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Pokémon 26 years

Shiny Phantump

Through Dream, I Travel
Location
Hallownest
Pronouns
She/Her
Partners
  1. sylveon
  2. absol-mega
  3. silvally-psychic
  4. ninetales-phantump
  5. cosmog
  6. gallade-phantump
  7. ceruledge-phantump
Hello! I'm here to review the latest three chapters. Like I said on Discord, I would read Hana and Leon watch paint dry because you could make it carry a tone as Hana thinks things about what kind of person Leon is while the paint dries. 26y has a character study sort of feel to it that hits quite nicely.


The First Weeks of Winter:

Speaking of... Wow. This is a heavy chapter, and I say that in the best possible way. I guess I'd also been holding out hope that they were okay, maybe lost somewhere offscreen or in a different time, because I was not emotionally prepared for them to be... so unambiguously dead. I was hoping they were at least alive, but it seems like Kurt knows better than that.

This is also the chapter that made me like Morty. Seeing him dealing with a more vulnerable situation, and seeing how he handles it does a lot to humanize him in my eyes. Prior to this, I felt like I really hadn't seen much in the way of emotion out of him- which is fine, not every single person who comes up in a story needs to carry the emotional core, Hana and Leon were doing a perfectly good job of that before- but it's delightful to see some of that coming out of him, too.

Leon wasn't hurting for characterization before, but this chapter does a ton for him as well. So far, we've seen pieces of the more emotional person at his core, but... Well, Hana's not wrong in marking this as the moment Leon breaks.

Whiteout:

Well, I've never been much of a person for fight scenes, but there's plenty else going on in this chapter, too.

Oh, Leon... You're not the champion anymore. Neither him nor Hana really have much in the way of firepower, and yet I suppose old habits die hard, and now they're taking on... Arcticuno? I assume it's Arcticuno because ice and bird, but it doesn't seem to get called- oh wait Hana might not necessarily know what a normal Arcticuno looks like, so she wouldn't know to call it that. Right. That makes sense.

Really, it could have been a lot worse, though. I thought Leon was going to get off a lot worse, and a sprained ankle isn't that bad in the grand scheme of things for Hana. Plus, I have a hunch a Lapras will be pretty good for them. I was quite pleased that Kurt gave it to them. I didn't really think they were responsible for Lapras getting hurt, so I don't really know what he was getting at outside that they're definitely irresponsible, but I'm liable to miss things in fight scenes.

I suspect Articuno may also be responsible Azalea Town getting cut off from the outside world by weather, too. Which leaves me with the ominous feeling we may not be seeing these warnings go away quite yet. Sure, Articuno's retreated, but I don't trust that we've seen the last of them. There's a difference between defeat and a tactical retreat, after all... I wonder if they'll end up having to use Lapras in that battle.

A Letter to Mum:

This. This is my favourite chapter. You have stabbed me in the emotions.

Leon's way of processing his loss is big and noticeable and that's just right for a character with a cracked shell like him, but there's something about Hana's more reserved and somber expression in this chapter that really pushes my emotional buttons. Hana writing a letter to be delivered in the future is such a wonderful concept to start with, and I started having feelings as soon as I figured out what her idea was... but the execution is what really pulls it together. She's decided to try to send a message to her family, but even during that process she can't bring herself to be emotionally honest. She comes so close to it- every little crossout has in it something she needs to say, but what's left behind is a letter as detached as a tax return form.

It's very... Hana.

Between all the nothing it says, and the fact Leon chose not to say anything to his family, I wonder if everyone would just be better off if it simply never arrived. I don't imagine anyone in Hop's family would happy, nor do I think it'd be much better for Hana's. I suppose it's best they know the two of them are alive, though...

I'm going to go hug my family now.
 

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3
Hello @Shiny Phantump

Thank you for your lovely review 🥲 I didn't know you're caught up so far already. You can't imagine how happy that makes me!!! And then to get such lovely feedback on the last chapters!!! Thank you so so much ❤️

Interesting thoughts on Morty. I hadn't taken that into consideration, but yes, so far he has barely revealed anything about himself. Somehow, they have a running theme with that too...
And omg, I never expected Letter to be anything more than a glorified filler because the story needs to decompress, but aaaaaa! I'm so happy that you like this chapter so much. Thank you, I owe you my life now ❤️
 

Flyg0n

Flygon connoisseur
Pronouns
She/her
Partners
  1. flygon
  2. swampert
  3. ho-oh
  4. crobat
  5. orbeetle
  6. joltik
  7. salandit
  8. tyrantrum
  9. porygon
I wanted to try and actually binge this entire fic to get caught up but alas, it seems my brain won't cooperate. That said, I skim-read 1-10 again because I have a terrible memory and wanted to refresh myself. I read 11-16 this time around, perhaps I can tackle more later.

Chapter 10 once again stands out as a favorite here. Hana's breakdown, and storming away from the tense situation between Morty and Leon, followed by her personal revelation to Leon was just.... very impactful, very fitting.

Looking back, there's a lot I thoroughly love about this story. Perhaps one of the biggest of those things is the characters. You have knack for capturing a big Mood and vibes in your stories. You also have a great knack for writing 'around' issues. Your characters often don't say what they mean and have layers to them. It makes them feel very human, occasionally almost frustratingly so!

I want to launch straight into some line comments, then talk a bit more about other stuff at the end! I'm going to mix some crit and praise, but just know that everything I say going forward will be mainly subjective impressions as a reader.

“Yeah, but it’s true.” Morty shrugged. “I’m stuck in Ecruteak, anyway. This here is the longest I’ve left the old town in over a year. Also, we’ve got a ride.”

“Come on, it’s safe,” Leon said about five minutes later while he stowed away the backpack.
So I will admit this like tripped me up. We went from characters having a conversation to somewhat abruptly transitioning to just being inside the pickup. This felt a bit jarring from a reading viewpoint.

Personally, I might have found it a little smoother if perhaps Hana had noted the sound of a car approaching, then takes in some details of it. Maybe she recognizes it as the same pickup from a few nights ago (correct me if I'm wrong here but that appears to be the insinuation). Alternatively maybe just noting a car pulling up alongside them and slowing down?

The drawing was a stunning recreation of Rose Tower, based on the description Leon had given earlier. It wasn’t exactly the building I remembered, but the little details separating the sketch from reality of the distant future made it all the more terrific. Bold, purposeful pencil strokes outlined the elegant spire while quick, random hatching gave the drawing depth. In the upper corner was the outline of a little butterfly. Next to it, written in Kantonian, were the words “Looks pretty sturdy, doesn’t it?”
This was a lovely description of the drawing. Describing art inside a piece of writing can be really difficult, but you captured the energy of it very nicely. Also like how you mentioned the hatching. I can't pt my finger on why but its a nice touch. Good detail.

Then I realised that Leon hadn’t reacted to any of my movements. By now, one didn’t even need to be psychic to recognise what was going on.
I continue to appreciate and be fascinated by Hana's perceptiveness involving people. Or at least, very particularly, Leon. I also appreciate the palpable and constantly returning grief happening that poor Leon is experiencing.

He put his petrified pokeballs on the table. I hadn’t seen them recently. He carried them around everywhere, sure, but lately he hadn’t been staring at them as much anymore.
:((
Every time this gets brought up it tears a hole in me. I cannot even begin to imagine the agony Leon is facing here. Your team is right there but they're not. And then of course, Morty's admission that he doesn't sense anything from them.... oof

I also want to note I particularly enjoyed the part following this. Leon comes close to another breakdown, and Morty manages to talk him through it it seems. Leon being able to just talk about his pokemon to someone, and then Morty's nice drawings on his cast is quite lovely, and bittersweet. I imagine Morty must have a fair deal of experience with grief and sadness in his line of work.

The note. I had written down what I wanted to tell him. That the word ‘sorry’ didn’t encompass half the pain I too felt when thinking about his team. That, even though I hadn’t experienced a loss like this, I wanted him to know he wasn’t alone. That he could share his pain with me whenever he felt like and that I’d try to listen, but that I was afraid I wouldn’t find the right things to say to build him back up again. But the words wouldn’t come out, no matter how thought out the note was. And then the split second was over.
OOF. This is another of those telling lines about Hana and her character. The struggle of desperately wanting to help someone who is grieving, but being afraid and uncertain of what to say is... well, its something I actually don't see depicted often.

Its really interesting here to get a depiction of grief not directly from the person experiencing it, but instead from someone near that person. A friend. Seeing those two sides really add a layer of interest.

Now we were wandering the streets of the historic city and I had to completely row back on my statement about how I’d got used to the building style by now. Violet was not just some single historic houses — it was an entire city full of it. Sure, it had its share of modern buildings along the main streets, but away from those it was a scene you’d see in an animated movie: Narrow, winding streets lined with small, wooden city houses. Their latticed windows had paper in place of glass and their white walls contrasted with their dark frames.

But most curious were their roofs. I didn’t notice it at first, but when we climbed up the stairs on the city’s only hill, it hit me: All the houses were covered with shingles in different shades of violet. From up high, the city looked like an entire sea of violet petals, its waves breaking on the tall mountains to the north and the autumn forests to the east. The Spearows and Pidgeys that perpetually circled the gusts over this sea made it look like there was another city above the human one. Air routes instead of streets, nests instead of houses and power lines instead of street signs. No wonder it was a world heritage site.
Oh man blue you have a talent for scene setting. This evokes strong ghibli vibes. It feels very atmospheric and enticing, and is just a Gigantic Mood. Also I now desperately want to go to Violet City. The way you dexcribe it here is just absolutely beautiful. A harmony of land and air coming together is :okgon:

I was rubbing the back of my nose when
I think just 'rubbing my nose' would work? Or 'rubbing my nose with the back of my hand'. Since I don't think a nose really has a back?

“Head of the family,” I mocked him through the smoke. Under the strain my Galarian accent got stronger, but I couldn’t care less. Not if confronted with such an idiotic thought. “I did not run up here to deal with daddy-issues and some outdated concept of honour.”
Okay even though Hana backtracks on this later I think she has a point and I'm glad she said it (even if it was partially because she was projecting). Falkner was basically about to sit here and let himself die to prove something. To his father's pidgeot I guess, about honor and family names.

But you can't prove anything if you're dead and there's something to be said here about what Falkner tried to do and why it wasn't right. Especially since Falkner himself comes and thanks Hana. SO in a way he kinda needed to be told off. And I'm glad because sometimes ones perception of the concept of honor can reaaally get in the way of doing what needs to be done.

I grabbed the young man by the arm once again, this time determined not to let him go, and dragged him over to the window. He protested, of course, but he didn’t know the sheer amount of strength that was needed for ballet.
I constantly adore this detail about Hana and her ballet past. I am very here for shredded ballet dancers because what ballet dancers do is freakin IMPRESSIVE as crazy. Also bonus points for having a female character allowed to enjoy feminine things, its too often in mainstream media I see a strong girl being presented as one who has to reject her femininity to be strong instead of, ya know, writing a complex character.

“You are such an idiot!” I got out between coughs. “Out there are people waiting for you. They want to see you safe and what do you do? Throw yourself in unneeded danger? Shows how much you really care about them!”

Finally. All those words I wanted to throw at Leon came out.
OOPSIE there it is! Just as she started saying this line I was like "hang on it sounds like she's-" and then I was like "yep there it is". I derive particular enjoyment from instances of people projecting issues onto other people. This also sets up an interesting conflict towards her feelings about Leon - she's mad at him, for what she views as throwing his life away recklessly, in 'undeeded danger'. She thinks he's an indiot for it.

There's a layer of fascinating irony here - she is somewhat reckless risking herself to climb the tower after Falkner. In essence, doing the same thing Leon did.

It'll be interesting to see how such an issue will try to be resolved. While its true that recklessness or throwing one's life away isn't good, there's the counterpoint. One should try to make an effort to save the life of others or protect them if possible. Where does one draw the line between actions Leon took on Darkest Day and ones Hana took here, on this tower? (also is this parrallel here? A storm, an enraged pokemon, someone trying to fight back, and standing atop a tower? HHHMMMM)

“Hannah?” Leon was both worried and alarmed. Leon. I could just follow his voice. He was his brother, after all. Just one, straight, safe way. I gasped for air, but only burning smoke filled my lungs. Alright! I pulled myself up and peeked out again.
So this is something I'll talk about later but I feel like in this burning tower scene, I wasn't quite as grounded as I'd like. Yes, you describe the soot, the smoke, the burning air. Thats very good. But I feel like if you added a few more descriptions it could really hit home. Even just going a little more in depth about about how the air burns, the acrid scent of smoke, watering eyes.

Couldn’t it understand how important fathers were for their children?
Hana is Fine and not projecting at all, nope.

We continued. I followed the voice to a tea,
I think you mean 'followed the voice to a T'

Also I was a little perplexed at this part. While the image of Hana descending by touch alone, guided by Morty(?) is extremely cool and I love it, I had a hard time parsing how Morty communicated. Did he telepathically communicate? Cell phone? Through Rotom? Another ghost? I think a little elaboration here would be nice.

but it invoked images of freshly mangled and starched sheets, wonderfully clean.
I am rather confused about the use of 'mangled' here, and I'm not sure if perhaps you meant a nother word? Its hard to picture something simultaneously mangled and starched.

“But believe me, I know how it is to have the fate of your family on your shoulders.”
*bonks Hana on head* NO! Bad Hana. Someone give her a hug please. What happened to her family and her parents is not a burden she should bear, or blame herself for. I hop she can learn to see this lesson by the end of all this.

We considered it an even trade since Rotom had now made Morty’s phone its permanent residence.
waitt what! She's just? Leaving Rotom? Not even a goodbye? NOOOOOO

I gotta say I feel a little salty about this, I enjoyed Rotom but now he's seemingly vanishing to hang out with Morty? And Hana has no visible reaction to this at all. Not even 'well, i didn't want to feel sad so I sucked it up, Rotom was happier there anyway'. I mean, Rotom was her last connection to her future life! :(
Ah well.

I did enjoy the addition of Mareep and Eevee though! Both are lovely and cute and I hope to see more of them going forward. I find myself wondering if perhaps Eevee will bond with Hana? They both seem to enjoy alone time. It'd be both cute and funny if say, Hana was doing her stretches and Eevee ends up joining in.

Also big oof at Leon refuses to have or catch any other pokemon. :((


Okay so there you have it! Those are most of my line thoughts and feelings so far. Now to get on to the other bit. As I was reading and rereading, I kept asking myself about why I felt the way I did when I mentioned something feeling a little off about 9-10 in my other review. And about what was bothering me so far.
To be clear, my enjoyment outweighs by critical feelings, and there's definitely more positive than negative. I love your characters and dialogue too.

After a lot of thought, I believe that whats throwing me off a little about this story is moments when the narration or thought process sort of jar from one thing to the next. I highlighted a couple parts above, but the ones that stand out as examples of what I mean are:
-The moment when Hana kicks Hoppip to attack the Geodude (a hilarious image, but I recall needing to reread more than once to understand what had happened)
-The moment when they get picked up while hitchiking and the car is suddenly there
-The burning tower sequence ->Leon yells at Falkner -> Falkner fighting? Zapdos? with a Pidgey?
-Escaping the tower with Morty's help

There's a some small moments and bits like this interspersed throughout the story where I felt like I had a hard time understanding either the characters thought processes or something physical happening in the scene. While the notion of Falkner fighting back and having to realize his Pidgey was waiting for him the whole time, was very cool, I found myself struggling to follow the logic chain that it was appropiate to send out Pidgey against a gigantic bird that destroyed half a house just earlier?

It's hard to give a concrete fix to this issues, since this is a fairly subjective thing, but one thing that might help is trying to review future parts for things that don't quite connect? Or perhaps a beta reader. I think overall I can sum this up as feeling like the pacing within the chapters, during emotional parts or dangerous physical confrontations can feel a little fast paced, whereas I wouldn't mind getting to see these moments rest a little. To get expounded on or exposited at for a little more, emotionally or physically.

ANyways, that aside I am now incredibly intrigued by whereever this plot is evolving! So far we have dynamaxing pokemon, a sighting of both Galrian and Kantonian Zapdos, sotrms and erratic pokemon behaviours.... Obviously it seems that maybe the Darkest Day might be happening again, but this time the birds themselves seemed involved to a degree as well.... I can't wait to see where all this goes.

I also want to close on a final note that I genuinely enjoy Hana, her character and story. Its really interesting to see her seemingly 'mundane' (but no less important!) issues she grapples with contrasted against the more outlandish things like giant birds and dunsparce. Love her. I love the way you portray her and I love how you highlight her struggles especially with ambition, perfection, and blaming herself for things she shouldn't.

I also enjoy the portrayal of Leon, grappling with the weight of responsibilities as champion, with the grief and helplessness he now feels, and the loss of his family. I love how you capture so much mundane aspects of traveling and walking and exploring, but make it interesting because of the characters and interactions.

Hopefully I can read more of this delightful story going forward!!
 

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3
Aaaaa thank you so much for your lovely review ❤️
And thank you so much for your kind words. I'm honestly surprised that so many people do enjoy 26y. This review as well as many of the other reviews gave me a lot of new motivation to continue working on part 2.
You also have a great knack for writing 'around' issues. Your characters often don't say what they mean and have layers to them. It makes them feel very human, occasionally almost frustratingly so!
Hehe. Well, that's where my entire wordcount comes from. People ignoring things :D
Oh man blue you have a talent for scene setting. This evokes strong ghibli vibes. It feels very atmospheric and enticing, and is just a Gigantic Mood. Also I now desperately want to go to Violet City. The way you dexcribe it here is just absolutely beautiful. A harmony of land and air coming together is :okgon:
Thank you :veelove:
Not gonna lie, when I know I'm up against an important location description, I spend up to an hour searching for the right reference pictures and video-clips and ghibli is *always* among it.
Also I was a little perplexed at this part. While the image of Hana descending by touch alone, guided by Morty(?) is extremely cool and I love it, I had a hard time parsing how Morty communicated. Did he telepathically communicate? Cell phone? Through Rotom? Another ghost? I think a little elaboration here would be nice.
Nah, that guy's screaming like a madman. But yeah, should probably make that clearer
waitt what! She's just? Leaving Rotom? Not even a goodbye? NOOOOOO

I gotta say I feel a little salty about this, I enjoyed Rotom but now he's seemingly vanishing to hang out with Morty? And Hana has no visible reaction to this at all. Not even 'well, i didn't want to feel sad so I sucked it up, Rotom was happier there anyway'. I mean, Rotom was her last connection to her future life! :(
Ah well.
Yeah, that was... not my most tactful move in hindsight. I had to axe him, but remembering why actually took some time. But Rotom needs to go for maximum isolation. I've grown a lot more attached to it after I wrote that scene, so now I want more Rotom content myself.
Also, there's a new Rotom-chapter out. I inserted it into the parts you've already read, so you might not now it yet. Perfect Rotom chaos. https://forums.thousandroads.net/index.php?threads/26-years.757/post-36630
After a lot of thought, I believe that whats throwing me off a little about this story is moments when the narration or thought process sort of jar from one thing to the next. I highlighted a couple parts above, but the ones that stand out as examples of what I mean are:
-The moment when Hana kicks Hoppip to attack the Geodude (a hilarious image, but I recall needing to reread more than once to understand what had happened)
-The moment when they get picked up while hitchiking and the car is suddenly there
-The burning tower sequence ->Leon yells at Falkner -> Falkner fighting? Zapdos? with a Pidgey?
-Escaping the tower with Morty's help
Ooooooh interesting. Very very helpful.
Those are scenes where, in the movie in my head, there's a decisive scene cut, but no new exposition shot. Very good to know. Will work on that. A lot of people have stumbled over this, but, well, in my head they always make perfect sense...
also want to close on a final note that I genuinely enjoy Hana, her character and story. Its really interesting to see her seemingly 'mundane' (but no less important!) issues she grapples with contrasted against the more outlandish things like giant birds and dunsparce. Love her. I love the way you portray her and I love how you highlight her struggles especially with ambition, perfection, and blaming herself for things she shouldn't.

I also enjoy the portrayal of Leon, grappling with the weight of responsibilities as champion, with the grief and helplessness he now feels, and the loss of his family. I love how you capture so much mundane aspects of traveling and walking and exploring, but make it interesting because of the characters and interactions.
:veelove: :veelove: :veelove:
You can't imagine how much that means to me ❤️
 
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kyeugh

you gotta feel your lines
Staff
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. farfetchd-galar
  2. gfetchd-kyeugh
  3. onion-san
  4. farfetchd
  5. farfetchd
1. lost
hi bluesidra! i know i promised to binge this after blitz, but i wanted to give you a bit of love before the event wrapped up too. i thought this was a strong start. we get a good impression of the big conflict our characters are facing—both in the short term, i.e. where the hell are we and how do we get home and why are my possessions turning into stone, as well as long term, i.e. there is a space dragon ripping reality apart and we're the only ones who can stop it. i think you make good pace here. they're thrown into the action immediately, and they get right to trying to solve it. the chapter is packed with good character moments, and we're left with a good idea of what's going to happen next.

i was very drawn in by the characters. you do a good job introducing us to them and providing some insight into their characters as well. i came out of this chapter perceiving hana as a very driven and no-nonsense sort of person, sometimes to the point of being a bit cold. she has excellent emotional regulation and is able to quickly banish her anxieties and fears. in turn, she seems to get a bit irritated when people aren't able to control their own emotions. when rotom is freaking out about almost being entombed in stone, hana basically tells them to suck it up and calm down. likewise, when leon is on the verge of breakdown about the fact that hammerlocke is getting obliterated and he's not there to stop him, she bids him to calm down and just look at the next step. she comes across as a little naïve to that capacity, although i don't think it makes her a bad person. it seems to be something she just struggles with as she doesn't experience those issues herself and isn't sure how to navigate them on the behalf of others. i've been there. i am predicting that going forward, her arc will be related to this. i can see it reaching a breaking point that she's seemingly unworried about their situation compared to leon, who is basically balding with stress about being stuck here.

i enjoyed leon's characterization too. i feel like we only see so much of leon in canon, but what we get comes through well here, and i even feel like he acts similarly to hop in some ways. he definitely feels like someone who takes his responsibilities very seriously here, as is probably appropriate considering the world is exploding back home. at the same time, he's sort of goofy and feels like a child in some respects. losing his pokémon must be really devastating. i couldn't stop thinking about how fucked it is while i was reading, and i really hope for his sake that they can be recovered. i have to imagine they can be—just murking his whole team right off the bat feels like a lot. but the fact that they can't be released right now really drives home how stranded they are. no phones, no companions other than each other: leon and hana truly only have one another right now. well, and rotom i guess, but hana doesn't seem terribly fond of them at the moment. :p

i liked the gradual reveal that they're in johto. the sentret was cute and it was clever the way you turned it into a character moment for leon. very cute interaction. if there were any doubts about their whereabouts, closing the chapter out with lugia and ho-oh stopping by certainly put them to bed. i liked how powerful lugia felt, such that they mistook it for a train. and ho-oh as the herald of a positive omen that brings a smile to hana's face feels very true to canon. it was a very evocative scene and i think closing the chapter with it set an optimistic tone for the story going forward.
«Why did he have to go back? He had almost made it to safety. Why?»
do these brackets denote thoughts? it threw me off a bit as i usually associate them with poké speech or something like that; italics is usually enough to get across that it's thinking for me.

We were in a forest, Whimsicott and the team probably had fun somewhere, warming their leaves in the sun.
this sentence is a bit awkward. is the whimsicott one that the narrator is familiar with, or are they just speculating that there's one hanging around somewhere? either way, perhaps: We were in a forest. [A] Whimsicott and [its friends/the rest of my team] were probably having fun somewhere, warming their leaves in the sun.

Within one second, I was wide awake.
i think "I was wide awake within a second" flows a bit better.

This was Leon’s coat, right? There could only be so many ugly capes around.
lololol, fucking owned.

Chairman Rose. Darkest Day. Hammerlocke. The falling sky. Hop!
i think this would be more impactful if the No Darkest Day, no destroyed Hammerlocke. line from earlier was cut.

Another deep breath, then I opened my eyes and — the screen was cracked! Not only that, the entire case was bent. And something else: the lower side of the phone was… petrified? It looked like someone had made a tombstone for my deceased phone and stopped halfway through.

I pressed the on-button and was relieved to see at least a few screen-cells flicker.
oh lord. i always think about this—if i broke my phone 30 years ago, would i be able to fix it somehow? kind of a fun thought. also, not sure what you mean by screen-cells here. pixels, maybe?

«Damn Macro Cosmos and their quality control,» I thought as I struggled against the strong glue. Rotom wailed on the inside, panicking.
this is actually terrifying, i'd be shitting my pants if i was that rotom. or... shitting my phone case, i guess. is this hana friends with this rotom? she seems sort of unbothered here.

“That grey… thing… mess… consumed my circuits. The motherboard — gone, just like that! And then it wanted to eat me! It was so scary!” Rotom hugged my face, sending electricity down my entire body.

“It’s okay. You didn’t die!” I struggled to get the tiny ghost away from me. “Now calm down, please!”
sort of harsh. i'm getting the impression of hana as a bit of a cold person.

the sweet scent of cypresses
hm, anecdotally i'm not sure if cypresses have a sweet scent.

Leon stood on top of a small height, trying to orient himself.
"small height" is a bit strange—small hill, maybe? also lol leon trying to orient himself.

the root-streaked, mossy ground.
this was a nice description.

“Everything’s fine.”
uh huh.

“Yes I am! You know what’s not? Everything else! Somewhere out there something’s wrecking Hammerlocke! I should be there, fightin’ it. But I’m in the middle of goddamn nowhere! Somethin’ about Dynamax I don’t even understand!” Leon was furious in a way I’ve never seen or imagined him. “Can’t even call a cab ‘cause my phone’s broken. And worst of all—” He reached for his waist bag and I instinctively took a step back. “This!”
i liked this dialogue, his frustration feels real. it was much funnier to read when i remembered he probably has a bri'ish accent.

I gasped. In Leon’s outstretched hand was a pokeball, often used and now turned solid grey, petrified like my phone.
wow, that's fucked.

where a small, man-made path
is there such a thing as a non-man-made path?

his feet tucked up to his chest and his head resting on his knees, was Galar’s Champion.
i'm not sure what it means for his feet to be tucked up to his chest, but i thought calling him "Galar's Champion" here contrasted nicely with his pitiful state.

He was ruffling Rotom’s plasmatic mantle
i wasn't sure what this meant.

“Charizard?” I asked.

Leon just nodded. He handed me the ball. It lay heavy in my hand; cold, even though his body should have kept it warm.

“It’s the same with Aegislash and the others,” he said, his voice hollow. I was by far not an expert on pokeballs, but judging from what Rotom told me, this looked grim. “What about yours?”
ugh. that's really scary, i feel for the pokémon. i really hope they're not just like... dead from this.

Leon sent my scarf a wary look, but let me get to work.
unsure about "sent a look"—maybe "gave"?

“The other one is a dead end at a railway crossing.” I looked at him. “I’ve been there today already…”

“Which one is it?”

“… I don’t know…”
oh my god, lol.

“Wait, yes! You were unconscious. I think it tried to steal something”
dropped a period here. love imagining sentret as devious little raccoons.

“Oleana always has a few for me,” he said. “Guess she knows how to keep me in line. Now which direction did you say?”
omg, hahaha. he just used the same trick on the sentret as oleana uses on him. precious.

And in their wake they left — a rainbow: Bright, broad, hopeful.
i think this dash should go.

There was something encouraging in this amalgamation of light and colours. Something telling me that, even though the Darkest Day was somewhere, consuming all the light, here the sun was still bright and powerful and the sky still intact.

We could beat Eternatus and seal it away. There was no doubt in my mind. A smile came across my face and for the first time in what seemed like an eternity, it felt sincere.
i liked this. i kind of think it would work better without the first two sentences of the second paragraph.
As I squinted my eyes to peek at it against the blinding light of the sun, I was sure that it itself drew the rainbow across the firmament with its feathers of pure colour.
"firmament" was an awesome word choice here. i think "it itself" is a bit confusing here though. maybe: As I squinted my eyes to peak at it against the blinding light of the sun, I was sure that the majestic pokemon's resplendent feathers had drawn the rainbow across the firmament. or something.

