hear it in Forrest’s voice that he wasn’t about to let this go. Rai didn’t move for a few good moments, debating with himself whether he’d be able to punch the man for his condescending tone or not. Except he knew damn well Forrest was in far better shape than he was right then, and if he chose to make a scene of things, Kye would likely come running. He’d caused his pokemon more than enough grief over the last few days, and the last thing he wanted was to worry him any further.

”Fine.” Rai choked out the word as he swallowed his pride. He intended to lower himself back down to the ground, but even trying to hold onto the post for support, he only made it part way down before gravity took over and pulled him the rest of the way. His ears burned with humiliation, as he sat in the dirt still holding his leg with Forrest looming over him. It was bad enough that Forrest had scolded him like a child, but now he truly felt like one and it did nothing to improve his mood.

”There, happy?” Rai muttered bitterly, refusing to look at Forrest.

" No," Forrest said with the slightest hint of empathy. He seemed keenly aware of just how miserable Rai was.

"You need to take it easy," he said, reiterating the cliche. "But you've also got to reteach your muscles how to respond properly. It's going to take time. You've got to be patient with yourself. Listen to your body while forcing your body to obey."

Rai nearly snapped at Forrest. Time was something he didn't have. He couldn't be laying in bed and playing invalid while he had places to be. Instead, he blew out a long, irritated breath as Forrest dropped down next to him. Forrest's torso leaned forward while Rai's foot was planted flat on his chest. He also massaged Rai's calf firmly enough to be effective but soft enough to be relaxing to some degree. After a few minutes, it was like Forrest knew the muscle was finally relaxing and released.

"Now, get up slowly. Control your muscles. Be aware how they move." He went from taking, to condensingly paternal, to coach.

He really didn't want to. Struggling to stand back up was one thing when there was no one to see if he fell on his ass back into the dirt. Having someone like Forrest coach him how to do something so basic was nearly beyond what his pride could handle. But pride wasn't going to get Forrest to leave him alone either.

Rai had to close his eyes as he started to sit himself up. Something so simple shouldn't have hurt at all, but the muscles in his core burned as he lifted his back off the ground. His arms felt like lead spaghetti when he put even a little bit of weight on them, but they didn't just give out on him as he shuffled his feet around to get them underneath him. Forrest's massage had helped the muscles relax some, but it didn't ease any of Rai's anxiety about a returning cramp dropping him to the ground all over again. He swore he could feel it lurking in his still tense limbs, waiting for his guard to drop when it would hit him full force all over again.

But it didn't. The tender, aching echo in his calf faded quietly into the background, as Rai breathed a sigh of relief and enjoyed the feeling of just standing without feeling like he might tip over at any minute.

"Now, let's go for a walk. Loosen up that calf," Forrest suggested and bat Rai on his back, now playing the role of supportive friend.

The Petildale Forest looked like any other forest from here. Most of their yard was flattened field. Much of the area was deforested, possibly by Forrest, himself. But he led Rai to the edge of the tree line, pace slow so Rai could focus on controlling his muscles. This made the walk long and tedious.

But something strange happened. Rai noticed Forrest's arm seemed to seize, bending at the elbow. Without a sound, he pulled his hands behind him and straight, pushing them up so his arms would be parallel to the ground. After a minute of this, he released slowly and flexed and stretched his bicep, which seemed to be the muscle that caused him problems.

"So, where are you from?" Forrest asked to distract from the tedium but not so much to distract from focusing on their recovery.

Rai was so focused on just putting one foot in front of the other without looking like some newborn deerling, that he nearly didn’t hear the question at first. Another knot formed, though this time it was in his throat as he tried to find the right words. He’d told more people about himself since coming to Hoenn than he had in the last several years, and the openness was a new sensation. Caution and hesitation were the first sensations to hit him, before reason kicked in. Haven had already known him, so lying would have been an ultimately useless endeavor, and Forrest certainly didn’t seem to be the type to run anywhere near the same kind of people Rai had the “pleasure” of dealing with. Besides, there was something about him that Rai felt Forrest would know if he did try to lie, and then he’d never leave him be.

“Olivine.” Rai said more to the ground than to Forrest while he watched his footsteps.

"Ah, Olivine's a nice place. Been there a couple times."

”S’ been a while since I’ve been out that way though.”

There was no reason to, either. Their house, or what was left of it, had been bulldozed years ago and rebuilt. He’d never found out who moved in, and to him it didn’t matter anyway. The house was gone, and so were the people that made it mean anything, which left nothing but bad memories for him to make a nostalgic visit for.

”Nice enough place. The Lighthouse there is one of the oldest in the world that’s still in use. Kind of a tourist trap, but it’s neat to see I guess.” Rai filled in to try and steer the conversation away from anything more personal without being too obvious about it. ”I’d ask if you had lived here for very long, but I’m guessing the cabin didn’t go up overnight. You guys got family around or do you prefer to be hermits out here?”

Forrest let out a low chuckle. "Well," he began. "I was born in Cherrygrove, but moved to Oldale soon after. My mother runs the Johnson Academy in Oldale and my father works with Professor Fir in Littleroot. Jeanne's from Petalburg. Her father's the Gym Leader there."

”That right?” Rai hummed in surprise. ”Would have never pegged you as being from my part of the world, even if you are a few years removed. All the people I’ve run into the last few days, starting to make me wonder if Hoenn isn’t where everyone washes up eventually.”

Rai meant it as a joke, though there was a part of him that truly hoped it was true. Maybe it was just some kind of bizarre luck that he’d stumbled into, but he desperately wanted it to hold. He was going to need all the luck he could muster if he was going to keep going like this. But thinking like that wasn’t going to get him anywhere fast. Following Forrest around the property line might be helping his muscles loosen up some, but it wasn’t going to do much good if he didn’t have a clear destination in mind. Especially now that the Rangers practically had Mauville City on lockdown.

"I consider myself a Hoenn native, though," Forrest said as if in correction.

