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Pokémon (PMD) Between the Mountains and the Sea

Intro/Part One, Chapter One: The Sea

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Between the Mountains and the Sea

Seafolk’s guild was not spoken of alongside the greats—even its own members could attest to that. But between a town that hates them and the threat of larger guilds coming to subsume them, they'd better think of some way to pull themselves together or else be dissolved. Fortunately, that’s not Solder’s problem, not when all he needs is to pick up the shattered remains of his memory and move on. Yet things can only get more complicated and it seems that for every reason he has to leave, another tells him to stay.
Ah, here's the PMD fic I've been threatening myself to release for a while. It's a little low-key and meandering, but there are enough bright spots to say I still like it. Anyways, I've banked something like a completed arc, sixty-thousand words and nine chapters in and I'm hoping to release them every week or so while I work on my other fic. Enjoy!

General warning for violence, swearing and adult themes. Death, references to abuse and alcoholism, self-esteem issues, anxiety, and general mental health issues. Finally, friends and non-friends being cruel to each other.


Part One

Chapter One
The Sea



Solder lay on a bench in the shade, the storm in his gut just quelled enough to open his eyes.

So he did. Unfortunately, the bench he lay on faced the ocean.

Solder groaned and shut his eyes again. He slumped back and took a deep breath. The wet slats weren’t pleasant on his spine, but it was better than standing. Or laying on the puddle-riddled stone harbour, instead. As if taunting him, a massive wave crested over the stone pier not too many metres away, mirroring the tremendous waves sloshing through his mind. He felt his stomach lurch at the memory.

He’d never take a boat again.

An electronic crackling interrupted his groaning. He cracked one eye open. The crooked fabric overhang he slept under filled his vision, but as he craned his neck, he noticed a brown-box radio sitting on the open window beside him. Its two dials stared at him like the eyes of a child.

A boyish, enthusiastic voice leaked from it with a little sing-song intro.

“...Aaaaand good morning, Seafolk! Welcome back to the broadcast! It’s fa~bulously sunny again today and the sea—she’s faring well. For all you sea-dwellers, be prepared for weeks of fortune and prosperity and ships brimming with fish. Now, let’s diiiii~p into the harbour for a moment~”

Solder tuned out the broadcast at that, letting it fade into background noise. After a few moments, he’d finally gathered himself enough to try sitting up again.

Taking a deep breath of salty ocean air, he swung his legs over the edge of the bench and dragged himself up. The harsh glare of sunlight forced him to squint. He looked out over the gatherings of strange creatures walking across the harbour, talking in groups or sitting alone at the edge of the ocean with fishing rods cast before them. Despite sharing a ship with an odd collection of them, he still couldn’t get used to the odd mutations, vibrant colours and absurd biology. Like, one of the sailors that he chatted with on the voyage here was a living key ring—Klefki, she called herself—she looked absurd, but how could he judge? She functioned perfectly. He could barely walk.

Solder frowned. He hadn’t seen a single recognizable creature yet—including himself (a quilava, according to the sailors, who gave him worried glances when he asked)—but they all talked and acted like it was normal, so…

Best not to rock the boat on that one. Pun intended. He could shut up and pretend this was normal for a while. Still, his mind spluttered and Solder felt a flash of anger as he tried to reach even basic memories. There existed flashes of vague, unreachable objects, creatures and images that slipped through his mind like water through a sieve.

“...Now, onto guild news. Un-fortunately, Zazz, our resident froslass, resigned this morning. Many of you may have seen her battle with Guildmaster Haxorus in the valley, but, needless to say, she did not beat him! What a surprise~. Of course, this brings into question the duties of the guildmaster. Can he really throw his weight around like that? Where does it stop? Personally, I’m wondering if more shows of discipline are sneaking up on us. We’ll see~”

Solder found himself listening to the voice again, latching onto the mention of the guild before he let it drift off again.

When he’d interrogated the sailors in between bouts of seasickness, the topic of guilds popped up frequently. And with it came endless praise. Endless stories of teams they’d ferried to other continents, their triumphs, their failures, their brilliant confidence and selflessness. Valotrope, Treebow, Sanclaw: all big guild cities, thriving utopias inland that housed the bravest er… pokemon (according to klefki) in the world.

Well, they certainly sounded impressive, but Solder had to wonder why nobody mentioned that Seafolk had a guild.

Half the sailors had, at one point, applied to enter a guild. None had succeeded. Klefki wasn’t shy about crying—literally crying, which sounded faintly like windchimes being shaken—on his shoulder as she shared that. They’d done written exams, interviews, background checks, battles.

He glanced at the masses wandering across the pier. One hulking, bipedal alligator-looking thing stomped by, giving him a sidelong glance before snorting and turning away. Solder barely caught the disarming flash of knife-sharp fangs as it grinned.

He shuddered, a sudden chill cutting through him.

He’d be torn to shreds.

Solder sat up as the radio continued to ramble behind him. He hopped off the bench, his stubby, alien paws meeting the ground with a splash. Water soaked him up to his ankles and he instantly wanted to get back into the sunlight.

He left the shaded bench behind without a second glance, spit into the warm sunlight and open streets of Seafolk.

Wandering around the busy pier on all fours proved to be awkward even without motion sickness bogging him down. Not the mechanics of it—he had no problem putting his legs forward in the right order or weaving his surprisingly flexible body around the crowds—but he was so short. Pretty much every pokemon was taller than him as he walked.

Feeling slightly shaken and pinned under the gaze of so many pokemon, Solder turned to the first street he came across, leaving the noisy pier behind. He breathed a sigh of relief as he left. The street was narrow and much less busy than the pier.

The city seemed built on a hill. The laid bricks and boards by the pier becoming trodden dirt the further into the city they went. They sloped up as well, going on until they, along with the city’s buildings, trailed off into the mountains and cliffs surrounding.

Solder was impressed by the architecture. Every house was erected as a block, kept up by wooden pillars and stone foundations. Few had glass windows, instead using thick wood slats or swinging planks to cover them. Each building connected to the street with massive, arching doorways that even the largest pokemon could fit through. Not many had second or third storeys, but those that existed were small, becoming progressively less massive until the top floors looked like garden sheds from the street.

As Solder strolled up the dusty street, he puzzled over the mess of T-shaped poles and platforms that reached from the slanted rooftops. There he saw a group of intimidating blue birds, long tail feathers jutting behind them in impressive Vs, roosting on the platforms. He squinted at them, wondering if they were just simple birds or if they could talk like everything else.

Then they burst into a chorus of laughing caws that echoed through the street. The biggest one flung its wings open, gesturing widely to the group. It brought another round of laughter. Solder shook his head and turned away, back to the street. Unfortunately, with another look, none of the buildings screamed ‘guild’.

Okay, fine. Time to ask for help.

