• Welcome to Thousand Roads! You're welcome to view discussions or read our stories without registering, but you'll need an account to join in our events, interact with other members, or post one of your own fics. Why not become a member of our community? We'd love to have you!

    Join now!

Pokémon K_S Villian-tine's prompt, "a book/reading" Now Grammarly'ed

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
AN:​
Author's note/Salutation:

Welcome to the edited version of my Villiantine's prompts. As it says on the tin, there be editing... as well as some dividing. My frantic note storage made the O.G version a nightmare to read, so I'm splicing them up into standalone pieces and re-releasing so anyone who wants to read my most recent work can skip a migraine.

Enjoy!


Villains-tine prompt, a book/reading
Part 1


Summary:

It started as an idle day in. Trying to ignore Mother Nature's temper tantrum and pass the time. It ended with the discovery of a long-abandoned scion of the Sakaki bloodline. Other traumas are also revisited.

(where my situation/character notes for Antonio Sakaki, as well as other Sakaki's from Giovanni's family, are converted into narrative form)

Content warnings: Racism, criminal activities, established adult relationships, discussions of a pandemic,




Grace and Giovanni had, during the start of the day, taken a view of the world beyond their Forest-side home, and the consensus was mutual. No way in Hell were they going out. The normally blue skies were slate grey. Lightning snapped it's electric fingers along the cloud banks like a Capo making death threats. The air was thick, and the wind hissed among the forest branches at a pitch that forewarned of a probable power outage.

The ground types were sheltering among the rock garden. Digging familiar trenches to prevent overflow from flooding their dens. The whole battlefield in his backyard was a crazed mess of tunnels set up to divert the upcoming overflow. Each scrape dug by honed claws, and sheepish looks up by cringing 'mon that knew they weren't going in their pokeballs unless it became a hurricane level threat outside.

It was one of the few downsides of having a trainer who believed whole heartedly in survival of the fittest.

Watching the subdued panicked digging from his pourch. Coffee cup in hand, Giovanni frowned, noting 'Queen was going quite a bit slower than her norm. She would need a check up he decided. After all the ground mon had set right what they tore up.

But that was tomorrow, Giovanni's problem. Today's finished his cup, and sliped in. He was going to spend the rainy day in comfort.

When the downfall came, it skipped Meowths and Growlithes stage and jumped right into the Persians and Arcanines. The Sakaki's had indulged intamency with a bit of a childish twist. Lazing in a comfortable twining of flesh, pillows, and blankets that might of resembled a pillow fort in certain right. Granted it was one build on a king sized bed...

The fireplace was set, going full tilt, and commandeering the place of honor previously held by the alarm clock was a tray of odd and end snacks and two cups.

The finest Cinnibarian blend was their favorite brew, though each had radically different opinions on what to put in it.

Hers was spiked with cinnamon, his with a splash of vanilla and cream. Indulging further weakness, and braving drafts and cool floors like a madwoman, Grace had indulged nostalgia further. She'd left him to slipp into the attic. A quick root around, and she'd came back with some books from her old things.

Though books were a generous term.

They squeaked through existence on the merest of technicalities. There were the requisite covers and pages, everything was glossy, glaringly so. If there was a word to encapsulate them, "shiney" would have been in the top four spot.

Godawful gaudy and would have covered slots one through three.

Following the trend of irrelevance, the collection was more pictures than words.

She'd laughed at him and asked if he'd never seen a school photo album before. Then nestled into his arms, boodle in tow, she decided that his "no" was an invitation to catch him up.

The awards and titles doled out to the smiling children had baffled him. How they'd been decided, their merit, was a mystery. And her explanation, that they didn't mean anything at all, left him bemused. What was the point of it then? Some of the alien wordplay were references to old pop culture, and Grace had declared him "too young to be this clueless," and that at a later date, she was going to "catch him up".

She chattered about familiar faces. Friends, acquaintances, that weird kid in the back row... It rolled over his head, an idle storm, but he perked at the word rival.

