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Ferris Talese

@Pezz570@HokumPocus@Jerkchicken@Fetzen@13org

The calm dissolved as soon as a cultist launched an attack at a guard, and Ferris glanced back at Karina and DB, who were likely fueled by adrenaline at this point. Though it seemed only Karina had been hit by a deterrent, both of them had been in the tower longer, and the original plan had been to extract all of them, not just Tyfurkh.

Returning Karina’s nod, Ferris followed her down the stairs, drawing a sword as he did. The room was a mess of small battles, and Ferris noted one of the cultists throwing down a cloud of pollen. Getting anywhere near the area would very quickly negate his magic since wheezing pollen had a penchant for sticking to whatever surface was offered to it, and holding his breath would only stall until the next breath he needed to draw. Thankfully, the affected area was a fair distance from where Tyfurkh and the Sightless were, so Ferris figured that, with some luck, he wouldn’t have to worry about the pollen.

From the looks of it, with Tyfurkh on the floor and the Sightless looming above him, arms elongated into long, sharp vines of flesh, Tyfurkh was in imminent danger of being speared. The situation, then, elevated him from priority into immediate priority, and there was no time to waste. What made him pause was the ferret on Tyfurkh’s head—Sil. Either the Sightless had judged her no threat at all, or the earlier hypothesis was true, and Ferris couldn’t imagine Sil being ignored if both seen and heard.

“Lynx, Sil’s on Tyfurkh,” Ferris said, his sword raised and his eyes on the cultist who'd broken ranks to make a charge for where they stood. “If we clear the way, you could—” he grunted as he clashed swords with the cultist, bracing himself and hurling the cultist back onto the floor where a passing guard took up the opportunity and delivered the fatal strike. “You could distract the leader. Just enough for Tyfurkh to put some distance in.”

He turned to meet the familiar’s eyes, searching for some sort of understanding or agreement. Another charging cultist was sidestepped as Ferris turned instead to a preoccupied cultist on the path to Tyfurkh, slashing at the back of his legs and elbowing him forwards towards the waiting guard. One engagement at a time, he moved forward, utilizing the ire of the guards, who’d quickly placed him as an ally, to his advantage.

As soon as he was close enough, he made a charge for the Sightless looming over Tyfurkh, his weight behind the shoulder-level thrust. His comrades were either beside or behind him, but they were both worn from their previous battles. Lynx, despite being invisible to the Sightless, was not a front line fighter. And, besides those two points, there was that the Sightless could see the future—that there’d be no point in trying to sneak up on some demon-channeling seer.

But those were just reasons Ferris could have used. In reality, he engaged because he could. Because, alone, that’s what he did.
Eryn Montero

Descent Tower || Day 5: Morning || @PlatinumSkink

“Heya Wil, morning!” Eryn said, waving when the Ruin Maniac came into view. “And yeah, it was all Tula, though, right Tutu?” Eryn asked as she looked down at the wriggling Magikarp in her arms, patting her with a grin. “Knew you could do it. Knew it.”

Her Pokemon stood beside her, she watched as Wilhelm led them to the shore they were diving from, surprised to see the man unloading a surprising amount of diving gear from his backpack. Out came flippers, goggles, wetsuits, and all sorts of other equipment Eryn stopped knowing the first thing about.

“Oh, I can borrow this? Can I just buy it off you?” she asked, beaming as she held up a wetsuit. “Er, why exactly… you know what, nevermind,” she said, draping the wetsuit over her arm and picking up a pair of goggles. Then, looking to the Quagsire, she held up a pair of flippers. “Hey, will I need these?”

The Quagsire’s response was a bit lacking, and Eryn hesitated briefly, then set the flippers back down. Since the word ‘ruins’ seemed to imply some amount of depth, she doubted flippers would be able to help her much. After all, she had the Quagsire, and if that wasn’t enough, she also had Tula.

“Right, gimme just a second,” she said, looking around. Though there wasn’t much cover, there was Peri, and Eryn grinned.

“Peri, give me a hand, won’t you?” she asked, waving the Onix over. A minute or two later, the Onix uncoiled, and Eryn stepped out in the wetsuit with her hair tied in a stubby ponytail and the goggles snapped around her head.

“Thanks, Peri! And watch this for me, won’t you?” she asked, making sure the zipper of her bag was closed before putting the bag on the Onix. “Pretty sure these are waterproof,” she said, grabbing her Pokedex and stepping back with a grin. “Right, that’s that, then. See you four in a bit!”

Given that Tula was the only water-dweller of the bunch, there was no reason to attempt to bring anyone but her. Kylie, the metal-type, would sink as quickly as Peri, who seemed all too glad to be told to wait despite never seeming to explicitly cite a desire to. Dei, on the other hand, appeared to be extremely unhappy about the whole situation, his hands crossed as he stared at Eryn, smoke trailing from his nostrils with every unhappy puff.

“Oh, c’mon, Dei. You’d hate the water,” Eryn said, rubbing the Charmander’s head with a grin. “Stay dry and keep Eri company, won’t you? You two can finish your conversation from last night, then maybe clue Kylie and Peri in while you’re at it.”

Eri’s eyes widened slightly as he glanced behind him, his Nuzleaf form’s leaf twitching as he locked eyes with Kylie, who smiled sweetly with one mouth and flashed some fangs with the other. Dei, on the other hand, huffed again, flicking his tail, but Eryn only laughed, giving him a final pat before straightening.

“Don’t miss me too much!” she said, saluting them as she jogged towards Wilhelm and the Quagsire, Pokedex and Tula in hand. Upon arrival, she looked between the two with a grin. “So, how’re we doing this?”

Now, breathing bubbles weren’t Eryn’s first idea as to how ruin exploring would work, but that’s how the Quagsire operated, enveloping both itself and Eryn and Wilhelm in a bubble. Since she was preoccupied with the newness of the whole situation, she didn’t realize until they reached the bottom that she could have brought more of her team along than Tula.