---

2. intermission

i'll be honest, i wasn't too sure what this chapter was for. i felt like the main things it added were a physical description of hana which we probably didn't need right now, a description of her personality that i think the first chapter did a more than adequate job setting up already, and some sentences indicated that people are searching for her and that she has a dad. this was pleasant to read and the description was nice but i don't think anything would be lost if you cut it.
Hanako is known to be a level-headed trainer, always in control of her emotions
checks out! lol

She was still wearing her challenger uniform, but her trademark rose singlet and her frilly scarf, in which she usually appeared on telly were visible underneath.
i think there should be a comma after telly here, but it might flow a bit better like: Her trademark rose singlet and frilly scarf, which she usually wore when she appeared on telly, were visible from beneath her challenger uniform.

---
3. some that don't belong

short and sweet one! hana's emotions take the front seat in this one; her feelings come through loud and clear at any given moment. first her relief to have found civlization, then her surprise at being in "kanto" and rapid turn to planning her next steps, then the revelation that she's traveled back in time and is kind of shit out of luck and the subsequent breakdown there. you can really tell that hana is someone that always has a plan, and this situation is really strongly testing her ability to create one. when she's finally pushed to the limit, all she can do is cry and berate herself. ouch.

i liked some of the issues they bumped into here. technology mismatches are the most obvious problems to run into with a time travel scenario like this, but i really liked how you went for the approach of, like... Sorry, you are not a person and you do not exist and all your credentials are invalid. especially in a setting like pokémon, where your identity determines your ownership of your pokémon, your ability to heal them, etc... that's a huge deal, and something she's right to freak out.

i felt like leon was kind of all over the place in this one. we don't really hear anything from him until he's musing about a soccer game. he points out that it's a rerun but doesn't really draw any conclusions from it—i kind of wanted to see him attempt to rationalize there. then we get to the pokémon center and he seems to be freaking out and needs a ten minute cooldown from hana, but after that he's back to his chipper self and tossing wallets around? and then we don't get any reaction from him at all about being in 1993. a lot of this stuff is explainable on some level by the fact that hana's just not paying that much attention to him and also his emotional state was shown in chapter 1 to fluctuate a lot, but still, i was thrown a bit by the fact that every time the narrative turns back to him he's basically done a 180°. i think focusing a little more on his progression, or toning it down a bit, might reduce the whiplash.
Pretty sure the rush of victory in the semifinals was nothing against the overwhelming joy when I had a paved road under my feet.
her relief here is really tangible, and i liked the way you grounded it in a previous experience.

My first reaction was to respond in Galarian. Because of my black hair and olive tan people of Wyndon and other big cities had often confused me for a tourist in the past, and I enjoyed their expression when I responded in my deepest Galarian accent. But this lady seemed genuinely taken aback. I switched to my Kantonian vocabulary when I thanked her and asked where exactly we were. Her expression became even more worried. She gave me a name I’d never heard before.
this is cool. i like the way her background is coming to aid her here, and i wonder how out of his element leon is about to be for the rest of this fic, lol. nothing like a bit of immersion to learn a language, i suppose. i wasn't sure what the last sentence in this quote was supposed to mean, though—is this a japanese/honorific thing?

Despite her best efforts, it wasn’t calm.

It took about ten minutes to cool Leon down.
it felt a bit sudden for leon to suddenly be in melt down mode again after pensively stroking his beard at a soccer match a couple minutes ago.

“I’ve got a credit card,” I heard Leon’s voice from the back room. “Here, catch!”
and he seems a bit perky here again.

I could still call my dad in Saffron City and ask him for help. No problem at all. One. Two.
i liked the return of the counting here. i wonder if she does contact her dad, that would be interesting.

“Miss, the year is 1993. According to your card, you aren’t born for another nine years.”
yeesh. that's gotta be rough to hear. i'm kind of surprised she didn't wonder for even a moment if she was being fucked with.

Were those tears in my eyes? Oh, yeah.

«No crying, Hanako, you aren’t a baby.»

I quietly apologised myself outside, but no one was paying attention anyway.
oof. this self-talk is not great—hana's emotional regulation may be objectively good but her relationship with her emotions does not seem good at all. i think you want "excused" instead of "apologized" here, btw.

---

4. cracks in the porcelain

i liked the slice of life feeling of this chapter. we kind of just get to exist in old-school johto (:wink:) for a little while and soak in the vibes, archaic technology and atrocious fashion and all. they atmosphere you established was very strong and homey... a lot of this chapter had sort of a yellowish or orangeish tinge in my mind's eye, like it's taking place an hour before sunset and is almost uncomfortably warm but not quite. i think you do a great job capturing the close-knit, small-town, low-tech feeling of johto here. the pokémon center isn't a pokémon center how i normally conceive of one, but sort of a little mom and pop place run by people who have their own lives and are offering help not out of obligation but out of the goodness of their hearts. i liked the small talk about home and the homesickness it caused.

i especially liked leon and hana just sort of being messy wrecks in front of each other in their ugly clothes with their unkempt hair. leon is clearly taking this pretty hard, but he still wants to put on a strong face and be there for hana. hana is just not really prepared to think about it at all. she's able to mechanically recount how they ended up here at lucy's request, but when rotom asks her if she thinks they'll make it back, she just shuts down. the way you make it feel like she's on the very brink of a panic attack for this whole chapter is well-done, and when it finally hits her desperation feels very deep and real. i liked the way you focused on the physical sensation of crying and the impact it has on breath. the self-berating was really heartbreaking to read... in general the emotional beats of this story are pretty powerful so far.

that said i'm not sure i fully understand what incited her breakdown here or what was upsetting to her about the conversation. i felt like i was supposed to pick up on it but it was just kind of opaque to me. i guess she just thought about how trends that she associates with the past are actually in the future for her, and that set her off? i think it could have been more clear.

also, small thing, but it was hard for me to visualize what the zapdos was doing exactly. was it close or far? was it checking her out or was it uninterested? was it standing or flying? did anyone else notice it? it's understandable that she's not picking up on all this stuff because she's a little busy crying, but i wanted something to sort of anchor the visual here.

anyway, good stuff so far! i have no clue how this situation is going to resolve, but it really says something that i'm not even particularly worried about it—if they're stuck here forever, that's fine with me, because the strength of this story is the characters and the vibes and hey, those can can keep coming regardless of the year. you're clearly a very strong character writer, and the thought you've put into organizing hana and leon's interactions and relationship really shows. i'm looking forward to diving further into this fic when blitz wraps up—seriously, can't give you enough props for your crazy performance this year, you rock.
While Owen somehow managed to talk down Leon
going back to the last chapter's review, i kind of wanted more from this.

Lucy didn’t want me to, but I had insisted.
tense changes here... i think Lucy hadn't wanted me to, but I'd insisted might be right?

“You know, I don’t think possessing someone else’s electronics is considered good behaviour.”.

“I’d rather play around with those simple relays than with that fossil of a computer over there. Here, look: on, off, on—”

“Stop that! We are guests here. Behave!”
lol, i love him.

And neither of us — Leon, Lucy nor me — knew exactly what to do.
i think "neither" is for cases where there are only two options, so as there are three here, you want "none" instead.

Even the family’s Meowth had by now accepted him as part of the furnishing and laid on top of him, curled into its tail.
"accepted him as part of the furnishing" omg, i love it.

This Pokemon Center was so small, I mused. Nothing compared to the ones back at home. It was more like a small house with a store-front and a guest room.

And even as far as houses went, it was small. From the kitchen I could see the eating and living area, as well as the tiny garden and the shed, where the outline of an old motorcycle loomed in front of a crammed hobby workshop. Yet everything here seemed so neat and tidy. The garden was well maintained, and the few potted plants on the windowsills basked in the sunlight. I put the plate on the stack and took the next one.
i really love the way that this pokémon center is just a small operation run by a couple folks who live there rather than a big corporate thing like it feels in canon. although it does sort of make you wonder why all the nurses are joys in this world.

“Hana…” Rotom slowly began, its voice whimpering, “are we ever going to get back?” I had no answer. Just the regular squeaking sound as I rubbed the tea cloth over the porcelain. After some time, the blinking red and green lights resumed. We stood there for a while. As the dishes came to an end, I had to consider what I would do next to keep myself busy.
really liked this moment.

not even the pip
i never knew pip was a word. there have actually been a wild number of words in this fic so far that i thought were typos but turned out to be britishisms, more than perhaps any fic i've ever read.

“Well, for the most part. In the south it’s pretty constant. Nevertheless, you should always leave the house with an umbrella. There’s… The south gets a lot of sun and warm winds from the sea, so it’s ideal for our plants…” I had to blink a few times to push back against the tears, now that I thought of our greenhouse and my plants and how Mum and Poliwhirl had taken meticulous care of them while I was away.
:( good detail but ouch

He looked terrible. Earlier I was convinced Leon didn’t need to brush his hair, but that ruffled mane proofed this theory to be wrong. The colour still hadn’t quite returned to his face, and the cast around his arm looked as uncomfortable as sleeping on a couch for five hours straight.
i really liked this description.

His voice was still matt, but it sprung me back into action
i'm not sure what "matt" means here—did you mean matte? even then it's unclear.
 
Chapter 26: At The End Of The World

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3

Chapter 26: At The End Of The World​

January 5th 1994, 7pm.

My lungs burned. My breath again made that gurgling noise and if I didn’t have a glass of water nearby, I’d surely have broken into another coughing fit.

What was up with me lately? This was merely the warm-up. My endurance had got worse and worse over the last month and I didn’t know what I was doing wrong. Sure, I skipped some days when work got too long, but whenever I was training, I tried to follow all my basic routines.

Eevee sat on a chair in the corner of this small box room that I had repurposed into a makeshift gym. I didn’t need to look up to feel that condescending glare of hers. Instead, I wiped the first droplets of sweat from my skin, took a deep breath, and got ready to jump back into my routine.

“Hanako, dear,” Sara’s voice sounded from beyond the door.

* * *​

A minute later, my workout for this evening was cancelled. Not that I was looking forward to it, given my performance today, but I felt the anger rise inside of me while I changed back into warmer clothes.

Leon was missing. One of Kon’s Farfetch’d had run off and he — out of all people — had taken it upon himself to search for the pokemon. Of course, he hadn’t returned. And of course he hadn’t taken Furret with him.

Now I slid into my anorak while she snuggled up against my legs, nervous and worried. She still limped a bit and enjoyed spending her days indoors, but she had never protested being his guide. Why he left her behind today was beyond me. I grabbed the storm lantern from the dresser and got ready for a long walk through the darkened Ilex.

Furret darted around when I closed the Center’s doors behind me and stepped into the village that had already settled in for the night. The farm pokemon had cosied up in their stables, while the families sat together in their living rooms, enjoying another quiet evening. Even the forest had fallen asleep, its usual lively rustling replaced by calm whistling of the winds and the occasional howl of a Noctowl.

The weasel led the way while we made our lonely walk into the woods. When the forest grew thicker and blocked out the last lights of the village, I didn’t look back.

The snow that lay almost knee-high here creaked under each of my steps while the wind rustled the heavy, snow-covered branches of the firs in vain. Wading through the masses of snow might have been difficult two months ago, but by now I was perfectly used to it. So now, in the lantern’s light, my thoughts started to wander.

Kon’s sons were pretty inept when dealing with pokemon, so having Leon help them out took an enormous burden off of the collier’s shoulders. Still, they were his pokemon and his kids. He should be the one looking for the Farfetch’d, not the person with the worst sense of direction on the entire face of the planet. I understood that Leon had a hard time putting his foot down, but…

And this chain of unfair fetch-quests didn’t end there. Even though the entire village considered Leon my responsibility — why was I the one looking for him now?

Oh, right, because the idiot hadn’t taken a single pokemon with him, left alone one that could help him find his way back.

I took a deep breath and counted to ten, very slowly this time. Because I knew those thoughts were wrong.

It wasn’t his fault. If anyone was to blame here, it was Kon who let him wander off and only now told me. Or me, for not checking in with him or for not telling Kon off, either. That was what the rational side of my brain said, and I tried my best to concentrate on it. Leon was not to blame.

Furret did a splendid job tracking him and I realised she had gained quite the experience over the last two months. She could even discern what set of footprints was the newer one when we came across multiple ones. That man was a disaster. How many circles had he walked?

The Ilex was still dangerous, even now that the constant blizzards had died down a bit. Only the paths near the village were usable, having been maintained by the people of Azalea. Beyond this radius, the forest gradually turned into a snowy deathtrap. I really hoped he hadn’t wandered off too far.

Should I even ask him what went through his head when he came to this decision? Probably not. I wouldn’t like the answer I’d get. And my patience for the day was already wearing thin. With him, with me, with everything.

Suddenly, I realised I’d been biting my nails this entire time and put my hand back into my pocket. When did I pick that old habit up again?

And why did— No. I shook my head, clearing my thoughts. Thinking about the ‘why’ to this entire situation would only make me mad, and I couldn’t allow that to happen. I had been scrubbing floorboards all day, and as much as I had got used to it, it had made me tired. In this state, I couldn’t guarantee having my emotions under control any longer.

To my relief, a few bends and paths later, Furret perked up, and I saw a sign of life: a faint light and something akin to a slashing sound were only a few hundred yards away from us.

My steps got faster, and a few minutes later, we reached a small clearing. Leon sat curled up against a tree and watched Farfetch’d, who, in the cone of an electric torch, had already cut down a sizable amount of small bushes. As soon as he noticed me, he jumped to his feet.

“Hannah?” I shielded my eyes against the sudden brightness of the torch being pointed at me. “What are you doing there?”

“Looking for you, what else?” I motioned for him to turn the darn thing away and only now he seemed to realise he was blinding me. “What are you doing?”

Lost for words, Leon pointed the torch light between his spot and Farfetch’d, then sighed. So today was one of those days where talking was difficult. Alright.

Furret had curled herself around his neck and he ruffled her fur absentmindedly, then sighed again. He retrieved a pokeball from his pocket and recalled the bird.

“Let’s go, I guess,” he said in a defeated tone as he trudged past me, setting Furret to the ground.

I stared after him, bewildered. “You’re welcome, I guess.” No reaction. I caught up and studied him closer. “Wait, are you angry?”

“No.” I fell in line and looked at his profile, while he stubbornly stared at the ground. For a minute or so, we walked in tense silence. I was about to accept his broodiness when he, without looking up, added: “Y’know, you didn’t have to come out here.”

A smile came across my face. I chuckled and suddenly, the air felt a lot milder. “Says who?”

“I didn’t ask for it.”

Within one second, the upbeat atmosphere was gone again. I stopped dead in my tracks and stared at him, not comprehending what I had heard. Had he just told me off for saving him from hypothermia? “You’re serious?”

Nothing in his posture had changed; he walked on as if nothing happened. “You couldn’t find your way out of a paper bag and now you’re acting like I’m inconveniencing you?”

Finally, at least a slight flinch. He stopped and turned half around, but still couldn’t meet my gaze. His voice was as flat as his eyes. “I didn’t ask for it, that’s all I’m saying.”

“What did you expect?” I burst out. Scared by the sound of my own voice, I immediately forced a light-hearted smile on my lips and railed my tone down. “You’re once again running ahead without thinking. I’m running after you, picking up the mess. This is our routine by now, isn’t it?”

It didn’t come out like the joke I intended and he didn’t take it as one. I felt my breath rise as Leon turned around fully and looked me in the eye with a deadpan expression.

“You done? Can we go?”

This was the last straw. My patience with him had been slim and now he didn’t even regard me with a full sentence? ‘You done?’ What was that even? Furret started shuffling around uncomfortably.

“If you ask me like that, no,” I hissed, while the reasonable part in my brain begged in vain to stop this disaster from unfolding. “Because that is a pretty nasty habit of yours. Your constant running away, I mean. It has caused nothing but trouble. Heck, it’s what got us into this mess in the first place.”

Leon still stared me dead in the eyes. Could he not at least show one emotion? At least to defend himself? After all, he was in that mess that we now called reality, too.

My breath got shaky from both the stress and the memories. “Back in Hammerlocke. Leon, why did you have to go back?”

“I have no idea what you mean.” His expression didn’t change at all, but I finally got to him. I could sense him getting angry, from the way his stance got ever more sure, to his grip around the torch tightening.

“You know exactly what I mean. You can tell me what you want, but you didn’t stand a chance against Eternatus.” I delighted in the shadow that flickered over his face. “And when I almost got you out of the danger zone, you decide to head back? As if you would have changed much.”

“Well, if you think so, why did you run after me?”

“Be—” I stumbled at the sudden counter. Leon’s voice was far from raised, but it was more than what I had got from him in days. “Because Hop was down and out and you can’t be left a minute without adult supervision it seems.”

“You didn’t need to—” There it was: Defiance. Finally. “I’m not stupid! And I’m not a baby! Stop treating me like one!”

“Then stop acting like one!” I screamed.

For a moment, the forest fell quiet; only the whirlwind of emotions inside me to keep me company. That shout had released something, untied a vital knot in the bindings that were holding me together. Whatever it was, it was now gone, and it left me hollow, almost insecure. But also freed.

My voice quivered as I made a wide gesture. “Leon, we are at the end of the world. No one here is going to help us. I have to work tomorrow. I should be sleeping. But what am I doing? Looking for you in the middle of a goddamn forest!”

“I said you didn’t have to—”

“Stop cutting me off!” I screamed. I was angry. My voice was angry. But it was also shaking. My breaths filled the dead space between us as I met his eyes. These eyes that could as well belong to a stranger.

“Get your life together!” It was almost a plea, hidden under waves of aggression.

“What?” he hissed. A ghost of the former golden sparks lit up as Leon broke out of his inertia.

His sparks met my embers, and I ignited in a fire of satisfying, all-consuming and blind rage. At this moment, I gave away all my restraint. There was no going back any more.

For a second, Leon was lost for words, then they almost poured out of him. “Do you think I enjoy this? Do you think I like feeling like an absolute failure?”

“This isn’t about you,” I shot out, quickly swallowing down a cough. “For once in your life, it is not about you!”

“Oh? Well, it’s not about you either. You haven’t spent one thought on Eternatus or Hammerlocke or the Darkest Day or — or anything since we got here! This right here is the first time you bring up the Darkest Day.”

“At least I’m doing something.”

“Keeping yourself busy with stupid things, that is.” Leon fought to contain his anger and I could see him consciously slowing down his breath. He took a step back and motioned down the path. “This is ridiculous. Come on, we should go.”

With that, he turned around and was about to head deeper into the forest. I crossed my arms and my eyes narrowed. I had not forgotten about the stupid things. Furret winced in panic.

“Must be really nice to think the roof over your head pays itself, Champ.” I almost spat out his title.

He flinched, but in a move so petty I didn’t think he was capable of pulling it off, he turned back around and mimicked my voice almost perfectly. “Must be really nice to think problems solve themselves by ignoring them.”

Delightful.

“Well, you moping around certainly won’t solve anything. If Eternatus is oh-so important to you, then do something about it! But no. The first time something doesn’t fall into your lap, you give up.”

A cruel smile crept across his face. “Ah yes, the ‘10 years reigning Champ, clearly everything was handed to you’ argument. Haven’t heard that one in a while. Rich coming from the one person who acts like this doesn’t affect her at all.”

“Are you implying I don’t care about what happened in Hammerlocke?”

“Yes,” Leon snapped back immediately, taking one step closer. The confidence that had become such a rare sight on him made him taller than he was. “So what is this really about?”

“You,” I shot back without hesitation. “It’s about you.” I wanted to hurt him and I wanted to make it count. “It’s about you, and your entitlement to my time, and how you’re so self-centred, you couldn’t look left or right even if your life depended on it.”

“My entitlement to your time?” he repeated, with no sign of backing down. “Sweet. I’ll remember that next time you throw yourself in unnecessary danger. Maybe I’ll reconsider putting my life on the line for you. Also, may I remind you that you’re the one who keeps running after me?”

“Better thank me for that, else you’d paint a pretty sad picture of yourself with those two working brain-cells of yours.” Poor idiot. He didn’t know how deep he had ventured into my territory of pettiness.

“Oh, now that was low. At least you’re finally showing some colours. And now come!” He took a decisive step away from me. “Let’s go back before you run out of things to complain about. Hop was right when he said that he’s got to drag you everywhere.”

“Hah!” I spat. I was by far not done with this, and he had just given me the perfect opening. “At least I spend time with him while I’m keeping myself busy with ‘stupid things’.”

Leon growled, and I knew I had hit a nerve. “You don’t get to talk about him!” He almost exploded. “You know him for what? Three months? Too bad you kicked him from the Cup. Cause know what? He at least got the guts to take me on. While you crumble the second you might — possibly — have to disagree with someone. Let alone face me.”

“Oh, look, first Hop, now me.” The sweet smile on my face grew wider. “You like bringing up people you know nothing about, right? Makes you look so much more mature.”

“You know what doesn’t make you look mature? Treating everyone around you like they are beneath you.”

Leon quivered with rage. He clenched his jaws, and I wondered what words he held back now. Whatever he could have said would have only been fuel to my fire. He wanted to see me go all out? He’d get it. I had warned him he wasn’t prepared for it.

In the end, he calmed down enough to get his act straight. “Know what? As much fun as this is, I’m out. You’re the one who has apparently everything under control, I’m sure you’ll get back just fine. Furret!” He spun around, bent on not stopping this time. I wondered if I could push him a bit further.

“Bold move from the guy who just said I didn’t have the guts to take him on,” I said, arms still crossed.

Leon flinched, but didn’t stop. “Have a pleasant evening!”

Furret whimpered, unsure where to go. She looked between the two of us until Leon finally turned around one last time and commanded her to him. “C’mere. Don’t worry about her, she’s fine,” he said to the scared pokemon while they turned away.

Furret looked back a few times until she left the radius of my light.

* * *​

The forest grew quieter when Leon’s footsteps slowly faded into the dark, but it took quite some time after that for the silence to fully return. When the sound of my breath became too loud to bear, I started walking.

What had I been thinking? Did I really say all those horrible things? How could I let that happen?

A chill surrounded me, and I could have sworn the night had got darker since I last checked. But the moon was still up, somewhere beyond the canopy of dead leaves, needles and branches. It was the world around me that had got darker and colder, now that the flame of anger had faded.

A knot grew tighter and tighter in my stomach until it almost hurt. I knew that feeling very well: regret. It was the reason I had to keep this side under control.

No, that wasn’t true. The guilt and the regret weren’t the reasons I hated losing myself in my temper. It was the scars it left on other people.

I sighed and buried my head in my free hand. Fragments of pictures and voices welled up inside me, memories from back when we were still a family. Mum and Dad would always argue, even if they tried to hide it from me. And sometimes, just sometimes, I wanted to have that luxury, too. Just tell everyone what I thought of them, disregarding the consequences.

Images from our living room came into my mind, so vivid I could almost smell the anise biscuits cooling on the stove or feel the chill from the ever falling powder snow outside, kept only at bay by the heat of the electric radiator. And the heat of the fight that was almost too big for this small room to contain. The feeling of how I wanted to explode, burst out and jump over the small coffee table that was the only thing separating all three parties involved. Get between the two and tell them how they should finally sort themselves out, even though I didn‘t even know with whom to start. Whatever, just to be heard.

But there were always consequences. Dad going on an early evening walk and not returning for the night, leaving Mum to deal with the situation. Mum drawing herself a hot bath so she could cry behind locked doors. And me doing my ballet routines, because that was about the only thing that didn’t hurt anyone.

I wondered what Leon was doing now.

Still, it had felt so good. Under all that regret, under all that guilt was a small, spiteful part in me that was satisfied. I had seen the hurt in Leon’s eyes and I’d lie if I told myself it was because he’d finally broken out of his apathy. No. I was happy because I hurt him.

And that was what I hated most about my temper. That small, spiteful part of me would rejoice if I imagined him angry, or even crying.

I had known how tense the situation was. I had even told myself that he was not to blame. And yet, I willingly went there, with the full intent on causing as much pain as I could.

«You messed up. You messed this up big time.»

I once again had started to chew on my nails, but this time I didn’t stop myself. I needed to think of a way I could make up for that.

«Leon.»

My breath rose as a tear ran across my hand.

«Why didn’t you fight back? All I wanted was... something. Something so I didn’t feel like I was screaming into the void constantly.»

But was that it? The knot moved from my stomach to my throat when it dawned on me. Everything I threw at him was true. I didn’t want to admit it before, but going over the fight again, there was not a single thing I didn’t mean. I meant it when I had said that I hated my parents and I meant it when I now said I hated Leon.

A coppery taste spread over my tongue, and I pulled my hand away. I had chewed my nails down to the flesh on two fingers. The sight of blood made me finally come back to reality. I had been wandering deeper into the forest. Looking around, I realised I was now the one who was lost.

Instinctively, I reached for the pokeballs in my pocket. Eevee, Skiploom and Mareep were all here. Okay.

The forest was even thicker here, making it impossible for the night sky to pierce through the dark canopy that hung so high above me that my light didn‘t reach it. Those trees were ancient, almost primordial, covered in thick layers of moss even now. It seemed like my feet had followed a small path. I looked around, trying to orient myself, to no avail. None of the trees seemed familiar.

I caught myself again chewing my nails and shoved my hand in my pocket, fist clenched.

Where to go now? Wait, was there a light in the distance?

I dimmed the lantern a bit and — yes — there was a very faint glimmer. Maybe fortune was on my side for once today.

I started walking in its direction, and even though my eyes were trailed on the path, my concentration wouldn’t last long.

If only I could make everything undone. But so far, I could only apologise and hope for the best.

But if I truly meant everything I had said, how much weight would an apology even have? Yet I needed to. I would be able to glance over everything, if only he would forgive me.

A sigh escaped my lips. Would I be, though?

I passed through an old, withered gate, not unlike the one we’d seen at Sprout Tower. Remembering the Children’s Festival, I bowed slightly, but was back to Leon within a second.

He could be selfish and self-important, or at least come off as such.

«No. Stop making excuses for him!»

He was selfish and self-important. Period. If I wanted, I could throw aloof and inconsiderate into the mix as well. He might have his good traits, but right now, the ‘stupid things’ weighed a bit too heavy to simply be overlooked.

Yes, anger wouldn’t help me now, but so didn’t self-pity or remorse. So why couldn’t I—

The voice came out of nowhere and I jolted around.

“A heart tainted with anger has no place on sacred land.”

Atop the small hill stood an elderly woman. She wore old-fashioned attire, even by Azalean standards, but beneath that, her posture was immaculate. And even though her voice was perfectly gentle, her expression was dead serious. I remembered her. I had seen her before, in the village.

“Sage… Sage Towa?”

And was that small wooden box behind her the forest shrine? It was not larger than a chest, but from the incense and the candles placed in front of it, it did look like a reliquary. Oh, no.

I immediately bowed down. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to!”

Upsetting the local priest was the last thing I needed. Even if right now those convoluted rituals were so far in the back of my mind, they could as well be in Kanto.

“You are a harbinger of anger and death.” Her frail voice was an eerie mix of accusation and compassion. “The Kami is weakened and fears you. And now you bring impurity to this sacred place?”

“I didn’t mean to—” I looked up, blinking. “Death?”

The anger part I understood, but death? I met the lady’s stern gaze and wondered how much more animosity I could rack up today. Or, more importantly, how I could manoeuvre myself out of this situation.

Suddenly, the sage’s expression softened, and an almost motherly smile played in the wrinkles on her face as her look fixated on something behind me. I followed her gaze and didn’t trust my eyes.

Where only the impervious darkness of the ancient Ilex had surrounded us a moment ago was now an almost familiar scene. A Farfetch’d cut through the bushes, having almost made its way to the shrine. Its expression was grim and determined as it focused on every slash, some hitting better, some worse. Behind it, someone sat against a tree and held a light to make work for it easier.

Leon. When had he…?

“I think you know what I mean,” said the elder lady gently.

No. No, I didn’t know what she meant. Not in the slightest. But now I saw a light nearing the clearing from the other end.

I dropped the lantern and ran towards the Farfetch’d.