"My parents moved here soon after I was born. I don't remember ever living in Johto. I've gone for family reunions and an occassional vacation, but this is my home," he continued. His voice graveled with inward reflection, old and reminiscent.

"Don't worry, you weren't missing much." Rai said, blowing out a huff of disgust. "Hoenn seems like the better choice anyway."

They continued their little walk around the "property." The trees around held a weathered age. The bark reflected the lightning strikes of violent storms that frequented the region. The leaves swung with an eagerness, hungry and excited by the breezes passing through. The grass was combed by the wind, the blades soft like fur. The sky was a pale blue with the whisps left off by the storm from the few days prior. Taillow and Swablu chirpped from deep within the Petildale Woods. Beautifly and Dustox fluttered through the branches of the trees. Cries from Zigzagoon and croaks from Lotad played a distant percussion of the wilderness.

Rai chewed on the inside of his lip in thought, as he experimentally lengthened his stride a little. It sounded like Forrest had family all over the place, and in some fairly lofty positions too. People who might make the Rangers look the other way. He didn’t like the idea of asking for any more favors from Forrest or his family, but if they had connections that could help him make up for lost time…

”There anyone in this region you don’t know?” Rai said with a low, impressed whistle, ”Don’t suppose you know anyone who’s familiar with Mauville Island, do you?”

Forrest didn't respond right away. Rai could feel his calf start to tense up in anxiety.

"I go camping there, annually," Forrest finally said, allowing Rai to slowly exhale the held breath.

"It's 'technically' a nature reserve, but there are a few locations where people are allowed to camp, given they have a permit from the Rangers. I was actually supposed to go with my sons this weekend, but..." he trailed off, implying his current condition. "Not sure if the wife is going to allow that so soon."

He paused a moment, thinking of what to say as if attempting to solve a problem. "We'll just have to prove to her that we can," he ended with a smirk, the implied invitation dangling in the air, difficult to grasp.

Rai tried his best to return the smile, even as a knot balled up in his throat. It would have been bad enough with the Rangers around, but Forrest and the kids? Forrest was more than able to hold his own, but with them around? What was he supposed to do if shit rocketed skyward again? How did he know who or what he was looking for was even still there? It wasn't like Dicky gave him a timeline, but with everything going on in Mauville...

Then again, it wasn't like his options were pleantiful either. The odds of him being able to get to the island alone, with permission or not, were not in his favor. But if he did tag along with Forrest, he might not be able to get away long enough to take care of his job.

"Not if he has the kids with him." The thought crossed his mind unbidden. "They're self-sufficient, but they're still kids. Forrest won't be able to keep tabs on all of you at the same time. Not for long anyway."

It was more than just a longshot, but Rai didn't have a better plan than that. He needed the time to heal, and he needed a way to the island. Now here were both served on a silver platter. He'd just have to deal with the risks.

"Shouldn't be too hard." Rai said swallowing his concerns and putting on a fake smile to hide behind. "If ya got room for one more, I could show you a few things I've picked up here and there. Might not suit you much, but between the two of us, we might be able to pull it off."

Forrest let out a soft chuckle, however soft his graveled voice could produce through his thick chest. "Sure thing," he said and landed one of his hands upon Rai's shoulder with a strength inappropriate for both their states, threatening to knock them both down if he didn't hold back as he had.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Phoenix
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Phoenix

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Rustboro City
The attack on Mauville meant a lot of paperwork on Hartwin's desk. His mother had taken to meetings with reporters while his father worked with the Rangers and Mr. Sturm. He'd been up through the night signing displacement claims of employees who lived in Mauville, which was ultimately a responsibility of the Fairfax Corporation. One of the many inconveniences of the business controlling so much within one Region. He just hoped the estimated times for repairs was overestimated by, well, all of it, and for the sake of the employees. Granted, nothing like this had actually happened before.
"Mr. Fairfax," a woman said, hardly past the door with her eyes tained on a tablet that lit up her face.
"Please, Natalie. Hartwin is..."
"Someone riding a gold and green Skarmory has arrived in Rustboro."
Hartwin immediately perked up. It'd been days since Theo had told Hartwin he'd be in Hoenn. Hartwin was surprised Natalie had even remembered.
"All right. Let's go," he said, both to his Delcatty napping beside him as well as his secretary.
"But, sir," she began to protest.
"It's time for a lunch break," he said with a wink and a smirk.
He ushered her to gather whatever she needed to leave the building as he did the same. He buttoned his brown suit jacket and then unbuttoned it while fidgeting with items in and out of pockets, unable to decide what to bring and which to do. After buttoning it again, he reached for his matching bowler hat that hung on the corner of his chair. Outside the office, he was never seen without it. A quick glance into a mirror on his way out the door was the last of his preparations. When he made it out of the office, Natalie was standing next to her desk with an unsure look and hugging the tablet she was holding earlier.
"Sir, are you sure this is a good idea? There's so much we need to do..."
Hartwin grabbed a cane for show and Delcatty strutted behind him with a yawn. "We've been here for fifteen hours. We need a break," he said matter-of-factly. "I'm taking you out for lunch," he added, explaining to her his alibi."
----------

"Good afternoon, Mr. Selvaggio," a voice said from a distance away. "It's been a while. How're your parents?"
The man was average. He could have been mistaken for someone approaching 40, but was barely 33. His suit was well-tailored, but the color dulled his features, it seemed. The bowler hat provided shade over his eyes, though he still squinted. Theo's once-cello-tutor looked rather ordinary, something Hartwin could never seem to escape despite his elevated birth.
An Altaria hovered behind a woman off to his side while the Delcatty rubbed her cheek against Hartwin's leg before looking over toward Theo. She chirped when she spotted the Whismur, the two having played together often when the Delcatty was still a Skitty.