He huffed and searched for a pokemon that didn’t look like it would kill him, passing over a group of intimidating monsters lurking in the wide arch of the building next to him. He scampered further up the street, turning the first chance he got; another row of stacked houses met him, this time sandwiching a square of overgrown trees, vines and shrubs that spilled out into the street. Pokemon milled about the street, but the park lay empty aside from a roundish pokemon with long rabbit-like ears sprouting from its head. Solder recognized this one, actually—it was an azumarill, like one of the sailors he talked with on the ship. She stood in the shade of a tree, seemingly content watching the pokemon pass by.

“Excuse me?” Solder waved as he entered the park. She didn’t respond. “Hey!”

One of her large ears twitched and she turned towards him. As their eyes met and Solder opened his mouth to speak, a brief spark of… something passed her face. And then it left. Not because she schooled her expression or smiled, she simply left. One moment they shared awkward half-smiles, the next she loped into the street, the blue orb at the end of her tail bobbing behind her.

Solder could do nothing but stare at the shaded patch of dew-grass she used to occupy, mouth open as if trying to find the words he was trying to say. He ran his tongue across his teeth. They felt sharper than they should.

“Fine.” He grumbled, turning back to the crowds in a huff. “Alright. Cool..”

Wandering around led him behind trails of creatures, all gathering around a set of open streets. He stumbled through the crowd and Into a bustling marketplace, with colored awnings arching between the buildings above him and a swarm of multicoloured pokemon crowding around wooden stalls jammed in the wooden buildings that framed them. The noise of it rivalled the colours, all manner of voices, crass and musical rang out over the crowd. None of it appealed to Solder at all.

For a second Solder thought to spare himself, to turn around and give up, but a thought struck him as he watched a fish-seller chat up a customer, waving him off with a brown wrapped package and a grin.

So he sighed and bore the noise, scampering around a passing pair of pokemon. Then he raised himself from four legs to two so he could look at his options.

The shops across the street were stocked mostly with produce. A wide array of herbs crowded together, overflowing from their boxes. They were the busiest stands. Absolutely crowded, pokemon all shoving past each other to get the best products. Further down, more pokemon hawked products in shaded tents with bits of jewelry and other trinkets hung around them. The rest of the market was just… fish. Solder didn’t notice at first, but most of the market consisted of buckets and trays of dead fish—none of which he recognized—sitting in beds of crushed ice.

He supposed it made sense for a seaside town, but as he sniffed the air—finally noticing the sharp, briny scent—he couldn’t help but shrink away.

Spotting a promisingly empty jewelry tent, Solder dropped back to his feet and skirted through a gap in traffic, silently thanking his nimble frame as he narrowly brushed a massive, scaled leg. He ignored the subsequent shout as he slipped past a group of chatting cats sharing an awning.

The shopkeeper looked like a walking sunflower, with a happy narrow-eyed face plastered in the centre of the radiating yellow petals. Solder didn’t bother trying to understand how that worked—or the way she manipulated her leaf-arms to hook and unhook the accessories from her wall. He reminded himself of the key ring he talked to on the ship, fought the urge to slam his head into the table, then cleared his throat.

“Hey, can you help me? I’m looking for the guild.” He thought about standing and bringing himself eye-level with her, but the moment of hesitation she held before speaking kept him on all fours.

“Why on earth would you want to go to our guild and not inland?” She said in a soft hum, before turning back to her work. “They’re not so friendly up here, honey. Ohhh, but I heard on the radio that Treebow’s guild is simply lovely in springtime—what with all those flowers. And such a nice stroll up the valley. Hmmm...” She trailed off with another hum, finishing her work with a pleased clap of her leaves and stepping back up to the counter.

Maybe she didn’t expect Solder’s completely flat expression, but her smile dipped a bit as she locked eyes with him.

“I guess you didn’t hear me, I wanted to go to this guild, not Treebow. In fact, I never even mentioned Treebow. Maybe I should’ve screamed,” Solder said, a soft venom to his voice. “But, okay. Yeah, yeah, trees, flowers, whatever—can you give me directions or not?”

“Oh, honey, maybe you should calm down first. I know how your type…” She gestured to him with a leaf. “...tend to get.”

“You don’t know me. And I’m not upset.”

“Sure, honey. Maybe I can help you later. After this customer.”

Then she simply ignored him, turning to another pokemon Solder hadn’t noticed had snuck up beside him. He clenched his teeth. The creature (taller than him, with a pair of scythes for arms) took his place and hit him with a side-eye. He let his irritation out in a laboured sigh, nodded and turned back to wait and watch the street.

There was no neighbouring stall across the street. So, with nothing to stop for, all the stray pokemon passed by like the swing of a metronome—back and forth, back and forth. Solder leaned against the shopkeeper’s table, happy for the moment to relax. But the more he counted, the more time passed with the sunflower’s enthusiastic conversation melting into the background noise, and the more he felt his irritation evaporate with nothing to spend it on. He let out a wide yawn. His muscles went slack and he found himself half-laying on the table. Soon enough, his eyes fluttered closed…

But a shrill squeal pierced through the crowds. Solder jerked awake, slamming his elbow on the table with a jolt of pain. He flicked his attention to the offender. There, across the street, some sort of yellow rat with a big wedge of teeth jutting from her muzzle sat on the dusty ground, clutching a brown bag against their side. Jewelled pins lined her shoulder-strap. They scrambled to their feet, scolding the orange, two-tailed weasel who must’ve knocked them over.

Mostly, Solder was fascinated by the… yellow swim floaty wrapped around their neck. Paranoid little weasel.

He started to lose interest as the mouse further overreacted. She whined in the same annoying squeal, she huffed, she flailed as if the light coat of dust she’d taken from being knocked over was toxic. Solder couldn’t help but roll his eyes. Not only at the mouse, but with how the weasel made a big show of apologising in a sickly-sweet tone of voice, patting her on the shoulder like a child—which she tried in vain to shrink away from.

Then they parted. Solder was just about to brush it off, turn, and make another go at the sunflower, but something caught his eye. While the mouse’s bag-strap once had a neat row of gems pinned to it, now half—a good eight or so—were missing. Solder blinked once, not believing the weasel could’ve pulled it off so seamlessly, but…

No, they were gone.

And the weasel had just reached the thicker crowds up the street.

Solder considered saying something, but… well, he didn’t really care that much about some stolen jewellery. Still, a nagging voice lurking in the back of his mind. Imagine if he showed up to the guild with a criminal in tow. It was just a petty criminal, sure, but his resume was a big, fat nothing right now. He’d take anything.

Solder took a quick glance back to the shopkeeper, still chatting away endlessly. It’s not like she was going anywhere.

With that, he took off, following the blaring yellow collar as it bobbed through the crowds. He lost sight as they turned a corner and, for a second, Solder paused. The weasel simply disappeared. Solder blinked, glancing around some scattered groups of pokemon in the otherwise empty street for a telltale flash of colour. For a while he was stumped. Then he noticed an alley—or, more of a construction error between houses. Any pokemon too much bigger than Solder wouldn’t be able to fit.

