There was so much to balance in her head all at once. Responding to what was said, processing what she was hearing from Wishkeeper, maintaining her composure... So much effort.
"Diyem's very nature ain't just that of a Dark Matter, which would be strange enough, but one that's been altered over decades to be somethin' unprecedented, and he's all alone in that," mused Brisa. "I respect him. I trust him, appreciate him, I'm even pretty fond of him . . . but it's hard to know how to act on or express any of that safely when positivity is downright nauseatin' to him. I do what I can."
She sighed, curling one paw and pressing a claw into her pad. "We oughta have had formal provisional leadership in place. This is the second time our communication with Diyem has been disrupted, and we were rudderless back then, too. Let's not let it happen a third time. I'll speak with him about that soon, I think."
Voicing her feelings on Diyem gave her space to think about the rest of it. Owen's apparent, suppressed distrust and resentment of others... Was that why he'd come here? She could talk about that while linking it back to her last point.
"The truth is, Team Spectrum's apparent practical strength belies its lack of underlyin' structure," she said, momentarily startled by how like Jesse she sounded, "and its dysfunctional membership. I'm halfway done patchin' things up with those members most offended at bein' left out, but those same members have demonstrated, in their fits of pique and fancy followin' the fight, exactly the reasons we didn't make all the info public at first."
Zekrom was listening intently. Brisa didn't need to look at Owen to know how he'd be reacting.
"Don't get me wrong, I know my teammates fer the extraordinary folks they are, but there's no gettin' around the fact that many of 'em – or their familiars – are naive, impulsive, contrarian, an' so on. Under the conditions we've been grapplin' with, traits like that are a liability."