“Leon,” I cried. No reaction. He still watched the bird practising Cut with this weary thousand-yard stare while the other me came closer.

“Leon!” Finally, he looked up. Confusion shot across his face when he recognised me. “Don’t—”

A swift breeze carried the torch’s light away and in front of me was again a wall of darkened greens. I abruptly stopped to not run into the towering undergrowth and my breath got caught in my throat. For a second, the world around me started spinning while I fought for air against the coughs.

“Don’t... listen to me, alright? I’m sorry!” I finally got out, tears of exhaustion running down my cheeks.

With one quick motion, I wiped them away and stared at the forest in front of me, that now lay quiet and innocent as ever. I hadn’t been imagining things. No.

“Leon!” With big steps, I pushed forward through the ferns and snow until they reached up to my hip, shoving aside branches and dead leaves. Nothing. The forest was a quiet emptiness for miles ahead.

“Where are you?” I shouted, but got no answer.

One quick breather, then I shot back around. Screw any sacred ground, I wanted to know what games were being played here. “Hey! Towa!”

My hand was already in the pocket holding my pokeballs, but behind me was only darkness.

“Towa!” I ran a few steps back, until I almost tripped over a root. The lantern had seemingly broken when it hit the ground, and the faint light of the candles on the altar was not enough to illuminate the forest.

I sorted through my pokeballs and with the familiar, mechanical sound, Mareep materialised next to me.

In the radius of his bright tail sphere, the clearing revealed itself again. But this time, with neither Leon nor the old lady, it seemed even emptier than before. The towering trees suffocated anyone beneath their branches and the dark, low buildings that pressed themselves against the forest to three sides of the shrine looked sinister, even though vines embraced them lovingly.

But I was not about to give up just yet. Happy to have a productive outlet to my anger, I followed a fresh set of footprints down the path that I had come from. Mareep close behind me, I took two stairs at a time — stairs I only now realised even existed.

Soon after, the tracks took a turn to the left, down a narrow path. Ahead in the distance, a lantern illuminated a small hut. How—

A few seconds later, I jumped onto the low, withered patio that was crammed full with even more tools I did not recognise nor care about. Against the whistling sound of my breath and the soft ringing of countless chimes, I pounded against the door.

“Hello?” I called. Inside, a voice singing some sort of lullaby stopped, but no one answered the door.

What kind of joke was this?

I knocked again, this time harder. Shuffling sounds were the only answer, and I considered knocking a third time before I would break down the door, but finally a female voice answered something.

“What?” I hissed when I didn’t understand a word, then quickly added an “Excuse me, can you speak up?” when I realised how hostile I sounded.

The door creaked open and the frightened face of a young woman, at most a year older than me, appeared. She looked around twice, and when she saw I was alone, she reluctantly stepped outside, positioning herself between me and the door.

“What is going on here?” I asked.

She answered, but again I didn’t understand a single word she said. I stared at her, trying to figure out what was wrong. The language sounded so familiar, and single words were in fact Kantonian, but other than that, it could as well have been an entirely original language. Something about ‘kami’ and ‘stain.’

My confusion must have been obvious, because now the young woman’s tone switched from pleading to concerned.

“What—” I whispered while I stared at her in disbelief. She had her black hair in a prim, old-timey braid and her outfit was even more traditional than what Towa had worn. I was certain I’d remember her if she had ever visited the village. So what was she doing here?

Out of a sudden, fear overcame me with tiny icy needles. I felt the hair on the back of my neck rise while a voice in my head screeched, «Go away!»

Mareep must have heard the same thing, because he tiptoed around nervously, coat fluffed. I took a step back and collected myself, ignoring the woman for a moment. I knew that feeling by now. This was the handwriting of a strong psychic type. Was that illusion of Leon its work, too? And if so, how long had I been in this illusion? Was I in one right now?

I fought back the overwhelming fear and reached for Eevee’s pokeball, but stopped when the woman’s hand darted to her sleeve. Under the kimono’s green fabric, a sharp, polished object reflected the lantern’s light.

The woman pressed her back against the door, and even though she didn’t take her eyes off me, she seemed distracted by something. Was she hearing the voice, too?

“You have to… leave,” she stuttered in the most broken Kantonian I’ve ever heard. “You.. are at the end of time.”

My shoulders relaxed a bit, if only because my confusion overtook any fighting instincts. “Where is Towa?” I asked, speaking as articulate as possible.

«Get out!» the voice in my head hissed and, for the briefest of moments, a picture of the gate I had passed flickered in my mind.

This time it was too much for Mareep. He took off and ran down the path, his scared yells accompanying him. With his light gone, the little shed looked almost otherworldly.

For a moment I was torn between running after my pokemon and forcing more answers out of this woman. My anger could surely power me through a few more psychic onslaughts. But then reason got the better of me.

I sent her one last defiant look, then ran after Mareep.

While I chased the glowing light of his tail-sphere through the ever-present snow, I wondered what pokemon could be behind that. Was it that bird again? What was its name? Morty had told me, but I had already forgotten about it. So first it tried to kill me, now it played around in my mind?

Mareep shot around the corner and I followed soon after, only to see the shining red gate and behind it Leon and Furret, making their ways here. With a panicked yelp, Mareep sped up and tackled Leon out of the way. A second later, Furret had wound herself around my shoulders and I caught up with them.

“There you are,” I said between breaths.

Leon’s only reaction was a grumbling noise, while he tried to calm Mareep. Judging from his hostile reaction, our fight did, in fact, take place. But what else had been real then?

I yanked the torch out of his hand and pointed it at the path, much to his protest. The gate was still the withered, dark structure guarding the trail into the woods. For a few seconds, I stared at it in disbelief while my breath formed into clouds in front of my mouth.

“What’s got into you?” Leon finally asked.

Still staring at the wooden construction, I shook my head while the world slowed down. “Nothing. Something was messing with me. We should go.” I turned around, trying my best to shove everything that had happened in the last minutes into the back of my mind. “What are you doing here?”

“Is it so hard to believe that I can find my way— argh!” This time it was me blinding him with the torch. I hastily lowered the thing again, mumbling an excuse.

“Looking for you. What else?” He was still incredibly salty. And hurt. And despite this, I still had to swallow down my instinct to snap back at him.

I took a deep breath and closed my eyes while I turned the torch in my hands to shut it down. When I was calm enough, I collected all my courage and looked at him. “Leon, I’m—”

“No!” he cut me off. “Don’t you dare apologise now! Not today. Own up to your mistakes just for once!”

I caught myself flinching at his sudden outburst. I hadn’t thought I had cut that deep. Then again, that was what I had set out to do after all.

“Hannah!” Leon groaned and ruffled his hair in frustration. “I’m so at the end of my rope. Can we just go back now and act like grown-ups?”

My gaze sank to the ground again. I shrugged. “Okay.”

“And no more talking. We play the quiet game now.”

I nodded, and I could tell how hard he still fought to contain his anger. The quiet game was probably best. Beneath the thin surface of remorse, I was still boiling all the way down to the core. From all the things that were and weren’t said and from all the things I had and hadn’t seen.

* * *​

The walk home was the most uncomfortable hour two human beings had ever spent in each other’s company. Between the repressed emotions and the crunching sound of snow under our shoes, the silence was even colder than the winter night’s air.

Getting ready for bed, I found myself talking to the image in the mirror, if only to enjoy the sound of words again. But what came out was still accusatory, so I went back to being quiet.

Only when I had already long settled under my blankets and the winds of the rising snow storm outside rattled the shingles on the roof did the gravity of the situation settle in.
 
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K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Chapters 8.5 Reaction



Laughs that’s one way to have a dream be interrupted. A small fuzzy ferret nudging a lolly towards your face… or rather a wrapped candy. Wait, it was still in the wrapper and not say.. pulled out of the mouth and offered like say how squirrels shuffle their food about…

I imagine Hana’d scream awake if that was the case, a resounding holler of “eew no no no!” as she’s rather fastidious.

Poor Leon losing an argument with a pickup happy sentret. He loses just by having to have the argument… How did the man make it to Champion again? Him interacting with his canon team between battles must have been hilarious. Seriously I hope he winds down enough to share stories from his own journey as I’m imagining it leans heavily on slapstick with one of his teammates stepping up as GPS a few days post-capture after they get lost yet again…

In which hoppip proves to be nothing more than death bait since it’s tackles barely creasing Hana’s pants. Honestly, it feels like a splash attack being described here. While I’ll give the sentient weed points for being gutsy… I’ve never found it or the ladybug ‘mon in soul silver of any use. Besides exp pools for leveling my electric types…

Oh please tell me no one catches the poor thing…

Leon’s attempt at older brotherly tolling fell so flat I think Hop had it easy in that regard. And… ung I feel for whoever decides to step up and train the critter. The fact it keeps trying to kill Hana I vote Leon.



Definitely getting a feather head bive off of Elm. What is up with the Kanto/Johto professorship programs the main ones in canon seem to be lacking attention spans…

But then Galar has a Champion without a direction sense, maybe it’s a flaw in the authority garnering processes in all the regions...

Which says nothing of the business sector considering how many corrupt economic giants there are in all the regions.

I’d be reassessing my sociological architecture with a track record like this…’

And elm's comment about an energy spike is all but lighting a fire under Leon, and just when Hana got him to kinda stop running around like a chicken with his head cut off… I see a backslide in the man’s behavior and them possibly getting lost as a result.

No Leon, no spoilers… And off her goes. Hana probably should position herself to step on his toes when they meet now people.

Although if this is the canonical start of Gold/Silver that means we’ve got the dex holder squad going to come out of the woodwork. And if its Game canon then the Radio Tower is due to kick up and the Lake of Rage event is only a few months away… but if this is Manga canon then Legends, Team Rocket, Pryce, and near-apocalyptic events are going to start to kick up..


He’s scraping and editing all the swears for all he's worth, I am sure. Huh, so Hana’s realizing he’s gentling himself around her a little. I’d been suspecting it for a while. But this is probably the most concrete example. I suspect he's seeing her as his little brother’s little friend still and therefore in need of protection and he’s trying so hard on every level he can think of to shield her. Even if it's from a knee-jerk profane rant…

Because seriously how could an educational committee spanning countries not realize that the critters out in the woods do multiply and then figure it out over hundreds of years, much less 26 years…

Suggestions for chapter 8.5

I’m thinking you meant Zipped not zapped when Rotom goes up to Leon, sounds like he’s shocking “the boss”.

Autocorrect got you by the looks. The line where Elm says: you look like Pokemon trainer” probably should be trainers since he;s talking to Hana and Leon. Or at least “a pokemon” if he only means the one he’d directing his comment to just one of them.






Chapter 9

Reaction

Considering Leon’s normal level of caution, I’m surprised he’s sharing and caring how he got lost, in a mountain range “just like this one” when he’s facing said mountains evil twin. Also they have no ‘mon except a tap happy hoppip, the first fifty level Sneasel is going to filet them both for dinner and use hoppy as a bit of garnish on the side…

Dangers of caving? cave ins, spelunking? I think this might be a typo but I’m not sure.

And Hana accidentally broke her promise to not let Rotom deal with “scary mon”. I shudder to think about his response later down the line. Junk of material, auto got you, I’m thinking you meant “chunk”

So we got a bit of a mystery, giant drilling and a knocked out Mr pokemon with his trusty rapiddash…

aww why not call them a gravel, or an avalanche, flock just seems so cliché…

So it was Morty huh, I was worried it’d be a rocket with the dark clothes at first… And it’s interesting how the cleanse tag , seeing it in action. Though how long it’s going to hold up with Hoppip the mad head butting marauder picking fights. And it learning tackle while hitting the gym leader no less.

While it could be a running gag it might be a bit problematic if the trend holds up to say… solar beam.

I love how Morty went all grim serious life/death situation to “hey it’s a new ghost type” in about two seconds flat, then flips back to serious. I suspect he’s going to try to get Rotom to himself for a little to scratch his curiousity.

Perhaps by bribing the ‘mon with a pager?

Hate at first sight, is my vote. I wonder if Hana’s ever dealt with a battle happy mon but since she hasn’t really talked/discussed her team we don’t know what they’re like. She;s also not horribly close to them either, so if she knows and what she knows is a bit of a mystery.

Her handling of the situation, by not really handling it (or recalling the ‘mon) though seems to lean towards a no answer though.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
your next chapter bundle... as a bundle.. hope you like it.

chapters 10-13 review line by line...

Chapter 11

Considering how much curry you eat in the canon game and make with your ‘mon I’m surprised Hannah and Leon both aren’t going into withdrawal. Love how the first thing Morty hops to (once we get past his serious/ghost juxtapose) is manners via name pronunciation. I’m actually a bit aware of having a similar issue with my name being commonly mispronounced. So I’m taking Morty’s side on this one… You tolerate what is easiest with strangers/acquaintances but man is it nice when someone actually bothers to get it right.

Seriously Hannah has a vicious side here. We’ve seen hinting’s of it when she pointedly holds back, the fact she has to hold back tearing into Leon in previous chapters, but this is a different tenor to a similar theme. Taking pleasure in verbally making someone scramble and prove themselves…

I’m wondering if spite/temper isn’t Hanah’s bionic hero weakness… the old Achilles heel trope from classic terms… Ad I wonder what Leon’s is, besides running headfirst into things and getting lost…

Now technically they never forbade Rotom from talking, so it wasn’t an act of treason, though Rotom’s technically smart enough to make its own decisions the fact that they didn’t even try to coach it beyond “stop playing with other’s technology” when it could very well talk…

Seems like a lack of foresight on everyone’s part there.

Bit of a backhand compliment from Leon there that could be a bit of an insult should Hanah read it wrong. Though “competent trainer” and “reasonable person to tell” might be two different birds here…

Seriously if the Darkest day teleport hadn’t happened during Morty’s daily meditation he wouldn’t have noticed... I’m of mixed feelings about that.

And Mory insists that they play ball fairly…

And Leon gives the most roundabout explanation while Hannah's mentally holding the leash screaming, no bad no spoilers!

Well, that resolve went out the window fast. Hmm so it looks like all the Legends are going to be on high alert, I wonder how Hannah's going to respond when she sees a picture of a certain avian? On the other hand, having Leon be able to freak out at someone who can take it and ground him in a nondismissive matter seems good for him.

Even if it's a mite... destructive.

Hmm, it's interesting really, Leon's basic reaction is to plow into it head-on and tear into it, but Hannahs is a more passive aggressive route born of defensiveness via the trauma of the divorce. And Leon has a heck of a point, people aren't as a whole like that, and Hannah does bring up her point (that while she suspects Leon won't break his promises her experiences of others doing so has left its marks) something they're both overlooking is the familial break down of Hannahs past was rooted in dysfunction, where Leon's is blustering and keeping him from exploding.

Easing pressure via controlled confrontation lets Leon at least direct that steam a bit and limit the burns., even the nature of the fight is upsetting... Neither one of them are at the point where they can notice the differences and get to a solution that hints at dysfunction (or perhaps the youth) in the main cast thus far...

I mean they're sort of acknowledging it, Leon's admitting it's a coping mechanism but Hannah's mulishly bottling it up reaction seems to hint of a problem to some as well as some as adding some tension to the moment.


Chapter 12 line by line


Leon does have a bit of a point. There's got to be some temptation here to abuse the future knowledge. Luckily Morty doesn’t seem to be the type. It took a few lines to realize they were trying to hitchhike… Though to where from where is a bit of a mystery even as they natter on about the butterfly effect movie and Morty making Hana feel mom vibes off of him. It's something that's left a bit up in the air (their location) until they get to shelter in the hotel/hospice/rest spot. And even then only fuzzily addressed.

Being an unmaterialistic gym leader Morty’s probably the best confidant they can get as he’s not folded to the temptation to bug them for lotto ticket numbers.

Hmm, so Leon is having strings of flashback/traumatic fixation events so often that Hana is spotting them that often that they’re familiar? That’s both good and bad, but seriously if talk out isn't working then they need to pick Hana’s plotting brain and get some sort of plan, even if it’s catching a few 'mon for protection, ease of travel, ect. Hana’s only accidentally gotten that ball rolling with her weed and furret, Leon getting on board might give him a more constructive outlet and keep him from shutting down though it's something they really haven't gotten around to talking about doing much less actually doing....

How is Leon’s Rose’s relationship in this fic? I haven’t played Sword or Shield so I have no clue their canon closeness but Rose seems less distant sponsor and more close friend for Leon if Leon’s still sticking up for him… Will you be elaborating on that later?

Huh, I wondered if Morty was functionally an exorcist/priest person in this fic or not. Nice to get that directly answered. I wonder how he’d respond to an old flick, like the exorcist, considering what his um extra night job is. Though it’s interesting that this culture treats ghost soothing as a reasonable thing to do (I guess a world with ghost types would encourage that a bit) and it’s interesting for it not to be locked up behind a masquerade/hush hush sort of setting. Were you perhaps thinking about Hospice when you were working on this part of the fic or did that come around later down the line?

Love how Morty’s all “I will not aid and abet any relapse obsession but shall do so with snark” when he makes a stab about the time travel library. Him gently checking the pulse of Hana’s life and is bemused about how in-depth Galar’s gym challenge lifestyle is. As a gym leader and one of the higher ones in his region. It’s a sharp deviation from the game’verse where the League is everything and feels more in tune with the manga’verse where the characters are more balanced without outside interests and ambitions (even if most of them are rather… evil).

Seriously Hana picking on the man because the keystone of his world got knocked out, between Darkest and his Team getting petrified... a bit of a low blow there. On the other side, I can respect not wanting to think too hard about getting a job, though being a celebrity post Gym Challenge is going to make accommodating a more mundane life after very difficult, I wonder if she’s thought of that.

And what si she going to do with all these high-powered critters she's captured once she's done with them?

Hana seriously telepathy doesn’t work like that. And trying to control Leon roundabout by controlling what is said to him is definitely not a good thing to be doing. I get not wanting the man to cause a scene or pick open a wound but really this is looking long term and if Leo’s going to have an episode the more people to do damage control the better. Also, Morty might be best equipped to help with that fallout since he's A) used to the supernatural so won't be surprised by much. b) trained to be sympathetic per his sensitive job, C) deeply invested in 'mon/league life, or seems to be more so than Hana is which adds a layer to his sensitivity/connectivity to Leon's plight.

Though thinking of the Manga serious perhaps Jerachi would be a good ‘mon to visit considering what happens in his arch and the dex’bearers in Kanto/Jhoto.

Chapter 13 reaction



I suspect /leon was really tactile with Hop and he's showing that with Hana when he tries to ruffle her hair. Kind of a big brother instinct on him.

Yes ruffling someone's hair who doesn't want to get ruffled, guaranteed off switch or dialogue.. until they get mad enough to bite that is. Though Hana doesn't seem the biting type. I'd blame Mortey less unless there's a high uptick in snark, and this seems more Leon starting to bounce back a bit. Or trying to bounce back a bit. He comes across as playful and energetic as a baseline and he's basically a celebrity so him putting up an expected front is somewhat... expected..

So it's confirmed his whole team is dead at this point then? Ehsh, guessing Morty tended that telling though he was starting to when Hana left them last time. I can understand Leon wanting alone and solitude time to recuperate
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Huh, so they literally made violet city... violet from an aerial view. Nice touch. The description of the bird postal system was a nice touch and spiraled out well to describe the rest of the area they're poking around in. I wonder who the family "friend" is. Initially, I thought Fuji but the guy didn't have a kid did he?

Ah, and we get curry withdrawal.. it was inevitable. though interesting how Hana used that as a point to dig. Leon's very much present-minded and Hana digging into his past is probably not something he liked very much. You know Hana probably would do well in Jhoto post Galar madness. She does blend in and the pace of that place seems to suit her and she wants to explore/ Where Leon, while wresting with the first flush of probable depression, is wanting to up and go already. It makes an interesting contrast.
 
Chapter 27: The Long Month to Spring

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3


Chapter 27: The Long Month to Spring​

January 6th 1994, 4pm.

The afternoon sun outside the window warmed my back, while the tea in my cup slowly cooled. I put my hands around the clay mug, but it was useless. Soon, the cold water would bring out the bitterness in the tea-leaves, making it almost undrinkable. But finishing it would mean I’d either have to order a new one, therefore implying I wanted to stay or leave my cup empty, giving me no reason not to leave. And I didn’t want either of those.

I turned the cup a bit on its rim, causing the tea inside to swash around. The scraping of the clay on the hardwood of the knee-high table was the only sound to fill the silence of the Pokemon Center’s lobby. A silence that was monotonous and tense at the same time.

Across the table, a metallic clicking sound emerged when Leon started to play with a spoon, bobbing it up and down.

He looked surprisingly well put together. After the last weeks of — for a lack of better words — withering, he now had a somewhat healthy skin tone. And even though he still looked sleep deprived, he almost seemed back to his old self. Almost.

“So…” I broke the silence. Not because I knew what to say, but because Leon had started the last two attempts at a conversation.

“We should talk about this,” he said after a while, not looking up.

“Yes,” I said.

That was as far as we had got with the last attempts as well. And like the last two times, this time also no one knew what to say, and so we went back to studying the tableware.

I counted two cups of tea, two spoons, and a glass of water. A bowl half-filled with pokemon-treats was shoved to the side. On the plate between us were three tea-sweets and five pairs of Kit-Kats, still packaged. They had all kinds of flavours here, and I hadn’t tried the cherry variant yet. It was the newest addition to the store that had only arrived via air-courier this morning.

Not that I ever wanted to eat anything ever again. My stomach and throat were so tight, I was sure I’d suffocate on the smallest crumb.

Leon cleared his throat. “I think we can both agree that we’re equally to blame here.”

“Yes,” I said.

Over in the kitchen, Sara had started her preparations for dinner. My thoughts almost wandered over to her, but I reined them in just in time. It was my turn to say something.

“I mean, I somewhat started it.”

From across the table came nothing, then finally a sigh. “I went along, so…”

I glanced up to find Leon studying the content of his teacup with at least as much emphasis as I did a moment ago. Him not looking at me somehow felt relaxing. I swallowed to get that knot in my throat at least a little loose, then looked back at my cup.

“The running off part, though not entirely baseless, was uncalled for. At least the way I said it,” I got out.

Across the table was a bit of movement, then a “Hmm”. It sounded strangely neutral.

I could go on listing off everything that was said that was wrong — I spent the entire time since we got back with nothing else. But that probably wouldn’t help. I knew those awkward make-up talks the day after way too well, and at best they achieved little. Still, I wanted nothing more than to apologise and forget about everything.

I looked up again to find Leon in deep contemplation of the spoon. Though I could tell by the way he bit his lips that his thoughts were racing.

“Now don’t take this the wrong way,” I said, watching him intently for any negative reaction. “But what were you thinking when you left without telling anyone?”

Another “Hmm” was the answer, followed by him shifting around on his pillow a bit more. For a few breaths, nobody said anything, then Leon switched his cup back and forth between his hands and cleared his throat.

“So, I’ve gone over everything a few more times, and I get why you got so angry,” he said before he bit his upper lip again and thought about how to continue avoiding an answer.

“Like, I didn’t want to come across as dismissive. And I really appreciate that you came all the way to get me. Really. But I can find my way around. It’s not like I’m completely helpless, you know?” As if to emphasise his statement, he firmly sat his cup on the table, then stared it down.

“I would have got back in time yesterday, too. I wanted to be alone, that’s all.”

I swallowed. “Sorry. It won’t happen again.”

Leon straightened a bit, almost alarmed, and it sounded like he wanted to say something. But then he started nibbling on his lip again and went back to playing with his cup.

Only now I realised I had severely underestimated how insecure he was about his abysmal sense of direction. Sure, at times it got so bad, he could file for disability and would get it granted; he knew that. But he was usually the first one to laugh along with any joke made at his expense and was quite open about it. I had to admit that I wouldn’t have that in me.

But judging from his reaction now, his constant joking was probably an attempt to cover up any insecurities, and I was ashamed that it took me that long to connect the dots. On the other hand, had I known that yesterday, I could have hurt him even worse.

And I had found plenty of ways to do that already. I at least wanted to get the biggest issues out of the way. Deep breath in.

“The things I said regarding the Darkest Day and Hop were…” I trailed off when he suddenly looked up, meeting my eyes with intense focus. “I’m so sorry. I know you care about them a lot.”

“I do.” His voice was stern and all his awkward shuffling was over.

“I know,” I sighed. “And I only brought them up because of that. Please don’t take anything I said as true. Because it is not.”

Leon straightened up. “Just so we are clear on this matter: I absolutely love my brother and I would do anything to stop the Darkest Day, okay?”

I nodded.

Leon continued, but his gaze was now transfixed on my cup. “I might do a terrible job at the moment, but they are the last things I’ve got and—” He grew weary again.

“You never talk about them.”

I immediately regretted saying it. It sounded so mean. But to my surprise, when Leon looked up, there was nothing but genuine puzzlement on his face. I held his gaze and for the first time today, I got the feeling we actually looked at each other.

“Because I care too, you know.”

I really did. Him thinking I didn’t almost hurt more than the ‘stupid things.’ I wanted to go home. Leave this terrible place behind and finally be with normal people again. I was so sick and tired of running around like a thrift store and living on the goodwill of the most narrow-minded people on the planet. I wanted to be with Hop again. And if that meant having to face Eternatus alone.

“Would you like to talk about them sometimes?” His voice was genuine.

“Well, if you…” I trailed off when I noticed the shaking in my voice.

What if the Darkest Day had consumed all of Galar and we were the only lucky survivors? What if there was no Hop to return to? What if we had to take the long way back?

A harsh scraping sound pulled me out of my thoughts, making me flinch. Leon had pushed the plate with the sweets over to me, but I only noticed it once it bumped into my hand. When I didn’t react, he again nudged it against my knuckles.

No matter how generously he looked at me right now, this wasn’t an offer.

When I opened them, my fingers hurt from how firmly I had pressed them against the mug. Reluctantly, I took one of those terrible tea sweets. I estimated they were over ninety per cent sugar and biting into one raised every hair on my body in disgust. I squeezed my eyes shut while my brain processed the intense sensation.

When I opened them, I was met with Leon’s expression, torn between reassurance and worry.

“Everything okay again?” he asked.

I nodded.

He cleared his throat, and a bit of this awkwardness flickered back up. “Do you think we can move on?”

“Yes!” I shot out without thinking twice. “Well, if you’re okay with it.”

“Absolutely. Totally. Thank you!” Leon sounded as relieved as I was. This had been going on for way too long.

Finally, that knot in my throat had loosened enough that I could drink my tea. It was cold and bitter, but it was just what I needed to wash the sugary taste out of my mouth.

When I looked back over at him, Leon played with the spoon again. This time, he let it wander from one end of the table to the other.

He was about as unsatisfied with that conversation as I was, I could tell. I still hadn’t forgotten about the ‘stupid things.’ The entire morning, whenever I did some chore around the Center, those words gave me a little sting. I was a pretty resentful person, yes, but I couldn’t believe that Leon didn’t feel the same stings as I did whenever he heard my voice.

But we had put the issue behind us. Those scars would heal, eventually.

“What happened there?”

The spoon had made its way over the table and was tapping my fingertips. I quickly pulled back and hid my chewed and bloodied nails in my fist.

“Nothing.”

* * *​

January 10th 1994, 7pm.

The yarn that I had weaved around my fingers was soft, not at all rough. But when I slowly pulled it, there was friction regardless. I didn’t mind. It was a comforting, steady feeling; the yarn running across and between my fingers.

As steady as the high-pitched sound of the telly or the crackling of the low fire in the fireplace. Everything around had slowed down to a steady, unwavering pace. There were days when I had the feeling this town was stuck in time and I was forced to live the same day again and again for the rest of my life.

But today, that slow, steady pace felt almost fast.

Well, not everything was steady. Behind the couch, Skiploom and Furret chased each other around while Eevee sat on the headrest next to me, her tail twitching in annoyance. In the bathroom, the shower had stopped and there was busy movement. And in the Pokemon Center’s common room on the other side of the town was the cheerful celebration of Kurt’s 81st birthday.

But over here, at Kon’s house, was movie night.

“Hey, sorry you had to wait!” I jumped a bit when Leon burst into the room. His hair was still wet, and he had clearly grabbed the first clothes he could get a hold of.