Lavaridge Town
"Watcher Clerk..."
"Major -"
"3 more casualties. Any word from the Hospital?"
"No room. We have to make due here."
"We're going to have a housing crisis..."
"I know, Major. I'm working on it."
"Yes, ma'am."
"Lieutenants Green and Fort with you?"
"No, ma'am. They're administering what emergency care they can. They put up a tent toward 112 South."
"Get them to the Centre. They lack the skills and experience for this kind of situation. Green and Fort should be able to prevent more casualties."
"Yes, ma'am."
"Anyone else good for transport?"
"Lieutenants Polak and Thompson."
"Get them to find safe places to set up camps -"
"Refugee camps?"
"Yes, Major. And make sure to assign the Students and Area Rangers as sentries.
We don't need them in the way."
"Yes, ma'am."
"Well - dismissed, Major."
"Watcher -"
----------

"Copy that, Grand Watcher Frisk."

____________________

Queues filled the town. The Medical Centre, the Torkoal Roast, groupings of citizens with and without camping gear, and whatever stations the Rangers constructed were crowded with the displaced residents of the terrorized Mauville City. At first glance, it was the panicked shuffle during the attack. After a few moments, the Rangers were quite capable in calming most concerns.
Dragons flew overhead. A whiteness of Altaria gently alit cargo drops. Flights of Swellow shot back and forth through the air overhead. Colonies of Pelliper carried emergency items from camp to camp. The Air Rangers worked with the local Gale Rangers to make sure all victims of the "incident" wouldn't create more victims in becoming leeches and nuisances to others as people sought shelter and comfort.
"Good afternoon, Chief Mura, sir," a woman, stoic and proud, greeted the retired Gale Ranger. Her hair was hidden by the light brown cap she wore, immediately informing the man from which branch she came.
"Lieutenant Amanda Red," she continued, introducing herself with a salute and then a shake of his hand. "I'm here on behalf of Major White and Watcher Clerk who are overseeing the current situation here in Lavaridge."
She seemed insistent, optimistic he would be impressed by her ability to throw names at him.
"They are hoping residents and bath owners allow as many victims of the Mauville Incident as they are comfortable housing. Any and all expenses will be covered by the Rangers and Fairfax Corporation. May we add you to our list of temporary hostiles?"
It would have been entirely unusual for him to have not already allowed some of the victims into his bath for shelter. It would have been even more unusual for him to decline the direct request. Regardless, the Rangers needed these formal processes to take place to keep as much order as possible in a time of such distress.


Outside Petalburg City
The heavy and tentative footsteps from the kitchen indicated his father and Mr. Kurin had come in for lunch. Jerrek finished the set of dumbbell flies so he could shower off and join them. He only put on his shorts before going upstairs when he'd be coming back down to finish his routine.
Ro and Ellie were finishing up setting the table by the time he'd made it up to the kitchen. Jeanne popped open Double Hoppips for Rai and Forrest to have with their meals. Ellie poured some Moomilk for herself and her siblings while Jeanne made herself a glass of wine to follow up the one she drank while preparing the lunch. She'd hadn't quite gotten over the stress of the Mauville Attack and the state in which her husband still suffered.
Bouffalant steak and Moocheese hoagies were made for the men while the children voted for macaroni and Moocheese with Tamato soup and grilled Moocheese. Jeanne elected to have a salad, loaded with all kinds of vegetables from their garden, a sprinkling of Moocheese, and a whole Blaziken breast hidden in there somewhere.
"So," Forrest started after sipping at his beer and still having a full mouth, "Rai, here, is from Olivine. Made me think we should vacation there sometime this summer. Visit some of my family and stuff..."
Jeanne voicelessly agreed. Shelly almost shouted "Auntie Vee!" with the brightest excitement. Forrest chuckled and Jerrek agreed, though he was more fond of Uncle Caleb. "Most of my extended family is in Johto," Forrest clarified.
Forrest offered seconds to Rai when he got up to get himself another hoagie. He also brought over two more beers for them, though, without asking. All the children, save Shelynn, Also had seconds. By now, Jeanne was starting to do the dishes with the help of Forrest's Masquerain and Shiftry.
"You finished your workout?" Forrest asked Jerrek as he laid back in his chair.
"Almost," the boy said as he drank the rest of the Tamato soup directly from the bowl. "Hey, Dad, could you spot me for my squats?"
"Sure thing, bud."
"Could I practice with Kangooroom, after?"
"If he's up for it."
"Awesome," Jerrek said with a wry smile.
"Why don't you come down with us? There are some exercises and stretches I could show you if you think you're up for it."
----------