“Well, I guess there was no reason for the suit and goggles either,” she said, sighing as she pulled the goggles off so they dangled around her neck. Then, shifting Tula, she frowned. “I think I want you next to me, not out there swimming,” she said, rubbing Tula as she continued looking around. All around, architectural constructs stood, speckled with algae and signs of underwater wearing yet somehow still seeming to be altogether intact. What part of these ruins were ruined, exactly? Sure there was the odd fallen pillar or tipped-over statue, but almost everything was untouched, unbroken.

“Guess someone’s been taking care of these ruins, huh?” she joked, glancing at Wilhelm. “Hey, Wil, why’re these ruins here, exactly? Like is this a sunken city or are there merpeople?”

The last part was meant as a joke, but Eryn was too distracted to follow up, watching as Pokemon drifted by. Poliwag and Poliwhirl were rather common, making up the small schools following the passing Politoed, which was dwarfed by a huge Pokemon that Eryn remembered to open her Pokedex for. Seismitoad, the vibration Pokemon, then Whiscash, which Eryn had seen before in a few fishing contest photos.

“Well, Wil, do you have anywhere specific you wanna go? ‘Cuz, if not, it’s exploring time,” Eryn said, grinning. “Let’s follow that Seismitoad! At a distance, of course. So we’re not being rude.”

And just like that, Eryn managed to rope the crew into spending a few minutes—or more, but who was counting—following after random Pokemon and poking into random ruins and crevices to look at carvings or murals that there happened to be. Being a tourist in Pureplain was quite different from being a tourist in an underwater city, where she was just about the only tourist in sight.

Eventually, after she’d satisfied her curiosity with following just about every interesting wild and getting a better look at every piece of sunken civilization that came into view, Eryn exhaled, grinning again. “Right, where were we again?” she asked, looking around. “Going deeper, right? Yeah, okay, let’s go. Should be, er, this way,” she said, pointing in the right direction. Or, was it a random direction?

“Huh, weird,” she said, then shrugged. “Deeper we go!”




Keaton Plasse


“This ship’s interesting, that’s for sure,” Keaton said, flashing Lynn a grin. They were overdue for a meeting, but that was mainly because the past month had been pretty quiet. Before Homecoming, it’d been all about finding Arianna and hearing her side of the story. Now, she wasn’t so sure. What she was sure about, though, was the ship and the children on it, and that’s what she’d chosen to focus on.

Keaton was mid-thought when the doors opened, and she glanced over, her grin slipping off her face as she registered the guns—civiliansterrorists?big gunsthey’re going to

The staccato beats of bullets ricocheting off steel dropped her to the ground, and she vaguely registered wet ‘thcks’ as her eyes darted between the crimson splotches staining her friends’ clothing. Eli’s leg—bone?—Lynn on the floor, her chest pooling red, Amelia’s neck, blood seeping through her hands. Lynn was up first—scrabbling first, reaching back—her spineshe healed fastwas that enough? An acrid smell indicated cauterization, and Keaton watched, transfixed as Lynn dragged herself towards Amelia. Her lips moved, and Amelia screamed, a trail of smoke flowing from Lynn’s glowing hand.

Sounds melded together as Keaton looked back to Eli, staring at the girl as the pounding of her heart or the gunshots—both—both—reverberated inside her head. There was too much going on for her to focus on a thought, and instead things streamed by her as she watched, the quiet part of her mind prodding her, telling her that this was no more blood than other times, easily drowned by the noise around her.

Lynn’s voice summoned her, and she looked over in time to see part of the girl’s face burst open. For a moment, everything was—was?—silent, the mangled chunks of Lynn’s face merely a pale pink against the shards of bone. Then, the moment was gone, Lynn falling, hitting the floor in a splat of growing red. Keaton barely registered her own voice as she lowered her hands from her ears, reaching, crawling for Lynn, a sear of sharpness grazing her side that she didn’t mind, but which blazed into pain that shot through her side, arms—rib—as she moved, fell, slipped on blood, looked down and tried to distinguish her blood from that of the pool she’d landed in. A hole was visible in her jacket, black against the blue, and the pain forced her to still for a moment, her neck craned. She wouldn’t die of it—not enough blooddid it hurt as much as when she dislocated her kneecap?Lynn.

She looked back up, but Lynn and Amelia were gone, and she sat there for another moment, her mind blank. Lynn was injured, pale, cold, expended too much energy, needed to get to heat—but she wasnt’t here anymore. Death—coma—healing—answers—

A scream—Eli—prompted her to look back, an ebb of nausea rolling over her as she trembled, shook her hands, scrambled to her feet, the pain beginning to become tolerable—adrenalinepressurewouldn’t bleed out, wouldn’t die quickly. She rushed to Eli’s side, looking her over, only somewhat aware of the groans and shallow splashing around her. Legcalfcan’t walknot fatalbleeding.

“W-we need to go,” she said, her voice shaky despite her best efforts to steel herself as she spoke. Her hands trembled, her knees trembled, everything was a bit blurry, doubled—tears—but they needed to go while the gunmen were still reeling from Eli’s attack. “H-help me hold her,” she said, grabbing Eli’s free arm and wrapping it around her neck. Pain lanced through her side, but she squashed it, looking to the girl when she didn’t move. She was younger—a childscaredfrozenwasting time.

Keaton fixed her with a glare, anger bubbling. “Help. Me.

The girl was equally—more—trembly than Keaton, but she did as asked, attempting to support part of Eli’s weight by attempting to push up from where her hands were wrapped around the taller girl’s waist. She was barely helping, but her grip left Eli’s other hand free to hold her gun as they maneuvered over bodies. A gunman up ahead shook his head, looking around, and Keaton bit the inside of her mouth.

