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Chapter 343 - Happy Birthday!
CHAPTER 343 - HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

Alcohol flowed freely as Amber Stewart's birthday party came to life inside Ronaldo's sprawling penthouse. The living room buzzed with energy, a whirlwind of people and Pokemon moving to the pounding beat of the music. Cassandra, ever the clown, belted out off-key lyrics for the crowd's amusement, drawing laughter and groans in equal measure. Meanwhile, Temperance's Whimsicott danced with Kael, leading him in a playful whirl under the gentle breeze she conjured. Temperance herself was doubled over with laughter, her Dragonair draped lazily across her lap, letting out an indignant growl whenever her hand paused mid-pet. Amid the chaos, Amber sat stiffly beside Temperance, her fingers fidgeting with the hem of her dress. Normally, her sharp wit had no trouble cutting through Cassandra's antics, deflecting Kael's doting compliments, or matching Ronaldo's long-winded speeches. But tonight, she was quieter, her usual sharp tongue replaced by nervous silence. Her shyness was never far when Temperance was around, but tonight it seemed magnified, her unease more noticeable against the laughter and cheer echoing around her.

Cecilia herself couldn't focus, either. She no longer found dancing enjoyable—and they knew as much—so at least she had an excuse to be sitting. She found refuge at the bar away from Temperance's worried gazes, her gaze drifting toward the glittering lights of the League outside, as if anchoring herself to the world beyond the party. She wished, more than anything, that she could allow herself a drink, let the alcohol dull the edge of her thoughts. But not tonight. Tonight, her mind had to stay clear like the sky on a beautiful day.

Still thinking? Slowking said beside her, his hands behind his back. He curiously browsed the selection of drinks at the counter—Tanqueray Gin straight from Galar, Chardonnay from Kalos, Paldean Wines from Ronaldo's family's vineyard, and all kinds of the usual hard liquor and mixing beverages. You ought to rip off the band-aid. Carefully. Like, you know when you douse it under warm water to get at the edges, but at the end of the day you're gonna have to get to it anyway—

Cecilia exhaled long and hard. "I know what taking off a band-aid is like." She reached for her glass of cold water and took a swig, enjoying the frigid sensation within her. "And I hate that metaphor."

I mean, we can talk metaphors all night; we can also just differ in opinions and cut to the chase. Slowking took a step in the air, the invisible barrier not even making a sound under him, and he sat on one of the high chairs next to her. His stubby legs dangling up and down were quite cute. Unless you do want to talk about metaphors all night. Wouldn't surprise me—

Cecilia threw the rest of her water at him, knowing he'd easily stop it. The gem atop his Shellder shone bright red, and the liquid turned to a thin line, snaking its way back into her glass with an elegance fit for someone who'd gotten water thrown at them their entire life. That was before the psychic nudged his head up, and a few drops of water flew on Cecilia's face.

"My makeup!" she whined and lunged at one of the napkins.

You dish it out, but you can't take it. Slowking winked, evaporating the water in an instant. Did our fighting like a couple of children make you feel better?

She gave it some thought, leaning against one of her palms as she twirled her glass around. Cecilia hadn't realized she'd been smiling, but the respite only lasted a moment. Despair and shame quickly clawed their way back into her, tunneling through skin like worms into soil until they reached her heart; they clung to her, making her body feel like lead. Her ankles, her wrists were rigid; her knees would have buckled under the weight of such pressure had she been standing. The Unovan finished her water, and Slowking gave her a refill by dragging some out of the tap and levitating it directly into her glass. She needed more—she was out of breath, she was—she was cold—her fingertips felt so numb it was as if her hands weren't hers—

A hand and a dull claw gently scraped across her back. Why don't we go somewhere more private? He looked around nervously to see if anyone had noticed, but Cassandra's latest fall had everyone enthralled. Temperance will most likely come check in on you soon; she doesn't like it when you're isolated too long.

"And this time I don't have 'studying for a battle' as an excuse." The Unovan wiped cold sweat off her face, and her fingers lingered on the edge of her biggest scar until feeling returned to their tips. "I don't think I was this nervous when I was about to face Jupiter, even."

Adrenaline and not caring about your life back then was a horrible mixture. Slowking waved a hand dismissively. So? Shall we?

"Mhm."

She carried her glass of water like it was her lifeline, making her way over the edge of the busy living room. Music boomed in her ears, the vibration going through her as if she were in a concert. Would they get noise any complaints tonight? Did it even matter?

"Cecilia!" Cassandra called out, nearly out of breath. Her body was covered in sweat, and multicolored lights reflected on her skin—or at least she'd been told it was multicolored. "Stop sulking about some battle and come dance with us!"

"There's no us! Gah!" Ronaldo screamed when Whimsicott blew a gust of air at him, and he stumbled back. "Temperance! Get your foul beast off me—ah!"

They were fun, these people. Out of touch, perhaps, but as kind as they could manage. Kinder, even, than she had ever been in her days as a sheltered rich girl. The same, she supposed, could be said of her friends.

Oh. She'd forgotten herself. Her old friends.

"I'll come by later, I just need to discuss something with Slowking," she said back. "We'll be just… ten—twenty minutes. Sorry, Amber. I know this is your birthday, but…"

Amber, for her part, answered with a ghost of a nod, not even meeting her eyes. Temperance did not say anything, but her eyes betrayed the clarity with which she saw Cecilia. Slightly narrow, eyebrows raised with worry, and an unspoken expression that seemed to ask if she needed her. Cecilia bit her lip and mouthed back a 'soon.' She just had to get her thoughts in order. She just had to get her thoughts in order. She just had to get her thoughts in order…

Room. A bedroom, to be exact. You could tell it was Ronaldo's by all of the Paldean things he kept in it. His family's heraldry hung on his wall: a stylized Bombirdier give that the species roamed the mountains of his house. A handwoven rug he had transported up here was spread across the floor, its bold light colors forming patterns reminiscent of Paldean tapestry. Paldean books, brands, everything and anything. You could tell he was somewhat homesick, even if he had come here to spread his wings away from his mother's watchful eye.

"I hope he doesn't mind." Cecilia wasn't sure he would approve her being in here, but already, her breaths came easier. With a hand on her chest, she took deep inhales and exhales. "I'm okay. Don't touch anything."

Wasn't going to. I'm not Toxicroak. After a pause, the water type raised his hands with a grin. She might hit me over the head if she hears. You wouldn't sell me out, would you?

Cecilia leaned against the walls with her arms half-crossed and imagined it—a well-placed Brick Break right on Slowking's head. "I won't. Or I will if you don't focus on the matter at hand."

I'm trying to make you relax.

"It's unfortunately working," she answered dryly.

He paused, the words lingering on the edge of his tongue as he seemed to weigh his options. Cecilia braced herself for a witty retort or one of his signature bad jokes. Instead, she got this. How may I be of help, my lady? Why are you finding venting about your anxieties to your own partner so stressful?

Hm.

She knew the answer. It wasn't as if she hadn't hinted at it all throughout this day when she had gathered advice from people she thought would be of help.

"Picture a basement. It used to be a box, but it grew into a chest, then a vault. Over time, it got bigger, more reinforced. Every worry, every fear, every doubt I've had about Temperance's fidelity—I packed them inside and locked them away. And now…" she trailed off, blinking rapidly. "Now I have to just let it out. All of it. It's grown so, so big. It used to be tolerable, but I can't bring myself to fully trust her. I get thoughts. Horrible n—nightmares." The words came out with a shiver. He had seen her waking with tears in her eyes.

The Pokemon tilted his head, letting the words sink in. Do you think she'd refuse to accept you? I am certain she would understand, especially since she knows your history. Temperance is an understanding human. Empathetic toward those she keeps close.

The Unovan did not even hesitate for a moment. "Of course, she would. That's what scares me."

Acceptance?

"Accommodation. As it stands, there'd be no way to fix the way I feel unless we took drastic measures. I'd need—I'd need so much reassurance… it would border on the—no, maybe we could reach compromise." A pause. "Compromise. I start therapy soon. Then maybe. Maybe." She kept whispering the word over in over, thinking about every single way this could go and no doubt not even scratching the surface. "There's also the shame," she said, quieter.

There's nothing to be ashamed of. You were hurt, and now it's like you're expecting to be able to just be able to walk on with a gash in your leg. He pointed at her scarred limb for effect. Grace was the Krokorok in this instance, and this time you didn't kill it.

"Please refrain from bringing her up, especially if it's to put that picture in my head."

The psychic sighed, not understanding, but complying. My apologies. He bowed with an arm on his chest. Let us speak of shame, then.

She chuckled bitterly, tasting bile in the back of her throat until she sipped on more water. "The Copperajah in the room? Sure, let's talk about it. I've felt ashamed of myself for getting my heart broken since that day. I go outside, and it feels like people would laugh at me if they knew. I hear someone talk about her, and I feel the need to quicken my pace to get away from her name. I see her, and I stumble over my words and feel the need to say sorry even if I should not." She'd nearly run out of oxygen. "All I feel is shame except when I'm battling, the only method I have of expressing myself freely."

Wouldn't that mean it would feel good to tell Temperance everything? Isn't that expressing yourself freely?

"I will tell her tonight; I'm tired of running. It's just… I need to work my way up to it. Plus, I wouldn't want to ruin this party for Amber. Arceus, I wish I could hate her." The crush on Temperance was… Cecilia figured it was obvious. Sometimes, she imagined getting in between the two of them and telling Amber to back off.

Oh, who was she kidding?

She'd be too scared of being dumped again. The fear of being abandoned for someone better—more stable and understanding—while she dealt with her issues was a constant pressure that had her feeling like she hadn't taken a clear breath since that evening in Canalave. Stuck in place, dying of thirst around an oasis with so much water available around her.

Cecilia looked down at her near-empty cup, seeing her distorted reflection in the glass. Fingers clasped tightly at the receptacle, a sad smile building upon her visage that hurt the corner of her lips.

"Killing is so much easier than this."

That, it is, Slowking agreed. Let us speak more of this.



Nine minutes—no, ten. Ten minutes since Cecilia had gone off on her own, and over forty since Temperance and she had spoken a word to each other. Slightly over an hour since the party had begun. Temperance craned her neck toward the hallway until Dragonair bumped her in the arm with her head. Ever the histrionic dragon, this one, but Temperance loved her all the same. The coordinator gently ran her nails under Dragonair's chin, eliciting a soft vibration from the delicate wings on her head. Even the tip of Dragonair's tail responded, the two pearls at its end softly clinking together as they rattled in delight.

To head over there or to not head over there? Temperance knew Cecilia needed her space when she got like this, or she would close herself off even more and stare you down in… she still didn't even understand what it was. Not anger, but disappointment? No, it wasn't. She knew what disappointed Cecilia looked like. Temperance watched Cassandra collapse on one of the couches for a break with ragged breaths so loud they broke through the music—the music that Kael lowered now that everyone was done dancing. Fear? What did a scared Cecilia look like, even? She'd scantly seen that look on her face. God, why was she so bad at deciphering her own girlfriend's expressions? Cecilia wasn't easy; she could be quiet, lived in her own world most of the time, and despised—truly despised being vulnerable. She was a book closed down by a clasp, shoved into a safe that had been dumped to the bottom of the sea a continent away.

Kael clapped his hands to gather their attention. "Should we do gifts? Ambs, what do you think?" When he did not get an answer, his brows creased with worry. "Ambs?"

Amber was paler than usual—you could tell even with all of the party lights bouncing around. She kept fidgeting with her thumbs, looking down at her lap and mouthing something so quiet no one could hear but herself. Whimsicott spun in the air, growing closer and closer with curiosity until Amber yelped and backed up against the couch.

Temperance wished her girlfriend was this easy to read. New members of her entourage were often nervous around her before they grew used to her presence, either because of her standing amongst those in the coordinator community, some crush or both. Ronaldo had been only a crush, since he was already used to mingling with those society designated as 'above' him in society. Cassandra was her oldest companion, and there had been one-sided sparks there for a while until Temperance talked her down. Kael, meanwhile, did not have a crush, but he had stumbled over his words the first few weeks they'd interacted because of how terrified he'd been of making a social faux pas. Amber had been the most obvious of all, asking Temperance about what she and Cecilia thought of open relationships a few weeks ago with the subtlety of a Snorlax attempting to tiptoe in a library.

Really, the only reason Temperance hadn't privately shot Amber down yet was because she worried about the reaction the little critter would have. She was bright, brimming with potential, and filled with so many great ideas, but she was also… she was also Amber. Skittish as a Wimpod and ready to run at the first sign of hardship. Her life had been blessed by good looks, talent, and intuition; she had not truly faced rejection ever, romantic or otherwise.

Long story short, Temperance would have to pick her words very carefully to not hamper her future. Once upon a time, she wouldn't have cared much; things were so much easier back then.

"Earth to Ambs," Cassandra joked. "Come on, did you get hit by a Confuse Ray, or what? Whimsy, did you—"

The grass type hissed in indignation, a sound that did not sound like it should have come out of her mouth, as if to say she technically didn't know that move, even if she could technically replicate a bootleg version of it that looked pretty.

"Sorry. Erm, if that's—if that's okay with everyone…" Amber trailed off.

Ah. There was her opportunity. "Shouldn't we wait for Cece? Actually, let me go get her," she said before they or her jealous Dragonair could react. Not that they would have said no regardless. They all agreed as she made her way toward the hallway—

"Um—Temperance!" Amber's voice cut through the living room, stunning the coordinator like lightning. "Before we do gifts, actually, could we talk about something, just the two of us?" She gripped the sides of her dress like a child. "It's, um, contest related."

It wasn't contest-related, that much was obvious. Temperance looked back toward the hallway, noticing the light under the door to Ronaldo's bedroom and catching the quiet sound of Cecilia's voice now that everything was so still. She then glanced at Amber, who was trembling like a leaf and looked like she was about to have a heart attack. She was putting everything on the line for this. Oh, dear. Saying no here would destroy her; she could see Amber tearing up already. The coordinator ran her hands through her hair and gave her a reassuring smile.

"Sure, Ambs. Let's go for a walk for a second." Her friends all knew already, having opted to let Temperance deal with this on her own this entire time. "Guys, if Cecilia comes back, you let her know that we'll talk when I'm back."

When she'd said go out for a walk, she had meant it. The ride down the elevator was quiet, but Amber looked just about ready to collapse in on herself. It was quite admirable, to see the girl push herself to. The little rituals she had to calm down—the muttering under her breath, the constant tracing of fingers against her palm, the way she nodded as if to reassure herself. None of it would matter, in the end. Ding, the elevator rang, and they made their way out of the extravagant hotel lobby. Dinners and conversations, laughter and joy, to be surrounded by such things and to be about to crush a girl's dream was… it had to be done.

Even if the Lily was active during the night, it was nothing compared to daytime. One could easily find a deserted street or alley or bench or park for themselves. Temperance did not know where Amber and she were going, but it was only a matter of time until her friend gathered enough courage for a confession. So long as they didn't stray too far and it didn't take too long, the coordinator was willing to make this as easy as possible.

Eventually they stopped a few minutes later in a small, tucked-away park nestled between two towering apartment buildings. The dim glow of streetlights filtered through the sparse canopy of trees, casting dappled shadows on the worn cobblestone path. A single wooden bench sat beneath an old lamppost, its light flickering faintly, giving the space an almost ethereal quality and inspiring a million contest routines. It wasn't grand or picturesque, but there was an intimacy to it. Was that why Amber had chosen this spot? She looked striking under the soft, flickering glow of the lamppost, the light catching the subtle shimmer of her brown hair, which had been styled into loose waves that framed her face. Her pale skin seemed almost luminous in the dim surroundings, a stark contrast to the dark fabric of her dress.

Amber took a breath. Here goes.

"I—" Amber clearly wanted to stop, every nerve in her body was screaming at her not to do this. Clenched fists, tightened jaw, and a whole lot of desperation. "Temperance, I'm sorry to say this when you—you have a girlfriend. But I can't take advantage of your kindness any longer!" Was that how she saw it? Taking advantage… maybe from her perspective, it could make sense. Amber clutched at her heart, wrinkling her clothes. "I'm in love with you. I'm so in love with you that every second spent thinking that I might never get to date you hurts like my heart's being run through a blender. I can't do this anymore." She laughed nervously, tears forming in the corner of her eyes. "So I'm putting it all on the table."

Oh, Legendaries. Temperance wished she would have given up eventually; she figured Amber would have, given that the girl had never been inappropriate with her. Temperance's saddened gaze lingered on her, and she blushed bashfully, face turning away. Boring. Too childlike. But not her fault.

"It must have taken a lot of courage for you to say this," the coordinator sighed. Amber was barely holding it together; this was not what someone wanted to hear after their confession. "I'm sorry, but I don't reciprocate your feelings. I love Cecilia."

The dam broke. She could not hold onto her tears any longer. "I—I figured as m—much," Amber sobbed. "Yeah. You two probably want me out of your hair. I'm sorry, I'll go—"

"Do not." Temperance knew how this ended. First, she'd go sleep somewhere else, then they wouldn't speak for a few days, and they'd slowly drift apart. "I mean, obviously you can leave if you want because I'm sure you'll need space, but hey." The coordinator stepped forward, sitting on the beach before patting the space next to her. Amber didn't move. "Crushes are hard, I get it. Sometimes, they're hopeless, but you can't help but want to get it off your chest so you can finally move on."

Amber nodded amidst her sniffles and sobs.

"I still want you to be a part of the group, not only because you'll squander career opportunities if we aren't close, but because I like hanging out with you… though I haven't seen you be normal next to me in quite some time with your anxiety around me and whatnot. When's the last time we had a conversation about ideas for performances? It's been over a month!"

Amber let out a lachrymose laughter, full of tears and regret, and she wiped her face with her arms. "I'm sorry. I guess I've been a bother." She laughed again, this time harder. "Arceus, I forgot—I had this whole pitch about how good of a duo we could have been with me helping you come up with routines for contests."

Temperance smiled. "Did you forget?"

She chuckled. "Yeah. Yeah, I just completely forgot." She slid onto the bench—but stayed at the edge so she wouldn't be too close. "I think I knew I had no chance, deep down. You're right that I just needed it off my chest—I feel like I can actually function around you now and it hasn't even been ten minutes."

Good. That had gone as best as it could have. "If you want, we can stick around here for a bit while you calm down before we head back—if you want to." Now all she'd have to do was tell Cecilia while they talked.

Amber glanced up at the moon, half hidden behind a cloud. "I have gifts to open, don't I? Let's stick around a little and then head back."



It wasn't perfect. It just wasn't, but maybe it never would be and that was okay. Cecilia stood perfectly still in front of the door, not even a finger twitching. She was real. She existed, and she could feel her feet against the ground; the air working its way past her nose, throat, and into her lungs; the cold spreading across her hand when she wrapped it around the doorknob. Slowking had been helpful just listening and challenging her ideas; Cecilia knew she could count on her Pokemon for everything and anything. They were so good to her even if she had rarely deserved their kindness.

Today, Cecilia was ready to say that she had worked her way up and that she deserved them again. She was nervous—of course she was. The little voice in the back of her head told her that she needed to silence herself if she wanted this relationship to last, but she knew the trickster was only scared to wear her heart on her sleeve.

You can do this, Slowking said.

"I can do this."

Cecilia slowly pushed the door open. She let the sound of the outside world sink in for a moment. Voices, music, Pokemon, flowing drinks. She imbibed it to center herself and anchor her newfound courage to this reality. Momentum carried her, for she could not allow herself to think too long. She reached the spacious living room and found the usual suspects, meeting them with a smile—they were all sitting on different couches, though Dragonair had claimed a beanbag for herself coiling up so she could fit. Cassandra browsed through her phone, occasionally joining in on the conversation between Ronaldo and Kael. Cecilia scanned the room—

Her smile fell. "Where are Temperance and Amber?"

"Went out to talk," Amber said. "Odds are the newbie's shooting her shot and confessing. They'll be back soon, but odds are…"

Cecilia didn't hear the rest of that sentence. Her ears were ringing—had she been stabbed? She slowly looked down at her chest, expecting to find a blade or a spike embedded in her ribs, for blood to be pouring down her skin and clothes, but found nothing. Where was this hurt coming from? Her vision was spinning as if she were drunk—she didn't even feel alive. An out-of-body experience that left her staring down at herself and taking in a spoonful of agony at a time. It was happening again. It was happening again. She'd been too slow to act out of fear of being replaced and in turn, she was being replaced. She could have stopped it she could have said something she could have intervened she could have saved herself and now it was over over over over over.

Had she even changed at all?

A hand and a dull claw gently scraped across her back.

Cecilia! Slowking screamed into her mind.

"Cecilia?" Kael was close to her now. Too close. He tried clasping her shoulder, but a hand rebuffed him—it was her hand. She hadn't even registered the skin-to-skin contact or noticed she'd been moving. "O—oh. Sorry? I was just worried—Cass didn't speak right—"

Cassandra held her hands together and made an exaggerated bow. "Sorry!"

"—she meant that there was no way Amber wouldn't be rejected. I mean, it's obvious, right?" Kael finished.

"Even Ronaldo had better odds," Cassandra mumbled.

"Screw off," he grumbled.

"Spare me your platitudes." Cecilia shambled along the living room; her knees felt like they were carrying Coronet itself. Slowking kept calling out her name, but it didn't matter. It was too late. The laughs and giggles, the time they spent together on their own, how much Temperance brought Amber up unprompted even when they trained—the signs had been there. No, it hadn't even been too late. There was just nothing she could have done; they were destined to be together. She would have fallen off the wayside eventually. One of the best coordinators in the country and a girl who was being heralded as a Type Energy genius across the community? The writing had been on the wall. "I'm leaving. I'm so tired."

They tried stopping her—it was all a blur. She lashed out without thinking, calling them unserious clowns who ought to experience ten percent of what she had before telling her that it wasn't a big deal. She yelled that she'd never see them again and that she would be all the better for it. She tore into them until they stopped trying to reason with her, and despite the anger feeling good, despite it being a veil to hide her fears and regret behind, she knew she did not mean any of it before the words even left her mouth.

She'd torched her only new friendships for a few minutes of respite. Not that they were ever real. Just like with Temperance, it was only a matter of time until they saw the ugly part of her and threw her away. No, they were real. But were they? They were; it was just easier to pretend they weren't to facilitate tolerating what she'd just done. Tears were slowly running down her cheeks, but she did not sob. Not since she'd died.

Now, they just flowed.

Whatever.

They were in the lobby now, and she was hugging herself, lying down on one of the public couches. The small ones that were never sizeable enough to contain her, and so her legs dangled off the side and every so often someone would ask her to pass, and she would ignore them, and they'd go around her with annoyance in their eyes until they saw what she looked like. Some fled, some apologized, some—

That wasn't a very good thing you did, Slowking said. I almost considered knocking you out with Hypnosis, but decided against it.

That was the understatement of the century. It wasn't as if she was going to stay in the group and pour endless salt into the wound, watching Temperance and Amber be with each other. Just imagining was enough to get her sick—oh God, she couldn't throw up here. Cecilia rushed and crawled toward a bin next to the couch, but only managed to cough over the can.

"I think I'm sick." She looked around—people were shooting her concerned looks. Luckily, it was late, so the lobby wasn't as packed as it could have been. Not that it mattered. Nothing mattered. Cecilia wiped the corner of her mouth. "I need to…"

A bit of psychic force pushed her upright. If you puke, I'll pick it up before there can be any issues, Slowking spoke into her mind. Are you going to run away?

She gave it some thought. "No. I was going to wait upstairs, but evidently my emotions got the better of me." She wiped more tears from her face, taking deep breaths of fresh air to keep her stomach from acting up. "What now? Do I just wait at the hotel entrance and let her break me?" she whispered. "I'd like to go out there and meet them to quicken the process, but I don't have the tools to find them in the middle of a city."

The water type shook his head. You didn't listen, but the others were thinking Amber was going to get rejected—

"It won't happen. No, it might happen tonight, but eventually… eventually it'll be over." Just like before. "It's just like you said. I don't want to limp through this a second time, hoping I'll be the one who gets chosen in the end. It's okay."

Slowking clicked his tongue. Hear her out! You're being like this for no reason—no, not for no reason. I apologize. He shook his head and circled around the lobby's couch. You've been hurt; you think you'll get hurt again, but confessions aren't a zero-sum game.

"We'll see," she whispered, already knowing that everything was doomed.

Eventually, Cecilia started feeling well enough to walk, but as the minutes passed, she started figuring that if Temperance had rejected her, there'd be no reason for them to be out this long. How many minutes had it been? It felt like nearly an hour, but her phone told her twenty-three. Cecilia waited, waited, and waited until she noticed them come in. They looked quite unbothered—they were smiling, even. Jealousy burned within her, a bonfire high enough to reach for the skies, intense enough to sear all that would reach too close. It didn't even matter what Temperance and Amber were like. One simple fact already spelled Cecilia's downfall.

Both of them were here.

Even Slowking had doubt etched on his face. She wanted to slip away and to pretend she'd never known these people.

"Do you think they were planning to deliver the news together, or just Temperance?" Cecilia asked. "Not that it matters. I'll engage them on my terms."

Once again, she would enable a new couple's happiness and fall on her sword for them. She'd already caused enough damage upstairs, so she at least owed them this—and wasn't it better this way? They could be truly happy, and there was technically no infidelity afoot. In fact, this is what Grace should have done.

Yes, things were better this way. It hurt, but it was better. "I'll tell you how it went." She recalled Slowking, who despite the look in his eye, did not protest her tackling this on her own. She threw his Pokeball up and down, feeling mildly better now that she'd gotten thirty minutes to think. Around the central help desk, beyond one of the hotel's restaurant, and onto the elevator hall. Her steps carried her further than theirs; she reached them quickly.



A haunting voice fit for an evil spirit startled them.

"Evening, you two."

Temperance flinched, and Amber's soul nearly jumped out of her skin—she would have fallen over had Temperance not grabbed her by the arm. The coordinator recognized the voice, but she did not like Cecilia's horrible tone. Defeated, yet resigned. Nails against chalkboard, each word forced through her esophagus like toothpaste through a tube too tight. The white in her eyes was tinted red, a sign that she'd cried some, and she used her height to loom over them like a Pokemon wanting to appear more threatening than it was. Why wasn't she up at the penthouse? In the moments that followed, a deafening quiet overtook the three of them.

Until Cecilia spoke again, fangs bared. "What? I'm making it easy for you, so just come out with it. At least say it to my face."

What the hell was she even talking about? "I think there's—there's a misunderstanding here. Why don't you go upstairs and wait for us to come back, Ambs?" No answer. Temperance glanced to her right and saw her frozen in place. They weren't really cornered and about to die, but Cecilia had a way of making you feel you were. "Amber." Temperance shook her friend by the shoulder."

"S—sorry."

"Go up to the penthouse. We'll meet you there."

She nodded meekly, following her guidance to the letter. She stood there awkwardly until an elevator came and climbed on.

"So it's just going to be you?" Cecilia said.

"I—Cecilia, what's wrong?"

The Unovan's eye twitched, and her fist clenched. Temperance had said something wrong. "I know she confessed to you already," she growled. "Were you going to tell me today, or were you going to string me along? Until when? The Conference's ending so it didn't affect my performance in the tournament? Give me a break." Cecilia moved in closer, hunching over until they were at eye level. "After I told you everything, you would do that to me?"

In this instant, something clicked in Temperance's head and she realized something.

Her relationship was now on a knife's edge.

"Cece, I was going to tell you as soon as we came home." She spoke fast—she had to if she wanted to rectify this. "Yes, Ambs confessed to me—"

"Ambs. Always Ambs. She's the only one that gets her nickname used as many times as me." Cecilia laughed, and her hand touched her forehead. "I'm always so blind—"

"No, no. Let me speak." She had to put her foot down, now. "I rejected her, Cecilia! Nothing is going on between us. I told her clearly that I didn't like her back."

Her face was still the same it didn't work why didn't it work— "then tell her to get out. Kick her out of your group, block her on everything, and never talk to her again."

"Come on, that's a bit extreme—"

"I see. Then it's over."

Why was she being—no, it was obvious why she was being like this. Temperance's mind was racing; what should she say, how should she react, how could she salvage this? "Cece, I'm willing to spend less time with her—I can do that. I can stop calling her Ambs, I can—I can do whatever you want," Temperance said. "But I can't… exile her. I—you know that I have a lot of clout. People will talk, wonder why she was given the boot so soon after being accepted, and the gossiping will ruin her career before she could ever get her foot off the ground." It was dangerous to be her friend. She was not the best coordinator in the region—although she was close—but she was easily the most famous. That was why she usually kept everyone but a few at arm's length.

Something akin to clarity reached Cecilia's eyes.



I see.

Cecilia tried making sense of it in her head instead of attacking, attacking, and attacking to shield herself from the pain for just a few more minutes, and she truly gave it some thought. It was true that Amber's reputation would most likely never recover so long as Temperance was on top of the coordinator world. And surprisingly—

Cecilia did not want this. She found herself caring when she wished she did not.

"I understand," she said, her limbs going limp at her side. "I get it."

"So, can we… just pretend this never happened?" Temperance's voice trembled with a desperation Cecilia had rarely witnessed. It twisted something inside her—an uneasy mix of guilt and gratification. She hated herself for the flicker of warmth that came from knowing she did truly matter to her. She found herself disgusting. "Let's just head back to our own hotel room? I just—I can't handle a party tonight."

Yeah.

Yeah, Cecilia could see herself accepting this. An apology, a smile, a hug, and an 'I love you' whispered in Temperance's ear; it would be easy, too. She might even be forgiven for her outburst toward her friends given a few days despite not deserving that at all. Things would eventually go back to normal, and everything would be fixed.

Everything except for her.

"I'm sorry." Cecilia noticed the shattering of a face—like porcelain under pressure. "I can't."

The words were barely out of the Unovan's mouth when Temperance followed up with a "why?!"

Why?

Because she would never be able to shake the feeling of an impending betrayal. Grace had said the same thing, after all. That she didn't really like Maylene, that the Gym Leader had been but a friend, and then something more then a friend but less than a girlfriend, and then she was gone for a few weeks, and then they made out behind her back.

"I'll never trust you. It's not your fault, but I never will."

"Have I done anything to erode that trust?" Temperance asked, desperate to understand.

"No. It's not your fault," she repeated. "I'm just… not right. I'm going to Unova soon, and every day, I'll wonder if you aren't doing things without my knowing. I'll start wanting to micromanage you, and then I'll start hating you. It won't work." Even if it hadn't been Amber, someone else would have inevitably used their long-distance relationship to confess to Temperance. Their relationship had just been doomed because her sense of trust was broken. "We can't date anymore."

"But we love each other. I've never loved someone as much as you!" she begged.

"We do."

"I—I'll—I changed my mind," she forced out, her breathing uneven as she struggled to form the words. "I'll… I'll do what you asked. I'll talk to Amber and say she can't stay—"

"You don't really want or mean that. You're a good person, Temperance."

Her shoulders sagged. "You start therapy soon. Maybe we can work something out—"

"I realize now that it's meaningless. I'd break up with you now either way. I'm sorry."

Tears in her eyes. "We're so good together."

Tears in hers, too. "We were."

Then, silence. Perhaps a hope from Temperance that Cecilia would change her mind, perhaps a hope from Cecilia that she'd find a way to make things work. Nothing came up.

"Can I go get my things from our hotel room?" Cecilia asked. "If you want, I can come another day—or I can send one of my Pokemon to get it—"

"Just get it now." She hid her eyes with a hand and whimpered. "Just—just get it now so it's over with."

Cecilia called for the elevator, waited what felt like an eternity, and then hopped on, but she was surprised to see Temperance get on, too. Not because she figured the coordinator would try to win her back somehow, but because of how awkward it was going to be—not that Cecilia cared much about such a notion. She just thought Temperance would.

"She ruined you," Temperance hissed through clenched teeth and paced around the elevator. "Grace Pastel broke you like a piece of frail wood over her knee, and now we both suffer for it while she goes around in costume like some cheap… some cheap jester."

"Yes."

She kicked the elevator wall and then moaned in pain. "Fuck. Fuck." She sobbed and stared up at the elevator lights. "How can you forgive her for this? There is not one ounce of regret in that piece of shit."

