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Author's Notes & Part One New
  • canisaries

    you should've known the price of evil
    Premium
    Location
    Stovokor
    Pronouns
    she/her
    Partners
    1. inkay-shirlee
    2. houndoom-elliot
    3. yamask-joanna
    4. shuppet
    5. deerling-andre
    6. omanyte
    7. hizzap
    Hey all! This is that "malamarfic" that I've been talking about in the Discord. I know I said that I'd post it tomorrow, but I realized that I actually wanted to make my Blitz self-promotion post as soon as possible, and for that, it would be better if I had the link to this thread.

    With that out of the way: what's this story about? Well, it's about Clarisse, a Kalosian Pokémon counselor with psychic abilities, getting a new client: an ill-behaving Malamar kept in a Pokémon rehabilitation facility. Things, of course, later take a turn as the staff of the facility mysteriously changes and their leader has an unusual offer for Clarisse.

    Content warnings for this story include "animal" abuse (they are Pokémon, so not exactly the same thing), gun violence, mind control, moderate profanity and some heavy themes such as police brutality. Overall, I would say the story is rated T.

    As of the completion of the first draft, this story is six parts long and around 18,000 words in total. I will be posting a chapter every few days to spread it out over the Blitz.

    That's it for the Author's Notes. Enjoy the story!

    ---

    KRAKEN'S GRASP
    by canisaries

    ---

    Part One

    ---​

    It was pouring when Clarisse arrived at the Fourrage Pokémon Rehabilitation Facility.

    She parked her car in the lot outside the main building, hoping she hadn't accidentally picked a spot reserved for employees only. Or did she fall into that category? They had hired her.

    She levitated her bag and umbrella into her hands and tried her best not to get wet as she exited the vehicle. Droplets bombarded the canopy of her umbrella as she made her way to the entrance of the red brick building. Just a few steps away, she heard a splash and looked down. Dirty water had already stained her boots.

    No, it's fine, she told herself. They'll understand. It's the weather, not me. I haven't done anything wrong.

    She took a deep breath and let it out. She stepped underneath the roof's overhang and shook her umbrella as dry as she could before folding it and entering.

    "Oh, it's raining poliwag out there, ain't it?"

    Clarisse looked up. A reception desk. And a receptionist. A middle aged woman. Her tone sounded friendly. Clarisse calmed down just a little.

    "Yes, it is," Clarisse said, loud enough to be heard but quietly enough to show she was no trouble. She stepped up to the desk. "Um, I'm here about the malamar."

    "Ah, you're the psychic, then?"

    Despite the receptionist's inoffensive tone, Clarisse tensed up. "Yes. Clarisse Thibault."

    "ID, please."

    Clarisse nodded, dug out her ID and presented it.

    "Any pokémon to report?" the receptionist asked, checking the ID.

    "One sableye."

    The receptionist raised a brow, and Clarisse's heart beat faster. "Sableye? Should I worry for my wedding ring?"

    Clarisse quickly shook her head. "No. Quartz is well-trained and well-fed."

    The receptionist flashed a smile. "Oh, no need to be so nervous, darling. I was only joking." She typed something on her keyboard, then emerged from behind the desk. She pointed at the hat rack in the corner of the room. "Just leave your coat there, and I'll take you to where you're needed.

    Clarisse nodded and took off her trench coat, intending to levitate it over the distance, but then stopped. Should she be showing her powers like that? The receptionist already knew she was a psychic, but…

    Maybe it was better to do it the normal way. She walked over and placed her coat, scarf and beret on the rack. Just like a regular person, no one to be alarmed about.

    After that, the receptionist took her deeper into the building. They passed by hallways that Clarisse could spot glass-walled enclosures in, but she couldn't catch a glimpse of any pokémon. But, then again, she supposed she wasn't here for them, so she shouldn't try to sightsee.

    Most of the doors were windowed, but once they passed under a sign reading ISOLATION, the doors became metallic. She became consciously aware of the higher level of danger within these walls, but that was anxiety she was much better at managing. Quartz was with her, Quartz could protect her against unruly mon. What Quartz couldn't protect her from was guns.

    An unpleasant memory surfaced, and Clarisse worked to suppress it. Why did that mental image have to stick with her so? She hadn't even witnessed it. She only remembered being told, and her mind had done the rest.

