#slam-dunkrai
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new-eyes-extra-colors · 8 months ago
Text
Sunlight
Fandom: Pokémon Omega Ruby
Rating: General Audiences
Characters: May, Maxie, Groudon, Steven Stone
Summary: "Frenemies" is a weird relationship to have with someone, but if May hopes to partner with Groudon, she's going to have to make it work.
A/N: The only excuse I have for this is that I dearly love both of these characters and think they should be friends. Two things to note: May is 24 here, and there is an on-screen panic attack about two-thirds of the way through.
A Groudon-sized heap of thanks to my friend @slam-dunkrai for beta reading for me!
[read on AO3]
Something was beeping.
May opened her eyes blearily, then squeezed them shut again at the brightness around her and frowned. Where was she? She peeked again and her head throbbed. The ceiling was white and tiled; not the popcorn ceiling of her room in Littleroot, and definitely not the supports of her tent. Her back was on something soft, her head supported by pillows. Her left arm itched fiercely, and something was tight across her chest, making it difficult to breathe. There was a sharp pain in her left side, like she had a stitch from exerting herself too much.
She rolled her head to the side, looking down the length of her arm to see what was making her skin protest so much. A long clear tube ran from her wrist to
 she followed it up to a bag dangling off to the side of the bed, far above her head.
Oh. Right. That made sense. Hospital, got it. They’d tucked her in a little tightly. The last thing she remembered was
 running? She’d been headed down into the Cave of Origin to deal with Groudon, Maxie’s voice in her ear and half her team left behind on the surface to help with the evacuation. How had she


No, that wasn’t right. The last thing she remembered was leaving the Cave of Origin, after Groudon. With Groudon.
Using her right hand so she didn’t disturb the IV, she reached up to rub the sleep out of her eyes. The beeping increased in tempo. It must be a heart rate monitor. Okay. Hopefully everybody assumed the ultra ball she had with her was one of her pokĂ©mon and not, you know, the horrifyingly eldritch walking natural disaster that had been well on their way to starting the literal apocalypse. Who would suspect that?
Her increased heart rate summoned a nurse seemingly out of thin air.
“Ah, you’re awake,” the woman said, sweeping into the room, a smile on her face. “How are we feeling this morning?”
“Fine, thanks,” May said. She tried to sit up and dizziness washed over her; she laid back down, head thumping against the pillows heavily. The pain in her side was back in force. “Where’s my team?”
“At the center next door,” the nurse replied, fiddling with one of the machines. “You’ll be able to see them once you’re discharged.”
“I’m good to go now,” May said. “I feel great.”
The nurse eyed her critically. “You are dehydrated and have three cracked ribs.”
Oh. Maybe the blankets weren’t tight after all.
“Just cracked?” May asked. “Not broken?”
The nurse leveled a forceful stare at her.
Okay, but she’d just fought a world-ending monster to a standstill, what, a day ago? How long had she been out? Whatever, it didn’t matter. She wasn’t intimidated. May leveraged herself up with her right arm, ignoring her protesting ribs. “Seriously, I’m good to go. I need to check on my pokĂ©mon.”
The nurse sighed. “I’ll send the doctor in to assess you, and you can discuss your situation with her. But I don’t recommend leaving unless she gives you the all clear.”
“Sure, gotcha,” May said. “I’ll be sure to drink lots of water and avoid any strenuous activities. I don’t need to be in a hospital to do that.”
*
The doctor protested as well, and no doubt May’s friends would once they found out, but she signed a release and wrote a letter stating why she was leaving before the doctor’s recommendation, and was discharged a few hours later. She brushed her teeth, got changed—somewhat gingerly due to the cracked ribs—secured the one pokĂ©ball she had on her person, gathered her bag and her cell phone—someone had kindly plugged it in to charge while she’d been unconscious—and checked her messages. Six missed calls, five from the professor and one from her mother, and two texts from Flannery and one from Brendan. Guiltily, she tucked the phone away. She could get back to them later.
She was going to get an earful from Steven for sure, provided he knew about her condition—if anyone did, he would—but given the circumstances, her health could wait a little while. She had more pressing concerns.
She couldn’t get over the fact that she caught Groudon.
Was that even allowed? Maxie had been going to do it, before everything got shot to hell, and he was probably a better trainer than she was. On the other hand, there must’ve been something wrong with his method, because instead of partnering with him, Groudon rampaged. There was no guarantee they wouldn’t do the same thing the moment she let them out of their ball, but at least now she could return them. Right? PokĂ©balls weren’t foolproof, even the expensive one she’d used, but it didn’t seem like Groudon had broken out yet, so they still had to be in it.
Wherever it was...
“May I see your trainer’s card, please?” the receptionist asked. May already had it in hand and passed it over the desk to her. “Okay, let’s see
 May Maple. It looks like we only have one of your pokĂ©mon under our care currently. An aggron. He’s in the large pokĂ©mon wing, down this hallway to my left at the very end. You’re welcome to visit him at any time.”
Wait, what? “Aggron?”
“Yes, that’s what his intake paperwork says.” The receptionist looked up at her, faintly confused. “Is that incorrect?”
When had Brutus evolved? “No, no that’s right.” Surely she’d be able to recognize him regardless. Right? She was that good a trainer at least. He’d recognize her, definitely. “You don’t have any others?”
The receptionist shook her head. “No, I’m sorry.”
Crap. Okay. She’d have to check with Steven, then; he would know what happened. “Okay, no worries,” May said, making sure to sound lighthearted. “Thank you.”
“Of course. Is there anything else I can help you with today?”
“Just one thing. What’s my aggron in for?”
The receptionist looked over her computer screen. “He’s being tested for stress fractures after being
 caught in a cave collapse, and also for exertion after a suspected spontaneous evolution.” She looked up at May, a question in her eyes, but didn’t say anything else.
“Okay, thank you. I think that’s all I need. You said the left hallway, right?”
“That’s right. Have a good day.”
“You too.”
May took off past the receptionist’s desk, power walking to keep from breaking into a sprint. A cave collapse and a spontaneous evolution. That’s why she had been running, right? She’d caught Groudon, but the earthquakes hadn’t stopped; she’d had to run to get out. She dropped Brutus’ pokĂ©ball sometime during the fight, so he was beside her during their escape. If the ceiling started to come down, he must’ve evolved to protect her. Vaguely, she remembered being pinned to the ground facedown with something impossibly heavy bearing down on her back, only saved by the sturdy construction of the suit, and then that weight being lifted marginally. The earth had been rumbling and air had been hissing in her ears. She must’ve passed out not long after.
May was pretty sure that was one mystery solved. Spontaneous evolution happened for a lot of reasons, but defensive evolution was more common than other types. To know that he’d somehow mustered the energy to save her after being so exhausted from combating Groudon, to know she was loved that much by her pokĂ©mon was

She wiped at her welling tears with the back of her hand. Now wasn’t the time.
She pushed open the double doors at the end of the hallway and spotted Brutus immediately. A hulking mass of white steel and rocky flesh stretched out across the floor, taking up a surprising amount of space. The attending nurse glanced at her as she entered, and the aggron lifted his head and looked at her with clear blueish green eyes.
May burst into tears at the sight, and ran the distance to drop to her knees and throw her arms around his neck, not minding at all the hard skin or cold metal armor or pain in her ribs. The nurse stepped aside and let her have her moment.
“Wow, you got big, huh?” May asked, pulling back to peer into crystal eyes and scrubbing the tears from her own. Brutus looked back at her, silent and stoic. “How am I gonna feed you now?”
“Biggest aggron I’ve ever seen,” the nurse said. “Course we don’t get many of them out here on our little island. But he’s an impressive specimen for sure.”
She turned to look up at him. “Is he okay? The receptionist said he was being looked at for stress fractures.”
“Yeah, he’s checked out so far,” the nurse replied, glancing at his clipboard. “The only trouble he’s in is due to exhaustion and overexertion.”
“Spontaneous evolution,” May said.
“Yeah, you know. PokĂ©mon are tough customers, especially this one, but even they can get the wind knocked out of them.” He smiled kindly. “I wouldn’t worry about him though. He’s recovering well, and I have no doubt he’ll be ready to leave in a few days. Really, it’s just a precaution that we’re still monitoring him.”
May sighed with relief. Alright. So she just had to arrange to stay a few nights at the Center—she had things to do, and people to talk to, and a giant eldritch lava monster to find, and hopefully everyone else would be sticking around in Sootopolis for a while too.
She spent the next hour cooing over Brutus, running her hands down his armored face and holding his massive paw in her lap. He seemed to be himself, just tired. Eventually, reluctantly, she patted his nose and stood. She needed to get a room here and then go figure out what had happened to Groudon.
When she did so, the receptionist said, “Oh—it looks like you’re already in our system for the rest of the week.”
May frowned. “Um, okay. Can I ask whose card is on file?”
The receptionist clicked her mouse. “It says here the credit card authorization was signed by a Steven Stone. Wait. The Steven Stone?”
Oh, but that made sense. Of course Steven would be footing her bill. Again. It had to have been him who brought Brutus to the Pokémon Center in the first place, and probably the one who recommended treatment for spontaneous evolution. He was the steel-type expert after all.
“Yeah, that’s him,” May said. “Can I pick up my keys now?”
*
She ran it over in her head during the walk back to the Cave of Origin. She went in with Brutus and Comet—one was in the infirmary and one still in a ball, clipped to her hip. Ivy was with Steven and Alluria was with Archie, and that’s where they both still were, according to what Steven had said on the phone when she’d called him after picking up her keycards at the PokĂ©mon Center. But where was Groudon?