“Go,” she said, releasing her hold on Eli so the girl’s good foot touched ground again. A glance around and she located a gun—the handle dentedstill operational—and she picked it up—pain—staring at the gunman, at how he gripped the gun, how he raised it, cocked it, mirroring what she saw best she could, her power pushing her to lower the hilt of the gun below her collarbone, fully extend her left hand, press the hilt of the gun against her face, slick smearing off against her cheek as she hunched over further. His gun went off, and Keaton’s did too, her head bouncing with the motion, the gun slipping, shifting, the bent side rapping against her cheek and chest with every jolt. Pain seared through her side—bone movedpoking something—and she dropped her arms, breathing, trying to cycle air as she stared at the man she’d shot, who wasn’t dead, was far from dead, was scrambling for his gun. He moved to raise it, and Keaton beat him to it, her power guiding her through the same motions, improving her hold here, her grip there. This time, the man fell, and pain whipped past her shoulder, prompting her to whirl around, adjusting her grip and firing at the man who’d shot. Her side, chest, shoulder all burned, her side the worst, though she was unable to distinguish where each spike of pain came from. Rib definitely poking somethingnot lungliver?muscle?

She backed into a wall, down it, the gun clutched in her hands as she panted, her breaths short, shallow, shaky—hyperventilatingpanic attackdeep breaths—each breath more of a gasp than the last, her mouth tasting of blood and metal. Could she fire the gun again? Her whole body burned, her toes cold, wet, numb as her eyes flicked around the scene again. How many gunmen were there? This wasn’t The Promise staff. Arianna then? Someone else?

She slid down the wall, her pants soaking up the blood under her as her eyes flicked to the bloody, lifeless, hollow body of a girl she thought—had seenarchitecture classbarely talked to her. Pain and cold were the only feelings as she sat there, the gun in her hands and the girl’s blood-matted hair beside her foot. Her breaths were quick, erratic—tryingnot workingblood, nauseating—as she rested her head against the wall, staring at what remained of the welcoming crowd and gunmen.

ArchieNatalieD's headless body—her eyes picked them out of the crowd—EliAmelia—Lynn. And herself—definitely bleeding outinternalslow and steady. Her heart pounded, though she could only feel it over her breaths.
boop

Keaton Plasse


Pulling her jacket against herself, Keaton hustled towards the loading bay, idling by the entrance to check her phone. While there’d been no word from Lynn, Eli had texted back, and Keaton was partial to waiting outside for a minute, watching people move about the loading bay. For so many, Homecoming had been exactly as advertised: A night of fun and drinks and letting loose. People loved talking about it, loved being asked how they spent the night, what sort of conquests or risks they took, but even though Keaton knew that, she still struggled with working the question into her usual repertoire for casual conversation. The tricky thing was that asking usually meant being asked in turn, and for Keaton, that meant she needed to decide between telling the unfortunate truth, twisting it, or lying. After some trial and error, though, she found that focusing on the drinking and beer pong turned out to be a better bet, considering that any mention of the campground usually resulted in questions about people hearing gunshots in the woods. Answering anything like that honestly wasn’t an option, and in the game of choosing to lie first or being forced to lie later, Keaton figured a preemptive choice was better for everyone involved.

Eli entered then, and Keaton waved, watching her approach with chips. When offered, she took, popping and crunching happily despite having just eaten lunch. For some reason—the salt, probably, definitely—there never seemed to be a wrong time for chips.

“Totally. I love being cold,” she said, cracking a smile. “And, well, the cafeteria’s cheap and has yet to kill me, so odds are I’m going to keep going.”

At Eli’s mention of Lynn and Amelia, Keaton traced her gaze, somewhat surprised she’d missed the duo herself. Lynn’s hair was usually a dead giveaway, often being nowhere near normal in color, and Amelia wasn’t exactly hiding in her black leather jacket. But, sure enough, there they were, engrossed in conversation. Lynn looked over, and Amelia waved, cueing either a greeting or feigned ignorance that bordered on rude, and the latter wasn’t much Keaton’s style.

“No idea. Let’s ask,” Keaton said, walking towards the two. Their conversation didn’t look all that deep—wasn’t all that deep, considering where they were. Amelia volunteering her power and being the hero of the day had marked her a viable ally, in Keaton’s book, and she was glad that Lynn was getting along with the girl. Where Eli was an easy friend for Keaton, Amelia wasn’t, so Lynn being able to befriend her was good news. Of course, whether they’d even need Eli and Amelia’s help anytime soon was questionable, but keeping their options open was good.

“Hey, gossiping about us?” she asked, looking between the two with a grin. “What brings you two to the loading bay? And, uh, Lynn, check your phone any less and I’ll have to buy you a new one.”
Eryn Montero

Route 5 || Day 4: Night || @PlatinumSkink

“Am I just really bad at fishing or something?” Eryn asked as she threw her nth catch back into the lake, watching as the wild equivalent of Tula disappeared into the dark. Four hooks, all Magikarps. She wouldn’t have been mad if she didn’t know there were other fish in the water, but she did know. It was Dragon Lake, for Arceus’ sake, and besides dragons and the occasional water-type swimming by, there were swarms of Carvanah. So many Eryn had to wonder how the Magikarp were managing to hold on.

Peri gave grinding snicker as Eryn packed up her Old Rod, muttering under her breath. Because of her—or perhaps because of the rod, because if it was because of the rod, she’d be able to shed blame and continue feeling pretty good about her fishing skills—it was now all up to Tula who, speaking of, had popped up in the water in front of her

“Oh Tula, you’re back!” Kneeling down, she scooped her Magikarp out of the water, swearing in her mind that Tula was at least twice as heavy and five times as sturdy as any of the wilds she’d fished. “Did you have any luck? I didn’t get anything on my end.”

Tula stared up at her, eyes unblinking as she wriggled.

Struggling to keep somewhat of a hold on the Magikarp to avoid dropping her, Eryn grinned. “Good news?”

On cue, Dei and Eri’s conversation ceased, and Eryn stuck her tongue out at them. “Go back to being exclusive, you two,” she said, ‘hmph’-ing for good measure before she refocused on Tula. “So, you found someone to take us to the ruins?”

Tula wriggled.

“Where are they?” Eryn backpedalled. “Are they around here?”

Tula stayed still, and Eryn frowned.

“Er, are you sure they’re going to help get us to the ruins?”

Tula wriggled, this time more insistently, if wriggling could be deemed insistent.

“Right, right, okay. So where do we meet them? At the ruins or something?”