Cecilia allowed the urge to defend her first ex-girlfriend pass and watched the numbers tick by. Floor 18, 19, 20—it helped. "I was angry for a while. It felt good. Righteous. I raged against everyone and everything around me, which is why I treated you so badly at first." The Unovan stood utterly still. Every extremity felt frigid. "It makes you feel active. In control. It's a very potent illusion, I think." Even before Grace's infidelity, she'd found herself getting angry beyond control. Maylene's mere presence, Coronet in general, Justin's death and her thrashing that house… "I was scared all the time in my childhood, and up until very recently. All the time. So I overcompensate by getting angry and burning everything down. But I'm not angry right now." She finally moved, running a hand through her loose hair. "I don't know. Maybe I'm just tired."

Temperance blinked at her. "You can say whatever you want; I will never, ever forgive her for taking you away."

"And that is your right." 25th, 26th, 27th floor. "I hope you don't do anything rash."

"...you're too good to her."

"I've seen her down the deepest throes of depression. If I let you hurt her—" and by the Legendaries, Temperance could do so easily "—what does that do for me? Does it bring my sense of trust back? Obviously not. In fact, it probably damages it further in the long run. It doesn't even bring me… petty satisfaction. It's nothing. Just nothing. Smoke. I wasn't a good girlfriend, so she chewed me up and spit me out. It is what it is."

Ding. The elevator doors opened on the 38th floor, and they set out toward their room. Cecilia could tell Temperance walked slower than she could have. The Unovan humored her.

"People will talk," she mumbled, "about the breakup. It'll tarnish your reputation, even if I put out a statement that makes you look good. I mean, I will."

Of course, it would. Two breakups so close to each other? Not only had Grace's rather toxic stans been a sight for sore eyes—already, they'd noticed that the friend group had split completely in Grace's favor; clearly this must have meant Cecilia was a demon who deserved nothing, so she was sure they'd rejoice—but Temperance's was older, more seasoned, and larger.

"Thank you." Cecilia dipped her head. "I appreciate it. I can't do anything about it regardless. No use crying over the inevitable. I'll keep a low profile."

"...are you sure there's really nothing I can do to salvage this?"

"Nothing."

"Damn it."

Their hotel room looked more somber than usual. Beyond clothes and her laptop, Cecilia didn't have much here. She didn't have much in general; nothing kept her tethered to this world. No more friends she could frequently see, with how busy Louis and Chase were these days, no more girlfriend, no more connections. Sometimes, Grace, when it was late at night and neither Grace nor she managed to fall asleep out of fear, her ex often talked about what it meant to be remembered, and what she could do for her name to echo generations beyond their death.

Beyond her Pokemon, Chase, and Louis, Cecilia figured she'd be forgotten in about a few years should she die. She'd be an afterthought in a few minds—remember that Unovan trainer who was in the Conference as a first year? Oh, what was her name again? That would be it. She had no roots planted anywhere, no place to call home, nothing that anchored her to this place. She might as well drift away in the wind as soon as her echo returned to Distortion.

Temperance lent her a bag she could pack all of her clothes in so she wouldn't have to make two trips, and honestly, she didn't feel like having to explain this all to Slowking before she settled inside the nearest Center—Arceus, would there even be room this late into the Conference? Would she have to camp out in the wilderness or sleep on some bench and wait to use the showers in the morning? Two heavy duffel bags in hand, she stood at the door of their room.

"So this is it, then? Nothing to be said to me—you'll just put your head down and pretend all of this is your fault?" Temperance demanded to know.

"It isn't fully—I acknowledge that."

"I—I hate that you're doing this. And—and Grace gets away with this scot-free."

"I think that if the opportunity came by, I'd want to talk to her one last time," Cecilia admitted. "For the last time in a while, at least."

She wanted to gently caress her cheek, to offer her a hug so overwhelming she would no longer be crying, but it would just make things hurt more for the both of them.

"If you start battling worse because of this, if you let this hamper you, I'll make sure you hear from me," Temperance threatened with her arms crossed.

"I'm afraid you've instilled a love for battling in me that is strong enough to withstand this. Even now I'm excited for my fight tomorrow—hopefully, my team cooperates."

"Good."

"And I want to take this opportunity to thank you for everything," Cecilia said. "I—I was lost and at my worst when I found you. I still kind of am, but at least I—at least I'm better. I think." Good enough to see beyond wanting to destroy anything mildly unpleasant, at least. "I honestly had no right to date you—"

Temperance's eyes moistened. "Stop…"

"It's true. I was awful to you in every sense of the word, and you put up with me until I changed. You're so kind, Temperance. Kind, driven, well-spoken, social, at the top of your field—you're everything I aspire to be. I was lucky to have you."

The coordinator rushed forward, wrapping Cecilia into a tight hug, who couldn't help it; she let her bags go and felt her back. It hurt. It hurt a thousand times. A self-inflicted splinter beneath her skin buried deep and bleeding her drop by drop. It was final. It was also soothing, and Cecilia finally got that undisturbed breath she longed for. The embrace felt like an eternity, but it was still too short.

"Thank you for everything," Cecilia said, grabbing her bags one last time. "Tell the others I'm sorry for lashing out at them. I said a lot of unsavory things that they didn't deserve." She turned to open the door but didn't move. She'd nearly forgotten. "Oh. And tell Amber happy birthday for me. I never did tell her."

"I will." A pause. "Think of me once in a while. Take care."

She left.



Lehmhart sang a sappy tune, his internal chords producing a melody that was akin to a melancholic piece on a violin—perfect for what she needed. The soft hum of his gears provided a rhythmic undertone, like a metronome with a mind of its own, occasionally skipping a beat. His fingers moved in perfect sync with the music.

Zolst had sprawled across the grass, his central head resting heavily on Cecilia's lap. His snores were enough to make a child stumble, though Slowking would have a lot worse to say about it. Speaking of, nearby, the psychic was nearly finished weaving invisible, opaque barriers around their makeshift camp, enclosing them in a bubble of quiet safety. If they had to sleep under the stars tonight, then they would do so in a sanctuary of their own making. Cecilia exhaled softly, her frustration still lingering from her earlier attempts to find shelter. Four Pokemon Centers, each one turning her away with the same apologetic explanation: no space. The rest of her team, meanwhile, was still at the nearest Center being treated after her latest battle. They'd discover her predicament soon enough, and she could only imagine the reactions.

These three had reacted with… more understanding than she'd have thought. Even the Hydreigon on her lap.

"I'm exhausted," she sighed. "I think I'll go to sleep right away. I have to wake up early if I want to catch a shower. Then I have clothes to iron for my outfit of the day tomorrow…" she'd never ironed before. Something to learn, she supposed. "Yeah."

I'll wake you, Slowking said. Good night, my lady.

Cecilia slid away from Zolst and hopped inside of a sleeping bag.

A hand and a dull claw gently scraped across her back.

Thank you to my Patreons - Spandaz, Alex Walters, ObsidianOlive, A Ferret, Oblige, Joe, Emilowish, Sean, Tim Schmidt, Dim, Violett T, Kail H, dragonslaver, Jon, RosaC, TsukiNoNeko, NPM, Jim A, Spicyice101, Vesperal, Addmolition exe, Frogsamurai, Alex F, Kiri, Rhuodric, Nord, Filthymacgyver, Grey J, creativityfails, Spartanstoryteller, Peter D, Bum, Zaire M, Plasmatique, Lodris, Chester, AnotherUser, BeautifulBusinessBoi, Papito12495, KeMon C, Geo, Pedro B, Rat, LR Brantley, ZZStrider, Sharkerxjak, Quakdoktor, nothingtoseehere, Mystic Corn, Paul S, coolblue, Ole W, Daniel J, Cosimo, Nick S, Pharros, Michael J, Jan, ChairmanK-, William F, Zhijia, Andy S, HeyMrJack, NineXO, Exceedes, Gustavo S, Serina T, lepton, sqw4l, Micah T, L'iien, Kisekibigdumb, Nikolai M, David G, endgame13, JK, Ian R, Rain, Jason H, Scandalion, ACertainName, Cosimo Yap, menirx, Pierre-Luc J., Alex A., Bridie, Christopher M
 
Chapter 344
Togekiss/Princess (Hustle) - Pound, Sweet Kiss, Growl, Headbutt, Fairy Wind, Ancient Power, Extrasensory, Thunder Wave, Air Cutter, Wish, Psychic, Shadow Ball, Dazzling Gleam, Moonblast, Charge Beam, Air Slash, Mystical Fire, Tri-Attack, Nasty Plot, Defog

Jellicent/Buddy (Water Absorb) - Bubblebeam, Night Shade, Absorb, Water Sport, Water Pulse, Hex, Poison Sting, Mist, Acid Armor, Shadow Ball, Recover, Brine, Whirlpool, Hydro Pump, Water Spout, Acid, Will-O-Wisp, Ice Beam, Taunt, Scald, Boil, Freeze, Protect, Ice Blade, Rain Dance, Extrasensory

Electivire/Honey (Motor Drive) - Thundershock, Swift, Elemental Swift, Thunder Punch, Charge, Leer, Ice Punch, Thunderbolt, Discharge, Fire Punch, Protect, Cross Chop, Thunder, Low-Kick, Screech, Radiant Leap, Static Shield, Bulldoze, Hammer Arm, Rain Dance, Lightning Bolt

Tangrowth/Angel (Chlorophyll) - Vine Whip, Absorb, Mega Drain, Stun Spore, Bind, Poison Powder, Leech Seed, Ancient Power, Power Whip, Knock Off, Sunny Day, Giga Drain, Sleep Powder, Solar Beam, Solar Blade, Brick Break, Ingrain, Bulldoze

Tyranitar/Sweetheart (Sand Stream) - Leer, Tackle, Horn Attack, Rock Throw, Payback, Stomping Tantrum, Smack Down, Bite, Rock Slide, Crunch, Sandstorm, Iron Defense, Dragon Pulse, Iron Head, Earthbreaker, Aerial Ace, Stone Edge, Dark Pulse, Rock Polish, Surf, Earthquake, Ice Fang, Flamethrower

Turtonator/Sunshine (Shell Armor) - Smog, Ember, Smokescreen, Incinerate, Iron Defense, Flamethrower, Shell Trap, Dragon Pulse, Bulldoze, Scorching Sands, Rock Tomb, Body Slam, Flash Cannon, Solar Beam, Rapid Spin, Scale Shot, Iron Tail, Focus Blast, Sunny Day, Fire Pillar, Flame Charge, Heat Crash, Fire Blast, Shell Smash

Claydol/Cassianus (Levitate) - Mud Slap, Rock Tomb, Rapid Spin, Harden, Confusion, Psychic, Barrier, Imprison, Wide Guard, Light Screen, Reflect, Ancient Power, Teleport, Earth Power, Sandstorm, Scorching Sands

Meltan/Mimi (Magnet Pull) - Harden, Acid Armor, Tail Whip / Not a battler

CHAPTER 344

"Oh shit. Did you hear?" Rare were the times these days when Emilia looked shaken to such an extent—at least with me. Wide-eyed, she stared right at me with an iron grip on her phone. "Shit, shit, shit."

I glanced at her for a moment, finding it difficult to rip my attention away from studying Marley's battles. She was a real headache to plan around for given that her Pokemon could easily run circles around mine save for Honey, who I hadn't used all day specifically for this occasion. There was also my costume to adjust and plan for—since we were friends, I was going to wear a special one for our battle and not just go with the multiple I'd been repeating en masse. Emilia called my name again, and I spun toward her on my chair, sinking deeper into it as if I were melting. The Kalosian Knight idea had gone over well, even if it was delayed due to costume issues until Melody finally got it delivered to me. The accent was… a work in progress that Poketch stopped me from doing because it'd be offensive. A brand risk, they'd called it.

"When I took refuge in your room, it was to really get away from all the noise." If I'd stuck with Maylene during study time, I never would have been able to focus and I would have been trying to hang out with her within twenty minutes—plus, she had work to do for the opening of the knockout stage; Denzel was streaming, most of the time with some people I didn't know online; Pauline had just been here, but had gone to buy us lunch while I holed up in this Pokemon Center. "If I lose this next battle, I'm screwed. I won't get to fight anymore."

I'd gotten enough pressure from Poketch telling me that it would be really great if I got to the knockout stages given that this was when the majority of TV and internet viewers started tuning in to understand not to screw around and apply myself meticulously. So far, I'd basically been living a dream, fluttering my wings to carry myself from one fight to the next, caring more about the hilarity and adrenaline of a battle and about what was learned than the results themselves.

If it were up to me, that would still have been the case. I wasn't nervous; I just knew that a lot of people counted on me to make them a crap ton of money.

Only the top six would be allowed to advance within our group, and both Marley and I were jockeying for that position, somehow having exactly the exact same win-to-loss ratio. In these final days of the group stages, there was no room for error. That did not mean fun was out of the picture; it was just that every single angle had to be considered. Honey would be instrumental in the battle, but Marley was smart, and she knew this. What measures would she take to counter him, did she have Pokemon unavailable to fight, did—

"I think it'd be better to tell you instead of you finding out."

counter him? Crobat's going to be a factor for certain, but who are going to be the other two? Arcanine? Electrode? Having to consider which of my own Pokemon to bring in factoring on my opponent's hadn't been something I'd been too experienced with before this month. Only Gym Battles had filled a similar niche—

"Cecilia and Temperance broke up… a few days ago," Emilia said all of a sudden, "It was announced today on her socials—not that I look at them often or anything. Haha…"

I snatched her phone from her hands faster than she could react. The statement Temperance put out was short, to the point, and eerily similar to mine. Hauntingly so, in fact. There was an obviously hidden facet that people would be able to glean: there was more behind the breakup than an 'amicable split' as was described. I read it. Then I read it again, and again, desperate to decipher these platitudes, to read in-between the lines to understand what happened because—

Because despite it not making any sense, I still felt involved in Cecilia's life. I had hurt her so terribly in a way I possibly could not fully understand despite knowing how awful my actions had been, so hearing that she'd moved on to someone else… it hurt me at first when there was still enough fuel for jealousy within me, but now, I was just happy for her. Had been happy for her.

My heart felt cold. Charred sticks and spent coal, smoke, and ash. The afternoon sun shone brightly through the living room's curtains, casting long, jagged shadows across the floor and pooling like ink in the corners. There was not one cloud in the sky. The light carried with it a weight that felt nearly suffocating, like hands covering the room, spreading until they'd choke the life out of everything they touched.

You flew too close to the sun.

Emilia let out a long sigh. "I want to say I told her being single was better but… it'd be in bad faith; I'm obviously biased." She slowly outstretched her hand, expecting her phone back. I moved my arm—I tried moving my arm. It was heavy; the device felt like one of Maylene's heaviest dumbbells. "Grace? Are you—"

"I'm okay," I forced out. "Well, no. Not really, but I'll deal."

"You look really pale."

I gulped and grimaced. "I'm just…" this time, it truly felt as if I were melting in Emilia's chair. "It had been a while. I thought they were going to go strong—I thought she'd be able to be happy. And if she can't do that, well, I—I—"

Did I deserve—

There was a soft prickle on my wrist, followed by one of Mimi's soothing vibrations. Reflexively, my hand found itself touching and feeling at the warm metal. How the tremors spread through the tip of my fingers, down the skin and bone, and then reached up to my shoulder. The rhythm was soothing.

"I'll be fine," I exhaled. I'd nearly been about to call Maylene for help—oh, I had to text her about the break-up, too. We were involved in Cecilia's troubles, the two of us, whether we liked it or not. My legs pushed me back toward my laptop, where a video of Marley's Crobat in action was paused. Poison was just about to gush out of the flying type's wings, as if had with each flap of his massive wingspan. "Right now, I need to focus on this." The words rang hollow. I glanced at my phone next to the laptop. "Right after I text my girlfriend."

Surprisingly—or many might say unsurprisingly, Maylene had texted me about the news two minutes ago, asking if I needed to see her. The first urge that flared up within every nerve, every synapse, was to fire off a quick 'no,' using her work as an excuse to shield myself away from the world and to pretend it'd be a good exercise in independence. Urges were just that: urges, and Candice's words echoed in my head. It was fine to depend on her, just as it was fine for her to rely on me.

And by the way she texted, I could tell she wanted to see me too. There were no grammatical mistakes or shortenings. I told her we could meet when she was free in about an hour.

"Can you close the blackout curtains and turn on the lights?" I asked. "The room feels too bright."

"Too bright?" Emi looked around. "I mean, I don't see it, but sure." She moved to close the window, looked through it for a moment, and then drew the curtains together. "Are you certain you can deal?"

"I gotta, anyway. Not like I can go and talk to her about it," I said. Legendaries, I wished I could so dearly—a heart-to-heart, this time, and not a shouting match. "I gave away that privilege a long time ago, and I shouldn't have spoken to her in that item shop." My stomach rumbled, and I rubbed a hand over it to soothe the ache. "Where's Pauline? I'm so hungry."

Everything felt mildly uncomfortable. The weight of my hair brushing against my neck, the hollow sound of my nails tapping the keyboard, even the rhythm of my own blinking—it all grated on me. And the lights. Those relentless, artificial lights. They burned too bright, sharp enough to scorch the edges of my skin and dig deep, as if they could settle beneath the surface and fester. The glare bounced off my laptop screen, piercing straight into my eyes, and I couldn't shake the desperate urge to crawl under a bed and never come out.

I changed my mind and asked for Emilia to open the curtains again. The sun was indifference. A giant ball of plasma incredibly far away that skewered the world with light not out of malice or purpose but simply because that was its nature. The bulbs on the ceiling felt… too personal. A magnifying glass on my person meant to look at my sins.

Fortunately, Pauline returned with the food not long after, offering an apologetic smile as she set the bags down. "Sorry for the wait," she said, brushing a stray strand of red hair behind her ear. "There were a fuck ton of people out there. You'd think they'd get bored after spending so many days on here." She'd picked up a few neatly packaged meals, the kind that came with utensils tucked in the wrapping, and the faint aroma of roasted spices and something fried filled the room almost instantly.

She took the news of Cecilia and Temperance breaking up…

Not mockingly. That would be wrong of me to say, but she did not feel bad about either, and I could swear I heard her mutter 'told you so' under her breath. It did not do much to assuage my worries—in fact, it mildly frustrated me, but I stayed silent and ate my food. Crispy breaded chicken with steaming white rice nearly smothered in some kind of sauce. Neither Pauline nor Emilia said much about the break-up other than a few theories about what could have happened, but it was clear that they didn't want to speak on this topic with me in the room.

The meeting with Maylene was soon approaching, so I gave them what they wanted and left the Pokemon Center, forgoing my armor, plastic sword, and helmet to go out in normal clothes. The last thing I wanted right now was to attract any attention. Usually, when I walked around the Lily in costume, people couldn't help but look at me. Some pointed and laughed, some just glanced, some asked for pictures, but they looked. I was radiant, giving light and shine of my own.

I was in no mood for that this afternoon.
I considered myself decent with people. Not great, but decent. That was why I expected Temperance to be absolutely furious at me from our previous interaction at that Kalosian restaurant—or the lack of it. Maylene believed it to be a coincidence, but there was no way it wasn't linked in some way. Just no way. That could only mean that she was a woman of action and that an attack would be coming any time now—figuratively speaking. I deserved it. Of course, I deserved it. But I still couldn't help to theorize. It wouldn't be a reveal that I was a cheater, given that this would hurt Cecilia as well, but…

Gah. No use catastrophizing about something out of my control, even if that was easier said than done.

We could have met anywhere but opted for the Gym House away from the crowds and prying eyes. I kept Buddy out during the half-jog there, wrapped tightly around my skin more for comfort than for protection at this point. The Jellicent was soft and had made himself warm like a blanket. Every so often, his tendrils shifted, anchoring lightly against my shoulders or waist as if to remind me he was still there. The sensation used to be strange, somewhere between a hug and a second skin, but it was welcome. Really, it felt as if he were doing half of the walking, keeping me from tripping while running uphill or pushing me forward when I hesitated.

Maylene was already waiting at the gate beyond the narrow road leading to the property, cross-armed and with a frown strewn across her pretty face. Her hair looked like it had been ruffled recently, probably by Candice or Roark looking to cheer her up. Just seeing her made me feel ten times lighter; she could purge the tar around my heart and fuel it for what felt like a thousand years to come.

Buddy slipped through my sleeve the moment my hands motioned to hug her. "Maymay," I said with a satisfied sigh. I felt so safe in her arms. "I—things feel like—my demons are finally catching up to me, and it's making me feel awful because this—this feels like I'm trying to make it about me and—"

She gently grabbed my head and placed her forehead against mine. Her pink eyes could see right through me. "I get it. I feel the same way." I could tell she was trying to keep her speech pattern steady to reassure me, but it ended up sounding mildly unnatural. Either way, it somehow worked. "Wait. Your costume…?"

"Left it at Emi's," I mumbled. "Didn't feel like getting people to look at me today."

"Oh…" her voice trailed off, fizzling off into the wind. She looked behind me, making sure I hadn't been trailed by some rabid gossiper. If I had, Buddy would have warned me. Maybe scared them off too. "Wanna head inside, or…?"

"Sure."

The tone I took reassured her for an unknown reason, but I could tell it did. Maybe it was the fact that I could still answer questions with a minimal amount of aplomb, or maybe it was something else, but Maylene gave me one of her reassuring smiles and held my hand until we were through the garden, patio, and inside the house. I shook my shoes off at the sliding glass door leading up to the living room. Buddy remained outside, vowing to chase away any wannabe paparazzi.

"The others are still out—I came here as fast I could and they told me they'd take over my work." Good. We were alone, away from so many eyes. Maylene trudged through the kitchen, opened the fridge, and leaned down to look inside. "Want anything to drink? Nia bought, uh, grape juice earlier. We were out."

I flopped head-first on the couches and groaned. "I feel physically unwell," I spoke into the seat with a muffled, whiny voice. "I don't even know how I'm going to battle today—and I still have Temperance to worry about, and I'm gonna have to deal with people being weird about it online and out on the street—I shouldn't even worry about that." What I was dealing with must have been so small compared to Cecilia's heartache. "I shouldn't even worry about anything. I'm making it about myself." A lack of concern was unrealistic, maybe I was making this a bigger deal than it was? "Plus, Pauline was being super weird about it. She's still hung up on their fight. It might cause tensions in the group—"

The couch sank slightly, and I felt Maylene's hand on my head. I allowed the silence to settle for a few moments, enjoying the safety her touch afforded me. Like a worm crawling through dirt, I crept toward the warmth of her skin and placed my head on her lap. As usual, she was wearing shorts; her skin was soft. I clung to it like a lifeline, wrapping my hands around her stomach and holding on for dear life.

"Why are things so hard?" I sighed.

Maylene's fingers traced the outside of my ear. "Wish I had an answer."

"Sorry. I know this is hard for you too, but I haven't even… asked." I turned to face her, still resting on her lap, but finally releasing her from my latch. She'd placed a glass of cold juice on the table.

As always when I caught her, tension spread across her legs, disappearing momentarily. "I'm—" she made a little choked sound, then released a tight breath. "Yeah. I was—thinking back when we were walking toward the restaurant." She laughed; it was a small and awkward chortle. "I feel so awful for what we've done that it's slowly been eating me inside…" she rubbed her forehead and sighed before looking off into the distance, her eyes searching for something far away—somewhere I'd never be able to see. "I keep telling myself that—you know, it'll pass eventually, but should it?"

"I knew there was something off about you back then."

Maylene scratched the back of her neck. "Yeah. You nearly caught me—it was kinda terrifying. I didn't want to say anything because I thought it was a little silly of me to want to make amends, especially when I'd just told you to back off."

"That's fair. Maybe we—"

"It's still a bad idea," Maylene meekly interrupted. "You want to right now because you feel like you caused this… and we don't even know if we did." She tried. Really tried to sound sure of herself, but to no avail; Maylene was an open book, and she spelled regret and ire at herself for actions past.

I rose slowly from her lap, placing my head against her shoulder. We were selfish, the two of us. We'd grasped onto the last threads of love, desperately holding ourselves up, but allowed Cecilia to fall in the process. "I'm here, you know?" I said, the words unyielding.

Her lips twitched into a smile. "I know." Her face went a little red up to the ears. "You, uh, doing better?"

Leaning forward, I grabbed the juice off the table, enjoying the cold condensation that had wrapped itself on the glass. "I feel like the last thing I want is to have so many eyes on me. I'm usually good at tuning out the crowd, but… I'm nervous."

"Are you still going to do your costume idea?" she asked.

I took a sip. "I don't know. I might message Melody and call it off. We can sell it as me wanting to be serious for such an important match—I only have a few hours to decide."

"Okay. Well!" Maylene clapped her hands. "You studying right now wouldn't do much—let's get your mind off of things and watch a movie or something. No phones."

"Sure! But why no phones…?"

"You'll browse Chatter and get angry at people."

I wanted to retort but came up empty. "You know what, fair enough."



Maylene waved her girlfriend farewell, wishing they could have spent more time together despite the fact that they were practically glued at the hip these days, but Grace had nearly forgotten she'd promised to spend some time with her parents before her match. The blonde was... relatively fine. Surprisingly so, even, having built up her mental resilience over the last few months, but she still wasn't going to go battle in costume. She watched her Jellicent slip under her clothes again as a second layer of skin, watched her fingers graze her Meltan around her wrist, watched until her head dipped below the hill, and then she turned back toward the house. Candice and Roark—who had come back while Grace and she had been hanging out—asked Maylene about her for a few minutes, but the Gym Leader didn't want to go too deep into Grace's troubles without her there. They knew the gist of it: the breakup had caused speculation to run amok online. Candice especially had made herself busy fighting random people online with her endless burner accounts.

She ran a trembling hand through her hair the moment she was back in their room. Such a stressful day. Grace had evidently forgotten to make the bed—again. The sheets were a tangled mess of navy and white, twisted up like a storm had passed through. A single pillow lay on the floor, half-covered by a discarded hoodie. From there, you could trace her laptop charger from the floor all the way to the plug under their small desk. It was still plugged in from this morning—darn. Hopefully, she wouldn't run out of battery—no, if she did, Denzel had a million cables to lend her. It was easy to tell that Grace had probably gotten tired of studying at her desk in the morning and had laid down on this pillow instead. On said desk was her ideas notebook and an empty glass of juice. She needed to drink more water.

Maylene hadn't realized she'd been smiling. "Dummy… what am I gonna do with you?" she lamented as she started cleaning up the room. Clothes returned to their drawers, the desk was cleared, the bed was made, and the window was opened to ventilate the room. "Now what?"

There was still a while until Grace's battle, and Maylene had endless options at her disposal. Hanging out with her fellow Gym Leaders or even some of Grace's friends to get to know them better, logging into the League's issues network to know if any department that ran the Conference needed help—the latest news she'd seen was from security having to detain some stupid kid who had tried stalking one of his idols after sending her creepy messages all Conference. There was always at least one such incident during this month, with so many personalities concentrated on a single, tiny island. Maylene's Pokemon were spread around the League with only Machamp being in her Pokeball, so there was also the option of spending some time with her.

The fighting type appeared with a flash of scarlet, easily towering over her trainer. She blinked for a few seconds, having been asleep to pass the time, then grinned and patted Maylene on the arm with two of her hands. The impact was enough to make Maylene take a half-step back, though she didn't lose her balance.

"Easy there, Machamp," she said with a laugh, rubbing her arm where the massive Fighting-type's enthusiasm had landed. "I might need that arm for a spar later."

The fighting type apologetically caressed her arm with a single, coarse finger and croaked, complaining about something Medicham did yesterday—some kind of prank involving cotton candy.

"I'll scold her for you later," Maylene said. "She always gets rowdy when we're out of the Gym!"

The Gym Leader never thought she'd be capable of saying this a mere six months ago, but she missed her work. Whenever she fell asleep, most of what she thought about had to do with her Gym—how to raise its efficiency in all departments, new tactics to use on challengers, new strategies to keep her trainers and Pokemon motivated. Maylene's eyes drifted toward the window, where the late afternoon sunlight filtered through the blinds. She stretched her arms over her head, feeling the slight ache in her muscles from the morning's workout. Summer was a well-needed break, but sitting idle didn't suit her; it never had.

Thinking about her Gym made her check on a few of her contacts in Veilstone. Half the reason was to pass the time, and the other half was to check up on what her father was doing. She'd half expected him to come here to embarrass and make things awkward for her as some sort of power move, but instead, Oscar had decided to stick in Veilstone to drum up support. Last she'd heard, he was working toward opening some kind of dojo—an unofficial 'Gym' in name only—where trainers would be able to battle him and get advice on how to raise their fighting types. This was legal, and fully within his rights. The practice was more common in Indigo, but Jubilife had a few unofficial Gyms. Maylene could have harried him with lawyers, but she wanted nothing to do with him and he would win the case eventually. She wasn't even sure she'd be able to delay the construction because she'd basically have no standing.

As innocent as he tried to frame this, it was fairly obvious to anyone with a brain that he was jockeying for influence within Veilstone. Maylene eventually wanted to get a mole within Oscar's circle, but for now…

For now, just checking in would do.



Like usual, the stadium was chock-full of spectators from every corner of the region, and Maylene figured they were even more excited than usual. Tie breakers like this were always electrifying to the public, especially when it was between two friends. The arena looked to be some sort of volcanic plateau with a dormant volcano at its center—though cracks sometimes formed and spewed hot air and flames through the gaps all throughout the battlefield. Knowing Grace, she would have lamented it not being lava, but even at levels this high, the League wanted no accidents. To her right was Candice, and to her right was Volkner, who had decided that he would rather go and watch this battle than to do any work like the rest of the Gym Leaders. Cynthia was nice about off-time during the summer, but everyone still wanted to help her. They knew she was struggling. That was why Nia wasn't here.

Maylene tried closing her eyes to feel Grace's aura, but there were far too many people here for her senses to reach that far. Maybe Lucario would have been able to, but hers just got overwhelmed. There were nowhere near this amount of people at Craig's Ceremony.

"She's going to get here when she gets here," Candice yelled in her ear. "No need to crane your neck like a Farigiraf!"

"I'll have you know my neck is normal-sized!" Maylene tried to answer, but she had to literally lean right next to Candice's ear for her to hear. Volkner looked miserable, cradling his head and possibly regretting his choice. Maylene would have teased him had he not looked like he was about to die.

She checked her phone—eleven minutes left until show time. Friends in Grace's group chat were sending last-minute good luck messages just in case she was looking at her phone, so Maylene opted to do the same. Knowing her, she was so focused that she wouldn't even be looking at her Poketch, though—

A tap on her shoulder. Maylene turned to look at Candice, who was still observing all around the stadium like a little kid. She thought it must have been a prank, but she noticed a paper note on her lap, neatly folded. With a frown, she opened it to read.

Meet me in restroom C close to that souvenir shop with the awful Garchomp plushies and the aloof Cynthia figurines alone. We have a lot to talk about. - Temperance.

Maylene read it again.

And again.

This couldn't be real. But it was. Maylene quickly scrunched the paper, shoved it into her pocket, and gripped the side of her chair until she remembered she might crush the armrests. What did she want—no, it was obvious what she wanted. Should Maylene even entertain her? Getting involved in this spelled trouble, but what if she spoke to Grace when she was out? What if she'd already spoken to Grace—no, there was no way. That made no sense; they separated right when she'd walked to the waiting room.

Her first worry was sound, however. Every time she blinked, nightmarish visions of Grace broken and sobbing at Temperance's feet flashed in her mind. It could be a trap of some kind, but…

Fine.

There was no way out of this.

"I'm going to the bathroom."

Maylene was too out of it to wait to see if Candice or Volkner had heard. She shimmied her way out of the bleachers, and down into the stadium's guts. Down here, where the halls were wide and empty save for the occasional straggler trying to rush to their seat, she could sense individuals. She followed Temperance's flame to the designated bathroom, having nearly caught up to her by the time they were there due to how fast she'd been walking. The door was closing when Maylene made it.

The Gym Leader slapped her cheeks to shake herself out of this haze. She needed to focus.

Maylene pushed the door open and entered the coordinator's lair.

She had felt Temperance, but it was only now that Maylene got a look at what she was wearing. All black, akin to a widow mourning her husband or wife at a funeral. Even her hair was as dark as the night sky. The fabric of her dress was smooth and satiny, draping her form with an elegance that seemed frankly out of place in the public restrooms—and even then, Maylene was the one who felt underdressed in her t-shirt and shorts. Everything was so quiet you could hear one of the faucets leaking against the sink accompanied by the occasional muffled cheer from the battlefield, audible even from this far. Maylene bit her lip, not knowing what to say. Wasn't it up to Temperance to speak given she had asked her here? The Gym Leader was starting to regret following her. Maybe she should leave; it wasn't as if Temperance could actually stop her. Yes, she'd gotten in over her head.