    Well, she supposed it only made her careful. And careful was good.

    The receptionist made a turn in the hallway, and so did Clarisse. Behind the corner, there were four men in grayish-green uniforms. And guns on their belts. Okay. Clarisse would just have to deal with it.

    One of the men, a chubby older gentleman with a beard, smiled and stepped forth. "Morning!" he said. "You must be Ms Thibault." He extended a hand. "Jean Bourbeau, the manager of the isolation ward. It's a pleasure."

    Clarisse took his hand and shook it. His robust grip was a stark contrast to her dainty one, but it seemed only genial. "It's a pleasure as well," she said.

    "I'll be the one in charge of making sure you get what you need," Mr Bourbeau said. "Give me a shout if anything's lacking, or talk to these fellas." He pointed to the other men, who nodded. "They'll get back to me."

    Clarisse nodded. "Of course." She had to admit that her reception so far had been a lot friendlier than she'd expected. Or feared.

    "Alright, let's go see Kraken, then," Mr Bourbeau said and headed deeper into the hallway. "Kraken's his name. And, well, you might just see why that fits."

    Clarisse didn't press Mr Bourbeau further. She'd already expected to be facing something less than cuddly.

    Clarisse followed Mr Bourbeau past several enclosures with mon. One had an arbok sleeping on a dog bed, another had a bored-looking mawile playing with a toy meant for toddlers, another yet had a noivern pacing around and stopping to hiss at the passersby, which made Clarisse flinch. These mon didn't seem very happy… but then again, they'd ended up in here because of bad behavior, hadn't they?

    Finally, they stopped at an enclosure with a rather large malamar. The malamar stood on his fins in the corner, his tentacles undulating and his yellow-eyed stare unyielding. Clarisse noted that there was nothing there aside from the squid - no bedding, no food or water bowls, no enrichment. Just white walls lined with that same aura-insulating glass that the front was made of. Clarisse wanted to ask about this, ask why they'd deprived the mon of so much, but she knew some questions weren't welcome with government people and decided not to risk it.

    "So," Mr Bourbeau began, "did they tell you the story behind this guy?"

    "To an extent," Clarisse said. "Former trained inkay. Upon evolution, went on the run and used his hypnotic powers to make different people let him stay in their houses and eat his fill. Do I have that right?"

    "Pretty much," Mr Bourbeau said. He turned to one of the other men. "Émile? Get her the amulet."

    Émile, the thinnest and tallest of the group, nodded and walked over to a box on the wall which he opened with a key. He produced two personal psychic insulator devices - colloquially called amulets by people that worked with them due to their necklace-like shape and function - and handed one to Clarisse while looping the other around his own neck.

    But this would make things difficult.

    Clarisse gathered up all her courage to talk back.

    "Um, excuse me," she said, "but I believe this will prevent me from communicating with Kraken telepathically."

    "Oh, you're a telepath, too," Mr Bourbeau said, scratching his beard. "But, regardless, we can't let you go in there without one. Not with how strong the squid's hypnotic powers are."

    Clarisse wanted to tell the man that she'd been top of her class in mind control resistance at Lumiose Academy of Extrasensorics, but perhaps she'd argued against them enough already. She would just have to rely on Quartz to communicate with Kraken. "Understood."

    She put on the device. Immediately, it became quieter inside her brain as the passive psychic presences of the other men were no longer perceptible.

    "Alright. You ready to go in?" Mr Bourbeau asked.

    "Yes."

    Mr Bourbeau nodded, and Émile stepped towards the door next to the enclosure to unlock and open it. It connected a see-through antechamber to the enclosure whose walls were the same kind of insulated glass. Clarisse supposed this sort of architecture was necessary for safety.

    Clarisse stepped through the door, and Émile closed it behind her before opening the second one. Clarisse proceeded through that as well, and Émile closed it, staying with her in the enclosure.

    This might make Kraken less receptive, thought Clarisse, but shook the thought. She would make it work.

    The malamar hadn't moved while the two had entered, only glancing between Clarisse and Émile and the gun on the latter's belt. Clarisse stopped roughly two meters away from the squid and brought a gentle, albeit performative, smile onto her lips.

    "Hello, Kraken," she said. "How are you today?"