Tula wriggled, and Eryn’s brows went up, but she quickly recovered with a grin.

“Tula! You’re amazing! Well, I knew you could do it. You don’t need me to tell you that you’re the most amazing Magikarp, right? Because you are, one hundred percent,” she said, grinning and rubbing Tula’s head. Then, realizing the time, she paused. “... Say, Tula, do you suppose they’d be willing to wait until morning?”

Tula wriggled.

“Okay, do you want to go tell them?”

Tula stilled, and Eryn frowned again.

“Er, no as in you don’t want to tell them, or as in they’d probably be fine with it?”

Tula wriggled, and Eryn realized that she’d phrased her question awkwardly. But, considering how happy Tula looked and how tiredness was slowly beginning to shine through her energetic wriggles, Eryn figured that it was due time for bed. So, adjusting her grip on Tula, she looked around at her team, patting Dei and Eri on their heads to get their attention.

“Back to town? I’m beat,” she said, muffling a yawn with a hand.

Eri stood, his Umbreon form arching its back with a stretch, and Dei stood as well, breathing a smokey yawn. Peri, on the other hand, rolled into motion without any sign of tiredness, which looked more forced with every second Eryn spent looking at her. She met Dei’s gaze with a smug look, which the Charmander returned with a snort and eye roll, and Eryn laughed, pushing her smaller team members along the path back to town.

“You all are getting healed and tucked away A. S. A. P, got it?” she said tiredly. “And say goodnight to Peri first, because she’s not going to fit in the Pokemon Center. Got it? Dei? Dei!


Lakewatch Town || Day 5: Morning

A grin hung on Eryn’s mouth as she walked towards where she’d agreed to meet Wilhelm. Having managed to both remember and gather the strength to send a text the night prior, she was now on her way to where the ruins were, her Pokemon at her side. Whoever Tula had managed to find to help them would be there as well—she was sure of that. Not because she didn’t doubt that the situation was rather unbelievable, because it was. Simply put, Eryn trusted Tula, because one couldn’t carry a Magikarp for multiple days and still expect betrayal.

“Alright, where’s that self-described ‘Ruin Maniac’? And where’s your mysterious new friend, Tula?” Eryn asked, looking around the designated meeting spot.

In her arms, Tula wriggled excitedly.





Camena


Mena hummed as she waited, a lazy smile on her face as she examined the hilt of the dagger in her hand. While it was a rather mundane mount for a blade, consisting of leather-bound wood bisected by a visible band of metal that marked the blade’s original hilt, it seemed that there was something carved into the wood. On closer examination, though, Mena realized it was some sort of writing. A signature, of ownership or craftsmanship, most likely.

Antivan. The blade was made by a craftsman—Valista of Bastion.

Mena couldn’t read the language, but she didn’t care either way. A blade was a blade, and where it was from mattered less than where she’d gotten it, which in turn was less important than how well it could cut because a blade’s purpose was to cut. The markings on the hilt were like the decorative notches on her leather armor: unnecessary.

Deciding that it was due time to stop poring over some scratches on wood, Mena opted instead to spin the dagger idly, looking around. The waiting spot wasn’t the best, was nowhere near high enough for Mena’s liking. If she’d had it her way, she would have chosen to wait on top of the rocky alcove, not inside. In fact, it was more of a ‘beside’ than an ‘inside’ for that matter, given how shallow the alcove was, and while standing next to a big rock was nice in that the big rock had her back, she’d still rather have the vantage point being on top of a big rock provided.

Her hand slipped, and she jerked it out of the way, her humming stopping and her smile freezing as the dagger hit the sand, blade sinking in with a muffled ‘shhk.’ Have to work on that. Playing with your weapons is a mark of a commoner, and Madame doesn’t—didn’t—tolerate lowbred behavior. Thought it undignified, easy to pick up, if necessary. This should be easy to pick up.

A second passed before she bent, extracting the blade. Her smile loosened, and she was spinning the dagger again, humming as her eyes scanned her surroundings. That there was only a single sandy path over was helpful since that meant she didn’t have to split her attention. There was only one direction her new companion could come from, only one direction for them to approach or attack from. Who were they, and were they in it for the coin as well? Whoever hired them had paid well—exceedingly so. Well enough to make Mena question whether they were buying more than just her services. Silence, she could manage, but not her life. Her life came before coin because, unfortunately, the dead couldn’t enjoy the pleasure of having coin.

The money is the focus. That’s all she knows. Drifter, goes with the coin, leaves with the coin.

Now, the saying ‘no honor among thieves’ was one Mena took to heart, but the person paying her knew how to play cards. A substantial retainer got her interest, providing proof that the tantalizingly large amount promised to her at the end of her job wasn’t a bluff. Considering how well-off she’d be once she got paid, Mena had made the executive decision to not take off with the retainer, which was somewhat of a first. Sure she’d lose all credibility if she took off every time she claimed a retainer, but she was good at her job, and her prices weren’t outrageous—unless she could get away with it.

They’re here.

A sound from further down the path got her attention, and she straightened, lifting herself off the rock she’d been leaning on. Sheathing her dagger, she headed down the path, her grin loose. Fair enough. She’d gotten to the spot first, so she technically had the advantage. ‘No honor among thieves’ and all.

As she scaled the slight hill, though, she was surprised to see figures—plural—come into view. Three, to be precise, and none were particularly welcoming. The least her hirer could’ve done was tell her how many people she’d be working with.

Noticing the three's stiff posture, she grinned, waving both empty hands at them in greeting. A human, a dwarf, and a qunari. All pirates, by the looks of it, or very fancy rogues. But, based on the stereotypes seafarers and rogues suffered, most likely pirates.

Qunari captain—proud. Asserts authority. Hates being challenged, or perhaps respects worthy challengers. Human pacing is crew, as is the dwarf lookout. Don’t have much information on the crew.