The cement stairs went down to the basement farther than one might expect. The ceiling was ten feet high, two feet higher than the other two floors of the house. The stairs cut the room in half and followed the back wall to the left.
This side was the personal gym, though looked like a small public one. Barbells, dumbbells, and other free-weight systems filled racks and were placed in stacks against the walls covered in charts and diagrams. On the side wall, between Jerrek's and Elizabeth's charts for routines and progress were diagrams explaining certain basic exercises and describing various alternatives. Forrest's was on the front wall where the passage to the other half of the room was and easily twice the size of the children's. Similar diagrams filled up most of the rest of the wall on either side of it.
Forrest walked through some easy exercises and stretches for Rai while Jerrek set up a barbell for his squats. Forrest spotted him while directing and assessing Rai. He'd done plenty of work as both a physical trainer and a physical therapist, and it showed.
Jerrek forsook showering again since he was going to go outside to "play" with Breloom. Forrest just knew he'd return covered in dirt and some blood (if he did it right).
Once Rai was finished the exercises, Forrest took him into the other side of the room, which was cleared, save four yoga mats. Floor-to-ceiling mirrors covered the side wall and four shower heads came out of the back wall. This explained the reason for the ventilation system in the ceiling as well as the rubber mat floor from wall to wall. There were two drains in the floor and some hooks on the wall that made up the stairs. Forrest offered Rai to shower off after, not really taking into account that there were no dividers or curtains.
But while Rai worked on his poses and stances, Forrest set himself up for 300 lbs dead lifts. Despite being 100 lbs less than usual, he still struggled through the spasms and cramps in his left bicep and right trapezius and obliques. He then joined Rai in yoga, though doing stretches and poses relavant to himself, and then went back to do barbell curls, shoulder presses, and sit-up variants. He ended with pull-ups and then showered off to rest for the day.
Forrest invited Rai onto the front porch to relax in the shade. He filled a cooler with ice and stuck several beers into it and making them stick up. That, with a box of cigars with a lighter and cutter, he headed for the porch.
To his delight, Jeanne was in a rocking chair with knitting needles between her fingers, working on a sweater for Rowan. Forrest stepped next to her and kissed the top of her head with a deep inhale. She paused briefly in acceptance but just continued on with her knitting. He went toward the other end of the porch and sat on the bench he'd made before Jerrek was born so there'd be enough room for the cooler and cigar box on the side table next to him. He cut a cigar and offered it to Rai before preparing one for himself. He then opened a beer, offered, and then opened one for himself. He puffed and sipped and sat in silence as Jeanne focused on her knitting in silence.
The slight breeze was constant and cool. The humidity was tolerable and the clouds skated across the sky, moving into constantly-changing shapes, ambiguous and natural. The faint yelps and screams of delight echoed around the house and against the trees. Otherwise, the silence of nature filled all their sense. It was a time of meditation and reflection. It was clear why someone would spend the time and resources to live out here. The Petildale Forest was tranquil yet wild, peaceful yet chaotic, as only nature could be.
"I'll take you into Petalburg tomorrow so you can get some new clothes," Forrest said without the courtesy of offering. "Looks like it's been a while since you've gone shopping for 'em. I'll stock you up with traveling gear so you're ready when your body's ready," he continued in a soft jest.
Jeanne gave an unapproving eye toward them, knowing full well what they were planning but submitting to the fact she held little authority over his stubbornness. However, she knew they both held a stubbornness the other couldn't tame. It certainly made for some interesting times, and still did.

Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Regitnui
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Regitnui Lorespinner

Member Seen 2 yrs ago

Lavaridge Town
[quote]

"And that's the public springs, with the hot sand baths and Pokémon spa. Old people say the sand helps their bones." Keoni smiled. Asuna had decided that he was getting a tour of the town today, whether he liked it or not. She'd kept up a constant stream of commentary, and that was a comfort. She'd proved that she was never quiet, unless she was up to something or wanted something to be up her.

"Isn't it weird, living under that?" He pointed at Mount Chimney. True to.its name, the red-rocked mountain hadn't stopped smoking since he arrived. He'd even felt an earth tremor last night, though circumstances had made it a little difficult to ask if it really had been the earth shaking. "At home, that's when we start calling people to the centres."

"Groudon's grumpy, but he doesn't cause trouble," Asuna explained. "As long as there's smoke and a little shaking he's still asleep and we don't have to worry. If he wakes up, then we have to run, because there won't be any lava until the land meets the coast. You wanna go up to the top?" Without hearing his answer, she'd already begun pulling him to the cable car. "You can look at the lava and see all the way to Rustboro or Verdanturf. I was really lucky one day and saw the Mirage Tower!"

Keoni let himself be dragged. After all, he'd gone up Lanakila hundreds of times. This smokey mountain was smaller. And she was going to the cable car. And she was quiet... "Asuna, there better not be something weird on top of the mountain."

She paid the attendant, and they were on board shortly after. "This is old and creaky," Asuna told him, settling down on a bench next to him. "In the tourist season, they get rangers to come up and grease the cords, make sure the trolley runs smoothly. This time of year the car gets stuck sometimes, which means most people take the trail. And there's Pokémon on the trail too, so you get a lot of trainers. But here we get a nice view and privacy." She then kissed him, in such a way that made no secret of which of the two she preferred.

Though Keoni found himself hoping the car would get stuck, the old machine gainfully rolled all the way to the top. Asuna grumbled something obscene, pulling her shirt back down. Not that it helped much. It barely touched her bellybutton. She stood, and Keoni followed. "That way's the caldera. It's always got lava in it but sometimes the level goes up and down. We can go there first." Keoni nodded. "Some trainers come up here, so put your gauntlet in your pocket."

They made their way to the edge, noticing more than a few other couples up here. More than a few others had gauntlets around their wrists. But Keoni had better things on his mind than a battle. Asuna leaned against him as he leaned against the safety rail, and that made up for anything. "And this never cools?" Keoni asked. Back home, a volcano like this would be black, with all the lava long cooled to glass, dugtrio hair or stone. But here, it just kept bubbling. A sizzle sounded as an errant water-type attack evaporated against the heat.

"Look!" Asuna grabbed his arm, pointing to the far side of the caldera. "Slugma! They swim in the lava, like those colourful pokemon with three eyes you showed me on the beach. They're almost invisible down there, but you can sometimes..." She leaned forward, looking down into the caldera, "sometimes see the magcargo shells. Little black rocks floating in the fire."

Honestly, Keoni had more of an eye for her than any gastrodon made of lava. The wind coming off the caldera blew her red hair back from her face, making it dance. After about five minutes, she caught her hair and noticed him staring. "Oops," He said, kissing her cheek.

"You're supposed to help me look for magcargo!" She punched him lightly in the shoulder. "Didn't you look at me enough last night? You certainly had a lot to see."

Keoni grabbed her wrist and pulled her into an embrace. "A whole lifetime isn't enough time to spend looking at you," He said. She blushed a little, and returned his kiss in the proper way.

"You are very, very charming," she murmured, walking fingers up his chest. "And very, very handsome. And very, very good at making me want you." They stood there with their lips locked for what felt like forever, but really had to be about five minutes. This time, it was Keoni who paid for the car back to town, and the machine valiantly rolled its way down.

Asuna was in a sullen mood at the cable car's performance, and grumbled under her breath all the way home. The occasional word would drift up to Keoni's ears; "boyfriend", "hands", "shake" and "good" along with a smattering of pronouns and explicit anatomical descriptions. By the time they got home, Keoni had very little patience left as well.