The worst-case scenario was that their ball had been lost in the cave-in, but Steven and Wallace were working on getting that sorted right now. When she’d spoken with Steven he’d mentioned that, as both a landmark and a place of importance to not just the Sootopolitans but Hoenn as a whole—and since there had been no major injuries during the short-lived state of emergency—one of their first priorities in the wake of this disaster was clearing the cave out. That was good, right? All she had to do was wait, in that case, and she had to do that anyway while Brutus recovered.
The cave entrance was so much less intimidating in the daylight—well, the natural daylight, not the light of Groudon’s summoned sun that had blared overhead in the dead of the night. Now, past the massive carved doors, it looked like any other cave she’d dove into during the last two years, except for the construction crew coming and going out of it.
Nobody seemed to notice her as she slipped inside and followed the wide passageway deeper into the earth. She had no idea how close she’d been to the entrance when the ceiling collapsed, but she was going to find out.
It turned out to be pretty far. She found Steven after the fourth turn, who knew how many feet underground, his metagross and a constellation of beldum floating ominously beside him.
He turned when she called out to him. “There you are,” he said, smiling. “You really should be wearing a hard hat in here, you know.”
“Eh, this cave already tried to crack my skull open once and didn’t manage it,” she said, knocking on her head with her right fist, and Steven chuckled.
“Be that as it may, May, safety is not a joke. Why don’t we go outside?”
“This’ll just take a second,” she said. “I know you’re busy.”
He nodded. “Alright.”
“First of all—Ivy.”
“Yes,” he replied, unclipping a blue and red ball from his belt. “She performed admirably, you should know. She’s exceptionally well trained.”
Hopefully he couldn’t see the blush that crept up her cheeks at that. “Thank you,” she said, returning the sceptile’s ball to her own belt. “You don’t know what that means to me. Um, second of all is a little more complicated.” Steven’s brow creased in concern as she continued. “So, um, I think I lost one of my team members when the cave collapsed.”
“I’m sorry, May, that’s very serious,” Steven said gravely.
“Yeah, I—I know.” She took a deep breath; hopefully if he thought she was overwhelmed with worry he wouldn’t ask too many questions. Like what pokĂ©mon is it and where did you catch it and hold on, I thought you only had four partners.
“They’re in an ultra ball,” she said. “So, um, if you find one, will you please let me know?”
He laid a gentle hand on her shoulder. “May, of course I will,” he said. “I’ll let the rest of our crew know as well. As soon as we find them, I’ll give you a call.”
“Thank you,” she said, with genuine gratitude. He held his arms out and she started in for a quick hug, but then backed off. “Uh, my ribs are cracked.” Dang it.
“Oh! I’m sorry, it had completely slipped my mind.” He held out a hand for her to shake. “Apologies for the formality, then.”
She shook it, smiling. “Don’t worry, I’m sure you’ve made it up to me already. Thank you for booking my stay at the PokĂ©mon Center, and for looking after Ivy and Brutus. At this point I think I owe you one.”
Steven looked at her. “May, we all owe you.”
Right. Saving the world and all that. “Eh,” she said, trying not to sound flippant. “All in a day’s work. Actually,” she said, “I do have one more question.”
Steven nodded.
“So, I know the cave collapsed, I know Brutus evolved to protect me,” she started. “But who dug me out? I’m assuming it was you and Diligence.”
“It was a group effort,” he replied. “I believe Mister Asher reached you first.”
That made sense; Maxie had been the one operating the other end of the radio, so he had been right there at the mouth of the cave. Not that it had been much help; they’d lost the signal almost immediately. Wasn’t his fault.
“After that, I arrived with Wallace, and then Mister Caspian, Mister Jeong, and Ms Khouri-LeRoux.”
Archie, Tabitha, and Shelly. She was planning on talking to all of them at some point. “Right, okay,” she said. “Just making a list of who all I need to thank.” Among other things. Definitely not who all she had to ask about her—her missing pokĂ©mon.
Stars above, Groudon was hers, weren’t they? Her responsibility. Reality settled like a weighted blanket around her shoulders, making her stomach churn with anxiety. She had to pick up the pace.
*
After thanking Steven again she showed herself out, and stepping back into the clear sunlight was a relief. She still had no idea how long she’d been trapped in the cave, but she considered it fortunate that she didn’t remember it. Being buried alive was
 well, it didn’t merit thinking about. Not now.
Next on her list: Maximilian Asher. Wherever he was. It was a little funny—after all this time knowing each other, they’d never traded phone numbers. She just happened to run into him. A lot. Which, of course, had been according to his plans all but the first two times, and that time in Lilycove when she caught him out shopping. But he hadn’t left her any hints about where to find him now.
He’d been such a frequent presence in her life the last two years and now it felt like an eternity since they’d spoken, even though it had been the day before yesterday. The last time was over the radio, right before Groudon erupted from the magma deep in the cave

Right, she wasn’t thinking about that right now. She had at least one person from Team Magma she could contact. It was fortunate he’d opted to give her his number after the incident at the Weather Institute all those months ago. She pulled out her phone and scrolled through her contacts, all the way down to the Ts, and then dialed.
It only rang twice. “Hello?” said a voice on the other end of the line.
“Hey, Tabitha,” May said. “It’s me. Is your boss around?”
“Maple?” he asked, sounding incredulous. “Yeah, he’s right here. Why?”
“I need to talk to him. Well—I need to talk to both of you, technically. It’s nothing bad. Where are you guys at?”
“North side, down by the lake.” Not far, then. “There’s a little cafĂ© on the east side of the gym. We’re on the patio.”
“Gotcha, thank you. I’ll be there in a sec.”
*
It was a short walk to the waterfront. The winding path led downwards, past a myriad of shops and clusters of apartments, and under hanging ivy and colorful banners before opening up in front of the lake. It reminded her of Olivine, on the far side of this same ocean, so close and so far. She passed in front of the Sootopolis Gym and its official League signage, following Tabitha’s directions, and soon spotted the people she was looking for.
They were sitting at an outdoor table under a bright yellow umbrella, and were both out of uniform. Tabitha looked sharp and professional in slacks and a button down, and Maxie looked surprisingly casual in slacks and a turtleneck. The bright red coat really did a lot for his silhouette, May realized. He looked smaller out of it.
Both men looked up at her as she approached, though Maxie’s gaze quickly fell away to the tabletop. May waved, a little awkwardly, and moved to stand a few feet away from them.
“Uh, hi,” she said. Her anxiety flared again. Might as well accept it—this was going to be a weird one, but she could still be polite. “I hope I’m not interrupting anything?”
Maxie and Tabitha shared a look—she definitely was interrupting something, and given the events of the last few days, it was probably better not to speculate.
“We were just finishing up, actually,” Tabitha said. “Why don’t you have a seat?”
Right, sitting down was probably less weird than standing here.
“How are you feeling?” Tabitha asked as May pulled out a chair and sat down between them. “Last time I saw you, you were being carted off to the hospital.”
“I feel fine,” May said. “The cavern got it worse than I did.”
Tabitha cocked an eyebrow at her, but if he knew anything to the contrary, he didn’t call her out on it. “Okay, well, that’s good. Glad to have you up and around. So how we can help you?”
“Well, I think you already have,” May said. “And um, that’s really the only thing I needed to talk about.” She took a deep breath and looked at them both in turn. Tabitha was leaned back in his chair, casual as could be, and Maxie was sitting with impeccable posture as always and still refusing to meet her eyeline.
“Steven told me what happened after the cave-in,” she said. “He said you both helped dig me out, and I wanted to say thank you for that. So, thank you.”
“It was the least I could do,” Maxie said quietly.
“You saved all our sorry hides,” Tabitha pointed out.
“People keep saying that,” May said.
“Probably because it’s true,” Tabitha said. “But regardless, you’re welcome, Maple.”
She nodded at him, and then Maxie cleared his throat.
“Ms Maple,” he said, finally meeting her eyes, “would you be comfortable speaking with me in private?”
That
 could be about a few different things. “Uh, yeah, that’s fine.” She glanced between them again. “Uh
”
Tabitha scooted his chair back and stood. “Courtney called earlier and I need to get back to her,” he said, “so I’ll leave you two to it.” He nodded at May. “If I don’t see you again, Maple, take care.”
“You too,” she replied warmly.
He pushed the chair in and then turned and walked away, pulling out his cell phone as he went. May fiddled with her bracelets.
“Are—” she started, just as Maxie said, “I—”
They both stopped, and Maxie ducked his head. “Go on.”
May hesitated. “Are
 how are you?”
“I’m fine, Ms Maple.”
Yeah, right. Who would be fine after all of that? He had the air of a kicked dog, and it was a feeling she was familiar with. However he was doing, whatever was going through his head, it sure as hell wasn’t fine.
“Okay,” she said, because what else could she say to that? Not to be rude, but I don’t believe you, sorry. It wasn’t the sort of thing you called someone on, so she let it go.
Maxie took a deep breath and closed his eyes. “I owe you an apology. More than one, I expect, but I will try to be concise. I can only imagine how much you must hate me, but—”
May flinched. “What?” How could he think that? She must’ve screwed up somehow, just like she always did, if he could think it was even possible for her to—when had she even been angry with him? Sure, she’d once cornered him on the fourth floor of a department store in Lilycove, feeling like an idiot with a stuffed animal tucked under her arm, and grilled him for hints about where his base was, but that was a far cry from angry. Annoyed that he was winning their little game of cat and mouse, maybe. And she enjoyed their battles; he was a good trainer.