Enough of this!

"I'm leav—"

Temperance cut her off. "I considered whether to do this endlessly the last few days." Her inflection was a tired one, worn down by what could have been screaming, crying, or both. "Cece would probably hate that I'm doing this; she said not to talk or do anything to Grace—oh, poor, innocent Grace." Her tone dripped with irony as she glared at Maylene. "But she said nothing about you."

"I don't think this is a great idea—"

She interrupted her again, taking a step forward. "But you followed me here because you're curious, aren't you?" she hissed through her teeth, each word popping with frustration. Temperance paused, taking a breath that seemed to calm her. She nearly stumbled, leaning against one of the sinks, and muttered something under her breath. "Listen, Leader Maylene. I'm not going to… berate you. I'm going to try not to yell at you. I just tire of imagining the two of you going about your happy little lives as if nothing happened. As if you didn't ruin a girl's confidence, self-esteem, and trust because you couldn't be bothered to wait a few weeks before you kissed. You knew her. You knew her, went through hell together, she helped you with your Gym, and you stabbed her in the back."

Oh. Oh, she knew so much more than what Maylene thought she would have; the knowledge the coordinator brought to the table was enough to make her skin crawl. It was so shameful that she could not help but lower her head and stare at her feet. Temperance must have had the wrong idea about them from the time she'd seen them at the restaurant. "It's not a good thing we did," Maylene acknowledged. "I won't defend it. Grace was in a terrible state of mind, but—I could have helped her without going so far."

"Hm. I expected such sanctimonious behavior; none of it matters. I'm just here to tell you what your actions have caused because I know that you are… a 'decent' person," she wrinkled her nose, "in theory. You're free to leave, but—"

"I'll stay." Maylene clenched a fist, feet firm against the ground. She'd nearly slipped and panicked, but better she listen to this than Grace; the Gym Leader would tell her in a way her girlfriend could better digest as soon as her battle was over, win or lose. Grace Pastel was many things, but she even now after her improvements, she could still be fragile like glass. Maylene knew herself to be mentally strong enough to take this.

And she did not trust Temperance not to tell Grace anyway should she not get what she wanted here.

The coordinator scoffed. "Very well."

Then, she started to talk with eloquence Maylene had rarely seen. It was slow at first, a story of a girl who did not know how to interact with people because she had never learned, yet had caught her eye one night in Hearthome. As Maylene listened, she could hear the passion in Temperance's voice whenever she spoke of Cecilia—still affectionately using her nickname. But intertwined with that passion was a lingering grief, palpable in the way Temperance's breath hitched ever so slightly at the end of each sentence as if each one carried the weight of realizing she would never get that love from her ever again. Temperance spoke of cracks forming under the surface of their relationship; those cracks, she could not spot, because she too had never been serious about someone, and Cecilia did well to hide her pain in secret.

Maylene got the entire, summarized story until they broke up.

"I share some of the blame," Temperance said. "I did not know what was hiding below the hull, could not see the fractures forming until it was too late. I was too caught up in the surface—too enamored by the image of us and our apparent progress to realize that we'd begun to take in water." She once again leaned against the sinks for support with a tired look in her eyes. "But you," she exhaled until her lungs were empty. "You two damaged her in such insidious ways that she… she…" Temperance paused. "She looked like she'd just seen the end of the world when she finally understood."

Maylene sniffled. She'd teared up—not a surprise for her. She tried to speak, but did not know what to say. Her lips quivered when she opened her mouth and felt so alien that she nearly forgot how to move them. It was just as Grace thought, and just as Maylene had feared. She'd brought up that her father had never found someone else earlier today—more than a decade after the incident.

"I must admit." Temperance wiped a tear of her own with a finger. "Though it is fairly obvious, I came here for selfish reasons. Cecilia is so harsh on herself, but she wants to move on rather than get bogged down in the trenches here with us." The coordinator laughed tearfully and grabbed a paper towel from the dispenser to wipe the corner of her eyes. "She thinks I'm a good person, can you believe it? The fool." She turned to throw the tissue in the trash, slamming her foot down on the pedal. "I came here to see you weep. And maybe tomorrow, or in a few days, or in a few weeks, I'll regret it. But right now?" She trudged past Maylene but stopped when they were level. "It feels like there's a little justice in this world."

The bathroom door opened, and Temperance left amidst another round of cheers. Grace's battle had started already—how would she even tell her after it ended?

Fuck.

She needed a minute.

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Chapter 345
Togekiss/Princess (Hustle) - Pound, Sweet Kiss, Growl, Headbutt, Fairy Wind, Ancient Power, Extrasensory, Thunder Wave, Air Cutter, Wish, Psychic, Shadow Ball, Dazzling Gleam, Moonblast, Charge Beam, Air Slash, Mystical Fire, Tri-Attack, Nasty Plot, Defog

Jellicent/Buddy (Water Absorb) - Bubblebeam, Night Shade, Absorb, Water Sport, Water Pulse, Hex, Poison Sting, Mist, Acid Armor, Shadow Ball, Recover, Brine, Whirlpool, Hydro Pump, Water Spout, Acid, Will-O-Wisp, Ice Beam, Taunt, Scald, Boil, Freeze, Protect, Ice Blade, Rain Dance, Extrasensory

Electivire/Honey (Motor Drive) - Thundershock, Swift, Elemental Swift, Thunder Punch, Charge, Leer, Ice Punch, Thunderbolt, Discharge, Fire Punch, Protect, Cross Chop, Thunder, Low-Kick, Screech, Radiant Leap, Static Shield, Bulldoze, Hammer Arm, Rain Dance, Lightning Bolt

Tangrowth/Angel (Chlorophyll) - Vine Whip, Absorb, Mega Drain, Stun Spore, Bind, Poison Powder, Leech Seed, Ancient Power, Power Whip, Knock Off, Sunny Day, Giga Drain, Sleep Powder, Solar Beam, Solar Blade, Brick Break, Ingrain, Bulldoze

Tyranitar/Sweetheart (Sand Stream) - Leer, Tackle, Horn Attack, Rock Throw, Payback, Stomping Tantrum, Smack Down, Bite, Rock Slide, Crunch, Sandstorm, Iron Defense, Dragon Pulse, Iron Head, Earthbreaker, Aerial Ace, Stone Edge, Dark Pulse, Rock Polish, Surf, Earthquake, Ice Fang, Flamethrower

Turtonator/Sunshine (Shell Armor) - Smog, Ember, Smokescreen, Incinerate, Iron Defense, Flamethrower, Shell Trap, Dragon Pulse, Bulldoze, Scorching Sands, Rock Tomb, Body Slam, Flash Cannon, Solar Beam, Rapid Spin, Scale Shot, Iron Tail, Focus Blast, Sunny Day, Fire Pillar, Flame Charge, Heat Crash, Fire Blast, Shell Smash

Claydol/Cassianus (Levitate) - Mud Slap, Rock Tomb, Rapid Spin, Harden, Confusion, Psychic, Barrier, Imprison, Wide Guard, Light Screen, Reflect, Ancient Power, Teleport, Earth Power, Sandstorm, Scorching Sands

Meltan/Mimi (Magnet Pull) - Harden, Acid Armor, Tail Whip / Not a battler

A/N: Been a while; I'm kinda burned out so it took a long time to get this over with and I might be a little rusty. Sinnoh's almost over, so fuck it I'll manage to finish it without as large of a break. We ball.


CHAPTER 345

A person could look back on their past and wonder how they'd arrived at this moment, unable to grasp how they'd made it this far. Not just in the life-or-death crises—the narrow escapes, the chances seized to keep going—but in the quiet, ordinary things too. Even now, as the battle unfolded before my eyes, it felt distant and strange, like something that was never meant to be part of my person. A pillar of fire erupted from the volcanic grounds, weaved into a powerful jet of blue flames by Sunshine's will. It was loud, so loud the crowd was nearly inaudible behind the roar of the fire which was almost animalistic in nature. It bent at an angle toward the Electrode who blurred to the side with Agility. The fire singed the spherical Pokemon's flank, but he used his momentum down the slope, his body bursting with electric power rivaling Honey.

Good.

I called out, "Shell Tr—"

Sunshine already knew, but Marley and Electrode knew as well. The electric type reacted beyond what we could even dream of, sliding out of the explosion's way before the dragon had even managed to spin around. With a booming laugh, Electrode fired off another Thunderbolt toward the glowing shell to trigger the explosion, and Sunshine growled in frustration, turning more of the earth beneath him into molten slag.

We were not fast enough to catch them even with our 'flying' with Shell Trap trick, but Sunshine's defenses were so high that they were struggling to break through. The battle had turned into a battle of attrition that we were neither winning nor losing. As it stood, it was advantageous for the both of us to not use our switches this early in the fight and to allow the likely trade to take place. Eventually, the heat from Sunshine would allow us to triumph, or Electrode would defeat us with a thousand cuts, I would send out Honey to take him out, and then Marley would follow suit with one of her own teammates. On and on, and on and on. Most likely, she had registered in Pokemon incapable of taking out Sunshine on their own, otherwise she would have switched already—most likely Ninjask along with her Crobat.

There was no story behind it. It was a rigid arrangement of tactics and spacing and efficiency and strategy and giving and taking—and that was good. Even with the new style I had made my own, that still remained to a large extent, but always the backdrop of a larger tale. Never the focus, but always at the edge of thought. And maybe, maybe if a decision was incoherent with the story I attempted to weave but the best strategically available to me, then I would not take it.

Now?

I used to battle like this?

It wasn't… bad. I could still recall the exhilarating rush of adrenaline during close calls, the thrill when a hard-fought strategy finally paid off after countless twists and turns. But what once felt electrifying now felt ordinary. The excitement had dulled, leaving the world muted and colorless, as if all the magic in the art of battling had quietly slipped away. It was like—you tasted french fries from Arlyle's, and you couldn't go back to other worse fast food places no matter how hard you tried. There'd always be an inescapable blandness about it; they weren't as crisp, as warm, as well-salted.

And you tried to go back. Oh, Arceus, you tried.

But maybe I still had it. A pivot had presented itself, half luck, half stratagem. The large 'volcano' at the battlefield's center had slowly grown more and more unstable throughout the fight, spewing fire and ash and taking stray hits from both Pokemon. In the highest echelons of battling, the trainer took more of a backseat, having come up with a plan of action before the fight itself and trusting their partner to see them through.

But when opportunity presented itself and your Pokemon was too embroiled in the fight—or in this case, so angry he might as well have been blind beyond what Electrode was doing—it was a trainer's role to know which artery to insert the knife into to see your opponent bleed out.

"Rock Tomb—the volcano!" My voice cut through the battlefield, echoing across the mountain's slope. The very same slope we were aiming for.

The Turtonator's eyes widened, but he immediately understood. Fiery rock at the mountainside turned molten under his influence, and he turned the volcano from pale mimicry spewing flames to a malevolent throne ejecting flows of lava.

"Get back here!" Marley screamed. The subtle fray in her voice betrayed the panic she was trying to hide. It wasn't the same given that she would be alive at the end of this, but I had heard it in dozens of Galactic grunts and their Pokemon.

Electrode sparked with the brilliance of a star, thinning and thinning until he grew indistinguishable from pure electricity. Before the sides of the mountain collapsed into a mess of lava that would trap him on the other side of the field, the electric type made it past our trap in one piece. Burned, but alive. At least Sunshine was focusing now that Electrode's permanent grin had been wiped off. It was surprising, with how shy the electric type was outside of battle.

Damn it. I was rusty. I clenched a fist, ignoring the irritation in the back of my head. I glanced at Marley through the dissipating toxic gases and saw her struggle. She was fighting for her life: a spot at the top 256, and you could see it in her movements. Every order came with a certain trill in her voice that made it break, with movements wild and unrestrained. Meanwhile, I had to contend with irritation, not fun. So what was the point? Why was I battling? A good finish in the Conference no longer seemed appealing if every battle was going to be like this.

Suddenly—

The world buzzed and came alight with electricity. Balls of lightning glided into the skies, each one pulsing with a steady, synchronized glow. For a moment, the battlefield below was bathed in a strange, flickering light, as if the sky itself had been netted in electricity. The hum of charged air grew louder, a tension building in the space between earth and sky, until it felt like the entire world was holding its breath.

A trap of their own. I could tell she'd been holding onto this because she'd only be able to use it once; it was a finisher, the kind of move that would wipe out your own Pokemon's energy.

Then, all at once, the Electro Balls began to descend—not with chaos, but with precise, calculated intent. They rained down like falling stars, each one targeting its mark with ruthless accuracy, each hitting a singular spot in Sunshine's chest until he retreated into his shell, but even then, they kept hammering him until it was nearly broken and nigh unusable. It was not the strength of the attacks that would do us in, but their pinpoint precision. Like a drop of water digging into stone for a decade, it had punctured us.

Could I counter this—yes, of course I could. Flashes of brilliant ideas, threads nearly within reach that I had grown too lazy to grab onto. Unwilling to let himself be bested without a fight, Sunshine roared from within his shell, flames spilling from every opening, begging to burst at its seams. The jet pushed behind him; he traveled up the molten slope as fast as he could. The jet of fire surged behind him, propelling him up the molten slope with blistering speed. As he barreled forward, the ground trembled beneath his weight. Chunks of hardened lava cracked and shattered, flung into the air like volcanic shrapnel.

He could see his opponent again, and he struck. His shell brimmed with power—Shell Smash—he was quicker, stronger, more determined than ever, and he barrelled down toward Electrode with the heat of a small star at his side. A game of cat and mouse ensued, one I felt nearly absent in. He chased, and Electrode ran; he brought heat upon the electric type like a physical force, a hammer on a nail visible through the way the air vibrated, and Electrode summoned a Light Screen and Reflect to bear the relentless attacks at the cost of much of his speed.

Not enough of it, however, for even then, he was quicker than us. Splitting the field in two had allowed us to cut off the amount of space they had to play with in half, but Electrode still managed to chip us down.

I hadn't really felt a part of that.

The battle commentator buzzed on and on about the state of the fight—obvious statements for the people sitting at home in front of their television instead of for me, so I paid him no mind. Rolling my shoulders, I recalled Sunshine and moistened my lips. They'd rarely felt this dry.

"...job Electrode." Marley's voice came into focus. Her Pokemon grinned and sparkled with electricity even while tired. "Keep going! You've got this!" Quickly, she stared at me, dark blue eyes piercing with… wanting. "Grace, are you—okay?"

There were murmurs in the audience, the highs from the first bout having now abated. Thirty seconds to speak—less than that now. Her voice somewhat snapped me out of my autopilot. Already, Sunshine was back in his Pokeball; he would be a hassle when he was healed. It would take a week for me to hear the end of it.

"Yup." My words resonated in the microphone, which hopefully hid away the bitterness in my tone. "Just dandy."

What next? I could take a risk and go with Princess, hoping that Electrode was tired enough to take down, or play it safe with Honey and give her the tempo back right after Electrode fainted. He'd suffer from the heat, but with Rain Dance and general use of ice TE through Ice Punch…

"You seem out of it. Where's—you don't have a story?" she hesitantly asked. She usually wasn't one for attention like this. "Everything seems flat." I gave her a look, not knowing what to answer. "This isn't… what I really wanted."

I grabbed Honey's Pokeball. "Sorry, I guess." I had too much on my mind for this. My focus was already fraying some now that there wasn't action right in front of me. Time was running out. "What did you want?"

"Haven't I shown you?"

I did not know if she'd answered like this because she had no time left, or because she truly meant it.

Honey materialized onto the field, his feet and fur catching fire until he flexed and frost returned cool temperatures to his surroundings. It wasn't perfect—but we'd practiced giving everyone their little ways of surviving one of Sunshine's rampages for the stories we'd come up with. Still, he suffered under the remaining heat and summoned a Rain Dance whose drops turned to steam before they could even touch the ground, blanketing the battlefield in a dense fog and hiding Marley away.

The fight began in earnest with Honey blurring across the field until he disappeared in a fog and all I could see was a clash of yellow and blue electricity. It coiled around the vapor like living serpents, crackling and hissing as they fought for dominance in the thick, damp air. The fog pulsed with each surge of power, flashing bright enough to momentarily carve out silhouettes within the haze.

Through her actions—those of an eager girl in the most exciting, high-stakes battle of her life—she'd spoken to me. This was life and death for her, given that we were both on a knife's edge. I had never considered her a rival, but she had, hadn't she? From the day that we had met, she had opted to hide her tactics away from me.

Ah.

She'd be disappointed if she won like this. And maybe I would be, too. A battle without meaning, made up or otherwise, was no battle at all.

The clash between Electivire and Electrode was short-lived as expected, with my electric type besting hers in around twenty seconds. The electricity slowly subsided, and everything went quiet for a moment after the referee announced that Electrode had fainted.

"I don't know what happened, but Grace, I think you inhibit yourself too much." Her words cut me deep, even if I couldn't see her. "I know you want to let loose. So let loose and do what you want to do. The world isn't holding you hostage." A pause. "You're better than this."

"You don't…" understand, I wanted to say, but it wasn't that complicated, was it?

Something bad had happened to Cecilia, and it was most likely my fault, so I just couldn't help but self-sabotage. Self-sabotage. It was at this moment that I had just realized I'd wanted to lose as some sort of punishment for myself, some sort of way to balance the world. You put it in words so strikingly straightforward, and it sounded so silly.

The world was complicated, but sometimes it was simple. An opponent faced me, and I needed to beat her until she was incapable of fighting back. I gripped my wrist, feeling at Mimi, and took a deep breath.

Chains, broken—no, there were never any in the first place. I just imagined them to be. "Let's do this, then," I declared right as a flash of red appeared in the vapor.

I recognized that screech, high-pitched and ragged, like frantic chittering undulating across the battlefield. Crobat might not have been Marley's starter, but she had turned her into one of her most vicious fighters. Instead of clearing the mist, the bat sank into its depths and grew so quiet she might as well have not been there. Electric energy sparked around Honey, keeping him protected from attacks up close, but Crobat's true threat lay in her poison and her attacks at a distance. Their hit-and-run tactics had the potential to destroy us.

And then, I heard it. The sizzling of poison melting through fur and skin, pained groans, and flashes of electricity exploding outward in Discharges large enough to cover nearly half of the battlefield.

There was a story to seize, to grip within my palm without letting go even for a second. Not one of a trainer tired and who had lost her flame—that wasn't what this was, and I would be retreading the same grounds I had sworn would now be unneeded. No, there was something else which was far more obvious. A trainer who unbeknownst to her had met her match, a final clash of rivals where to err meant the unraveling of a year of work and the bitter taste of defeat. I had beaten her easily over and over and hadn't taken her seriously until now, when the realization that I might lose had finally sunk in. Added weight.

"Honey!" I bellowed, cupping my mouth with my hands. Color returned to the world. "Clear the fog!"

Two of his fists shone brightly with Hammer Arm, and he clapped his hands together—the fog shuddered under the pressure, twisting and peeling back in ragged sheets as the nascent shockwave tore through it. Honey was in quite a sorry state, burned by acid, his skin punctured with holes that crippled him in all the ways that mattered. He had obviously been poisoned and was now on a timer.

I pointed toward my rival. "I guess you've made it here for a reason. Maybe I'll have to take you seriously after all!" I boasted with a haughty grin. "Let's bring the fight to them! Railgun!"

Though the shockwave had cleared much of the fog, it had also shattered the earth into many pieces—rocks Honey gathered around himself with electric currents like spiderwebs. They clung to his two fists, turning into larger and larger spheres and building up into what we needed, but Crobat was not idle. In between Air Slashes and torrents of poison she brought forth with each flap of her wings, Marley had another trick up her sleeve. A shrill screech tore through the clearing mist, sharper than before, and suddenly Crobat split into dozens of flickering afterimages, darting through the air like a swarm of shadows.

With some luck, it wouldn't matter. Honey's arm bulged, vibrated with a high-pitched hum and shone once more with an electrified Hammer Arm until his entire limb was alight. Then, with a thunderous crack, Honey thrust his arm forward and the rocks flew off like shrapnel. Each fragment was the size of a pebble, but fast enough to puncture metal. The rocks shot through the air in a blinding volley, propelled by electromagnetic force, and left streaks of light in their wake. The electrified projectiles dissolved Crobat's clones in a single hit, but none of them got to the real—

"Behind—"

"Leech Life!" Marley laughed.

The real Crobat. She'd disappeared somehow and snuck up behind Honey, something they'd done before in the videos—some kind of U-Turn trick that tricked the human brain by overwhelming it—but to reposition, not to get up close. Honey flashed with Discharge, then built it up into a Thunderbolt and then a Thunder, but Crobat's sharp teeth were locked tightly onto his neck, no doubt sucking up his energy and injecting poison at the same time. You're not going to outlast us, I thought as sweat dripped off my cheek, but then I realized their Toxic was going to be the great equalizer.

Crobat fell apart first, her remaining clones disappearing and the poison type collapsing onto the volcanic grounds, but Marley made use of her thirty seconds and Honey followed on the twenty-third. Effectively, it was a draw, because even though she'd have to release her last Pokemon first, Princess was already locked in and I wouldn't be able to adjust my choice. It was all or nothing.

Marley's final Pokémon emerged with a constant, grating buzz that set my teeth on edge, eerily reminiscent of Louis' Vespiquen, but sharper—if less all-encompassing and unnerving. It felt like it burrowed beneath the skin, a droning vibration that made the air itself seem thin and brittle. Red eyes gleamed in a darkness that wasn't even there. Already, Ninjask was a blur of motion smeared across the air, more of a splattering of beige, black, and red than a concrete shape. Aside from the occasional sonic boom, I had no way of knowing where Ninjask currently was. Her fastest Pokemon. She was putting it all on the line.

My teeth unclamped from the inside of my mouth. "I didn't know you'd grown into a risk-taker, Marley," I probed, hands immediately going for Princess. With Speed Boost, there was no way I'd let her gain any more time. "You've surely grown, but it won't be enough to defeat me!" My tone was corny, but it was fun again.

Out into the air came Princess, but she was attacked before she could even take stock of the situation. Slashes and cuts relentless and too fast to even see. Ninjask was so quick he might as well have been everywhere all at once; he was an omnipresent enemy that would be nigh impossible to beat conventionally. He was more like a force of nature than a singular opponent.

Princess exploded with a burning Dazzling Gleam to get Ninjask away from her, but he managed to slip away and only got slightly burned—or at least I thought he did, it was difficult to tell. Bloodied but far from beaten, Princess summoned burning, red-hot flames that she spun around herself like a ring that then stretched into a sphere.

"Barrier!" I commanded.

It was solid now. A bubble of fiery wrath wrapped around a psychic shield. It would cost us speed, but it wasn't like it mattered given that we were fighting Ninjask. The bug type buzzed in irritation, a sound that was everywhere all at once, and darkness blurred—Night Slash—it broke Princess' barrier at the cost of heavy burns, but his claws cut deep and left behind lingering consequences. Damn it, everyone knew that trick now. It wasn't perfect, but the time it took for Princess to make her barrier appear would now be longer, and in this fight, that was the difference between five hits and none.

The assault began anew, and again we were on the defensive. Ninjask was relentless, sticking to us like glue. The moment Princess left an opening in between a Dazzling Gleam or Mystical Fire or an omnidirectional Air Slash, he was always there—an impossible blur against the sky. Ninjask darted through the air with a speed that felt unreal like he wasn't flying but teleporting from one angle to the next. Princess tried to climb higher, banking hard to gain distance, but it was useless. He was already there, slashing at her flank with claws glowing dark as pitch. Night Slash again. Were they hoping to make all types of TE slower to use and slowly cripple us?

That was the thing with Marley's team. Offensively, they weren't that tough to deal with, Ninjask especially, but the damage added up. Attacks requiring concentration like Moonblast were impossible to use under such conditions. We'd fought battles where we hadn't been the fastest in the air, but rarely had she been dominated so.

"Cut!" I bellowed the order, feeling my voice rasping against my throat.

Nearly invisible, belief streaked through the air like razors against reality. Little tears she had willed into existence. My jaw unclenched for a moment when I caught a glimpse of a shape, a slowness that could have only meant Ninjask had gotten hit, but my expression fell when he—

I didn't think it possible to be so fast you could go through belief. Princess was fighting a force, not a thing with a tangible shape. There was no meat to cut into, and so her cuts frayed and allowed Ninjask to slip past. A shockwave burst right next to Princess, stunning her—Arceus, breaking the sound barrier right next to your opponent to confuse them; they did that?!—and a splattering of mud landed on the Togekiss' eyes, allowing for something deeper.

I recognized that particular gleam, and the weight added to Ninjask from Metal Claw slowed him some, but he was still so quick he cut across Princess' flank, dealing real damage.

Things couldn't keep going this way, or we would lose. Marley would snatch victory for the first time and ruin us. We were better than that and better than her. Princess didn't know where to aim or what to do besides attacks that hurt the world around her. We had harmed Ninjask throughout this, but we needed something decisive. A trap that would take them down in one fell swoop. Ninjask was fast, but he was frail. Able to be crumpled like a leaf underfoot.

My fist clenched with that thought, and my eyes focused on the remains of the volcano amidst cheers, gasps, and screams from the crowd. It was nearly all collapsed, but it was what remained under that interested me, the bits and pieces that hadn't been fully cooled by Rain Dance. Fire and hot air expunged by the occasional geyser turned to molten rock and toxic gasses. It was all there, but trapped, having suffused below the earth and building up with pressure.

My eyes darted back toward the sky—Princess, bloodied fur, bruised skin, and half blind, but not broken just yet. She had used everything in her power to stay alive, and she was still hanging on. The Togekiss was losing altitude due to Ninjask's constant harassment, and I assumed Marley's goal was to ground her permanently.

I snapped my fingers and whistled sharply. Cool, calm, and collected in the face of what looked to be certain defeat; that's my character. "Down," I ordered, waiting, waiting, waiting as she fell further and further toward the ground like a fallen angel. Ninjask followed closely behind, catching up in less than a second. My face remained neutral, waiting for our opportunity, waiting for Marley and Ninjask to overextend. That familiar gleam of Metal Claw hoping to finish us off—"Ancient Power! Blow up the earth!" the words spilled out of my mouth as fast as they could.

Turning on her back and remaining afloat, Princess responded instantly, her wings flaring out wide as a shimmer of energy pulsed through the air. The ground beneath us groaned, a low, guttural sound that seemed to vibrate through my bones. Marley's mouth gaped, the confidence in her stance faltering as the earth itself seemed to come alive under Princess' command. The battlefield cracked and split, jagged lines racing outward like veins, glowing faintly orange from the heat beneath. Princess burned, but she could still summon a barrier even if it took seconds—an eternity on the battlefield. Meanwhile, the defenseless Ninjask's entire body caught fire, leaving afterimages of himself burning as he followed Marley's orders to flee back into the sky.

Lava spewed up from the ground in great bursts, partly cooled but still functional. Princess widened it, casting a wide net that made Ninjask flee and gave her the space needed for this.

"Moonblast, gravity."

The sphere materialized in front of Princess, glowing with a soft, ethereal light that belied the sheer force simmering beneath its surface. A perfect replica of our dearest moon that gathered rocks—molten and solid—under its thrall. Ninjask darted through the air, wings a blur of desperate motion, but even speed couldn't outrun gravity.
The bug type burned to a crisp soon after.

It had been difficult to tell how much damage exactly Ninjask had taken due to how fast he'd been, but he was a sorry sight. Ignoring the obvious burns, he had plenty of cuts covering his body and residual glamour from Dazzling Gleams. Princess was worse for wear too, nearly incapable of even floating and covered in shallow wounds that must have hurt like hell. I hadn't even noticed the cheers rising up and up and up, along with the referee declaring my victory.

My legs were shaking. Top 256.

It didn't feel real, and thank the Legendaries, I was brimming with excitement—not that I had forgotten the Copperajah in the room. Cecilia was in pain, but… I could worry about her without destroying myself. I recalled Princess, letting my shoulders sag, and I wiped the sweat off my forehead. Mimi vibrated in glee around my wrist, and Mesprit giggled in the back of my head.

Rarely did trainers come and meet each other beside the field in the Conference outside of the knockout stages, but this fight was too important not to. Marley's eyes were red with tears when I got close to her. Heat and poison coiled beside us right behind the psychic barrier. Many words could have been said here: apologies for getting her out of the tournament, affirmations guaranteeing she would do better next year, or that it could have gone either way, but that wasn't what she wanted to hear or what I would have wanted to hear had I lost.

"Thanks for battling me. That was an awesome fight." I smiled at her. "And thanks for shaking me out of my… issues. I hope you had fun too."

It wasn't… a great story. I'd pulled at the nearest thread on the spot and used it as a springboard more than committing to a character for much of the battle, but it had pulled me out of my funk and served its purpose.

"Are you kidding?" Marley let out a sniffling laugh and held out her hands. "I'm still shaking, look." She could barely keep them still. "That—I felt alive. I don't think I've ever spoken that loud."

"Your voice has gone a little."

"It would have been embarrassing if I'd had to keep going with a raspy voice like this." She gently rubbed the front of her throat. "The lava—Legendaries, that completely went out of my mind after Rain Dance. I thought I had you afterward, and with your Turtonator gone, Ninjask had nothing to worry about."

Which explained why she had sacrificed her Crobat to set up for a one-on-one. Ninjask's biggest counters were large changes in temperature, and she'd taken care of that. Her strategy had nearly worked. It would have with a little more power behind her attacks.

"Your Ninjask sure is a piece of work," I sighed. I'd expected him to have much less stamina, but the last time he'd been used in a public fight had been her eighth Gym Badge. She'd kept his progress hidden this entire Conference.

"He's pushed his limits."

We didn't have much time left, but we promised each other we'd talk later and tell each other about how we'd strategized to beat each other.

We shared a hug before leaving.



Maylene had two kinds of anxiety. The one where it concerned herself—for example with her father or Gym—and it made her want to avoid even thinking about it, throw herself into work, and lash out at people before finally accepting help. Then, there was anxiety for others, which was a much more restrained affair. Fidgeting fingers, darting eyes, and the desperate need to say something despite clearly not wanting to. Finally, she leaned against the stadium hall's wall and took a deep breath.

"Temperance came to talk to me."

I froze for a second, but nodded, letting her explain what had happened. Temperance had spoken to her just to hurt in an attempt to heal her broken heart.

"It's gonna be okay," Maylene rambled in a whisper. "Just keep your head in the game for your tournament—didn't Melody call you? You should—"

"Maymay." I looked up at her. "I'm fine." And I was fine, in the literal sense of the word. The guilt was there because it had never left, but things were going to be okay just as she said. Maylene's eyes widened, but I continued before she could speak. "There are words we left unsaid, Cecilia and I. I think we need to have a heart-to-heart—if she wants to."

Enough avoidance, enough self-harm, enough of it all. I didn't think it would clear the air between us and we'd go back to being friends or even acquaintances—far from it, but there was so much more I wanted to say.

She leaned in and murmured, "a—are you sure that's a good idea?"

"I know her," I said. "I think she'd want it, but I'll let her take the first step."

Only a few days later, the group stages finished, and my first battle of the knock-out stages was revealed, along with the entire bracket.

Grace Pastel v Cecilia Obel

The world had a way of doing these things.

A heart-to-heart, I had wished for, a heart-to-heart, we would get.