    Kraken only stared, not that she would have understood his answer very well anyway. Clarisse figured it was the thought that counted.

    Clarisse pondered for a moment what she would try next, and then remembered what she had in her bag. "Maybe you'd like something to eat," she said, digging into the bag.

    "Uh…" Émile began. "Be careful. He might use any objects you give him to attack."

    "I'll be careful," Clarisse said. She then produced a green plastic container with chunks of veluza flesh within. She stepped forward and placed it on the floor, then stepped back. "Here you go."

    Kraken eyed Clarisse, then the container. He lifted it telekinetically, stared at it for a moment and then --

    On reflex, Clarisse blocked the container flung at her face with a telekinetic barrier. It thunked against the translucent pink sheet and landed back on the floor.

    "Hey!" Émile shouted at Kraken, his hand on his gun. Clarisse's heart jumped to her throat.

    "Oh, no, no, no, there's no need for that," she got out. "He didn't even throw it very hard."

    Émile gave her a glance, then Kraken. "Alright, then," he muttered, leaving his gun alone.

    Clarisse sighed in relief. She then crouched to pick up the container on the floor. Well, at least it didn't open. That would have been a mess.

    She put the container back into her bag and searched for Quartz's pokéball. "Maybe you're just not a fan of humans," she said. "In that case, I have someone you can talk to."

    She found the ball, drew it out and released the mon inside. A dark gray, almost black, sableye materialized before her. The malamar's eyes widened slightly and he let out a short groan of disapproval.

    "I know ghost types can make you psychics uncomfortable… us psychics, even," Clarisse said, "but Quartz is very nice. Aren't you, Quartz?"

    Quartz opened his sharp-toothed mouth and chittered at Clarisse. He then turned to Kraken and chittered some more. Clarisse was in tune with Quartz enough to know this meant something along the lines of 'Hello! I am Rock-Crystal. Nice to meet you!''

    Kraken huffed, turning his gaze back to Clarisse.

    "Quartz is also a rehabilitated mon," Clarisse said. "He's a rescue from a gem farm. He knows what it's like to be locked up and afraid."

    Kraken made a noise that almost sounded like a 'ha'. Clarisse presumed he was too proud to admit to being afraid.

    "Would you like to tell Quartz what made you do the things you did?" she asked. "Escaping your trainer, mind controlling those people to give you food?"

    Kraken made some groaning noises to Quartz, and Quartz chittered back at Clarisse. 'He says he does not need to justify anything to you.'

    "Oh, but it would help, wouldn't it?" Clarisse said. "The sooner you tell me why you were behaving the way you were, the sooner we can work things out, and the sooner you'll be out of here. You can go to the sea if you want to. Plenty of fresh fish and crustaceans there."

    Kraken groaned again, and Quartz relayed the message. 'Food is not what he craves.'

    "What do you crave, then?"

    Kraken smirked darkly and growled, and Quartz spoke for him. 'Power.'

    Clarisse froze, but then regained her composure. "What do you need that power for?"

    The malamar raised his chin and narrowed his eyes, saying nothing.

    Clarisse turned to Émile. "Has he talked about this before?"

    "Yeah. That's all that we can get out of him, really. He just wants power, apparently."

    "Hmm." Clarisse glanced at Kraken. "Well, no one wants power without a reason."

    "Could just be that he wants the power to do as he pleases. Though it feels like he already got to do that?"

    "Well, he's captured now, so maybe he wants to be so powerful that even the law can't stop him."

    "Mm."

    Clarisse turned to the malamar. "It can be nice to get to do what you want, but everything we do affects others. And we need to respect each other's boundaries so that everyone can live in peace."

    Another laugh-like vocalization. Clarisse supposed Kraken wasn't too concerned with others. She'd heard this could often be the case for malamar, but her studies at the Academy had taught her that they could still learn to see things differently as long as the benefits of cooperation were explained to them well enough. She knew, then, how she should proceed. While she wasn't fully sure it would work for this individual, she owed it to him and society to try.

    "It'll certainly be easier for you, too, to compromise," Clarisse continued. "You've already seen what happens when you act with aggression. The law exists to make sure those people don't hurt others, and that's the reason you're contained here."

    The law should exist for that reason alone, but of course, the truth was a bit more complicated. She would know. Her brother certainly had before his demise.