He crept up, peeking around the corner.

If Solder hadn’t followed him, the alley might’ve been paradise for the thief. It was easy to skip over, easy to hide in. But instead of leading to another street, a heaping pile of broken furniture and scrap blocked the end. And there, crouched on an upturned wooden crate, the weasel examined his spoils, a grim frown on its muzzle.

Perfect.

Solder stepped around the corner and into the alley, blocking the only exit.

Only to realise he hadn’t thought of a plan.

“Hey, you… stop,” he said, good criminal-stopping words lost on him. He couldn’t muster up the enthusiasm for it either, so his voice came weakly, like he was reciting a speech. “Drop the pins, weasel.”

The weasel looked up, blinking owlishly.

“Weasel? Wow, I haven’t heard that one since I was just a little scamp chasing after fish in the bay. You need some better material, kid; it’s bui-zel.” He winked and gave Solder a crude smile, but after a second it dropped. “Hey, wait—you’re a bit of a weasel yourself, aren’t you?”

Solder blinked. He looked down at his long, furry torso. Was he?

“That’s not important,” he huffed, letting his shoulders slump.

“And you can’t just accuse me of something like that! What proof do you have?”

“I saw it.” Solder pointed at his eyes with a nubby paw, then he glanced back over the pins sitting on another crate beside the weas— ah… buizel. “I still see it, actually.”

The buizel hesitated for a moment, the twin tails behind him spinning slowly. Then he followed Solder’s gaze, slowly, slowly, until he reached the pins. He must’ve just remembered they were there because, with a quick flick of his paw, he knocked them to the dirty alley floor.

“Woah, how’d those get there? Haha!” He chuckled awkwardly. Solder returned the buizel’s forced smile and shrug with a flat scowl. “That’s so weird! Anyways, I’ll be going, now. Got… important… things to do, ya’know?”

The buizel stood, dusted himself off and started a casual stroll towards Solder, stopping once he noticed that Solder had advanced further and stood up, bracing himself against both walls of the alley in a makeshift barricade.

“No, I think you’ll be going with me.” Solder said, forcing his voice deeper. Inwardly, he was faintly happy with the way the buizel held his paws up to his chest and stepped back. Solder’d intimidated him, at least a little bit.

It was a much better line than before, to be fair.

“What, you wanna battle?” the buizel said, shaking out of his hesitation and crouching. “I’m game.”

Solder raised an eyebrow. While he thought he could certainly take the other pokemon, he’d rather not have to fight. Ever. Luckily, he had a much better idea.

“What if I just scream?” Solder asked and the buizel hesitated again. “Like: ‘Help, this monster’s attacking me!’ or something?”

“Umm… don’t?”

By the way the buizel’s eyes widened and his tails’ spinning slowed to a stop, Solder knew he couldn’t resist the idea. With a glint in his eye, he took a deep breath through his nose. Then he let it out in a harsh shout.

“HELP! Help, he’s—“

Solder was cut off as the buizel lunged, slamming into him, eliciting a winded ‘oof’ and knocking them both to the ground in a tangle of limbs. While Solder lay, stunned, beneath the buizel straddling him, he felt two paws wrap around his muzzle and hold it in a firm clamp.

He blinked the stars from his eyes and squinted at the shaky smile of the buizel looming above him.

“Okay! Okay, um… let’s just calm down. If I let go, will you scream again?”

Solder nodded. The buizel’s smile dropped completely. He shifted on top of Solder.

“Oh.” His jaw clamped shut with a sharp clack. Solder jerked back and forth beneath him, struggling to get free.

The buizel grunted and put more pressure on Solder’s chest, forcing a jolt of pain through his lungs, exhaling harshly into the paws clamped around his muzzle. The buizel opened his mouth again.

Then Solder watched his pupils dilate, catching on something at the mouth of the alley. The sharpness of a brief exhale echoed from behind Solder and he craned his neck, struggling to wrench himself from the buizel’s grasp. Still, he managed to catch an upside-down glimpse of another yellow duck standing behind them, a deep spark of fear in its eyes.

“I’m not kidnapping him!” The buizel snapped, jerking backwards without releasing Solder. “I’m not! We’re just— wait, no! Not that! Ah— wow, there’s really no way to make this look good, is there?”

The duck didn’t look like it had been listening at all. It took a tentative step back, then one more; then that turned into a sprint.

Solder couldn’t help but snicker under the buizel’s weight. He and the buizel shared a look—one uneasy, one amused.

Though that amusement didn’t last long. This was… certainly not how Solder imagined this going, but if someone else got involved, he bet they’d just steal his thunder. Give him a pat on the back, maybe, then take the buizel off his hands.

Taking advantage of the buizel’s momentarily stunned state, Solder finally managed to wrench his face from the vice grip holding it.

“Wait!” He said, before the buizel could jerk forward and catch him again. “I’ll be quiet. Let’s just talk, alright?”

The buizel kept his paws up as if waiting for Solder to bite, but after a moment of nothing he reluctantly dropped them, dropped his guard, and nodded. Solder took the opportunity to push himself off the ground. The buizel tumbled off him with a startled yelp, hitting the alley floor and laying stunned on his back for a moment before he scrambled deeper into the alley.

“Look, I don’t really care about the pins that much,” Solder said.

“What? Then why did you cause a scene?”

“It was funny.”

Solder didn’t smile, but he wanted to as he watched the buizel’s bemused expression grow. Then the other pokemon shook it off, forced a smile and cleared his throat. Solder noticed the way his tails spun more vigorously behind him.

“W-well then. What can I do for a… fine mon like you?” The buizel tried for a casual lean against the wall. It didn’t work, mostly because his orange fur was a matted mess of dirt. It looked more yellow than orange. “If you want a cut, I’m telling you now I’m not selling the spoils.”

Solder paused, actually needing to think about the question. What he wanted was to get credit for catching a thief, which the guild could apparently help with. Except, he still didn’t know where the guild was.

Right. He forgot about that.

So maybe his plan wasn’t very well thought out. Or thought out at all. Although…

“Can you take me to the guild?” Solder said.

For a second—where the buizel scrunched up his muzzle and gave Solder an odd look—Solder thought he saw through it, but as quickly as it came, it left.

“What?” The buizel stood up from the wall. “That’s it? Sure. You won’t tell anyone if I do, right?”

“Yeah.”

No.

The buizel’s smile returned with a vengeance. He sauntered over to Solder, trying to slip by him and out the mouth of the alley. It was a nice try, but Solder managed to wrap an arm around the buizel’s shoulders—just enough to catch him if he tried to run. Still, the other pokemon didn’t seem to mind as they walked out of the alley together, practically conjoined with how close they were.

“Alright! I’m Larcen, by the by,” the buizel said, returning Solder’s favor by throwing his own arm around the quilava. Solder grunted under the weight and the irritating scratch of the buizel’s dust-stiff fur against his face. “May I know the name of my co-thief?”