"Welcome back," she'd snarked, then returned to reminiscing about her grade school days. And mildly rebuked, he paid her more than half a mind.

He supposed there was some charm to be found in a preadolescent rivalry that had been boiled down to "They'd been at each other's throats", with informative tidbits of "Little Ms. Perfect Wannabe had wanted to be a trainer". And that's all it'd taken to get Grace on board.

Because "Ms. Perfect" was the meanest girl in the second grade, having a thing for pulling Grace's hair. After one stinging assault, Grace had decided that she was going to be the best trainer Viridian had ever seen.

Spite had carried her through rigorous training. Getting her first 'mon, a Meowth, and permission to battle at a stupid young age, she'd been eager to get out and train.

One scratch attack later, because meowth weren't shy in slashing up their trainers, Grace decided that rivalries were stupid. She was going to run a 'mon petting zoo. Soft, fluffy, not bity things, were more her speed. And training, and trainers, could go rot.

Except Giovanni, because he was her special exception...

And Andre, because that man and that man's charmeleon were insepertable.

How that ambition had changed to nursing was quite the mystery.

He'd poked and prodded, and Nurse Grace Evens let slip none of her secrets. In tones, one was told about the bird types and the beedrill, she drawled out her sarcastic tale that was more snark than informative.

There was this fun thing called a "medi-experience share", and when someone equipped with that was passed a "degree stone"...

"For the last time, that's not how stone evolution works." Giovanni snorted. "So should I fear death via cancer per a surfeit of evolution stone radiation?"

"Only if I had gone into radiology." She countered sweetly.

Thunder rumbled above them, the windows rattled, and cradling her close, he considered what of his past he dared share. Because the lightning strikes were getting closer together and he could feel her heart hammering under his touch.

Grace's brave front would not hold forever.

For him, vulnerability and history were a calculated risk. He weighed truths to lies, and settled for a sanitized middle ground. Wheeling out a rather pedestrian tale of his childhood.

It was a mild defilement of old memories, all done for the sake of providing Grace a distraction.

He confessed he hadn't gone to school. His childhood was a thing peppered with just enough education to avoid sbario attention. The second they were able, the elder Sakaki's had pulled him out of academia, and tossed him at every apprenticeship they could. Some were of a mildly illegal slant, and odd jobs were at odd hours, which meant he never got to interact with kids on a normal schedule that weren't tied to his familgia. While he was deliberately vague, one of the shady gigs he expanded on. It had been a spat of plumbing jobs at what he'd suspected to be a mob hideout.

"Between frat boys and mobsters, I'd be hard to say which had the worst habits."

"Well, I'd say you avoided the worst of both worlds, you know the perks of taking a good shower, and you're living on the straight and narrow."

He snorted a laugh, and Grace considered something, one of her fingers tracing a path up his arm. Her nail was not cutting sharp, but a pleasant prickle along the circular scars that'd been Zio Sal's neglect more than anger. "So where's your coat of arms, Mr. My Family's Been in Existence for Centuries?"

"The tacky old thing with the white blob that's supposed to be a mew stamped on it? I wrapped my mother in it for her funeral shroud and burned it all."

"Gio!"

"In my defense, it was ugly as sin."

"Seriously! You could have given it to a museum or something, not indulge in some... history... deleting... arson kick!"

"Seriously," He chuckled, "it... doesn't exist." He deserved that pillow to his side. "I think Nona might have something like that, somewhere, but I wouldn't know what it looked like. Or could care less. It's an off-mainland treasure if it exists at all. I'm not passing it up to a mainland region, much less one as anti-Italian as Kanto."

"Alright, but you have to have something like a photo album, right?"

The no he uttered sounded lame, even to his own ears. He frowned in confusion because he knew lies. And this felt like a lie, even though he hadn't meant it as such.