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Chapter 346
Togekiss/Princess (Hustle) - Pound, Sweet Kiss, Growl, Headbutt, Fairy Wind, Ancient Power, Extrasensory, Thunder Wave, Air Cutter, Wish, Psychic, Shadow Ball, Dazzling Gleam, Moonblast, Charge Beam, Air Slash, Mystical Fire, Tri-Attack, Nasty Plot, Defog

Jellicent/Buddy (Water Absorb) - Bubblebeam, Night Shade, Absorb, Water Sport, Water Pulse, Hex, Poison Sting, Mist, Acid Armor, Shadow Ball, Recover, Brine, Whirlpool, Hydro Pump, Water Spout, Acid, Will-O-Wisp, Ice Beam, Taunt, Scald, Boil, Freeze, Protect, Ice Blade, Rain Dance, Extrasensory

Electivire/Honey (Motor Drive) - Thundershock, Swift, Elemental Swift, Thunder Punch, Charge, Leer, Ice Punch, Thunderbolt, Discharge, Fire Punch, Protect, Cross Chop, Thunder, Low-Kick, Screech, Radiant Leap, Static Shield, Bulldoze, Hammer Arm, Rain Dance, Lightning Bolt

Tangrowth/Angel (Chlorophyll) - Vine Whip, Absorb, Mega Drain, Stun Spore, Bind, Poison Powder, Leech Seed, Ancient Power, Power Whip, Knock Off, Sunny Day, Giga Drain, Sleep Powder, Solar Beam, Solar Blade, Brick Break, Ingrain, Bulldoze

Tyranitar/Sweetheart (Sand Stream) - Leer, Tackle, Horn Attack, Rock Throw, Payback, Stomping Tantrum, Smack Down, Bite, Rock Slide, Crunch, Sandstorm, Iron Defense, Dragon Pulse, Iron Head, Earthbreaker, Aerial Ace, Stone Edge, Dark Pulse, Rock Polish, Surf, Earthquake, Ice Fang, Flamethrower

Turtonator/Sunshine (Shell Armor) - Smog, Ember, Smokescreen, Incinerate, Iron Defense, Flamethrower, Shell Trap, Dragon Pulse, Bulldoze, Scorching Sands, Rock Tomb, Body Slam, Flash Cannon, Solar Beam, Rapid Spin, Scale Shot, Iron Tail, Focus Blast, Sunny Day, Fire Pillar, Flame Charge, Heat Crash, Fire Blast, Shell Smash

Claydol/Cassianus (Levitate) - Mud Slap, Rock Tomb, Rapid Spin, Harden, Confusion, Psychic, Barrier, Imprison, Wide Guard, Light Screen, Reflect, Ancient Power, Teleport, Earth Power, Sandstorm, Scorching Sands

Meltan/Mimi (Magnet Pull) - Harden, Acid Armor, Tail Whip / Not a battler

CHAPTER 346

Life was often stranger than fiction. Cecilia took the stairs of the Spire two at a time, nearly bounding toward Cynthia's office with her phone clutched in her hand, its battery hanging on by a thread. It was tough to charge things when you were homeless. There were plenty of outlets to use around, whether that be in Pokemon Centers or other public buildings, but they were nearly all occupied at all times of day. She had checked her side of the bracket once, twice, a dozen times to be sure she hadn't misread or imagined things. Then a dozen more, just to be certain. But the truth remained: in three days, she would be battling Grace Pastel.

The final step sent a faint tremor up Cecilia's leg, giving her pause. She never showed up to the Champion's office unannounced, but this time, she had no choice. This—all of this—had Cynthia's fingerprints all over it. She had been of great help this entire Conference, but Cecilia remembered now why the Champion had gotten to where she was. Cynthia Collins had a way of arranging events in ways that would benefit her.

But that was the question, wasn't it? Cecilia's fingertips felt cold as her hand reached for the door. How in the world did this benefit her? What wheels had she set in motion, and to what end? Her head went spinning with each answer that appeared on the tip of her tongue. Ratings from the potential drama—no, of course not. She wasn't that shallow. A way to mend things between them? No, Cynthia herself had said that it would take much that this single Conference to even do that. Special training of some kind? While Cynthia did not really have plans to directly train anyone who wasn't her unborn nephew, she did enjoy throwing people into the deep end of the pool and letting them either sink or suddenly muster the capacity to swim—

Cecilia jumped, hearing the Champion's voice through the door. "Well? Aren't you coming in?"

Taking a few deep breaths to settle down, the Unovan pushed the great wooden doors open and entered Cynthia's office. She was at her desk, as always, with her Togekiss with her, as always, and with a mountain of paperwork waiting for her, as always, but what was different today was the particular stone she had in her hand. Weighty, creased, and weathered by the centuries as it may have been, Cecilia recognized Spiritomb's keystone that usually rested deep inside Cynthia's pocket. The tall woman toyed with it with a nonchalance that felt alarmingly dangerous, turning it within her palm while she gave Cecilia a long look.

"You came to speak," Cynthia said before nudging her head toward one of her two chairs. "Come and sit."

Cecilia gulped, eyes stuck to the keystone, but she followed suit and—jumped when wisps of ghostly energy roiled around Cynthia's palm when she rasped the chair against the floor. Togekiss giggled, wings fluttering at his side.

"They don't like the noise," the Champion said.

"S—sorry." While Cecilia had seen it before, it had been in the midst of what had felt like an endless fight for life itself atop Coronet, so she'd been too emotionally exhausted to care. The teasing sight of a sliver of Spiritomb left her heart feeling like it was stuck in her throat, especially when the Unovan knew how… vulnerable she could be at the moment. Everything was still so raw.

Cynthia placed the pulsating keystone on her desk, tapped it twice with a finger, and all activity ceased within a few seconds. It did not all cease instantly, but was a lagging decision taken by the one hundred and eight souls within. For a while, Cecilia was caught up in the routine questions: how are you today, have you eaten, do you need me to procure you a room, how are you feeling, et cetera, but eventually, she put her foot down, literally and figuratively.

"You've seen the bracket of the knock-out stage, haven't you?" Cecilia asked in an accusatory manner. "I'm against… Grace."

"I've given it a look or two," Cynthia banally answered. She tapped a pen against her chin and leaned forward on her desk. "Stranger things have happened."

"Don't spew lies at me," she hissed in between her teeth.

"Craig Goodwill went up against Sarah Newman the first time he got out of groups in the midst of a personal falling out." That was the example Cecilia knew of, but Cynthia continued listing battles between friends, enemies, exes, and everything in between that had gone on throughout the years. "It happens."

"You say all of this," the Unovan noticed, "but you never explicitly denied not having anything to do with it."

There was a subtle shift in Cynthia's eyes, though Cecilia couldn't even come close to knowing what it meant. The blond woman, worn out by decades of rule and what it implied, stared Cecilia dead in the eye with none of the warmth she had gotten used to these past two weeks. It was not a killer's look, but it still took her so aback that it robbed her lungs of their air—or perhaps she had simply forgotten to breathe. The unpleasantness that followed was akin to the jarring sensation of plummeting through empty space, that brief, stomach-dropping lurch before waking from a nightmare. She almost expected Spiritomb to be acting up, but the ghost was still inactive, resting within their keystone.

"Are you a fatalist, Cecilia?"

The girl blinked for a few moments, not knowing what to say. "I—no?"

"You came up here multiple times in our meetings, telling me how you wished you could talk to Grace one more time." Like a blade back in its sheath, sentimentality returned to her gaze. "Now, obviously I have nothing to do with this matter, but I can tell you that this is not meant to force some reconciliation."

It was as Cecilia thought—there would be no advantage. Grace was already in her grasp through Maylene, and Cecilia wouldn't be of use there. Granted, the Unovan doubted everything was such a zero-sum game for Cynthia as Mira had once guessed.

"A battle is many things, Cecilia, but it can also be the purest form of conversation if you let it." She tapped the table four times, enunciating the last four words. "Speech through actions and through your dearest comrades," she placed a hand under Togekiss' chin and gently scratched, "equal footing impossible anywhere else. Whether it be a fight for sport or a fight for survival, there is no better or purer form of communication."

Yes, Cecilia thought, there's the madness in her.

"Furthermore," a pause, "it's what you wanted."

"Not like this."

Cynthia's lips quirked upward. "Look at you, already thinking destiny is set in stone." She sighed, and Cecilia knew it to be the beginning of a lesson. "To be a living creature is to have agency, and to have agency is to have the capacity to inflict change upon the world." She stood up and calmly walked toward her window, hands behind her back. Traces of sunlight danced across her face. "An individual may be told they cannot do something their entire life, that it would be all for naught, but they are not alive until they take their own destiny into their own hands and face the world with grit. Even if it brings failure, humiliation, or what have you, at least you're living." She slapped her palm with the back of her hand. "You have to act. You have to act on the world, or it consumes you."

Once, a girl had lamented in the rural north of Celestic Town, a backwater that barely anyone bothered with. How many times had she been told she couldn't do it? You can't be a trainer, you can't join the Circuit, you can't get a badge, you can't reach the Conference, you can't win, yet suddenly, within the year, she was Champion. She had seized the region by its throat despite the naysayers and had been ready to reshape it in her image.

Cecilia might not have expected the lesson, but she managed an answer. "I get what you're saying, but I've been given enough metaphors about life and death for a lifetime."

Cynthia grinned. "They do that a lot, don't they?" She walked back to her desk and raised an eyebrow at Togekiss having stolen her seat. She gave him a joking look, and he jumped off with an innocent hum. "But the point remains the same. This is a two-pronged lesson: one, you want something, and the opportunity's fallen into your lap, so get it. Two…" she grabbed Spiritomb's keystone again. "Better get everything off your chest before meeting your own ghost. What were your last few interactions with Grace like?"

Cecilia sighed. Hiding from her in this very building, awkwardness beyond relief in that item store, and then a shouting match in Canalave.

"Not good," Cynthia guessed. "It makes your job in a few weeks harder if you have nothing but painful memories to remember recently and the good is further away."

The Unovan slumped in her seat, convinced, but not ready.

"Here's the thing. I dislike people who believe events are set in stone. That the world is rigid and their fate is sealed and that nothing they do can change it." Ah. That must have been what that glare had meant when she'd asked if Cecilia was a fatalist. "You're acting as if you've already lost in all of the ways that matter."

"I'm not—"

"You are. That kind of thinking is a self-fulfilling prophecy." Cynthia leaned back in her chair and rested her head on a loose fist. Golden curls of messy hair got in Togekiss' face. "Sorry if I'm being harsh on you, I just want you to make use of this opportunity, because it is an opportunity, not just a risk."

Yes, it was a risk. A risk to be unmade.

But she was right. One could avoid Grace to heal without getting into a fit of anxiety every time she was mentioned. The thought of facing her was still a haunting one, but it was…

"There you go," Cynthia said. "Now you get it."

Cecilia felt her lips curving. "Yes. Yes, I do."



"...oring the drama, could be anyone's game. I mean, both of these trainers have radically changed their styles recently, seemingly to a lot of success. They've shown themselves capable of reaching the knock-out stages in their first year! Granted, there are more than them. Barry Lane, Lauren Goodwill…" Goalducc listed more names, some of them I hadn't heard about. "It's a shame the bombings cut so many first years' Circuits short! Before we go into details about their Pokemon and each of their capabilities, Denzel, what do you think about this battle?"

My best friend looked in his element without a shred of nervousness to his tall frame. "I mean again, right? Everyone keeps talking about the low odds of this matchup, but for the results, I think it really depends on who manages to snag a switch advantage early and who presses that into real material gains…" Denzel kept droning about what he thought the battle might look like in ways that were so rigid I could have wept. It annoyed me, so I decided I'd stop listening to the livestream for now and maybe get back to it later. I closed my laptop and stretched; the grass prickled the bottom of my legs as I observed my Pokemon do some light training in the distance. I had to remind Sweetheart that it would remain light every five minutes, or she always started going crazy and I was sure Cassianus didn't want to get pelted with Dark Pulses. Other than Honey, Princess, and Sunshine, they were all near the cliffs save for Mimi, who was napping on my laptop.

The news of the coming battle had me somewhat anxious, but calmer than I had any right to be. My mind wasn't racing about what I'd say or do, or how I'd perform, or if I even deserved to win. Instead, I had the jitters one would have before any important battle. Maylene and Emilia were more nervous than I was! It was difficult to believe that in two days we'd be fighting.

I'd thought about a pep talk with my team, but they already knew what was at stake, and this wasn't as important to them as this was to me. For Sunshine or Buddy, for example, this would just be another battle. The difference, however, was that they knew how much this mattered to me.

The day since the announcement had been spent studying Cecilia's new style and workshopping my own strategy with my family. I'd stayed away beforehand because it hadn't felt… proper to check up on how her battles had been doing. The only time I'd seen her enjoy herself as close to that much in a battle was during our first fight with Chase and Denzel in Hearthome. I was glad it had worked out for her and happier that Temperance had taught her so much in such a short amount of time. Outside of actual Pokemon training, I was confident I would have beaten Cecilia from two months ago with a decent performance. Today was a different story; there was a lot to worry about and keep track of now that her Pokemon were so versatile. Marley had offered to help me train, but other than general advice, I'd refused—not because I didn't want to win, but because no one else could interfere.

This was going to be our battle. There would be no meddling, no one influencing the decisions I took.

"I guess the break's done," I whispered to myself.

With renewed vigor, I pressed on, playing video after video, looking within every frame, every nook and cranny I could find. The more informed I was, the more I'd know how to approach this entire fight. I was not going to come in a silly costume—she was owed more than that—but I still needed to decide exactly what narrative to take. It was already taking shape within the back of my mind, and if—if I went with this, I just hoped it wouldn't come off as too pretentious.

To Cecilia, not the audience. I didn't give a crap about the audience.

Less than forty-eight hours remained until the battle. I'd better make good use of them.



And I did. Time with my friends was put to the wayside these past few days, and although I still made time for Maylene, it was less than I'd wanted to have. Sometimes I wished there were more than twenty-four hours in a day. There was a certain vibration in the air—a constantly beating drum hammering against my skin as the fated hour approached. I felt ready, or as ready as one could be considering the circumstances.

But that was only for the battle itself.

The knock-out stage functioned differently not only in its rules, but in every clash's importance. This was when the majority of the viewers would tune in outside of the Lily, when so many battles would stop happening simultaneously. With fewer battles to cover, the media could zero in on the most compelling clashes and launch interviews on a massive scale. I was no stranger to attention after my time with Poketch, but that didn't make it any less aggravating. They were pushing a narrative now—spinning our old relationship into drama to juice their ratings. Despite wanting to tell them to screw off, I was all smiles when what felt like the fiftieth microphone was shoved into my face on my way to the stadium.

"Ms. Pastel! Ms. Pastel!" a freckled, round-faced woman called out. "I'm Regina with the Hearthome Herald!" She looked a tad nervous. Her eyes didn't know where to look and her hand was shaking a little—was it because Maylene was with me? "Could you answer a few questions about the battle if you'd like?"

And to think that Craig would set up literal press conferences for these. I gave her a smile and nodded, gazing at the massive camera her colleague carried on his shoulder. He was tall too, assuring that he'd tower over the masses to get a good shot of whatever was needed. "Sure thing, but please keep it short. I wouldn't want to be late."

"Thank you! And of course!" she practically squealed. "Now, plenty of networks have asked you about how you feel and what you expect, but we'd like to know what you expect from this battle? Besides a simple victory, of course."

There was no way to delve deep into this question without unraveling all of our history, so I decided to keep the answer simple. "Battling is my passion—there really isn't anything else that makes me feel the way this sport does," I said. "So what I really want for today is for the both of us to come out of this satisfied no matter the result."

It was a bit of a cop-out, PR answer, but it was the honest truth. A win or a loss here was secondary—this was my truest of goals. A few more questions followed, the most notable of which was the reporter asking me what I thought of Hearthome and if I'd ever decide to spend more time there before my departure to Unova. She was probably looking to boost her city's reputation with my words, which was somewhat surreal, even after all of the fame.

"For our final question," the reporter said, "if you had one thing you wanted to tell your fans ahead of this pivotal moment, what would it be?"

I paused for a second, hand reaching at Mimi around my wrist. "I'd tell them that I'm happy they stuck around for so long, through thick and thin." My fist clenched. I was a murderer, violent, crazed, and eccentric, but they still remained. Despite us not interacting as much as we could have, I appreciated them. A legacy was what I wanted to leave behind. "And that I'm going to etch this battle into Conference history."

The reporter seemed to like that line—it would make a good headline, wouldn't it? The live feed was cut off soon afterward, and I finally allowed myself to relax, even if I still had an approachable look about me.

"Your opponent has been rather silent and is rather difficult to approach, so we appreciate your cooperation! If only she was like you…" Regina trailed off.

My smile twitched, but the moment I opened my mouth, I felt Maylene's hand gently grab mine. She'd been sidelined in a lot of these interviews, so I felt somewhat bad for her, but she'd decided to brave them anyway to support me for as long as possible before we had to go our separate ways. She'd be cheering me on as a spectator soon enough, but her presence was a blessing. Instead of making a scene wanting to say that neither Regina or any news network was owed anything, we moved on toward the towering stadium.

I didn't take any more interviews after that.

"You okay?" she asked in a low voice. The fact that she was still holding onto my hand with so many people around was a testament to how much she'd been worrying. "Your body feels tense."

There was an unsavory joke to be made here but now wasn't the time. "A little. This is important." I rolled my shoulders, trying to unloosen the metaphorical knots in them. "I just want to be standing on that platform already."

Maylene let out a soft chuckle. "At least you're eager." A pause. "I'm looking forward to it too, you know?"

"Hm?"

"To hear what you both have to say," she added.

The stadium loomed ahead, a monolith of steel and glass that seemed to swallow the sky. Its sleek, curved walls reflected the overcast light, casting distorted images of the crowds gathering below. Massive digital screens wrapped around the upper levels, flashing highlights of both Cecilia and my earlier group stage battles, and occasionally our faces, including my horrid trainer ID picture I took at the start of the year in Sandgem. Unburned, innocent, and clearly so, so nervous. Strangely enough, even if the option was available for a fee that was honestly paltry, I'd never wanted to change it. It felt like looking at a time capsule, the key to an easier time, which was the energy I would need to channel soon.

Stepping inside and getting through the maelstrom of people at the entrance, I met my friends in one of the halls leading to the bleachers. Everyone was here—even Louis had come around for the day, though from what I knew he'd stopped by to see Cecilia first. My parents too, even if they were a little separated from the group due to the age gap. Marley seemed to be talking to them a bunch, though. Lauren was off to the side with her headphones scrolling through her phone, most likely listening to music. Mira was chatting and catching up with Denzel, Pauline, and Emi—seeing her and Pauline talk amicably was a sight I would have thought impossible a few months ago.

They all had words to say, whether that be good luck, or quiet reassurances that were honestly quite welcome. Denzel clapped me on the shoulder with that familiar, easy grin, though there was something steadier behind it this time—an understanding of what this moment meant. Mira's enthusiasm was like a spark, practically vibrating with energy as she rattled off encouragements so fast they blended together. Lauren nodded in the distance with a discrete smile. Pauline offered a quick nod, sharp and confident, her eyes carrying a fire that said win, because I know you can, not out of a desire to see Cecilia crushed, but out of genuine support. My parents gave me a warm hug and both said they were proud of me. The support made my heart swell. Yes, this was my fight, but having people at your back was never unnoticed.

Cecilia didn't have all of this support. She had Louis and Chase—but I was sure something must have felt like it was missing.

Twenty minutes spent chatting, and it was time to go. Maylene cupped my cheek and whispered "go out there and have fun," in my ear, and I pecked her on the face quickly before running off.

Having all been built or renovated after the Final War, most of the League's stadiums had a similar inner layout despite minor differences like size or their outer layer. Where I was led by this League Trainer wasn't where I was accustomed to, but a shorter path that would lead to, according to them, a different waiting room. The halls quickly thinned, and soon enough it was just us two. The distant roar of the expectant crowd faded into a dull hum behind thick concrete walls. Each step echoed faintly against the sterile, polished floors—an empty rhythm that felt louder with every turn we took.

Then, a sliding door. Before entering, he fitted me with the usual lapel microphone.

"Now remember," he said, "you've got to walk out together."

"Huh?"

He opened the door to a spacious lounge filled with comfortable-looking couches, snacks, and drinks lining the counters. My eyes darted toward the only other individual in the room. Cecilia had come dressed quite simply. Her tunic was loose and a dark gray while her trousers were flexible, a dark charcoal with reinforced stitching along the knees and sides. Her dark boots were the most worn part of her attire almost in an artificial way—like how you could sometimes tell if someone had ripped their jeans on purpose or not. On her face was eyeliner with sharp, geometric shapes around the eyes—like winged tips that stretched farther than usual along with simple, bold golden eyeshadow.

Her white eyes widened a smidge when she looked at me. I was, after all, wearing what I'd had on the day we met—truly met. Floaroma. Baggy jeans and a wooly blue t-shirt the color of the sky. My hair tied in a ponytail from my run that very morning. Cecilia dipped her head, greeted me with a simple, smooth 'good morning', and grabbed a pack of cookies to munch on.

Barely given enough time to think, the League Trainer ushered me inside. My legs felt a little stiff, but I managed to sit down on to closest couch, remaining in silence as the seconds passed by and the League Trainer left. How had I missed this? When I'd watched the Conference in my childhood in the knock-out stages, the two trainers had always come out together, waving at the spectators for a bit before splitting up and walking toward their respective platforms. There was probably an email or message I'd gotten I hadn't paid attention to because of how engrossed I'd been in planning. Cecilia didn't seem surprised at all.

I silently gulped and started to slowly relax. The room had a strange physicality to it. It wasn't just tension, though that was there, thick and undeniable. Awkwardness, maybe, but something else lurked beneath it. Anticipation, perhaps. Whatever it was, it clung to the air like smoke—dense, lingering, something you could almost reach out and tear away. This wasn't like in the item store; there would be weight behind every word spoken before this fight.

It was she who broke the silence.

"How are the others?" Cecilia asked.

"Oh. They're doing good; they're very excited, obviously." I didn't stumble over my words. It was strangely normal. I briefly went over each member of our old group. It was awkward small talk, but it was something, even if I felt like this would be so much easier in a Pokemon battle. "Is Chase around?"

"He's finally taken a break from non-stop work and is somewhere in the stands. He complained about how much of a pain in the ass it was to navigate the island with so many people, but he managed."

"He does usually manage," I repeated with a few nods.

"It's a wonderful thing, to have his drive and spirit. I hope I channel some of that today." She crossed her legs. "Are you nervous?"

"Kinda. You?"

"Deathly so. I feel like my body's going to explode," she laughed softly. "But I'm looking forward to it."

I mirrored her smile. "So am I."

An alarm blared above, telling us that it was time to get going. We stood together side by side as a timer counted down above the door from thirty.

"Remember when you'd just come back from Lakhutia and we explored the island together?" Cecilia reminisced, stretching and cracking each finger.

I touched the Pokeballs at my hip. "Hmhm," I softly said. "We found a stadium much like this one, didn't we? I wish it was the same one."

"That's just like you."

"But I remember that promise," I whispered. "I always remember."

The doors swung open.

A wall of sound crashed over us—cheers roaring, relentless, and deafening.

We both smiled, raising our hands in unison to wave at the sea of faces beyond.

Yes.

I was ready.

Just let me get to the battle already!

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Chapter 347 - Turning Point VI New
Togekiss/Princess (Hustle) - Pound, Sweet Kiss, Growl, Headbutt, Fairy Wind, Ancient Power, Extrasensory, Thunder Wave, Air Cutter, Wish, Psychic, Shadow Ball, Dazzling Gleam, Moonblast, Charge Beam, Air Slash, Mystical Fire, Tri-Attack, Nasty Plot, Defog

Jellicent/Buddy (Water Absorb) - Bubblebeam, Night Shade, Absorb, Water Sport, Water Pulse, Hex, Poison Sting, Mist, Acid Armor, Shadow Ball, Recover, Brine, Whirlpool, Hydro Pump, Water Spout, Acid, Will-O-Wisp, Ice Beam, Taunt, Scald, Boil, Freeze, Protect, Ice Blade, Rain Dance, Extrasensory

Electivire/Honey (Motor Drive) - Thundershock, Swift, Elemental Swift, Thunder Punch, Charge, Leer, Ice Punch, Thunderbolt, Discharge, Fire Punch, Protect, Cross Chop, Thunder, Low-Kick, Screech, Radiant Leap, Static Shield, Bulldoze, Hammer Arm, Rain Dance, Lightning Bolt

Tangrowth/Angel (Chlorophyll) - Vine Whip, Absorb, Mega Drain, Stun Spore, Bind, Poison Powder, Leech Seed, Ancient Power, Power Whip, Knock Off, Sunny Day, Giga Drain, Sleep Powder, Solar Beam, Solar Blade, Brick Break, Ingrain, Bulldoze

Tyranitar/Sweetheart (Sand Stream) - Leer, Tackle, Horn Attack, Rock Throw, Payback, Stomping Tantrum, Smack Down, Bite, Rock Slide, Crunch, Sandstorm, Iron Defense, Dragon Pulse, Iron Head, Earthbreaker, Aerial Ace, Stone Edge, Dark Pulse, Rock Polish, Surf, Earthquake, Ice Fang, Flamethrower

Turtonator/Sunshine (Shell Armor) - Smog, Ember, Smokescreen, Incinerate, Iron Defense, Flamethrower, Shell Trap, Dragon Pulse, Bulldoze, Scorching Sands, Rock Tomb, Body Slam, Flash Cannon, Solar Beam, Rapid Spin, Scale Shot, Iron Tail, Focus Blast, Sunny Day, Fire Pillar, Flame Charge, Heat Crash, Fire Blast, Shell Smash

Claydol/Cassianus (Levitate) - Mud Slap, Rock Tomb, Rapid Spin, Harden, Confusion, Psychic, Barrier, Imprison, Wide Guard, Light Screen, Reflect, Ancient Power, Teleport, Earth Power, Sandstorm, Scorching Sands, Hyper Beam

Meltan/Mimi (Magnet Pull) - Harden, Acid Armor, Tail Whip / Not a battler

CHAPTER 347 - TURNING POINT VI

If one is to speak of promises—those curious arrangements of words and will that bind people across time—then one might speak of a promise made not long ago, in the fleeting span of months, between two girls. It was simple in its terms, but heavy in its weight: they would survive at all costs through trial and tribulation to face each other at the Conference. Yes, the promise heralded a fight, but it was not just about the battle; it was also something else. Something more. A pact that promised that they would live to see the summer.

Grace Pastel and Cecilia Obel saved the world, ironically nearly destroying themselves in the process. They emerged from the experience changed for better or for worse, and Team Galactic had been scattered like ash to the wind.

And yet, one battle remains. It waits not to decide the fate of the world, but to hopefully tie together all that has been unraveled. The two teenagers stare at each other as they wait for it to commence, eager for the fight. The arena itself is a dry lakebed. Its surface is pale and cracked, the color of old bone, with jagged lines spiderwebbing outward in every direction. The ground is brittle underfoot, as though one careless step might send the whole thing collapsing into dust. Faint traces of water remain in shallow depressions, and worn-down stone pillars are scattered across the field, some tall, some broken.

Cecilia's body feels confined, even in the looseness of her gray tunic and dark trousers. She coils with tension as if preparing for a blow. Sweat traces a slow path down her face, and her fingers twitch restlessly around her first Pokeball as her lips curve upward in anticipation. Excitement practically spills out of Grace, yet she desperately tries to get in character—still herself, but perhaps something heralding more innocent days. Softer eyes, a more relaxed demeanor, a timid smile that remains ravenous despite her best efforts. They wear their eagerness in different ways, but the feeling is the same, and it hums between the two like a taut string waiting to snap. Here they are, in the midst of the largest and most consequential tournament of the year.

They'd met a year ago in the most random of ways, nearly sparking conflict. Their relationship had taken shape after shape.

At the beginning came friendship. It was tentative at first, then certain. From friendship grew love, and from love, a kind of dependence that bordered on ruin. They became each other's refuge, each other's vice, each other's drug, and when it all fell apart, they were left as nothing more than broken shards of glass capable of hurting those around them who were left to pick up the pieces.

The referee announces the start of the battle, but like the swelling audience, he may as well not exist. Both girls' arms snap forward; they wordlessly release their Pokemon.

For a moment, Grace is somewhere else. She pictures their first encounter: Togetic facing Fletchling under a pale sky. She can smell the sweet scent of Floaroma's endless flowers, feel the chill of autumn wind blowing in her hair. She is no one. A first-year trainer looking to make a name for herself, a helpless girl with a crush on someone who seems a world away and who always looks past her. Bygone times could be so addicting if one let them; they always beckoned in your ear in the darkest of nights, asking what if so and so had been different. Grace Pastel looks to the past, and Togekiss materializes in the air with a sing-song cry. The flying type's fur shimmers under the summer sun, where she sparkles like glitter. Her first child—her baby. Her everything who had known her when she was a scared city girl terrified of harm befalling her.

Cecilia looks to the future. She sees herself one, five, ten years from now with everything she has to deal with behind her. It steadies her fraying nerves, makes her stand up straighter, more confidently, and it allows her to look far ahead. It is the ultimate high that gives the illusion of certainty, and one she will have to be careful not to chase. A desk inside a high rise with all of Castelia below her, where she stands as Gym Leader; A clipboard in hand atop Mount Vertress, advising an Elite Four member with practiced ease; a brief, glorious moment atop the Draconic Throne as Champion herself. That is the thing about the future: unlike the past, it is a tentative thing. Uncertain, unfocused, a puff of smoke. One can dream as big as they want without putting the effort in. Golurk emerges from his Pokeball a stalwart figure that seems larger than life. First on one knee, the automaton rises to his feet, each movement smooth and deliberate like Cecilia desires to be. The ground sinks slightly under his weight; however, it solidifies when Golurk orders it to do so.

The referee slashes his hand down. This was, is, and will be for everything.

The battle begins.

"Lehmhart sets the stage for those who will come after," Cecilia solemnly starts.

Music spills out of the construct in ghostly waves. Like an ominous wind, it presses against any who would hear its folly unprotected. So much is its weight that it makes the entire ground vibrate and bend under the beautiful melody. Through the shifting of its inner workings—low grinding gears, the rhythmic pulse of pistons, the hum of ancient mechanisms moving in concert—a song is created. Yet Togekiss' domain is the sky, and a barrier isolating for sound is made in a flash to counter. The fairy circles high above. Missile-like artefacts of stone peel off the lakebed and follow her every move, each is large as she and as sharp as a honed spike.

Words continue to leave Cecilia's mouth. "His shell is iron made manifest." Golurk's clay armor glimmers with a metallic sheen. The Unovan thinks forward, always forward, to every machination Grace could trap her with, but their opponent already takes action.

"S—slam them down on his head!" Grace yells with uncertainty. Cecilia remembers this is how she used to speak in her first few battles; she has seen the recording of her battle against Roark. Grace is inexperienced. She doesn't yet know what can work and what won't, which commands carry importance and which ones are little more than noise. She is grasping at instincts that haven't fully formed, hoping they'll be enough, but she will grow quickly.

To Golurk's right stands one of the pillars littering the lakebed. Order and narration flow from Cecilia's mouth, and the ghost picks it up, splitting it in two over his knee. As dust and shards of stone cloud his surroundings, the first of Togekiss' missiles catches fire. Then another. And another. They slam into Lehmhart, but the automaton stands true. Both of Golurk's arms rumble, flying upward like jet engines and still carrying the two broken stones.

"He wishes so dearly he did not stand alone. He wants a future to fight for. Friends. Family. Poltergeist!" the Unovan says. Ghostly abominations crawl out of cracks left by Golurk's wind and possess the two pillars. They split further and further aided by Golurk's arms—Togekiss tries to slow things down, but if there is one thing the fairy has rarely faced, it is fighting an opponent capable of juggling as many tasks as she is. "Never alone will he face life's troubles again."

Togekiss tries to wrest control of the stones from Golurk through Ancient Power, but his friends remain by his side. Grace realizes something as her daughter fights to dodge and counter every Shadow Ball that the possessed shard of rocks throw at her, burning away the hungry souls that risked clipping her wings with her Dazzling Gleams.

They have lost control of the skies.

She steadies her excitement and bites her inner cheek so hard it burns raw. She's nervous, but excitement at the passion for battle sneaks up on her like a Kecleon. Her inexperienced mind races to find a solution—she did not expect to be caught off-guard so quickly. This is a story, yes; in fact, it might as well be the climax. But it is also a battle. A fight in the mud for a knife that spells your devastating doom or your glorious victory. Character or not, she is well to remember this.

The Poltergeists flicker out like candles in the wind when Togekiss' light singes them; they scream and scream and scream as the object that binds them to this world can no longer hold onto them. They try to overwhelm her, but only few make it to her barrier and begin to eat at it. Grace rubs at her wrist, her Meltan, and her teeth flash for a split second before she catches herself. She plans to evolve this battle—to change in the span of minutes instead of months—but not so soon.

"Light him on fire!" Grace tries. The flames catch slowly at first, as if unsure whether something so ancient and clay-bound can truly burn. Then, it takes. It licks up the Golurk's body in long, deliberate tongues, casting its towering frame in hues of orange and blue. It does not hurt him much, not yet at least, but it will remain constant. "Now concentrate your wind."