“Solder.” He didn’t bother to dignify that last part.

“Weird name.”

Solder just bit his tongue.

~(0)~

There wasn’t a chance in the world Solder would’ve found the guild on his own. Not only was it not in the city, it was a kilometre out, through winding dirt paths that snaked around and over cliffs, until they converged and cut through a valley. According to Larcen, this was the only way out of Seafolk on foot.

The flat roof of a gatehouse greeted Solder and Larcen in the distance, over a hill, and Solder breathed a sigh of relief. After a long day, the sight was a blessing. It helped that the mountains were quiet and awash in a fresh breeze that welcomed him to his destination.

They chatted all the while. Solder tried to resist, at first, but Larcen eroded him over the course of a thousand words. He went on about Seafolk, mostly. Solder didn't have much to say. He just gave vague half- truths and shrugs.

But by holding his tongue, he learned nothing. So he talked. Latched onto easy, mundane details.

“I got a lot of pokemon tiptoeing around me in town.” He asked, strolling beside Larcen. They’d stopped dangling off each other as they entered the valley. Now, Solder glowered at Larcen’s back as the buizel waded in the neck-high grasses growing from the cliff base, picking flowers as he passed. “A merchant was talking about ‘my type’, whatever that means. Do I look like a punk to you?”

Larcen turned, staring at Solder with a quirked eyebrow. His whiskers twitched. A limp bouquet of irises dangled from his paw.

“It’s ‘cause you’re a firestarter,” he said. Then he gave a small smile, as if what he said made sense.

Solder looked at himself with a frown. What was different about him? Were all quilava arsonists here? Did that make all buizel thieves? Solder waited until they were on the road again before talking, letting the awkward silence simmer between them. He stared at the back of Larcen’s head, watching it bob through the flowers.

“How can anyone tell I’m an arsonist? Not that I am, of course, but you seem to think so.” Solder said.

Larcen paused, turned, and gave him an open-mouthed stare.

Maybe he shouldn’t have asked that.

“You— “ Larcen’s voice came as a whisper. He composed himself. “Are you okay? You know what you are, right?”

“A quilava. I’m confused, not stupid.”

“Yeah, but… your type?”

Solder froze, staring off into the mists swirling in the valley, past the guild. Type… type… had he heard anything about type? It sounded like a judgement of personality, but maybe it was a little more significant.

So Solder stammered for a few moments, feeling like his brain was stuck in sap.

“Ars— heat… heat type. No! Fire! Fire makes sense. Fire type.”

Solder turned back to Larcen. Needless to say, the buizel’s tense muscles and confused frown were not reassuring.

“Okay…” he drawled. “What type am I?”

Any pride that warmed Solder’s chest at the ‘okay’ fled as he looked at the buizel. He bit his lip and tried to think.

I’ve got no clue. What type is a thief? Stealing type? That swim-ring collar of his might be a clue, but what type can’t swim?

“Umm… land?”

Larcen smiled, but it barely breached his cheeks.

“Wow, you might be stupid, then. That’s not even a type.”

“How would you know?”

“There’s only eighteen of them. I’m water.”

That explains the fins...

“Why the collar, then? Weird fashion choice; can’t you swim?”

Larcen grinned, giving his collar a firm tug.

“I can’t take it off. It’s a part of me, actually.”

Solder hummed and turned away, avoiding Larcen’s suspicious smile. Maybe it was best he shut up for a while; the last few minutes have been nothing but him putting his foot in his mouth over and over again. He burned up beneath his fur despite the light breeze. He didn’t know anything about himself before the ship, but somehow he got the impression he wasn’t used to being put on the spot like this—being so ignorant he couldn’t understand the most obvious concepts.

“You okay, Solder? This is getting less funny and more sad.”

Solder thought about it for a while, the scuffing of his feet across the dirt path and Larcen rustling through the grass melting into background noise. Eventually, the guild became more than a flat-roofed gatehouse as they grew closer. Now, Solder spotted some jutting wooden structures hanging from a particularly large cliff behind it, framed by windows carved into the lower cliff face.

As tempted as he was to deny anything was wrong, to keep lying forever, he realised that he’d already failed, to no one's surprise, least of all his own. But eventually he’d have to trust somebody, and it wasn’t likely Larcen would forget about that one weird pokemon that knew nothing about anything.

All of a sudden a faint, irritating spark of guilt clogged Solder’s throat. He coughed.

Fine…

“Look,” Solder said, letting his frustration out in a weary sigh. “I woke up a couple weeks ago, beaten nearly to death, remembering nothing—not even my own name—and being shipped to… well, here. It’s not a big deal or anything, just... confusing and frustrating and terrible.” He took a deep, deep breath, the pressure high enough he felt like a balloon. Then he let it slip out through his nose. It felt hotter than it should as it passed over his chest.

Larcen winced and clicked his tongue once, the sharp sound barely reaching Solder.

“That… sucks. I kinda feel bad now,” Larcen said.

“Don’t. It’s not your fault.”

“Nah, not for that.” Larcen toyed with his whiskers, his pace slowing to a crawl. He refused to elaborate beyond that, even as the duo walked in silence.

At this point, the wide, arching doorway of the guild crept out from behind the gatehouse, into Solder’s vision. Created from massive stone bricks, it looked plain besides the illegible runes marking the top of it.

“If you want to know about types, I can give you a nice little catch-up when we get in the guild. For now…” Larcen smiled and held out his fistful of drooping violets.

Solder glared at them. What was he supposed to do? Eat them?

He plucked one and gave it a sniff. It smelled like grass and sugar.

“Am I supposed to feel better, now? What’s the point of this?”

Larcen didn’t take back his hand. His smile froze a moment too long.

“It’s an apology, I guess. Thought I’d trick the foolish newcomer, but oops, he has head problems! And now who’s the fool?” He pointed to himself and rolled his eyes. “Me, like usual.”

It took entirely too long for Solder’s brain to catch up, looking from Larcen to the guild, then back again. Then back again…

“You—”

“That’s right! Welcome to Seafolk guild, home of me! And other pokemon, too, but I’m obviously the most important.”

Larcen’s cheeky wink did nothing to soothe Solder’s pounding heart and grinding teeth. The heat in his chest boiled. He raised himself up on two legs and opened his maw to say something, to spit maybe.

Instead, when his lips parted a spurt of red-hot flame licked across the paw clenching Larcen’s violet, charring it in an instant, spilling out across his fist and swallowing it in a blanket of fire. He yelped and threw himself back, hitting the dirt wide-eyed as he shook his paw, desperately willing the fire to…

It vanished. Actually, it was never there. There was no searing heat, just the faintest hint of it. The tan fur on his paw was just… ruffled. Mildly.

“Uh…” Anger gone, Solder looked to Larcen.