Mind reaching back, through the years, he remembered that first plane ride to Nonas as a little boy. There'd been an endless seeming book, the old Madam drilling him on names and dates for the whole five-hour flight... He hadn't touched it since. But it'd been among her things, and perhaps he hadn't thrown it out...

Discharge met wind burst just right; the resulting racket sounded downright apocalyptic. Lights flickered, making Grace curl into him as the faux night's shadows spawned into impenetrability.

Before worry could set to roost that something was down rather than rattled, light returned with a staticy flick.

And the alarm went off, because it always did whenever there was a blip in the power grid.

"Fuck, Arceus damn it!" She was quicker than him, and closer. Digging the clock out from under the bed by its cord, Grace slapped the mute button with enough force his hand stung in sympathetic pain.

Unfortunatly Grace had hit the temporary mute button. The clock howled to life as soon as she set it down and pushed it away. The resultant tug to rip on its power cord from the wall and kill it for good was more than understandable. Even if the violence of her doing so had him half up and lunging to save the tray. If he hadn't they would have had a shit ton of laundry to deal with.

"I hate that thing."

Perversely enough, it was hers. Alarm clock and complaint both. Any attempt to replace it had been met with resistance as she swore it was the only thing that got her up after a bleed eye shift.

He'd pointed out that she could just not take those shifts anymore. She was her own Made woman. Why play these games? She'd rattled off her standard excuses. Obligations to coworkers preferred patients with special needs needing stability... And when he was unmoved, she told him to shut up. From the set of her shoulders and the pointed glare as she shoved the unplugged monstrosity back under the bed, he knew not to push his luck.

Between her mood and the aggravation of modern technology, another round of "why keep it?" would wind up with him on the couch.

"Do you think there's... like a... Zapdos up there who's done the 'mon equivalent of hit the sultry music, got his girlfriend over, and they're doing love loops or something to make baby Zapdos over our heads?"

That was an image for the ages.

But realistically?

"There's not enough discharge going off for one Zapdos, much less two," He ruled. "The last Zapdos sighting off of Vermilion left miles of molten rock, blasted everything taller than a blade of grass, and people went deaf from the thunder. I guess if you need a god 'mon to bitch at... Palkia?"

"HIS Pearlescent Embessary of Space isn't supposed to be petty enough to be moving choice bits of sky matter to scare us, mere mortals." His chuckle made her rib him. "Alright, fine, I'm spooked, Mr. Unflapable. You're fine. And a troll, but that's how I pick them." She huffed. "The TRIO is supposed to be better than that." She flinched as the lights flickered again. "Not that I'm saying HE might get bored occasionally. But..."

"Maybe it's Pikachu season?" He wondered. Taking the opportunity to get her to curl into him. She steadied in his arms, distracted and comforted.

And that finger was back to tracing, swirling around one particularly thick scar by his wrist. Her strokes slowed as she spoke.

"You're the trainer, not me. Are they?"

"No idea. There are almost nine hundred of these pain-in-the-ass, god-mode capable critters. And you want me to know what gets them in the mood?"

His mind... might be lingering in the gutter a bit today. But with the thrumb of thunder rattling his bones, her warmth, and proximity, it was a recipe to put him in the mood.

A kiss-nip on her shoulder got her to tip her head back with a smile and hum. Her wordless acceptance of his offer of distraction was met with him pressing kisses along her jaw and down her neck. As he worked, her nails continued their patterns along his arms in feigned indifference.

Feigned, because he could feel and hear the uptick in her breathing and pulse. Her muffled, throaty chuckle was sweeter than any Persian's pur.

And her hand was busy. Her nails scraped along his skin in a distracting pattern.

Was she writing something, or doodling? He couldn't tell, but the feathering touch and its attendant edge made him want her more.

With a blistering crack, the lights gave up the ghost. He snarled a soft oath at God because it figured. Spite done, for now, he shifted his grip. Loosened but close enough to be present. He was not going to take advantage of the claustrophobic dark. Because he knew Grace's phobias.