Hot tears pricked at the corners of her eyes and she felt her face flush and throat tighten. “I don’t—I don’t hate you.” Stars above, if she screwed up this badly, did she misinterpret their entire relationship? She twisted her hands in her lap. “Um—do you hate me?”
“No, no, of course not,” he said quickly. “No, I didn’t mean—ugh.” He closed his eyes briefly. “I apologize, Ms Maple, I’m finding this more difficult than I imagined. I misspoke. Permit me to start again?”
She wiped at her nascent tears with the back of one hand. “Uh, yeah. Go ahead.”
He nodded. “Thank you. Now: please understand I’m not asking your forgiveness. But my error in judgement never should have fallen on you to fix. The monumental task of dealing with Groudon never should have been your responsibility, and for the fact that I was unable to rectify my own mistake, I am truly sorry. You should not have been involved.”
She waited a heartbeat, and then two, and then said, “Okay, but I involved myself.” He opened his mouth to reply but she held up a hand. “I’m a trainer, Maxie, so it was my responsibility, actually. And I mean, you were there. Nobody else had the team for it.”
“Regardless—”
“No, there’s nothing else. I’m sorry, but like, it wasn’t something that you alone could have fixed. And everything turned out fine—the earthquake damage was minimal. Hell, I caused more trouble for everybody by collapsing the cave. Nobody was hurt. I really don’t think this is my place to say, but you seem to, so
 apology accepted.” She shrugged and immediately regretted the motion as the pain in her ribs flared again. “You’re forgiven.”
He closed his eyes. “Just like that,” he said flatly.
“Yeah. I mean
 yeah.”
He shook his head. “Just when I begin to think I understand you, you do or say something like that.”
May resisted the urge to shrug again. “Sorry.”
“You don’t have anything to apologize for.”
She nodded. “You know, I wouldn’t’ve chased you across the entire country if I hated you. I would have just like, told Steven where to catch you.”
“I see,” he said unconvincingly.
She waited a beat, but he didn’t continue. “So, um, are we okay now?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean our
 relationship, or whatever. Back to normal, right?”
He studied her for a moment. “I’m very interested to hear what you think normal is for the two of us.”
She huffed a laugh. “Well I didn’t think you were going to ask me to define it.”
He raised an eyebrow at her.
“Okay, okay. Um. Rivals? Friendly ones? Who don’t hate each other?”
“You tell me, Ms Maple. You’re the one with a laundry list of things you have every right to be aggrieved about.”
“I already said you were forgiven.”
He sighed. “You did.” He leaned back in his chair. “Very well. I suppose rivals is
 fitting.”
“Great. 
Um, not to change the subject, but there is one more thing,” she said slowly. “I had an ultra ball with me when the cavern collapsed. Did anyone find it, or
?”
His demeanor changed subtly—back straightening, eyes narrowing—and in that instant she knew that he knew.
Oh, stars above.
Of all people
 of course it was him.
“Yes,” he said coolly. “I was wondering when you were going to broach that topic.” He reached down and unclipped something from his belt, and then placed the slightly melty black and yellow pokĂ©ball in the center of the table. “I did, as it happens.”
“Oh. Uh. Thank you.” She didn’t reach for it.
“I have been trying to decide what to say to you regarding your chosen solution,” he said, tapping one finger on the tabletop, “but I find that words simply escape me.” He took a deep breath. “Ms Maple, I’m well aware I have no right to tell you how to handle this—”
“So don’t.”
“—but I cannot overstate the danger of attempting to—”
“You were going to do this.”
“I was wrong.” He leaned forward in the ensuing silence. “You’re so quick to forgive me, but I was wrong. Do you understand that?”
“You weren’t down there,” she snapped, and he leaned away at the heat in her voice. Guilt bit into her instantly. “I’m sorry. But the one time that you weren’t there—” Stars above, stop. She wasn’t admitting that to him, at least not yet. She shook her head. “Look. I’m not going to try to justify myself to you, but I don’t think I had a choice. The cavern was coming down and I couldn’t just—leave them.”
He laughed and she frowned. This wasn’t the giddy schoolboy laughter of their encounter on Pyre or the triumphant, borderline maniacal laughter of Groudon’s cavern. He sounded
  tired.
“Ms Maple, I am not trying to lecture you. And I’m certainly not implying that you’re incapable of handling her. Obviously, you’ve done that once already.” He sighed. “But I think you should seriously consider not following in my footsteps.”
“I really think we’re past that point. They’re already awake, now.”
“And you think that’ll make a difference.”
“I mean, yeah? They haven’t broken out of their ball, yet. I’m sure they could.”
Maxie tapped one finger on the tabletop. “I suppose that’s fair. What exactly is it you plan to do?”
“Take them somewhere they can’t hurt anybody if they decide to have a temper tantrum, let them out, and just
 talk to them.” She held up her hands, forestalling any argument. “I mean, they’re a pokĂ©mon, right? And they have partnered with people in the past, right? You weren’t wrong about that.”
“Perhaps,” he said slowly, like he was conceding a point he didn’t really believe in. “But to be frank, Ms Maple, is your team in any shape to handle her a second time if she proves to be less than tractable?”
“Yes,” she shot back. “Ivy and Alluria are good to go. That’s two type advantages. More than what I had last time, and they weren’t tractable at all then, believe me.”
“I do,” he replied. “Regardless, I don’t think you should be undertaking such an endeavor on your own.”
May stared at him. “Who am I gonna ask to help with this?”
“I don’t have an answer for that.”
She had one, but he wasn’t going to like it very much. She’d probably have to work her way around to it. She picked an angle and dove in. “I mean, the obvious answer is the League.”
He hesitated, then shrugged and folded his hands primly on the tabletop.
“Yeah, that’s what I thought.” She sat forward. “Turning Groudon over to the League is basically like handing them to the Devon Corporation. Look, I want you to know that I know that. Just because I’m friends with Steven
” She shook her head. “I’m not blind to his flaws, is what I’m saying.
“But if not him, then who? Because I can’t let them rot in a ball forever and I can’t let them rampage, so at some point I’m going to have to deal with them and like you said, it’s better not to do it alone.”
“I’m sorry, Ms Maple, but I don’t have a solution to offer you.” At least he had the good grace not to suggest her father, gym leader or not. “I wish that I did.”
With a sigh, she sat back in her seat. Groudon’s pokĂ©ball sat between them on the table, an odd, faintly ugly centerpiece. She had to play this smartly if she was going to get what she wanted.
“Maxie, listen,” she started, and he nodded. “I appreciate the suggestion, I really do. But I already thought about it and I already have someone in mind.”
“Well, good, then,” he said.
“He’s an expert on Hoennic mythology.”
He opened his mouth to reply, and then squinted at her. “No.”
“Why not?”
He set his jaw. “Ms Maple. Far be it from me to understand your
 earnestness in attempting to ignore how singularly I have already failed in that endeavor. But recent events have made it abundantly clear that some quality of mine rendered me incapable of succeeding in this particular effort and it would behoove you to acknowledge that.”
“You’re literally the best man for the job.”
“I’m literally the worst man for the job.”
“You know you want to.”
“Yes, I do, and that’s precisely the problem,” he snapped.
May sighed. Plucked the ball from the center of the table and turned it over in her hands. Made a show of it. “Fine,” she said, trying her best to sound defeated. “If you’re not comfortable, I won’t try to force you. I’ll just do it alone again, which is not, you know, dangerous at all. Or,” she said as he opened his mouth to reply, “maybe I’ll just ask Archie for help.”
Maxie narrowed his eyes at her. May held his gaze.
“He’s a sweet guy,” she continued, maintaining eye contact. “Seems pretty knowledgeable about this kind of thing, too. I bet he’d be happy to give me a hand. And I do have to talk to him today anyway, since I have to get my milotic back from him.”
Maxie folded his hands in his lap. Inhaled and then exhaled. “You,” he said, voice low and measured, “are trying to get a rise out of me, and it isn’t going to work.”
Oh, now all of a sudden he was unbothered by that. “I’m trying to ask for your help,” May shot back. “Except you’re more bull-headed than your own camerupt, apparently. I had to sit through your big speech about your incomparable partner—”
“Yes, and we saw how well that went.”
“Well we wouldn’t be doing that again,” she said. “No expectations, no grand intentions, no inscrutable magical artifacts. Just two people, and one pokĂ©mon. That could work.”
He hesitated, and she could practically see the gears turning in his mind. “I should be talking you down from this.”
“I can’t just let them sit in a ball forever, Maxie.”
“I know, I know. Gods.” He pulled off his glasses and pinched the bridge of his nose, eyes shut. He sat like that for a long moment, and May leaned forward, trying not to grin. She had him.
“If I don’t help you, you’re going to do this anyway, aren’t you.”
“Yep.”
He sighed heavily, and then leaned back, put his glasses back on, and looked at her squarely. “You’ll need space,” he said. “A lot of it.”
“Somewhere secluded, ideally,” she added.
He nodded once. “Do you have someplace in mind?”
“Yeah, I think so. It’s about an hour’s flight from here, if I’m remembering right.”
Maxie hesitated. “Flight?”
“Yeah, unless you want to swim. That’d probably take longer.” She squinted at him. “Can you swim?”
“Very well, thank you,” he said haughtily.
“Well, pick your poison. How does your swampert do in saltwater?”
“It’s a euryhaline species.”
“So, fine. So between her and my milotic
”
“I think I would prefer to fly,” he said. “If it’s all the same to you.”
May smiled. “I think that’ll work fine. Are you available tomorrow?”