“Yeah, that’s the whole ‘fire type’ thing I was talking about.” Larcen said. Then, noticing the still-smoldering flower lying in the dry grass, spat a stream of water at it as casually as a snap of the fingers.

That was about the moment Solder’s brain melted.

“That’s… not possible.”

“Yes… it… is?”

Solder clambered back to his feet and crawled to the flower—now sad and petalless and dripping—sniffing it as if it wasn’t real. He turned to Larcen and wrinkled his brow, waiting. For what, he didn’t know. An explanation, maybe, but Larcen only shrugged and Solder let out a hot breath through his nose; no flames escaped this time.

Right, this is how things were. No matter who he was and what was impossible to him, the world would work without his permission.

So he just let it simmer in the back of his mind.

“So what’re ya here for?” Asked Larcen. Solder paused, raising an eyebrow at him.

“You couldn’t have just told me?”

“It was funny.”

Solder decided it was best to just breathe. Sit there, take in some clean air and calm the nausea and frustration and quaint little urge to do violence to a weasel.

He looked around. He’d barely noticed, but they’d reached the foot of the gatehouse. It was a flat-roofed wooden building with more heavy wooden slats barring the windows, floating a good inch above a desk that stretched across the outside. It looked like some kind of border control booth, complete with a sliding gate beside it—stretching across the gap between the gatehouse and the cliff beside it.

“You wanted our help with something, right? And as an… ah apology for leading you on, I’ll take you on now, instead of putting you through the whole rigmarole, y’know?” Larcen continued, leaning in and giving Solder a condescending pat on the back.

Solder had half a mind to bite his hand. He huffed and focused on more important things.

“So this is the guild, huh?” Solder squinted at the entrance beyond the gate—the blocky stone arch etched with strange runes. “What’s that say?”

Solder dreaded the sharp, inhaled hiss Larcen let out beside him.

“Just ‘Seafolk Guild.’ Can’t you read?”

Great. Can’t read either. Can act, can’t read, what’s even the point of trying?

“Is there a cliff I can jump off around here?” Solder snapped.

Larcen let out a dry chuckle. He patted him once again, which transitioned into a warm arm around his neck. Solder groaned under Larcen’s weight.

“Slow down a bit, kid.”

“I’m older than you.”

“Eh, you don’t know that.”

Solder gave up at this point, just leaning into the buizel and letting him lead the way. Closing his eyes and just breathing. He could pretend it worked, but really it left him shaking like a leaf in a storm.

“I want to join the guild,” Solder said. Larcen stopped.

“Really?”

There was a faint hint of disbelief to his voice, just a whisper under his tone. Solder simply shrugged under Larcen’s arm and nodded slowly.

“I can probably make it happen. You’re sure, though? You were looking around town for the guild so you’ve probably heard… things…”

He just sighed and nodded again.

“Alright!” Larcen unlatched himself from Solder and clapped his paws together. “Come on, we need some help to open the gate.”

Larcen wandered off, letting Solder trail behind. He sauntered around the corner of the gatehouse, then back. He ambled around a pile of rocks. Finally, he let out a sharp cry as he rustled through a scraggly Laurel bush on a little outcropping overlooking the road. Solder, who’d been right behind him, narrowly avoided trodding on the buizel’s tails as stepped forward, sidling against the scratchy branches and wax leaves of the bush. Two new pokemon sat there. One, a black-and-blue lion lazing about in an empty patch of grass; and the other, a tall, graceful creature with a flowing white dress and a crop of green hair.

“There you are! Solder, meet Veille luxray and Auloin gardevoir, they’re some other guild members.”

The tall one—the gardevoir, from Larcen's point—turned to face him. She had a clipboard in her hands and a flat, unimpressed look on her face. Her other hand clutched a stick of charcoal, the dusty black smearing against her hand.

“Where did you come from?” Auloin said, her voice monotonous but with an odd edge, like she was waiting to cut him with it. “You couldn’t possibly have come through the valley. We would’ve noticed. Certainly not through the mountains. Veille?”

The luxray—who Solder only now noticed had been sleeping—grumbled and rolled over. She blinked and yawned widely, showing off her fangs. Solder grimaced as the sunlight glinted off them, like a mouthful of little mountains.

“I was watching…” Veille grumbled, then turned to face Solder and Larcen. Her eyes were piercing and gold, sharp even through tired tears. “Oh. Hello,” she said. Then she turned back over, stretched out and relaxed into the grass again. “Sorry about my disposition. I’m nocturnal. Gives me an edge. You know, a healthy luxray sleeps eighteen hours a day.”

Larcen turned to Solder and rolled his eyes as if the quilava was in on the joke.

“That’s great, Veille, but we need—“

“That’s hardly true,” Auloin cut in, leaving Larcen’s mouth flapping open, “a healthy luxray only needs twelve hours. Besides, what possible advantage could you gain from a nocturnal lifestyle rather than a diurnal one—You’re apex, even in the current ecosystem where your prey is immobile and your territory drawn on deeds.” Auloin hummed and tapped the stick of charcoal in her hand on her clipboard, then pointed it at Solder. “Now, considering I haven’t missed any travellers coming into Seafolk—which I doubt I have—I can only assume you came by boat.”

Solder stared down the length of her charcoal stick as it hovered centimeters from his nose. It seemed to stare back.

“Yeah?”

“Heh,” Veille huffed, “a quilava on a boat. That’s a good one.”

Solder flashed back to his time on the boat. All that time spent hunched over a sick bucket or in bed, eating gruel and trying desperately to fall asleep so the nightmare would pass quicker. In his mind, a wave crashed over the harbour and he felt the sudden urge to retch.

“Oh, yeah,” he drawled, dipping his voice and glaring at the back of Veille’s head. “I was laughing the whole way here.”

Larcen took the moment to jump in.

“Yeah! Haha, good joke. Very funny. Listen, Auloin we need you for just a sec—“

“Oh! Veille.” Auloin jumped up, her eyes flashing a bright pink. “Someone’s coming down the path.”

Sense?

Veille grumbled and cracked a single eye open. The motion lasted half a second before she closed it again, but Solder swore he saw a sliver of golden light slip from under eyelid.

“Hmmm… one serperior. Two servine. Goodnight; try not to wake me up again.”

Auloin quickly scribbled something on her clipboard, but Solder barely noticed, taking a sudden interest in the road, too busy peeking through a gap in the spindly branches surrounding him. There, framed in a little window created by the yellow-green leaves, a group of pokemon passed along the trail—a long, green snakelike one pinned between two smaller snakes. Snakes, with legs.

“Uh… yeah,” Larcen said, smoothing out his whiskers, “Speaking of awesome powers, could you open the gate for us?”

“If that’s what you wanted, why didn’t you say so earlier?”