His once coaxing motions turned to steadying. He twined their hands together, interlocking their fingers to still their tremor. Curling so he could press his head into her back, between her shoulders. He felt her shiver in his hold, as thunder spit and snarled above their heads.

He slowed his breathing, humming a familiar tune; his calm cut through her panic.

She followed his lead, no longer on the edge of hysterics, but definitely not happy.

"Sorry... sorry... it's so fucking stupid... I know it's just thunder..."

Distraction. Her panic flicked a sympathetic twinge of nerves over him, and he grabbed the first idea he had and ran with it.

"I'm scared of Garchomp."

She stiffened in shock. Very much aware of the old saw, of a Sakaki never admitting weakness.

And perhaps she wondered where this was going.

Honestly he was wondering himself.

"One of the strongest 'mon in the ground type genome. Why do you think I don't have one? During a Rocket assault," he needed to edit this, quick, "It's off the official records..."

It was sloppy as shit, was what it was. But the floodgates were open. She could hear that familiar inflection, a breathy rush that told of his control giving out. He loosened his grip because while she might pick and scratch in her terror, he had a habit of clenching, crushing, whatever was under his hands. He'd not hurt her. Unfortunately, letting her get free meant that she could turn to him in concern. Coward he was, he closed his eyes as he continued.

"You know I get called in to help with rabid mon?" He felt her nod. "It wasn't feral. It was augmented. This splinter cell of Rocket had gotten hold of a berserk gene, a god complex, and decided to start End Times."

He swallowed and recalled his doctor's advice. That sometimes those horrid things you saw tumbled out, and that if he was safe, to let it.

Here and now, there was nowhere safer. But that didn't mean he didn't feel regret in indulging.

"Pitch dark room... this biped thing that was all spines and soft sand sloughing off. You couldn't breathe when it was near. All you could hear was hissing. That's it, no footsteps, and you couldn't scream. You choked. Everything was muffled. It was twice the size of a man, almost as broad... and it made this awful raspy chitter. It was... talking to itself while it killed. Raving. Tearing through men and 'mon, croaking, "So hungry."

So very hungry.

They both shuddered, and Gio swallowed.

"I'm sorry, it... I was going to make light of it but..."

The truth had tumbled out. A dangerous truth that was almost totally uncensored.

"It happens." She poked him, and he cracked open his eyes. There was nothing but affection undercut by concern. "Gio, the doc said this is going to happen. You had a messy time, we both did. And you," another poke, "bottle things up. That's bad."

He huffed a wordless nonsense noise that he let her decide the meaning of.

Her arch tone and prod told him she was suspicious but she wasn't calling him out on his bullshit, yet.

"You letting it out is good. Is it going to make a mess, yes. Do I care, no."

A look of horror slid across her face, and Giovanni braced himself.

"Seriously, Gio, in all truth... You have nothing on that last super flu. My first year in Scrubs, I thought I could handle anything. And then this mutation moseys out, and it's a real killer. Most of my patients got cramps so bad they were immobilized, a few older folk got broken legs. It was like something from the Dark Ages. There were relentless fevers, and everyone got sick. Young adult, old, child, they just staggered in vomiting... You want to talk about a mess?"

Her tone warbled, a ghost of old suppressed hysteria trying to come to the fore.

"The first round of symptoms was cramps that could snap bones, and add on unrestrained vomiting, and diarrhea. It lasted for seventy-two hours in mild cases. People were coming in with bone bruises, immobility, and were utterly desiccated. We needed an all-hands-on-deck until they were able to modify the vaccine. Everything smelled and tasted like vomit." She swallowed back remembered nausia. Her fingers feathered up his chest, as she used the touch to remember she wasn't there, it wasn't then.

As for him, he hadn't been there. He'd been trapped off the mainland by sheer chance. A famiglia meeting that had been meant to last days, and been nearly half a year per that illness. Being trapped among the swarm of Sakaki's had been it's own hell. He'd ran his affairs remotely, been basically untouched, but he'd lost enough men, lost enough revenue, to know the damage was bad.