    Kraken made a face as if he was getting bored. He groaned a response that Quartz relayed again. 'He says he has already said everything he wants to say, and that you can leave.'

    "I'm not leaving quite yet," Clarisse said. "Our hour's barely started. Now, you can stand there and say nothing, but wouldn't it be much nicer to talk to us? I doubt you get many visitors."

    Kraken didn't seem like he was paying attention, just staring past them with a half-lidded gaze.

    "Kraken?" Clarisse prodded. No change.

    Émile stepped forward, chest puffed out. "Answer her."

    Clarisse raised her hands. "A-ah, that's okay. He doesn't have to answer if he doesn't want to."

    Émile gave the woman a look, then stepped back again. "Alright," he said, "but if he dawdles too much, ten sessions might not be enough."

    And you'll have to hire me for longer, Clarisse filled in. Of course, this was not her motivation for letting Kraken take his time. It was simply how she'd been trained.

    "I'm sure he'll come around soon," Clarisse said. "We just have to be patient."

    "Mm. I hope you're right."

    Clarisse nodded. She glanced at Quartz, who shrugged. The woman took some time to think of her next approach.

    "Alright," she said. "If you don't want to talk about what you did after you evolved, how about before that? What were you like as an inkay?"

    ---​

    Kraken hadn't said anything for the rest of the session. Not a peep. Just held that bored gaze with the occasional stink-eye.

    Clarisse had already begun to worry that the guards would think her unqualified and call off the contract, but then they saw her off with a 'see you next week', drawing a sigh of relief from the woman. With her container of veluza collected, Quartz recalled and amulet returned, she headed home to her apartment.

    She made herself some pasta with the veluza Kraken had refused - it was still good, right? It certainly tasted alright while she ate it, Quartz munching on his gravel in the background. After this, she made sure all her socials were in order, and then… budgeting.

    The long process confirmed what she'd anticipated: barely scraping by. She had then made the right choice in forcing herself to accept a job from government people. Every client counted. Especially now that they were so few and far between…

    She couldn't understand why. She'd invested a decent amount of time and money in her socials and website, so they should look just fine. Was it because of what she was? Were people - regular everyday people - really unable to see past their paranoia when it came to psychics?

    She sighed. Maybe she should just take it easy for the rest of the day. Watch some videos. Couldn't watch streaming services, no, she'd had to nix those little luxuries. Well. She supposed there was always piracy, but just the thought of committing any crime, no matter how minor or harmless…

    She didn't want to go like César had.

    So she found herself a video of an espurr playing with yarn and pressed play.

    ---​
     
    Part Two New
  • canisaries

    you should've known the price of evil
    Premium
    Location
    Stovokor
    Pronouns
    she/her
    Partners
    1. inkay-shirlee
    2. houndoom-elliot
    3. yamask-joanna
    4. shuppet
    5. deerling-andre
    6. omanyte
    7. hizzap
    The scheduled time has come for the second part of this story!

    Content warning for discussion of mind control and one attempt at it. Enjoy!

    ---

    Part Two

    ---​

    'I see you're hiding behind that device again. I should expect no less from someone so weak.'

    That had been the only thing Kraken had said to her during the next two visits. He'd said it right at the beginning of their second meeting, too, leaving the third one entirely silent.

    Clarisse had a much better reason now to expect to be kicked out, but for some reason it hadn't happened. Something he'd overheard from one of the guards - 'They're getting impatient' - seemed to suggest they were responsible to someone higher up. She supposed it must have just related to the optics of government efficiency somehow.

    On her fourth visit, Clarisse arrived at the facility the same as the previous two times. She showed her ID and was escorted to the isolation ward the same as the previous two times. But something there was different.

    Instead of Mr Bourbeau, there stood a pale, stone-faced man in a black suit. Clarisse also didn't recognize any of the guards this time.

    Oh, no, she thought. Have I done something wrong?

    The black-suited man spotted her and spoke. "Ms Thibault, I presume?"

    Clarisse's heart caught in her throat. "Y-yes."

    The man made a beckoning movement with his fingers. Clarisse slowly made her way to him - for what else could she do?

    "You may be wondering where Mr Bourbeau is," the man said.

    Clarisse nodded stiffly.

    "Mr Bourbeau has been assigned to another facility," the man stated. "I am to act as his substitute until a more suitable replacement has been found."