Larcen groaned. Veille yawned. Solder ignored them, wishing he could sleep like the luxray stretched out on the grass. The same pink glow as earlier returned to Auloin’s eyes and, although the effect wasn’t immediately obvious, soon a faint, hollow grinding sound emanated from behind him. He turned just in time to watch the gate slide open—nestling itself behind the gatehouse.

Solder did his best not to let his persistent headache lay him out. Or his jaw hit the floor. It was fine. Everything was fine. Lions can see through walls! Weasels can spit elements! Telekinesis exists! He was certain these things weren’t supposed to happen, but he couldn’t fashion a single reason why not. And now the fresh mountain air started to taste a bit sour.

“Okay. Alright," Solder said. "No, that’s good. Let’s get inside, I think I need to lie down.”

Solder pushed through the bush, Larcen, mumbling a goodbye to Veille and Auloin. The gardevoir waved them off without a word as they padded down the hill, Solder almost sliding down on a patch of wet grass. Larcen didn’t laugh, to his credit, but Solder still caught his smile.

“Auloin is a psychic type, that’s how—“

“No. Shut up. I’m serious about lying down. Guilds are supposed to have places to sleep, right? Just let me get some rest.”

Larcen only shrugged, unoffended.

Solder thanked him in silence and they continued walking past the open gate and gatehouse. Beyond that, before the open arch of the guild, lay a quaint little square of trodden grass and dirt. Some brick planter boxes overflowing with massive red flowers and vines and scraggly, stunted trees sat in the middle. The entire place was framed with bulletin boards. Two of them were empty, the two on the other side were plastered with notices, all scrawled with frustrating, wandering runes. Solder turned away from them.

“Here we are,” Larcen said, nearly whispering, as they passed under the stone arch. “Welcome to Seafolk guild...”

His voice echoed faintly down the long, stone-carved hallway beyond the arch. The hallway itself was dark, mostly stark beside some unlit lamps hanging from the ceiling and framed somethings that hung off the wall.

Then they reached the middle—the dark center of the hallway, where Solder couldn’t feel the sun on his back and the light from the room at the end couldn’t reach his eyes. A moment of blessed calm hit him there. He hesitated a bit and let Larcen skip ahead. It almost felt like he’d closed his eyes even though he could still see the light.

The last few seconds before the guild were spent in blissful silence.
 
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Chapter Two: Our House

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter Two
Our House


Solder didn’t know what to expect when he entered the innards of the guild; he could only imagine as he squinted through the transition from the darkness of the hallway into the brightly lit main room.

Luckily, he didn’t have to imagine for very long.

The room was large, a space carved in the mountain that could potentially hold a hundred standing pokemon. Unfortunately, scattered furniture arranged in random circles closed everything in. Couches, chairs, and tables all gathered in their own little groups like opposing cliques, some housing pokemon, but most empty. Everything was further separated by piles of crates and boxes overflowing with random junk or stuffed with paperwork or simply discarded, empty.

There was a space in the corner, beside a wooden doorway, that Solder had to parse for a moment. It seemed to be a massive pile of shattered wood and stone rising out of a sunken hole like bits of broken bone. He bit his tongue as he tried to figure it out; then, in a flash, he got it. It was an arena—a pit where all the members were supposed to gather and sit on sets of sunken stone steps encircling a platform that presenters could stand on. But this one overflowed with broken furniture and more random trash.

He sat there, looking over the disastrous lobby, quirking a single brow and waiting for Larcen’s explanation.

“Soooo… this is the lobby.” Larcen said with a cautious smile. “It’s where we’re supposed to take clients if they wanna talk or a place to wait for help from Guildmaster Haxorus or whoever. Not many pokemon come in here anymore.”

Solder glanced at a particularly rickety stack of boxes that nearly reached the ceiling.

“Is that their choice or yours?”

“Uhh…”

“Nevermind. It’s not as bad as I thought.”

It was worse.

But Solder could keep expression stony and skirt around his disappointment. Still, it wasn’t very promising. Especially when all he’d heard about guilds on the boat were their wonders—their fancy architecture and impossibly hard workers.

Solder sighed. It turned into a groan as he felt his front leg seize up in a cramp, all the day’s walking finally catching up to him.

Really, it’s not like he could complain. Actually, this place seemed perfect for him.

Larcen hummed. Solder hummed.

“So you wanted a room?”

Solder’s body felt like an anchor at those words. His headache never really left, but the simmer raised to a boil. And now—as he was so painfully aware, cursing and shaking his paw—the cramps were setting in.

“Yeah.”

The spring returned to Larcen’s step in an instant.

“Well, follow me!”

With an infuriating amount of energy that made Solder wince, Larcen led them through the maze of boxes and furniture. Right, left, right, right, right, right, wait…

“And here we are!”

They didn’t exit through the wooden entrance to the right side of the room. They didn’t exit through the many sets of stone doors on the other side; instead, they wandered in a tight little circle until they reached a closed cube of couches. They looked well-lived, their cushions lumpy with stuffing, wool blankets draping off them like black waterfalls.

“This is it?”

Larcen chuckled and scratched the back of his head.

“Sorry, kid, we only have three rooms and the office, and all of those are taken. We get to sleep here unless —“

Solder interrupted him by powering through his last spurt of energy, sprinting forward, and leaping over the back of a couch to land with a satisfied whump in the nest of blankets. He melted into the cushions, giving into the instinct to work his way under the blankets and curl into a ball. A wave of bliss washed over him and he sighed into the wool that dampened the noise and light outside. It smelled musty and old, but that was fine.

“‘S fine.” He mumbled, poking his muzzle through the folds to watch Larcen squeeze between two couches and enter the square. “It’s better than the ground. Or the boat.”

“Ha! Fair enough. You still want to join, right?”

“Yeah.”

“Great! I’ll wake you up—”

Solder growled under his breath.

“—oooor I’ll just ahh… wait. Until you wake up. Don’t blame me if the Guildmaster’s office is closed by then, though.”

Solder let out a wide yawn, retreating under his blanket as Larcen settled down on the seat across from him. He felt the crash coming, his remaining energy dripping out of him like blood from a wound. He settled in, letting his eyes flicker shut and the bright lights and muffled ambience fade away.

Maybe the light and noise of the day were what constantly interrupted his sleep, maybe he just had too much to think about, but Solder had a fitful nap. Caught in a cycle of waking up disoriented in a different position that he started, by the fifth time he resigned himself to the waking world.

Still, considering he’d only existed for a couple weeks, he’d never felt better.

Solder stretched on the couch, reaching over his head to crack his back. It left him in slight awe of his own flexibility; by the time he felt the satisfying release of pressure his spine should have broken.

With a wide yawn, he blinked the sleepy tears from his eyes and looked across to the other couch. Larcen still sat there, staring at the ceiling as his tails slapped at his ankles.

“How long have I been sleeping?”

Larcen blinked. He looked back down and hit Solder with a grin.

“You’re awake! Thank the ocean, it’s been fifteen years!”