Grace's narrative added a fresh hellish skeen to the disaster he'd missed out on by sheer hapstance.

""You burned your clothes at the end of the day... And it was damn virulent. You saw the quarantine scrubs, the whole body covering?" He nodded, the news had been controlled but not that controlled. He felt her resultant shiver. "I hated those, not because you got bruises wearing them. You did, everyone did, that wasn't the problem. It was with all those layers you couldn't see anyone. The person next to you could pass out mid-IV. And you wouldn't know why. You'd be left scrambling between a panicking patient and your peer. Not knowing if it was sickness, or exhaustion, or just some older practitioner's heart just giving out from stress."

"That happened." Her voice was tight, old loss, familiar pain at some mentors passing. His hands ran soothing patterns down her back, she let out a shutter sigh. "During the worst, the beginning, when they were yanking doctors out of retirement, the stress would peak and.."

Silence, while both stared unseeing into empty space.

"I know it's not a Rocket monster from hell, but it's a sort of proof, you know? I've seen and done things. And if I need to, I can do it again. So... don't hold back. Not for my sake. I'm not glass, I won't break"

Giovanni sighed and repeated the tired mantra for days like this.

"Sometimes it comes out," Then he pecked the top of Grace's head, both a thanks, and an apology. "And I get the sentiment. Thank you for trying."

Lightning rumbled outside, a crackling slash that made him wonder if he shouldn't go to a second-story window and check for two Zapdos going at it.

"I'd really like to get out of Stephen King's head now." Grace whimpered, stiffening against him.

"I could see if anyone in the extended family could arrange someth-" She really was abusing that poor pillow. And him. He'd of felt ill-used if she'd hit, but somehow she managed to miss. He wrested the softness from her for himself, tucking it behind his back. "A simple no would have sufficed."

"No mob jokes."

"You know. Ah ah," His mild scolding kept her from ripping off the sheets. Well, it was her own fault that she was out of pillows. He'd made quite the nest and wasn't budging. "Let me finish... I think I do remember something. Madam Sakaki," Because he'd never lied about what his mother was, Grace was very well awaretaht his mother had been Kanto's Capo de Capi. He'd had to swear on everything sacred to him he hadn't inherited the title, that she wasn't marrying into some eil saprano's knock off.

Rocket, not being a monarchy, didn't believe in it's members inheriting thier rank. So it hadn't been a lie when he told her he wasn't anything like his mother. Either in rank, or personality...

"She had an old picture album,"

Really, if the lightning didn't let up, he was going to poke his head out and see if some stock horror villain was nattering about bringing a cadaver to life...

And if there wasn't a better sign, a better atmosphere to fit the mood, he couldn't think of one. The beginning of a horror film, and Madam Sakaki, the ideas fit together like a hand in a glove.

"I can't guarantee 'no mob, ' but I can promise most of them are old enough to be safely mocked without fear of retribution. Most of them likely being dead..."

She gnawed her lip, outre morals wrestling with boredom and fear. Finally curiosity pushed through, giving her enough wiggle room for her to hang her scruples. And perhaps indulge in gossip against old mobsters centuries dead.

"You have a deal."

It was the best one he'd gotten all week.
 
A book, part 2 edited and updated New

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Villian-tines,
prompt number 26
A book, part 2




He'd had to go to the basement. Part to ensure the generator for the fridge and emergency line was working properly, part to root through a few boxes in the back. There were, to his surprise, some old Sakaki keepsakes among the deeds and dated deals. Nothing incriminating, mainly a few odd and end things that he felt like someone had just dumped half a desk into his packing while his back was turned.

He found the black-bound book halfway in.

A quick flip proved it to be part photo album, part scrapbook. Nothing dangerous caught his attention as he skimmed, the back was a glued-together mess, but besides that oddity, he tucked it under his arm and rooted out an odd decoration to take its place.