There is another wind that permeates the battlefield other than Golurk's hymn of machinery he somehow makes sound like an orchestra. A wordless one borne of belief that Togekiss brings with her whenever she goes. It is always so subtle it is nearly silent, but then it gathers around Golurk in concentrated hues of pastel pink that feeds the flames. In another story, Grace tells herself, this would have been a good representation of the fire that now burns in her heart. This attack is not without cost, however. Togekiss' barrier breaks down with a wordless scream and souls crawl across her body, staining it with their negativity. Another Dazzling Gleam bursts out of her, but it fails to expel every ghost and more are on their way. They leave a trail of sickly purple as she flies, whispering horrible things in her mind that beckon distortion, leading her toward—

Grace's eyes focus.

Toward one of Golurk's hovering fists.

Cecilia's own shimmer with hope as would two lonely pale stars in the night sky. They had been lying here in waiting, hovering in the air. A Dynamic Punch capable of shattering the little fairy's body should it make full contact. The fist closes and shines bright white, illuminating the entire field in its awesome glow, and flies to meet its mark. Like a lighthouse steers wayward ships home, the souls direct Togekiss as a mere suggestion she believes to be her own. Grace yells as her daughter slowly turns toward the arm. They are on a collision course that almost feels set.

Grace smirks and recalls Togekiss at the last possible second right before impact. They got her quicker than expected. She rolls her shoulders and rubs the side of her neck. How grand, she thinks, for Cecilia's Golurk to catch them so. She must have predicted this. Known that Grace would lead with her first Pokemon and used this tactic to counter them. Meanwhile, she had believed that maybe Cecilia would match her. That they would recount their journey together and parse through the good, the bad, and the ugly.

Cecilia Obel is her own person, even now. It is a toxic—albeit not entirely unfounded—belief that this entire battle revolves around her relationship with Grace that made the blond teenager believe she would lead with Talonflame. The fire type has the advantage in the air, or at least that is what Grace thought Cecilia believed. For as much as Grace has changed and wants for Cecilia to move on, there remains an infinitesimal part of her that thinks she could have made Cecilia sing to the tune of her own song. That she would mirror her own intentions.

Grace grabs her next Pokeball and faces the remaining Poltergeists. Golurk still burns, even if the fire is less intense, but the pink flames cling to him stubbornly, and the edges of his body have begun to melt like candle wax. The ghost's arms return to his body just shy enough of the flames, able to still serve their original function. The girl's face grows a little more stern, for she has now brushed close to death and injury, but there is something else. A nascent thirst for violence that would only grow in time.

Yes, Cecilia tells herself. I know you, Grace Pastel. Now send out your next Pokemon and let us spar some more. Let this moment last an eternity. The girls' eyes meet; thirty seconds have gone by.

The embodiment of a living mountain spews out of the Pokeball, and her roar shakes the foundation of the very ground Golurk stands on. She, too, sinks deeper in, breaking the earth with her weight until she solidifies it enough to stand on. Darkness spews out of every crag in her armor and oozes throughout the battlefield, sending the Poltergeists reeling. The golem's wind and song bounce off the mountain like it is an immutable wall. The Unovan's face falls. Has she misread Grace—no, she is piecing their journey together and her progression as a person, looking to the past, recounting every tale and retracing every step. That was why she had come dressed in the outfit they had met in, why her face is now so guiltless.

So why did she release Tyranitar and not Jellicent, her second Pokemon?

No matter. It is not like she has time to think on it. Grace has already let her Tyranitar loose, and the rock type gathers water from shallow pools to Surf on. At first, it is but a trickle, but from a single drop, the mightiest of rivers can form. The liquid seeps through the cracks in the ground, and Tyranitar mounts a massive slab of stone, riding it with impossible speed as the water surges beneath her. "Golurk steadies himself and prepares to strike at a distance with Hammer Arm," Cecilia narrates. He follows her every word, once again sending his limbs away. The glow is less than Dynamic Punch, but pressure ripples in waves as they fly toward Tyranitar.

Grace laughs and grins like a child does discovering candy for the first time. She knows how it feels to win, now. To see her opponents broken at her feet. "Dark Pulse, Sweetheart!"

Black, undulating beams shoot out of Tyranitar. They shimmer at the edges with absence—void given form, humming with the low, guttural sound of the mountain's muffled roars. The air distorts in their path, warping like heat haze under a sunless sky. Cecilia screams; Golurk's eyes shine brighter, the music swells, and every Poltergeist throws itself at the advancing Tyranitar. They helplessly bounce off of her like pebbles thrown upon a brick wall, and they are unable to assail her mind, but it is naught but a distraction. The automaton's arms dodge the first Dark Pulse, then the next, and the next—but then one gets hit. Its engine stumbles like it is catching its breath, and it collapses against the lakebed. The second? Grace knows there is no time to intercept.

"Iron Def—" she stops herself when she sees the confidence in her youngest's back. There is no more tension in her stance, no fear in her shoulders. Only excitement. "Crunch!"

What is it that makes children so wondrous? The purity of their curiosity. The unfiltered need to know, to touch, to feel everything the world has to offer and to absorb all the information like a sponge. Put the average adult next to a Hydreigon, and they will scream, cry, run, freeze, or perhaps beg for mercy. A child, proven they are young enough, will look up at the dragon and tilt their head in awe. They might reach out a hand, not to strike or shield themselves, but simply to understand. To feel the texture of scaled skin, to ask—without words—what are you? Can we play? Tyranitar—Sweetheart—is a fierce Pokemon, an apex predator, and also, some might forget, a toddler.

This is the second leg of Grace's journey. She unearths the pleasure of violence, of winning, and it is where anything seems possible. She doesn't know her limits—she has not even begun to understand the complexities of the world. She believes she can unseat Cynthia and become Champion in a year, despite not even knowing why she would want to. She believes she can delve into Coronet, saving Cecilia from her doom even though she would be going against one of the most powerful families in Unova. She believes that she can convince an agonized Turtonator who has lost everything that she can heal his heart and will burn half her body for it. She is brave and foolish and hurt.

Sometimes, that bravery—that trust—pays off.

So when Tyranitar's darkened, endless teeth sink into the side of the arm, catching it mid-air before she can bear the brunt of the Hammer Arm's impact, there is no surprise. All she thinks is, 'of course I can do that.' The Surf hits Golurk at full force, extinguishing the flames around him, and then Tyranitar does what she does best. Her claws find heated softened clay and tear through it with ease. She drives him back, dragging his weight across the flooded ground as if he were nothing but a lump of rock. He kicks, clumsily and off-balance; he collapses the earth beneath with a stomp, causing them to sink. It is no use. Cecilia lets him fall, watching the violent display to the end.

She is mildly unsettled. How can she not be? To have gotten the Pokemon order wrong means that she no longer knows Grace as well as she thought she did. Still, Cecilia does not let this shake her. She steels herself, recalls Golurk, and clears her throat. "Lehmhart may have fallen, but his influence lingers," the Unovan says as all the Poltergeists crawl back into Distortion. Even now, his music permeates the battlefield. "His love and kindness will ripple for time immemorial."

For those who come after. What a nice thought. Beyond the obvious glance into the distant future, it is also the sentiment that history is not moved by a singular Great Man, but by the countless, unseen hands that keep the wheels turning. From the smallest village to the world itself, you are naught but a cog in a well-oiled machine. Stories are just that. Stories. To move the world itself, you need influence. Reach. People. This runs counter to everything her opponent holds true; this is the antithesis of Grace's understanding of the world.

Cecilia Obel is a newborn. She barely has anyone left to cut out, and only one that she can call herself truly close to other than her Pokemon.

The Unovan grabs the next cog in the machine. "Golurk was meant to fall," she announces, "given that he was The Foresight To Think Ahead."

Something smaller emerges from the crimson light. Red claws drip with poison that bubbles on contact with the damp earth, eating shallow pits into the stone. Her frame is lean, all sinew and sharp lines, and her yellow eyes pierce into the large Tyranitar as her throat swells with a croak. The music does not affect Toxicroak, not because of her typing, but because of Lehmhart's care.

"Toxicroak walks a treaded path," she quickly says. While Tyranitar had beaten Golurk handily, he had still helped them some. Cracks on her armor had formed around her jaw. Sand spills out of every crevice inside of her, darkened and silent, letting only whispers of Lehmhart's music through. In a moment, the Sandstorm has swarmed the entire battlefield. "She stands vigilant, poised to strike at any moment." She scans the arena, unable to see anything. She can't even see Grace on the opposite platform. Can Toxicroak even hear her? Remembering the voice lessons Temperance taught her, Cecilia yells as loudly as she can. "Pursuit!"

For a few long, aching seconds that stretch into eternity, nothing happens. The sandstorm rages, pelting at the barrier in front of Cecilia like rain on a window. Even in her monochrome vision, the world beyond is grainy, blurred, and indistinct. It makes her feel an agonizing absence. Everything is so quiet it feels disconcerting. Wrong. Fighting a Tyranitar should be all screaming and terror, but it is not. They tame the darkness of caves, the sandstorm and sand dunes of the deserts, and they ambush their prey, overwhelming them until they are dead before they can even fight. They are true apex predators—rulers of their environment.

The Unovan allows herself to smile. Toxicroak, weak as she was when the Unovan found her, was only so in strength and not in spirit. It was her, after all, who had tried to fight against Abel to save her friend Wooper from being kidnapped, even when she was hopelessly outmatched. "But once in a while, something has the Audacity To Fight Back."

Pursuit, Cecilia has found, is a peculiar move. It can be used to disturb a Pokeball's energy, making it easier to hit before it is recalled, but it can also be used to track. Not in the way one tracks footprints or scent, but through motion itself—through intention. It latches onto the thread of an escape, the barest twitch of momentum, and so, it can be used to sense movement. Of course, in a Tyranitar's tailor-made environment, it might be too much to ask, but with a Dark Gem…

The sandstorm wanes, allowing her to peer through for a moment, and she nearly gasps.

There are two impacts. The familiar soothing glow of a Drain Punch blooms against Tyranitar's abdomen. The light seeps into her plating, and a spiderweb of fine fractures spreads across the green armor. Thin, branching lines that shimmer with residual energy before settling into stillness.

She's been hit. Truly hit. Pain flashes across her face, her breaths are heavy, and she struggles to stand up straight.

And then the second impact comes.

Beneath Toxicroak, the earth shakes with terrible force. A sudden, upward shock splits the ground open, and jagged stone spears erupt from below. Soil and steam explode into the air as the battlefield bucks beneath the two creatures' weight. Grab her, Grace yells, and Tyranitar does so, using the Earthquake to her advantage. Toxicroak is stronger than she looks, but she can't possibly break out of Tyranitar's hold should Cecilia order it.

Yet, the Unovan stays calm. Hands neatly folded behind her back, she watches as bright flames bulge in the goliath's throat. For once, she is silent and lets the action speak for itself. The fire swallows Toxicroak whole; it engulfs her with a roar that would burn any man to smithereens. It floods from the creature's jaws in a chaotic torrent without care, and behind Tyranitar is an unrestrained smile. The fire is Grace, and Grace is joy.

Cecilia smiles back. "Toxicroak takes her Revenge."

The fire ripples like water, and a limb covered in burns bursts through the blaze. Unlike Hammer Arm or Focus Punch, this one neither glows nor howls with power. It does not warp the air or make it heavier. It is sharp, deliberate, and quiet, just like its wielder. Toxicroak, Cecilia knows, has never been one to be flashy. It is not meant to impress.

It is meant to land.

The fist punctures Tyranitar's stomach like a blade finding its sheath in one smooth motion. The entire ordeal lasts one to two seconds at best, but Cecilia knows that it must have felt like an eternity to her companion. Toxicroak slumps soon afterward, collapsing as the flames dissipate. Tyranitar stumbles, blood pours out of her wound, the sandstorm stops completely, she gasps and—

Remains standing, even in the sunken ground. Not that it matters in the grand scheme of things. Her next Pokemon would swiftly deal with her. Cecilia knew coming into this that Tyranitar would be the single, biggest problem to her team, and now she has been dealt with, if at a great cost. That is not to mean that she is doing fine, however. Cecilia knows she is behind.

Grace knows it, too. She wipes the sweat on her hands off her jeans and licks her lips. She had not expected Toxicroak to be capable of staying conscious long enough to strike when besieged by such a close-range Flamethrower, especially with her Dry Skin, but she is still in a good position to complete her story first. "You did great, Sweetie," she praises, but her daughter is too weak to respond. She considers recalling her, but decides not to—not when there is a chance she could land a hit on whoever Cecilia sends out next. Right now, it appears she is waiting to weaken Tyranitar as much as she can.

Ah. Grace feels her thoughts racing; she considers every possibility as she always does when there is even an ounce of respite. While half of her imagines what she will do against every Pokemon her opponent might send, she narrows in on a previous thought—finishing her story first. She cannot gauge what tale Cecilia is weaving so far, but feels the need to cut her off. She believes Cecilia already knows hers, but perhaps not what it is meant to say.

Face me. Look at me—every part of me that you've seen. That, and something else—

No more time. Cecilia releases her next choice. The psychic rises with no effort at all, lifted by something unseen and a flicker of his wrist. In the air, he remains perfectly still with his hands behind his back, mirroring his trainer. Tyranitar offers a weak roar of defiance scraped from the bottom of her lungs, but Slowking's eyes scan the field with a calm sigh. There is no urgency in him. He does not attempt to escape or rush to the fight; he is instead above it all, literally and figuratively.

"Dark Pulse." Grace tries to hope that it will land. The darkened rings tighten in Tyranitar's mouth, and she lets the beam out with a muffled grunt; Slowking simply floats out of the way and counters with Water Cutter. The current bends and divides into a dozen different jets that twist and turn, then convert directly on Tyranitar's wound. Her eyes roll into the back of her skull, and she falls without a word.

New experiences allowed the Grace of old to savor the delicacy of battle—of the thrill of being steps away from victory or defeat, to be on either side of a knife's edge. Freedom away from her parents made them not realize who she was becoming, and her friends were too inexperienced with life or preoccupied with their own affairs to notice until it was too late.

The only time Grace remembers the audience is to honor her parents, friends, therapist, and girlfriend who have pulled her from the brink.

But for now, she must look back and become cruel.

Cecilia stares at the dragon who faces her with a breath held tight in her chest. The air around the creature simmers and shakes. White-hot flames leak from his snout that burn the very essence of the earth, and water evaporates around him in seconds. His tail scrapes the fragile ground, leaving black streaks in its wake. There is no familiar roar, no posturing, no Flamethrower up at the sky, but a calm stare up at Slowking. Turtonator is the promise of something violent. He moves slowly, deliberately, dragging his bulk like a siege engine given consciousness. Jagged spines rise from his shell, designed to maim and scorch whoever would dare strike.

Cecilia begins to understand Grace's aims, now. Where she herself seeks meaning in fragments—six reflections of a self still forming—Grace wants her entire team to reflect her journey as a whole. She understands what each Pokemon she has used represents. Disturbed by the remnants of Golurk's song, Turtonator squints and shakes his head in discomfort. The ground beneath him, already weakened by heat and weight, sinks slightly, and he stumbles a little. His very own presence can be a terrifying one, but he seems uncomfortable. As if his very existence is an uneven, ugly thing.

This is it, the Unovan thinks. An opportunity to equalize—

Grace glares, points up at Slowking, and slips into a grin. Cecilia flinches at the familiar sight. "Get up there and cripple him," Grace says savagely. She has learned to enjoy violence; it is new, fresh, liberating, and most of all, it makes her believe she is just so powerful. Such a potent lie for a child to fall to.

Turtonator slams his tail against his shell, and it erupts. The blast scorches the earth beneath him in a violent bloom, sending up shards of stone and a cloud of smoke thick enough to blot out his silhouette for a single moment. He emerges from the smoke in an upward arc. It is not graceful, but it need not be. Turtonator doesn't ascend so much as detonate his way skyward, each burst from his shell an exhale of fury too dense to stay bound to the earth. Young cruelty is a wild thing. It does not strategize. It does not hesitate. It takes the most direct path to its destination, and whatever stands in the way is collateral.

"Slowking evades and clips Turtonator's wings with Disable," Cecilia quickly narrates. The psychic's eyes dull for a moment, and the next time Turtonator slams his shell, nothing but a pathetic gout of fire sputters out. Better cut off the TE at the source than constantly evade, especially when Slowking is slow in the air, she thinks. "He follows through," Cecilia murmurs, "and seals away the fire entirely."

Turtonator collapses back to earth with an ear-shattering crash. He immediately scrambles up as Cecilia orders more attacks at a distance, retreating into his shell just in time to hide away from more Water Cutters. They strike like thin and merciless whips, slicing into his armor with sharp, wet cracks. He endures it only long enough to build momentum, then scuttles away in a blur of motion, spinning low to the ground in a Rapid Spin that throws up grit and steam in his wake. Occasionally, he tries to retaliate. Dragon Pulses lack in their usual fiery luster and wash helplessly against Slowking's barrier without leaving so much as a crack; Scale Shots burst from his shell like shrapnel, but they are far too scattered to land at range. The dragon's mastery of Rock Tomb finds itself too lacking to reach that high as well, and without the sun overhead, Solar Beam proves slow and cumbersome enough to simply dodge.

He is a beast, yes, as is Grace, but they have been caged, and should Grace be unable to fulfill his narrative, then her entire battle plan would fall apart. Without fire, Turtonator is naught but a child raging at what he cannot control. Finally, he roars, shaking his head at the incessant music that disturbs his concentration that might just break him out of this disable, and suddenly, cruelty appears a lot more childish than it did at first. No longer will this have the narrative punch Grace desires. Slowking does not laugh, nor does he mock. He would rather execute. He has done well to cut off the dragon's fire, but they need more to take him down. Turtonator are coldblooded creatures that are not fit for frigidity. Ordinarily, he would burn hot enough to stave off the cold with his sheer presence. But now, robbed of his inner blaze, they can bring him down through temperature alone.

Grace is frustrated—how can she not be? Their wings have been clipped. They can endure, yes, for Slowking was never built for swift destruction, but endurance means nothing when all roads lead to a slow, quiet loss. She seethes, jaw clenched and knuckles white, her gaze fixed on Cecilia with enough anger for her head to spin. Her enemy pays her no mind as if she does not exist. Grace hates this feeling. Hates the stillness. Hates the helplessness that wraps around her like cold iron. She would make them all pay the long price. She commands ruin, holds devastation that is capable of killing anyone in her path, yet once that is taken away, she is nothing but a girl. Only Grace Pastel. It is in moments like these that she closes her eyes and remembers that red-haired woman toying with her, haunting her nightmares—

"It is never good to get lost in your own head," Cecilia whispers. This battle, she speaks partially to herself. It is a comforting way of taking stock of everything she must change. "That is why, Slowking knows, one needs the Acumen To Take A Step Back." Another barrage of blades of water strike at Turtonator's shell. Cracks keep spreading, and the dragon groans in pain. "To sleep on things before making a rash decision, to take stock of your options, and maybe, just maybe, to not be so serious all the time."

—and Grace sinks deeper into the pit.

Break out of the cage.

A joke is told by Slowking and Cecilia. Laughter rings around Grace's ears, but it grows deformed and twisted. Snowflakes begin to fall onto the lakebed.

Break out of the cage.

Water spun from Slowking's will hits the ground and turns to ice in seconds, webbing over the terrain in gleaming veins. A low, creeping fog follows, curling around the broken pillars and stretching across the arena like a shroud.

Break out of the cage.

A groan escapes Turtonator. He tries to stand, but slips onto the ice and cannot even get back on his feet. With what little remains of his strength, he looks back at his trainer, unconsciousness calling. She has been silent for so long—why? Was she not a warrior who commanded his respect, his leader to follow in battle? His fire had been taken away, but where is hers?

But then, for a moment, his eyes meet hers, and that is all he needs to feel reassurance.

A cornered beast is a creature stripped of all but instinct and the desperate will to live. It has nothing left to lose. And so it lashes out, desperate for survival, clawing and biting at anything that moves. There is something almost pitiful in the way it fights. It is wild and aimless, driven more by fear than fury. Yet, even in its despair, it remains dangerous.

"Shell Smash!" Grace's throat hurts because of the force of her words; her fingernails dig into her palm.

With the last of his energy, Turtonator cracks his shell open right down the middle with a splitting, explosive sound, and Slowking gasps; the psychic's eyes lose their dull grey color, and the dragon's fire roars back to life. The thread has been cut. Disable, at its most complex form, is capable of cutting off the very lifeblood of a Pokemon's capabilities, but it is a punishing, complex technique. The sudden burst of energy surging from Turtonator overwhelms Slowking's deep concentration entirely like a controlled blaze growing wild in an instant.

Flames pour from the breach in Turtonator's shell, licking up the brittle air and painting the cold fog in shades of molten white gold. He is a star born from rebellion, from the refusal to stand down, from what makes him a dragon—but he is a weak one. His light flickers as much as it burns, his breath is ragged, his footing is uneven. And yet, that is what makes it beautiful. Not because he will solve everything, but because he dares to exist and defy their fate at all.

"Slowking cuts off the beast's flames again!" The surge of panic in her voice is like music to Grace's ears. "He flies up and—"

"Get up there and drag that little worm back to the ground! Supernova!" Grace screams with a feral grin. It is her first time giving this order, but her partner understands immediately. He has all the tools at his disposal.

This time, there is no stopping them. Turtonator blurs in a mess of flame and color, washing away the snow around the arena. He leaves behind a trail of gouging flames that burn with the determination to live as its fuel. Countless detonations burst beneath his shell in rapid succession, so many so fast that it appears as one continuous explosion. Calm and composed as always, Slowking's wrist flicks up—but in barely two seconds, the gap has already closed. The drake tears through the air in a spiral of fire, and when he reaches the psychic, it is like a dying star hurled against a mirror. The first barrier shatters on impact, bursting in a wave of colorless light. The second groans under the pressure, but is destroyed all the same. The third bends, warping like heat-blurred glass.

And then it is burned to smithereens.

With a tired, satisfied grin, Turtonator latches onto Slowking, and they begin to sink like a falling star. The psychic's pained groans are obscured by the roar of the flames, but despite this, he manages to gather his thoughts and assault Turtonator's brain. Blood seeps from his eyes and instantly evaporates, but the dragon refuses to let go. He glows brighter, burns stronger, bites into the Slowking's throat with burning fangs, becomes a hypnotizing sight until—

Ah.

He lets go.

He tumbles down, crashes into the lakebed with an impact that splits the earth. The ground caves beneath him, brittle and sun-bleached, and for one terrible second, everything holds still. Grace holds her breath.

Then the explosion comes.

It is deafening, all-consuming; it is a sound that feels too large and encompasses the entire stadium and beyond. Fire blossoms outward in a blinding sphere and turns the cracked earth of the arena into jagged ruin. Both girls shield their eyes, but the brightness pierces their eyelids as if they aren't even there. Stone pillars crumble where they stand, collapsing as the shockwave ripples out from the crater. Turtonator's aspirations crumble, and he is left a smoldering ruin, his body broken and shattered. Only unconsciousness spares him an agony his body cannot endure.

Grace glances up and sees Slowking, burned, but living. He floats unsteadily in the sky without his usual poise. Chunks of his pale pink hide are scorched raw, blistered and peeling where fire had licked too long. The Shellder crown fused to his skull is smeared with soot and blood, some of it his, some of it not. He lets out wet, raspy coughs, and with each breath, a trail of smoke hitches from his throat. One arm hangs limp at his side, trembling, useless; blood runs slow and steady from the deep gash along the side of his neck. His eyes are glassy, half-lidded, but the light in them has not gone out. He is a sorry sight, mangled beyond the pale, yet his mental fortitude keeps him standing.

Surprisingly, there is no rage that consumes her. Instead it is something cold that comes from the depths of her mind, thoughts her current self is now desperate to keep hidden. She's tried to bury them, the part of herself that thinks in absolutes, in costs and consequences, that every deal has a winner and a loser, but she lets them surface now. Just this once. This time, Grace does not wait. Not for the thirty seconds granted, not for the smoke to clear, not for the ache to settle. There is no mercy in battle. In one smooth motion, Turtonator is recalled and no warmth is given to the dragon that so desperately fought in her name. There is no time for pleasantries when they have a fight to win. Victory or defeat, after all, is the difference between survival or death.

Cecilia wipes the sweat off the back of her neck and takes the small opportunity to breathe. She understands that Grace is trying to reminisce on their journey, their time together, so she already knows that only one Pokemon would fit her narrative next.

A creature of the depths emerges, ancient, bloated, and still. It floats without movement slightly above ground like a corpse forgotten in the ocean. Red, lidless eyes pierce through the dust and flames still ravaging the arena after Turtonator's explosion, and a soft, pleasant series of whistles and clicks spread through the battlefield. The sound feels far too charming to come from such a monster, yet it is also slightly distorted, as if it had come from deep below the waves.

Cruelty has multiple facets. When one discovers how much power they truly wield at their fingertips and use it for any means they desire, it can feel like a high rarely ever reached by anything else. Power is a drug, but it is also a means to an end, and tolerance for it builds quickly. Adrenaline-pumping fights soon become cold and calculated—you clear your mind and try to find the most efficient way to kill, because twisting the knife for the fiftieth time just isn't fun anymore. Sadism withers and soon gives way to apathy.

Jellicent has spent decades embodying that emotion. He lay in wait, months at a time, conserving his energy, and struck at whatever he could drain and kill. Back then, time had just been another tide to wait out. Grace whispers something, and the ghost dissolves into mist that spreads throughout the entire arena. Not even Lehmhart's music disturbs the sea monster; he seems at home in it and its ghostly whispers.

"Slowking deftly lands back on the ground and cuts off water." That last word is said with bite. Already, the pink-skinned psychic drops down to earth. His eyes flash grey, and—

Another whisper from Grace, and Jellicent's eyes within the fog dim. Slowking's own widen, and an uncharacteristic rage takes hold of him. Water surges from his mouth in a high-pressure torrent, smashing into the stone below with such force that the ground splinters apart. Shards of shattered rock levitate around him, caught mid-air in the grasp of his Psychic, and without a pause, he flings them forward. They helplessly penetrate the mist and fly through without causing any harm. "Slowking focuses," Cecilia tries. "He focuses." He does not; he has been overwhelmed by anger and the urge to fight.

Taunt, the Unovan realizes. Her partner would grow accustomed to it if given enough time, but did they have that? The mist envelops Slowking, remaining thin enough to see him through, but then it enters him. It crawls through his nostrils, mouth, and even eyelids. For a heartbeat, terror grips Cecilia—she remembers the many times Grace has told her that this was the most efficient way Jellicent had of killing—but she remembers it is nothing but a battle. Cecilia shakes it off just as Slowking convulses, his body arching as thin strands of violet smoke begin to seep from his pores. They whisper out of him like pressurized steam from a cracked pipe. The monster is boiling Slowking from the inside and hitting him with a Hex.

Cecilia stops herself from clicking her tongue. Take a step back. Take a step back. Unlike Grace, her own Pokemon are but facets of the personality she wishes to have. While her having recalled Togekiss had essentially killed her narrative purpose in the fight and so effectively rendered her unusable, Cecilia's plan was not so convoluted. She recalls Slowking before the damage grows irreversible, a beam of red light rescuing him just as he gets down on one knee. He is badly hurt, but perhaps a Slack Off as soon as he reappears may salvage this.

What now, she asks herself. To fight this version of Grace is to meet her at her worst, at her most ruthless, at her most difficult to battle. Oh, they had done terrible things together, hadn't they? Snuffed enough lives between the two of them to have potentially affected thousands of people—their families and friends. Some of these were warranted. Self-defense cases where it was truly her or her opponent—but others? Blinded by the rage of Justin's death, the Unovan had not tried to spare them like Grace had.

She hadn't even tried.

The idea of revenge always feels so good. Once upon a time, Cecilia wanted to hurt her father for hurting her, to beat her brother and take the Championship away from him for leaving her behind and for saving their father's skin, to kill Jupiter and as many Galactic grunts for taking Justin away from her. Revenge consumes a person's mind and turns them into a machine capable of only caring for a single thing: the rush you would get once you finally got what you wanted. But the pain always remains. It is what has made her lose her friends, what made her lash out and use people, what made her not realize that she almost lost her dear Pokemon she cherishes so much her heart feels full whenever she is in their presence.

She'd done so much wrong.

Fingers clasp around the metal of a Pokeball. She remembers meeting her first Pokemon for the first time, that feisty little Deino that tried to scarf down everything that would get near him as if it were food. He had nearly chewed her hand when she tried to let him smell her. While Talonflame came close, he had known her the longest.

What Cecilia finds beautiful about the way she is battling is that none of her Pokemon changed themselves to fit what she needed to showcase what she hopes to become in the future. The truth of it all is, she has seen them, fought with them, experienced everything with them, and now they each embody a part of what she wants to become. She wants them to be the sum of her parts. When one thinks of a Hydreigon, they think of the embodiment of rage—a three-headed hydra that would blast anything encroaching too close to its territory and leave its corpse still scorched with draconic burns as a warning. In Unova, they are seen as antonyms to civilization. Tales are woven about them to scare children to force them to behave; they are the beasts that lurk in the darkness, high up mountains, ready to sink their teeth into your flimsy flesh.

One might think, then, that Zolst represents a streamlined, focused anger that Cecilia could control, one she could direct at those who deserved it. If she is to be honest with herself, Cecilia is tired of being angry, and there is another facet to Unova's most famous dragon.

Hydreigon are also revered for the way they carve through the world without flinching. They are creatures of conviction who rarely doubt themselves, and for that, humans across Unova have looked upon them with awe. They adorn old regional flags and war emblems, their three heads painted in bold strokes beside swords and laurels. A child with a temper might be nicknamed little Deino as a sign of affection. In old towns, folk still recite sayings like 'All three heads must sleep before a Hydreigon rests,' spoken about relentless people who can't relax until every task or worry is settled.

Cecilia summons her dearest Zolst with a deep breath, and he responds in kind. He emerges with a calm exhale and his wings stretched wide, his silhouette cutting against the smoldering crater beneath him. Ash and dust stir at his arrival, drawn upward in loose spirals that scatter across the battlefield. His heads do not snap at the air, begging to be let loose against an enemy; they stand at attention, eyes narrowing at Jellicent, who had reformed himself and drifted back to Grace's side of the arena.

"You've been with me since the beginning, seen me change the most. Down south, you learned just as I did." Somehow, the music swells with her words. She tries to hold her voice steady, but it breaks. What the three Gengar who had killed her and remade her anew had taught her was not only that she was a fellow ghost who had so far left no mark, but this. Despite the terror one has wrought in the past, despite how they can be perceived, "is there anything sweeter than—"

Jellicent moves—Grace must have whispered something.

"—the Heart To Be Remembered Fondly."

The ghost lunges in a jet of compressed water, then vanishes into vapor halfway through, his body slipping back into the fog like he was never there. Here they come, the ultimate foe. The want to do good against the want to hurt. "Zolst stands perfectly still." Not one head moves even an inch. Only his wings are a continuous shift of motion. Cecilia can see her starter's breaths—the temperature is plummeting. "He gathers electricity in two mouths and draconic energy in the other."

The left head crackles first, sparks coiling along its fangs like threads of golden wire pulled too tight. Cecilia imagines Temperance's lessons, the way her voice strains when the Unovan makes—made mistakes. Then, the second, its electricity wilder, freer; it expands with a flash and blooms like the laughter of a child running downhill. Cecilia blinks and sees Ari's booming smile and lust for freedom, of Lehmhart and Zolst taking him to fly like he wished so dearly. From the central head, the glow builds—deeper, slower, a heartbeat of draconic force gathering behind gritted teeth. Within a second, the three energies gather in front of all heads and mix together with a delicate balance that had blown up in their faces hundreds of times.

Yet, this time.

"Stormsurge."

This time, it flies.

Turquoise lightning, almost alive in the way it is shaped like a drake's maw, in the way it lets loose a roar that makes her inner ears rumble, in the way it spreads and forms teeth and a body and—Grace's eyes widen. She hasn't seen Hydreigon do this before, not even in the battles she has studied, but she is no longer that child who gets caught off-guard by a hidden technique every Gym Battle, that little girl whose legs shake at the sight of the unexpected. She barely has time to whisper to Jellicent.

"Scatter. Lure the electricity—"

The mist divides like the tide withdrawing. Tendrils of vapor twist and peel away from his core, unspooling like silk caught in a sudden wind. Some race low along the ground, curling around rocks and craters, while others rise upward and thread into the sky like climbing smoke. A bit of himself remains and liquefies the moment the electricity hits and directs it away, but it is a breathing, living thing, infused by the draconic urge to conquer and rule. It doesn't lash out. No. It swarms them and coils through the fog with a dull hum, freezing him in space.