"Where've you two been?" Mr Mura called when they entered the house. "You're moving, Keoni. We need the guest room for Mauville victims."

Keoni opened his mouth, but Asuna interrupted, "He can sleep in my be-" she stopped herself halfway under her grandfather's stare, "room. Bedroom, and we have a spare mattress for him, and he knows how to make a good pillow from clothes and it will be perfectly fine, we wouldn't dream of-"

Keoni put a hand over her mouth. "Mauville isn't contagious, is it, sir?" He felt Asuna start giggling against him, and her grandfather managed just a subtle smile.

"Mauville is the town south of here, Keoni. We're hosting some of the invalids that got caught in the bomb blast," He explained.

Asuna wiggled her mouth free. "We're going to wash off by the spring," she declared, pulling Keoni by his hand.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Utrax
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Utrax 𝕰𝖝𝖙𝖗𝖊𝖒𝖊 𝕭𝖎𝖗𝖉

Member Seen 1 yr ago

A brief reunion...
Rustboro City


"Good afternoon, Mr. Selvaggio."

Theo opened his eyes slightly then looked toward the familiar-- Oh! Sitting up slowly while being careful not to wake his Pokemon, Theo grinned widely upon recognizing Hartwin-- sort of recognizing, that is. What was it about Hartwin that always made him seem a bit older than he should have been? Maybe it was the way he walked, a bit slowly, posture hunched over, and his hands behind his back-- perhaps it was simply his rather simplistic choice in fashion, that seemed to rely heavily on earth tones and bowler hats. Though they weren't very far apart in age, Theo felt as if he were a fountain of youth whenever he was around Hartwin. Movement in his lap caught Theo's attention before he could form a response-- it was Harmony, rousing himself from slumber, with an ear perked up attentively. Almost immediately after waking, Harmony leapt out of Theo's lap, then dashed toward Hartwin's Delcatty with excited chirps. It was then that Theo realized it really must have been a while since he'd last seen Hartwin.

Then Hartwin asked, "It's been a while. How're your parents?"

"Saying that it's been a while is a bit of an understatement," Theo replied with a soft chuckle. He remained seated in the grass, with Melody still in his lap. She was regarding the newcomers with curious eyes and notable timidity. Theo placed a reassuring hand upon her head, then turned his attention to Hartwin's secretary. "Greetings miss, I certainly hope this old man--" Theo said with a joking wink at Hartwin "-- hasn't been giving you trouble." Theo smiled in a charming manner before telling Hartwin, "And before you scold me, consider the hardship I've been through-- attacked by some trainer obsessed with Nick-- can you believe that?"

It was then that Theo decided to recount the battle. Hartwin probably knew already that Theo was nearly impossible to interrupt once he started a story. Whenever Theo began to speak, his desire to share seemed hungry, and quite firmly rooted in a natural storytelling cadence. For all the dramatic flair with which Theo described his encounter with the trainer and the Nidoking, there was a heaping dose of humor lurking beneath his words. Here and there he cracked jokes about how "terrifying" it all was and how "innocent" he and his Pokemon had been. Truth was, Theo still felt anxious about the situation, and this was the only way he knew how to decompress-- humor and sharing.

Finishing off with how heroic Harmony had been, Theo then asked Hartwin, "Do you suppose that he's getting close to evolving? How was your Pokemon leading up to their changes? And, I know it's going to sound ignorant of me, but I have no idea what a Whismur will evolve into."

Theo sighed then snapped his fingers and added, "Ah-- and my parents are fine." He chuckled.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by LegionPothIX
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LegionPothIX

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Slateport City

The gaggle of girls dispersed in huffs and giggles and sighs. Comments were made by some spectators about the lack of coordination on the part of the coordinator. Other comments were made about the validity of the younger girl's assessment while she hugged her Ditto. but these spectators moved on to more impressive shows of talent and skill anywhere else in the city.
However, one spectator held more interest in the Ditto-girl than the others. She approached from behind with a Whismur hopping beside. "Hi," she said with a level of cheerfulness unexpected from most. "You seem to know quite a bit about Pokemon training." It was largely a redundant observation but worked well enough as an introduction. "I'm Jenna," she said "and this is my Whismur," she added with a look down to the silent pink orb. "Have you studied at the Academy? I've never seen you before."
The whimpering wishmur and her whispering trainer startled Sarah who was still riding the adrenaline of her first proper victory. "Hello," she cautiously responded to the trainer who engaged her. The single-type pokemon seemed both curious and cautious and Sarah eyed it warily.
The girl, older than Sarah by a half-decade, combed her fingers through her straight brown hair and positioned it behind her ear as Sarah responded.
"Not exactly," Sarah explained as she returned her ditto's premiere ball to her belt, "My mom was a Gym Leader in Oldale back before I was born."
Jenna shifted her weight to one side and raised her eyebrow, "You're from Oldale?"
"Yeah," Sarah tentatively said as she reached out a hand to the whismur who almost let her pet it. "there's an academy there, you know it?"
The older trainer nodded. "Yeah, the Johnson Academy in Oldale," she said as she opened a calendar app on her gauntlet. "I'm heading back there for a special demonstration. If you're not doing anything else, you should come with me. You'll learn a lot."
For a moment the exuberant child lost a bit of her luster as she looked down at the map her lens produced. There was a hazard advisory in bright yellow that blocked off Route 103. The heavy rains higher up-river had caused the Route 103 fork to flood and there was no way she was getting across with her pokemon alone.