“Well, I wasn’t expecting three of you,” Mena said as she came to a stop in front of the two at the hilltop, an amused grin on her face as she looked between them. “So, tell me—rogues or pirates? I was leaning towards pirates since… all of that,” she said, indicating the jewelry in the qunari’s hair, “which, by the way, is stunning. Makes me jealous you own that all and pull it off.” She glanced between them again, then mocked surprise. “Oh, where are my manners? Mena, at your service,” she said, flourishing an exaggerated bow before straightening with a grin. “Nice to meet you two. Or three.”
Eryn Montero

Route 5 || Day 4: Night || @PlatinumSkink

Eryn made a beeline for the lake, setting up on a flat rock overlooking the waters when she got there. A glance around showed no Carvanha, so she bent down, easing Tula into the water.

“There we go, all nice and comfy,” she said, letting go of Tula. The Magikarp bobbed underneath the laketop, resurfacing with a wiggle of her fins.

“Perfect. Now, this might be a little dangerous, so don’t go too far, but could you try and find me a wild to take us into the ruins? Just poke around and see if any of the lake dwellers are interested in a short adventure. I’ll catch them in a Pokeball, yes, but I’ll release right after. And, you know,” Eryn said, grinning, “if they’re tough enough that the Carvanha stay away, that’d be a bonus.”

Tula bobbed in the water again, wiggling her fins, then disappeared into the water. After few seconds of staring at the water, Eryn paused, swinging her backpack around to rummage around in it.

“Ahah,” she said, pulling out her Old Rod. “Darryl’s gift was useful. Now, let’s see, how do you do this again… ”

A minute or so of experimenting with the rod later, Eryn cast the line, settling in against Peri, who’d coiled up against the rock she’d chosen, settling her head on top to create the perfect surface for Eryn to lean against. Beside her, Dei and Eri were still chatting, Eri turning into a Lunatone and cluing Eryn into the subject likely at hand.

“You two having fun in your little two-person club over there?” she asked, nudging Peri. “Look at those wannabes, being all exclusive.”

Eri looked to Dei, who puffed some smoke crossing his arms. At that, Eryn snickered, Peri joining in with some grating noises. Dei, however, looked very much unamused, electing instead to turn away and ignore both of them, continuing the conversation with Eri.

“Aw, he's so cute,” Eryn said, adjusting her grip on the fishing rod. Another snort told her Dei had heard her comment, and she grinned, petting Peri.“Hopefully Tutu found something, because I’m not getting any bites here.”




Essie Hietz

Route 2 || Day 1: Late Morning

Route 2 was unlike any route Essie was used to, opening with a slew of shops rather than open land. Staring at the various signs as she passed, she wondered whether there was any truth to the outrageous placards. The first few had been pretty reasonable, with a breeder-run healing service Essie noted for later, but later on down the route, the claims began spiralling. Magikarp scales marketed as miracle cures, Rare Candies going for so cheap the shopkeep was either dumb or dying—or both. Wasn’t there some old people disease that made them forget things? Maybe that’s what was happening.

“Well, that’s lunch taken care of,” Essie said, spotting a curry place setting up, a board titled ‘Brittanium’s World-famous Curry’ propped up beside it. “But it’s still a bit early. What do you two say about a bit of training?”

A happy squawk and slow nod later, Essie was off finding a quiet spot further down the road, where she stopped to allow Mica to swoop down from her shoulder. “Right. Mica, let’s work on your Supersonic. Your aim isn’t that great right now, but if you hit, well, let’s just say your voice is loud enough. Try it against Todd. If you confuse him, I’ll return him, and we’ll be fine.”

Mica squawked happily at Todd, who didn’t look too enthusiastic about the idea. Still, the Torkoal didn’t complain either, turning around to face Mica with a resigned puff of smoke.

“Oh Todd, remember that thing we talked about? The lava-that-won’t-cool-too-quickly thing? Let’s try that out,” Essie said. When Todd looked at her, giving her a questioning ‘Tor,” she shook her head. “No, no, not at Mica. At wherever. Let’s focus on making lava pools since we already know you can hit a target.”

Todd nodded, and Mica squawked again, flapping up from the ground.

Essie grinned. “Let’s do this! Todd, Lava Plume! Mica, Supersonic!”

Now, the first few times Mica missed entirely, and Todd’s lava stayed molten for only seconds longer than usual. Still, as they kept it up, minute improvements started stacking. Slowly, Mica managed to swap the high-pitched shrieks she was doing for lower pitched ones in exchange for increased volume, under Essie’s suggestion, and Todd managed to break through a temperature plateau to rapidly increase the lava’s cooling time. How he did that was anyone’s guess, but Essie was happy anyway.

“Alright, c’mon back, Todd,” Essie said, recalling the Torkoal after Mica managed to confuse him yet again. She grinned as Mica landed on her shoulder, she let Todd out again, setting her hands on her hips triumphantly, noting that some of the lava Todd had spouted had still yet to cool.

“Good job, you two. Really. I’m proud,” she said. “Now, let’s pop by the forest over there and take a look before getting lunch. I’m pretty sure we’re closer to it than the shops.”

As soon as she entered the route, though, a blur of black and white came swooping out of the trees, aiming right at her face. Mica was on it, though, flying forwards and aiming a Supersonic at the object, and the battle was on.


“C’mon Todd, let’s head back,” Essie said, leading the way back to the main route. She could’ve noticed that the Starly’s attack had hit harder than she’d assumed, but she didn’t. Sure, it was clear that her training had helped Mica out, but Mica was still pretty weak. Even the wilds were a bit strong for her.

A light headbutt from Todd prompted her to glance at her Torkoal, and she brightened up again, sighing. “Yeah, you’re right. We’ll just have to do a bit more training, which reminds me—what should we name your new moves? How about ‘ultrasonic’ and lava… um… strike!”

Todd gave her a funny look and she shrugged. “What, I don’t have any better ideas.”

Back on the main road, she got both her Pokemon spruced up at the healing shed, taking a second to chat with the breeder manning the stall and thanking them for their help. Her stomach growling signalled that it was time to leave, and she quickly redirected her team toward the food stalls, where she got into the long line for Brittanian curry. Noon was upon the route, and the

“Wow, this place sure is popular,” she said, peering out to the side to admire the line. It wasn’t the longest line she’d ever been in—breeder show meet-and-greets were ridiculous too—but it was longer than the lines at the rest of the food stalls, looking to be at least a few minutes.