Fighting Jellicent is a headache. Even Grace herself can and has admitted that. She'd even made him leave a little bit of mist close to her so she could speak to him through the barrier instead of a real, tangible part of him that can be blown away as Byron had done to her.

They have, however, found a way to make the damage stick. As Jellicent reforms slowly, like a clump of cells knitting themselves back together, his red eyes flicker and the turquoise electricity fries him again. He tries once more, only to get the same results; the ghost lets out a wordless, frustrated scream that makes the temperature plummet into the negatives. Grace's mind races with a hundred ideas at once within seconds.

Recover doesn't work he can hurt us he can kill us we can't enter him think think think what can I do can we stall with Protect can I make him run wild with Taunt even though he's a dark type can I pressurize Hydro Pump strongly enough to pierce his scales what about Night Shade bombings ice ice ice use ice—

The stream is never-ending, and she does not panic. This version of her has managed to cut off that weakening emotion like a rotting limb. It is the kind of thought process that lets her torture an overworked Gym Leader in need of help, that lets her kill a hostage just to get to their assailant, that lets her cut into a man's legs and watch him get mentally tortured until he takes his own life. So once more, as Cecilia wastes her time with pretty words and descriptive narration and Hydreigon gathers his strength, Grace asks herself: what does the girl want?

To kill—

To win at all costs. She does not even think about the battle as a whole, just about the current fight in front of her, because that is the essence of survival. To put one foot in front of the other before worrying about your destination.

She has it. She whispers a series of orders so quickly she can barely pronounce the words. It has been eleven seconds since Stormsurge hit Jellicent.

Something begins to gather in the crater.

"...so once again, call upon those who lay the path for you. Draconic Remembrance!"

The world darkens, not with the familiar void of Darkness, but with the familiar chill of ghosts, and it is not Jellicent's doing. The sea monster spills out into the world and expands into a blast of salty frost as Lehmhart's song beats the last of its notes. Like the final part of a song played on a piano, but somehow stretching and stretching forever until it surrounds and disorients her. Grace cannot believe Hydreigon can push, pull, and command ghosts—even with help—but she has no time to worry about it. From little cracks in the air crawl cold, purple horrors, each malformed and lined with countless eyes, teeth and tentacles. They scream, but their voice is drowned out by the music.

Jellicent doesn't have time to make them look right. They fly in an arc like a barrage of missiles as the world itself goes turquoise. Zolst rises to meet them; one head shoots it out of the sky with Dark Pulse while the others continue to tame the lingering ghostly energy in the air; however it is only one head, and dozens of Night Shades. Some land, and when they do, they coat Hydreigon in ice and turn him sluggish just as they'd done to Turtonator. Jellicent reforms as a gaping maw below the floor and swallows Zolst whole until he is blown apart by another darkened blast and has to retreat.

Everything is but a distraction. Grace covers her ears and smiles as she keeps whispering orders.

That is the thing with grand attacks—they need time and concentration.

Theirs would be grand, too.

Each part of Jellicent which had been blown up slithers across the ground like Ekans lurking in the undergrowth. They circle the crater's edge, dig through the cragged earth, and leave behind trails of frost that glitter like glass. They all gather back to their objective all along. The final Night Shade is a true giant. It towers inside the crater, tentacles flowing like kelp in the sea, its body moving as if it floats in water only it can feel. Ghostly mist clings to its form, pulsing in waves, and above it, countless red eyes blink open, one by one, in silent rhythm.

Then, the real Jellicent arrives—no longer whole, smaller, and severely weakened due to Recover being cut off—but enough. He slips into the giant's chest, and the mist welcomes him. His body unravels into tendrils of fog that weave through the tentacles, the bulbous head, and the eyes until he is spread thin.

The clone straightens. The frost deepens. The blinking stops, and resumes, this time with all eyes in unison.

A single, deep whistle reverberates through the arena, this time possible to hear through the music.

The Night Shade lives.

"Zolst focuses; he knows he can do this—he has worked too hard and come too far to fail now," Cecilia says warmly, and somehow, that is all that is needed.

Grace scoffs in disbelief, but they are in too deep to stop now. Hydreigon steadies in the air, wings held wide, and all heads seem to smile. Little purple dots light up all over the arena like stars through thick smoke. "Hydro Pump," Grace whispers. The sheer amount of water that gathers in front of the abomination's mouth would be enough to fill the massive crater twice-over. It coils and churns in the air, thick with pressure, glinting with frost.

The dots flash. The music swells.

Then they start to detonate.

Not all at once—no, they go in rhythm with the music, like a heartbeat unraveling, a chain of turquoise draconic fire snapping into place around Zolst. Each blast hangs in the air after it bursts, suspended by ghostly energy—glowing, spinning, waiting. They refuse to fade; they are a continuous cacophony of explosions.

Still, the Hydro Pump fires.

It crashes through the arena like a tidal wave that would drown and wash away anything in its path. Hydreigon's two heads roar for the first time, their eyes flash, but their paltry hold over water—one of their weakest elements—renders this attempt no better than trying to empty a lake with nothing but a cup. He tries to get out of the way, but it follows him and hits the dragon at full force. The explosions hit the shade, chewing at its edges at first, and then unraveling its entire structure exponentially. Segments of the Night Shade's vast form collapse inwards like dried skin, arms drooping and vanishing into black mist, the crown crumbling like coral dried in the sun. For a moment, there is only the sound of rushing water and the shimmer of detonations flaring behind it, then even that goes quiet, and Lehmhart's song finally ends.

Jellicent is nothing but a puddle on the floor, if even that. He has rarely been weakened this badly, and there are naught but slivers of him left scattered all over the battlefield. He has traced a ravine in the arena with his Hydro Pump, from the crater all the way to the edge at Cecilia's platform. His Night Shade is gone, only leaving the faintest trace it has ever existed in the form of lingering miasma in the air. Everything is flooded with only a few remaining pillars rising above the surface; the water still churns and churns, creating large waves that wash harmlessly against the barrier. Something else lingers in the air, fading, darkened nuclei that her opponent had detonated.

Hydreigon remains afloat, coughing water out of his lungs through all of his mouths and barely hovering in the air above the water. His chest is caved in, nearly all his scales have been peeled off, and he barely hovers in the air. His eyes flicker, still with a smile on his face, and he stares Grace down from below as if to taunt her. Grace understands him. Good triumphs over evil eventually, he hacks out. Fortune favors the kindhearted.

Grace scoffs. It doesn't. It clearly doesn't. Throughout history, tyrants have ruled swathes of territory, criminals have wrought untold pain upon the earth, people like Backlot and Mars and countless others have managed to live their lives undisturbed until she put a knife to their throat and made them stop. She hurt them like they hurt others, like they hurt her.

Yet, the words stick with her.

She finishes recalling Jellicent and thinks as she bites her lip. She remembers a time—a time where she would go out of her way to do good, even for strangers. She helped the girl who now faces her despite barely knowing her and her having threatened her in a bathroom stall, befriending her without any advantages. She helped a Larvitar who had lost her mother, adopting her as her own. She helped Turtonator while he grieved for his trainer, scarring her own body to reach his heart.

Through the silence, Grace laughs, surprising even herself. A moral lesson? From a Hydreigon?

Arceus bless him, he may not be right, but Grace wants to believe him. She is a monster, but he reaches out regardless and gives her a chance to rekindle her humanity. The teenager affectionately rubs the metallic bracelet around her wrist and finally remembers who she is; she has scared even herself, sinking back into a way of thinking that had made her nearly lose everything.

She must learn how to be a person again, and she knows who best would help her write that story.

"...yet, their presence still lingers," Cecilia finishes, wide-eyed and lips hurting from smiling. Zolst has performed beyond her wildest expectations. They've practiced eight of these hybrid techniques—carefully mixing and matching Type Energy, measuring out just enough of each to avoid collapse. Precision over power. Art over instinct. And all of it is only possible thanks to Temperance's patient guidance. Yet much like hopes of becoming a full-fledged person, he is a flailing newborn learning to walk in this department. It takes a lot out of him, and he can't use a third. "You feel it in the air, don't you?"

Here is the thing about ghosts: they remember. They last an eternity and will think, feel, experience until the world itself unravels and withers. It is written into the world that ghosts are harbingers of negativity. Sorrow, anger, envy, regret, on and on, and on and on. One might sometimes wonder, then—most of the time children learning about their dear world in class—if ghosts can ever truly be happy.

Cecilia spreads her arms open. "Unbridled joy!"

Of course, they can! The spirits laugh and laugh as they swirl around Hydreigon, their forms bright and fluid, glowing a vibrant turquoise. They hold onto this world without a ghost type's guidance by clinging to the draconic energy lingering in the air like a lifeline, and she will need them for the rest of this battle. She has helped them see the world again, helped them listen to music and had Lehmhart converse with them, and so they would pay her back in kind. Was being remembered fondly not wonderful? Did it not fill your heart with happiness to the point of overflowing into your body and altering your own behavior? The way you stood a little taller, breathed a little deeper, smiled without meaning to? Did it not soften the way you moved, loosen your hands, draw your shoulders back as if you were being held by something unseen? Cecilia can scant remember a time she has been this joyful.

Finally, Grace's eyes meet hers again, and she releases her next Pokemon. The red beam strikes above a half-submerged pillar and brings forth another automaton, built at the hand of Man to serve, protect, kill if need be, and little else. It floats just above the stone, limbs splayed at its sides with geometric precision, its shell a faded clay hue, polished smooth by time. Claydol sluggishly opens its eyes, blinking and analyzing its surroundings as it floats higher and announces its presence.

"Enemy detected: Draconis Tricephalus," it chimes for all to hear, its outer voice cold and unfeeling. "Commencing defense protocols."

And so, another bout begins. Hydreigon and Cecilia now know that the dragon can rush in without risking the immense danger Jellicent poses, and she wastes no time narrating him that way. Severely wounded but undeterred, Hydreigon descends from above like a meteor given life, his six wings tucked close, his three heads laughing with glee. Grace can feel it too—what remains in the air—but Claydol cannot, at least not yet. Around the psychic, gallons upon gallons of water rise in shifting, transparent cubes levitated by its will. It hurls them in front of Hydreigon, who blasts them away with Dark Pulses, but the liquid serves as a good enough disturbance to shield them from the dragon's eyes. It all collapses down in a waterfall that refracts the arena's turquoise light into chaotic scatterings across its psychic walls.

"Teleport and Rock Tomb," Grace orders, eyes unblinking. Her voice is still stilted. Cold. Masked by the noise of the water.

When Hydreigon passes through the cascading waters, he meets nothing to sink his teeth into or blast away with energy. Instead, above him, sinks rocks as large as he is, still wet from their submersion in the makeshift sea. The first strikes Hydreigon's shoulder and sends him careening sideways, wings scrambling for lift in the humid air. The second glances off his tail, but the third—

Claydol loses control of the third when one of the faded lights explodes at its side. Even now, the influence of those who have come before remains in Cecilia's favor. Hydreigon has already recovered and hits the psychic with a Dark Pulse from below, and for a moment, things already seem lost.

Grace knows that Claydol is at a disadvantage, but she believes it will pull through. That is the thing with love and trust: it is often nonsensical in nature. It defies calculation, it allows people to throw themselves into hopeless odds not because they expect to win, but because they cannot imagine doing anything else. This entire year, through every up and down, through becoming a monster, killing dozens, hurting hundreds, she has not once not trusted her dear children.

"Alert: Energy levels critical. Operating at 47% capacity," Claydol blares; their voice is accompanied by flashes of red and continuous alarms.

For a moment, there is a break. It has not been agreed-upon beforehand, but neither trainer orders their Pokemon to strike. Claydol floats above, listing off warnings, and Hydreigon flies below and remains conscious by a thread.

"How robotic," Cecilia notes. The Unovan wipes sweat off her forehead and can't stop herself from smiling. "I know you can do better than that." She did not mean in terms of battle abilities, but humanity. "You're better than me at it, after all. Both of you." Grace has touched so many lives, changed the fate of many for the better. Cecilia wants that for herself. She wants to matter.

A pause. Grace breathes heavily into her microphone and leans against her knees. "Will you teach me?" she asks.

"Your emotions have been sanded off," she declares. "With mine, I am learning as you are, Grace." Cecilia's face shines. "You're good, deep down. I tried to embody you, to make myself into someone you'd like, but after a long, long year, I realized that I'd rather try my best at being myself. Whatever that means."

The blonde blinks. "And you want that person—you—to be good."

"Who would not? It's tiresome, being so… lackadaisical about myself and what I can, and cannot do."

The desire to do good.

For Grace, it had never truly gone away—just been warped into a parody of itself until she would unironically deliver men to be tortured to death in the name of justice. It had been 'good' because she had wanted it to be, but that was, and is, not how this works. Being good, as Denzel once said, is hard, sometimes thankless work. Aliyah had told her that it always began by trying your hardest, that burning desire in your heart to improve.

"I want it," Grace breathed out. "Our paths might differ, but that's okay. We're okay."

"Then let us begin once again." The Unovan's smile never leaves her face. She inhales loudly, and her voice changes, growing more commanding and deeper. "Hydreigon keeps battering away with Dark Pulse; he is relentless, never allowing any respite," Cecilia says.

Grace's voice brims with hope. "Intercept with one of your hands! Keep moving and avoid the explosions!"

Claydol's arm jerks outward. One of its floating turret-hands disconnects from its body, swings in front of the incoming Dark Pulse just as it detonates, and the impact rocks the air, swallowing the space in black light and draconic heat. The hand cracks down the middle, scorched and trembling, but it holds. Just barely, but another one of Hydreigon's belated explosions rocks the psychic's very core. It must act now.

It. It. It.

Dehumanizing your enemies—or even yourself—makes it easier for you to kill them. But behind every pair of eyes is something that dreams. Something that hopes. Something that lives.

Grace opens her mouth not to give another order, but to remind her Claydol—and by extension, herself—that she is a human girl just like everyone else. "Cassianus!" she yells.

They dreamt in the past, too. Hushed ideas of their favorite song, color, joke, or story. Of their favorite part of Lakhutia's castle, and even that the King's crown might look good on them if they could try it on one day—blasphemous thoughts.

Cassianus' eyes flash, and the psychic is gone, Teleporting faster than they ever had before. Hydreigon scans the length and width of the battlefield, using his three heads to sweep the arena, but his opponent has disappeared.

Something foams under the water. Neither Grace, Cecilia, or Hydreigon notices it at first. The water pulls outward, drawn into something deeper, a light that rises and spreads through the entire sea, then concentrates into a single point.

A wide blast of plasma tears upward, and in an instant, everyone recognizes it. Hyper Beam. The water splits around it, flung outward in violent sheets as the beam carves through the air and hits the arena's shield's ceiling. It is a torrent of blinding light tinged with gold and red, so hot it warps the air around it; steam explodes upward in thick plumes that superheat the air.

It hits Hydreigon head-on and keeps going, swallowing him whole. The beam holds for a few seconds, but by the end, the dragon is an unconscious mess of peeled scales and burned flesh; the ghosts under his joyful thrall finally retreat and the turquoise that tints the air recedes all at once.

Grace doesn't understand—well, she understands, just she does not know how. Never had they used that move together before, never had Cassianus given even an inkling of being able to use Hyper Beam. From the raging, burning sea emerges the psychic, untouched by the water thanks to a body-tight barrier they had encased themselves in just as they Teleported.

"That was scary," they say with a few blinks. "Ow."

Grace laughs, eyes still wide. "You can't feel physical pain, silly."

"Don't take this away from me."

She wants to ask how, but she will not get that answer until the battle ends. Within every Claydol, carved into their biomechanical innards as inscriptions no one remembers how to read, rests the innate knowledge to use Hyper Beam. Few Pokemon hold this privilege, but they are one of them, and unlike their biological counterparts, when they grow powerful enough, experienced enough, and the situation is desperate enough to call for it, it triggers like a memory in waiting.

Cassianus whispers in Grace's head while Cecilia recalls her Hydreigon, something only the blonde can hear. Are you having fun, my King? The question snaps her out of her character-driven daze for what feels like the first time this entire battle. She blinks, not knowing what to say. Lakhutia's Kings always thought about a glorious past or their future legacies and would forget what was right in front of them. It's important to live in the moment, the psychic adds, their voice accompanied by the turbulent waves below and the roar of the crowd she finally remembers. Do not forget the present.

After a short pause, she nods and is wrested back to earth. She feels like herself again—because she can become herself again. She had gone through every transformation she had undergone and was now free to look the present in the eyes. No grin splits her face in that moment, nor does she laugh, or show any excitement. A sudden calm overtakes her, and everything seems slow enough to make this battle last forever. She sticks out her tongue and licks her upper lip, inhales slowly through her nose, and swallows. Tingles reverberate across her skin. She is as focused now as the time she faced down Saturn and his grunts and won, but no one will die at the end of this battle, win or lose. The sun will keep rising every day, the earth will keep spinning around it, and one day, this will all be memory.

But today? Today is happening now.

Yes.

She is having the time of her life.

Cecilia can barely believe it. She clasps Zolst's Pokeball within her palm and thanks him for his help. She thought she had Grace dead to rights, trapped within a cage of her own making—her laser focus on the linearity of her story. Time, after all, only flows in one direction, and Claydol is the perfect representation for a girl trying to learn how to be a person again. Not that she could have done much good with Tangrowth in this environment anyway—though she is the one who flooded the arena in the first place and—

The Unovan shakes her head and rolls her shoulders. She cannot get caught in Grace's rhythm, otherwise she has already lost. Much of the water has been lost to Hyper Beam's sheer heat, but the field is still akin to a shallower sea, where landbound Pokemon would do nothing but flounder. She knows Grace is in the same position as well, so if she manages to take down this Claydol…

Cecilia smiles thinly, and realizes there is only one option. "There comes a certain freedom with clarity one gets when they take flight." With less than thirty seconds, she speaks quickly. "When you are high in the sky and everything seems so small. Your doubts, your past, the voices telling you to stay grounded all vanish. Up there, it's just you, the wind, and the Freedom To Try Something New."

The Pokeball tears open with a high, bombastic cry, and from its light tears forth a blaze of crimson and fire. Wings outstretched, Talonflame screams into the sky with untold joy to be able to fly again. The heat trailing her feathers warps the air behind her, leaving streaks of flickering gold in her wake as she climbs higher and higher, until the psychic ceiling itself groans under the force of her ascent. Her flight seems so fluid, so free; she has wings and eyes Cecilia only wishes she could have, the ability to see and fly over the horizon whenever she wishes.

Once upon a time, a deep fear used to permeate in the Unovan's head. Talonflame had, and has always been an independent mind, flying away and exploring for hours at a time—and more recently, days. Terror used to rock Cecilia's mind each time her little bird would fly off; the thought that she might just not come back would haunt her, seizing the moment to free herself from her earthly shackles. Just like her brother had done to her back in their childhood the moment he began his journey. After all, who would bother staying with her?

The Unovan snaps her fingers and points forward. "Talonflame outruns sound itself and sends an array of feathers to pierce Claydol!"

A shockwave tears through the arena as Talonflame speeds up, a stream of Tailwind that feels more like a Heatwave at her back and Agility in her blood. Behind her, she leaves a trail of flaming feathers sharpened with Steel Wing—but they are different than usual. Faster than usual, as if the psychic energy from Agility remains within them. They do not rush toward Claydol all at once, casting a wide net to force the ground type to widen its psychic focus.

"Barrier! Keep them close!" Grace orders—

"Talonflame uses Secret Power!"

The water below them rises in a single, sinuous line. It slithers upward from the lake below like a snake, undulating with a hypnotic rhythm as it climbs toward Talonflame's beak.

As Claydol takes the feathers for themselves and sends them back toward the fire type, the water threads itself in front of her mouth with a silent snap of tension, and forms itself into a ring. With a screech, she releases the Water Pulse. It is, however, not only weak, but slow. As much as Temperance has helped, a fire type working with water can only progress so quickly.

However.

"She hones her claws, and launches into a Brave Blitz that radiates like the sun." Already, she had already been moving. Cecilia's Pokemon have gotten used to acting as she speaks, and Talonflame is as astute as they come. She folds her wings tight against her body, dives, and becomes a comet. White fire erupts across her feathers; the heat shimmers, blinding and pure, and every beat of her wings feeds it—not that they are visible. Within an instant, she is high in the sky, and the next, she is right about to ram into Claydol with enough momentum to break through steel.

Grace doesn't have the time to speak, given that she has barely opened her mouth, but Claydol reacts. The speed of sound is plenty of time to think. They have already run through the options. Teleporting is too slow, especially given their energy reserves after that Hyper Beam; barriers might have worked should they have formed at least ten, but it is too late for this; no, there only remains one option. The psychic understands that this offensive move is to disorient them enough to let the Water Pulse hit them, at which point their body would give away at contact with said liquid.

To be alive, to be a person, is to take destiny by your own hands and to swim against the current. Cassianus embraces the impact, allowing Talonflame to ram into them like a bullet, but when the bird tries to break away, she finds her body held fast. Cass has to act quickly; they can't keep Talonflame pinned for long. Mud gushes from the Claydol's body, splattering over Cecilia's embodiment of freedom. It cools rapidly, hardening into stone and locking both Pokemon in a single, unmoving mass that still leaves bits of their bodies exposed.

Then, they fall.

And fall.

And fall.

Who would blink first? While the sea has again lowered, either through Talonflame's Heatwave or naturally seeping into the porous dry lakebed, both Pokemon sinking here would spell their end—but Cecilia believes that maybe, just maybe, she can make this work. Claydol is weaker to water than Talonflame, being unable to even feel the patter of rain without being severely weakened. All she would have to do was wait five, maybe ten seconds, and she would be able to recall her Pokemon and have the clear advantage to win—

"Break away!" Grace says, licking her lip.

This is where Cecilia was mistaken. This was not a play for Claydol to take Talonflame down with them, but a way to finish her off in one fell swoop. They are alive; like in every creature that dots the earth, they hold the burning desire to live, and will go down kicking and screaming instead of lying there and accepting it. The solid mass of rock breaks in half, and Cassianus manages to hover right above the waves while Talonflame falls and sinks below the sea. The Unovan wastes no time and recalls her, though this battle, she realizes, has just gotten a lot more difficult.

"I told you that you were good at this," Cecilia chides. "I had no idea this was coming."

Grace stretches, breathing a sigh of relief. "I didn't either, at first. I just went along with the flow."

Claydol lets out a cheery sound effect and lets out a synthesized, "surprise!" Their voice crackles like the sound of an old radio.

The Unovan has no choice. Scizor would get destroyed in this environment, and she knows it. Part of her still can barely believe Claydol is giving her this much trouble—it was all of Grace's other Pokemon she worried about. She closes her eyes and imagines, tastes victory for a moment, and all the jubilation it would involve. Finally being able to move on, to face the world with her back straight, chest puffed out, and a confident smile as she learned to be more than she ever hoped she would be. Then, she sends out Slowking.

The pink psychic type sinks into the water immediately, and she orders him to use Slack Off. He is in a terrible state, still burned and mangled beyond recognition, but if they could use the water as a shield…

"He's weak!" Grace calls out. "Into the water, too! Hound him—speak into my mind if something goes wrong!" she quickly adds.

She is correct. If Slowking were healthy enough to act, he might have been able to challenge Claydol's psychic abilities, and most likely overpowered them to poke holes into their protective bubble—at the very least, he would have forced them to stay on the defensive and neutralized all of their offensive options while underwater. But now? Neither Cecilia nor Grace can perceive what is happening underwater; they miss the sudden burst of searing earth erupting underwater, forced up through artificial geothermal vents borne of Claydol's nascent will. Smoke, ash, heat, and mud surge upward beneath Slowking, the explosion jarring him awake and tearing him out of his Slack Off.

He has, however, recovered enough to offer some resistance. He raises his good arm, eyes flashing grey, and attempts to Disable Claydol's psychic abilities. Cassianus stalls for a moment, but rebukes him without hesitation. Behind them rises great pillars of earth and mud, solidified until they go above-water and act as miniature islands—and when Cecilia sees them poking out of the fading sea, she realizes her mistake.

Enough, she thinks. Enough. She has come too far to lose control like this, and she would not go gently. Cecilia's hand hovers over her dear Slowking's Pokeball, but it does not grab it. No, instead, she decides to employ everything she's learned. Taking a step back, and looking at the situation as a whole; attempting a strategy she would never do in a new and fresh take; the ability to think beyond this one match, and to look ahead.

Ahead. Ahead. Ever further ahead. She shall reach for the stars and grab them, or she would have nothing at all.

Luckily for her, Slowking finally comes through. A sudden frost spreads outward from his hand, locking the water around Claydol in a jagged prison of ice and is now primed to defeat his rival in a battle of the minds. The ground type floats up like an iceberg, and those precious dozens of seconds it took until they broke out is all it takes. Cassianus' barrier folds and bends by the time they break out of the ice and plunge back into the deep; all of their efforts are spent staying dry. For all both psychics pride themselves as barrier experts, Slowking has been honing his skill far more consistently and for longer than Cassianus. With both Pokemon exhausted, it is a slow and sloppy duel that ends in Claydol's defeat, their biomechanical brain fried from so much invasive activity.

Grace is so proud of them. So, so proud; and yet there is much to be done. Even now, after Cassianus' defeat, stone and mud still fills the water, and it slowly seeps deeper into the earth. The sea is now shallower than it has ever been, with dozens of pillars raised like islands dotting an ocean. It reminds her of the battle with Barry Lane, the fight that showed her how deep the gulf was when it came to her improvising skills. She has come far, since then.

She is human again, able to feel and empathize even for those who have wronged her, able to give second chances and turn the other cheek when she can. If Grace Pastel has one wish, it is that by the end of her life, her name might be sung from shore to shore. Across the hills of Shinwa and the rolling fields of Kalos and all of Solante, through the hungering sands of Orre and the wartorn continent of Ransei, even to the isolated settlements of the ranger-run regions far to the south, and the isolated settlements without master that dot this earth. Few in history have achieved such a feat, but whether evil or good, they were all extraordinary.

But that is the future, is it not? Grace inhales sharply through her teeth; the air feels warm and soothing. She thinks: what can I do right now, and the answer comes instantly. She wants to cap off her story, and she wants to have fun doing it. The teen grabs her next Pokemon, who appears with a flash of gold. The aspiring hero—the one who had pulled her from the brink of monstrosity—who emerges on one of the islands and crackles with barely contained energy. Muscles coil beneath a hide striped like storm clouds, and arcs of blue electricity dance across his body with each breath he takes. Electivire slams a fist into a palm, creating a thunderclap, and points a single finger in the air, letting the audience's cheers bask over him.

"Honey, you show off! Your opponent's Slowking underwater, though I'm not sure you want to go for a swim!" Grace laughs, clapping her hands. "Electric Swift!"

Electivire summons a set of stars that spin around him, collecting electricity until he launches them forward. Each one far too quick for anyone but Talonflame to dodge, and Slowking is a sitting duck wherever he is. Unfortunately for them, the sea having so much sediment and dirt means that it isn't a great conductor and she believes they probably can't just fry him out of the water. They need a needle and thread, not a hammer. The stars, for their part, easily manage to track Slowking in the muddy water. As Cecilia guesses through her narration, he raises a hand and raises a barrier, but he does not know he has already lost.

Electivire whirrs like an engine, and Grace asks, "you found him?" He is electricity, feels it wherever it goes. The needle and thread had not been Swift, but this. "Then use Lightning Bolt!"

Storm clouds gather above the hero's head, and lightning strikes down into his waiting hand, coalescing into a jagged, crackling lance of pure power. He barely seems to wait to aim—he doesn't need to. Grace watches, heart pounding, grinning like a girl half her age. Isn't my family just so damn cool? With a childlike scream, he hurls the lance into the lake. It pierces the surface with a hiss, and then the world beneath explodes with light. Electricity branches out in every direction, illuminating the depths in a web of searing brilliance. The water slows the bolt down, but barely, and when it reaches Slowking, it shatters his barrier and pierces his gut.

Cecilia calls out for him a few times—but she hears nothing but a faint whisper in her head as she grabs the psychic's Pokeball. Your eyes… are looking… far away, my Lady. Very far away. Beyond your horizon. You might miss the—

The voice cuts off. He has fallen unconscious. As there is no response from him for thirty seconds, the referee calls for her to recall him and release her next Pokeball. He is gone, but his words stick with her. What was he going to say? What could she miss? Was it not great to aspire to be… to be…

"Hey. Cecilia." Grace snaps the Unovan out of her thoughts. "You look stressed out."

She blinks, realizing Grace speaks the truth. She wipes her moist palms on her clothes, places a hand over her somehow still slow-beating heart, and smiles. When did she start getting anxious…?

"Battle's far from over," Grace adds. "It'd be a shame if one of us stopped having fun."

"I'm afraid you're right," Cecilia says—though calling it 'far from over' is a big stretch. They're in the endgame now.

Two options lay in front of her, but only one makes sense. Her only choice is to send out Talonflame into the fray again. Her final Pokemon cannot match Electivire in terms of speed, and he has experience when it comes to navigating this type of terrain. Talonflame's wings are the only thing capable of outrunning the sheer speed of Electivire's attacks—for a time. The choice is made quickly.

"Thank you for letting me know I was being stupid," the Unovan says, Pokeball in hand. "Talonflame emerges from her Pokeball, crimson against crimson—" Cecilia swallows her next words when a brilliant blue flash explodes out of Electivire's hands. "Me First!"

In the same instant, the fiery predator screams out a Thunder of her own, shrieking as the attack tears through the air. The twin bolts collide mid-flight with a deafening crack, the explosion shaking the battlefield. The charge in the air is so intense that her feathers puff up, crackling with static. "She bathes the world in heat, ridding it of its water!" Each beat of Talonflame's wings brings with it scorching heat that turns the sea to vapor. Even with Agility and Tailwind, they can barely dodge Electivire's attacks. Swift and Thunders tear across the sky, and he uses both attacks expertly. The stars corner her slowly, swarming around her, until she has to use Me First to not get hit by a Thunder.

"Again! Again! Again!" Grace exclaims with sheer delight. With each strike, she throws her hand forth as if she is the one throwing out Thunders, and not her Pokemon. Once, twice, thrice, this happens again and again until— "Eat up!"

Cecilia's eyes widen when Electivire's electricity suddenly disappears as soon as the cycle repeats and Talonflame sends a Thunder hurtling his way. The bolt crashes into his chest with blinding force, and he harmlessly absorbs the lightning. Muscles twitch, veins pulse with raw power, and his eyes burn brighter than before. The Unovan gulps.

She messed up.

Before she can force Talonflame to flee back into her Pokeball, utilizing her final switch, a Thunder falls so fast it doesn't even register. There is no buildup, no warning crackle in the air. Just a thin line of light, sharp and silent, connecting Electivire's body to the sky and then to her Pokemon in a single blink. It is so quick that Cecilia sees it before sound can catch up. The Unovan moistens her lips, yet no panic takes hold of her. Cecilia scans the arena and takes a deep breath. The sea is now shallow enough to have retreated fully into the crater save for some stubborn puddles, the entire battlefield is shrouded in warm, humid vapor, and the islands Claydol had raised are now thick pillars jutting out of the earth unnaturally. She thanks Talonflame for her service and recalls her quickly.

The lakebed isn't dry anymore. It has taken a beating, but it has been fed, too. Water has seeped into every crack, and the churned-up sediment has settled across the basin in a thick, dark layer. The kind that plants would grow from eventually. The kind that sticks to boots and skin. The kind that remembers what it's like to be alive. The land could support life again. Certainly not soon, and never in the same form, but perhaps one day.

Cecilia pauses for a moment, and not to think of strategy. That road is already set in front of her with no further options, and she believes—truly believes—that her Pokemon will pull through. Slowking's words have stuck with her, even now. She lets her final Pokemon's Pokeball rest in her hand, and brings it against her forehead. The metal feels cold against her, but permeates with a certain warmth nonetheless. She's doing it again, looking too far away instead of right in front of her. Wanting to jump up the entire set of stairs instead of climbing it step by step as she did every few days to visit Cynthia. It is this mindset that made her crash and burn these past two months, losing all of her friends in the process save for Chase and Louis.

She is endlessly thankful for their presence.