"Sure," she finally said after consiering the alternatives, "Why not? I never got to go, but we'll have to take a ferry from Mauville City."
With the destination set the duo left town to formally start her adventure.
Route 110

The duo had a bit of a journey ahead of them if they were going to walk to Mauville City from Slateport City. It was a long and difficult trek, first through shoals loosely connected by rickety bridges, then up a very steep hill. It was the perfect place for the recreational bike path that was artfully constructed overhead but as neither girl possessed a bicycle, or permit for the path, they were forbade from using it.
Sarah let her pokemon out of their balls for some much needed non-battle exercise, and the quarrelsome trio were almost immediately sent back in for 'time out.' Only after realizing that they were indeed on dry land, with water nearby to play in, and not a ship did the trio calm down a little and stop their infighting. The oddish and zigzagoon pranced around and raced ahead of Sarah and Jenna while the ditto rolled in a goopy mess right next to them.
"Oh, are these your favorite pokemon?" Jenna asked as she looked to the zigzagoon who was rooting around under a bush.
Sarah looked a bit confused by the question, and seemed oblivious to the implication that they were receiving special treatment. "They're all my pokemon." she said with a shrug.
"Oh!" Jenna laughed, "You really are new at this aren't you?"
Though Jenna was playful in her delivery it was at this moment that Sarah started to think she had made a terrible mistake. As they neared the city Jenna became increasingly more apprehensive, something Sarah only noticed because her Wishmur's demeanor changed to match.

Mauville City

There was something off about the city today, and neither girl could put their finger on exactly what it was. Neither of them had subscribed to any news organizations beyond the Pokemone Fanclub's newsletter, and had no way of knowing what had happened the night before. As they made their ingress into the bustling streets the peices slowly came together for Jenna while Sarah remained blissfully ignorant.
"It sure is busy today," remarked as she passed through the many people and pokemon in the streets.
Not wanting to concern a child, the teen Jenna put on a facade while finding any excuse to get away and help. "How about," Jenna's voice cracked as she spoke, "You go see about that boat."
Sarah nodded in conformation and set her backpack down on the street to check its contents for currency while Jenna disappeared into the crowd. With a fist full of coins, three mints, and a button she stood back up ready to buy a ferry ride. A ferry ride she had absolutely no ability to pay for and, as it happened, the ride was completely full with sad and angry adults yelling about some attack.
She had been here once before with her parents when she was younger, and didn't remember the city being so... lively. It was a big city, compared to the town she grew up in, but this was different in a way she couldn't quite put her finger on. Since the ferry wasn't going anywhere, at least with her on it, she figured that it would be best to see what was going on. If there was trouble, some kind of attack, then it was her duty as a Pokemon Trainer to help!

Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Phoenix
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Phoenix