    "...I see." This seemed strange, but perhaps it was nothing. Relocations could happen for a number of reasons. Yes, it was surely nothing.

    "I am Mr Blanc," said the man, extending a hand. Clarisse shook it. It felt mechanical.

    "Clarisse Thibault," Clarisse said, then flushed. "But, um, you knew that already."

    "Yes." Mr Blanc nodded. "Let us go."

    The man led Clarisse and the other guards to Kraken's enclosure. Clarisse began to wonder if this new guy would be as accepting of the shortcomings of her rehabilitative efforts as Mr Bourbeau.

    "I hear you are trained well in resisting mind control, Ms Thibault?" Mr Blanc suddenly said.

    Clarisse paused. "...Yes. How did you know?"

    "It is listed on your page as one of your strengths."

    "Ah."

    "Taking that into consideration…" Mr Blanc looked at one of the guards, a well-built man with short ginger hair and a beard. The guard nodded and made his way to the box where the amulets were kept. "We believe you should be fine without an insulator device."

    "O-oh?" Clarisse let out. "I mean, yes! I agree. I think it would go a long way in helping the rehabilitation process, as it will allow Kraken to talk to me directly."

    "I am glad we are in agreement." Mr Blanc glanced at the guard who had put on his own amulet. "Mr Fortin, if you would?"

    Mr Fortin nodded again and unlocked the door to the antechamber. Clarisse followed, and the two proceeded to the enclosure.

    Kraken was waiting. He seemed pleased for once. And then --

    Pressure built up. Kraken's eyes seemed so, so bright - or was it that everything else was dark?

    Clarisse knew what to do. She focused on the pressure and, as if using invisible hands, pushed outwards. The pressure dissipated and her surroundings brightened as Kraken's eyes dimmed. The malamar's face showed traces of surprise.

    He then spoke to her directly for the first time.

    "You are strong."

    His telepathic voice was deep and resonant. He must have chosen it to sound strong himself.

    "I have trained extensively," Clarisse said.

    "No, that is not it. You have always been strong. I can tell." He smirked. "I have also always been strong."

    "But not strong enough, you say?"

    His smirk fell. "Not quite, no. I must train more. But this place offers little opportunity."

    Clarisse kept her face neutral, but internally, she was positively giddy. Finally, Kraken was speaking to her again.

    "What is it that has you craving more power?" she asked.

    "Is it not obvious? I want to get out of here."

    "There's a much easier way to do that, you know."

    Kraken frowned. "What, prostrating myself before these humans and obeying their humiliating demands?"

    "Which demands do you feel are humiliating?"

    "All of them, really."

    Clarisse tilted her head. "Humor me and name one."

    Kraken glared at her, then sighed. "They want me to 'play nice' . They want me not to use my powers to get my way." He stood up straighter. "But I am powerful! Why should I not utilize the skills that I have?"

    "Well, it's like I said," Clarisse replied. "Everyone, even powerful people, needs to respect one another for society to function."

    "Oh, but the law does not have to respect you back, does it?"

    Clarisse quieted.

    She would have to lie here.

    "The law does have to respect you back," she said. "Everyone has rights, even if humans and mon have different ones. The law has to respect those, or it'll face consequences."

    "Let me guess. From the law?"

    "...Yes."

    "And how can I ever trust the law to police itself?"

    Clarisse sighed inaudibly. "You just have to."

    "This 'society' of yours does not seem too alluring."

    "It's still the best thing we have," Clarisse said. "And it's allowed us to achieve so many things that we wouldn't otherwise have been able to. Millions of shelters, abundant food, clean water. Medicine. Safety." For most, anyway. But bringing up the less-than-global availability of these necessities would not help her case.

    "All of this can be - was - provided to you as long as you cooperate", she added. "Heck, you have it easier than humans. You don't have to work when you've got a trainer to take care of you. All you have to do is stay out of trouble."

    "All fine and good until that trainer abandons you," Kraken growled.

    "Why would a trainer abandon you?"

    Kraken held a stare.

    Did he mean he was…?

    Suddenly, Kraken flinched. "Forget what I said," he then said. "It is unimportant."