Solder scoffed and rolled his eyes. He picked himself up off the couch and craned his neck over the top, searching for the entrance. Through the holes in a fishing net stretched between two stacks of boxes, sunlight still streamed into the courtyard. Solder turned back around and settled into the couch again.

“You just been sitting there? Don’t you have something better to do?”

“No,” Larcen grumbled, “Are you still tired? I thought you’d be friendlier after a nap.”

“I’m friendly,” Solder shot back in his signature, unimpressed monotone, “I’m always friendly.”

Larcen squinted and scratched at his whiskers, giving Solder one long searching look before he gave up and flopped back-first onto his couch. Solder let him sit for a while in the quiet bustle of the lobby. He caught the leafy sound of flipping pages and gleaned across the room. Some blue, bipedal cat pokemon sat between a stack of books across the room, apparently ignorant of them.

“You alright?” Solder finally asked.

“Yeah. I’ve been thinking.”

“Really? Thinking?” Solder smiled, unable to help himself. It was an easy setup, to be fair.

“Oh, haha, very funny; you’re a riot. But, oh wait, it wasn’t me who—“ Larcen glanced at Solder, hesitating a moment as they locked eyes. He gasped. “You’re smiling!”

Solder screwed his face into a frown.

“What?”

“I thought you’d just be grumpy and boring all the time, but you smiled!”

“That was a smirk.”

“Nah, liar. I won you over with my charm, didn’t I?” Larcen smiled wider, staring at him with such intent it made Solder squirm

“Whatever. Who cares? You had a thought, huh? About what?”

Larcen’s expression lingered for another moment before it dissolved.

“I guess I sort of forgot how sucky this place was. I live here, so when you came in with that look on your face, I was like: ‘Wow! We’re a disaster, huh?” Larcen laughed, but it sounded hollow.

“It can be… cleaned up.”

That was technically true.

“Nah, it’s not about that.” Larcen said, “Well, look at me. Or Auloin and Veille, who never set foot in here.”

“I thought you said they were guild members.”

“They are, I guess they got their own place and now they keep to themselves. Y’know, they rarely come to meetings, just sit out there and do… whatever it is they do. And do you see him over there?” Larcen peeked over his couch and pointed to the blue, bipedal cat Solder caught reading earlier. Solder hummed in confirmation. “That’s Landy, the meowstic; he’s a psychic, too. But… ah… don’t talk to him, he’s nuts. Everyone here is nuts, too, but he's the worst.”

“I can hear you,” the meowstic called out from across the room. His voice was low and cold, enough to make Solder pause before trying to parse his words. It didn’t seem like Larcen held the same reservations.

“Yeah, so?”

“I find it fascinating to watch you justify your own fear to me. So I’m ‘nuts’, yes? Ignoring the antiquated term, I’m not unstable, you just have issues to work out with psychics.” He flipped a page with force. It was only now, as Solder watched, that he realised Landy’s paw never touched the book.

“Oh, yeah? Then why do I like Auloin? Not like that, I mean, but... y’know—”

“Because she’s useful to you.” Replied Landy, as if on instinct. He turned to Solder. “You, firestarter.You’re Larcen’s friend, correct?”

Solder, cautious and intimately aware that question was rhetorical, nodded.

“Try not to let him influence you. We share a very neutral level of respect since we’ve only just met, but that drains quickly around the worst of us.”

With that note, Landy’s eyes glowed blue and he cast his arm aside, flinging the book across the room in a fit of violent, fluttering, pages. Larcen yelped, ducking just in time to avoid it.

Without a noise or a twitch of the whiskers to betray any emotion, Landy got up and padded out of the room, the door opening, then closing behind him without a touch.

Larcen waited a while, peeking over the couch until Landy’s steps stopped echoing through the room.

“He seemed charming.”

Larcen huffed and wrenched his glare away from the door.

“Yeah, he’s like Auloin if she hated everyone." He sunk a paw into a nearby cushion. "Ugh, now I’m grumpy. Let’s just get you signed up. Maybe after we can do a mission or somethin’ before it gets dark.”

The buizel waved Solder behind him and sauntered to a door—one on the opposite side that Landy exited. On the other side, a set of carved stone steps led up, up, around a corner and out of sight. More lamps embedded themselves into the walls and cast a warm light through the narrow passage.

As the duo climbed the stairs, Solder noticed how good he felt. In his mind, he should be aching, stiff and sore from before his nap, but he could hop up the stairs with ease. Even catching up to Larcen presented no problems despite the buizel refusing to wait or pause between his chattering.

Eventually, they passed an offshoot hallway and the stone steps became wood. Solder’s first step brought an alarming creak, his weight shifting the board beneath his paws. As he gasped, sure it would break, he caught a whiff of fresh air—clean and slightly salty, a harsh contrast to the aged, musty air in the base. But the board held and not a dozen steps after, he realised where the fresh air came from.

A wide, open window stretched across the right side of the passage, the wooden staircase revealed as a built-in addition to the cliff. More importantly was the view. Solder couldn’t hold in a gasp as he took it in. It revealed the stretching, emerald planes of tall grass blowing in the wind, only interrupted by stacked cliffs. Solder could trace the roads, the pokemon that travelled along them drifting like blood cells. He could see the entire city now and it was both bigger and smaller than he thought—less spread out, but denser, taller, those bird-perches standing like a stripped forest. If he squinted, Solder thought he could see the boats bobbing on the sparkling waves.

“Woah…” Solder gasped, leaning halfway out the window and catching a cool breeze in his fur. He shivered. Larcen chuckled and patted him on the back.

“Yeah, pretty sweet, isn’t it? Every time some boring inner-continent pokemon come pokin’ around, complaining and wondering why anyone stays here, I show them this and they shut up.” He shot Solder a grin. “You haven’t even seen it at night yet. I’ll show you later”

And oh, Solder would hold him to that.

He returned the smile—thankfully with no comment this time—and continued up the staircase.

“And the guildmaster gets his office up here, can you believe that? Unfair.”

The passage ended in a quaint little antechamber, two log benches and some wild vines sandwiching one large door.

“Don’t tell him about the—” Solder tapped his head a couple times. “You know.”

“Eh, I wasn’t planning to—I’ll do most of the talking so don’t worry about seeming like dead weight. Besides, he likes me. You’ll get in fine!”

Larcen shot Solder a wink and he struggled not to roll his eyes; somehow, he doubted the buizel would have trouble talking. And Solder was less concerned with that and more concerned with keeping it a last-minute reveal. Honestly, telling Larcen might’ve been a mistake.

Without a knock, Larcen swung the door inwards, revealing the guildmaster’s office.

The office was tidy and contained—a marked difference from the lobby. A large desk sat in the middle of it and the walls were all lined with shelves of knick knacks: Giant pearls and jars of odd somethings and, to Solder’s faint horror, a collection of skulls stared at him from across the room. Naturally, the opposite wall was taken up by another window with another beautiful view.