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Rustboro City
Credit: @Utrax
Hartwin shook his head with a smile on his face as he found a spot to lay a blanket for him and his secretary to sit and begin to eat as Theo continued to exaggerate, rather humorously, his most recent encounter with something as unusual as a - gasp - trainer. He took his time to put together food for the woman and his Pokemon before setting himself up with food. All the while, he nodded and chuckled at Theo's sense of narration and humor.
"Ah, good," he said through a breathed laugh. He finished a bite of sandwich before continuing with Theo's previous question.
"It's generally up to the Pokemon whether they evolve or not. Should this Whismur choose," he said, looking down and attempting to graze a gentle hand upon its forhead, "it would evolve into a rather," he paused as he thought of a term that lacked the harshness of what he was actually describing, "hearty Loudred."
Squinting heavily at Hartwin, Theo mumbled, “What’s a Loudred?
With the press of a button on a devise apparently attached to a button on his blazer brought up a hologram of an image of a rather brutish looking creature with hollows protruding from its body and a mouth gaping and consuming. The coloring was skewed due to the light produced from the devise, but it seemed to have a similar yet darker complexion. Anything cute and unassuming of its previous form was lost in this transformation.
Theo’s jaw dropped at the image and his eyes immediately went toward Harmony. Even Melody’s mouth was wide open as she stared at the hologram, then over at the Whismur. Silence passed for a beat. “Okay,” Theo said in a small voice. He cleared his throat as Melody wiggled around in his lap to look up at him. “Okay,” he told Melody, completely at a loss. Both Theo and the Jigglypuff’s expressions were mirrors filled with mild confusion and anxiety.
Hartwin took a sip of whiskey from a flask (without trying to be discrete) as he powered off the hologram. A glance sideways came from the woman across from him as she took a sip of water from a bottle. This made him remember he'd failed to properly introduce them.
By the time Hartwin looked back to Theo to begin introductions, he found a very disapproving expression upon Theo’s face. Why was it that every time he took a sip from his flask, Theo looked as if he were about to puke a little? Hartwin made no mention of the look.
"And this," he said as he swallowed a half mouth-full, "is Ms. Natalie McKapherty, my secretary for the last 10 years. This is little Theodore Selvaggio," he said with raised brows, playing on the jest from before, "my once-cello student who proved to be quite talented with music."
Without missing a beat, Theo looked over, waved a little, then sang, “Helloooo Natalie.” The woman blushed with a hushed giggle and looked away in some combination of shame and embarrassment.
It was as he spoke about this that he noticed Theo without any instruments around. Further inspecting the surrounding area, he noticed the Skarmory was not around, as well. "I'd ask you to play me something to prove you've kept up with your skill, but it seems you've given up the art," he said with playful accusation.
Theo looked around as well at that jest, confused, “Oh don’t tell me I left it on Nick’s back again.” Groaning, he looked over to Hartwin then sighed, “Perhaps when Nick decides to come back, I’ll be able to play something for you.”
"Shame. Would have been nice to be serenaded while we struggle through this disaster," Hartwin said, disappointment lilting in his voice. "Ah, no matter. It's good to see you doing well."
Disas-- oh! Oh yes. That disaster-- did they catch anyone or… I’m sorry, I only skimmed a few articles,” Theo rubbed the back of his neck. He caught Natalie staring him down and shaking her head. A redness formed on his cheeks and Theo tried to hide it with a rub of his face. "W-well, if you have an instrument I could tune really quick, I would be delighted to play something for you," Theo stammered.
Hartwin smirked and shook his head. He wasn't here to talk business and Theo was the last one that needed to be worried about his work. Instead, he tapped a button on his jacket, the one below the button he'd tapped earlier for the hologram, and a menu of sorts was displayed before them. It rotated until it landed upon a violin. "Since I know it's your true talent," he started, "we'll go with this."
He tapped the air below the image of the violin. It glowed bright and then faded into nothing. A moment later and bright orbs danced upon the blanket before him. As the process began, Theo watched the violin materialize with his usual fascination. While he’d come from a wealthy family, Theo himself was less technologically up to date than the rest of well… everyone. A childlike grin spread across his face as soon as the violin, housed within it's black leather case, fully came into being.
"I haven't taken it out in a while. I hope it doesn't need new strings," Hartwin said as he lifted the case and extended it toward Theo.
Reaching out to take the case gingerly, Theo snickered, “A while, huh? Maybe you’re the one who’s given it all up.” As he placed the violin case in the grass with a smirk on his face, Theo couldn't keep the nagging feeling out of his mind that his jest was true. While he didn’t know what Hartwin was up to these days, it seemed to be more stressful than simply playing music-- there were a few more wrinkles and gray hairs than Theo remembered Hartwin to have.
“Sir--” Natalie spoke up finally, to get Theo’s attention.
--Please just call me Theo, ah, sir is extremely formal,” replied Theo, his brows raised in surprise.
“Right… Theo, ah, what exactly is it you’re going to play?”
Oh, just a short medley,” Theo replied with a smile, as he removed the instrument from it’s case, “Nothing that’ll put either of you off schedule, if that’s what you’re worried about.
Natalie blinked, caught off guard by Theo’s comment. Theo held the violin up and softly began to tune it, smirking at Natalie all the while. Coughing softly, Natalie shot back, “I’m not worried about that--” Hartwin's laughter suddenly forced her into a beat of silence.
“Wh-what?” Natalie asked.
To save Hartwin from having to reply, Theo began to play a cheerful tune. It took Melody a while to figure out what he was playing but she eventually joined in, to support Theo’s violin playing, with a counter melody.
Hartwin and Natalie sat in silence, watching Theo glide the bow across the strings, his fingers gliding across the strings and waving back and forth, his posture, upright and almost rigid, yet peaceful and light. It was natural, somehow fading into the sounds of the park around them. The trees and the breeze ebbed into the melodies and swung with the tune around them. It was as if nature stood still and praised Theo's talents and skills.
Natalie kept still after the tune, but Hartwin shortly applauded with a genuine smile.
"That was beautiful," Natalie said. "The Ode to Littleroot was something my mother would sing to me as a child."
It seemed tears began to form upon her eyes. "Thank you," she said with a nod and a shamed smile for being so emotionally moved by a short medley.
With a large smile on his face, Theo nodded at Natalie then told her, “Anytime. It’s one of my personal favorites as well.” Theo idly played notes as he asked Hartwin, “Did this meet your wildest expectations?
“Your Whismur...” Natalie said softly, wiping a tear from her eye.
A nudging at Theo’s knee caught his attention as Natalie pointed it out. Theo looked down to see Harmony pushing him, pushing Melody, then pushing him again, in a pitiful display of sadness.
Theo pouted slightly, “Oh I’m sorry-- I didn’t want to disrupt your playtime with Delcatty.” Harmony let out a heavy sigh at that, then plopped down in the grass, becoming a tiny pink blob of depression.
What a downer-- Harmony, you act as if that’s the last song I’m ever going to play,” Theo snickered.
A ringing pinged from Hartwin's person. The bottom button was tapped and a voice was projected from the button rather than an image. The voice was so clear, it sounded as if the individual on the other end was right there with them. This little device was clearly much more advanced than the widely produced Trainer Gauntlet of the region, suggesting that this was some kind of prototype or simply too expensive for wider consuption.
"Hartwin, we need you back in the office," the voice said, as if commanding with some kind of irritation due to Hartwin's constant "walking away" from his responsibilities.
"We're on our way, Max. What'd you find out?"
"There's some shrinkage we can't seem to account for."
"Okay..." Hartwin said. As with any business, shrinkage was a common occurrence and something for which to account toward expenses. It was redundant to say "unaccounted shrinkage" since shrinkage is considered "unaccounted loss of product." Maxwell, of all people, should have been able to understand that saying such wasn't nearly specific enough given the way in which voiced the concern.
"It's triple than normal. I need you to check all employee wages for any inconsistencies."
"I'm still working on the displacement reports."
"Yup," the voice said with some impatience. "And I'm working on the Hospital and Institute's inventories.
We're all overwhelmed. You just have to make it work."
"What's the deadline?"
"There isn't one. It's not a priority."
"I'll contact you when I find something."
Hartwin pressed the button on his blazer and rose from the blanket on the ground. "Well," he said with a heavy exhale. "Back to work for another 15 hours."
Natalie rose to help pack up the picnic without a word. She understood her duties to the company for which she worked as well as the lives of their employees. The Mauville Attack was a disaster unforeseen and for which was unprepared. The thought that this would not be the first attack on Hoenn was a fear that floated around in her mind. It was a thought from which she took determination when growing too tired to keep her eyes open or too unfocused to type properly. Max's message to Hartwin she'd just overheard only added to her anxiety that seemed to be unable to show in her face.
"Come back to the office. There's an employee room available if you're looking to stay here for a few days. I can't promise I'll have the time to visit with your properly any time soon, however." Hartwin's tone was stony, now. Warmth left his voice and was replaced with a clinical cold. It was the switch from lighthearted to professional he'd developed a time after he'd assumed the Accounting Department of the Fairfax Association.
----------

The room was small, an eight-by-six with a twin-sized bed and a bathroom barely large enough to have the toilet, sink, and standing-shower not on-top of each other. The desk next to the bed was made for a child and the dresser could only hold a few days of clothes. The walls were painted a pale yellow, warm and light, which provided some comfort in an, otherwise, claustrophobic space. The only technology in the room was a cylinder protruding out of the wall separating the bedroom from the bathroom. It was the personal version of the PokeStation and had direct access to the Fairfax warehouse to obtain goods. The prices for these items were much lower, too. It accounted for the fact that this was, indeed, an employee room and that they would receive a discount on all their goods.
Hartwin nor Natalie had the time to properly show him the room and help him settle. But, he wasn't necessarily a "guest" as Theo had spent so much time with the Fairfax Family that there wasn't much of a need for such formalities. They offered their services should Theo require anything, but there was a sense that such would be a severe inconvenience to either of them should Theo pursue their hospitality.