    "Oh, no, it's quite important," Clarisse said. "If you have trusted someone and that trust has been broken…"

    "I have never trusted anyone. But yes, I have been 'abandoned', so to speak, if you must know. I was too… self-confident for my trainer's liking. But, really, it was I who abandoned her.

    Clarisse doubted this was the truth, but she knew not to call him a liar to his face.

    As the spell of silence stretched, Mr Fortin spoke next. "Are you making progress?"

    Clarisse nodded. "Oh, yes. Extensive progress."

    "Good to hear it," Mr Fortin said, though his tone wasn't quite as kind as his words.

    Alright, Clarisse thought to herself. What to do next?

    She remembered Quartz, dug out his ball and released him. The sableye chittered a greeting.

    "Why have you brought out that weakling?" Kraken asked tiredly.

    "Quartz isn't weak," Clarisse said patiently. "If you want to see it for yourself, you can always have a battle. Pokémon understand each other better through battle, don't they?"

    Mr Fortin raised a brow. "A battle? Indoors?"

    Clarisse flinched. Right. She shouldn't go ahead and make promises like that without --

    "I'll allow it," Mr Blanc said from the other side of the wall. "It isn't as if there's anything in the enclosure to break."

    Mr Fortin made a face that seemed to say 'we are in here', but didn't protest further. "Alright, then. A battle."

    Clarisse nodded. "On the count of three, Kraken?"

    "Fine."

    "Splendid. Okay, Quartz, get ready."

    Quartz chittered and took a few steps back to give himself some space.

    "One," said Clarisse. "Two. Three!"

    ---​

    Kraken, indeed, ended up seeing for himself how strong Quartz was. The two fighters tied after a ten-minute tussle, the battle ended by Clarisse after seeing both of them winded enough - and thinking of the time they had remaining. Kraken, of course, saw this as a win, and Clarisse found out the hard way that the squid was not a gracious winner.

    Regardless, the battle left him in such good spirits that Clarisse had a much easier time talking to him afterwards. She could have risked it and asked more about that 'abandonment', but decided not to, and settled for inquiring about Kraken's life here at the facility.

    "They feed me pellets here!" Kraken had said, mantle puffed as if he was a bird ruffling his feathers. "At least my old trainer fed me several kinds of canned fish!"

    "I'm sorry to hear that," Clarisse had said. "Would you like me to bring you more canned veluza next time?"

    "Keep your veluza. Pity is a terrible seasoning."

    Their session eventually came to a close. As Clarisse left, she couldn't read the faces of the guards or Mr Blanc. She supposed that they simply weren't expressive people - and it was better than them saying anything negative.

    Next week's session saw Kraken wanting another battle, and Clarisse and Quartz obliged. The malamar had made strides, though still could not quite knock Quartz out in the ten minutes Clarisse gave them. Despite this, Kraken once again acted as the winner, boasting about his power.

    After the battle, Kraken was even more talkative than before. He mostly complained about being imprisoned and criticized every annoying habit each of the guards had, but he did also mention some things about his past. It was, however, mostly only about how strong he'd been since he was a hatchling and how he would always beat all the other mon in the junior circuits. When Clarisse finally dared to ask about his last trainer, Kraken crankily said that he didn't want to waste a single breath on that weakling - ignoring the fact that he was using telepathy.

    Clarisse, not wanting to push him, steered the conversation back to earlier in his life, and listened to his tales of his amazing feats for the rest of the session. Upon getting ready to leave, she did worry again, as they'd now spent five sessions of the contractual ten and she wasn't necessarily much closer to getting the malamar to behave. Then, as if she wasn't anxious enough, Mr Blanc called her over and said he wanted to discuss something.

    "Have I done something wrong?" Clarisse asked, heart pounding in her chest.

    "No, you have performed your duties excellently so far," Mr Blanc said, though he said it without a smile. The tone was still friendly, at least, so it didn't seem sarcastic…

    "Then… is there another matter?"

    Mr Blanc glanced around. "Before we continue, we should move this conversation to my office."

    "Oh. Alright," Clarisse said, nodding.

    Mr Blanc wordlessly led Clarisse through the hallways and into his office. It was a little bit cramped, but Mr Blanc seemed to use the space very efficiently with neatly organized desk supplies and immaculately stacked papers. He took a seat behind his desk, and Clarisse sat down on the chair before it. Her heart still pounded, but a little less violently.