“Of course, Brittanian curry is the best. I’m getting my second bowl,” someone said from behind her. “The spicy sauce is where it’s at.”

“What? Spicy? Excuse you, true Brittanians get the sweet sauce,” another voice said.

“... Well, I don’t know about you all, but I think the sour flavor is pretty good,” yet another voice said.

Essie looked back and forth between the line, trying to figure out which of the options sounded most appetizing to her, and by the time she arrived at the front of the line, she’d found her answer. “Large bowl of spicy, sweet, and sour sauce please!” she told the vendor, who paused his writing, looking up with furrowed brows. “I heard they’re all good, so just mix them. Good and good makes good, right?”

The vendor opened his mouth, shut it, opened it again, then shut it again, pursing his lips. “Whatever you say, missy,” he said, writing her order down, and Essie happily paid and took her number, picking up her mysteriously-colored bowl of curry and plopping it down onto an empty picnic table when her order was called.

“Mm-mm! Doesn’t that smell good?” she asked, admiring the scent of the curry, which was quite spectacular if she did say so herself. While it had the telltale smell of Tamato berries, it also smelled of sweet Mago and tangy Grepa, which altogether created a noseful of scents.

“Dig in, you two,” Essie said, divvying the portions into two smaller bowls for her Pokemon. “Ahhm.”

For the first second or so, the curry tasted interesting. Confusingly so. Then, it tasted pretty horrid, but by the time it went down, it was back to tasting okay. The aftertaste—well, it was nothing to write home about, but it wasn’t bad.

“Hm, I wonder if it tastes funny because they didn’t add enough sour sauce,” Essie said, looking to her Pokemon. Mica perked up when she looked over, squawking happily without touching her curry, and Todd managed a croaky ‘Tor,’ wincing as he attempted another bite.

“Oh, is it too hot? Well, I mean, you’re a fire-type, Todd. I thought you’d be able to handle it, but if not, well,” Essie said, shrugging.






Keaton Plasse


Keaton stared at the camera on her laptop incredulously. “Cara, I’m an architecture major, not an arts major.”

“Yes, Keaton, but I’m assigning you an art project anyway. Think of it as a destresser this finals season,” Cara said, sounding more amused than Keaton necessarily liked.

“Can I decline?”

“Nope.”

“... What if I don’t do it?”

“I’ll give you an ‘incomplete’ mark for your semester.”

“And if I submit a blank canvas?”

“Give it a chance. You just might like it.”

Keaton sighed, half tempted to point out that Cara didn’t answer her question, half encouraged to go through with the plan regardless of the results. Assigning her an art assignment to ‘destress’ her was hardly fair. Besides the fact that any assignment, well-meant or not, would only provide another source of stress, she was already plenty busy without the extra assignment. Plus, she couldn’t even remember the last time she’d tried drawing something. Freshman year? Maybe, but nothing worth mentioning. High school? Then, probably, but that felt so distant it may as well have been another person altogether.

“What’s the point, Cara? Why even bother with all of this? I know you decreased my workload this semester, and don’t even get me started on how you’ve excused me from studio,” she said, crossing her arms and sitting back in her chair. She sounded like some spoiled child, complaining about having an easier time, but it was true. What was the point of masquerading around, pretending that she had any desire to get a degree at this point? With her power, she had many options that were far more lucrative than working in an architecture firm. She could trade stocks, invest in real estate, or bet on sports. Sure she might not always be able to come up with a bet to place, but she’d never bet wrong, and being able to guarantee profit was more than enough. That is, if she was even allowed to walk away after leaving The Promise. More likely than not, she’d be locked into some job for the government. That’s what they did—were doing.

“Miss Plasse, The Promise is a rehabilitation center, but it is also an academy. It is founded on the belief that every parahuman deserves a second chance a—”

“You know what, never mind. Forget I asked,” Keaton said, uncrossing her arms. “Just send over the projects. Might as well get started now and get them out of the way.”

Her laptop pinged, and she opened up the rubric for the art project. “... ‘No architecture-related submissions will be accepted’? Cara, you do realize I’m going to submit a stick figure, right?”

“Have fun with it, Keaton,” Cara said, her tone again betraying her amusement.



Bananas or apples? Apples. Eli seemed like an apple person.

Placing some into her grocery basket, Keaton continued strolling, wondering whether she should pick up some takeout for good measure. Eli wasn’t bedridden anymore, had even started leaving the house, but she still didn’t have much of an appetite. Keaton’s fix for that was buying her food since seeing food around might force her to consider eating it. She’d done the same for a friend in college, who later got diagnosed with depression. While Eli’s case was nothing as serious, Keaton figured she’d still do what she could. A support system was key in times like these, and Eli seemed like she could use some more support.

Given that Keaton now had two jobs on top of school, she was pretty hard-pressed for time, but she managed to block out chunks some nights for some movies at Eli’s. Her being there and eating encouraged Eli to eat along with her, and it wasn’t as if she didn’t like watching movies late at night. If cliche romance movies had one thing in common with trashy horror movies, it was that both were great to watch over food, with friends, while groaning and critiquing every mistake the protagonists made. In fact, even though she and Eli spent most of their time bashing the movies instead of watching them, they went through enough movies to make Keaton doubt whether they actually hated them all that much. After all, they could choose to watch quality movies instead, but somehow that had never occurred to them.

As she exited the store, she wondered briefly whether Eli would like the book she’d picked out. ‘On Crimes and Punishments’ by Cesare Beccaria was a book she’d at first thought to be the famous ‘Crime and Punishment’. Only by flipping to the back cover did she realize that she’d gotten the titles mixed up, but somehow it still seemed like something Eli would enjoy. Based on how much Eli loved thrashing period romcoms for their historical mistakes, it was clear Eli enjoyed history, and she also seemed to like horror movies about serial killers more than those about paranormal happenings. That said, a self-labeled treatise dating back to the Italian Enlightenment didn’t exactly sound fun to Keaton, much less the part about ‘condemning the death penalty,’ but that was her. She knew Eli liked history and crime, so unless the bookstore she worked for came into possession of a copy of ‘Crime and Punishment’ soon, this was as good as it was getting.