It had been holding down someone else's tax reports. A quick skim found them to be Zio Sal's property taxes. What the man was doing, owning a bakery when he couldn't boil water, was not Giovanni's business. What was, was that the base of the papers was starting to rise. Alarmingly. Like an accordion compressing in reverse.

Making a mental note to have a burn day, before the bakery papers roused to sentience, Giovanni headed out.

Persian, the brat, had been napping down below. Making her regal presence known among the dust bunnies and topmost boxes. Smoothing the hair she'd swatted when he dared to get too close to her lofty perch, Giovanni made his way out.

The unrepentant cat followed at his heels, meowing things besides an apology. And because of that, he ignored her nudge, a mute request for a good petting.

Used to being ignored when she was being a little demon, Persian murred under her breath about head scratches and treats from Grace.

A snarl from the sky kicked up, and the cat popped. Going from standing to flying straight up in a perfect vertical jump that ended in her landing with her claws drawn. Each leg thumped and clicked heavily at her landing.

Ears pinned back in alarm, Persian glared at him, clearly blaming him for Mother Nature's shenanigans.

Or perhaps for not warning her.

Persian yowled like a Legend was breaking in through the window, barrelling down the halls to the Sakaki's bedroom. Tail poofed and raised like a broken flag to declare surrender to the world. All she had to do was go back down, but no, off she went to get snuggles from Grace.

Stupid cat.

Grace pulled her attention from the quivering cat at his return. A ghost of her old curiosity lit her eyes as she tipped her head at him, in a mute question.

"I found it."

"Is that the Necronomicon?"

He'd read Lovecraft and got that reference, thank you very much. As a reward for his labors, he might have taken the softest blanket from the bed-nest and bundled in. Glaring at the woman and cat from his nook of warmth, like an angry kakunna.

"If I say sorry, will you share?"

There had been a spill between him coming and going. Sheets were stripped and pushed out of the way. She'd made do with what hadn't been soaked, but from her shiver, what she'd made do with wasn't enough.

So much for avoiding laundry.

He considered Grace and Persian; both were employing their infernal puppy eyes. He glared at them and crunched up among the folds.

Grace's hands found the edge of his sanctuary and started tugging and prodding at the seams.

"If you let me in, you'll be warmer." Lies. If she left him alone, he would stop getting cold air coming in. "and you can share and care your vampire book-"

He rolled his eyes, unfolded the edge, and acquired a Grace lamprey as a result. Persian could damm well take her cat pillow at the foot of the bed, and like it.

To be... completely fair... the "vampire book" seemed to have been started back when cameras weren't a thing. It was done backwards. Starting in near pre-history, and became more modern as it went. Pages had been added in, though how Giovanni had no clue.

The artist hired for the first few generations of Sakaki had taken the idea of somber and monochrome to whole new levels. And the Sakaki's within seemed to have an unhealthy obsession with dark colors.

"Seriously," Grace drawled, "why does everyone look like a vampire?"

Pointedly not looking too closely at the teeth of a distant uncle, Giovanni hummed. "There must be some Sakaki genetic inclination towards wearing black."

"That level of bad taste better be a recessive trait."

If Grace were raised as a Sakaki... well, Giovanni might have feared for his manhood. As it was, her insinuations warmed him better than the best scotch and a blazing fireplace. Toes curling in pleasure, his answering smirk was tender.

Before she could decide if she wanted to take him up on that unspoken offer, Persian decided to flaunt her nesting instincts. Indulging a slinky sort of kneed, that resulted in one stolen pillow and sheet. The feline twisted, making a snug cat croissant at the foot of the bed with only her tan head poking out.

More than familiar with the cat's "it's raining, and I don't care" facade, Giovanni ignored the show. He had Grace in his arms, something to read, and mercifully, the thunder was on the decline.