"Focus not your entire width on what you will be tomorrow; remember what you are today," she murmurs to herself. The microphone picks it up, but she does not care. "Scizor is the oldest in our merry band—" Lehmhart does not count, given that his sapience is a few months old. "He was born in Eterna Forest's outer ring, where the Pokemon are fierce enough to scare away most children but are, in the grand scheme of things, nothing. Weak."

She's out of time. The Unovan releases Scizor, who—even though she cannot tell—gleams with a radiant red. He lands lightly, wings thrumming with energy, his polished crimson shell catching the light through the fog in a way that makes him seem almost ethereal. For a moment, she believes Electivire will attack and that she will have to continue when there is a lull in the fight, but they do not. Grace tells him to wait, and he does, arms crossed and tails brightly swaying in the thin fog.

Cecilia mouths a thank you, though remains unsure of if Grace can see it, and continues. "From the day he was born, he has fought for survival, fought to get stronger, and of course, he has failed. Who hasn't?" Scizor's wings beat with reticence, and the Unovan smiles fondly. His dream is to beat what sleeps at Eterna's center, and he has often taken fights he could not win in hopes of getting stronger. "But his will is ironclad, so he gets up, again and again, as is your duty once you are born into this world. With every failure comes the opportunity to grow and learn. He has the Discipline To Try Again."

"Get up in his face and Fire Punch!" Grace screams as soon as they finish.

Cecilia guffaws. She couldn't wait even one more second, could she? Electivire turns into living lightning, snaking across the arena and around the pillars Claydol had raised. They could, however, use these to their advantage as well. "Scizor—" No time. "Agility and Swords Dance!"

Scizor doesn't hesitate. His body loosens, motion flowing like the wind as he kicks off the ground and jets backward, wings screaming with speed. As he moves, his arms rise and cross in an awkward dance because there is simply no time. If they are to beat Electivire, they will have to give everything to their offense. Electivire's hand catches fire and reaches out, grabbing Scizor by the throat.

"Thunder!"

"Bullet Punch into Fury Cutter!" Cecilia screams.

The flurry is so quick it appears as a blur endlessly slamming into Electivire's chest; the final hit is a cut that cuts a deep wound across his chest. The electric type groans in pain and lets go while Scizor blasts him with a bright, high-pitched Flash Cannon coming right out of both his claws. Electivire covers his face and grunts, digging in his heels, and by the time he can see clearly again, Scizor is gone. Cecilia can see him, skulking behind a pillar, but Electivire and Grace cannot. They'd nearly lost right then and there.

Try again.

"Hiding I see! We'll find you!" Grace quips.

"In your fucking dreams, Grace!" She swears, but she is all smiles and expectation. "Just you wait, we'll get you!"

"Ha! Honey, take down those pillars!"

The pillars shatter.

Electivire barrels through them like a force of nature, twin tails glowing, each swing sending stone flying. Dust and debris choke the air. Scizor darts from pillar to pillar, flickering into view with a flash of red for a heartbeat before vanishing again. Flash. Scizor reappears—barely. A gleam of metal, a hiss of air, and he strikes; claws wielding an even more powerful double Fury Cutter crash into Electivire's side in a flurry too fast to follow, but Electivire does not only move fast, he thinks fast. He twists with a growl, grabs hold of one of Scizor's arms mid-strike, and slams a Hammer Arm into the steel-type's chest. The Fury Cutter only grazes him, and Scizor is sent back skipping over the ground like a ragdoll.

Try again.

"Get up! Get up! You can do it—" Scizor listens to her immediately, ignoring the cracks spread across his chest. "Now—"

"Stick close and we'll win!" Grace interrupts.

Electivire is relentless in his pursuit, never leaving them a second to breathe. He is a constant opponent from which there could be no respite. Cecilia is sweating bullets, but she has to time this just right. Wait. Her head spins. Wait. Her eyes are wide open. Now.

"U-Turn!"

Scizor swerves around Electivire with a sudden burst of speed from his wings and slams a claw onto his back. No respite. Another burst of Flash Cannon, this time wide and short-range, flies out of the claw and burns the electric type's back before he backhands Scizor with all his weight and his arm sizzling with flame. The impact rings out like a cannon; Scizor is flung through the air, limbs flailing, but he stabilizes himself and lands on his feet. The electricity constantly coiling around Electivire seems to slow Scizor down. Static Shield.

Try again.

"Bulldoze them!"

"Up—"

"Radiant Leap and give 'em a big old hug!"

The Bulldoze call is a trap. Scizor is already airborne when Electivire surges into lightning again, leaping up with such force that the ground caves beneath him. At such a close distance, Cecilia's mouth can't react. It just can't. But Scizor can. Electivire clasps him tightly as they fly through the air in an arc, but the steel type slams his head clad with iron into the would-be-hero's own. They tumble, spinning out of control. Then—crash—they slam into a pillar, shattering its base in a hail of dust and rock. The structure groans, begins to fall, but both Pokemon leap away before they can be hit. Electivire and Scizor stare each other down, the former with his bloodsoaked fur and the latter with his body fried and fractured, split in a fine lattice. Sparks still dance across Scizor's carapace, crawling through the damage like insects. His limbs twitch from residual voltage. It is difficult to have the momentum when Electivire is faster than eyes can follow, but as always.

Try again.

"Didn't get a Fury Cutter off this time, huh?" Grace teases. She is having so much fun.

Cecilia rolls her eyes to humor her. "We'll get you. You think you can just keep coming at us and do the same thing over and over? It's getting old, try something new!"

"I guess you're right. You two are trickier than I thought—" the blonde's eyes focus again. "—Railgun!"

Shattered stone levitates around Electivire, and within a second, they are electrified at the tip of his fingers. He shoots them as if his hand is a gun, and six of them lodge themselves within Scizor's cracked armor.

"Now!" Grace yells.

Electivire's arm pulls back sharply as though tugging on an invisible rope. And Scizor moves. He's dragged through the air, helplessly reeled in by the charge buried inside him. The ironclad bug knows there is no fighting this, and so he embraces the risks and decides to go on the offense—

Which is exactly in line with Cecilia's thoughts. "Aim for the legs!"

"Jump!" Grace counters.

Another Fury Cutter goes wide as Scizor passes underneath the soaring Electivire, the slice passing through nothing but air and wet earth, but the steel type doesn't stop. His momentum carries him forward, claws dragging sparks from the ruined ground, wings flaring with a burst of speed. He twists, plants a foot, and launches himself straight up. One claw reaches out—sharp, focused—and strikes. It catches Electivire's leg mid-air—or would have had he not put up a Protect right away. He spins in tight, claw gleaming white-hot from a charging Flash Cannon, and fires straight into Electivire's barrier, using the opportunity to jump back and purge the stones out of him.

Again and again, this exchange is done. They trade blows for what feels like forever, yet barely lasts two minutes in truth. Electivire is the one pressing forward, driving the rhythm with wild, thunder-fed momentum. He moves like a storm barely held together, fists sparking with electricity and flame, each step crashing into the ground with enough force to leave shallow craters behind. Scizor is fast—but not faster. Not now. He's on the back foot, ducking and weaving, his claws raised more to shield than strike. A haymaker arcs through the air and clips Scizor's side, sending him spinning. Electivire is on him before he lands, grabbing at his leg, dragging him through the mud and slamming him into a pillar hard enough to crack its base. Scizor scrapes free and retaliates with a sharp Fury Cutter across the ribs, leaving a sibling to his previous cut.

Each order from both teens is feverish now, spoken without breath, driven more by instinct than strategy. They cut each other off without care, shouting over one another, leaning hard against the barrier as if willing themselves into the fight. They get lost in the pace of battle, the ever quickening flurry of blows, the raw rhythm of movement and impact, the sound of fists meeting steel and steel striking back. Everything becomes a blur of motion and heat and noise. There is no room for thought anymore. Only reaction. Only momentum.

Scizor is exhausted; only one choice remains now. They have waited this long, been on the backfoot this long, and it just feels right now. "Let us throw everything at them!" Cecilia closes a fist as she yells.

Scizor's wings begin to buzz and blur, and a Tailwind blows at his back. He rushes forward with unprecedented speed— faster than he had ever been in this battle. His body screams for release; he pushes himself so much his carapace starts overheating—a fire sparks, and it begins to melt, yet he pushes on, because when one fails, they try again. For a moment, for an instant, with the Bullet Punch to carry him further, he is as fast as Electivire.

The electric type reacts, because he always does. He explodes with a Discharge that lights the battlefield in a wash of crackling white and blue lightning. Scizor doesn't stop. He can't stop. He's like a bullet already fired; there's no turning, no slowing, until it hits something. Electricity tears across his frame, crawls into the cracks of his armor and boils beneath the surface, but he keeps going, claws drawn back, every step another piece of himself given up. He is going to hit, or he is going to break trying.

Well.

The hit never comes.

Scizor collapses mid-charge, his body giving out all at once. One leg locks, the other buckles, and he crashes into the ground at Electivire's feet with a heavy, scraping thud. Steam hisses off his back where the electricity cooked straight through the plating. His claws twitch once in defiance, then fall still. "Get up!" Cecilia orders—not maliciously. She simply cannot comprehend that Scizor has fallen, that he is out of tries to give. She blinks for a few seconds, recalls Scizor when she realizes he has lost consciousness, and her hand goes to her next Pokemon…

Her next Pokemon?

She doesn't have any. The battle is over.

"Scizor is unable to battle! Grace Pastel takes the win 4-6!" the referee says.

It sinks in now, and it hits her like a bucket of cold water to the face. Until she had met Temperance, battling was enjoyable, yes, but also a means to an end—it accomplished the nebulous goal that is 'getting stronger' even though it is but smoke and mirrors. Refining her craft was elating now, but never has she fought someone to have made her get lost in the joyful frenzy of battle. Cecilia ignores the cheers and blinks the tears forming away. She doesn't understand why she is crying, exactly. It is not sadness, nor is it joy, but something else. Perhaps it is simply the finality of it all finally settling into her bones.

Grace's legs tremble as she stares down at Electivire. Instead of celebrating or basking under the audience's cheers, he looks back at her in silence and nods, offering a thumbs up. He knows how important this was, and how important it will be. She mouths a thank you, voice caught somewhere between breath and feeling, and recalls him. Her steps down the metallic stairs are slow, careful. The adrenaline still pumping in her veins makes everything feel slow and surreal. Meltan slides up her arm, perches on her shoulder, and wraps its little hands in her hair. "I forgot to…" she trails off. She had bungled up her final message meant to come with Honey because she had been so caught up in the delirium of the fight. Meltan cries out again as if to tell her not to fret. "Huh."

Her steps feel strangely light as she goes to meet Cecilia down the side of the arena—a formality amongst opponents. This battle has not lasted long, in the grand scheme of things—Grace certainly has faced longer trials—but it feels like a lifetime has passed.

The blonde looks up at her ex-girlfriend when they meet, into her pale, blank eyes which still leak tears, then offers a hand. Cecilia smiles and shakes it, and the tension melts away.

"It seems like I did not win narratively or as a matter of fact," the Unovan laments. "It is your complete and total victory. Congratulations, Grace." She clears her throat. "I wanted to win, of course—every cell in my body screamed for a win, but I wanted to at least force you to send your Togekiss out again."

"I…" Grace stops for a moment. "I would have wanted to. That was the plan from the start, to show that little girl who set off from Jubilife was still in here, you know?" she points at her heart. Cecilia's eyes widen, and she throws her head out, barking out a laugh. "It's—all arbitrary anyway!" Grace quickly adds. "It was fun, wasn't it? That's what matters, in the end."

Cecilia knows she wants to spare her feelings, but as she says none of it matters. "Agreed. I've rarely felt so alive." She has lost, but it doesn't feel that way.

"There's a lot I forgot to say, y'know." Grace hugs herself. The microphones are off, now; they are free to talk undisturbed. "Like… my dad explained it to me. And Temperance." Cecilia winces, imagining how the coordinator must have chewed Grace out. "I'm sorry for ruining your sense of trust and I was supposed to go into this whole thing where—"

"It's okay," Cecilia says. "It's okay. We all live with the cards we are dealt with, and I'm tired of just wallowing in self pity. Go and be happy." She had said it before back in Canalave and meant it then too, but today, she speaks without burden. Her body feels light. "I'll work and better myself, brick by brick, day by day. It's important to remember—"

"The present," Grace adds at the same time as her. Laughter is shared. "But still, I'm sorry. I'll always be sorry." A short pause lingers. "You're leaving for Unova soon, then?"

"Now that I lost, all that remains is my promise with Cynthia once the Conference ends." Cecilia would be leaving sooner than Grace is. "I cannot lie, I'm… excited. So many new opportunities—and my co-workers seem amenable to having a tall, creepy girl added to the team. Yes, it'll be a nice time."

Grace giggles, then looks at the battlefield at their side. Her smile falters for a second, growing sad. "I really liked your battling and your message, Cecilia. I—I hope this helped you. And that this doesn't sound too pretentious. And this is goodbye, then—"

"It's goodbye," Cecilia confirms quietly, "for now. I need a clean break and a fresh start, but one day, if you're in need of help or an old face to keep you company, I can be of service." She tilts her head, and her lips quirk up. "Though I'm not exactly known to give good advice."

"If I'm not intruding when the time comes, I'll take you up on that," Grace says before looking down at her feet. "Then, uh. See you later?" she asks tentatively.

"See you later."

If one is to speak of promises—those quiet, unfinished shapes that linger between people—then one might speak of a parting that came not with bitterness, but with the warmth of a connection still shared. It was not clean, nor easy, but it was needed. Between two girls who had hurt each other, knowingly or not; between two girls who had healed in equal measure. They did not know when or how they would meet again, but simply that the thread between them had not been completely cut. It has merely been stretched thin, and hopefully one day, somewhere down the line, they would find each other once more.

Not as lovers, but maybe as kindred souls who had shared the weight of the world together.

One might even eventually call it a friendship.

A/N: Sorry for the wait, everyone.

When I started writing I Will Touch the Skies at the end of 2022, this battle was one of the clearest pictures I had in my mind. Of course, the way it was written, what goes on during it, and the outcome of the fight aren't the same as what I envisioned that December, and it went through many iterations in the two and a half years I've been thinking about it, but the structure always remained the same. At the core of what I wanted to write is the exploration of what being Chosen to save the world can do to a teenager's mind. It did not matter what form it took—Grace and Cecilia were always going to break up, and they were always going to face each other at the Conference as the penultimate battle closing off their character arc.

Of course, whether I stuck the landing or not weighs heavily on my mind as I write this, and it's part of the reason this took so long to come out. Sure, I was burned out of writing Pokemon in general (writing so much in so little time will do that to someone at some point), I had a really busy semester in university, but really, it was also difficult to open the google doc and start to write. You always put it off, you know? Oh, I'll do it tomorrow, then the day after that, and then suddenly it's been three months and you haven't even started.

I started, eventually. It was hard; I must have deleted like five drafts of this because I couldn't accurately put on paper what vision I had in my mind. In the end I decided an omniscient narrator like what I had used in the 'Time and—' chapter would work best, and once I broke through that barrier, the words began to flow again. I'm sure this chapter will have lost a lot of its impact given that it's been months since I updated, but I hope you enjoyed it regardless. Thank you to those who come back and read this.
 
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Epilogue I New
Togekiss/Princess (Hustle) - Pound, Sweet Kiss, Growl, Headbutt, Fairy Wind, Ancient Power, Extrasensory, Thunder Wave, Air Cutter, Wish, Psychic, Shadow Ball, Dazzling Gleam, Moonblast, Charge Beam, Air Slash, Mystical Fire, Tri-Attack, Nasty Plot, Defog

Jellicent/Buddy (Water Absorb) - Bubblebeam, Night Shade, Absorb, Water Sport, Water Pulse, Hex, Poison Sting, Mist, Acid Armor, Shadow Ball, Recover, Brine, Whirlpool, Hydro Pump, Water Spout, Acid, Will-O-Wisp, Ice Beam, Taunt, Scald, Boil, Freeze, Protect, Ice Blade, Rain Dance, Extrasensory

Electivire/Honey (Motor Drive) - Thundershock, Swift, Elemental Swift, Thunder Punch, Charge, Leer, Ice Punch, Thunderbolt, Discharge, Fire Punch, Protect, Cross Chop, Thunder, Low-Kick, Screech, Radiant Leap, Static Shield, Bulldoze, Hammer Arm, Rain Dance, Lightning Bolt

Tangrowth/Angel (Chlorophyll) - Vine Whip, Absorb, Mega Drain, Stun Spore, Bind, Poison Powder, Leech Seed, Ancient Power, Power Whip, Knock Off, Sunny Day, Giga Drain, Sleep Powder, Solar Beam, Solar Blade, Brick Break, Ingrain, Bulldoze

Tyranitar/Sweetheart (Sand Stream) - Leer, Tackle, Horn Attack, Rock Throw, Payback, Stomping Tantrum, Smack Down, Bite, Rock Slide, Crunch, Sandstorm, Iron Defense, Dragon Pulse, Iron Head, Earthbreaker, Aerial Ace, Stone Edge, Dark Pulse, Rock Polish, Surf, Earthquake, Ice Fang, Flamethrower

Turtonator/Sunshine (Shell Armor) - Smog, Ember, Smokescreen, Incinerate, Iron Defense, Flamethrower, Shell Trap, Dragon Pulse, Bulldoze, Scorching Sands, Rock Tomb, Body Slam, Flash Cannon, Solar Beam, Rapid Spin, Scale Shot, Iron Tail, Focus Blast, Sunny Day, Fire Pillar, Flame Charge, Heat Crash, Fire Blast, Shell Smash

Claydol/Cassianus (Levitate) - Mud Slap, Rock Tomb, Rapid Spin, Harden, Confusion, Psychic, Barrier, Imprison, Wide Guard, Light Screen, Reflect, Ancient Power, Teleport, Earth Power, Sandstorm, Scorching Sands, Hyper Beam

Meltan/Mimi (Magnet Pull) - Harden, Acid Armor, Tail Whip / Not a battler

EPILOGUE I

My laptop's fan filled the room with a slow, drone-like hum with an incessant noise that made the heat feel even heavier. The air was thick and unmoving, heavy with the scent of my iced tea. Droplets gathered at the rim and traced uneven paths along the curve, pooling at the base. Sunlight bled through the blinds in pale, listless stripes, and Mimi drooped like melted ice cream over the table. "Blegh," I sighed, sprawling my upper body over the desk. "It's sooooo hot."

"Can't do anything with the A.C. busted," Maylene said. My head spun around so quickly my neck hurt. My girlfriend stood at the door with that teasing smile of hers, arms crossed as she leaned against the frame. "Still watching the footage of your battle, I see."

"Yup." I slowly turned back toward my laptop and heard her steps approach me. There had been a certain mental fatigue permeating throughout my brain since the battle with Cecilia. It wasn't anything debilitating, it just made me feel a lot more sluggish than I usually did. "Can't focus, though. I feel like I'm seeing the battle, but I'm not really learning anything about it." Mimi chimed, their eye bouncing inside their golden gear as they wriggled their arms around. "Pfft. Thanks for the offer, Mimi," my finger softly caressed their head, "but your great mind is better used somewhere else. Like…"

"Like telling Grace to take a break already," Maylene said. Her arms gently draped over my sweaty neck. She placed her chin against my head. "I get wanting to study your loss, but Candice is coming back soon and her Pokemon can cool us down."

My loss—yes. It didn't sting as much as I thought it would, but if one wanted to improve, they needed to have a certain hunger to pick apart your own mistakes—in a healthy manner, of course. My defeat had come one round after my victory over Cecilia at the hands of Souta Mikage, a third-year Johtohan trainer I'd never heard of prior to my assignment against him. That went to show just how big this beautiful world of ours truly was. Half normal, half ghost type specialist, he had hurled interesting tactics at me he had learned in Ecruteak. He was a scion of Morty's clan and had gotten lessons from the Gym Leader before according to Jasmine. His ghosts wove dark glyphs in the air like ink over spell tags to power up his normal types in certain ways. The final standings had been 4-6, an identical scoreline to my battle with Cecilia. His Kangashan had mangled Buddy so hard that the water type had spent the last night and all of this morning in the pool.

"Candice is buying ice cream too," Maylene added. "I guess I can make today a cheat day and have some."

There was a cognitive dissonance to these peaceful days, albeit nowhere as strong as the one that had struck after defeating Team Galactic. Having lost the Conference, there were no more battles left to fight, and so, no more training rhythm to get into. It was like having the wind taken out of my sails a little bit, but maybe it was just melancholy because losing here truly put a cap on this turbulent year.

"If ice cream's involved, count me in!" I shut my laptop and stretched in my chair, letting out a tired groan. I dragged my feet toward the hallway door…

"Wait—" she held out a hand. "Um. You know, you haven't spoken much about your battle with Cecilia. I wanted to give you time to process, but, uh." Maylene scratched the side of her arm. "Basically, are you okay?"

It had been a week now. And honestly? Things felt good. Strangely good. Dandy, even. We hadn't spoken since, of course, but something about that day had worked like a salve for wounds we hadn't known ran that deep. Every step I took now felt ten times lighter than before, like I'd been unshackled from invisible weights around my joints. We obviously hadn't spoken since, but while my friends had asked me all about it the moment I stepped back into the stadium lobby, I'd been avoidant to say too much.

"I'm great!" I smiled, grabbing her hand. "Really. It feels like I can finally move forward now without being haunted by my sins." They would always remain, but at the very least I could treat them as a learning experience now and not something that had ruined Cecilia for good. "Plus, ignoring all of that, it was fun. Like, really fun. And isn't that what battling's all about?"

"Volkner would tell you it's a drag 90% of the time."

I rolled my eyes. "Volkner's Volkner. But I guess it's different when it's your job."

We started walking down the hallway toward the living room. When we'd first gotten here, it had been pristine, but now, empty pairs of shoes lined the walls in haphazard angles as if they'd been kicked off mid-thought. A tangled phone charger trailed from one outlet, half coiled like an Ekans. I still didn't know whose that one was. "I think things are good right now," I whispered. "We'll be okay."

"You said that during the battle, so I don't doubt it," Maylene said.

True enough, a lot of what had been said during our fight had gone over the trainer community's head, especially without the missing context of the fallout of our relationship. Plenty of forum or Chatter users had tried to pin down what the entire thing was about—especially my fans—but no one got it completely correct. Some did come close, but they were screaming into the void that was social media and their theories never went anywhere.

Half of the Gym Leaders were out, at the moment. During the day, the house was more of a spinning carousel than a home. Some would go back to their Gyms occasionally to check up on their Gym, while others would go watch battles or hang around on the Lily. Right now, Wake and Gardenia were camped out in the living room, betting on an ever-growing list of trainers, stringing together risky parlays on who would land where in the rankings. Volkner, meanwhile, was lounging on one of the beanbags with his Raichu hogging the air from his hand-fan.

"I'm telling you, Nia." The large wrestler tapped two fingers on the table. "If you don't bet on this Ellis kid to reach quarters, you're going to lose big." He smirked and shrugged. "Wouldn't want to see one of my co-workers' hard earned paycheck go down the drain."

Gardenia's Leafeon leapt onto her head, tail flicking as it peered curiously over the table where a bunch of names and teams had been written on a whiteboard. The Gym Leader, meanwhile, simply drained her glass of ice water. "Yes, Wake. Why wouldn't you give me such good advice when it would literally help you if I messed up." She spun the remaining ice cubes around her glass by twirling it. "You'll have to try better if you want me to take a bad position."

"Hi guys," Maylene said. "When's Candice coming back?"

"I know, right?! I need my damn ice cream!" Volkner whined like a twelve year old. "When are we getting someone to fix the air conditioning? The heat's killing me."

"Any more and you'll melt into a puddle right on the bean bag," I said. "That'd be a shame. For the bean bag."

Raichu cackled at that. "Traitor," Volkner groaned, pushing the electric type off his stomach. The poor martyr went and ran up to us, and Maymay crouched to offer him head pats. "Look at you, offering yourself to the enemy." He squinted at me. "I see you're done studying your loss and now you've decided to harass me. Arceus, I can't deal with this heat."

"Get a Kadabra to Teleport you to Snowpoint, you'll have an easier time!" Jean-Pierre yelled from the kitchen. He wasn't cooking—not when we'd already all had lunch—but Wake's husband couldn't help but make sure everything was in its place after anyone used the kitchen. If he were a Pokemon, he'd have a Domain all over it. "I'm sure Candice will appreciate it."

"Nice one, J.P.!" Wake slapped his knee and roared out a booming laugh. "She'd appreciate it a bit too much! Arceus, whenever someone visits, they have to fight to leave." That was true enough, given that she'd said she wanted to keep us all in little jars. I offered the fun fact to Wake. "That sounds just like her! I'm surprised she didn't guilt trip you so you stayed an extra day."

"With Craig offering to fly us back, that was off the table," I said. Though I had a feeling he would have remained with us until we were ready to leave, even at his detriment.

Gardenia pinched the bridge of her nose, and brought her cold glass to her temple. "She was just too excited to get challengers during the winter. Anyway, just go take a dip in the pool, Volkner. Your constant complaining's ruining our fun."

"'Been there every day. It's a grand time," Wake said.

Volkner ignored them both and just started browsing his phone. It was nice, being around everyone like this—surprisingly relaxing. Maylene's family of Gym Leaders were eccentric, loud, larger-than-life personalities, but somehow they always made room for me to fit in. I still felt a bit on edge around Gardenia, but the others had allowed me to integrate myself into their dynamic well. The Grace Pastel of one year ago wouldn't believe her eyes and ears if she could see where I was now.

When Candice came back with ice cream and other groceries, we all gave her flak for taking all of her Pokemon with her.

"I got distracted!" The ice type specialist pouted and glared at us. "What about you lot? Making little old me walk around in the sun. You'd think we're in Orre with how hot it is today!"

"The heat wave's going to last all week, apparently," Volkner chimed in.

"You Sinnohans. Always complaining about a little heat," J.P. said.

"If I hear one more dude who grew up somewhere else say that it's not actually hot, I'll go crazy." Candice trudged on to the kitchen, where Gardenia and Jean-Pierre helped her put everything away in the fridge. She bumped her shoulder against Gardenia's arm. "Hey pookie—"

Gardenia's eye twitched when Maylene and I snickered. "I will end you."

"Come on, I know you like it when we're on our own!" she leaned in and kissed her girlfriend on the cheek, ignoring the uncharacteristic blush.

There was a quiet comfort in the banter, in the small, passing conversations only a tightly-knit group could have. Every joke, every half-finished sentence or knowing glance held layers of shared history I was only just beginning to understand. Listening to them—laughing, teasing, arguing like siblings—felt like catching glimpses of who they were beyond the job. Even after weeks of living among them, moments like this still revealed something new.

"By the way, are you still going to visit Clara today?" Maylene asked me before she licked her spoon clean of vanilla ice cream. "And. Um. Natalia."

Clara—one of Mars' victims when she was obsessed with me—was still locked up at the Lily's high security prison, but as I had promised, I often visited her to keep her company among the prison's mindnumbing white halls and few distractions. I'd gotten Clara visitations from Musharna as well, and I had great news for her today. Natalia was… well, I had never gone to see her before, but there was an urge within me to see her with my own eyes. She'd been evil until her Dusknoir had taken her prisoner, but what would she be now?

I nodded. "Yeah. Wanna come with? I was thinking of going at like four or so."

My girlfriend perked up. "Yeah!"

Around thirty minutes later, however, came a message from Melody that cut my time with Maylene and her family short. I had kept in touch with my liaison after the battle with Cecilia and my loss to Souta, but this would be our first in-person meeting since. "Oh shit," I mumbled. "My parents are gonna be there."

"Really? Why?" Maylene asked. "Seems official."

"Trainer visa stuff, I think," I said, eyeing the message.

"Do you have to Teleport to some office?" Wake asked.

"Nah, I'll walk. Get some physical activity in. Thanks for the offer, though." Maylene stared at me like she was looking at her kid walking for the first time. "We work out together multiple times a week, Maymay!"

She let out a cute 'hmph' and pouted. "But you always whine by the end."

"Because my body kills meeee."

After plenty of reminders to put on sunscreen and bring a water bottle, I finally set out. I'd just fished Buddy out of the pool. He was now curled up, content, and tucked into the folds of my clothes. Mimi clung around my neck like a warm, humming necklace. The sun beat down hard, relentless in its heat, but my wide-brimmed hat kept my face shaded, and the loose, breathable clothes I'd thrown on made it all just bearable. And to think that we in Sinnoh had it best.

On my way to the address Mel had given me, plenty of fans stopped me to praise me for my performance or try to cheer me up for my loss. It felt good to be out in the world, to see all these different faces and voices that knew of me and little factoids about my journey. Loss or not, the endless march of time kept going. I even came across Edith and some of their friends out for a drink, but couldn't stay to chat; I would have been late otherwise.

Within the lower levels of the Lily, near the port, sat a rented office building. Its exterior was plain and functional—painted in a dull off-white, streaked with salt and grime from the sea air. My parents were waiting outside; by the looks of it, they were bombarding Melody with questions. The liaison had a rather professional look on her face as if she needed to assuage their worries.

"...my understanding that I could—" Dad's eyes went to Mom for a moment, "—Sam and I thought we could handle this. I had no idea Poketch had to be involved."

He wasn't angry, that I could tell. He just had a way of wanting to understand every little thing about a situation so he could get the full picture. Before Melody could answer back, however, she noticed me and let go of her soothing, public relations approved smile.

"Grace!"

Both my parents greeted me with warm hugs—though my mother noticed the weird sensation of Jellicent. The water type had gotten into the habit of slipping out of my clothing every time I needed to hug someone, but his mind was still sluggish after that shellacking. Mimi chimed out a greeting while Melody specified that we could continue everything inside. I scratched the golden gear on my necklace and followed closely. The moment we stepped inside, the coolness of the air conditioning breathed new life into my steps. My liaison led us inside a modest office space. It was tidy, cool, and quiet. A large table with plenty of water bottles sat at the center, surrounded by high-backed chairs; this was reminiscent of the kind of room I'd seen in Poketch Headquarters in Jubilife. Melody motioned at us to take our seats, and my parents flanked me while she sat opposite of us.

"Now, as I was saying, Mr. and Ms. Pastel," Melody said, smoothing down her blazer, "Poketch would like to take over Grace's travel logistics effective immediately. That includes trainer visa processing, authorization for Pokemon of certain threat levels," she eyed the tentacle slipping out of my sleeve, "and minor work authorization under corporate sponsorship."

That made sense considering I'd be doing ads or whatever. Being a sponsored trainer meant that I was technically working in another country. Arceus, if there was a part of the job I lamented, it was having to waste hours away for a shoot now that there would be a brand new land to explore, especially considering I wanted to go on foot unless the situation required otherwise. With how broad Unova's phone coverage was, Poketch wanting to contact me in the middle of a route wouldn't be an issue.

"I guess it's more convenient this way," Mom said, hands awkwardly folded on the table. She seemed out of place here, having grown up and spent the vast majority of her life in Twinleaf. "What do you think, Arthur?"

He hesitantly nodded. "It's… fine. A warning would have been nice. We just feel a little small—we'd like to be involved in our daughter's travels."

Melody raised an eyebrow. "I emailed Grace about this a week ago…?"

I shrunk into my chair. "Um… I might have been too distracted planning for my fight with Cecilia?" A heavy silence spread throughout the room. "Sorry."

Dad let out a silent laugh. "Always with your head in the clouds, you." He roughly scruffed up my hair until I whined at him.

"I should have sent a message to confirm, but I didn't want to bother you after such a big battle coming up. It's okay." My liaison cleared her throat. "For the authorization of your Pokemon—Unova has different levels of licenses that scale with badges." I remembered Denzel telling me about countries like Galar or Unova having such systems. It felt horribly restrictive and hypocritical considering you could pay extra to bypass some—not all—of this system according to Cecilia, which is how her brother got his start with a Deino. Melody continued. "Since you own eight badges here and participated in the Conference, this is only a matter of… exhausting paperwork. When that's done, you'll be able to carry your team legally and catch essentially anything you find in the wild should you want to add anyone else to your merry band."

I wasn't even thinking about a new family member right now; things felt pretty stable now, and I was content with what I had. Who knew what Unova had in store for me, however?

She pulled out a thin tablet from her briefcase. "She'll also need a local bank account for stipends and performance bonuses, which we'll open jointly under her name with your oversight." Both my parents raised an eyebrow at that. "It's just some legal shenanigans that ensure Grace can remain under Poketch's compensation system. Trust me, we want to get all of our t's crossed and i's dotted to make the transition as smooth as possible."