Getting a job with The Promise staff was the easy part. There were lots of jobs to be done—custodial, managerial, and general labor, just to count a few. The tricky part was getting assigned to the right job. With the ship getting monthly supply drops from Earth, time was of the essence, but that resolved when Keaton got the job she wanted: identifying and tagging boxes and packages. It was an easy job, in many ways, but it required a decent amount of basic memorization and inference. That, however, was covered by Keaton’s power, as was the introductory period of the job, which Keaton breezed through. Being able to check her work made picking up new jobs a simple task, and soon enough Keaton was well-integrated into the system of getting packages where they needed to go. Since the mail system aboard The Promise was an automated one, packages needed only to be tagged and left out back for the machines to pick up. Package taggers factored in when there was a problem, or when a package was being delivered to a staff building. Security measures and such were present, one of which allowed Keaton to examine package contents, which was why she’d signed up for the job in the first place.

The job, though, was largely a dull one. Mostly it was just approving boxes of food and supplies going to one staff department to another. Given that the next big supply drop would come with the next ship of students, there wasn’t anything major being moved, which Keaton figured was about right. Letting student workers handle sensitive material was a careless move. Besides, it wasn’t as if she was allowed to handle paper files or such. Those boxes were transferred directly by the staff, to the staff, which was the only correct move.

Today, she was on x-ray duty, looking at scan after scan of box contents as she approved them for the system. Why this wasn’t automated like the rest of the process was beyond her, but she was thankful she got the up close and personal look, even if she’d yet to find anything. Boxes of fruits or vegetables passed through the scanner, Keaton hedging her bet on tomatoes, then oranges when more than two boxes passed by. After that it was boxes of clothes, blankets, then books.

Something near the top of the box of books caught her eye, and she frowned, staring at the object on the screen. Was that… a bag of pacifiers? It sure looked that way from the scan, and she kept her eyes on the box as it came out, noting the size and design, then the package number and address. ‘The Spire.’ That wasn’t surprising, but Keaton was trying not to jump to conclusions—had been trying for a while. A bib or stuffed animal here and there was a red flag for her, but she’d heard of staff members with families on board. A whole bag of pacifiers, though, was a lot more incriminating than a bear or two, even if no self-respecting teen would ever admit to bringing a stuffed animal on board with them. With one or two, Keaton couldn’t discount confiscations, but she could for a bag. There were at least ten—more than enough for a family, even a few.

As for the location, The Spire was known to all, visible through any window on the correct side of the ship. Though Keaton hadn’t been able to dig up many details about what went on there, it was pretty clear that it was where the staff resided and operated from. R&D went on there, but there were many types of R&D. Some were harmless, like the type that made Radvi his chips. Some, though, were not, and mixing the harmless with the not-so-harmless seemed like a hassle. But, then again, this was the staff, and Keaton had learned not to bet on things being unlikely.

“Hey Liz, you free? I think I saw something in one of the boxes. The one over there—red tag, for The Spire,” Keaton said, pausing the belt and pointing out the package.

“This one?” Liz asked, putting away her phone and pointing to the package. Keaton nodded, and Liz stuck her key card in, popping open the lid as Keaton walked over. Inside was the bag of pacifiers from seen earlier, all twelve of them, but there were also books. Picture books. Titles so thin and simple they could only have been for young children.

“What, pacifiers and books?” Liz asked.

“Oh, that’s what they were! My bad—I thought they were something else, bunched up like that in a bag. Sorry!” she said, flashing Liz an apologetic grin.

“Yeah, whatever. Get it yourself next time,” Liz said, shutting the lid and pulling out her phone again.

Keaton returned to her seat, mind whirling. That was more than enough for one kid, perhaps even a few. It was a supply drop. For children. In The Spire. Not incriminating in itself, but the clues were starting to add up, and Keaton listened when the evidence pointed the same way as her hunches.



Fidgeting with her hands in a conscious effort to avoid picking at her nails, Keaton waited, her eyes flicking between the steam rising from her coffee and the nurse in front of her. She’d already given her name, so it was a bit too late to bail, but maybe the nurse would say someone was already visiting and give her an excuse to leave before she committed. Well, more than she already did, because she still wasn’t sure what she was doing. What was she doing? Why was she even here? It felt right, but lots of things felt lots of ways, and—

“Room 302, Ms. Plasse. You have a good day,” the nurse said, looking up with a bright smile.

Keaton blinked, then nodded, grabbing her coffee. “You too,” she said, giving the nurse a tight smile before heading to the stairs. One floor, two floors, three floors of time to doubt later, she was in front of room 302 looking at Radvi through the window on the door, all bandaged up and plugged into a machine and looking like he was just asleep.

Knocking out of habit, she hesitated, then let herself into the room, the beeping machine the only sound beside the door as she closed it. She walked forwards, hovering at the foot of the bed feeling like an intruder. Against the wall beside her was a small table of flowers and cards, some of the petals more wilted than others. That seemed about right. Radvi had friends, colleagues. People like Eli who truly cared about his well-being. She, on the other hand, she was here because… it felt right.

She hesitated, then swapped her coffee for one of the vases of flowers, bringing it over to the bedside table. Setting it down beside the necklace there, she took a seat in the chair, staring at the necklace. A wedding ring and a bracelet. A wife and daughter.

Her eyes slid down, then up towards Radvi, whose face was so covered in bandages she could barely make out anything under them. The machine continued beeping, and the seconds ticked by until Keaton cleared her throat, feeling she should say something.

“Um, hey Radvi. I… I didn’t know you that well, but Eli likes you, and you seemed like you always meant well,” she said, her words coming out haltingly. She was talking to a comatose patient, and she was feeling awkward doing it. Way to go, Keaton. “I, um, I don’t really know why I’m here. I just figured… well, I was in the area, so I figured I’d drop by.”