A few pages later and he had to wonder if he hadn't screwed his eventual children with some prophecy. There wasn't a lick of anything other than an accent in white or red. It looked like he was seeing a procession of great-aunt and uncle funerals, not the acknowledgment of births or family gatherings that were the descriptors scribbled in around each shot.

"Did you notice, no one's smiling?"

"Sakaki gatherings are somber events." Gio mimed Nona's inflection since such shrillness was beyond him. " Men are meant to be sober, loyal, and strict."

"Ung." Grace stilled her relentless burrowing into his side. "You hear this bull, uterus? You need to damn well reject these genes he's talking about. Girdle those eggs. Or no more fun times. Ever. I swear it."

He laughed, and if she took advantage of that to steal a pillow back. Well, it was his fault for indulging, and he was more than capable of adjusting her position, despite her protests, and making her serve in place for what she stole.

As the text became more modern, he started to recognize people beyond obscure, historically inaccurate one-liners. In the areas where he recognized the handwriting, the purpose of documentation had changed.

Pictures, some candid, some formal, stood beside a folded paper that, when teased open, proved to be a death certificate. In a few cases, the papers were several pages long. A few were even a medical examiner's uncensored reports.

After a few pages of this, Grace stopped. "Gio, we aren't reading your mom's "hit" book, are we?"

He... couldn't believe the Madam would be that stupid... this could be something as mild as her notating everyone's deaths so she could savor the ones she hated without drawing attention to her sport...

A sort of feel-good indulgence for the depraved...

But Sal's picture blew a hole in that. A candid hospital shot where he'd been recuperating from having two broken arms and a broken leg. He was awake in the shot, his cast-bound leg raised insanely high on its sling. There wasn't a nurse in sight, or a doctor, or anyone. Just the old mobster, who wasn't that old in this shot. Sal was possibly younger in that shot than Giovanni was now. The Made Man's injuries were fresh, his eyes wide and glazed.

"He can't have been seeing visitors. Not with his eyes like that. He's drugged to the gills."

"Probably best we don't know anything else," Giovanni warned.

He turned a page and saw two little girls. Arm in arm, dressed in their Sunday best and trying to look sober. Their sparkling black eyes told tales. The littlest was nine, the other fifteen.

It took him a long moment to recognize Gemma and her little sister Saphrina on the page. The eldest was long gone, the youngest a fresher loss. Dead at twenty-one, at least if the gossip was right.

It felt positively alien to realize that he was older than his big niece Gemma, that he'd outlived her and her spitfire of a younger sister. He was older than them both now. He flipped through a few pages to see if Saphrina's kids were within but the book was too out of date to tell that tale. The first few pages were blocks of bound papers, a near pouch of documentation in... binary? The code was too thick for him to understand. So he ignored it, flicking back to familiar pastures.

Grace took the hand not holding the book, twined their fingers. They leaned against each other, looking at the picture of those two girls for a very long time. She knew of Gemma, the young woman was one of the few familgia members that had a picture in Giovanni's home, on his personal work desk, no less.

"You know, if you want to know, you could just call."

Grace was a smart thing, having sussed the reason for his flipping ahead, though he hadn't said a word. But her solution was more than it seemed. More than an insultingly easy solution.

Saphrina had overt ties to the Mob. Grace's encouragement to reach out was an offer to mutely tolerate the social fallout of that contact. And, in theory, it might even work. But there were more than just Kanto law to consider.

With a sigh, Giovanni shook his head, moved to turn a page. "I went legit. Barring Executives and the Madam, the rest of the famiglia won't have a thing to do with me... and being around them would be..." He could imagine the shrill screams of P.R. Worse, any smirching of his name was an invitation for the police to all but move in.

Between the scuffles Grace had kicked up during her wild social justice crusade years and Giovanni's... well, everything... the police and the Sakaki's in close proximity were not a good combination. To put it very mildly.

He huffed, and she released his off hand to pin the one twiddling then page.

"You know, when I was younger, it didn't bother me. But now, sometimes, it does."