"So wait—I need an actual bank account?" I asked. "My money won't be linked to my Trainer ID?" It was a rather efficient system run by the Sinnohan government for anyone who was legally recognized as a trainer. Getting my own bank account felt a little grown up.

"Mhm," she hummed in acquiescence. "This is Unova, Grace. Privatization is king." Melody glanced up at my parents. "So?"

"So long as Poketch can't decide how her money's spent and things remain the same as they are now, then I'm okay with it. Sam?"

My mother nodded.

"Currency transfer from Sinnoh to Unova is taxed differently depending on use, so it's up to you how much money you want to hold here. Obviously, you'll have full financial freedom…"

After a lengthy talk about finances and poring over every detail, Melody moved onto the next and final part of this process: the fact that she would be coming with me. This was new to none of us, but there were still some details she wanted to go over.

"I'll be handling media obligations, scheduling, and coordination with Poketch as I'd been doing until now. She gave a tight but not unkind smile. "I won't be alone, of course. There'll be a small rotating support team to ensure your daughter has the support she needs." She waved a hand. "You know. Logistics, public relations, tech—and that'll probably grow if things go well. But I'll be the one in charge of our small team, and I'll be handling nearly all of the PR." There was a pause. "Now… I'm sure you're aware of the… privileged position your daughter has within Sinnoh's League."

As everyone else in Sinnoh did, my parents didn't know the full story—just that I'd gone into Coronet and helped take down grunts, but not that I'd reached the summit itself. Still, they understood how close I was to our government. I expected a tiny giggle from Mesprit, but the Legend remained quiet, as they'd been the last few days. Odd.

"That position will of course be null within Unova, and so Grace will no longer enjoy her many legal immunities she's seen so far. Should something happen, Poketch is committed to offering Grace the best team of lawyers the company can muster—provided the circumstances don't clearly place her at fault and would irreparably harm the company's image. The fine print will all be in the contract…"

I zoned out a little at the legal drivel and the endless clauses about brand risk or liabilities. I'd learned a lot in Sinnoh, progressed leaps and bounds as a person, and I was going to be on my best behavior—save for the fact that I wanted to check out some Pokemon Rights organizations that weren't Plasma when I technically wasn't allowed to. But that wasn't breaking the law, nor was it actually in any contract that I couldn't do that. There was just a lot of heat on any organization of such nature because the Plasma Organization had been banned from parliament. They were still allowed to operate as a movement, at the very least.

The meeting now over, Melody pulled me aside to catch up beyond work stuff. The Board was pleased with my showing at this Conference, and I had their full backing going into Unova.

"It's going to be fun. A lot of work, but fun!" She clapped her hands together and grinned. "If this goes well for the both of us, we'll have designed the blueprint for expansion into other regions. Poketch will be exceedingly grateful." What enthralled her was not helping Poketch—though she was loyal—but the challenge of such a new environment. It was nice, seeing her like this.

"I'm excited too!" Fresh faces, new challenges, a region far larger than Sinnoh I could spread my name in? I couldn't wait! But… "So I'll be leaving when, exactly…?"

"Twentieth of August to give yourself some breathing room before the Circuit starts. Get yourself adjusted to the jet lag, the new environment, and such. Might be a bit of a culture shock."

I breathed out a sigh of relief; that had been in line with what I figured. That date gave me plenty of time to enjoy my summer with Maylene and the rest of my friends. A full month wasn't as long as I wished I had, but I'd made this choice because I wanted it. What kind of people would I meet there? How different would the sky look in a place where no one knew my name, where I could become something new beneath unfamiliar stars?

The meeting now over, I bid Mel and my parents farewell, promising I would see them later today. We hadn't signed anything yet; Dad would have an independent lawyer take a look at it first. Maylene had sent a message saying she'd be waiting home, and that is where I made my way to next, not forgetting to swing back by our room to grab some of Honey's comics. Clara had taken a liking to a few series and he'd told me he didn't mind giving them to her, kindhearted as he was.

The cobbled streets winding up through the Lily were nearly deserted, all the day's energy pulled toward the coastline and the roaring arenas. Not that we were quiet in any way—we chattered away under the blazing sun, talking about my previous meeting with Mel.

"I'd bet like a million Pokedollars you're going to get arrested at least once," the mischievous Gym Leader said with a confident grin. When I opened my mouth to rebuke her, she continued. "Come on. You? I'm not saying that it'll be for anything bad, but you're definitely spending a night in jail."

"Well, if it's just one night."

Maylene snorted. "Now you're moving the goal posts."

"Nuh-uh! I'm just entertaining your delusions!" I huffed and crossed my arms. "I'll be an upstanding representative for both Poketch and Sinnoh, thank you very much." There was a short pause. "Seriously, look at me. Do I look like a lawbreaker to you?"

She stared me up and down a little slower than anticipated; my skin prickled and my face warmed slightly. "Yeah, I'd arrest you on sight, no questions asked."

"That'd be abusing your authority!"

The bickering continued for a while yet. Verbally sparring with Maylene was fun, even if she knew how to press my buttons. I was happy to see her less worried about the fact that I'd be gone soon and that we'd have to go long distance, but I believed we could make it work despite the time difference. She was just… really good for me. Plus, she'd be visiting at some point!

The banter slowed the closer we got to the League's prison, then ceased entirely. It would have felt inappropriate to. The concrete monolith stood stalwart like an affront against the nature beside it. A dull gray, brutal, and unyielding, it felt like a scar upon the land where Sinnoh's worst were gathered to rot forever. Louis had come with me the first time to see his father and get closure, but every subsequent instance, I had gone alone to visit and chat with Clara. The guards were used to my presence by now, and Maylene was Maylene, so we were let in easily after recalling both Buddy and Mimi—the latter of which endlessly complained about having to go in their Pokeball again. I promised them some extra scrap later, and they quieted down.

There was only the standard psychic sweep, a brief mental check to ensure we hadn't been tampered with or influenced in any way. I waited as the cold seeped into my mind, expecting Mesprit to play a prank like usual…

The Mr. Mime's eyes went wide, and tears began to flow down her face. Her trainer, as usual, believed she was just playing up theatrics, but the psychic once again swore that something was up with me. She called me terrifying under her breath.

There you are, I thought as I entered the compound.

Hmph. Whatever! they jeered. I could almost picture their pouty face. I couldn't resist toying with this cute Mr. Mime. And I am NOT pouting!

Pretty sure she'd love it if you stopped. Where have you been?

There was no answer. As usual, the blinding white of the prison washed over me and overwhelmed the senses. It was a ruthless decor designed to scrub every trace of humanity from the air. Too clean, too polished, footsteps that echoed too loudly. Even Maylene seemed uneasy at how close the walls felt. They felt suffocating, yet transient—like you could touch one of the walls, and it'd just give away.

"There. Inmate 58," the accompanying guard said.

Clara still looked the same. A taller, older version of me with a longer face and fewer freckles spread further apart; her hair—she had cut it short into a bob—was blonder than mine too. Her burns on the left side of her body mirrored mine, a little deeper in some places. The first time I visited Clara, she hated my very existence; I was a reminder of why she had suffered under Mars for so long, the source of every ounce of pain she had been given. Today, the girl perked up and dragged her chair closer to the impenetrable glass that separated us from her cell. Her once blank room had been decorated with little things that she'd asked for, like a few flower pots she took care of. There was art all over what used to be sterile walls, mostly of how she dreamed when Musharna was allowed to visit. A few old books and comics were stacked near the corner of her room next to her bed.

"Grace!" Clara beamed, a hand over the glass. "And…" she blankly stared at Maylene, not knowing how to refer to her.

"Maylene's fine," my girlfriend said. "I'm just here to add a new face to chat with—but I can leave if you want—"

Clara hurriedly shook her head. "N—no! That would be absurd. Stay."

"I got some more comics for you," I said.

I passed her the next edition of Gallade X through a thin opening in the glass, and spoke to her at length about the previous books she'd read. At first, I'd come to visit once every two or three days, but all my… relationship issues, and now with the Conference ramping up, I hadn't had the time to keep that cadence up. Clara was quite sympathetic for my loss, but she'd never really involved herself in battle. It had never been her passion, preferring to study dreams and how they could help in therapy. Maylene gelled rather well with her—especially since she knew more about said comics than I did. Honey lent them to her as well; it was something the two enjoyed bonding over.

"Are they still treating you okay in here?" I asked, not caring for the facility guard behind us. Clara did look better. There was life in her eyes that used to be void of anything but misery and anger. "One word from you, and I'll… tell someone about it."

There. That was a perfectly normal thing to say.

"Things are good. I even get to see Musharna every day now! They've stopped sending that psychologist so often recently, though."

"I have good news, actually." I couldn't help but pause for dramatic effect. "I've got word that you should be out of here soon. It'll take a month or two, but—"

"Oh Legendaries, Legendaries, Legendaries, Legendaries!" Words spilled out of Clara's mouth so quickly she just about choked on her own spit. She jumped excitedly and clapped her hands in a display of excitement one couldn't help but smile at. "Ha…! I can't believe it. Am I dreaming? This is real, right?" She pinched her own cheek.

"It's real," I said. "I told you I have a lot of influence here, didn't I?" It honestly took barely any effort. All I did was write to Cynthia, tell her I didn't mind waiting while she sorted through the endless tasks required of her after having gone through Distortion and stared its master in the face—I held back a shudder and felt something crawling on my back—and everything else fell into place. If I was a Shard the Champion wanted to keep in her good graces, then the least I could do was to help those who had been wronged because of me. "Though the one caveat is that you'll have to go through some community service for a few weeks—"

"I don't care! I'm in!"

I glanced at Maylene and she gave me a quiet, knowing look in return.

This felt right.

My visiting hour would unfortunately have to be split today, however, given that there was still one prisoner I had to see. Natalia was held in the deepest recesses of the facility, buried beneath layers of reinforced concrete and winding, labyrinthine corridors. You could hear the low, constant hum of the prison's inner ventilation system, and everything here sounded slightly muffled, like in Bella's route. That must have been because of the thin film of psychic barriers covering every wall to prevent a malicious actor from blowing this place up.

"Creepy place, huh?" Maylene offered, as if she needed to break the silence. "I had no idea this was in here. I'd go crazy down here."

"That's definitely by design," I whispered.

Natalia, however, looked right as rain, even with the collar around her neck rigged to explode on command should she try anything. It still felt uncomfortable looking at her—bright red hair just like Mars', though it had grown long enough to flow down her neck. It wasn't as if she could keep it styled down here. There was that same, threatening smile plastered on her face—or maybe I'd just learned to associate it with danger. A certain edge to every movement that had me on edge, not knowing if she would suddenly become violent.

She donned the same pale white prison uniform as everyone else did. Her eyes lit up when she saw us, but only for a second before dulling once again.

"Hey kids."

I blinked, taking a step back as if I'd been struck. I expected some snarky greeting, something that radiated confidence. Something that showed that this predicament meant nothing to her and she would always carry herself with aplomb, that showed she was still this untouchable enemy who I would forever scorn. Not this tired, tepid, deflated version of her. She was not Mars; she was Natalia. Over seventy years old, Johtohan, and a full-fledged human with regrets, wants, and the capability to love. Her starter's death had, after all, made her decide to retire, not that Dusknoir allowed her to.

"Can I help ya?" Natalia said, unmoving. "Need some more information on Team Galactic? I'm surprised they're sending you lot."

Silence remained for a few dozen seconds. What had I come here for? To see what had become of her? To try to see if she was truly a monster, and if her wanting to stop being a mercenary had been a lie? To taunt her with the freedom she would possibly never taste, knowing that she had two decades left to live at most?

"Natalia. I—I honestly thought you'd be infallible. That this wouldn't hurt you at all." She looked drained. Utterly spent. That felt weird. "I guess I just came to see what's become of you and to speak."

She chuckled. "Speak?"

"I dunno." I shrugged. "Of course, I can leave if I'm pestering you." I sat down on the cold, hard floor and crossed my legs. "But you're lonely, aren't you?" She'd killed many, but hadn't I? Then Dusknoir had kidnapped her soul and forced her to watch as he tried to bring her back over and over again, manipulating her clones as a sick gesture of love, and now she was stuck in a strange land five decades past her time. "I definitely can't do anything about you being here," she had killed far too many Sinnohans to be let out, even if that was decades ago, "but I guess I just wanted to like, give you a chance. I got mine." I glanced at Maylene.

She'd been rather quiet, the weight of Natalia's presence pressing hard on mind, despite it being a shadow of her former self. "Yeah. Plus, Grace is leaving in August, but I could come and give you stuff. B—Books and the like. Maybe teach you how to remain active in such a cramped cell."

Natalia stared at us, a flabbergasted expression plastered on her face. Mouth and eyes wide, she began laughing so hard she doubled over. It was… uncomfortable, the way her laughter mirrored Mars'. The retired mercenary wiped tears from the corner of her eyes and let out a long, joyful sigh.

"Children are so precious."

And thus, we began to chip away at the invisible wall between us.



"Angel! Don't touch his hair, he gets very particular about it!" I said.

The Tangrowth retracted his vines from my father's balding head and started touching mine instead. While I'd originally visited my father's hotel room after signing Poketch's contract, we'd met up with my Mom to spend some time together—we'd gone out to eat lunch, shopping for souvenirs, and now we'd settled in a park until Denzel came to pick me up. It felt odd, seeing the two together, especially when they were acting so awkward around each other when the topic of conversation or matter at hand didn't have to do with me or my future.

It was quality time nonetheless, and most of my Pokemon took quickly to my parents' company. Princess, naturally, gravitated toward Dad, clinging to him and soaking up every ounce of attention when she wasn't curled beside Buddy, reveling in the steady stream of cool air he gave off. Sunshine was in his element, quite literally, stretching out under the sunlight with obvious delight even more than Angel was. Sweetheart was playing next to a sprinkler system where plenty of human children and Pokemon were fooling around—under strict supervision from Cassianus.

Well, 'strict' might have been stretching it. They'd just been instructed to call me if she moved at all so I could recall her, but she was behaving well. Just sitting in the grass and letting the water wash over her scales. Cass, for their part, had taken a new liking to letting their barriers protect them from water after my battle with Cecilia. They called it 'proving their dominance' over their mortal enemy. They would often talk to water and taunt it as if it were alive. Even my parents' Herdier was playing in the water, though he would occasionally come back for a treat.

"I remember when you and Princess were just starting your journey!" Dad reminisced, misty eyed. "I knew you had potential!" He wagged his finger at me and turned to Mom. "She'd tell me she didn't want to battle—no clubs, or anything, but she'd watch them on TV because there was 'nothing else on.'"

Mom snorted, and I felt myself blushing. Arceus, did he have to embarrass me every time? "You do that too! Your construction shows?!" I protested.

"You don't get it from me, you get it from Samantha," he said.

"You were just as bad as I was! And Arceus, you're still onto those shows, hm?" she said, half-teasing. "Arthur loves the idea of getting his hands dirty, you see? He wanted to be a mechanic when he was a kid. Well, only after his stint as a trainer didn't work out."

I had… never known that. "Wow."

"I loved the idea of fixing cars, especially in a city as busy as Jubilife. Engineer worked out best, in the end."

It was nice, seeing them speak; it was a glimpse at the childhood I'd missed. Not that they would ever get back together, and they would rarely have a reason to speak for any reason not involving me, but maybe they'd remain on these terms. It'd be better than complete and utter silence—I knew how difficult this was for Dad, still. It always would be.

Eventually, Denzel showered up flanked by his Lopunny, who was glued to her phone—and surprisingly, Emilia. The tall boy was dressed how I'd expected Chase to, with shorts and a tank top to survive the heat. I did not even want to know how Emi was okay with wearing a cute outfit in this heat. She was wearing a frilly dress and tights. Tights! Only Marley was that committed.

"'Afternoon, Mr. Pastel. Samantha. Killer weather, eh?" He ignored Sunshine's grumble of disagreement. Emilia also offered a polite greeting.

"Oh please, I've already told you Arthur's fine," Dad said.

"Mister makes him feel old," I chimed in, happy to get my revenge.

"Can we steal your daughter away for a bit? We've been planning things," Emi asked.

Goodbyes were shared, my Pokemon were recalled save for Buddy and Mimi, and we made our way toward Denzel's hotel room, chatting about anything and everything on the way there. The awful heat, the Conference, Unova—

"Don't let 'em steal you away, yeah?" Denzel said half-jokingly. "Unova's all the rage. People always want to move there."

Denzel wasn't showing much of it, but I could tell my departure was going to hit him hard. He was my first trainer friend, my first companion, as I was his. I owed him so much. He was the one who had splashed that bucket of cold water on my face after the raid, the one who had made me understand that should I continue to tread that path, I would lose everyone I knew.

"You don't have to worry about that." I offered him a smile as we stepped inside his room. Sylveon, who was napping on the bed, jumped down and embraced me in countless ribbons. "Yes, yes, I missed you too, Sylvi!" My fingers scratched the back of his ears. "So, what did you two want to get me in here for? Want to assassinate me? Kidnap me and hold me for ransom?" I joked.

"That comes later," Denzel snorted. "You texted that you'd leave on the 20th, right? What we want to do is to organize a farewell party for you on the week-end beforehand."

My eyes widened. "Oooooh."

Emilia's eyes sparkled at the thought, the socialite that she was. "We'll combine our funds and rent a venue at the Hotel Grand Lake for the entire day—"

"Wait, I can help—"

She cut me off with a scoff as Sylveon dragged me toward the bed and made me sit. "Absolutely not! This is your party!" The fairy barked in agreement. "Originally we wanted it to be a surprise, but…"

Denzel picked up where she left off. "Since it's a party for you, we want you to have input on what we have in it. Food, drink, events, you know the drill."

"Aww, you guys!" I jumped up and hugged them both, making sure not to press too hard on Denzel's back. "Thanks for looking out for me! I thought about doing a get-together before I left, but you were already on top of things. And the Hotel Grand Lake? For a whole day? Man, you guys are rich. Remember me when you're the most famous influencers in Sinnoh!"

"You remember us," he said before scratching the back of his head. "Um. You know."

I held onto his hand and squeezed. It was rough, calloused from his rough year as a trainer. "I will not forget. Ever. Don't even joke about that." A silence spread throughout the room; I realized he must have felt unsettled, so I laughed it off. "Anyway, we're inviting everyone, right?"

Emilia grabbed her phone. "Yup. All of our friends except, um, Maeve. I reached out, but she said she didn't want in."

Ah. She still wanted to get away from us at all costs, huh? We'd been a magnet for trouble this past year, but I was going to turn a new leaf with the worst behind me.

"Bummer."

"But yeah! Mira, Lauren, Louis, Pauline, Marley…" Denzel continued listing off names, "Oh, and Maylene if she wants, of course. And guess what? Chase said he'd come too."

That was—surprising. Especially considering I figured he wanted nothing to do with me after the harm I'd done to Cecilia. "Really?"

"Yeah!" Denzel beamed. "I saw him after your battle with Cece. Basically, he was like…" his face grew harsher for a moment. "Huh?! A party? I don't know, I guess I'll come now that the battle's done. They seem to have made up—but I won't like it!"

"Horrible impression," I said. "He'd be more like: A fuckin' party, Williams? I dunno, if you want me to come, I'll come—" I couldn't keep the bit going; making a voice that deeply wrecked my throat. "You get the gist of it, right?"

"He did add the 'fucking' and the 'if you want me to come' in there…" Denzel chuckled.

Emilia rolled her eyes, but we could both tell she'd almost cracked. "Let's stay on track, yeah? Grace! What food do you want at your party!"

They gathered a list of everything I wanted—some of them pretty extravagant. I even asked about a chocolate fountain, to which Emilia said she'd see what she could do. Pink fireworks, a tower of cream puffs shaped like a Togekiss. It was kind of an incredible answer to my requests, and not to reject it outright.

I was happy to have met them.

"Too bad Cecilia won't be able to come," Emilia said.

At the very least, it was because she would be busy up north, and not because of a rift between us. Last I'd heard, she'd gone down back south to one of those villages she'd spent those weeks in. She had people she wanted to see there, people she had helped and who had helped her in turn. Then, she would be spending practically the whole month of August with Cynthia in the Battle Frontier. She had her path to walk, and I had mine. One day, we'd meet like normal and talk about all the great things we'll have done together while apart over some juice and a nice meal.



My knuckles rasped against Jasmine's office door.

"Who is it?" It felt odd, hearing her voice devoid of the warmth usually reserved for me. Her tone while she worked and spoke to strangers was curt, sharp, and most of all, had a hint of a threatening inflection to it.

"If you talk like that to strangers, you'll have a tough time making friends!" I shot back through the door.

"Grace! Come in!" There it was. Like a sword sliding back into its scabbard, Jasmine's voice softened instantly, the edge gone and buried. My mentor, Olivine City's Gym Leader, and most importantly my friend greeted me with a warm hug. "You elusive little shadow! You'd think you were a Ho-oh with how much you disappear."

I'd visited her a few times since winning against Cecilia, but not as much as she would have liked. There was so much advice she wanted to give me, so many stories she still wanted to tell, and so much work she wanted to complain about.

"I'll take being Ho-oh. Being that well known seems pretty cool."

"Bet it has a lot of responsibilities, though," she added. "You can sit, I was just going through this paperwork." Jasmine nudged her chin toward her desk. "Most of it is just plain boring—just the usual diplomatic tangle. Agreements that need five signatures, for fifty different people to look at it, and a phone call with both Lance and Champion Cynthia to make sure no one's insulted by the order of names on the page."

"Sounds like fun, actually." After all this time, there still was nothing that made this office feel like Jasmine's. I supposed that was because she'd never been at home here. "Leaving soon, huh?"

"Two more weeks of this and I'm home," she said with a tired smile. "Sinnoh's been good for me, really. It gave me the space that I needed. The Gym… felt suffocating after all those years. Plus, believe it or not, I'm starting to miss my co-workers."

I raised an eyebrow, leaning against my palm. "The co-workers you spend hours complaining about? Those co-workers?"

"Yeah. There's a bit of a love-hate thing going on, I think," she sighed. "I want Morty to tell me he'll torture me so he can get another Gengar because I forgot to answer his work email, and then I want to sneak into his Gym at night and hold a knife to his throat just to show him I could. I want to scream at Blue for never answering his work emails, and then I want to sic Metagross on him and give him a migraine for twenty-four hours when he threatens to blow up Olivine until the whole beach is glass."

"But…?" I probed.

"But I also just want to spend time together and chat about life. We're only human."

"I want you to have a relaxing year next Circuit—or, um, Challenge." They called it Challenge down in Indigo. "Ease back into it. Take a bit after Volkner. Remember how to swim before you jump in the ocean again."

The Gym Leader snorted, drumming her fingers against the table. "I will. Lance can't give me shit for this after I've been his perfect little foreign dignitary. I've gained a lot of goodwill." She lazily pointed at me. "But that goes for you too."

"Hm?"

"A year's a long time. Don't rush into things in Unova; take your time. You said it'd be a vacation, right? It's a big country. Take the time to appreciate the sights and go slowly."

I snorted. "Jasmine? Saying good things about Unova?"

"Just how beautiful the land is, independent of the people." She took a deep breath. "But you know, being a coward isn't all that bad. Keeps you alive. I bet the kids like not having to risk their lives. The parents, too." She traced circles on the table with her sharp nails. "Sometimes I wonder what would have become of me without Team Rocket to whet me."

She often spoke of her old self—shy, reserved, and always by-the-book, the complete opposite of who she was now. Sometimes, however, one could see glimpses. Those moments had become more frequent since she'd stopped using alcohol as a shield, no longer numbing herself into someone untouchable. Above it all and basking in violence.

"Did you know someone?" I hesitantly asked.

She stared at me, memory flashing in her eyes. "Who didn't?" A pause. "Take care in Unova, kid. You'll always be welcome in Olivine."

"Well, my girlfriend thinks I'll get arrested…"

Jasmine burst out laughing, slapping her desk. "That sounds just like you!"

"It does not!"

"And call me! I want to hear about how you'll weird those softies out."

"I will not!"

I'd make them love me!



It was another sunny day on the Lily. Countless spectators in the stands had come with cold drinks, portable fans, or their own Pokemon to cool them down, and I'd brought my friends with me to watch. The Conference finals were underway: Aubri Schneider against Jamie Pearce. The first girl had needed no introduction from the announcer. She was my Poketch colleague, though we shared little more than an uneasy acquaintance—though recently, it felt as if she had warmed up to me some, even if she could only handle a few minutes of me before getting tired. The second boy, Jamie, I had met while getting my authorization to get a seventh Pokemon by pure chance in Veilstone. Then, he had been mentioned by Craig as his biggest threat, and after that, he had rolled over me in the group stages, beating three of my Pokemon with only his Gholdengo.

Yet his ghost of gold and avarice which had seemed so insurmountable to me had fallen, as had his Glimmora, Stonjourner, Lokix, and Aromatisse. The score was five to five, and all that remained was his Dragapult against her loyal Chatot. I'd never actually seen the scrappy flying type fight, but Legendaries, he was a menace.

Talons tipped in darkness, he kept pace with the Dragapult, tracking the dragon even as it vanished through slivers of torn space, slipping between cracks in reality like a phantom. Dragapult flashed Madness into Chatot's mind in an attempt to tear it asunder, but it only afforded him half-a-second—long enough for the dragon to launch a salvo of draconic darts from its horns, each one shrieking through the air before erupting mid-flight in bursts of pressure and draconic flame. Everything both Pokemon did, they did better than us. Their mastery of technique beyond their typing, their stamina, their precision; it was a beauty to see in action, and encouraging to witness that I was nowhere near the summit. To survive Dragapult's constant barrage, the Chatot would constantly use Power Switch to bulk up when he got hit and make his hits count double when he was on the offensive. The dragon, meanwhile, moved with terrifying ease. Faster than even Talonflame in full dive, and with control over the Distortion that was almost casual. Attacks aimed at him flickered out of existence mid-flight, swallowed by cracks in space like they'd never been real to begin with. Sometimes, he seemed to exist in two places at once—half a step ahead of himself, flickering through the air in layered afterimages that felt just as real as his body.

Chatot violently shook his head and extinguished the flames with a burst of air, commanding a complete mastery over the air. Images of something wrong, a world that would tear a living mind apart, kept nagging at him. Half a second here, half a second there, and further still, he continued to slow to Dragapult's relentless assault.

And yet.

"Now, Chatot!"

A scream tore out of his throat and made my hearing aid spike. The entire audience covered their ears, and Dragapult halted mid-air as if he'd been ensnared. The screech melted into a song that made the dragon's eyes dull and heavy. Jamie Pearce's jaw clenched—Aubri had been waiting for this. Chatot's voice was his most dangerous weapon, but one he used sparingly. Too much, and its effects dulled. He'd been saving it for the moment it would matter most.

Dragapult did not fall asleep, but him stopping for even an instant was what Chatot needed. Talons and beak now covered in pink dust, he began a ferocious assault on the dragon with a Play Rough that sent him barrelling toward the gold-covered ground. Pearce called out to his Pokemon.

There was no answer.

Aubri's arms went limp. Cheers broke out all around us, louder than they'd ever been for me.

She'd done it.

After years spent in Craig's shadow, Aubri Schneider had finally claimed her first Conference win by the skin of her teeth. I expected her to break into a triumphant grin, to finally let the weight lift and show something close to joy. But she didn't. She gave the crowd a curt nod, acknowledged her opponent with the bare minimum, and walked off without a word, jaw tight and eyes unreadable. Most people who had come to see this battle, who were packed like Magikarp in these stands, would not understand her reaction. A lot of trainers, especially at our level, would very easily do so. To Aubri, her victory felt fake. Something she could only obtain because the man she had chased for so long had sacrificed his life for Sinnoh and saved them all.

I wanted to tell her she was wrong, but could I blame her for getting into her own head and thinking that? She and Pearce had been this Conference's clear front runners, but throughout this scorching month of July, loudmouths had been filling the airwaves or screaming online about how whoever won this year would not have deserved it because the crown was Craig Goodwill's to take.

"Think she'll make it to Cynthia?" Pauline asked, genuinely curious.

"No," I said.

And that was that. The world was beautiful, but it was also cruel in its indifference. With the Conference now over, there would be a ceremony at night to celebrate the end of the event, a final opportunity for people to enjoy the Lily's activities before the island closed to the public for another year. We waited for the crowd to filter out before leaving ourselves, and once we did leave, we stumbled upon a particular group. A lanky boy donning a green scarf even in this heat, a striped shirt and golden hair. Another with his red cap tilted just so slightly and a yellow backpack slung over one shoulder. The last, a girl, with a pink and dark dress and sneakers, her hair somehow flowing in the stale air.

Barry Lane and the twins, Lucas and Dawn Sinclair.

"Woah!" His head turned toward us, and he honed in immediately in a way that was honestly unsettling. "Look who it is! My rival, Denzel, Pauline King, and you um, whatever your name is!" He looked at Emilia. Right, his rival. It was more of a one-sided thing— "Aw, man! It's such a shame we didn't get to battle again! You've come so far since Pastoria!" Barry had made it past groups, but had gotten eliminated in the top sixty-four. He and Lauren made it the furthest out of all the first years— "Watcha guys doing here? The twins and I were watching the finals. Arceus, are Aubri and Jamie good or what—"

"Please stop talking," Lucas groaned. "It was hard enough with you commentating on every little thing in the fight."

"But I wasn't sure you'd noticed everything! You totally didn't get the intricacies of Aubri's Lumineon being able to snatch light out of the entire battlefield! That wasn't some dark type energy nonsense, it was the real deal! And…"

While Barry kept talking Lucas' ear off, somehow dragging Denzel into his orbit, Dawn settled with us girls. There was a certain look in her striking grey eyes I didn't recognize—not that I knew her very well. I'd only seen her by chance in Sandgem months ago.

"Lulu really hates it when Barry gets going," she said. "He's the kind of guy that likes the quiet." She glanced at her brother. "Friggin' edgelord, I swear. Always talking about how he hates everything."

Pauline hummed. "I've always wanted to have a twin."

"And have two of you?" Emilia took a deep breath. "I don't think the world's ready."

"How long have you guys been here?" I asked. If they'd been at the Conference this entire month, it'd be surprising if I missed them. The island was large, and there were tens of thousands of people on it at the moment, but fate had a way of bringing people together.

"Oh, we were busy with an assignment from Professor Rowan, so we could only manage to Teleport when Barry had battles. It was very quick—in and out," Dawn explained before pausing. "You know, there's this thing; it's odd. I've never really looked into battling, but then I've seen so many fights this past month, and I… understand them. The mechanics behind them. And when I don't, I desperately want to."

I nearly took an instinctive step back.

"Barry's wrong, you know?" she continued. "I'm sure Lulu gets it too. How Lumineon bent photons into its skin so none of them within the arena reached our eyes. All we could see was her. It was beautiful. Like she was floating in a void."

"You'd make a good coordinator," Emilia offered.

Dawn shrugged. "I dunno. I thought I'd be content with Infernape, Clefable, Pachirisu and Kadabra at the lab, but… maybe I'll give this Circuit thing a shot next year. The professor will let me, I bet. Lulu better not copy me."

Barry barged in suddenly, feet excitedly stomping on the ground. "WHAT? DAWN, YOU'RE JOINING THE CIRCUIT? OH MAN, WE'RE GONNA BE THE BEST OF RIVALS. GRACE, YOU'RE RETIRED!"

"What?! Dawn, I'm gonna have so much work if you go prancing around Sinnoh for a year!" Lucas whined.

A new fire was born, embers stirring within Dawn's heart. I would not remain to witness it, but I feared for those who did—my friends included. They might just be swept away by this girl should she grow her flame into something real.

And so, the Lily of the Valley Conference ended that very night, with everyone leaving the island like grains of sands scattered to the wind. My friends flew or Teleported back to their hometowns, Gym Leaders closed down the house and returned to their work to prepare for the next Circuit, Aubri began to mount her Elite Four challenge—hers was set to be a private affair, unviewed by the masses.

As for me?

I soon found myself back to where it all began.

Jubilife City, a T.V. remote in hand with Princess—now far too big for my lap—curled up on me anyway, and battles from the tournament playing on the screen.

"Princess! Your fluff is blocking the T.V.!"

My daughter chirped happily and snuggled up tighter against my stomach. I smiled at her, my hand drifting toward her head.

Twenty more days. Plenty of places left to visit to say my goodbyes.
 
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