She paused, letting the beeping fill the room again. What else could she say?

“Eli—Eli was pretty upset about… this all, and I’ve been checking up on her. Kind of. Well, I’ve been busier these few weeks since I picked up another job, but she seems to be back on her feet, so it’s mostly just texting now. Before, it was dropping by to make sure she was okay. Bringing her food and stuff, maybe watching a movie or two,” Keaton said. “I guess… I guess I should say, I hope you wake up. For Eli’s sake, if not yours.”

Silence sunk in again, the beeping steady in the background as Keaton stared blankly at Radvi. The gravity of his situation sucked away all her thoughts, only vaguely reminding her of her own mortality, but she could easily sit in the silence, even relax in it. She’d kept herself busy in the past few weeks, not giving herself a chance to sit and think, because every time she did, all she could think about was Homecoming—how helpless she’d felt, how useless she’d been. They were inane thoughts, she knew, but it wasn’t so much the thoughts as the feeling that stayed with her. Being out of control—Keaton hated it, hated not knowing, not being sure. She liked being sure that the ring and bracelet belonged to Radvi’s wife and daughter, that the flowers and cards were from coworkers and friends, that Radvi’s heartbeat was stable and strong. Being sure helped her relax, made her feel normal, like herself. And it was scary, not being herself. The one day she decided it’d be okay to let loose a little, Arianna showed up, and Radvi got put in a coma. None of it was her fault—she knew that. But she also knew that she didn’t do—hadn’t been able to do—anything to prevent any of it. Lynn could have died, she could have died, Radvi very nearly did die. It made her all wonder whether investigating The Promise was even worth it, with Arianna out there. Maybe working with the staff was a better option for now, even if they were experimenting on kids.

She shifted in her seat, looking back at the flowers on the table. In the vase was a humble collection of yellow daisies, resembling dandelions with how obnoxiously yellow they were. They looked happy, though, if flowers could look happy.

Settling into her seat, she pulled out her notebook and a pencil, flipping to the page after her last design sketch. Then, turning towards the flowers, she attempted to sketch one, focusing on the way the light and shadows curved along the petals. As she drew, she glanced back at Radvi, and, in an impulsive stroke of inspiration, outlined his bandages under the daisy she’d drawn, then drew another daisy when the balance seemed off before going back to outlining the bandages. That continued for a while, her inventing flowers out of nothing now, poking some leaves out of the bandages for good measure. Even though Radvi was turned towards her, there was very little skin she could see, which was why she could fit so many daisies, she figured, and if she added another—

A knock sent her flinching back, clutching her notebook to her chest. It’d been from the neighboring room, as she quickly realized, and she relaxed with a sigh, looking down at what she’d drawn. Flowers and bandages on a face. How contrived, how cliche, but… she liked it. It was comforting, seeing the flowers with the bandages, and Radvi’s sleeping face was peaceful.

She tore the page from her notebook, looking around for somewhere to put it. She wasn’t keeping this—no way. It was nice, but it was Radvi, and it wasn’t really something she could turn into Cara for her pseudo-project anyway. Right?

Pulling out her phone, she turned it on, holding the camera over her drawing. “Cara, is this good enough of a final project for you?”

“I suppose it’ll have to do,” Cara said, her tone lilting, and Keaton clenched her teeth for a second as she told herself that no, she didn’t care that the AI was dripping with ‘told you so’ smugness. She’d gotten the assignment off her plate, and that was enough for her.

“Do you need a scan or physical copy?”

“Nope, the project was for fun. Feel free to keep the piece to yourself.”

Rolling her eyes, Keaton pocketed her phone, cleaning up her stuff. Then, walking over to the table with the flowers and cards, she slid the paper under a bouquet so that only an empty corner was peeking out.

“I’ll, um, be leaving now. Get better, Radvi,” she said, looking back at Radvi. The beeping machine answered her, and she managed a smile, picking up her coffee. A half-open card, though, caught her eye, and she paused, glancing back at Radvi. This… this was probably unethical. And dumb. And probably useless. But maybe it’d help. Maybe.

Pulling out her notebook again, Keaton wrote down the names on open cards, figuring that tearing envelopes was further than she was willing to go. Then, this time quietly, she left the room, sparing one last glance at Radvi as she closed the door.



“Pat, I’m heading out!” Keaton called, waving at her shift manager, who seemed to be on the phone. His brows were furrowed, and when she called, he looked up, waving her over.

“Dial this number for me, won’t you? I swear I’m getting it right,” he said, pointing to a handwritten phone number on a post-it.

“That’s a seven, not a one, right?” Keaton asked, pointing to what she knew was a seven.

“I tried both already,” Pat admitted. “The number with one doesn’t even pick up.”

“Right,” Keaton said, frowning as she entered the number. Putting the phone on speaker, she listened as the phone rang, rang, then clicked. Static blared out, and Keaton flinched, slamming the phone down.

“God, what is going on? First we’re missing a package, then I can’t even reach the distributor,” Pat said, groaning and rubbing his temples.

“Missing a shipment?” Keaton echoed.

“Yeah, I was told there’d be six shipments today, but only five arrived,” Pat said, sighing. “Guess I’ll have to go talk to the boss. See you tomorrow, Keaton.”

“Yeah, see you,” Keaton said, frowning as she left. Her phone buzzed—Cara reminding her about the new arrivals. As if anyone could forget that. Judging by the time—and the fact that she’d skipped breakfast—she was due for lunch, so lunch it was. On the way to the cafeteria, she composed a text to Eli, sending it.

Hey, when are you headed to the loading bay?
To Eli

Then, figuring it wouldn’t hurt, she sent another one to Lynn.

You headed to the loading bay?
To Lynn

The girl had a penchant for keeping her phone turned off, given her distrust of Cara, so trying to reach her was always a bit of a struggle. Still, Keaton had done so over phone so far, and maybe she’d be able to get Lynn to get used to Cara sometime, if not trust her. After all, Caroline was a valuable ally, sarcasm, smugness, and all.
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