“You want to wait?”
“Yeah. I mean, it’s almost dark and I just realized I haven’t eaten anything at all today.”
He gave her a withering look. “Ms Maple.”
“I had things to do, okay?”
“Stars preserve me,” he muttered. “Well, conveniently we’re at a cafĂ©, so why don’t you go in and order something now?” He waved one hand. “On me.”
She balked. “Are you offering to buy me dinner?”
“Yes, if only to ensure you eat a proper meal. I’m unfortunately aware of your proclivity towards instant noodles and energy drinks.”
She made a face halfway between a smile and a cringe. “Yeah, forgot you knew about that.”
*
The roof of a PokĂ©mon Center—at least most of the others she’d been to—was usually as busy as its interior, with trainers relaxing, sparring, or simply taking in the sights. But this early, May was the only one out here, and she was grateful as always for the solitude. She had to admit, the East Lakeside PokĂ©mon Center had a wonderful view. She could see all the way across the lake from here, to the local gym and to the Center on the opposite shore. The sky was rapidly lightening, but the city, in the depths of its crater, was still awash with darkness. Pinpricks of lights—streetlamps and windows and trolleys—stood out on the far side of the lake.
She was just cinching the final strap on Comet’s saddle when she heard the door to the roof open. She glanced over, only half expecting Maxie even though she knew he was punctual, and tossed him a little smile and wave when she saw it was him before getting back to her preparations. She wasn’t used to flying with passengers; typically it was just her and Comet and she forewent the saddle a not-insignificant portion of the time. But today, safety was the name of the game.
“That’s a latios,” Maxie said from somewhere off to her left. She looked up and over Comet’s back at him. He was back in his red coat, looking like his normal, faintly imposing self. That was probably a good thing.
“Good morning to you too. His name’s Comet,” May replied, finishing up with the buckle and scratching behind her dragon’s feathery ears.
Maxie mouthed the name with a frown. “Your fourth pokĂ©mon is a latios?”
She wasn’t surprised that he remembered their names, though she couldn’t recall mentioning Comet in front of him. Comet apparently took exception to Maxie’s tone, and snapped his jaws, arched his neck, fluffed up his feathers, and tipped his head to side-eye Maxie, who took a step backwards.
“He’s not trying to be critical,” May said to the dragon, smoothing the feathers on his neck back down with one hand. “I think he’s just surprised.”
“Yes, though at this point I’m not sure why.” Maxie shook his head. “Every time I start to think you couldn’t possibly impress me more
”
May ducked her head and bit back a smile. “The, uh, attitude is just because he doesn’t know you. He gets a little flighty around strangers.” To Comet, she said, “Please be nice. I told you we’d have a passenger today.”
She kept smoothing feathers, doing her best to reassure him. That seemed to settle him somewhat, and the sharp angle he held his neck at relaxed. He stretched out toward Maxie curiously, sniffing the air.
“You can pet him now if you want,” May said. “I promise he’s friendly.”
Maxie hesitated, but then held out a hand for Comet to inspect. The dragon arched his neck again, but not as severely this time; then, slowly, pressed his nose into Maxie’s palm.
“Scratch behind his ears; he loves that.”
Maxie did so, a faint smile tugging at his lips, and Comet trilled. “A latios,” Maxie repeated. “You’ve had him since before Pyre, yes? Why didn’t you ever use him in battle?”
“He doesn’t like fighting,” May replied.
“Can he understand what we’re saying?”
“I think so? He seems to pick up tone pretty well, and intent if he knows you. I just talk to him like he’s a person and that seems to work fine.”
“Fascinating,” Maxie murmured.
“We’re still working on the sight-sharing thing,” May said, “but it’s pretty taxing having someone’s entire sensory experience dumped into your head, especially when they see in the UV spectrum and have psychic powers and an extra set of limbs compared to you. The first time we tried it I got a horrible migraine-and-nosebleed combo. Spent the rest of the day curled up in my tent with a pillow over my head, trying to ignore the phantom limb sensation from briefly thinking I had wings.”
Maxie leaned to the side to give her a critical look past Comet’s neck. “And this is something you regularly subject yourself to.” It wasn’t a question.
“It’s not that bad now,” May said defensively. “We’ve been practicing. Uh, are you ready to go, then?”
He sighed. “Yes, we’d best get going.”
May patted Comet’s shoulder twice, and he lowered himself into a laying position on the ground, tucking his forelegs underneath himself and spreading his wings. She showed Maxie how to buckle the belts that would keep the two of them secure on Comet’s back while flying, waited for him to get settled into the second seat of the saddle, and then double-checked his work.
“Sorry for that, but I don’t want to lose you to a mistake,” she said. “Uh, not that you have anything to worry about; Comet and I have practiced mid-air catches before. He’s pretty good at it.”
“Dare I ask how?”
May winced. “Uh, probably in exactly the way you’re thinking.”
He sighed and leveled that forceful stare of his at her. “Ms Maple, at some point you and I are going to have a serious talk about that reckless streak of yours.”
She broke eye contact quickly; she could unpack any implications there at a different time. “Sure.” She hopped into the front seat and did up her own buckles. “We’re not doing any fancy flying today, though, are we bud?” she asked, leaning forward to pat Comet’s neck. He warbled.
May looked over her shoulder. She would have twisted, but her ribs were already protesting from lifting the saddle earlier and she didn’t want to injure herself further. “Okay, have you ever flown before?”
“In a plane,” Maxie said dryly.
“Well, then, dragon riding 101—basically just do what I do. Lean when I lean in the direction I lean. If you’re not sure what to do, just lean forward. There’s a strap right behind my seat—” she reached back to pat it, “—you can hold onto that. Please don’t grab me.” That was less a rule and more the preference of someone with three cracked ribs, but he didn’t need to know that. He’d just blame himself for getting her hurt, even though it wasn’t really his fault.
“Also—you probably want to put your glasses somewhere safe. Which reminds me, I have a pair of goggles for you.”
Maxie removed his glasses and tucked them into an interior pocket of his coat as May dug around in her pack for a moment before producing a second set of flygon-brille goggles, the twin of the ones perched on her own forehead.
“Interesting choice,” he said. “Very
 traditionally Hoennic.”
“I like that they don’t scuff in the sand,” she replied. “I got them in Lavaridge.”
Maxie made an approving noise, but didn’t say anything else. She half expected him to brag; he was from Lavaridge—it wasn’t a coincidence that his sister was the gym leader there.
May pulled on her own goggles, and once Maxie was situated, she patted Comet again to signal they were ready to go. The dragon stood slowly so as not to jostle his passengers. May hunched forward as much as her aching side allowed. Behind her, Maxie hissed a breath.
“Don’t forget to lean forward,” she said, and felt Comet’s stance shift as Maxie did so. “And don’t forget to hold on.”
“Believe me, I have that covered,” he said, sounding grave.
May tried not to smile at that as Comet took two bounding steps forward before leaping off the roof. He flared his wings almost immediately to catch the wind, arcing upwards in a neat parabola before flapping hard to gain more altitude. Cool air rushed past and May almost laughed aloud as they soared in a skyward spiral over the lake, now sparkling and golden in the light of the early morning sun. When she could see the ocean past the white crater walls of the city, she let go of the saddle.
“Okay, hold on!” she called over her shoulder, over the wind, and then lifted her right arm and key stone bracelet high in the air, and—
—blinding white light burst from the mega stone on Comet’s collar as he transformed, massive wings stretching wider as his feathers rippled, changing from blue to lavender. If they’d been flying solo, this was the part where he’d flip them over into a triumphant loop, but he remembered what she’d asked him about gentle flying today and instead only trilled and beat his wings harder to increase his speed.
May whooped as they shot upwards into the wide blue sky, despite the throbbing ache in her ribs, despite the monumental task waiting before her, despite what she was going to have to deal with back in Littleroot, eventually. There was no feeling on the planet like this. With one hand on a dragon’s neck and the wind in her hair, for a little while, at least, she was free.
They leveled out at cruising altitude about a half mile above the city, and May tugged at the thread of psychic energy connecting her mind and Comet’s to ask him to turn southwards, roughly in the direction of that old tower that loomed on the horizon. He bobbed his head, dipped a wing, and banked.
Finally, she turned to look at their passenger. Maxie was still clinging to the saddle, but his posture seemed somewhat relaxed, and he was taking the opportunity to peer over Comet’s side down at the city and the long line of black basalt Groudon had left in their wake as they had traveled to the Cave of Origin from their cavern beneath the sea.
“You doing okay back there?” May asked.
“Fine,” he said, somewhat stiffly, pulling his gaze away from the scenery to meet her eyes. “If this is your usual means of travel, I think it’s very telling.”
“I’ll take that as a compliment.”
“I meant it as one.”
May nodded, grinning to herself. “Okay,” she said over her shoulder, “we’ve got about an hour, maybe a little less since it seems like the wind’s in our favor. Should be a pretty smooth ride.”
“Thank the gods,” Maxie muttered.
They settled into what May felt was companionable silence. The only noises were the rush of the wind, the occasional beat of Comet’s wings, and the cries of seabirds. Far below, the ocean sparkled in the sunlight, a vast blue diamond-studded quilt covering the world.
The sun shone brightly high in the sky, warm and heavy on May’s bare arms. They were really doing this, she realized. Less than an hour and, for the second time in two days, she’d be facing down a monster so powerful as to bring the whole world to its knees. She’d barely beaten them the first time.
Anxiety coiled in her gut, and she took a deep breath. Stars above, but she hoped this wouldn’t get them both killed.