With way more energy than I had the entire day, he darted over and let himself fall onto the couch next to me.

“So, what’s on?” he asked without stopping for breath.

Blinking twice, I tried to fight back my weariness to at least somewhat catch up to his speed. And even though I had stared at the title card for minutes now, I had to search my brain for it. Time to wake up.

“My Sons,” I finally said.

“What’s it about?” Leon reached for a blanket over on the other sofa and the torsion made his voice sound weird.

“It’s the one about the deaf-mute girl and that family gathering. Where the father and the son get into an argument.”

“Cool cool,” Leon said while he tossed the blanket so it covered the both of us. He clearly had no idea what I was talking about. How often had we watched that movie now? Three times at least.

But that was okay. Because today was a good day. Leon had been out and about from sunrise until way after sundown, training with Farfetch’d and the kids. As taxing as it could be, it was good seeing him back to his old self again.

A bit more shuffling around and we had settled in. Eevee on my lap, Furret around Leon’s neck, Skiploom on his chest and the remote in his hands.

As soon as the opening credits were over, the old show began again. Leon had slouched down into a lying position and now tried to get his feet onto my lap, but every attempt was met with a decisive scratch from Eevee. The two of them seemed to have some issues lately, but I trusted the champion of ten years to sort that one out by himself.

After a while, that small scale warfare became too annoying, and I moved Eevee onto the headrest next to me. I made a point to scratch her chin while Leon claimed his ‘victory’ with a content smile.

One after another, the movie introduced its main characters, but I wasn’t able to focus. Leon couldn’t really keep still and wriggled his toes around. I was sure he didn’t do it on purpose or was even aware of it, but it made me even more conscious about the unwanted contact.

I didn’t even know why that touch raised every hair on my body and put me so on edge. When Eevee had sat there just a moment ago, I didn’t mind either. But now, everything in me focused on the warmth and restlessness he exuded.

“Aren’t you tired at all?” I asked. Because I sure was.

Leon looked up from flipping the remote around and shook his head.

I sighed internally and tried to get comfortable. The characters had gathered on the anniversary of their mother’s death and already tensions were showing. Good thing I already knew the movie. With the amount of times my brain blanked on me today, I probably couldn’t follow otherwise.

I scratched Eevee’s chin one last time and put my hands down. They were met with Leon’s legs, but I didn’t know where else to put them on this crowded couch.

As soon as I touched him, even through the blanket, he calmed down. It was a difference like night and day. No more random shifting around, and even the remote flipping had stopped. When I looked over, I found him staring at me, with an expression that I hadn’t seen in a long time — happiness.

Suddenly, a heat-wave of embarrassment overcame me and I made a point of gazing at the screen again. Not one frame registered in my tired mind, but at least that awkward moment was over. Though I was sure, I could still feel his eyes upon me.

Ten minutes went by with only a few nudges against my hand, almost as to reassure him I was still there. And when I looked over the next time, he was asleep.

I smiled as I sunk deeper into the couch. To feel so safe, so relaxed in the presence of another person that one could fall asleep… I didn’t remember when I last had that feeling, but it sure must have been a wonderful moment.

* * *​

January 19th 1994, 7pm.

“No 523 on the National Dex?”

From across the table came a tired humming sound, almost inaudible against the wind rattling the Pokemon Center’s wooden windows. Then, after some time of consideration, an “Anything more?”

I counted the empty squares. “Nine letters, last letter is an ‘A.’”

Silence as Leon counted something in his head, and I continued across the grid. A town in Kalos starting with ‘A’...

“Zebstrika,” he replied a few seconds later.

I filled out the spaces. They matched.

Darkness had already settled in and the faint flickering light from the single lamp and the fire in the fireplace made reading the small letters on the grainy newspaper hard. I briefly considered asking Leon to get us a table lamp from the storage, but then dismissed the idea. It wasn’t worth the hassle of explaining it to him.

Ambrette was the town in Kalos. The musical starring Olivia Newton-John was Grease. But was there something for him…

“Normal type move with six letters,” I said.

“There are hundreds of those.”

If I wasn’t mistaken, there was a certain passive-aggressiveness to his tone that I didn’t like. I held back the sigh that was already in my throat.

This had been his idea. The entire morning, he had been bugging me about how we should do something in the evening, and now that we were spending time together, he couldn’t be less interested. Nothing I had suggested suited him, and the approaching storm outside had cut our options quite short already.

Jigsaw puzzle; reading a book; watching telly — I internally groaned as my brain replayed all the sounds of refusal a human could possibly make. I had heard them all today, and probably a few more. Even working out together or simply calling it a night had been met with an indecisive “Nah.” So now we were doing crossword puzzles. His fault for not being able to decide on anything.

Deep breath in. Count to ten. Try again. There was one question left for him in the bottom right corner.

“TM06?” I asked.

“Fly,” Leon answered without hesitation.

I stared at the grid and almost considered not responding. When I finally did, I couldn’t quite hide my frustration any longer. “It’s supposed to be five letters.”

“TM06 is Fly, what do you—” He stopped himself before his voice got too loud, then sighed and from the sound of it, went back to burying his head in his arms.

Why did I have to put up with this?

“It’s Toxic,” he mumbled and I couldn’t agree more. But if we both knew that, then why did we even sit here? I knew why I was sitting here — I lived here. Now if only he made his way over the street and finally left me alone. Or do something. Whatever, it would be better than that uninterested middle thing.

“Why don’t you write it down?” he asked, and the sheer innocence in his tone quenched the rising anger in me. “They changed a lot of the TMs around over the years. If I remember correctly, TM06 used to be Toxic.”

Oh.

The following silence was only cut short by the wind outside and Leon sighing again, tired. We had the entire Center to ourselves and the lack of activity around made his low energy even more jarring. Especially after how clingy he was earlier.

Persée premiered in the Parfum Palace in 1682.

“Hannah?”

I hummed a sign of general attentiveness while I searched my brain for somebody named Denboku Kamado and their birthplace.

“How much is a plane ticket to Galar?”

I still had no idea who this Kamado was, but Hisui fit.

“Two hundred thousand yen, I’d guess. That’s about fifteen hundred pounds.” Another hum. “What are you on about?”

For the first time since we sat down, I looked up and over at him. He had already stacked everything that he could get a hold of and had not been nailed down into an impressive tower. Now he was transforming the front page of the newspaper into small strips.

“Nothing.”

In the ensuing, quiet moment, putting down my pen sounded loud in the lonely room. The shearing of paper almost echoed off the walls. When the tear had finally reached the end of the sheet, Leon started crumpling the strip into a small ball. He shuffled around and watched the tail end of it intently as it jerked across the table while it got pulled closer and closer to its doom.

“Eternatus is still in the reactor core under Hammerlocke Stadium, right?” Leon said, not looking up. “If I go over there and… maybe I can get rid of it before the Darkest Day even happens.”

My eyes sunk back to the crossword puzzle. Engaging with yet another ridiculous plan was pointless, but so was this entire ordeal, and at least he had made an attempt to reach out. I sighed, collected all my remaining fortitude into a forgiving smile, and looked up again.

“Eternatus drives the power plant, right?”

Leon nodded eagerly, eyes still trailed on the paper-strip. “It attracts the Dmax particles that heat the water so the steam from the cooling can— argh!”

When he realised the flaw in his thinking, Leon ruffled his hair in frustration, making it even more of a mess than it had been before. I cocked my head to the side, watching him. Lately, his plans had been getting worse and worse.

After some time of reconsideration, he looked up, meeting my eyes. “Okay, no getting rid of it, then. Rose wanted me to hold on to it all along, so I’ll do that.” His tone was almost stubborn, and I knew he just wanted me to agree on something, but…

My gaze trailed off as memories of that fateful day back in August twenty-five years from now resurfaced. The sheer and utter chaos as the midday sky had darkened into deep shades of poisonous black.

“With what?” I asked, and it was a genuine question.

Nothing had worked back then. No matter the tier of pokeballs he had tried, it broke free regardless. Its attacks were too strong, every hit was more than enough to be fatal and if it hadn’t been for Hop, I wouldn’t sit here today. It simply couldn’t be contained. It was dead-set on devouring us and all of Galar after that, it—

A hasty dull sound pulled me out of my thoughts and when I looked up, I noticed the salty taste in my mouth and the tears in the corners of my eyes. I blinked them away when I saw that Leon had got up. He was already at the Center’s door.

“Where are you going?” I asked, alarmed. The tower fell over with a terrifying noise as I stood up and ran over to him.

His hands were insecure while he tied the laces on his boots. Desperate to not meet my gaze, he took two deep, shaking breaths and I realised I wasn’t the only one fighting tears right now.

“Catching some air.” He was so eager to get away from here, he almost fell over himself when he got up. He hadn’t even put his jacket on.

I quickly rewound the last few words in my head, then it hit me. «Oh, no!»

“I didn’t mean it like that!” I pleaded. But my words didn’t reach him any more as the door fell shut between us, throwing one last snowy gust in my face.

* * *​

January 28th 1994, 11am.

“Hello,” I greeted no one in particular as I entered Kurt’s home.

No one answered, but it didn‘t surprise me. I had seen the old man in the backyard tending to his apricorn trees and his daughter had been at the market half an hour ago. Poor thing. She already looked exhausted, and the kids were only waking up.

I put the wicker basket down and got out of my shoes and into some slippers, more than happy to have the house to myself. Laundry time was my time, and I would defend it to the grave if I had to.

Leon was probably still angry at me for exactly that reason. After our squabble in the morning, he had been quite salty. I got that he wanted to make himself useful, especially today, when Kon had nothing to do for him. But I wouldn’t give up my personal highlight of the week because he was bored.

My personal highlight was doing laundry. How low had I sunken?

I picked up the basket again and made my way over through the living room and kitchen and into the utility cellar. Everything here smelled old, telling the stories of generations of people that had lived here before. Their marks couldn’t quite be erased, no matter how hard one would scrub. But as soon as I opened the cellar door, the heavenly scent of fresh, warm cotton embraced me and I rejoiced in the feeling of cleanliness.

I loved this room. The tiles here were white and clean, the shelves were not made from wood but from metal. Even the colourful array of cleaning agents stacked on top of each other looked cheerful in the monotone mix of browns that coloured my every day. And in the corner were two machines, so modern they almost looked alien in this place — a fully automatic washing machine and a tumble dryer. The only ones in Azalea.

The air was still damp, and I opened the small window to let some air inside. With the brittle scent of winter and the smell of freshly chopped wood came the strange melodic coos that Lapras used to communicate.

«So that’s what he’s doing now,» I thought. A few meters above me, Kurt’s backyard seemed to have become the stage for a familiar drama again. Lapras in his small pond, shifting around uncomfortably, while Leon stared at him from the edge, equally uncomfortable.

Never in my entire life had I thought I‘d see the day when Leon was unable to bond with a pokemon. But now it had become so obvious even Kurt had stopped bothering him.

But that was none of my problems.

I opened the dryer and there it was — the best smell in the universe — discount Rawst berry and Wepear flower conditioner. I took out the uppermost sheet and pressed it against my nose, soaking in the scent.

It was not my favourite flavour, not by far. But it was mine. It had taken me a special order in the shop and plenty of ridicule, but now that small piece of luxury was mine and mine alone.

«That bottle is going to last you three years, small as you are, girl. You should put on some weight.» Urgh… old people…

Sara was way too old-fashioned to use conditioner and her machines matched their owner in that regard. So now I carried my laundry and a few hundred yen across the village every week. It was worth it.

I took another deep breath, getting lost in the fluffy, soft, artificial scent, flying through clouds and over green summer fields of berry trees. It was a promise of a life somewhere else. A place where time had moved past 1940 and of people that brought a fresh breeze of excitement whenever they entered the room.

Here in Azalea, everything was gloomy, damp and subdued. The colours, the smells, the people. Many of them washed their clothes by hand, and I could even see why. Their old ways had kept them — and us — alive during this winter.

From preserving all kinds of foods, to growing them themselves and upcycling every last scrap of material. I had seen and learned skills I thought would die along with my great-grandparents. So it was understandable that these resourceful people here didn‘t see the need for modern things like conditioners and tumble-dryers.

But I wasn’t one of those people. Somewhere out there, at this point in time, other people also used this conditioner, and that gave me at least a bit of hope.

Taking one last breath, I folded the shirt and put it in the basket. As I sorted through the drum, separating shirts, socks, shorts and the like, I wondered who these people were and if I would fit in with them any better than I did here.

I didn’t like Rawst and Wepear. I just knew the people of Azalea didn’t use it, so it had gained instant sympathy. If pressed, I might have answered that Pecha, Mago or Pinap were my favourite flavours, but to be honest, I wasn’t sure any longer.

Fragments of Leon’s voice came through the open window, flat even though he tried to sound encouraging and friendly. I picked up the basket.

I had lost him already. Maybe I had lost myself here, too.

* * *​

January 31st 1994, 4pm.

A dull pain drew through my neck and up the back of my head, culminating along the parting of my hair and flared up whenever even one strand moved. The water in the sink was getting cold, sending shivers up my arms. But I knew that as soon as I turned on the faucet, that sound would drive me up the walls. My feet felt heavy, my joints tired, my eyes small, and my nose stuffy.

In short, I was cranky.

But there was one source of discomfort that blew everything else out of the water: Leon. Instead of letting me suffer in peace, he hovered around me like an overprotective Orbeetle. And just like a bug, he was fast, loud and overall annoying.

“Wanna hang out later?” he asked with way too much energy while he reached across, grabbing one of the last plates that still needed drying.

I shrugged, causing my neck to protest with all its might.

“Farfetch’d and I found a cool spot in the forest. There’s a cave-in that connects straight to the Slowpoke Well. It’s a super cool trip, so if you want to...”

I shook my head as carefully as possible while I drained the water from the sink and grabbed the second table cloth. As if I wanted to leave the house today. If I finished the dishes, I could count myself lucky.

Since I finished my work in the archive, there weren’t many long-term projects around the Center and Sara struggled to find work for me from time to time. On any other day, this thought might have scared me. My work here was what paid the bills and kept me from losing my mind completely. Today, however, I was glad for the lack of tasks.

I picked up the bowl that had by now drained and rubbed the last droplets of water off it. Then I reached up to place it back on its shelf.

“Or have you seen that massive pile of firewood over at the market? I bet we could ask if we can help out there. No, wait, let me do that!”

He sat — no, slammed — his plate onto the counter and the sharp sound of porcelain on metal shot waves of pain through my brain. I flinched violently, letting go of the bowl in my hands. But instead of the lethal sound of glass hitting the floor, I was only met with an “Oh, careful there!”

When I opened my eyes again, Leon had already stowed the bowl away, his bright smile beaming. It was too much.

I grabbed him by the arm and dragged him to the door. He had resisted all my previous, gentler attempts to get him off of me, so now this would have to suffice. I shoved him into the common room and blocked the doorway with my body.

“For the love of god, Leon, let me finish the dishes! Wait here, play with the pokemon, anything! Just leave me alone!”

I slammed the door shut before he could open his mouth, but even through the rice-paper, the “I just wanted to help” sounded defeated.

The commotion had left a disturbance behind, almost as if the noises and movements still lingered in the now quiet room like ripples on a lake. I waited for those waves to fade while on the other side of the door, Leon’s steps dragged away.

Finally. For the first time today, I had space to breathe.

I opened the window to let some fresh air in while I finished my work, drying and stowing away the last tableware, cleaning the sink and reorganising the things in the fridge so I could fit the leftovers in there. With every gust of wind pushing in through the window, Leon’s suffocating presence faded.

Was that how Dad had felt whenever he had gone for one of his walks?

After I had finished everything, I stood for another ten minutes, leaning against the counter and collecting myself. Then I headed into the living room.

Leon sat on the couch, feet tucked up and eyes somewhere on the path between here and eternity. The thousand-yard stare I hadn’t seen in so long was back, and even though he certainly tried, he couldn’t shake himself out of it.

Skiploom scurried around, torn between antagonising Furret and chasing Mareep’s tail sphere, but all of them knew best to keep their distance.

I sat down on the low coffee table across from him. He couldn’t meet my eyes and I didn’t want to meet his. So we both looked at our own undetermined points somewhere between the tatami mats.

“I’m trying, Hannah, I really am.” His voice had a pleading side to it I had never heard before. Well, I had, once.

“I know.”

There was no longer any reason to make up. By now, we both knew that it was a waste of time and effort.

Leon shuffled around and, now back in reality, faced me directly and with the utmost conviction he could muster. I returned his gaze.

“You mustn’t leave me. Promise me this!”

Exhausted, cold, and sad. This was definitely what Dad had felt when I asked the same of him. And though I had promised myself that I would do better than him, I sighed before I shook my head.

* * *​

February 2nd 1994, 9pm.

I could barely contain my laughter to keep up the fake belligerency. “Okay, but having a 500-year-old demon seal in your room is not old-fashioned?”

“A what?” Leon looked between me and the man on the other side of the phone’s screen.

“Those eye-shaped engravings,” I quickly explained. “Haven’t you seen them around?”

Leon’s horrified expression told me he remembered them, and I turned back to the screen, meeting Morty’s equally confronting grin. For a while he stared at me, saying nothing. Too late, I identified the mischief in his expression.

“So, what happened that good old Sara we—”

With a unisonous scream, both Leon and I darted for the mute-button, and cut him off just in time as Sara walked past us.

“Dang, Morty, we are not alone here,” I whispered into the earpiece, but the smug smile on his face confirmed all my suspicions.

The elderly nurse stopped and shot us an inquiring look. And while all the blood in my body rushed to my face and reduced me to a stuttering mess for a few seconds, Leon got up and, under the pretense of looking for some drinks, got her away. I internally thanked him while also swearing revenge against Morty.

He and Rotom had a lively discussion, so I unmuted them. Judging by Morty’s expression and Rotom’s last sentences, it had just finished explaining in vivid detail how the muting was on our side and that it could do nothing against it. Served him right.

“Hello, Hana!” the upbeat poltergeist screamed, and I greeted it back before it vanished into the circuits of the phone. Rotom seemed to thrive in Ecruteak.

“So, what happened?” Morty asked, this time more seriously.

I collected myself and shot him one last glare. I would not forget about this. “Nothing much.”

A cold can of ice-tea bumped against my arm and I quickly thanked Leon, while he pulled his chair back next to me.

“I just wanted to get that cabinet out of the way. But it turned out that covering that thing — seal — up is a crime down here.”

“Well, yeah,” Morty said with a playful tone while I reached for an empty glass. “How is it supposed to protect you from demons if it stares at a cabinet back side?”

Leon shrugged and opened his can of soda. The carbon dioxide escaping the lid made a hissing sound. “I’ve covered the one in my room up ages ago and been sleeping sound ever since.”

Morty watched us for a second or two, superimposed boredom covering up his usual, unreadable expression. “Interesting. I know who I’m going to blame when the cat demon destroys Azalea. You guys better skip town.”

I briefly stopped pouring my tea to make a face at him and from Leon’s mocking laughter I could tell he was about as amused as I was. Morty seemed to be on a streak today.

But then Leon stretched himself in his chair, smiling and having already forgotten about the jab. “You know exactly that we’ll be bothering you next, right?”

“Aha,” Morty hummed, mirroring Leon’s movement. “Do that. And then I’ll give you two a proper lecture on why Kaibyō banishment plays an important part in Johtonian folklore.”

My eyes sunk down to my tea, where the warm air started to condense around the cool glass. All at once, the room felt incredibly quiet. The sudden shift in the mood escaped no one. After an uncomfortable moment, Morty spoke up again.

“But seriously, is that the plan?”

For another heartbeat, I stared at my glass, while time seemed to come to a grinding halt. Then I noticed movement in the corner of my eyes. But even with Leon nodding, I couldn’t bring myself to do the same.

“You know you are always welcome,” Morty said while Rotom flickered across the screen in celebration. Coming from him, it sounded like it was a mere trifle.

It took a conscious effort to conjure up my voice. “That is, as long as we aren’t disturbing you or anything.”

“Don’t worry. You’re not the first, you’ll not be the last. Bother away.”

“Thank you!” If I could, I’d crawl under the table right now.

Morty sighed. “You two would rather die on the spot than accept a helping hand, do you?” He wasn’t entirely wrong there. “If it makes you feel better, I’m going to tell you I need some help around the house.”

“Really?” The way both Leon and I sounded equally desperate was concerning.

Morty buried his head in his hands and sighed. This time, the exasperation wasn’t even exaggerated.

With one deep inhale, he got up. “You guys wait a minute, I’ll be right back.”

And just like that, he left Leon and me alone with ourselves. When his foot-tapping got too unbearable in the silence of the Center, I turned to him.

“Is that the plan?” I asked.

Leon intently picked at a loose thread on his sleeve, then nodded. He looked as lost as I felt. “Do you have anything better?”

I shook my head. Leon went back to his sleeve.

“Me neither,” he said, voice flat.

I turned back, tracing the rim of my glass with my finger. So I wasn’t the only one who couldn’t think past spring, even if I tried. By now, the world beyond the snowy forest and barred mountain-passes felt foreign. But then again, so did this town.

When Morty returned, I looked up, relieved to have some distractions from my disjointed thoughts. “For starters, Leon,” he said while sitting down. “You could help me identify what that is.”

“That’s a stack of paper,” Leon answered with a deadpan expression that Morty promptly returned while he turned the papers to face the camera.

“Oh, that’s a self-assessment sheet for the League.” Leon lit up with excitement. “And it’s so thin! And ancient.”

“You call that thin?” Morty was far from amused about any jokes, and with a stare that could call into question the entirety of existence, he simply asked: “Why?”

“So that—” Leon stopped his enthusiasm mid sentence, then turned to me. “Hannah should technically not hear about this.”

I only raised my eyebrows. He gave in within a few seconds.

“Okay, so it’s so you can determine the relative strength of your pokemon.” Leon turned to look between Morty and me. “See, Hannah, in official League battles like the circuit, the battles are at a set level range for the defender. Would be kinda mean if you’d have to face the full power of the Gym Leader’s team on your first badge, wouldn’t it?

“So, that’s where this self-assessment comes in. You run your pokemon through a number of tests so you can gauge their power level and from there you calculate back.

“When you get a challenger with, say, one badge, you go look up what level range you’re supposed to have and then adjust your team accordingly. But to do that, you have to know what level your pokemon are at, so you get a feeling for after how many hits you call it a day and such.”

Morty frowned over his papers. “It says here ‘number of hits withstood’. That could be anything.”

“That’s why you have modifiers,” Leon said, unfazed by the interruption. “Look a bit further down. There should be something about if it’s a special or physical move, the damage type modifier, and what level the attacker is at.”

Leon turned to me while Morty flipped through the pages. “Rose made me fill out one of those things by hand once, so I’d learn to appreciate the computer-aided methods. And man, do I appreciate them now.”

When I didn’t respond, his smile turned into a curious expression, matching mine. “What?”

“You sound like you do this a lot.”

Leon nodded, smiling. “I do. The Championship Cup and the competitive scene are League battles after all.” He sighed. “See, that’s why you shouldn’t hear this.”

I took a sip of my ice-tea, not breaking eye-contact. “So you would have — what’s it called? — scaled our match? What about going all out then?”

“Capped. And hey, those are the rules.” He shrugged. “Also, I’m the one with ten years experience and home-field advantage.”

I wanted to say something, but Morty interrupted. “Here: Tier 2 attacks. Examples include Thunderbolt and Thunderpunch. Getting hit by those is a monumental difference for Gengar.”

“That’s why you distinguish between special and physical attack, defence and moves,” Leon quickly explained before turning back to me. The curses Morty whispered under his breath were audible even here.

I met Leon’s inquiring gaze, way too tired to do anything meaningful with my expression, while I processed this new information. “Capped, huh? What would you have capped our match at?”

A smile came back on his face and his eyes lit up. “The Championship Cup is at a careful 75. So Flare Blitz is out of the picture — sadly. When we…”

Within one second, the spark in his eyes died and got lost in the emptiness. Champ Leon had vanished again and left only a husk behind. I put my glass away, but before I could reach out to him, he had already got up.

“Excuse me, I’ll be right back.” With that, he disappeared into one of the side rooms, out of view. And if I hadn’t watched him the entire time, I could have sworn there were two Leons around.

I looked at the closed door for a long second, then turned back to the screen, burying my head in my hands.

“I can’t deal with this any longer.”

Only when the echo coming off the walls of the phonebooth struck my tired ears did I realise I said it out loud. And that I also didn’t care.

“Neither does he.” Morty’s emotionless voice broke the silence that stretched itself over the room, only for it to return soon after. The rustling sound when he put his papers away did little to keep it at bay.

“Look, don’t get worked up over it.” I could feel his eyes piercing me, even through the screen, and for a moment I was sure he could hear the shaking in my breath. “He’ll bounce back.”

I shook my head again, but the silence and the emptiness made it hard to move.

Back and forth and back and forth. Lately, Leon was only bouncing from one high to the next low and no matter how well he hid it, he inevitably pulled me with him.

Morty sighed. “I’m sorry, I don’t know what to tell you.”

“How long?” I looked up and was met with his calm gaze. Something was going through his mind, but when I registered movement behind me, he just shrugged.

The other Leon was back again and regarded me with a wide smile.

Watching him closer, I could see that his face was still a bit wet. How long had he been gone? At most, half a minute. How could a splash of cold water turn his entire demeanour around so quickly?

Morty picked up the papers and put on an accusatory tone. “There is no distinction between special and physical moves.”

“What?” Leon sat down and leaned forward. “But there should be…”

If given the chance, Leon would have climbed through the phone to take that catalogue apart. So while an eager discussion about special and physical moves emerged, I grabbed my drink and made a bit of space so the two could talk more freely.

Over the winter, Morty had grown more than against any Gym Leader position. Now he only struggled with the thought of having to decline an opportunity like that.

Whereas Leon was the polar opposite. He explained the process to Morty with a patience and passion that I had forgotten he ever possessed. But that was the young professional pokemon trainer that Leon was shaping up to be, back when we were still in Galar. Before…

I clutched my glass tighter and tried to concentrate on the cold sensation against my palms. Somehow, focusing on something made thinking the unthinkable easier. Flashes of purple and black flickered in the corners of my memory.

Before the Darkest Day ended a lot of lives all at once. Charizard, Aegislash, Dragapult, Haxourus and Seismitoad were gone, and we were absolutely out of ideas on how to bring them back. And where they were turned to stone in an instance, their trainer had faded over time, leaving behind a ghost of himself that was unreachable and untouchable.

But was it that? Right now, Leon was here. He explained League protocols as if he had no care in the world. He was here. But why was I feeling like I was drifting through this silence, away, alone even though Leon and Morty were right next to me?

Somewhere so far away was a familiar voice.

He sounded so much like his brother. And if I tried, if I really tried, I could see Hop in him. Leon’s hair had grown longer over the winter, and most of the time he couldn’t be bothered to take care of it. But if I imagined that away, if I imagined him smaller and… and… more likeable…

No!

Maybe it wasn’t him who had changed. Maybe it was me. Maybe I had drifted so far away that I couldn’t reach him any longer. But then again, did I ever reach him?

Leon was always on a pedestal. Not even Hop was close to him any longer. So who was I to assume that? And Hop was the only reason I had put up with him. But now I wasn’t sure if I could give him his brother back at all.

That person talking to Morty on the phone was a stranger.

For months we had been exchanging words, but never talked. Whenever I had tried to ask him what was bothering him, he had either avoided the question or given me a nondescript “Nothing.” And so I didn’t tell him either, because what else was there left to say in the silence after ‘nothing.’

Even though I wanted to ask him what happened at the forest shrine or what he meant with the ‘stupid things,’ I couldn’t bring myself to open up like that.

For one, because I wasn’t sure what had happened myself, but mostly because mentioning our argument would open up those scars. They had not healed over time. Even though we claimed to have put the issue behind us. But whatever those words sealed away, all the apologies and the questions that were never said or asked, they hung between us like a dark, drooping cloud.

So no wonder no one of us had any better plans. Morty was the only thing that connected us and Ecruteak the last goal that we shared. Because, after all, if I couldn’t bring Leon back, there was no need to hang around this person with his mood-swings and his unpredictable bounces.