Lavaridge Town
When the sun set upon Lavaridge, the town turned a golden rust unique to the small village. With campfires and tents lining the narrow paths and filling in the small parks, it reminded the locals of the annual Spring Festival that celebrated the legends of Kyogre and Groudon's forced cooperation over the land of Hoenn.
Kyogre's rains drenched the lands while Groudon evaporated it as it touched the ground. When Rayquaza descended from the Skies, the Hot Springs of current-day Lavaridge was what remained in the midst of Kyogre and Groudon's eternal feud. These Springs were then blessed by the Sky Deity and have held the healing properties of the earth and sky and sea since the creation of the world.
However, the mood wasn't nearly as excitable. Murmurs of the "terrorists" attacking them while they were displaced spread throughout Town. This put the Rangers on edge, both having to squelch any concerns as well as creating a sense of uncertainty in themselves. It was difficult for them to keep strong and stoic while their own sense of anxiety rose.
Rangers from all over the world were gathered in Hoenn at this time, creating its own turmoil. Those native to Hoenn felt superior to those of equal rank of those from foreign regions. Despite having the same Divisions and Ranks, their uniforms were quite different depending from where they came. Rangers weren't unused to working internationally, but they instilled in themselves a sense of superiority through a heightened sense of obligation toward their native Region. Of course, such things were never discussed openly.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Regitnui
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Regitnui Lorespinner

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"Stupid cat," Keoni picked the litten up from its attempt to settle on his face, and flicked her over back towards the very cushy cat bed Asuna had put in the corner. The woman herself hadn't woken at his movements. Hadn't even reacted, in fact, except to snuggle herself closer against him under the blanket. Keoni settled back down himself. It wasn't time to get up yet. He could enjoy a few more minutes.

"Keoni?" He swore, softly, into the pillow. Asuna's eyes opened just to glare at him before closing again. "Keoni, we'd like you to help with the hot springs today, if you don't mind."

Rolling onto his back, he called to Asuna's grandmother, "Of course. I'll be out as soon as I'm dressed."

"Take your time, dear." Her footsteps padded down the hall.

After about a minute, Asuna reached down and tightened her grip. "What did you call my grandmama?"

Keoni whimpered. "Nothing. Nothing I meant."

"Good. I like those too much." She walked her fingers up across his stomach. "Though I like the way you kiss me more. Is that funny? I do like the way you massage me, especially with the hot spring water, but your kisses are like candy." She moved forward and kissed him lightly. "Mm. Like candy bars."

He smiled, kissing her until she rolled onto her back. "So you don't want sugar in your coffee?" Asuna grimaced, sticking her tongue out at him when he stood to get dressed. He turned back and ran his hand through her fuzzy morning hair. "Try to be sitting up when I come back, OK?" Her only response was a grumbled complaint involving early birds and holidays.

By the time Keoni got to the kitchen, the house guests were about. Funny how he thought of them as guests, even though he'd only been here not even a day longer. Katherine had quickly found that injured people with little else to do were rich sources of scratches and attention, and so had quickly tried to make Keoni jealous by ignoring him in favour of them. It would have worked more if she didn't look over at him every time he came past.

The coffee machine was halfway through the boil when Mr Mura came down wearing an old-fashioned ranger's uniform. The insignia were still recognisable, and so Keoni duly saluted when he entered the kitchen. "Morning, sir. Looking very official."

"Mmm. Good for the people to know that the rangers are looking out for them," Mr Mura commented. He tugged the ends of the sleeves and adjusted the collar. "I'm surprised this still fits, you know."

Keoni found Asuna's favourite cup, an orange construction meant to resemble a cylindrical sleeping Abra, its tail the handle. He'd adopted a simple blue cup, reminding him of the ocean at home. "Sir, I am not at all. I suspect you only carry the cane to remind the Pokemart cashiers that you need the senior discounts." Catching the wary look in Mr Mura's eyes, he explained, "You're still fit enough, sir, that they'd probably forget otherwise."

Mr Mura snorted, satisfied with that answer. "My wife mention we need you to clean out the hot springs today?"

"Yes, sir." Keoni added a rather alarming amount of sugar to Asuna's cup, topping it off with milk. "I'm not sure how you clean out a pool that's always filling, sir, so I hope you'll show me the right way to do it."

Mr Mura grunted. "There's a trick to it, kid." Keoni finished his own cup and carried them upstairs to Asuna's bedroom. Evidently under massive protest judging by the constant string of grumbles she was emitting, she was sitting up in bed when he came in. She stuck both her hands out for her cup, letting the blanket fall off. "Coffee."

Keoni chuckled and leaned down to hand it to her. "You sound like a z-"

"Sh. Coffee time." He smiled and blew on his cup, stirring it a little more. Asuna, on the other hand, had an iron throat, and started drinking it right away. Keoni could almost picture a little battery meter next to her, gradually filling from red, to yellow, to green as the cup emptied. By the time he was halfway through his coffee, Asuna had topped up and she was her usual perky self. She pushed her hair back, looking at him with a feline glint in her eyes.

"They don't need you right away, do they?" She asked, crawling toward him in such a way that Keoni realised just how well she resembled her pet. He shook his head as her hand settled on his lap. "Good. Gimme candy." She nuzzled his neck before settling into a insistent kiss, biting his lip a little. He put his mug down just before she pounced.
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