    Mr Blanc clasped his hands and lowered them on the desk before himself. "Ms Thibault, if I may ask… what made you become a pokémon counselor?"

    It was fortunately an easy question. "Well, I'm a big fan of pokémon. I enjoy working with them, and I enjoy helping them even more. And my nature as a psychic gives me an advantage over non-psychics as I can communicate with the mon directly using telepathy and mind reading, bypassing the language barrier. Except with dark types, of course."

    Mr Blanc nodded. "And what made you specialize in psychic types?"

    Clarisse found it refreshing that someone asked instead of just assuming every psychic naturally wanted to work with psychic pokémon. "I suppose I just feel a sense of kinship with them."

    Mr Blanc nodded again, then held a brief silence. "Back to your… willingness to help pokémon," he said. "You must look at the mon we keep here and wish for them to be successfully rehabilitated, correct?"

    "Yes. It would be a great shame if a mon had to stay locked up for the rest of their life."

    "A great shame indeed," Mr Blanc said. Clarisse could swear she saw a hint of a smile on the man's face, but it was gone as soon as she noticed it.

    Mr Blanc leaned back. "As a woman highly educated in matters of the mind, I trust you know the basics of neuroscience?"

    "Yes." Of course, it depended on what was considered 'the basics', but Clarisse had enough confidence that Mr Blanc himself wasn't some kind of neurosurgeon.

    "And you know that repetition of certain behaviors in response to certain stimuli strengthens the associated neural circuits, making the subject more likely to perform that behavior the following times they encounter these stimuli?"

    "Yes, of course." Clarisse was doing well - but where was this going?

    Mr Blanc leaned in. "Were you aware that this phenomenon is also theorized to take place during hypnosis?"

    Clarisse blinked. "I suppose I never thought of it that way… but it sounds plausible."

    Mr Blanc nodded. "With this in mind…" he began. "There is some interest among my acquaintances in government intelligence in testing this theory."

    The conversation, all of a sudden, made sense. A cold pit tore itself into Clarisse's belly.

    "You want… Kraken to use his hypnotic powers to steer troubled mon towards more positive behaviors," she spelled out.

    Mr Blanc now smiled with no attempts to hide it. "Precisely. You are very quick to catch on."

    "But --"

    Clarisse caught herself slightly too late. Her distaste for the violation of mon's rights to psychic autonomy had caused her to speak before she'd remembered the power dynamics at play.

    "But what, Ms Thibault?" Mr Blanc asked patiently. "Please, do communicate it if this makes you too uncomfortable."

    "Well…" Clarisse peeped, her throat too tight. "If you insist, I should mention that this sounds somewhat… unorthodox."

    "Progress has always relied on ventures into the unorthodox," Mr Blanc said. "But rest assured, Ms Thibault, this will be handled professionally and with careful consideration of what is and is not necessary. We do not intend to toy with the minds of mon here."

    "Ah…"

    "And I should mention, miss, that you would be properly compensated for your contributions to convincing the malamar to act as our hypnotist."

    Properly compensated… Clarisse could use the money.

    But no - she couldn't sell these poor mon's minds just for money, could she?

    "What do you say?" Mr Blanc asked. "Extend and deepen your contract with us for some much-needed returns?"

    How did he…?

    Right.

    He was with the government.

    "Tell you what," Mr Blanc said, getting up and circling the desk. "Take the week to think about it. There's no need to rush into a decision you might regret."

    Clarisse gripped her bag a little tighter.

    She should say no, right here and right now. She should stand up for her principles.

    But… could she afford that?

    She could afford…

    …to take a week.

    "I'll take a week," she said, "to think about it."

    Mr Blanc nodded. "Very well. You may be on your way, then."

    Clarisse nodded and got up.

    "Oh, one more thing," Mr Blanc said.

    Clarisse froze. "Yes?"

    His expression sharpened. "The contents of this conversation are confidential. Do not share this with anyone, or there will be consequences."

    Clarisse swallowed. "Yes, sir."

    Mr Blanc's face returned to neutrality. "Alright, then. Have a safe trip home, Ms Thibault."

    Nodding, Clarisse briskly made her way out of the room and shut the door behind her.

    She let out a wavering sigh.

    One week. At least she had that much.

    ---​
     
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