No!

This felt so familiar. So awfully familiar. I would not let that happen again.

“Hey, Hannah?” Even through the unfathomable distance, the silence and the wisps left behind by the Darkest Day, Leon’s voice was gentle, and his eyes caring. “What’s up? You don’t look too good.”

I blinked a few times. The way back into reality was a long one. My tea had got warm and the cool tether that kept me from drifting away was almost gone. I straightened up on my chair and looked between Morty and him, desperately hoping that one of them might do the trick instead.

“Nothing, don’t worry. Go on!” The words came almost instinctively.

Leon again looked at me for a bit too long, and though he had his innocent and naïve persona back, that look pierced right through me. I gripped my glass tighter and even twisted my mouth to mimic a smile. After what felt like forever, he turned back.

“So, like I said, it’s your choice,” Leon said, back again in his lively discussion that I had lost track of an eternity ago. “But you know my take.”

«It’s nothing, Hana. Nothing.»

* * *​

February 14th 1994, 7am.

Dusk still lay over Azalea when I stepped outside this morning, but up high, the sun already tinted the mountaintops orange. Soon, its light would reach the village.

With one swift motion, I catapulted Skiploom into the stiff breeze. A happy squeal accompanied her as she drifted higher, greeting the sun long before we down here could.

Eevee nestled herself in the collar of my jacket, while Furret darted ahead to the collier’s low house, where smoke was already coming from the many chimneys. Mareep quickly chased after her — as soon as I opened the Center’s front door again that he somehow closed on himself.

Up ahead, Skiploom’s Sunny Day almost challenged the first light in intensity as the sun reciprocated her greeting.

From across the town came a gleeful bleating sound when Mareep bumped into Leon and received his first pats of the day. He and I exchanged a tired but hopeful smile. So he had heard the radio as well.

When Skiploom sailed down again, her dandelion flower had turned into soft cotton. I took in her fresh scent, pressing the overjoyed pokemon against my chest.

With the early sunlight and the smell of morning dew, spring had arrived.
 
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Chapter 28: Ocean Winds

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3

Chapter 28: Ocean Winds​

February 16th 1994, 4:00pm.

The single bench on the bus stop right on the border of Ilex National Park was a lonely place. It overlooked the ocean, sitting on a small cliffside just a few yards over a sandy strip of beach. But in the cold weather of this late-winter-early-spring day, the beach was deserted, and the ocean reached the horizon way too soon.

An icy wind blew up over the foamy waves and through the white boards of the bench, making me shiver. My open hair fluttered around my face as I examined a single strand, picking on its ends until I finally ripped off the spliss. But the clean edge mattered little in the grand picture. The damage it had suffered over the winter was undeniable.

The stiff breeze blew the strand out of my hand and so I tucked the whole mess back into a sloppy bun before I huddled closer into my anorak. Between the ocean winds and the shadows of the Ilex, it was getting cold.

Maybe a bit of movement might have helped. Leon had realised that as soon as we had got here. Since we still had no watch, we were left with no other option than to wait here until the bus arrived.

And waiting was something this Champion was thoroughly incapable of. So after what must have been five minutes, but felt like five hours, he had gone to investigate some ‘cool thing’ in the Ilex and had not returned ever since.He had promised on his life to stay within earshot and since Furret was with him, I believed it.

Now I waited for the bus. But most importantly, I waited for the bus — alone.

Right now, the quietness was worth more than any warmth.

I turned a bit, tucking my feet closer and let my gaze wander over the ocean behind me. Balancing herself on the backrest next to me was Eevee, admiring the view as well. Absent-mindedly, I brushed through her fur and she nudged her back against my hand in return.

The quiet vastness of the sea was comforting. The air was clear, fresh and, most of all, new. But my head hadn’t quite got over the crushing tightness that was Azalea. Breathing was still hard, even now that there was plenty of air around.

In fact, it was so hard that we had made less progress than I had anticipated because of it. But now, way too late in the evening, we had finally arrived at our halfway goal for today. Lonely and forgotten as it was here in the middle of nowhere, I would have never guessed that we were only one bus-ride away from the biggest city this region offered. And I could not await it.

I averted my eyes from the waves to focus on a few tangled hairs in Eevee’s scarf. Careful not to hurt her, I ripped the knot out and then brushed her fur a bit more. She watched my every move closely, enjoying our peaceful alone-time.

She deserved so much better. Her fur had got dull, no matter how meticulously she had maintained it over the winter. I couldn’t wait to get her a good shampoo and conditioner to bring that shine back.

«And a brush to sort those tangles out,» I thought, while I picked another one apart. My shopping list grew by the minute.

The breeze picked up again and Eevee squinted as her long ears were blown forwards. But even more worrying was Jumpluff, who now blew past us again with a frustrated cry. Sighing, I motioned for Eevee to wait and got up and over to where Jumpluff dug herself out of a snow-drift.

“Why don’t you sit with us?” I asked, but she slapped my hand away with one of her puffs.

She hadn’t adapted well to her new body, constantly fighting against the wind to not be blown away. She had been in an overall bad mood all winter long and would only lighten up occasionally when the sun came out or she could cause mischief. But this was the first time I saw actual frustration on her.

Suddenly, the wind picked up. A powerful gust blew over the pines of the Ilex, causing the trees to bend and roar. I instinctively grabbed Jumpluff, else I’d never see her again.

But when the wind had settled, and the Ilex had fallen quiet, I noticed a strange assortment of shadows dancing across the ground. Round, bubbly shadows bouncing from one to the next. And when I turned to the sky, a whole cloud of dandelion puffs was blocking out the sun.

In my arms, Jumpluff fell silent.

It was a marvellous sight. The Jumpluffs glided on the winds, carried, but never dragged by the current. Between them, they guided the smaller Hoppips and Skiplooms that were not as proficient aviators as they were.

When the breeze died down, the entire flock descended with gleeful yelps not too far from the bus stop and covered the ground in a carpet of cotton balls, dandelions, and leaves. The younger members of the group caught their breath and stretched their leaves and petals, while the more experienced scurried around, regrouping the chaotic bunch as much as possible.

With a determined jolt, Jumpluff freed herself from my grasp. She hopped a few feet ahead, but then, when she was mid-air, got swept up and knocked back by another gust. When I ran over to her, she was already getting up again, defiance in her round face.

We exchanged one quick glance, then I had already kicked her a good part of the way. She sailed through the air, but her newer, heavier form and the resistance of her puffs made her land way earlier than I had calculated. I silently apologised to her.

But Jumpluff was not to be dissuaded. She got up again and half jumped, half waddled over to the group. With one last, determined hop she finally landed close to two small Hoppips.

As soon as she got there, unrest swept over the entire group. The Hoppips tiptoed around while she told them something. Not before long, another Jumpluff emerged, putting itself between her and the frightened Hoppips.

I watched them from a distance. Was she trying to make friends?

When the wind picked up again, the flock wasted no time getting away from this strange threat. The entire field of flowers that had formed here lifted up, starting from the far distance and rolling towards us like a wave. The last ones on the ground were the two Jumpluffs.

When its friends were already up in the air, the two exchanged one long glare. Both jumped up simultaneously, but where the other one caught a current that carried it to its peers, my girl… dropped down.

She tried catching up a few more times, hopping fruitlessly around, until she gave up with a defeated sigh. I walked over to her and picked her up. This time, she didn’t protest.

Back at the bench, I sat her down on my lap and it almost felt like she was crying. Or shaking in anger, it was always hard to tell with her.

“Hey, baby girl, don’t worry. You’ll get there some day.” Even by my low standards, this pep talk felt empty.

Eevee stepped in and yelled — or so I presumed — something at the blue ball in my lap, but it also did little to brighten Jumpluff’s mood. In the end, all I could do was hold her tight and run my fingers through her puffs.

She was always front and center with her temper, and if she wasn’t, she would find a way to press herself into the spotlight. Eevee and Furret were mostly fine with this, but I remembered times when Leon had to quite literally get her out of his hair when he was training with Mareep.

Now that I thought about it, this behaviour was not unlike what Leon did when he was so in-my-face about doing something together. Or what I had done when I ransacked my brain for any last thing that I could use to hurt him. It was simple attention seeking.

But why? She always took center stage, she would make sure of that. Or was there more to it than pure attention? When we met her back in Cuora, she was alone, and I’ve never given it much thought until now.

Those thoughts didn’t make it too far today, either.

With a ‘Thud’ Mareep hit the ground, now that he had staggered out of a bush a few yards down the road. For a few seconds, the little sheep tried to orient himself, then Leon ran up to him, petted him and in return received an electrical discharge. And just like that, the quietness was over.

After he had shaken off the remnants of electricity, Leon spotted me and came running over, beaming brightly. On his shoulders was an equally happy Furret and in his arms… a Growlithe?

“Hey! Hey, Hannah! Look who I found!”

If migraine had a voice, it would be his.

He stopped in front of me.

The Growlithe in his arms smiled just as brightly and wagged its tail, panting in excitement. “Lucky, this is Hannah. Hannah–Lucky. Can I have a pokeball?”

It took me a moment to take in the words, while Eevee tensed up next to me. I didn’t know what it was, but seeing him made me feel so tired. Even though I should be happy that he was holding this random dog. Somehow, I just couldn’t be.

Finally breaking out of my stupor, I searched my waistband for a spare pokeball and tossed it over to him. “I’ll not catch that one for you.”

Leon caught the ball flawlessly, but for one heartbeat, his illusion of normalcy couldn’t keep up with him. “You don’t— you don’t need to.”

He sat the Growlithe down and searched his own waistbag for his Trainer Card. With a quick press of the center button, the pokeball activated and Leon flipped through its menu to the one where it would change the registration.

I watched him while he scanned the barcode on his ID and had to admit that I was surprised at what I saw. Not that he knew how to use a pokeball, no. But that he was willing to.

Leon knelt down and let Growlithe inspect the ball — an action that ended in his fingers being licked. “We’ll play later, okay? For now, you’ll have to wait.” Growlithe nodded in excited agreement and one second later, it had vanished into its ball.

“Well done,” I said, still overcoming my astonishment. He shot me a weak smile.

Leon returned Mareep to his ball and then came over to me. Now that the pokemon were away, it seemed again like every step weighed him down. When he leaned against the sign next to me, the winds had slowed down.

“I didn’t know you use nicknames for your team,” I said after a while, if only to get a conversation going.

“Oh, I do,” he answered, faster than necessary. Seemed like he was eager to fill that awkward nothingness with any sort of chatter, too. “I do. It’s just when things started to look serious, Rose asked me to sign the rights to their names over to my brand, so he could trademark them. I mean, they explained it to me a bit differently, because, you know — ten. But it still felt kinda wrong. So now I’m going with their species names in public.”

He shrugged, then sighed. I turned over to look at him. Seemed like this was as far as that wave of energy would carry him, as well as that conversation.

“Now things…” he began, but then couldn’t bring himself to finish the sentence. I would have liked to ask him what Charizard’s nickname used to be, but the way he now stared at the cracks in the asphalt forbade every question.

A few minutes passed by and the winds rose again. Somehow, they had got even colder.

So here we were again, waiting. I hugged Jumpluff tighter while my eyes lost focus somewhere on the other side of the street. Leon started tapping his feet and probably tied the one-hundredth knot into the cordon on his hood. The ocean winds blew over the cliffside relentlessly, freeing single strands of my hair. I watched them dance around on the gales.

“How are you?” he asked after a while. I hummed something nondescript for an answer. Next to me, Leon shuffled around.

“Hannah, I don’t think we should travel together any longer.”

I turned around to face him, while my brain still parsed those words. He bit his lip for a long, quiet second where only the howling of the wind and a distance unfathomable stretched between us.

“I… need some time to myself, and so do you.”

His voice was rough around the edges and he struggled with the words, as usual, but he was not insecure. He did not fidget and when he met my eyes, his gaze was steady and secure.

He was never secure. Not when it came to this. How?

“You’re really not doing well, as in, physically. Also, mentally, but I, like, can’t look into your head.”

I felt myself spiralling through all the emotions. Confusion, fear, anger, sadness, guilt, shame. From one to the next within a heartbeat. But somehow, all of that happened behind a wall of glass. The only thing I felt was cold.

Eevee nudged her head against my cheek and I could tell she was shaking. Mechanically, I ruffled her fur.

“So, I’m getting you to Ecruteak. That’s the least I can do. And then please, please think about seeing that doctor.”

No, wait. Leon couldn’t need some time to himself. He was barely able to be alone for an evening. And he was the one who wasn’t doing well, not me. I was supposed to get him somewhere, not the other way around. None of this made sense. None of this could be happening.

But not a single word came out of my mouth.

The silence was back.

* * *​

The wind howled loudly, and it got even colder when a few clouds blocked out the sun. At one point, Leon had knelt down in front of me and talked for a bit, but I couldn’t remember what he had said. Only that Eevee got so agitated that I had to recall her, else she would have scratched his eyes out.

Then finally my brain kicked back in and we chatted away like always. I told him about Jumpluff’s encounter earlier. And then, for the first time in forever, we actually made plans.

The bus arrived and about three hours later, the vast outskirts of Goldenrod City replaced the shoreline on the horizon. Soon we marvelled at the sight of skyscrapers, busy streets and the sheer amount of people.

The city was overwhelming with its lights and sounds, and its smells of asphalt, plastic and neon-lights. Leon instinctively picked all the wrong directions, and I had to run after him more than once.

Talking was easy again. But somehow, it didn’t keep the silence at bay. The silence that still sounded like ocean winds.
 
Chapter 29: Ghosts of a time gone by

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3

Chapter 29: Ghosts of a time gone by​

February 21st 1994, 1:00pm.

The ceiling above my bed was a dull white, overshadowed by hues of grey and only intersected by the dark gaps running between the panelling. I followed their path with my eyes, like I had done many times today. And like so many times before, my travels were halted by the vent of the AC unit. I had stared at it for the past few hours or so and still couldn’t tell how many slats it had. I didn’t bother counting them now either. The string that hung from the grate only flapped sporadically when movement in the room disturbed it. And there had been little movement.

There was movement all around me, sure. Outside, cars moved past the Pokemon Center and people went on their daily routine through the big city. They didn’t pay their surroundings much attention. And why would they? It was their home, after all. But I was a tourist here, and I was overwhelmed, as I should be.

Goldenrod was a wonderful city, bustling with life and new experiences. In its fast pace, it was hard to take a minute to get a feeling for it. But once one found a quiet street corner and a moment to take the city in, its character emerged.

Clear, bright skyscrapers were home to countless offices and the people busily pushing pens inside. The shopping mall’s mascot, a cheerful Clefairy greeted everyone from the electronic billboards for miles around, inviting onlookers to experience the latest fashion trends for themselves. The radio tower watched proudly over its city and region. It kept permanent contact with its counterpart in Kanto, while at its feet the highway to the modern east was being constructed. The sleek, emerging railway station that was specifically built for the Maglev and would soon connect Goldenrod and Saffron was a bold statement towards progress.

But among the broad streets and the modern buildings the city prided itself with were still signs of its past — low hanging, disordered telephone wires, small back-alleys where vendors sold all kinds of local food and the old, low city-houses, too stubborn to make way for a modern era.

The harbour with its gigantic cargo vessels and cranes that was now the gate to the world, was only half an hour away from its predecessor, the colourful Shimaboshi district. This strange relic of time was founded at the turn of the last century. From there on refused to develop alongside the rest of the city, staying instead within its own weird bubble. Stepping into it was like stepping into a different timeline, where Johto’s traditional art style was now backlit by neon-lights and where celestial Gyarados ornaments wound themselves along the signs of electronics shops. At night, the district glowed in an ever present, warm red, when the countless game corners opened their doors to their clients.

But all of those lights and colours were now far away, here in my small room with the white ceiling panels and the silent AC.

Today, no amount of advertisement, no matter the shape it came in, could lure me outside. Even the thought of movement felt tiring, and so I lay here, on my back, in my pyjamas, staring at the ceiling.

Eevee slept next to me, tidily curled up in a ball, her now soft and untangled fur pressing against my skin. Jumpluff watched the world outside the tiny window, occasionally sighing. Her blues had only got worse since we got here. Mareep was with Leon and wherever he was, training. Furret was with them, making sure the clueless bunch would find their way back in the evening. And I was here, in the middle of the region’s biggest city, hiding from the world.

In the silence of the room, my thoughts began to wander. Back to Leon knocking on my door this morning, asking why I didn’t show up for breakfast and if I wasn’t hungry. Back to us grabbing some takoyaki yesterday, which Leon then finished for me while we talked like nothing ever happened. Further back through yesterday, to me waiting for him to stop chatting with the clerk at the pokeball shop about the recent developments in the catching mechanisms on Ultra Balls.

While they were ten layers deep in pokeball tech, I had flipped through the pages of a lifestyle magazine. It had informed me about the latest gossip in Celadon’s idol scene, some make-up tips for the upcoming spring and a handful of beauty-tips for pokemon-fur of all kinds. It had only been around 100 yen, but we were already spending money we didn’t have. So it went back onto the shelf when Leon had finally said his goodbyes and we idly browsed through the TM department.

I sighed — the only sound to break the silence in my small room. It moved the air, but not enough to move the string that still dangled motionlessly from the vent.

I used to love these kinds of magazines and would scour them for news and little hacks I didn’t know yet, eager to try them out. But now, it all was so far away. The shine on the pages felt dull, and not even Leon’s smile could light it up when he gave me the cliffnotes version of the shoptalk.

Suddenly, the hotel phone next to me rang, its shrill sound cutting through my thoughts and the silence with ease. With gravity’s help, I turned my head over to stare at the white device that was begging for attention.

Morty.

For a long moment, the lure of the mattress’ comfort was overwhelming, wrapping my limbs with paralysing weight. But then I reminded myself of his other three calls I had already ignored that way today. Time to face reality.

I grabbed the handset off its station and pressed it against my ear, readying myself for whatever scolding was about to come my way.

“Hello? Hanako? Is it you?” A female voice rang from the speaker and I braced myself up for the first time today.

“Yes?” I answered, still trying to assign a face to that voice that sounded so vaguely familiar.

“Hello! It’s me, Lucy!” Finally, the dots connected when my brain pulled up an almost forgotten registry of images and feelings. I actually sat up.

“Lucy? What a surprise!” I said, a smile forming on my lips. “How are you?”

“Oh, we are doing well.” The nurse’s voice had gained confidence now that she knew she had the right connection. “Slowly things get going again. More trainers drop by the Center now that the winter is ending. Oh, and yesterday, the first crocus broke through the snow.”

“That’s wonderful,” I said, my tone matching hers almost effortlessly as the memories of the old-fashioned town and its cosy Pokemon Center pushed all my worries aside.

“It is, right? The ocean at this time of year is also very refreshing. It protected us from the worst of the winter. Kitty is still angry because of the snow, though.”

Cherrygrove was far away, too. Not just in terms of distance; it was also far away in time. Its memories lived in its own bubble, just like Shimaboshi. But they were precious memories nevertheless. For the first time in a long time, a warm feeling, almost like a smile — a genuine one — spread through my chest.

“How is everyone else doing? How’s Owen?” I asked while I watched the string on the AC sway.

“Owen? He gets more work at the station, now that more trainers are on the road again, but nothing out of the ordinary. One of his fellow officers is out of commission for some time because of a broken leg and now they have to scramble to get his shifts covered. But otherwise, everything is quiet.”

In the ensuing silence, the warmth in my chest ebbed away; disappearing as fast as it came. Keeping the smile on my lips required more and more effort and a heaviness again got hold of my shoulders. For a quick second, I wished I could make those ever fleeting moments stay.

When Lucy spoke up again, her voice sounded solemn. “How are you doing?”

The moment I heard her question, I realised I had dreaded it ever since I picked up the phone. Slowly, I let myself sink back onto the bed.

“We are fine, mostly,” I answered after some more silence. “It’s been… quite a lot of things have happened. But why are you calling?”

“To ask you exactly this.”

Eevee, annoyed by my moving around, repositioned herself next to my shoulder while I stared blankly at the ceiling.

“See, I’ve been talking to Sara the other day, and she told me that you two left Azalea early already.” The concern slowed Lucy’s voice.

I hummed a weak sign of confirmation. “As soon as they opened the national parks.”

“So, how are you?”

The static on the line felt almost crushing; the string hung motionless again. The only remedy to this agonising silence was talking, but…

“Leon, he… hasn’t been okay. Kurt couldn’t do anything for his team.”

“I’ve heard that.”

“He’s not been coping well. At all.” Suddenly, all the words almost fell out of my mouth. “He’s all over the place. One day he’s sunshine and rainbows, and when I think I’ve figured him out and got used to it, he’s all doom and gloom again. At this point, I could start reading the coffee grounds to predict his mood for the day.

“And worst of all, he doesn’t talk! Lucy, you can’t imagine how close he was to his team. Back at home, he couldn’t shut up about them. He’d say a sentence and the next one would be about Charizard. And now? Nothing! It’s like he is a completely different person from the one I knew.

“And now… and now he tries to convince me that—”

When I stumbled over my own words, I realised how agitated I had become. I took two gurgling breaths, trying to sort my thoughts, when a horrifying realisation dawned on me.

“This is all my fault! I should have been upfront with him instead of letting him believe there is some hope.”

Lucy had been quiet, but now she spoke up, her voice soft and empathic. “You know that’s not true.”

I stared at the ceiling while I felt a knot in my stomach form again. How I wished she was right. I sniffled.

“We had an argument, and I told him to walk it off. Everything. Just walk it off. I am such an idiot!”

“Oh.”

“But now he wants to do the Gym Challenge again, because— I don’t know.” I covered my eyes with my free hand and massaged my burning eyelids. “Honestly, I don’t know why he does anything anymore.”

Okay, that was a lie. I knew why he did it. He wanted to convince me or himself or both of us he was okay. But mostly, he wanted to get away from me. And who could blame him after all that happened?

I was such a fool! If only I had tried a little harder, or listened when he had tried to talk. Maybe if I had got to know this person, if I had tried to be a friend…

But all those opportunities were in the past now. In retrospect, they had been there, I just didn’t see them. An entire winter full of little moments to reach out, to connect, and yet — nothing.

Now I was here, in a hotel-room with a white ceiling that was the only familiar thing in this strange land from a time long passed. Where people moved through their days on the grey sidewalks like ghosts but came to life in small, crowded alleys, when colourful lights from another time gave them substance. Where they treated smells and sound so foreign, I couldn’t have imagined them in my wildest dreams like they didn’t exist. And where I started to dissolve like the smell and the lights, lost like one of those ghosts that I occasionally bumped into but could never touch.

And the only person who connected me to the ground I was walking on wanted nothing more than to be without me. To leave me. Leave me behind like—

“Hana!” I instinctively held my breath when Lucy’s voice pulled me back into reality. “That was a lot of stuff about Leon, but how are you doing?”

My breath was fast, raspy, and insecure. It took a while for these shadows to vanish and for the white ceiling to become real again.

“I’m okay, I guess,” I said after a while. On the other end, Lucy sighed.

“Listen, when I talked to Sara, she was more worried about you than about Leon. You are seriously ill but you brush off any attempt to help you.”

Not this again!

“I am not—”

Lucy cut my weak protests off with a decisive “Hey!” When she spoke up again after that, her voice sounded a lot softer. “You need to see a doctor. If it helps you, you can live with us again, sweetie. But this is not about Leon any more.”

How was this not about him? The entire five months that we had been here were about him, right? Give him his team back so he can go back to stop the Darkest Day. And even before that — Hop’s and my journey had been about him in one way or another.

It was his decision to leave, too.

But me not wanting to let him go — that was about me.

“Hana…”

“Yes?” I blinked twice. How much time had passed?

“Just checking if you’re still there.”

“I am. We— I have a place to stay. In Ecruteak. But thank you! I can’t even begin to tell you…” My voice faded out.

There really were no words to tell her how grateful I was. Only knowing her offer existed meant that I had a place to stay and people that cared about me, even with Leon gone.

But still.

“Are you going to see a doctor?” Lucy asked again. I hummed and listened to the sound ebb away in the small room.

If I wanted Leon to stay, it was on me. I had let enough opportunities pass me by already. But was this even a fight I could win any longer?

The takoyaki yesterday and the carefree chatter while we strolled through the streets — being with him could be so easy. We could work. Hypothetically, we could.

But even holding on to the earpiece and listening to Lucy felt like a chore. I was so tired. Convincing Leon to stay was an insurmountable task. He wanted to leave, and Arceus only knew for how long already.

Relationships broke apart, that was the nature of life, and it always started with one person leaving. I hadn’t been able to prevent it back when I had been given five years, how was I supposed to do so within only a week?

The lure of the mattress was just so overwhelming. As I lay there, staring again at the gaps that ran between the ceiling’s white panelling, while the world outside my window moved on, I sighed. Then I conjured up the strength to finish this conversation.

Tomorrow would be another day. Hopefully, a better one.
 
Chapter 30: City Lights

bluesidra

Mood
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. hoppip-bluesidra-reup
  2. hoppip-bluesidra-pink
  3. hoppip-bluesidra3

Chapter 30: City Lights​

February 24th 1994, 7:00pm.

Music blared out of the speakers here in the lobby of Goldenrod’s Pokemon Center. Some sort of highly synthesised pop of the 80s, easy and catching. I found myself tapping my toes to the rhythm of the tune, even though I didn’t focus on it. But once I realised it, I was entranced.

I stopped my work for a brief second and watched my finger on the yellowish white mouse match the common time. Deep, deep in my mind, the memories for fitting movements emerged, but they felt way too distant to actually act on them.

Turning my attention back to the flickering screen, I clicked a few steps forward in the menu. I had completely forgotten how aggressively bland the Storage System’s interface was. When it asked me for the new trainer’s ID, I dutifully typed in Leon’s number and, with another click, the transfer was confirmed. That was Mareep.

While I slid down from the barstool to stow his ball away, I was met with Eevee’s glare. I quickly brushed through her fur.

“You’re staying with me, don’t worry,” I assured her. It did little to sway her, but being scratched behind the ears showed effect.

I ignored her contemptuous stares while I dug out Jumpluff’s ball. Turning it in my hand, a sigh escaped my lips. We hadn’t really decided on what to do with her. I climbed back onto the chair, and, biting my nails, scanned the ball’s barcode, hoping some inspiration would come from it.

“Warning: Operation can not be performed without pokemon present,” the computer notified me.

Great.

Sighing again, I packed up my stuff and logged off.

Eevee followed me closely as we made our way through the Center’s busy lobby. Even though we’ve been here for almost two weeks now, the bright lights, modern interieur and the sheer amount of people still felt alien.

Goldenrod never fell asleep; its lights never dimmed. Cars, busses, trams and trains were busy transporting people around every hour of the day. Shops were open 24/7 and if one wasn’t, one could easily find another one.

And yet, time seemed to stand still. Almost two weeks. A lot had happened, and still…

“Excuse me.” I pushed through a crowd of travellers who blocked the stairway to the upper levels.

When we reached the second floor, the noise from the lobby ebbed away, cut off by several heavy fireproof doors. Eevee’s light taps on the carpet became audible again.

I unlocked the door to my small room at the end of the hallway and ushered her inside. She was not amused. Only when I sat on the bed with her did she finally agree to sit down and roll herself into her tail.

I was as unhappy about the situation as she was, but what else could I do? The blatant anger in her eyes was enough of an answer. I should fight.

This was all way too easy. There was no struggle, no fighting, no war between Leon and me. Only silence.

But why? There were arguments to be had, reasons to be made, questions to be asked, and promises to be given. I was simply too tired to do so. If I didn’t still have things to do, I could fall over onto the bed right here and now and sleep for a week.

But we still had to figure out where Jumpluff would stay.

I pressed my eyes shut, trying to push my parents’ voices back into those dark recesses where they came from. It was the same, wasn’t it? Two years. That’s how long I had been able to make my peace last. At least they had put up a fight.

No, better Eevee didn’t accompany me now.

A furry tail flipping over my hand made me snap back into reality. How long had I been staring at the wardrobe?

With one last pat on her head, I left Eevee in our room and made my way to the fire escape stairs. They were the quickest way to the small balcony where Leon and Jumpluff practised her flying.