She took the book and turned back to the girls had been told not to smile. He wished they had dared to defy that order. Seeing their smiles would have been nice.

"Tell me about them?"

"Gemma and Saphrina Sakaki Corosso were sisters in arms. Hell-bent on breaking the mind of every sbario they could."

Until Gemma couldn't, a bullet in the head ending her career stupid young. Saphrina had carried on the proud Sakaki cause of being a royal pain in the authorities' ass. Skirting that fine line between brave and stupid until an encounter with police brutality had left her unable to walk.

Oh, she'd recovered, but after?

She'd been too scared to carry on after that.

"So if I'd seen them during my civil unrest days?"

Grace had attended protests and rallies against everything corrupt she could. Hell, she'd even had a record in corporate circles.

That'd been a fun find, when, during his giving her a tour of one of his legit businesses, his head of civilian security had barged in like a Tauros with its tails on fire. Giovanni had gone from placid tour guide to grim Made Man in moments. Expecting to hear that they were under attack by some upstart anti-Rocket insurrection. The commotion had much tamer roots, thank God.

It was just the man having a fit. The head of security had seen Grace on the cameras, and he remembered the fiery red head and her silver colored eyes. The story had come out around a slew of widely inappropriate, angry posturing. The guard had claimed that Grace had assaulted him during a protest against Viridian co'.

Grace's defense had been lackluster at best. She'd accidentally dropped the sign. It'd been heavy.

Surprised at that spot of rather passive aggressiveness, Giovanni had given his fiancée a long, long look. She hadn't elaborated. Or amended her words to become an actual apology.

Knowing Grace... each facet of her behaviour was damning.

"I have everything under control," he'd soothed the irate guard. "And I'll personally oversee her conduct. You have nothing to worry about."

Part curiosity, part to shut the man up, Giovanni did some independent research. It had resolved to be one of those fun social upheavals during his early days as an entrepreneur. He'd nominally owned the company, inherited it in the upheval of his mother's death, and promptly forgot about it during his league training days.

It'd been Madam Sakaki's pride and joy. Suffice to say its practices were overtly evil and wasteful. Enough so the locals, mainly stereotypical conflict aviodent Kantoese, had raised hell.

Grace, and fifty other young adults (a sprinkling of do-gooders, ex-employees, and families thereof) had waged a mudslinging war with both the intellectual property the company produced as well as one noisome CEO. Going over the man's files, Giovanni found himself agreeing with the picketters. The man should have been shot, rather than allowed power over anyone.

A quick perusal found the man had been killed in prison, which took that chore out of the Rocket's hands..

As a whole, the disgraced business had been a slew of greedy bastards.

And that observation was coming from him.

They'd been an economic blight in their time. Chugging down every resource they could. Likely realizing, as he cleaned house,e that they were near the top of his to-do list and...

And the attendant incident report, when things had hit boiling point, was one of those grey things. Yes, there'd technically been an assault. One of the kids of the protestors had chucked mud balls. Yes, the security teams should have been rotated out to prevent them from lashing out due to unresolved stress, but Giovanni had had no clue things were this dire.

The end result was a mini-riot that ended with his security head having to take a mandatory leave of absence due to a concussion. Grace hadn't dropped a sign; she'd used it to break out of the scuffle because someone had armed the unarmed guards with illegal guns.

Recalling that fun aspect of Grace's pre-winning career, Giovanni smirked.

"If there was a chance to throw something, anything, at a copper, Gemma would have had your back."

"How was her aim?"

He made a so-so motion with a hand.

"She once tossed her pokeball with a sirviper, fumbled, and hit herself in the head with it. The ball released the snake on her back."

The snake had gone full constrict mode the second he was out of his pokeball... It'd taken three adult Sakaki's to pry Gemma out of her beast's loops.

"You know, she got me into training?"

"You mean you weren't born riding a rabid rhyhorn?"

Giovanni laughed. "The madam wasn't that deprived."

Not quite, but it was a very near thing.
 
Top Bottom