*
May’s estimation on their flight time turned out to be slightly off; Comet touched down about an hour and a half later. It wasn’t a large island they landed on—only a few hundred yards across, mostly covered in sand and scrub grass, with the ocean lapping sedately at the shores.
May was already unbuckled and sliding off Comet’s back as he folded his wings, and she helped Maxie down a moment later, holding his arm as he steadied himself. He really wasn’t used to flying.
“That wasn’t so bad, was it?” she asked, smiling.
Maxie sighed as he put his glasses back on. “I imagine it must be an acquired taste.”
May chuckled as he began combing his hair back into place with his fingers, looking as disheveled as she’d ever seen him. She bit back a smile and turned her back to him to pet Comet. She didn’t want him to think she was making fun—it was just that he was kind of cute when he was out of sorts.
“How is it that you’re familiar with this place?” Maxie asked. “We’re in the middle of nowhere.”
“Well, we’re not exactly nowhere,” she said. “Pacifidlog is another three hours or so in
” She turned to orient herself, and pointed. “
that direction. Far side of the archipelago.”
“I suspect our respective definitions of nowhere may be significantly different, and you didn’t answer my question.”
“Oh—how am I familiar. We do a lot of flying around. I like exploring, and there are a lot of little uncharted islands out here. Never know what you’re going to find. Plus, it’s kind of peaceful, you know?”
“I see. You don’t worry about getting lost?”
“Not with Comet around. I don’t know for sure but I think he can sense the planet’s electromagnetic field. He’s an excellent navigator, anyway. Besides, in this area, you can orient yourself off that tower.”
Maxie frowned. “What tower?”
“That one, on the horizon.” May dug in her bag to retrieve her field binoculars and passed them to him, pointing. “See?”
“N—ah, yes, I do.”
“Not sure what’s going on over there, but there’s a nasty downdraft around the exterior—we tried flying to the top and Comet almost got knocked out of the air. And the front door’s locked.” She squinted at him. “I don’t suppose you’d know anything about that?”
He lowered the binoculars and arched an eyebrow at her. “Why are you asking me?”
“You’re the mythology expert.”
“Hmph. I suppose I am.” He hummed. “If I had to venture a guess, I would say it sounds like the Sky Pillar. It’s a place of great importance to the Draconids.”
“The dragon tamers who live in the Falls,” she said. Not unlike her mother’s side of the family, across the ocean in Blackthorn. She’d met a few on her journey, and had simultaneously felt awe and jealousy that they were so connected to their culture, in exactly the way she wasn’t. “Like the old ruins on Pyre and in Granite Cave on Dewford, right?”
He looked faintly pleased as he passed the binoculars back. “Yes, exactly. They’re one of the oldest cultures in Hoenn. The Sky Pillar is supposedly a point of contact with their god, Rayquaza.”
“A dragon, I’m assuming.”
“A great one, allegedly. One that’s supposed to
 keep the planet in balance.” He frowned again. “A serpent eating its own tail.”
“What?”
“Ah—nothing. I’m just suddenly doubtful of its existence, recent events being what they are. Were.”
“What do you mean?”
“Groudon isn’t the only one of her ilk,” he said, and everything crashed into May at once: Groudon. They were out here for a reason; she wasn’t just sightseeing with her new best friend. They had to deal with Groudon.
“Not the only giant scary world-ending monster,” she said shakily. “Okay.”
Maxie frowned and held a hand out halfway to her arm, like he was about to touch her but thought better of it. “Ms Maple, are you alright?”
“Yeah, yeah I’m fine.” She waved a hand dismissively. “What were you saying?”
He narrowed his eyes like he didn’t believe her, but continued anyway. “I was saying Groudon has a counterpart. Her equal and opposite, the incarnation of the sea itself, Kyogre. Rayquaza is supposed to keep the two of them in balance. I didn’t think of it at the time since we had other more pressing concerns, but I wonder why Groudon’s rampage didn’t attract Rayquaza’s attention. By all accounts it should have.”
May fiddled with her bracelets, running her thumb over the cool polished surface of her key stone. “Lugia’s the incarnation of the sea,” she said.
“Wh—oh. Yes, I suppose you would think that.”
“It’s true.”
“I have no rebuttal,” he said. “My expertise is in Hoennic mythology, not Johtoni. Though I will say, given recent experiences, your gods seem more
 benevolent than ours.”
“Yeah, I can see that.” It had been all over the news, about a year before her family had moved to Hoenn: Lugia had appeared in the Whirl Islands, just off the coast near Olivine, to partner with that boy from New Bark who bested Team Rocket for what was hopefully the final time. May had compared herself to that boy a lot over the course of the last two years, but never did she expect she’d also be dealing with a partnered legendary. All things considered, she would trade Groudon for Lugia in a heartbeat.
That was a mean thought. Groudon was her responsibility now, no matter how scared she was, and whether she liked it or not—and if she wanted this to work, she needed to like it.
“What’s Kyogre like?”
“Much like Groudon, I suspect.”
“Hm.”
A beat of silence passed, and then Maxie asked, “Is this why you were so upset on Pyre?”
“Huh?”
“You’re Johtoni. I’m sorry to say it just occurred to me. You cremate your dead, yes? Mount Pyre must have been
 shocking.”
“Oh. Yeah. I mean. Among other things, like how it’s super haunted and all.” And like him ignoring her about the data she and Tabitha had retrieved from the Weather Institute, but he didn’t need to hear that.
He hesitated, and she realized he must be thinking of that too, and probably regretting it. “Right.”
Another moment of silence passed between them. The waves crashed down on the shore, seabirds called, and Comet yawned and curled in on himself, settling down in the grass for a nap.
“Are, um. Are we stalling?” May asked in a small voice.
Maxie smiled ruefully. “Perhaps we are. Shall we, er, get to it, then?”
“Yeah.”
“How do you propose we prepare for this?”
Gods, what could they even do? Maxie had planned this for at least two years and things still went awry for him—and they were essentially winging it, now. At least they weren’t in the middle of a city this time, but other than trying to minimize potential casualties—
“PokĂ©mon out, or no?” Maxie clarified, cutting into the downward spiral of her thoughts with a direct tone.
“Oh.” Good question. “I don’t want to come across as intimidating.”
“I don’t believe you need to worry about that.”
She shot him a glare and he shook his head at her.
“You’re only proving my point,” he said.
“Since when do you have a sense of humor? I don’t want to come across as threatening then. Like, I want to telegraph ‘I would like to be your friend,’ not ‘I am going to have my milotic hydro pump you into submission.’” Not that she was convinced she could actually do that, two type advantages or not, but—
“I think backup would be reasonable, all things considered,” Maxie said diplomatically.
Right. Right. May fished around for a compromise. “Maybe we could leave them a ways away? I don’t want to crowd them.”
He nodded. “That works for me.”
May unclipped Alluria’s ball from her belt and released her near the shore. White light spilled upward into the elegant shape of the milotic’s long neck, barbels, and fanned tail before coalescing into cream, pink, and teal scales. She settled heavily into the sand, draping her coils over each other, and looked at her trainer with large dark eyes.
May stepped forward and ran her hands down the smooth scales of Alluria’s neck. A few yards away, Maxie was gently patting his swampert’s wide snout, and she was waggling her external gills happily.
“Just stay here for a little while, okay?” May said to Alluria. “I’m going to shout if I need you.”
Alluria crooned a low note in acknowledgement. She was slow out of the water and only getting slower as she grew, but she had range, which would hopefully be an advantage if Groudon proved to be less than tractable, as Maxie had put it. Worst case scenario, they could retreat into the ocean.
“Are you ready?” Maxie called.
Her heart thudded in her chest and she drew in a sharp breath. No, no she wasn’t. How was she supposed to be ready for this? The first time she’d been coasting on a sense of unreality; her life had spiraled out of the real world into a monster movie, to the point that nearly being blasted out of the sky by Groudon’s solarbeam on the flight back to Sootopolis had barely registered. Now? Now she’d be facing them down on foot, injured and with no suit, without her strongest pokĂ©mon—
“Ms Maple?” Maxie materialized at her side, peering at her with something like concern written on his face. “Did you hear me?”
“Uh—yeah. Yeah, I’m ready.” She flashed him a smile and rubbed her hands together so he couldn’t see how they were shaking. “Are you?”
He gave her another look like he didn’t believe her. “Yes, I am. Shall we?” he asked, then turned and marched off toward the center of the island without waiting for her response, his shoes crunching in the sand.
May took a deep breath that did nothing to steady her fraying nerves. Okay. He believed in her, didn’t he? He wouldn’t be out here if he didn’t believe in her—hell, he had the opportunity to do what he wanted with Groudon and he didn’t take it. That meant something.
And she had beaten them once already, while they were presumably much more powerful. She had Alluria and Ivy and Maxie’s swampert waiting in the wings in case something went wrong, and Comet too if they needed to make a quick getaway. They were far enough away from Sootopolis that they could call for backup and have it arrive long before Groudon reached the city again—or any populated area, for that matter. But what if all of that wasn’t enough?
And what if they took that as a threat? How would she feel, being quite literally out of her element and surrounded by potential enemies? There was no way to judge how Groudon was going to react, if they were going to be open to a partnership or if they’d try to fight. May would be scared, just like she was now, and scared pokĂ©mon reacted poorly—she still had the bite mark scars on her arm from that poochyena she’d scraped up off the road in Rustboro to prove that. But what else could she do?