My breath grew raspy, and I stopped just short of the door to calm it down. I didn’t want to cause him any more worry. When I finally stepped outside, I was met with a surprise.

The balcony wasn’t big, maybe two square meters, and it was almost entirely covered in dandelion blowballs. From time to time, a yellow flower peaked out from the fluffy sea of cotton. The evening city lit the scene up in an eerie, multicoloured glow.

And in the corner, back against the concrete curb, sat Leon, a Hoppip on his head and clearly in his element. The Jumpluff he held in his arms was my girl, of that I was sure. I’d recognise that thinly veiled aggression anywhere. But today, she seemed to restrain herself a bit more than usual.

“Hey,” I whispered as I carefully pushed the door open and stepped outside. Many eyes turned to me, but this flock seemed calmer than the one we encountered on Route 34. They pulled back in apprehension, leaving a radius of empty space around my feet, but I could see the more curious Hoppip already pondering to explore me.

“You’re good with them,” I added as I stepped over a Skiploom that proudly dragged Leon’s cap around.

He smiled and nodded. “I’d better be. Those are my namesakes. Now watch that!”

With this, he sat Jumpluff onto his knees. She took a few careful bounces, then she jumped up and, catching the breeze from the AC-unit above, sailed over to me and into my arms. I squeezed her tight and ruffled her blossoms, whispering praise into the cotton.

“Really? Your parents named you after the Hoppip line?” I asked through her puffs, trying to catch a glimpse of Leon.

“Well, not exactly. Don’t ask.” He put on a smile, but it was obvious how awkward he felt about it. That, and the fact that no lighthearted banter could ease the gravity that somehow lay over the situation. On any other day, we might have laughed about the Hoppip that was now climbing up my leg, but not now. No, this now was covered in a blanket of dreary melancholy, more than any other dusk could evoke.

The longer Jumpluff cuddled into my arms and the longer the wind waved through my hair, the more it dawned on me. No, I had known it ever since her first encounter with other pokemon of her kind. It was time for her to move on. She had chosen to settle any custody battle herself.

I ran my hand again through her puffs — this time slower — enjoying the softness of her blossoms and the fluffy sensation of the small, stubby hairs covering her body. They had got denser since she was a Hoppip, and now almost covered her like fur.

The wind picked up, replacing the warm breeze from the AC with chilly February air. I knew I had only a couple of minutes left to cuddle the first pokemon that I ever caught in this strange land. And who had now grown up and found another family. For a moment, I struggled with the urge to simply recall her. Instead, I pressed my face deeper into her puffs one last time before I pulled her away to look at her.

“You know you can always come back to me, understand?”

Jumpluff nodded, and her red eyes glowed with conviction. But who was I even trying to fool here? A ‘we’ll meet again’ was just a goodbye in instalments. There was no way I would ever see her again. But delaying a final farewell to an uncertain reunion sure softened the blow. I tried my best to hold back tears.

I hugged her tight once more while the breeze grew stronger. On the ground, the other Jumpluff scurried around, trying to get the younger members into a starting position. A bunch of them skittered over my shoes and brushed along my feet. Leon fished for his cap. There was nothing I could do to buy more time.

Then the decisive gust arrived. Hoppips and Skiplooms launched themselves in the air, some brushing past me as they made their way to the skies. For a moment, their shadows drowned out the city lights and the world began to look natural again. Through the stream of moving flowers, Leon and I exchanged a long glance. It was time.

With the last dandelions drifting past me, I extended my arm over the edge of the balcony. Jumpluff balanced forward and, like we had done so many times before, I gave her one last nudge. She pushed herself upwards and caught the breeze, gently sailing on it as she closed up to the other pokemon.

Her goodbye drowned out in the winds.

My heart grew heavy, despite the smile on my lips. Leon got up and leaned against the railing next to me, quietly adjusting his snapback. In the distance, the flock got smaller and smaller, only a collection of dots against the city’s skyscrapers and the last streaks of red in the evening sky.

The sounds of the city drifted upwards as my gaze lost itself in the neon-lights of advertisements and windows. Vehicles moving across broad streets, stopping for pedestrians and speeding up again. The same catchy tune that played in the lobby, but now from the speakers of a bar across the street. The chatter of the crowd gathering in front of it. Up here, it was quiet.

In this small square, between the patter of disregarded plastic furniture and the AC unit’s monotone droning, it was peaceful. And although Goldenrod didn’t stand still and time moved forward again — here, it was slow.

The dots had disappeared into the sky and the clouds and the lights. She was gone. I firmly prohibited any and all of those selfish, resentful thoughts that came creeping into my mind. Oh, no! I would be happy for her. She deserved nothing less.

Another breeze made me shiver. It would carry Jumpluff a long way, to wherever she was headed now. Hopefully to a place where she felt like she belonged.

Rustling movement broke the silence, as Leon wrapped his jacket around my shoulders.

“She’s gonna be alright,” he said, as he leaned back against the railing and I hummed an absent-minded response.

Of course she’d be alright. In the end, we all turn out alright. People meet, stay together for a while and then go their separate ways. That was the way life had always been. But if it was that, then why was it so hard to let them go?

I watched the bus hub on the street beneath and the people going about their busy ways. Tomorrow, we would join them. 9:48am, Line 32 to Ecruteak City centre.

Leon sighed. He was watching the street below as well.

“I’m proud of you for checking out that doctor,” he said after a while.

I nodded. So he had read it. Not that I didn’t place the letter conveniently for him to find. It was the least I could do, after the hoops he had jumped to get me an appointment in the first place.

“Asthma, huh?” Leon shuffled around a bit, leaning from one arm to the other. “From the fire in Violet? Or did you have it before already?”

“Violet.” My voice sounded dry, even though it shouldn’t. The knot in my throat kept my mouth from drying.

“I’m sorry.”

A long pause stretched between us. Even though those words couldn’t change anything, his genuine condolence felt good. As did the fact that he didn’t freak out. Maybe he had done that already. I sure did. Right now, I needed all my capacities to process the possibility of my lungs being impaired. For that, I was thankful that I didn’t have to regulate his feelings, too.

Something Leon had said a long time ago came back to my mind. “I am not a baby.” No, he wasn’t. Even if he hid it well most of the time.

“What now?”

“The next appointment is in two weeks,” I said. “In the meantime, I’ve got some exercises on how to breathe properly and a handful of emergency meds.”

“Here in Goldenrod?”

I nodded. “The bus connection is decent enough. And maybe later on, I can switch to a physician in Ecruteak.”

“Okay.” His voice sounded as strange as I felt — a mix between finality and transition.

Everything had been said between us. There was no reason to stay up here, in the icy winds of the evening. If only I found some words. Say something to hold on to this moment, to stop it — no, to stop Leon from leaving and to make him stay.

But what? We had gone over all things already. No, he wouldn’t stay in Ecruteak. Yes, he would try the League Challenge again. He had his reasons; I knew and understood them, and there was no further need to argue against them.

Sure, we’d got phones and exchanged numbers. ‘We’ll stay in contact.’ Another goodbye in instalments.

He needed space. And I did so too. There were days when hearing his voice alone made every hair on my body stand up. We could work. Hypothetically. But we were not made for each other. In practise, we did not work out. Not as friends, not even as acquaintances.

But then why was it so hard to leave right now? I just had to turn around and go. Jumpluff leaving was hard enough already. All I wanted was to curl up and wait out the night until tomorrow. Tomorrow, when there would be the next farewell.

The city below moved, but its colours blurred and lights numbed the longer I stared at it. A wet streak ran down my cheek, and only the cool breeze made me notice it. The tear rolled down, past my lips and to my chin, where it stayed for a second. Only when another tear joined it, it got too heavy and dropped down, glittering in the city lights before it vanished amongst them.

My heart started racing.

«Leave now! You don’t want him to—»

I turned away and had already taken half a step back, but Leon was faster, as always. He wrapped his arms around my back and pressed me against his chest, so close I could hear his heartbeat match mine.

Every inch of my body screamed.

Leon pressed his head against me, his body blocking out all the light and sound. In his darkness, I could feel his hair tangling in mine, brushing against me as it danced on the breeze. The city’s chaos being blocked out by his body, replaced with the silent sound of muscles moving on muscles. My tears being soaked up in the knitted jumper, my sobs absorbed. He held me, completely and utterly. If the ground would give way under my feet, I would still be safe in those arms. Those arms that closed tighter and tighter around me. Smothering.

My instincts told me to run. But why? Wasn’t this what I wanted? He was here, right? Would he stay if I asked him? Would he let me accompany him?

I could make it work. I could come undone in these arms, vanish into this darkness, dissolve into the silence. I could make it work. Even if it meant suffocating under this presence.

No.

It took more than a conscious effort to push against him and the lure of falling into him, losing myself in this darkness and crying my heart out. But I pushed him away, regardless. As soon as the neon lights hit my eyes, the temptation was gone.

Stumbling a few feet back, I couldn’t hold the cry in, even though I tried to catch it. Now all I could do was cover my mouth, hoping to save some of my fleeting dignity.

How dare he? How dare he even think about leaving me? Or make me feel this way? There it was — anger, my one and only friend. It gave me the strength to stand upright and stare daggers at Leon. Part of me knew it was wrong, but without it, without him holding me, I would crumble to the floor in a matter of seconds.

Leon backed off slowly. Whatever small spark of anger had been there, it was immediately quenched when I heard his voice, trembling and low.

“Sorry, I don’t know how else to—”

My body acted without my consent when it moved across the small space. My hands grabbed his head and pulled him down to me until his forehead pressed against mine.

“—comfort someone.”

“I know,” I whispered, a hot tear running down my cheek.

“Sorry. I’m so sorry, Hannah. I messed this up.”

My fingers dug deeper into his hair while I ever so slightly shook my head. He was warm to the touch. And even now, he drained the energy from me. The closer we were, the tireder I got. I shoved the thought aside. I didn’t want to think about it.

This one moment here — if only I could make it eternity. By now I was nothing more than a thin piece of paper, a leaf, brittle from the winter’s cold, dancing on the winds. If I let him go, I’d surely crumble to dust. But if I stayed, I would burn up in his heat.

«But please, please, please don’t leave!»

What was I supposed to do, alone in this strange world? Stay in bed again the entire day? And Leon? He would move on without me. He was doing better without me anyways; it seemed. What was I supposed to do, alone?

«Don’t leave! Don’t leave, Hana!»

I swallowed down a cry, hard. Why was I making things complicated again? This moment wasn’t eternity. It was just that — a moment. And it had already passed a few heartbeats ago; I was only clinging on to it in desperation.

Hesitantly, I opened my eyes and looked up. He was so close. Leon didn’t move, not an inch. Was he holding on to this moment as well? Closing his eyes to avoid seeing the inevitable, too?

The wind picked up and blew strands of his hair against me. Some of them got stuck on my wet cheeks, most of them only brushed my face.

But what if he didn’t leave? What if I stayed? It would be the same slow, agonising drain that left both of us weary and hollow. And none of us should have to go through that any longer. No, Leon was better off following his namesakes to wherever the wind carried them.

When I finally pulled away, I couldn’t stand to look at him. For one moment, I diverted all my attention to my breathing, making sure no other cry would escape me. Then I waited for my heartbeat to slow, before I whispered a simple “See you tomorrow” and turned to leave.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Hii back again

here are chapters 14-16

CHAPTER 14

The way the roof takes a beating I suspect something did the damage rather than nature. Having come up from a looong binge of horror/paranormal shows having something pace above the roof doing damage down and Morty’s proximity… I’m mildly suspicious it’s a less than a material threat.

Considering Hana’s trouble magnet status… whatever ‘mon did the damage was likely not mundane bare minimum… are they near Mortor town AKA Pryce?

Suspicions non withstanding I’ll leave it as “wow, nature is the worst alarm clock ever” and leave it at that until more data surfaces.

Alright, I lied…

A howl and thunder… on the legend area that thins the herd of options since Electric is so… scanty a type… Zapdos so says my Kanto happy self.. but considering that there were no wing beats and an emphasis of heaviness where birds are supposed to be light for flight... What’s the thunder dog's name from Jhoto, the wanderer? He’s heavy and clawed and if trained right very very fast and at least in Manga canon has many reasons not to trust anything unusual in his region and the hounds tend to be very proactive…

Heard… Hana got a bath, there are holes in the ceiling… I’m suspecting heard is too mild a word. And am left wondering over who is paying for what. Would acts of Legend violence on the property be considered an act of god? I can only imagine the insurance policies set in place.

Leon’s restless wanderlust is both lateral and horizontal? No wonder he got lost in those mountains. Also, you think the gaping holes and water gushing would have dissuaded Mr. Champ. Just a little bit. Ah well, someone’s got to be the restless catalyst. And worst-case scenario they might see the owner of their room coming and be able to book it faster…

And Hana is going to have to tie Leon down, I think both her and the reader know that look at this point. Wonder how long Morty’s appeals to sense are going to hold. Granted they could double battle, last two seconds instead of one if the Legend pauses to laugh at them before thunder shocking them because a thunderbolt would be too much energy....

And considering Hana raced into Galar’s… Rose born apocalypse…. without her team yeah… Morty’s hopes don’t hold a snowflake’s chance in Blaine’s gym...

How you describe Faulkner’s gym fits the soul silver/heart gold interpretation well. A raised void filled with birds. Nice to see Hana is realizing the Hop/Leon relationship in their actions.

Really I expect Hana is going to buy a tape recorder and record herself saying something to the effect of “not a minor” and have Rotom play it when Leon does his champ/older brother shtick…


love how Morty’s shading of things colored Hana’s expectations so very strongly. How old is Morty anyway that someone’s Hana's age looks like a little brat?

I’d say “go down with the ship” is definitely not valid considering Faulker is in a gym not a ship and that should give Hana all the moral wiggle room to whap Mr. Featherhead upside the head and drag him off. How she’s going to do that under Pidgeot’s eye though remains to be seen. Though if the birds were pragmatic it might turn away…

Or it could be stupider than Featherhead…

Have you read “Digger” by any chance? I’m imagining a particular wombat and her palm smacking her head when the other cast’s levels hit maximum idiocy level. She and Hana would get on well.

curious how she’s confusedly adding Hop to this… and replacing Hop as Morty… I wonder what subconscious juggling she had to do to make that work in her head.

Curious how Hop offers her more comfort while Leon more established and experienced is more of a burden to her. And now is not the time to be acrophobic Hana, the small dust mop of a bird can sorta ease the fall down… Actually, considering how small Piudgys are how does he ease someone down? Claws wrapped around the waistband and slowing the fall with frantic flaps? Grabbing an arm and pulling up madly (I can only imagine the dislocation bare minimum with that tactic)

I guess what I’m wondering is how would a pidgy helping someone fly work?

Made me think of the old Awkward Zombie comic about surf and wartortles…

You know I appreciate how you show the panic attack then show how to get someone through it without it being an utter disaster. Thank you for that…



Chapter 15

And Hana wakes up…I in a hospital perhaps, to Leon walking Faulker through gym leader/trainer one oh one. It says a lot that Faulkner hasn’t had this talk yet and he’s Hana's age though. I hope the kid's dad isn’t as bad as Norman (the protag’s parent of aqua/ruby) for example. Granted considering this is the ‘mon universe absent and meh parenting’s a norm.

How far back in time did you think you went Hana? Charcol? Though it could be an Arceus shout-out, or just her getting more and more fed up with her time displacement and venting a little in her head.

In which Leon’s perspective would snidely think “seeing red and only not screaming because you barely avoided pulling a Saint Lawrence”

He’s sinking more and more into his concerned brother slant… and I don’t know how Hana’s going to deal with it going forward. She was against it in the beginning and… yeah she’s going to be buying that recorder and giving Rotom a few pointers on his new attack of “press play”.

In which after Hana elaborates on her encounter with Ho-Oh and the boys start ripping their hair out thinking “how did we miss this?” I see a Leon heavy guilt trip if she lays it out enough for him to figure her “bad day” occurred on the day she’s listing and realizes she got accosted by a legend…

Like how Faulkners adult enough to actually get over his pride to approach Hana about the night despite his crippling personal loss.

It’s interesting seeing Jhoto/Kanto’s more honor traditional view clashing against Hana’s more pragmatic down to earth nature. She’s got a point, roasting over it isn’t a good reason and while not tactful she had a point,… but Faulkner’s got a point. Without any real ties to the culture that holds those beliefs, it lessens her impact of that obligation to her.

She can feel some of Featherhead’s pain but not all of it.

And it makes an interesting contrast, all the more vivid for them being very close in age yet though sharing some heritage them being from different worlds and the time displacement not being the crux of the character conflict.



Review of Chapter 16

Oh, gods, Leon and Eusine are cape bros. Hana is going to feel the brain cells making an escape in the back hatch if they bond hard over their outerwear. On the flip side, she’ll feel more sympathy for Leon and his aversion to plants/botany depending on how this plays….

Leon would be a chatty drunk, wouldn’t he? And if he’s bouncing off of a hyped-up Eusine whose going to be doubly hyped because LEGEND SIGHTING.... I feel for designated adult Morty. That must have been agony for the man. It’s less League/obligation that’s pulling Morty back but his last dredges of introversion calling his sanity back home where he will homebody and meditate and try to recover from all of Le’ and Es’s forced socialization.

I’m guessing either glaceon or Umbreon for this ‘vee… My theory for Dark type evolution goes like this. Since dark types actually evil in the Japanese translation… and Kanto Persian went from normal to dark in Alola for being over-pampered drama queens I can see it aligning with this ‘vee’s base personality.

Ice theory's less thought out and more of an ice queen with probable deforsting if they can get on eventually. Or the ‘vee freezing Hana out if she can’t.

Hopefully Leon will give her some pointers, as Hana’s base team seems obscenely mellow as personality conflict/strong emotions in a ‘mon seems to surprise her greatly and disarm her every time it comes up. She seems ill-equipped to handle drama/strong personalities overall… I’m wondering of most of her team was Lax/Gentle natured as a rule of thumb. Her reaction to Hopip’s battle happiness, Evee’s vanity and cattiness are examples of proof for this theory…

And from Leon’s robust nature I can only imagine him being a bit of a party animal and raising the roof of Galar’s stadium after a sweeping win against previous challenges… and the loser not minding as Leon would totally drag them into his shenanigans and on pub crawls to soothe any wounded feelings...

.. Leon’s.. trek answer seems a bit over optimistic.

And Hana pointing out the giant optimistic size hole…

Yeah, they are so on square one and not moving an inch, despite perversely traveling via train to a new destination…

I’m thinking the logical decision might be to appeal to a Legend to get their tickets home, but I wonder if it might happen naturally with Hana’s status as a Legend Magnet being in full play. I swear she’s the ANTI-ash, really she is.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
hi I come bearing gifts
chapter 17 line by line reaction

Chapter 17

No, way wait, if hopip wins the combat we can have fresh muton with breakfast… though considering typing they might be having toasted salad. Never mind Leon, try to help out I guess.

You know it’s interesting that Leon’s soccer skills are such a life saving grace for this team…
Though I shudder to see him doing it with a non-levitating magnamite.. or gulpin… or god a voltorb.

Now I can’t unsee it. Joy. It’d mark their paths with explosion craters and at least keep Leon from getting lost and perhaps inspire various Rangers ecetera to follow the chaos to gently “guild” the time displaced social nuisances towards their destination with minimal um… combat.. craters…

Alright stopping now.

At first I thought the Mareep had been one-shotted by a kick, and I’m imagining ‘hop with leaves puffed and tugged by the critters static ability… and making Leon’s hair poof in turn… when he flutters back. Sorry I’m in a mood I guess… And I guess I’m not stoping.

Oh well.

Wonder who’s getting the static themed lambchop once the fights over. Eevee is vicious, another point for dark methinks. Though how Eevee is not a wandering puff ball of brown dander… Backstabed by a scratch, ouch.

Hmm “flicked her nose up” is an odd way to phrase it, Perhaps it’s a regional thing but tipping seems a better, flicking, especially with a snout, seems a little odd.

Hmm ominous, “I’ve got you” and not answering with a yes or a no. It speaks of Hana rejecting Leon’s advancement as trying to be her friend /comrade in arms. I’m wondering and have been wondering since I thought over how she’s been describing Leon (more as an obligation to Hop who she adores, and an obligation that makes her feel unsafe, not be being menacing but by being, per her perspective, feckless, unnecessarily emotional, and whimsical) that if it becomes viable if Hana is going to leave Leon and not look back. This is one of the things that points me to that conclusion. Well we’ll see how it pans out.

Really I have to wonder why Hana even became a trainer, she seems to take no joy in it. At least it seems like that when juxtaposed to Leon’s exuberance. And while I get some of is schedule is to avoid tackling his grief head on there’s still a sense of enjoyment for him in it.

Really Hana you are not portraying strong confident person considering the opinion of a fox cub possibly getting bad is getting to you… How did she manage public performances? Hm I’m thinking Eevee’s just scratching a curiousity itch and wanting quiet company than camp roudy, but that’s just my honest opinion

I think Hana’s lack of expectation of response from the Eevee tells a lot of her as a trainer. If you don’t expect anything much beyond the bare minimum in interaction you don’t get a lot ack in return. It becomes easier to ascribe strong personality as a problem rather than a trait… It’s painting a bit of a picture, not a pretty one, but an educational one. And it makes her a better match for Eevee then she probably thinks.

Out of curiosity how did you learn so much about ballet and its attendant exercises and what not? What made you decide to make that such a keystone of Hana’s character? It’s been an interesting angle to say the least.

My money is on the Mareep getting lost and wandering after them a bit for a while before being re-acquired (I’ve a theory that Leon’s tendency to get lost might be catchy) lets see if I’m right.

Actually how Leon function reminds me of my own hiking/travel difficulties. Learned to pick something to keep at one side at all times and make a note of that thing where I can always see it. Or to literally mark the path where I’m going next. In urban settings google maps is a must though… It makes travel stressful as heck so I can feel for both Hana’s irritation at the trait and the pain of Leon’s navigational difficulties. Glad he’s able to enjoy things though as I’m usually so stressed I can’t because… well tiniest distraction the record wipes clean.

Seriously I can see Hana just marching to the league office when they get back, turning in her… well everything trainer related… and each step marked with a firm “nope..nope..nope” going “I’m out” when she gets to the desk and tossing everything down and one of the aides being like…

“um So… ah… what wsa your reason for resigning form the League challenge?”

“Sanity preservation.”

“We don’t have that reason code.”

“SANITY PRESERVATION”

“alright then…”

She’s all but oozing frusteration at this point and I’m finding the juxtapose between what she thinks of as “the right next step” her feelings, and her trying to supres those feelings as the build up for a perfect storm.

When this comes to a head I doubt it’s going to be pretty..
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Chapter 18

To quote potter it always looks cooler than it actually in person.

Hana’s learning this now.. a bit shocking, but alright.

I guess guess the move would be a more trainer centric eye spy and easy to handle while on foot. Though I suggest Hana make it a neon sign, a big bright one, les likely to lose it. Though why she’d agree to toss up “navigation rights”

They’re going to get lsot, aren’t they?

Sighs.

It’s like Ash got spliced His lack of direction and enthusiasm to Leonand his Legend magnet and bad luck to Hana…

You know I’m a little suspicious that Leon can’t dance. I wonder if Hana would be going out of her way to offer lessons if they got along better.

Nice showing of the feral side of the ‘mon verse. Though they might be training their team up, the beasts around them see their catches/team mates as “dinner”. I’m wondering how often Leon dealt with it. And now I feel for bugsy. He’d probably have to repace his kakuna once a week.

Huh Hana is gifting Leon her ulcer in the making by aking over his reckless title. The convo after is going to be interesting…. Especially since she’s getting fished out by the man.

I’m forgetting her previous encounter with Ken. Like utterly forgetting… So I’m sharing Leon’s confusion here. And he’s barely holding in his hot headed “what the heck were you thinking” rant by the skin of his teeth. And he’s got a Furret boa now… I’m imagining his league gear from Galar and thinking that Furret would be right at home as Leon’s animate accessory for the next league battle…
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Chapter 20 review

Really poor directional sense and bad placement of self, and a perchance for climbing, I’m starting to wonder if the man’s a cat. All we’d have to do is confirm a fear of water then we can toss another one on the headcanon pile. And to commemorate the event I will see if I can find a picture of Leon with cat ears on.

“catching up” while playing log-in-the-path? I suppose that’s my cat’s justification as he wraps around my foot and pretends he wasn’t lonely/needy, not really, just there doing… things...

I was a bit confused as to Mareep’s confusion/location and Leon’s activities besides being low enough for Hana to trip over. The light is shed… the order was a bit odd and it made for a disjointed reading. You’ve had episodes where you explain things in bits and bobs but the order of how you thread it along leads to confusion. This was probably the most obvious sample I could offer…

My confusion cleared up when Hana suggests not doing push ups with weights… that’s where it cleared up, but before that point I had no clue.

And I’m imagining and exercising Leon with hair frizzing due to Mar’s static at this point.

Smart sheep wanting to dodge out of the way of a pending explosion. And please tell me Leon’s not exercising on his bad arm…. And he is… agreeing with Hana’s tone at this point.

I don’t know if it’s a macho thing or an avoidance but punishing self thing, or Leon being a ditz. I’m leaning against the ditz part because he’s not pulling an “oh I forgot” card when called out to the carpet by Hana.

Because she can Leon, as well as send the other guy for an invisible shirt, though if Hana doesn’t think that Leon hasn’t dealt with a fan before….even if it’s a mildly creeper fan. And I don’t think Hana’s got any calls to be interfering, Leon’s an adult and whatever his preferences are are kinda his business here. Granted my irritation soften a bit when she confessed to auto modeling to girl coding… They really should just strive to let it go and move on, hopefully, they do.

Nah they’re going headfirst into an emotional quagmire, a few toes in then hit the wall of both being stubborn and poor at communication… and you wonder why Sword Shield got so far along as it did with these two “protagonists” going against Rose…

“Get back to Normal” my… it’s more likely things are going to get worse when the reality kicks them both in the teeth but we’ll see how close or far off Hana’s expectations are next update.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
more reviews for 21 and 22
Chapter 21


How do you argue with a stanima reserve? I’ve grumbled at the green stamina wheel in BOTW as it’s given out while gliding over an encampment or other, but that’s different.

Subtle Leon’s not, I wonder if he ran into poison oak or something? Oh wait, itching under the cast? Mildly ominous that.

Part of me thinks they need to just drop the facades and try to deal with things privately… well semi privately since they are on a route and all. But both of them are champs at masking and evasion and stonewall so I suspect it’s not going to go down in a controlled… anything at this point.

Which is ironic because their tactics are about controlling but ultimately lead to an utter lack of it…

Huh so he finally asked after the girl code huh? How could he not have… well he’s got a brother so he might decide it’s mildly comparable. And yes Leon, everyone is twelve mentally at least. As they dig deeper into the gender differences, well it’s a grand distraction though how Leon's not had this convo with someone before this to have basic etiquette… because how he’s walking into the most basic pitfalls speaks of some inexperience here…

It’s a catch 22 for Leon really. He has to do things to look good, even controlled eating and exercises for maxing out is charisma, but it’s not something he enjoys, but to capitalize on his fame/champ status he has to do it to control his looks.… it’s a nasty bit of cyclical situation and lifestyle choices that can get worse as time wears on. And it’s skating right over his head a bit as to how it could be impacting him and turning outward in his wrong assumptions and concerns for Hana. Curious how Hana’s aware to see the problem for both of them/

Exploring the cost of fame and Hana realizing what she’s sotra in for if she wins is an interesting slant and something I wondered this fic would get into. I’m liking how you dig into it and am amazed that my playful jab of her baling might actually carry some weight.

Hmm would anti-wingman translate to dragapult in ‘mon geek speech?

Ung yeah Hana’s having to tackle gender/racial stereotyping. At least Leon’s sympathetic. And yes Hana, everything is pokemon battles to the man. It’s part of his charm.

And the “how did I get caught” line repeated twice, I think that’s an accident…

Well Leon did warn him.

And I suspect Hanas going to mop the floor with Eevee we’ll see. Curious how she’s syncing so well with Eevee. It was something I suspected to be happening but wasn’t being shown before this point so it was a bit of a surprise.