She couldn’t just run away—but gods above, was she good at running away. What else had the last two years been if not a grand disappearing act? She’d dipped out of Littleroot, she’d been shirking her responsibilities with Birch Labs, she didn’t remember the last time she talked to her father, and worse, she liked it that way. But she’d ran straight into this, a problem she couldn’t run from, or hide from, or fight, or ignore, or—
Suddenly Comet pushed his face up to hers, warbling in alarm, and sun-warm feathers brushed the back of her arms as he wrapped a wing around her and clutched at her right hand with both of his. She squeezed back instinctively. Her throat felt tight and her head pounded.
“Ms Maple?” Maxie appeared a moment later, frowning in concern and half-reaching out to her again. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing. I’m fine,” May gasped. “I think—I think I’m having a panic attack.”
“That is definitionally not fine,” he said sternly. He stepped forward and placed a hand firmly on her back between her shoulder blades. “Sit down.”
She did so shakily, knees hitting the sandy grass hard. She took a ragged breath in and her ribs twinged. Maxie knelt beside her, hand still on her back.
“Just breathe,” he said gently.
She tried. Every breath scraped its way down her throat and her head throbbed and blood rushed in her ears, but she tried. Her chest was tight and the pain in her left side was so sharp it made her want to cry and she just couldn’t get enough air in to soothe her aching lungs, but she tried.            
Inhale.
Minutes passed. She could hear herself breathing tremulously but the world felt zoomed out, like she was a bystander watching herself from outside her own body. Somewhere far away, Comet’s warm hands clung to hers and Maxie rubbed soothing circles on her back. None of this could possibly be real. Any moment now, she’d wake to see the canvas of her tent above her head—just another night on the road.
Exhale.
The world came back into focus slowly, beginning with the pain in her knees where her weight pressed them into the sand. Her bare shins itched, her arms felt leaden, her head pulsed with a nascent headache. The sensation of swimming through a dream passed as she settled back into her body. She was here, and she was with friends.
And she was probably about to get them all killed.
Maybe don’t think like that.
Inhale.
“Can you speak?” Maxie asked quietly.
May sniffled. “Yeah.”
“Alright. What’s the matter?”
“Um. Like, aside from everything?”
He hesitated. “I would appreciate something specific to address.”
That made her laugh for some reason. “Sure. Uh, just for you.” She wiped a fingertip under each of her eyes to clear her tears, being careful not to smear her makeup, and took as deep a breath as she could.
“This is a mistake,” she said. “Like—I barely stopped them the first time. And if you couldn’t get them to work with you, I don’t have a chance. So we’re probably just going to piss them off or scare them, which is going to lead to them rampaging again, and if they do that I don’t know if recalling them will work, and we’ll be back in the same situation we were in.”
Maxie shifted his weight. His hand was warm on her back.
“I don’t mean to be rude, but that’s objectively untrue,” he said slowly.
May looked up at him sharply. “What?”
“To begin with,” he said, “you stopped her when she was more powerful than she is even capable of becoming right now, and while at a disadvantage too, might I add. Additionally, the Red Orb is still in Sootopolis and we’re far from the Cave of Origin, so there’s no risk of her undergoing primal reversion a second time. Finally, comparing yourself to me is ridiculous. You’ve already accomplished more than I did by catching her.”
“But there’s no guarantee they’ll decide to partner with one of us,” she shot back. “What are we supposed to do then?”
Maxie leaned away slightly and gave her a long look.
“What?” May asked.
“What is actually the matter?”
“What do you mean?”
He shook his head. “You were so confident about this yesterday. You aren’t given to being unreasonable so it’s clear something else is bothering you. What is it?”
May looked away. How did she even begin to explain this, especially to someone like him? He didn’t lack for confidence in himself in the slightest, to the point that it was almost a flaw. How could she describe the bone-deep dread of knowing that her best was never good enough, that every endeavor was doomed to fall just short of success, that she could always, always be better, but never enough as she was?
She wasn’t that boy from New Bark. She never would be. She couldn’t be.
“I can’t do this,” she whispered. “But you still could.”
“Absolutely not,” he said vehemently.
“Why not?”
“She has no reason to listen to me. You’re the one challenged and caught her. And you didn’t answer my question.”
May took a deep breath. Closed her eyes. “I’m not—I’m not a good enough trainer to do this. They don’t have any reason to listen to me either. I can’t do this.”
Maxie paused. “I’m unsure how you came to feel this way,” he said carefully, “but you should be aware that you are again, objectively, incorrect.”
“I—”
“Stop,” he said. “Just listen. You’re an outstanding trainer, and your pokĂ©mon agree. Look at Comet—can you not tell how much he cares for you? To say nothing of Brutus. Do you truly believe he doesn’t love you, after pushing himself so hard to help you? What is it that matters more than that? If anyone can handle this, Ms Maple, it’s you.”
Comet nosed at her cheek gently, as if agreeing with him.
“What’s going on with you?” she asked. “Yesterday it seemed like you thought this was a bad idea.”
“I did. You convinced me otherwise. Consider something for me, if you don’t mind.”
“What?”
“What’s the worst thing that could happen?”
She pulled her eyes away from Comet to stare at Maxie instead. “I already told you.”
“And we established that you’re quite capable of handling her in a battle, and that primal reversion isn’t a concern. Try again.”
Stars above, it would be so easy to push him over into the sand. She was half tempted to do it. “We could die. That’s pretty bad, Maxie.”
“That’s fair, I suppose. Was Groudon aggressive towards you at all during your initial battle with her?”
May frowned. “Uh, no. They seemed not to notice me.”
“Then she hasn’t displayed behavior like that before,” he said curtly. “There’s no reason to think that will change. Groudon’s not a mindless monster; she’s a pokĂ©mon, and one that had a good reputation among humans in the past. You were right, yesterday—this could work, and it’s something worth doing. Your worst-case scenario may possibly happen if we do nothing, as well. It’s better to be sure.”
“I—” May grit her teeth. “You’re really frustrating sometimes.”
“So I’m told.” His voice softened. “Will you be alright?”
She nodded. “Yeah, I’m—I’m fine. I’m sorry.”
“You haven’t done anything wrong. If you weren’t
 anxious about this at the least, I’d be concerned.”
She laughed shakily. “Not really how I wanted to be validated today.”
“Your worry can be valid,” he shot back. “But you were catastrophizing. That isn’t the same thing. Keep your worry within the realm of reason.”
“Easy for you to say. You’re never worried about anything.”
“I’m worried about you right now.”
She didn’t have anything to say to that. Her arms felt limp and her head pounded. Of course he was worried about her. This must seem out of character to him. For two years she managed to keep it together around him only to fumble at the last second, when it mattered most.
“I’m sorry,” May said. “That was disingenuous of me to say.”
“Apology accepted.” He paused. “On that note, I believe we may also need to have a conversation about your self-esteem, or apparent lack thereof. As I said before, I’m unsure why you feel this way, but it would be unconscionable for me to let this state of mind persist unaddressed. Now,” he said, standing and brushing the sand off his slacks, “shall we?”
He held out a hand to her.
May stared at it. Comet had ahold of her right hand, and she could barely lift her left due to her ribs, and she didn’t want to ignore him because he was being kind and they were doing so well

What the hell, how bad could it be? She lifted her left hand, ignoring the twinge in her ribs, and—
“Are you trying to injure yourself further?” he asked archly. “Other hand, please.”
May cringed as she pulled her right hand away from Comet. “No, I just, um, didn’t think you’d know about that.”
He looked offended as she placed her hand in his. “You really thought I wouldn’t check in on you?”
“No, I—why would you?”
He pulled her to her feet, then dropped her hand and placed both of his on her shoulders.
May froze. He was looking at her intently, like a hawk might eye a rabbit. Her heart pounded in her chest.
“Ms Maple,” he said firmly, “I’m unsure what sort of company you’ve been keeping that has led you to believe the contrary, but you deserve people in your life who care about you.” His grip tightened incrementally. “Do I make myself clear?”
Her tongue felt glued to the roof of her mouth. She nodded.
“Good.” His hands fell away from her shoulders, and he folded them behind his back, standing up straight. “Now,” he said. “Let’s get to it.”
He turned and marched away for the second time, leaving May standing there feeling like she’d just run a marathon. Stars above, she’d forgotten how intense he could be.
She exhaled. Well—this was it, wasn’t it? She didn’t get to stall anymore, and if she wasn’t brave enough to do this now, she probably wouldn’t ever be. She just had to
 leap in.
Comet shuffled up beside her and rested his head on her shoulder, chirruping softly. May reached over to run her hand down his face as she leaned in to press her cheek against his.
“I’ll be alright,” she said. “I think. Just hang out with Alluria for a few minutes, okay? I’ll shout if I need you.”
He made a sound halfway between a growl and a warble, but did as she asked, settling in the sand beside the milotic. He folded his wings, but stayed upright and alert.
Okay. May took a deep breath and started forward, heart still racing as she power walked to catch up with Maxie, who was standing several yards away, waiting for her. They could do this—she could do this. She stepped up beside Maxie and looked over at him.
“Do you suppose this is far enough inland?” he asked, arching an eyebrow at her.
“Uh, sure. It’s as good a spot as any,” she replied.
He nodded. “In that case,” he said, stepping backwards and making a sweeping gesture, “I believe the rest of this is up to you, Ms Maple. I’m right here if you require support.”
Dread settled like a weighted blanket around her shoulders. It would be easier, in some ways, to decide this wasn’t worth it, actually, and to turn tail and run back to Sootopolis, drop the ball in the PC, and never think about it again. But she couldn’t stomach that.
Okay. This was easy. She’d let pokĂ©mon out of balls before, obviously, and that’s all this was. Right? The first step was letting them out to see what they’d do. She could manage that.
She unclipped the ball from her belt. It felt strange in her hand—rough and malformed from the overwhelming heat of the Cave of Origin warping it. For some reason she expected it to feel heavy, too, but it didn’t—it was the same almost-nothing weight of any pokĂ©ball. She could’ve mistaken it for any of her other team members.  
Deep breath in. The gentle breeze tossed her hair around her ears, carrying the soft sound and salty smell of the water with it. Maxie was probably waiting on her again.
May exhaled. Just go through the motions.
She raised her arm slowly, as if she was moving through deep water. Her head swam. With her thumb, she pressed the release button, and the clasp disengaged with a soft click.
Immediately, white light poured from the ball to pool at her feet in a shape that grew larger at an alarming pace. It was close—far too close. May’s heart thudded against her aching ribs and she took a step backwards—directly into Maxie.
He caught her by the upper arms. “Steady,” he said. “You can do this.”
His hands fell away and her throat was tight as she rasped a breath. The light towered above her as it rapidly faded into red and black scales. Groudon was hunched over on all fours, heavy head nearly touching the ground—if May reached out, her fingertips would almost brush their nose. Far, far too close—
Their jaws parted, revealing long fangs and black gums, and they hissed like a fumarole as grey smoke spilled from the corners of their mouth. Their hot breath stank of sulfur. May’s eyes watered and her limbs trembled—she had to run, she had to run right now—
And then they stood, pushing off the ground with their forelimbs and stretching up to their full height. The ground quaked as they shifted their weight. Creatures that large shouldn’t move that fast—but that didn’t stop them. They swung their head back and forth as they looked around urgently, and hissed again.   
The sunlight flared, brighter and hotter in an instant, feeling like a weight on May’s bare skin. She squinted, holding a hand up to block the worst of it, palms tingling, but it was still so intense. Oh, hell—
“Get her attention,” Maxie said from right behind her. “I’d wager this is an instinctive response. Let her know she’s not in danger.”
Right—right. She could feel her hands shaking as she raised her voice:
“Groudon!”
Their head jerked at the sound, then deliberately tipped toward her. They fixed her with one bright yellow eye, and May sucked in a breath. Did they know their name, or were they just reacting to the noise?
She didn’t have time to think about it. The thought dissipated as fast as it had come under the overwhelming intensity of Groudon’s full attention. They were looking at her.
Oh, gods, this wasn’t going to work. They were a deity, and she was just—herself. Not that boy from New Bark, and not Maxie Asher. Just—
They growled, and the whole island quivered beneath May’s feet as the very earth responded to their call. You couldn’t tame a power like that—couldn’t bind it to your will. My incomparable partner, Maxie had said. But what had she done to earn their respect?
They snarled and May quailed, her tense muscles screaming at her to run, but she was pinned to the spot by Groudon’s white-hot gaze. And then—
Maxie put a bracing hand on her shoulder. “No rival of mine is going to be intimidated by an oversized reptile,” he said right beside her ear. “Talk to her.”
This time he left his hand where it was, and something about the connection was grounding. My incomparable partner

May stood up straight and balled her fists at her sides. “I don’t want to fight you again,” she called up to them. “I’d rather be your friend!”
They opened their mouth again, showing teeth, but didn’t make a sound. If they were a lairon, she’d interpret that as a threat display—back off, or get bitten. But it could also be a challenge.  
“If it’s really a battle you want, you should know I won’t back down,” she said.
Groudon snapped their jaws, and their eye flicked briefly past her, but they didn’t otherwise move.  
“But if you’d rather not,” May continued, “will you please hear me out?”
A heartbeat passed, and then two, as Groudon blinked slowly. She was being judged, May realized. She swallowed thickly. She was a fraud. Everything about her—the bravado, the compassion, the competence—it was all a façade that dissolved under scrutiny and somehow, they’d know it.
And then Groudon snorted. Smoke roiled from their nostrils. They looked at her, and she at them.
They were listening.
“Incredible,” Maxie breathed.
May exhaled. That had worked? She fished around for her next words. She had a hard enough time talking to other humans; what was she supposed to say to a god?
“You must be so overwhelmed,” she said, realizing it even as it left her mouth. No wonder they hadn’t responded to Maxie. The Red Orb, the Cave of Origin, and being woken up suddenly after who knew how many years

Groudon eyed her, expression inscrutable, the same way Brutus had done when she first met him. May shifted her weight, leaning back on her heel. She shouldn’t think of them like that—they weren’t her beloved aggron. But they were still a pokĂ©mon.
“I want to help you, if I can,” she continued. “My name’s May. I’m a pokĂ©mon trainer. I travel all over Hoenn with my partners. You met one of them before—do you remember?”
They hissed.
“I’m really sorry, but I was afraid you were going to hurt yourself or someone else. But I hope that we’re past that. I don’t want to fight you again.” She took a deep breath. “I’d—I’d like you to be my partner, too.”
They didn’t react.
“If not, that’s okay. I’ll take you wherever you want to go and release you. But if you want to see the land you created
 then I want to help you do that. We humans aren’t perfect, but we’re trying to make things better—for everyone. There’s so much to see.” She hesitated. “You probably haven’t had a partner in a long time, huh?”
They tilted their head, and exhaled. Slowly, they lowered themself back down onto all fours, and this time May managed to clamp down on the thrumming energy in her legs that told her to run. Groudon kept their head cocked to one side to watch her with a single eye, and it occurred to her that they probably couldn’t see very well in front of their nose—like Brutus.
They were close enough to touch, now. May reached out a hand; watched as their vast yellow iris contracted as they inspected it. Then their gaze moved upwards, to her face.
The sunlight suddenly dimmed, easing the heat on her skin. They weren’t going to fight her.
“Is this a yes?” she whispered.
They closed their eyes and huffed, sounding almost exactly like Brutus. Maybe—maybe the two of them weren’t that different, after all. Carefully, amazed at her own bravery, May laid her hand against their snout.
Their bright scales felt like smooth, sun-warm stone against her skin. They leaned into the touch, and so May brought up her other hand to sweep under their jaw. They rumbled contentedly.
She’d—done it?
May laughed tremulously, and Groudon cracked an eyelid to look at her briefly before closing it again. She’d done it. They weren’t going to rampage, they weren’t going to hurt anyone, they weren’t going to plunge Hoenn into an endless drought.
She felt herself tear up. Was this how that boy from New Bark felt, when Lugia dipped their graceful neck to be touched like an equal? That flood of relief—that you weren’t being judged, that you weren’t found wanting, that you were worthy
 Wasn’t that the whole point of partnership—to be loved?
May leaned forward and squeezed her eyes shut, pressing her forehead against Groudon’s snout. For a moment, she could hear nothing but the sound of her own breathing as the tension in her chest unspooled.
She took a deep breath and straightened. “Hey, do you—” she started, and then realized Maxie’s hand wasn’t on her shoulder anymore.
She turned. He was standing a few yards behind her—when had he moved? His hands were behind his back, his chin lifted slightly, and he looked unbearably smug: the perfect picture of himself. And then he smiled at her. Tight and quick, but still.
May smiled back. “Do you wanna come over here?” she asked.
His smile faded. “What?”
“I don’t think they’ll mind.”
He blinked at her. “I
” He suddenly looked lost. She’d never seen him speechless before—she hadn’t even been sure it was possible. But here they were.
She felt a sudden crash of empathy. Of course he probably thought that, after what he’d done, he didn’t deserve the opportunity—and maybe he didn’t. But she didn’t care about what he deserved. Whatever his plans had been, she believed his apology was sincere, and she had meant it when she said she forgave him. And he was still a trainer—a good one at that. He wasn’t the heartless monster running Team Rocket back in Johto, who treated pokĂ©mon like tools to be used and discarded. He would’ve treated Groudon well.
May moved to stand beside Maxie and looped her arm through his. He hesitated when she stepped toward Groudon, but followed when she tugged at his arm.
This was going to be another weird one. But—hell. The last two days had contained the strangest experiences of her life. This was easy.
“Go ahead,” she said.
“Hello,” Maxie said, sounding almost—sheepish? That couldn’t be right. “I believe I owe you an apology for disturbing you.”
With their head still low to the ground, Groudon snorted a gout of smoke and blinked slowly.
May reached out and patted them between the nostrils. “I think that means you’re all good.”
“Huh,” he said, uncharacteristically subdued. “I will defer to your judgement on that.”
May smiled again, letting go of his arm so she could pet Groudon with both hands. They closed their eyes fully and settled down into the sand, rumbling softly, just like a lairon would.
Maxie started to raise a hand, and then turned to look at her intently. “Do you think she would mind if I
?”
“Go ahead,” May said again.
He began to reach for them, hesitated, and then tried again, as if he had to convince himself of the action. But his fingertips brushed their nose, and then he was laying a hand fully against the ridge above Groudon’s eye.
“I was expecting
” He leaned to the side, leaving his hand where it was as he inspected the rest of them, all scales and spines. “Absolutely fascinating,” he murmured.
He turned back to her suddenly. “Ms Maple,” he said, and then paused, and she realized that whatever he was about to say next wasn’t rehearsed. “I want to thank you for
 quite a lot, actually, but also for this specific moment.” He ducked his head. “I don’t believe I deserve it.”
“Well, to be honest, I think you do,” she replied. “I couldn’t have done this without you. You’re pretty great.”
He flinched like she’d struck him. “Hm,” he said, suddenly refusing once again to meet her eyes. “I will
 bear that in mind.”