Review of Chapter 22


Now Hana you’re supposed to take advantage of this to pinch, poke or prod the person wondering about hallucination. It’s part venting part tradition, and wholly reality affirming.

Though them not anticipating weather changes (it’s October, the weather gets dodgy in autumn, and winter can kick in early depending on where they’re at. Granted the surprise does show the somewhat sheltered nature of the Galar region. After all, they fenced off most of their “wild” areas and have cities/towns in easy access almost at all times. Jhoto’s pretty rugged in comparison and so the surprise is understandable)

So it was the Friday Lapras event, I wondered.

Hm it’s curious, how Hana mentally derides Leon’s drive to go home, his reckless go-go mentality but in the privacy of Hana’s mind she’s not that different.

And it’s interesting to see the contrast in Leon and Hop Hops teasing, Leon’s pointing out that it can cause problems professionally and personally (with Hana’s ‘mon).

I suspect she’s holding back because she’s terrified of being open due to her trauma/past but hey reader interpretations, right?

Nice use of transition, using Leon as a wall to chop the text down, it adds a bit of levity to the moment and confirms, the wise old poke’ master he might be but he’s still something of a ditz.

And the turnaround where we slide from hiking to the dawning realization that, for them, this feels like this is it. Step two to the grand plan or loss of all steps forward.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Chapter 23 review

The introduction made me think that Leon was going to narratively lead the charge. But it swapped to Hana who is watching the last hit land.

Now part of me wonders if Leon brings his team back to his present time if there might be a reversal of their petrification. But that’s a question for so much later. I’m just glad he didn’t hare out into the wilderness and downfall at the moment, so the fallout begins.

It’s a wonder the canon trainers even find Kurt at the bottom of the well it’s so out of the way. Laughs, Hana is such a city slicker, the “only” thing she recognizes the tractor. I’m imagining her reaction if she’s dropped into an “Arceus” timeline instead and imagining her head exploding as a result… And poor Rotom, the tech withdrawal must be beyond words.

Granted we haven’t seen him/them since the battle in the mines with Mr. Pokemon… it’s been a while…

It’s a kind of denial, thinking that one day will make a difference, small inconveniences, even mild ones can take a day or so step back to get perspective… but Leon’s whole world got crashed around his ears hence my view on Hana being… at best, wildly optimistic.

Thoughtful of her willing to risk waking him up to save one of his few momentoes. And I can understand her needing some distance to deal with Leon’s state as well as her own revelation that the man’s a friend rather than an obligation… But on the other hand it’s like… you just were thinking aboug how he needed support and you’re leaving…

I swear Hana’s a poster child of mix messages.

I honestly expected Hopip to go through a winter/hibernation, but the mental image of her chilling in a pot by a window with a snowy view is amusing. Oh my god is tis movie the equivalent to a hallmark film.. it sounds just like… (shuffles off to get sap removal) yeah it is.

And I think Leon unraveling the yarn fo attention is half a point for the cat theory. Therefore I’m spared a cat’leon picture search for now…

I’m of mixed feelings on Han’s honesty, a comforting lie that Leon can pull apart later and realize as such would be such a mercy, but its so against Hana’s nature and rubs against her trauma so she can’t… and she realized a bit too late that she can’t offer that comfort, not now anyway…

Hm I hadn’t imagined Morty stepping up to be both their comforters at this time, but he’s definitely stepping up to the plate, even if he is (roundabout) making Hana cuddle up with the lingo of her heritage as the “price” for keeping in contact with him.

Yeah definitely not linear, and the “steps” are more a lie than anything else where they bundle themselves into pairs and take you on with flying tackles…



Huh so Morty will roundabout ask for spoilers when facing personal life-altering decisions.. roundabout. Or rather ask for a sounding board… though “spoilers” and her having an idea how things pan out sorta throws a few curveballs into free will if a future traveler tosses everything into predetermination… and that might be going a bit too deep.

Oh god, Lance being mobile, might mean another cape’bro fest, though with Leon’s mental state and.. yeah it can go so long. Also might mean that the anime/manga timelines are coming to a head since Lance being active kicked in around the Lake incident.

So Hana’s finally starting to realize everything she’s been quietly grieving over the last few… weeks or so. It’s catching up, while Leon’s at his lowest point… This is looking more ominous by the moment and I do not look forward to them pinging off of each other.

(doing this a bit out of order... here's chapter 25 will do chapter 24 when I find it again)

Chapter 25 REVIEW

Seeing even this one-sided interaction between Hana and her mother (or rather what Hana believes are her mother’s expectations) is very eye-opening and explains so much.

So when will Morty be elevated to sainthood?. Juggling his spiritual, league, and therapy sessions with the displaced Galarians (and his friendships as well, for an introvert that’s always a trial).

Um… Leon in his depressive state and deep in his grief is more fun than… ouch that’s a tagline to discourage visiting if I ever heard one. Huh it’s an interesting variable of culture clash really, I'm used to my “regions” method of family/friends offering material support and distance more than anything.. to have that experience contrast against another culture’s that’s moto seems to be “don’t ask don’t tell” with a skien of what seems a bit of racism as well… I’m now imagining furret, mareep, hopip’s pot and Leon being ensconced in adlibbed novice scarfs, well it made Hana’s xmas shopping easier.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Chapter 24 REVIEW

Really Hana poking at his relaxation coping methods a bit low ms. Hallmark movie-a-thon…

And being trapped with each other, short supplies and no real ability to get out is going to make things so much worse, like a pressure cooker, I suspect a lot I going to hit the fan at this point.

“Don’t worry is always the prefix of some sort of crisis… at least in my experience…

And it’s proved right. Fast.

Ice beam, with Hana’s bad luck and sudden winter weather shift, I call an articuno sighting…

Seriously she’s going to find Celebi in a field of flowers at this point on her walking route.

Love how Eevee’s got a firmly established “front” peas in a pod those two.

Let? There’s no let, Hopip smelled the battle through her roots and came out swinging. Like always.

Cleared skies but now view on the attacker, ominous. Wonder if Hana will recognize the ‘cuno considering Galar’s is.. something else.

Hmm how and why would a legend brave a cave for a bit of lochness-inspired escargot? The back and forth and the avian clearly playing with prey and defenders definitely adds a sinister shade to what started out looking like a more feral exchange. While the ‘cuno might be hungry the playing with the others not meant to be eaten puts me to mind of the crew my version of Celebi runs with in Transversal. Breaking the rules of physics on a whim and taking what they want because they can…

I love how in the middle of a multi mon on Legend scuffle Hana’s house plant sasses in the most immature way possible and she just rolls with it. She’s getting less shocked by her ‘mons personalities perhaps. I sorta wonder how that’s going to bleed with her team mechanics when she gets back to Galar?

Wondering if that seed wasn’t a worry seed.

The back and forth of the fight, you can see it almost as a list, bopping back and forth between each key player and victim in the battle, I was wondering how you prioritized who does what and when. I usually write everyone out and then cut and paste the parts together that seem to mesh and was wondering about your method.


And after the battle, or at least during its lull, Hana is going to drag Leon out on the carpet. While I don’t totally agree with the town/Kurt making Lapras Leon’s issue (the man has issues enough if he’s self-destructing so obviously/openly) or how they’re handling in making it Hana’s problem (when she is not ok enough to deal with he own plate much less Leons) it does wonders for building tension.



I also vote the Galar trainers get their selves patched up enough to get somewhere safer where they can start getting treatment for their issues, Ilex was doing the bare minimum, and the longer they stay the more damaged I suspect Leon and perhaps Hana will become for the experience.
 

Spiteful Murkrow

Busy Writing Stories I Want to Read
Pronouns
He/Him/His
Partners
  1. nidoran-f
  2. druddigon
  3. swellow
  4. lugia
  5. quilava-fobbie
  6. sneasel-kate
  7. heliolisk-fobbie
Heya, going around to try and knock out some people on my hitlist of “people to review” who have been waiting for a bit longer than others, so that takes me here to -checks notes- a time travel story involving Leon and a Galar PC, huh? That one’s certainly different.

But hey, this is the right time to put some feelers out to check out things that are a bit different or off-beat from what I’d normally be looking at, so let’s just dive right in and see how the first few chapters of your story roll:

Chapter 1

Everything went by so fast. Eternatus’s unending body raced upwards, squirming as it was devoured by this abyss of light.

As did I.

Wow, just cutting right to the chase for that opening, huh? Well if nothing else, you can’t say that it’s boring. ^^

A hand was holding me tight. But even this hand couldn’t protect me from the gravity, magnified tenfold here in this space between dimensions. Its force was all-consuming. It had already erased any and all sounds and now even threatened to pull in the light that seeped out of the cracks in reality.

… D-Max Eternatus’ or another person’s? Since D-Max Eternatus technically is a hand, so…

And then I collided with its centre. I could feel every bone, every muscle, every cell of my body scream when the force suddenly reversed — and then vanished. In its place were fragments of a blue sky, clouds and sound.

… Is this the part where Leon gets yeeted through time? Since this sure felt like the part where Leon gets yeeted through time.

Eternatus didn’t escape it. Its body, its thousands upon thousands of black links over the red stream of pure energy, reaching from here to eternity, had come to an end. Once more, it reached out for me, its five fingered claw so close I could almost touch it. For a moment, I saw the true potential of this destructive force flash before me.

… Wait, what exactly did Leon see there again? Like maybe there’s a story reason for it, but it feels a little weird to talk about “the true potential” of a destructive force without seeing something get set on fire or blow up or something.

I dunno, maybe I’m overthinking it.

Another arm was closing around my waist, pressing my back against a warm chest. Then Eternatus’s hand snapped closed, vanishing into the rift. The sound. The overwhelming sound of air rushed past my ears. A body curled itself around me like a protective shell. Purple strands of hair in the corner of my eyes.

I might be tripping, but this paragraph feels weirdly like it’s written in present tense while everything from the narration thus far has been written in “five seconds ago” past tense, including the two short paragraphs right after this. I left some suggested tweaks to keep things a bit more consistent on that front.

Then we hit the ground.

«Hop!»

Well that’s quite an opening there. Let’s see what on earth we’re getting into once the dust settles.

Somehow, I managed to stay awake after the impact.

Oh, so it’s:

487.jpg


But in Leon’s head.

Leon lay next to me on the ground, his arm still around my ribcage. He was breathing, and that had to suffice for now. I mustered up my last strength to roll over, away from him and his warmth, into the cold, wet grass.

Scratch that about “in Leon’s head”, guess this is Hanako’s PoV we’re seeing things through here.

«Why did he have to go back? He had almost made it to safety. Why?»

Unless if Leon and Hanako are getting amnesia’d as a plot device, I kinda wonder if we should’ve gotten more info filled in about where they were and what roughly was happening right beforehand since it can help the audience visualize things indirectly through something as simple as “We were in Macro Cosmos’ power plant” since people already have a pre-baked image of that from the game.

A Skwovet was trying to pull something out of his pockets, but I couldn’t shoo it away anymore. A coppery taste spread from somewhere between my tongue and my nose.

That isn’t a good sign, since I’m pretty sure that means Hanako’s bleeding right now. .-.

Above us, the rift in the blue sky was only a faint scar, the stream of light pouring out of it growing smaller and smaller while my world faded into darkness.

Narrator:
:unownF:

Hanako: “There’s thirty chapters of this story! I’m not dying here just yet!”
:eltywtf:


The next time I woke up, the grass had dried, and the haulms swayed on a chill breeze, creating a rustling melody. The pain that had surged through me had died down to dull pulses. Something heavy covered my entire body, keeping me safe.

Wait, the what now-?

… Oh, so that’s a ‘haulm’, TIL. Though I wonder if something like “stems” would’ve been a better word choice since it means the same as how you’re using “haulm” here and is a lot more widely known.

Though eh, I won’t sweat it too much. Since for all I know, the narrator at the moment is big on botany such that ‘haulm’ would be a reflexive word choice.

It was quiet around me, and the air smelled of summer ferns and an impending break in the weather. No Darkest Day, no destroyed Hammerlocke. We were in a forest, Whimsicott and the team probably had fun somewhere, warming their leaves in the sun.

:copyka2~1:


Boy was that Galar that Leon left behind really a mess. So that’s what happens when you fall short of being able to smack down the Hand Dragon in this setting, huh?

Something heavy covered me…

Within one second, I was wide awake. I shot up, tumbling a few feet away from the foreign feeling before my brain kicked in.

I stared at the fleecy thing while my eyes still fought against the dizziness. This was Leon’s coat, right? There could only be so many ugly capes around.

To be fair, it’d have been a solid 8/10 cape without all the ugly corporate logos scattered all around. I’ll have to give Lance props for never letting his own cape become a massive billboard.

When I reached out to check, the sharp pain around my ribcage flared up again. I took a conscious, deep breath while I turned the coat around. No broken ribs. And this was definitely the Champion’s coat, with all his sponsors and whatnot.

Wonder how Leon’s feeling about those logos of Macro Cosmos and its various subsidiaries on that thing right about now. Assuming he’s not unconscious at the moment.

But where was he? Or where was I, for that matter? How did I end up in a clearing in the middle of a forest?

confused-bird.gif


Cautiously, I stood up and twisted my ankles and joints. My back protested every move and the scrapes on my arms and legs burned under my torn clothes, but nothing seemed to be broken.

Chairman Rose. Darkest Day. Hammerlocke. The falling sky. Hop!

Hanako: “... Actually, wait. Why isn’t there more stuff on fire and dark and ominous clouds everywhere right now? It’s not as if Eternatus went anywhere… right?” .-.

«Okay. Okay. Everything’s alright. Deep breath in, count to ten. There’s nothing that can’t be solved. You just need to keep cool.»

Narrator: “She’s not keeping cool.”

Even though the wave of panic subsided at the count of seven, I continued up to ten and finished the exercise with a deep breath out. I needed a plan.

Hop was in Hammerlocke. To get to Hammerlocke, I needed to get out of this forest first. And before I could get out of this forest, I’d have to find Leon. Hop would have me if I left him here. So, best to call him. Hop gave me his number for emergencies, after all.

If the title is how far back those two got thrown back, that’s going to be a real trip once Hanako realizes that she’s now going around at least 10 years before Hop was born. Keeping my eyes out for how that inevitable moment plays out.

Without even opening my eyes, I reached for the back pocket of my pants to my Rotom-Phone. Another deep breath, then I opened my eyes and — the screen was cracked! Not only that, the entire case was bent. And something else: the lower side of the phone was… petrified? It looked like someone had made a tombstone for my deceased phone and stopped halfway through.

Okay,
:unownF:
for real this time. Though it’s not as if that thing would magically have worked 26 years before the present day since it’s highly unlikely there would’ve been mobile carriers that supported Rotom-Phones, or smartphones at large.

I pressed the on-button and was relieved to see at least a few screen-cells flicker. My relief was short-lived, however, because the next thing I saw was Rotom’s scared face as it tried to get out of the device.

Oh, well. Never mind then. Rotom is still alive after all.

“Hana! It’s got the case too!” Rotom’s distorted voice sounded through the speakers. Now I felt it as well: While in my hand, my phone started turning to stone. Rotom squeezed in a corner as, along the cracks, the display turned to solid granite.

Well, nevermind then.
:copyka2~1:


“Ah! Don’t worry, I’m here!” I fidgeted the phone around until I found a little slit. Jamming my fingernails between the casing and the back-cover, I pulled as hard as I could, trying to remove it.

«Damn Macro Cosmos and their quality control,» I thought as I struggled against the strong glue. Rotom wailed on the inside, panicking. I had to press it to the ground with one foot and pull with both arms, but finally, the back cover cracked open.

That’s… not a product of MC’s quality control. That sounds more like time itself trying to get rid of something that doesn’t belong there.

Though then again, you never know considering how MC thought it was a good idea to try and power Galar with an energy source that could’ve caused a localized apocalypse if things went sideways.
:copyka~1:


I fell over backwards into the grass and now the sores on my chest screamed at me, but I held a shaking Rotom in my arms. Its body, covered in ectoplasm, felt weirdly cold and gave me slight shocks as it pressed against my chest.

Rotom:
:lagiCri:

Hanako: “It’s alright. It’s all over now. I hope.”

“What was that?!” Rotom’s own voice was even higher than what I usually heard through the speakers.

“I— I don’t know. I wanted to ask you,” I replied.

“That grey… thing… mess… consumed my circuits. The motherboard — gone, just like that! And then it wanted to eat me! It was so scary!” Rotom hugged my face, sending electricity down my entire body.

Wow, I was joking with that last cutaway gag, but I figured Rotom would be shaken up from what was going on. Though sounds like Dialga/time itself really did have it out for that phone.

“It’s okay. You didn’t die!” I struggled to get the tiny ghost away from me. “Now calm down, please!” One last shock made my hair stand up, then Rotom let go of me.

“Right! What’s the thing you always say? One deep breath?” The small pokemon closed its eyes and imitated breathing in.

“Yes. And count to ten.”

… Wait, Rotom as electric ghost thingies can breathe? .-.

While Rotom counted, I got to my feet and picked up the phone. By now it had fully turned into stone and weighed heavy in my hand. So much for calling for help.

I mean, even if it didn’t become a stony paperweight, it’s not as if you were going to get reception 26 years in the past, so…

… Well unless Arceus stepped in and made your phone magically work like in PLA, which it obviously didn’t here.

The surrounding woods were thick and didn’t show signs of much human interference. The grass in this tiny clearing was almost knee high, except where our bodies had lain. Deeper into the forest, the grass gave way to sparse undergrowth, which itself gave way to nothing but moss covering the roots of the gigantic trees. Sunlight broke through the canopy and formed spears of light piercing the humid air. There was the bitter smell of late summer on the wind, mixed in with the sweet scent of cypresses as a gust blew the last lingering warmth away.

«Deep breath in. Find Leon. Then find your way home.»

… Wait, but if Hanako is here on her own, wouldn’t it just be her body that left an impression? Since it’s her and Rotom, who was in a phone at the time and feels weird to talk about having a “body” in that state.

That said, this is some lovely imagery here. Wonder if Hanako got dumped in those woods right outside of Postwick, since the description kinda reminds me of them.

“You don’t know by chance where we are, do you?” I asked, looking around.

“Nine. Ten. No, sorry. All my map material is in there.” Rotom pointed at the petrified phone.

Hanako: “... Fantastic.” -_-;

“That’s what I feared,” I sighed and picked up the coat. “Come on, looks like we have to find our way ourselves then.”

Rotom gave an approving jingle as I followed the track of flattened grass and undergrowth deeper into the forest.

Would recommend breaking this one paragraph up into two smaller ones.

“You know what’s strange?” Rotom mused after a while.

“Hm?”

“I can’t pick up any mobile signal here.”

Yeah, I called it. Though shouldn’t that have been “couldn’t pick up any mobile signal here” given that Rotom is no longer inside their phone that’s now a lawn ornament? Or are Rotom just sensitive to whatever EM frequency band is used for mobile telephony in this setting?

“Leon! Over here!” I yelled.

Leon stood on top of a small height, trying to orient himself. A fruitless task, as proven by the many circles I had followed to find him. As soon as he heard his name, he waved at me and then half ran, half jumped down the root-streaked, mossy ground. «Watch out!» I wanted to shout, but somehow he managed to land every jump perfectly.

Oh right, Leon canonically has a sense of direction that makes Ampharos from PSMD look like a savvy navigator. I actually briefly forgot about that one, but it’s a nice little bit of attention to detail.

“Hey Hana! Sorry, I didn’t mean to go out that far,” he said, giving me an apologetic smile. Then, without even standing still for a single breath, he turned around, ran a few steps, and once again looked around the forest. “I think you’re better than me at doing this… How do we get out of here?”

I don’t suppose that Hanako knows about how all things constant, moss tends to grow on the northern sides of trees in the northern hemisphere since there’s less sunlight from there, right? Since I didn’t exactly get an “outdoorsy person” vibe from her.

Unsure how to respond, I could only get out a weak “Ahm” before he continued.

Yeah, I thought so.

“Hop told me you’re always the one with the plans.” He spun around and gave me another wide smile. “Don’t let me down here, okay?” I watched him as he randomly decided on a route he had not yet tried.

Hanako: “Great, no pressure there.”
:ohnowen:


“Is everything okay?” I asked, looking at his torn leggings and the scrapes on his arm.

“Everything’s fine.”

I took another long look at him. He held his right arm in a slightly more protective position than his left. And he had appeared to be a bit paler than usual. Maybe the fall hadn’t been so gentle on him after all. The fall and, well—

“Are you sure?”

I kinda wonder if Hanako should’ve noticed this before she spoke up, since it feels a little weird to have Hanako abruptly get concerned and then after the fact reveal that Leon’s been a bit roughed up as opposed to the other way around.

Leon spun around with an intensity that made me jump half a step back. “Yes I am!” he screamed, his golden eyes glinting dangerously.

e02e5ffb5f980cd8262cf7f0ae00a4a9_press-x-to-doubt-memes-memesuper-la-noire-doubt-meme_419-238.jpg


For a moment, the forest fell silent.

“Yes I am! You know what’s not? Everything else! Somewhere out there something’s wrecking Hammerlocke! I should be there, fightin’ it. But I’m in the middle of goddamn nowhere! Somethin’ about Dynamax I don’t even understand!” Leon was furious in a way I’ve never seen or imagined him. “Can’t even call a cab ‘cause my phone’s broken. And worst of all—” He reached for his waist bag and I instinctively took a step back. “This!”

Even if this is a bit coarser than we ever see Leon canonically, something about this just feels really plausible for that sense of “frustrated and protective” vibes it gives off for a Champion who’s got the knowledge that they fell short and things are presently going sideways without them being able to do anything.

So congrats on expanding Leon’s character in a way that still feels like it has continuity with what we’ve seen of him officially.

I gasped. In Leon’s outstretched hand was a pokeball, often used and now turned solid grey, petrified like my phone.

Oh. Well now. That is a terrible omen for how all of these two’s Pokémon are faring right now.
:wtfuckle:


«I am so sorry,» was the first thought shooting through my head, but Leon’s shaking anger had me fall silent. I watched him press the ball’s middle button over and over again, to no avail. Finally, he clenched his hand around it until his knuckles appeared white under his bronze skin.

This… also has happened to Hanako’s Pokémon as well, hasn’t it?

“Know what? Wait here, if you want. I’m gonna find a solution for this.” With this, he turned around and sprinted off. A moment later, he was gone.

de7.png


I had stared into the woods for a good while, when I felt my hands tremble. Absent-mindedly, I began twisting my ankle. An old stretching pattern that was firmly rooted in my memory. Deep breath in.

That… that was scary,” Rotom mumbled.

Not sure if Rotom’s talking about almost-petrification or Leon’s mood there. Though I guess it works both ways.

«Could I have handled that better somehow? Deep breath out. Probably. But how? Deep breath in. How…»

:blobyes:


Cold drops of rain fell heavy to the ground and onto my back and finally broke my wandering thoughts. No matter the state he was in, Leon would get lost. I needed to find him. That was the least I could do now.

I counted to ten, just so I knew I wasn’t rushing things. Then I ran in the direction he went.

Considering how Leon has a penchant for getting lost, I’m not sure how well-advised this all was on your part, Hanako. ^^;

… Though wait, how have we not gotten an explicit namedrop about Hanako from the story all this time anyways?

The rain had turned the moss into slippery sponges and the canopy of trees into a torn umbrella, regularly showering me in cold rain water while my shoes struggled to keep their grip.

Thankfully, the torn moss on the wet rocks made it easier to follow Leon’s traces. I almost expected to find him in a fissure between the boulders and giant roots that now made up most of the uphill track. But despite a few places where a long streak of moss had been torn from its footing, he seemed to have made it through this treacherous part just fine.

That’s going to wind up happening at some point in this story, isn’t it?

After falling once and slipping countless other times myself, I finally made it to the top of the hill, where a small, man-made path ran along the crest’s ridge.

The footprints were harder to follow on the gravel, but I didn’t have to search any further. Huddled up against a tree, his feet tucked up to his chest and his head resting on his knees, was Galar’s Champion. He didn’t seem to have noticed me. A fresh streak of grass and blood ran along the side of his white pants. His snapback rested by his side. By now his hair was soaked, turning its usual purple colour almost to black. Cautiously, I took a step forward.

“Hey,” I whispered. He looked up, still pale. “I’m sorry.”

Well, Leon’s certainly taking Charizard getting stoned well™ right about now. .-.

… Not that I fault him too badly given that he and his fire lizard are just a step below being conjoined twins from how they’re depicted in official media.

Our eyes met briefly before he averted his gaze. His golden eyes still had their glow, but his radiance was missing. He motioned me to sit next to him.

“Here!” I held his cloak in front of his face and for the first time, he looked at it. He hesitated for a heartbeat before taking it.

… How is that thing not soaked and dripping water right about now? ^^;

“Thanks.” He struggled to unfold the bulky thing with one hand, and the sudden activity seemed to have broken his apathy. I was relieved to see some energy coming back into him. After all, that was the Leon I knew from back when Hop and I used to have our re-watch marathons of his brother’s old matches.

Oh, so Hanako really is the Galar protag in this story’s continuity.

“Here, let me help you,” I gave in. “How do you want it?” It took us a while, but we finally had it over his head.

“You don’t have to apologise to me,” he said.

He held
the cape up with his wounded arm, again motioning me to sit next to him. I recognised his blatant attempt at blackmailing, but gave in. For the next few seconds, I endured his struggle to cover me with his cloak until it surrounded us both like a blanket.

Another spot where I’d recommend splitting the paragraph up again.

“There was no reason for me to yell at you,” he said. Now that he had nothing to do, he kept himself busy by looking everywhere else — the cloak, his shoes, the path — but me.

“It’s okay.”

I… weirdly did not get a strong sense of Hanako being super bothered by that moment earlier, though I suppose Leon wasn’t wrong about him yelling at her. It might have made sense to play up the whole “whoa”-ness of that encounter a bit harder if you ever go back to add further revisions.

“No, it’s not,” Leon sighed. His voice sounded exhausted yet stern. “I messed up, I really did. As Champ and… and, well, as Leon. That’s all there is to it.” He turned his head, looking me straight in the eyes. “I hope you can accept my apology. I’ll make sure it never happens again.

“O— Of course,” I stumbled. The sudden intensity of his expression caught me off guard.

“Thank you.” He turned back, relaxing a bit.

Considering the what the text had to imply about the absolute state of Hammerlocke before you got yeeted to this forest, I’m not sure it’s safe to assume there will be an opportunity to fall short ‘again’. ^^;

We watched the rain pour down for a while. Rotom had by now left my waist bag and was enjoying being massaged by Leon.

If this is an ongoing thing for Rotom, I think you want the “was [verb]ing” construction, since otherwise it makes it sound like Rotom was massaged and then it ended.

I tucked my legs under my body, getting a bit of distance between him and me, and started picking at my torn tights. For a moment, all the racing thoughts of the last hour were gone, and only the sound of the rain hitting the ground and leaves around us remained.

Turned out, Leon’s cloak was an excellent raincoat.

Guess I was wrong about it getting soaked. Though I suppose it’d make sense that Leon invested in a cape that wouldn’t be water-absorbent.

After a while, I looked over at Leon. He was ruffling Rotom’s plasmatic mantle, his thoughts who-knows-where. Still in his lap was that petrified pokeball.

IMO, it probably makes sense to be unambiguous here about the pronoun in at least one place and just flatly say “Leon”.

“Charizard?” I asked.

Leon just nodded. He handed me the ball. It lay heavy in my hand; cold, even though his body should have kept it warm.

:uhhh:


Yeah, I stand by that comment about no wonder this guy has been so depressed and on-edge, since this is probably just a tiny step below finding Hop as a lawn ornament in terms of feeling for Leon right now.

“It’s the same with Aegislash and the others,” he said, his voice hollow. I was by far not an expert on pokeballs, but judging from what Rotom told me, this looked grim. “What about yours?”

“I’ve left them with Hop, before you… you know.” Silence.

Wow, that’s somehow even worse than what happened here with Leon’s Pokémon, since for all we know they and Hop have been vaporized. .-.

“I’m so sorry,” I finally whispered. For a moment Leon didn’t react at all, then he shrugged.

Now I understood how utterly useless any ‘sorry’ sounded. Leon had been with these pokemon for over a decade and stood undefeated with them for almost as long. I had only started training pokemon roughly a year ago and couldn’t imagine a world without my team. To lose Pokémon who had friends for such a long time… At least I knew mine were safe back in Hammerlocke. Or—

That’s a bold assumption if I ever heard one given that you explicitly stated in narration that Hammerlocke was destroyed the last time you saw it, Hanako.

«No, no. Deep breath in. Count to ten. I’ve found Leon. Now the next step is to get out of here.»

Yeah, there’s the “well, crap” realization that I was expecting there.

I looked at Charizard’s pokeball before handing it back. “I’m sure someone knows what to do about that. If not the Nurses Joy, then Professor Magnolia.”

bender-laughing.gif


Hon, it’s literally petrified. Considering the way Rotom was freaking out when your phone was getting stoned, Leon’s Charizard’s in all likelihood dead right now.

Leon sighed. “How do you do that?” He was still staring at the path. “How can you stay this calm?” He paused for a moment, then suddenly jolted back into an upright position. “I could scream right now if I wasn’t actively calming myself down! Argh!” He gave a frustrated groan, then slumped back against the tree.

I… kinda wonder if this block should’ve been broken up into at least 2 paragraphs. Like I know you do this whole mix of dialogue and description sometimes, but for whatever reason, it looks kinda jarring here in particular.

Carefully, I extended my legs again. They hurt from the scrapes and bruises, and I focused on the movements of my toes when I wiggled my feet. The ridiculousness of the situation forced a smile onto my face.

Wait, ridiculous how? Since I got more of a “grave” vibe from what’s going on since you two aren’t even sure if Leon’s Pokémon are still alive right now.

“When things get too overwhelming, try to focus on the next step. Then it’s not so much you have to deal with at once,” I finally recited. Leon thought about it for a moment.

“And what is the next step?”

My smile vanished the second I heard the desperation in his voice.

There are, like, so many things to do now. Do something about my team. Find out what’s going on in Hammerlocke. Seal Eternatus back to where it came from. Make sure everyone’s safe. Y’know? Champ stuff. And I don’t even know where to start. Or how to get there, for that matter.” He sighed. “Normally I just go somewhere and things sort themselves out. But now? I am completely lost.

So… just another Tuesday for Leon, huh? :V

Though more seriously, this feels like one of those paragraphs that would probably read better were it broken up into pieces.

I took a moment to think about my response and how to calm him down. I had a plan after all, right?

Don’t make me fetch the LA Noire Doubt meme again, Hanako.

“We have to get out of this forest. My phone is broken too, so we’ll have to find a place where we can call someone.”

Rotom: “I’d just like to point out that there’s no reception-”
Hanako: “Yes, and presumably there’d be reception outside the forest.

Desperate to have something to latch on to, Leon followed the thought and his eyes became focused again.

Good idea. We could call Sonia. She knows a lot about the Darkest Day.” He paused for a moment. “Catching up with Raihan is probably also a good idea. He stayed behind in Hammerlocke for the evacuation. He should know what’s going on there.”

… Wait, if Hammerlocke is destroyed, would it even be safe to assume that there would still be cell towers still standing and with power? Or is Galar one of those settings that set up its mobile network with blimps like you sometimes see people make proposals for.

I nodded and forced a weak smile. “See? And just like that, you’ve got a plan.”

Which should probably worry you a bit more given how “seat of his pants” this plan was, Hanako. ^^;

Leon nodded, his eyes focused again. He gave it a few more thoughts, then got up with a determined “Right.” As soon as he put weight on his right arm though, he flinched. It was only a bit, and he was up before I could object.

“Wait, let me fix that,” I said when he was about to collect his cape. He sent me a questioning look, and I pointed at his arm. “Come on, sit down again!”

… I sure hope that that’s just a scrape given that Leon’s arm hurts whenever he puts weight on it, since broken bones would do that too. ^^;

This is one of those things where a bit of description as a reminder of “oh right, there’s some really obvious scrapes running up the length of his arm” would’ve been a handy addition for getting a feel for how Hanako is so confident she can make a difference instead of instantly going “yeah, we’re getting you to a hospital”.

“Can you do something about that?” he asked, reluctantly following my order.

I nodded while I took off my scarf. There was a reason I was my term’s appointed first-aider.

Leon sent my scarf a wary look, but let me get to work. He didn’t get to decide what suited him and what not. His entire career had been a disaster fashion-wise, at least as far back as I had followed it.

Wow. Rude.

The moment I took my eyes off him and he couldn’t follow my movements any longer, he sighed.

“What if there’s no Hammerlocke or Raihan that I can catch up with?”

You see, I’m a little curious as to why this never crossed Leon’s mind sooner, since I could’ve sworn the narration explicitly stated that Hammerlocke was already destroyed.

“Stop that!” I whispered, but Leon didn’t even register.

“I messed up! I messed the f—” He bit his lip. His words sounded strained. He was on the verge of collapse.

“Leon…” I said. Mostly because I needed to think. “Just breathe! Please. It’s going to be alright.”

Debatable, but you now have a whole lot of time to work with before you have to worry about Hammerlocke again. Probably. Maybe.

To my surprise, it worked. Leon took a few deep breaths in and then slowly unfurled himself. He had his eyes closed and his lips moved in a silent whisper. Whatever he told himself, it did wonders.

When he opened his eyes again, he was almost back to normal — smiling, radiating warm confidence and making stupid remarks on whatever came across his mind. This time it was my scarf. That I subsequently squeezed his arm a bit too much, may or may not have been on purpose.

Narrator: “It was absolutely on purpose.

I watched him closely while I patched him up, but he seemed stable. Not even Raihan could change the weather his mood as fast as this guy.

Unless if it’s a Britishism I’m not privy to, you probably want “his mood” there in that sentence.

“Hey, if you go on like this for a bit longer, the rain will actually stop.”

I turned around. He was right. The rain had turned into a mere drizzle. Finally! “You know, I wasn’t exaggerating when I said I was lost.”

Another spot where IMO you should consider breaking up the paragraphs.

I shrugged and motioned up and down the plain gravel path. “One of those two directions will lead us somewhere.”

“The other one is a dead end at a railway crossing.” I looked at him. “I’ve been there today already…”

“Which one is it?”

“… I don’t know…”

Oh boy, having to rely on Leon to get yourselves unlost from the middle of a forest. This… sounds like it’s going to lead to shenanigans in short order.
:fearfullaugh~1:


It took us quite a while to get up. We were both stiff from sitting on the ground for way too long. Now that my leg warmers were fastened around Leon’s chest to keep him from moving his arm, my legs felt icy in their torn leggings. I carefully rubbed and stretched them when I heard Leon call my name.

… Oh, maybe Leon did break his arm after all. That was a little unclear to me from the description. .-.

“Hey Hana, look at that! Have you ever seen a pokemon like that?”

I looked up to see a small brown ball of fur on two short legs. Its body was almost completely round, with a long, bushy, striped tail. Its tall ears pointed to a very perceptive and cautious pokemon, but this one in particular didn’t look scared at all. If anything, those small black eyes looked rather demanding.

Wait, so it’s a Sentret, then? Though I see we have our first namedrop of Hanako of sorts.

I shook my head. “Never…”

I gave it a closer glance. It carried something in its paws. A shred of paper?

Wait, yes! You were unconscious. I think it tried to steal something”

Would recommend breaking this block up into a couple pieces since it functionally feels like 3 separate thoughts taped together.

“Hm. What do you have there?” Leon squatted down and reached out for the shred. As soon as he got too close, the little critter struck at his outstretched hand, jumped onto his head and from there made its way to his waist bag.

With one determined grasp, I grabbed it by the back of its neck and pulled it away. Its initial resistance faded under a single stern stare.

Oh, so it’s busy
:quilaeep:
-ing in live-time, huh?

It was strange. Leon and I were Galar’s two most powerful trainers. But, as we were currently without our teams, we were just regular people. Still, there was a part in me that refused to show this little guy the same respect I would have had a year ago, when Mum warned me not to venture into the high grass. And it seemed to understand that.

This feels like an ever-so-slightly ill-advised idea given that the only Pokémon on-hand you two have at the moment is a Rotom that may or may not be trained to battle effectively, but you do you, Hanako.

“MCL Cherry Drops?” Leon asked.

Both I and the furball in my hand turned to him. Leon looked at the scrap of paper in his hands. A sweet-wrapper for Macro Cosmos Living’s disgustingly artificial bonbons.

That’s all?”

Same deal here as elsewhere, since Hanako’s thoughts feel pretty distinct from Leon’s dialogue bookending it.

The pokemon struggled in my hands to get the wrapper back. It braced its powerful tail against my body to get closer to the highly valued rubbish, sending spikes of pain through my ribcage. It became, however, completely limp at the marvellous sight of a handful of sweets that Leon pulled out of his pocket. He dangled them in front of the pokemon’s face, who turned into the tamest pup ever imaginable. I sat it down. It was still transfixed on the bonbons.

Yeah, that’s why manhandling a Pokémon like this wasn’t the most brilliant idea in the world. Even the likes of humble Rattata pack a punch when backed into a corner.

“Okay, little guy. You can have these,” Leon said in a serious tone, while I rubbed my aching bruises. The pokemon immediately snatched at his hand, but he was faster.

Under one condition: You’ve got to behave!” he added, his hand still over the pokemon’s head that now stood still, albeit begrudgingly. He handed it the precious sweets and I could almost watch the sugar addiction getting a hold of the little guy.

Well, that’s one way to pick up a new Pokémon in a pinch-
Leon got up. “And now be a good boy and bugger off!”

… Or not.

It took a moment for the pokemon to understand that no more treats were coming its way. When it saw that neither of us would move a muscle, it finally turned tail and vanished down the slope.

When he was sure it was out of sight, Leon popped one of the red drops of solidified carbohydrate into his mouth. He offered me one too. I declined. It went to Rotom instead.

Rotom: “You sure? Since this stuff tastes really good-?”
Hanako: “Yes, I’m sure. Let’s move on now.” >_>;

“Oleana always has a few for me,” he said. “Guess she knows how to keep me in line. Now which direction did you say?”

At this point, tossing a coin was as good as it got.

Hanako:
tomoko-kuroki-wata-mote.gif


Fifteen minutes later we stood in front of a railway track, secured with fences and even some cameras. Leon gave a short, frustrated grumble as he turned around and walked the other direction.

Wow, they actually got out of the forest in a semi-quick fashion. Here I thought they were going to be stranded in there for half the day considering Leon’s knack at getting around. :V

We were already a good distance away from the tracks when a sharp sound, like a jet cutting through the air, echoed through the forest. It got louder and louder until the volume was physically hurting my ears. Then a white and blue arrow shot down the tracks, its velocity making it hard to discern anything but the colours. And within a mere heartbeat, it had vanished again into the woods, taking the noise with it, leaving only a cloud of mist behind.

Well, that’s one way to find out that the rails are still in service right now. ^^;

“Was… was that a train?!” Leon yelled.

I shrugged. There was still a painful ringing sound in my ears, so I could barely understand him. I struggled to get up and then pulled Leon up as well. Without me even realising, we had both sought shelter from the unbearable noise cowering on the ground. Leon was still fighting with the tinnitus he certainly experienced, so when I turned around I was the first one to see it.

“Look!”

Would hack up Leon’s dialogue from Hanako’s narration. Also, if he’s yelling, it might make sense to additionally make Leon’s line a bit more “exclamatory” than it presently is, since it reads more like he’s saying it neutrally.

When that train had shot across the tracks, it had also dispersed the water on the rails, creating a veil of mist over the crossing. Now that the sun had finally fought its way through the heavy rain clouds, it was sending its rays directly to us. And in their wake they left — a rainbow: Bright, broad, hopeful.

Leon: “... Isn’t Hammerlocke in the process of burning to the ground right now-?”
Hanako: “Not now, Leon. Seriously, just enjoy this.”

There was something encouraging in this amalgamation of light and colours. Something telling me that, even though the Darkest Day was somewhere, consuming all the light, here the sun was still bright and powerful and the sky still intact.

I mean, being separated from it by 26 years of time certainly would help on that front, yes.

We could beat Eternatus and seal it away. There was no doubt in my mind. A smile came across my face and for the first time in what seemed like an eternity, it felt sincere.

A moment later a majestic cry echoed from the treetops as a huge pokemon soared through the air, its powerful wings parting the clouds and painting the sky blue again. As I squinted my eyes to peek at it against the blinding light of the sun, I was sure that it itself drew the rainbow across the firmament with its feathers of pure colour.

violet-spit-water-the-incredibles2.gif


Wait, Ho-Oh? Are these two even in Galar right now-?

- Looks up at summary -

Oh right, they’re not. Guess that they’re in Johto now at the moment considering the Pokémon.

Chapter 2

Challenger No. 634 – Hanako

Originally from Kanto, her family moved to Postwick just a few years ago. Nonetheless, she considers herself a true Galarian. With her fairy-type team based around her Whimsicott, she took the Gym Challenge in stride. Victorious in the finals of the Champion Cup, she now anticipates the ultimate showdown in the match for Galar’s Championship.

Waaaaaaait a minute. If Hanako’s from Kanto originally, wouldn’t Hanako logically be able to recognize Sentret or whatever it was she manhandled in the forest? Since Sentret have been able to be found on Kanto Route 1 as far back as Gold and Silver.

I mean, alternatively, the other Pokémon could be something different, but the description felt very “Sentret” to me.

Hanako is known to be a level-headed trainer, always in control of her emotions. Though her journeys with her rival Hop had made her more open and outgoing, she is still quite camera-shy. Rumours say she used to be a competitive dancer, but lately she’s mostly seen working at her mother’s gardening shop.

Printed: August 12th 2019

… Wait, who on earth wrote tis thing anyways? A Galarian gossip magazine?

The rescue worker turned the card around. It showed a tanned, slender young woman with long, straight black hair neatly pinned into an elaborate bun. She was still wearing her challenger uniform, but her trademark rose singlet and her frilly scarf, in which she usually appeared on telly, were visible underneath. The pose she struck was cool and provoking at the same time, with her arms crossed and her straight back cutting a sharp line against the skies over Wyndon Stadium. Only her icy blue eyes betrayed her discomfort with the photo shoot.

>The rescue worker

This chapter’s going to go from 0-100 in
:copyka~1:
-ness in short order, isn’t it?

He sighed. This was the Champion Cup card, freshly printed in anticipation for Leon’s and Hanako’s match. Under other circumstances, his daughter, self-declared leader of Team Hanako would be overjoyed. But so far, they still hadn’t recovered either of the competitors.

Well, that was less
:copyka~1:
than I was assuming, but it still got decently so. So back in the “present day”, the dust has settled and Galar’s a smoldering wreck right now, huh? Since that seems to be the vibe that’s given off given the passing mention that neither Hanako nor Leon have been “recovered”.

Chapter 3

For the first hour we speculated about the nature of Eternatus and the Darkest Day, but after a while our conversation died down. I was getting tired and the bruise around my ribcage slowly but steadily made itself more known with every step that I took. Leon was now noticeably limping, and his remarks became less and less frequent. I tried distracting myself with the surrounding flora, but the fact that this entire forest was composed of cypresses and firs, in particular types I’ve never seen before, as well as the occasional wild apricorn tree, did nothing to lessen my worries.

Yup, these two are in Johto right now. I kinda suspected from the outro of Chapter 1, especially since in retrospect they almost certainly almost got run over by the Magnet Train, but this all but confirms it.

Dusk was already settling in when — finally — at the end of our small maintenance path — the lights of a town appeared. They were a godsend. We actually managed to speed up. Pretty sure the rush of victory in the semifinals was nothing against the overwhelming joy when I had a paved road under my feet.

Watch as it turns to horror in like 30 seconds after they realize they can’t understand squat from the locals.

We made our way around some old-looking cars and onto what I presumed to be the main road. Street lights were illuminating this small town with its mixture of contemporary houses and what I could only describe as odd little stores along the road. Between the few old, wooden houses, clothing lines were hanging low over the street, slightly waving in the wind. A few people were still outside, and I didn’t hesitate to approach an elderly couple.

I’m assuming that Pokéworld culture is a lot uniform across regions in this setting? Since at least IRL, even without getting yeeted back in time, you’d be able to tell that you weren’t proverbially in Kansas anymore by getting punted from some random corner of the UK to one in Japan just from differences in architecture and the car marques, so I’m admittedly a little surprised that Hanako isn’t going “waaaait a minute” at the place she’s stepping out into.

Since even without going “Pokémon regions are knockoffs of their counterpart chunks of IRL”, there’s presumably a noticeable difference in how the average town is in Kanto vs. Galar, and Johto would be a lot closer to the former and trip memories for Hanako unless she left Kanto before she was old enough to be able to regularly retain coherent memories.

“Excuse me, can you point me the way to the Pokemon Center?”

The elderly couple looked at each other with an expression that made my heart sink to my by now pretty worn-out shoes. Then, much to my shock, the lady explained to me, very slowly and articulately, where I could find the Pokemon Center. The description wasn’t the shocking part, though. Rather the fact that she spoke flawless Kantonian, even with a little accent.

Oh, so there is a language difference between regions in this setting, I can already imagine Leon’s live-time
:wtfuckle:
face right now, since I’m sure he wasn’t expecting this. :V

My first reaction was to respond in Galarian. Because of my black hair and olive tan people of Wyndon and other big cities had often confused me for a tourist in the past, and I enjoyed their expression when I responded in my deepest Galarian accent. But this lady seemed genuinely taken aback. I switched to my Kantonian vocabulary when I thanked her and asked where exactly we were. Her expression became even more worried. She gave me a name I’d never heard before.

Leon: “Uh… Hana? What exactly is going on right now?”
:ohnowen:

Hanako: “I’m… not perfectly sure myself, honestly.”

“Should we accompany you to the Center, my dear? You seem lost,” the elderly lady offered. I shot a glance over my shoulder to find Leon missing.

“No, thank you. I think I’ll be fine,” I said with an expression that must have looked incredibly unconvincing. “Have a nice evening!”

:sceptical~1:


Hanako: “Fine enough. Anyhow, moving right along…” >.<

I sprinted off, my worries growing into a slight panic. I hadn’t heard such fluent Kantonian in over two years. Last time I heard something remotely like this was when I called my aunty in Lavender Town for Christmas.

I found Leon and Rotom not too far, both transfixed on the tellies in the display window of an outdated electrical store. The sports program was on. I tried to pull him away, but he wouldn’t budge. In fact, he silently pointed to the TV and squinted his eyes again in a mixture of focus and fatigue. Now it hit me! This might be a soccer broadcast, but every single word on screen was in Kantonian. They even pointed out how this was a rare full-length rerun of the Galarian Football League finals. I took a step back and looked at the store-front. My concern grew into immeasurable dimensions.

Oh, so CRTs were the norm for displays 26 years ago in this setting too, huh?

The finals should never be a rare rerun,” concluded Leon rather factually, stroking the hairs on his chin as I read ‘Cliff’s home electronics’ on a neon sign in big, bold Kantonian letters.

Hanako: “Uh… Leon, I don’t think we’re in Galar right now.” ._.;
Leon: “No, no! We’ve clearly just wandered into a Little Saffron! … Not that I knew that there were such districts out in the boonies like this.” ^^;

The expression on Nurse Joy’s face when we almost kicked in the door to the Pokemon Center (the door wasn’t as sturdy as one would expect) was one of pure horror. Within the same second that the sliding door bounced back shut, we simultaneously asked a) where exactly we were and b) to please do something about Leon’s pokemon. If she had called the police at this moment, I would not have blamed her. Instead, she just asked us to calmly explain what had happened.

Oh, so they’re everywhere in this story’s world, too, huh? :V

Despite her best efforts, it wasn’t calm.

Yeah, no kidding when you’re living out “PLA, but at least 120 years late” with a region swap on top of it.

It took about ten minutes to cool Leon down. He had absolutely no understanding of why Nurse Joy was more concerned about him than about the state of his team. Only when she finally put the pokeballs into her healing station and switched it on, he agreed to follow her to the back room where she could take a look at his arm.

… Geez, Leon. Just how bad is that arm of yours? .-.

In the meantime, I was going through the registration process with Nurse Joy’s husband. After all, we would likely stay the night here, and if Leon’s arm was any worse than we thought, his insurance would have to step in. I gave him my details and my Trainer Card. He had acted reserved before, but the look he gave my card and a moment later me was one I didn’t like at all.

So how’s that going to play when it turns out that the card was registered 25 years in the future, anyways?

“Do you have a valid one?” he said, handing me back my card. He had the no-nonsense demeanour of a police officer who had seen this all too often.

Oh, really well, I see! /s

“This is a valid card. It’s a Galarian. I know we’re in Kanto here, but—”

“Johto,” he interrupted.

Yup, called it earlier. Though in retrospect, I feel a little slow for not picking up on things sooner since there were a lot of little things that were very “Johto” in retrospect.

“Johto,” I repeated. Didn’t make much of a difference, both regions were at the opposite side of the globe from where we should be.

“Look, if you don’t accept Galarian cards, can we just stay here and pay the extra fees? I’ve got the international banking on it activated.” I pushed my card over the counter again.

… Did that even exist as a feature on credit cards 26 years ago? .-.

Also, how has Hanako not noticed that this Pokémon Center presumably looks downright ancient compared to what she’s used to in the present day?

He gave me another long glance over the rim of his glasses, almost as if he was asking if I was joking. The man slowly opened a drawer on the front desk, pulled out an antiquated card reader, and swiped my card. He wouldn’t move his eyes from the display until the device beeped unpleasantly, then turned it so I could see what it read.

“Not covered.”

I’m surprised that card was recognized as valid to begin with given that it’s been issued at least 20 years into the future.

“What?” Now the panic in my voice was really picking up.

“I’ve got a credit card,” I heard Leon’s voice from the back room. “Here, catch!”

Leon: “It’s one of those tap-and-go cards so this should be a cinch!” ^^
Hanako: “Leon, have you looked around at where we’re at? I’m not sure if this place even has a chip reader with how ancient this gear looks!” >_>;
Leon: “Hey, you never know. All sorts of stuff turns up in the countryside these days.”
:gardeshrug~1:


He tossed his wallet in my direction, but I was too shocked to react in time. It bounced off my shoulder and onto the floor, snapping me out of my daze.

As I crouched down and flipped through Leon’s cards, I tried to get my thoughts in order. Deep breath in.

Okay, so we were in Johto. No problem. I could still call my dad in Saffron City and ask him for help. No problem at all. One. Two.

Until she asks to borrow a phone and gets presented with an ancient Pokégear from across the counter.

“Miss?”

“Yes!” I jolted up. “Here!” I handed him the credit card with the Macro Cosmos logo on it. He didn’t even take it, just gave it one quick glance and looked at me again like I was joking.

And like he was about done with my jokes.

Mr. Joy:

:riowtf~1:

Hanako: “... A credit card issued by the biggest conglomerate in Galar? It’s not that old, is it?”
:uhhh:


“Miss, the year is 1993. According to your card, you aren’t born for another nine years.”

Ah yes, and there’s the reason why this story’s named ‘26 years’

Silence. Silence as my world faded to white once again, just for a second. I heard Leon’s voice. And Nurse Joy.

“Owen, that’s enough now,” she said. “Be a bit more sensitive! Look at them!”

Live look at Hanako + Leon right now:

D3F1DJhWAAEwUfI.jpg


Were those tears in my eyes? Oh, yeah.

«No crying, Hanako, you aren’t a baby.»

I quietly apologised and excused myself outside, but no one was paying attention anyway.

Well, they’ll at least get a second chance at defeating Eternatus? I mean, it only involves waiting for half their lives to pass to get it at this rate, buuuuut…
:joltyshrug~1:


Alright, onto the end-of-review wrapup. But I liked what I read of your story thus far, even if it was a bit of a trip to read a story where structurally the first chapter was three times the length of the next 2 combined, but combined they all did a good job at getting the initial pitch of where things are going laid down.

For specific strengths of your story, I think that the opening that just jumps right into things was a good choice, especially since it sets up a good contrast between the initial chaos of an abortive attempt to stop the Darkest Day going seriously sideways along with the slower pace of the rest of the chapter as Leon and Hanako try to figure out what on earth happened to them as they lick their wounds in another place and time in their world.
Not that that’s a bad thing, mind you. I felt you did a pretty good job with characterization in these first three chapters and while Hanako’s admittedly a bit of an OC since game protag characters canonically can be almost anything, especially from XY on, Leon’s portrayal felt like something that’s at once different from what we see of him in the games, while feeling like it’s a decently believable take at how he might act in a situation like the one 26 Years’ is thrust into, if with a bit coarser language. The slower pace also lent itself well to a good sense of mystery and peril through things like that whole 'Rotom Phone getting stoned' moment, along with the sinking realization that things were too late for Leon’s team. It’s a handy meta device from keeping these two from just curbstomping everything they come across and it does a good job at getting readers curious about what's coming for the future.

There were a couple of things that I had as bones to pick with the first three chapters, but it was less stuff that I felt that were systemic issues and more little things that popped up here and there occasionally. I noticed in a few places that you had paragraphs with multiple “complete ideas” in them that probably would’ve worked a bit better broken up into smaller ones, and a few places where the verb tense of the narration was a bit inconsistent and drifted out of past tense in a manner that I’m not fully sure was planned. There were also a couple spots that I felt had some issues with description, either it being a bit too light to the point where it kinda cut into my ability to visualize things as a reader, or it coming late and being stated after the fact in contexts where it might have made sense to mention them a little earlier on. Granted, individually I don’t think that those were particularly hard issues to resolve, and could probably be mostly smoothed out with a solid once-over.

The one semi-big issue that I had was that Hanako’s reaction to getting yeeted to Johto had a couple aspects about it that made me go “... waiiiit a minute” since the scenes in question are being viewed through the eyes of someone who has roots from the region to the immediate east of Johto. Granted, “my world, my rules” applies, and perhaps Hanako had left Kanto at a very young age and never really had a chance to come back (even if that was never explicitly stated), but in the absence of such factors Hanako’s reaction to Johto felt a little inconsistent for things she should know. With two primary things standing out to me:

- I was kinda surprised that Hanako just flatly did not recognize what Sentret (or at least I think it was a Sentret) were. While this makes sense for the perspective of someone born and raised in Galar if taking Dexit literally, unless if Hanako has just never been to Kanto since her very early childhood, she presumably would’ve seen someone with a Sentret before since they’re wild encounters in parts of Kanto as far back as Gold and Silver and Johto is literally right next door with a high-speed rail link. A perfect recipe to run into a trainer rocking one. To say nothing about seeing Sentret in books or online searches through devices like her trusty Rotom Phone before it got stoned since unless there’s something about your setting that I’m missing, Sentret aren’t exactly uncommon Pokémon.
- Additionally, Hanako came off as kinda underreacting to coming across the Johtoan town in the boonies since even before getting into the fact that all the TVs and cars look like they’re fresh out of the houses of pensioners and weirdly skewed towards brands that might be popular in Kanto but not in Galar. Like one would think that there’d likely be immediately noticeable differences in architecture and town layout that Hanako and Leon would’ve picked up on, and it kinda felt like it left a couple of things on the table. It might have been fun to see the gears in Hanako’s head turn as she tried to grapple with that and rationalize the increasing weirdness and getting more and more “it’s just a little airborne, it’s still good, it’s still good” up until flatly being told that she’s 26 years in the past in a distant land that might as well be a whole different planet for Leon.

Perhaps there’s more context that smooths those out or makes it make more sense in it, but it either hasn’t been brought up by the story yet or else wasn’t brought up in these chapters.

Even if that might have wound up coming out a bit more critical than planned, I did enjoy these chapters @bluesidra . I thought it was a decent opening and it sets up things well for getting readers invested in seeing what’s coming next. Dunno if I’ll be able to come back for more of 26 Years during this Review Blitz since I’ve got a full plate, but can see myself revisiting this tale at some point in the future. After all, you did a good job at making me interested in seeing where things will go from here.

Hope the feedback helped, and good luck with Review Blitz! ^^
 
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