May smiled ruefully to herself. That would have to do for now.
Maxie cleared his throat. “I would also like to add,” he said, “that I cannot possibly overstate how proud of you I am.”
It was May’s turn to look away in embarrassment and squeak out a “Thanks.” Maxie didn’t say anything else; just nodded.
The waves crashed; the seabirds called. After a long moment, May asked, “Now what?”
“Hm. I suppose we return to Sootopolis,” Maxie said. “I’m sure there is still more to be done there.” He looked at her over Groudon’s snout. “Eventually, more people than the two of us will know about this.”
That would have to be alright. Whatever else was going to happen, May suddenly felt that things were going to be okay. This was an end, but it was a beginning, too—a new and surprising chapter she never could’ve anticipated. But it looked like she wouldn’t be alone for it. Not this time. Littleroot still loomed somewhere on the horizon, but for now, it was a distant shadow, and she was standing in the sunlight.
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birbmania · 1 year ago
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didn't get a clear shot in this series but I'd be remiss if I didn't post one anyway and tag @girl-like-substance and @slam-dunkrai
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seaquestions · 2 years ago
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commission for @slam-dunkrai!
[ID: a painting of the commissioner's oc connor & the pokemon darkrai. darkrai is whispering into connor's ear, who has both hands on his face with a frightened expression. a red halo is behind his head, which backlights the whole piece. blue text on the left reads: "will i follow?" and white text on the bottom right reads: "a slamdunkrai novel." End ID]
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alparlaboratories · 1 year ago
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I started playing AC6, and while fiddling around with the decal maker I realized you could easily make Darkrai with just the preset logos and symbols. An eye, one half of a shark's jaw and three flames put together, and there they are. I figure @slam-dunkrai might like it.
So I based my first mech on that. Still looking for a chest and head piece that more resemble Darkrai. But it's basically a high-mobility, low-weight unit that specializes on long-range barraging and then getting in close with boosters to smack the enemy with a sword when they overheat.
I'll make more mechs later based on other stuff when I get more parts, but it's a really good game so far. Every single person is in pain or suffering and there's no hope, just like the Armored Core I heard about.
Also wow they weren't kidding about your handler being one bad day away from calling you kitten. Doesn't do it for me, but I get why so many of my acquaintances love him.
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bayalexison · 1 year ago
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Tag Game- Current
Yo, so I got tagged by both @bunana-pancakes and @noodle-artist, thanks so much the both of you! Both of them have great artwork, do check those out!
Current time: 9:56pm Pacific Standard Time when I started this
Current activity: Watching a friend streaming the game Chameleon Twist 2
Currently thinking about: Oh gosh so many fandom events in the fall how I'll balance them all lol
Current favorite song: Bishop Briggs, Jekyll and Hyde.
Currently reading: Haven't been reading anything as of late, though the last thing I read were some fics from Dimileth Garden Gala and FE Engage Ship Exchange.
Currently Watching: Critical Role, which I'm a couple episodes behind and probably will switch to podcast version instead. I also recently finished watching Persona 5: The Animation.
Current Favorite Character:  Alfred from FE Engage, he's been taking my brain space atm lol. Having finished Persona 5 Royal and watching a friend streaming Strikers, Yusuke comes a close second lol.
Current work in progress: My Lord of the Rings AU for Dimileth Goggles. Also plan to get back to The Azure Queen now that it has been announced Dimileth Trick or  Treat is coming back. I have the draft of the rest of The Azure Queen finished, just need to make time for editing (got distracted with other fics and Persona 5 Royal lol).
Tagging: (no pressure!) @slam-dunkrai, @sweet-suzume, @write-the-stars, @silversdragonemporium, and anyone else that wants to do this!
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raunchyandpaunchy · 2 years ago
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Those Are Some Words Thursday
(The thrilling sequel to WIP Wednesday, which I am two weeks and one day late on)
Thank you to the lovely @blakedeadly for tagging me! This time, I do actually have some words to share, which is neat.
Tagging @ooksaidthelibrarian, @slam-dunkrai, @cielsosinfel, @hogsbando, @girlboss-emporium and @darklight-tower, if they’d like to take part - on Thursday or any other day.
Anyway, here’s a snippet of what I’ve been working on recently: a Yakuza/RGG one-shot, feat. Majima/Nishiki in ‘96 when they’re both in decidedly bad places and share this incredibly toxic, irresponsibly sadomasochistic relationship. Putting under a read more, because this is a little more extreme than my usual work. Heads up for mentions of sex, crossdressing, pain and dacryphilia.
“If you’re going to stare,” Nishiki had said, in a breathy, couldn’t-care-less kind of tone, “the least you could do is buy a girl a drink.”
Majima couldn’t help but smirk. This side of Nishiki was a hell of a lot more intriguing than the one that he’d beat on back in ‘88, or the sad sack that trailed around Tojo HQ. Not that there weren’t similarities. Even under the meticulously applied makeup, the coiffed hair and carefully chosen outfit—or maybe even because of it—that same desperation still shone through, all too eager to impress.
It was gonna get the kid bled dry one day.
“Sure thing, darlin’,” Majima replied easily, slipping into the sleazy, inviting demeanour of a ghost from his past. “What’re ya havin’?”
“Shochu,” she sniffed, her French manicured nails drumming against the wooden countertop. “My name’s Akiko, by the way.”
“Majima Goro,” he replied, grinning wide, shark-like. “It’s a pleasure, Akiko-chan.”
The night had ended in a cramped alleyway somewhere in the Champion District, Akiko-chan’s legs wrapped around Majima’s waist as he fucked into her hot, tight insides. Her once immaculate appearance was gone, replaced with something that, in Majima’s opinion, suited her far better—lipstick rubbed away from her kiss-swollen pout and smeared messily across her face, the pale slant of her neck littered with bruises, mascara trailing down her face in tear tracks. She’d clung onto Majima, her nails digging into his back like talons, huffing out more and please and hurts between hitched, hiccupy little sobs.
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new-wave-worm · 3 months ago
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@slam-dunkrai
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i did monsieur hulot in dress to impress
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mannimarcos · 4 years ago
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OC portrait with darkrai for @slam-dunkrai - thank you so much for commissioning me! ^_^
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victoryroadburnout · 4 years ago
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yo, so i have not been able to review the new chapter in a timely manner but i have read it a couple of times now and it's really damn good. expect more thorough gushing on ao3 when i have the spoons for it but i would feel bad if i did not at least gush to you slightly about it now. really love the way you write nico and addie so much tbh, it's such a great dynamic. thanks for the good content, as ever
oh dont worry about it, i understand entirely! im just happy to hear such nuanced thoughts about my stuff when my own thoughts about it are usually garbled nonsense and memes, its very validating when people pick out parts of things i did and acknowledge that i made something coherent and not a clusterfuck of action and emotion that it feels like trying to get it out there sometimes lmao
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mismagireve · 4 years ago
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for the "fanfic things you're good at" post: you're really good at introducing protagonists and making us empathise with them while at the same time leaving certain important details about them unrevealed until later on, which is a really great way to get the reader interested!
;-;
thank u so much,,,,,
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birbmania · 2 years ago
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@girl-like-substance​ and @slam-dunkrai​
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Hello, this is my first ever post on this site, please be nice to him as I will be going to bed now
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isa-ah · 5 years ago
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a commission for @slam-dunkrai !! if ur interested in commissioning me catch me over on @creamandhoneyscommissions
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cyanidas · 6 years ago
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for the pride month request post -- please could i get a bi pride darkrai??
Here ya go! ^u^
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The requests are for my art only and this was the best pic of Darkrai I had ;w; I hope you like it, though!
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onipilot · 3 years ago
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I have nothing really new to add to the rangers convo, other than to reiterate that it is an excellent and underrated series that is still near to my heart, and that my experience writing for the zine you helped host for it a few years back was a delight. glad to see more love for the games, and I hope you are well! :>
AAAA I CANT BELIEVE ITS BEEN SO LONG SINCE THAT HONESTLY that was such a fun project to host since everyone showed so much passion for it!! ive been meaning to host a vol 2 for it, but i have yet to find the time for it :,) would love to have you back for it in the future if i ever get around to doing that! thank you so much for being a part of that project!!
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bisexual-kaidan-alenko · 7 years ago
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🌠
Jojo, pokemon, shitposts
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bayalexison · 1 year ago
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Tag Game
I was tagged by @itsmoonpeaches, thanks so much! I think you also tagged me in another tag game, which I plan to do eventually.
Current time: 10:50 when I started this
Current activity: Checking PokeCommunity's Get Together Bingo results (I didn't get any marks this draw drats)
Currently thinking about: my Dimileth Goggles and PC's Get Together three remaining entries I have to do
Current favorite song: lol lately listening to Persona 5 Royal soundtrack. For a non gaming song, Fall Out Boy's Heartbreak Feels So Good
Currently reading: Writing entries for PC's Small Writing Contest. I have seven out of ten entries read!
Currently Watching: Mostly been keeping up with Pokemon Horizons weekly.
Current Favorite Character: Currently FE Engage Alfred and Persona 5 Haru and Yusuke, though Byleth, Dimitri, and Annette will still have a place in my heart haha.
Current work in progress: Still on my Dimileth Goggles Fic, Until the Stars Are Alight! Got Chapters 3 and 4 drafted but there's a certain faction that I decided to have more of a role of and need to change that. After that hopefully will get back to the Azure Queen.
Tagging (no presure!): @illustrious-rocket, @sweet-suzume, @dynadratina, @slam-dunkrai, and anyone else that wants to do this!
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