Solder wanted to keep exploring the oddities, but the pokemon on the other side of the desk sucked his attention away. Guildmaster Haxorus, he assumed, was a massive, hulking lizard whose mere tail dwarfed Solder’s entire body. He looked covered in moss-green armour and had a massive axe jutting from his mouth. Solder froze, holding his breath at what appeared to be blood staining the axe.

“Hey! How’s it goin’, Guildmaster? Brute?”

At first, Solder winced as Haxorus shifted his attention from his desk to them, thinking Larcen insulted the massive, obviously dangerous creature, but only then did he notice the other creature beside him. It was fully green, maybe half Haxorus’ height, and much more slender. What appeared to be a pair of translucent red goggles rested on its muzzle and a set of sharp, membranous wings twitched behind it.

Dragon?

It was the first thing that came to mind at least.

“Larcen? I told you not to barge in without knocking. What’s so important you need me right now?” His voice rumbled lowly, from deep in his chest and Solder clenched his teeth as he felt it hit him, even from across the room.

“Solder,” Larcen said, ignoring the glares both dragons sent him, “meet Guilmaster Haxorus and Brute, the flygon. He’s the guildmaster’s assistant or whatever.” As Larcen motioned to him, Brute started, blushing faintly. “Now, since I got your attention, Solder—“

“Wait,” Haxorus interrupted, holding up a single, massive claw, “ It’s Solder, correct?”

Solder, confused, ignored the way Larcen spluttered beside him. He nodded in agreement, then winced as the guildmaster grumbled and traced his axe with a claw.

“Yes, I believe we got your brother’s letter. I’m glad you made it safely, too; I know from experience how hard the journey can be, especially for embers such as yourself.” He smiled. Or, he tried to. It seemed more like a grimace with that axe in his mouth. “ In any case, we’re glad to have you, even if only for the time being—your father and I have known each other for a very, very long time, so doing his sons a favour was no problem for me.” He chuckled good-naturedly.

If Haxorus said anything else, Solder didn’t hear it. His mind filled with hot static. It broke, thoughts snapping like a string pulled too tight. Still, he forced a smile—tight, way too tight—and laughed with enough force to hurt his lungs. Larcen gave him a wary glance as he toyed with his whiskers.

Father? Brother? What? He had a brother? There, out the window and very, very far away, on some island or continent or wherever, his family… existed. And that was enough. It should be enough.

“Letter— where’s the letter? Can I see— ah… sorry, I just...” Solder took a deep breath, fighting through the white noise. Calming himself. “I’d really like to see it.”

“Brute?”

“I’ll find it right away, sir.”

Brute leaned down and began pulling open drawers one at a time, sorting through stacks of paper until he found his goal with a sharp aha! He stretched out his arm, presenting the paper. Solder snatched it with shaking paws. He unfolded it, then began to read…

...all those illegible, scratchy runes.

Right. Can’t read.

So he pretended, staring blankly at the paper for nearly a minute. A little voice in his head screamed all the while and he felt his breath heat up again.

“I think you’d like this, Larcen.”

“Huh? Oh, nah, not really.”

“It’s a great letter and you should definitely read it.”

“It’s probably just stupid, sappy stuff. I’m not interested.”

“Just fucking read it.” Solder snapped, letting a tendril of flame escape his mouth and lick at the edge of the letter. He shoved the paper into Larcen’s muzzle. The buizel winced and shot him a bewildered look, but a moment of hoping they could share thoughts and the buizel’s mouth formed a small ‘o’.

“Oh! Right, I ah… your brother! You talked so much about him and I… I love him— I’d love to meet him, I’m a big fan! Haha!”

“You’re pushing it.” Solder sighed, brutally aware of how the dragons stared at them—like a freak show which, if he was being frank, wasn’t far off. Larcen made a big show of thumping his chest and clearing his throat. For no good reason, naturally. At least he read the note seriously.

“To Guildmaster Haxorus,

I have to thank you once again for the offer. Despite your friendship with our father, you’ve never met us before and, although he’d never tell you this, I think he got a little teary-eyed at your response. Or maybe it was both his sons leaving.

Solder’s already gone ahead. I shouldn’t be surprised, seems he got most of his personality from dad. But you’ll probably get along fine with him. Ha! That is, if he even stops at your guild first. I told him to take some time to rest, but he’s never been able to sit in one place long and I doubt a boat ride would be enough to lay him out.

In more serious news, the storms have gotten worse in our port and the boat I was supposed to take is in the dry dock for repairs. Good thing the sailors are in a hurry otherwise it’d be there for months. As of right now, it should only take a week or so, so you can expect me in a few more.

If Solder reaches you, please try to keep him out of fights. I’ve heard about embers’ reputation in Seafolk town and I don’t want to break him out of jail first thing off the dock.

Thanks again,

Cauter.”


Solder mulled it over. He’d get to meet his brother soon—and wasn’t that the strangest concept? Still, he felt the burn of shame spread from his throat and through his cheeks. It wasn’t so much the guilt of not knowing his own brother, really he felt mostly nervous about that. And he had no memories to stew over anyway. There was nothing to do about it, therefore no guilt.

At least he could tell himself that.

But really, that ending, the caution about fights, got to him most. That wasn’t him, was it? He looked down his muzzle, at his paws, and felt the warmth of fire still lingering in his throat. He couldn’t fight. Most importantly, he didn’t want to. He was just as likely to throw himself out the guildmaster’s window than fight any of the monsters he’d seen.

Yet his brother thought otherwise. It made sense, and then it didn’t. Something nagged at him, but he couldn’t quite place it. Still, he could do nothing but wait. He sighed, tamped down the guilt with everything else simmering inside, and took the letter back from Larcen.

Haxorus and Brute still watched from the sidelines.

“Well, now that you’ve satisfied whatever curiosity you had, I believe I interrupted you.”

Both Larcen and Solder shrugged simultaneously.

“Nah,” said Larcen, “he was just gonna… join.”

“Join? Our guild? I thought you’d only be here temporarily.” An alarmed rumble layered his voice.

All eyes turned to Solder. He had no good answer for them.

“That’s what I meant. I just… didn’t want to sit around and do nothing. Figured I’d do some work around here while I recover from the trip. Besides, you guys need whatever help you can get.”

“Well, you read the letter, you’re welcome here anytime. And it would be unwise of me to turn down free labour.”

“Free?”

Haxorus paused long enough for Solder to fear he’d pissed him off. Then with a hearty chuckle, Haxorus slapped a claw on his desk. It rattled under his weight and knocked a pen to the floor. Brute yelped; he dove, catching it before it hit the ground. A misty, wistful look kept the guildmaster oblivious.

“You really do remind me of your father. In case of payment, it’s a good thing you got here before I left. You’ll get paid per job, of course, so it’s not strictly necessary for me to handle your coin, but if it goes through us we can more accurately monitor our income and our fees. I can get you set up with Brute while I’m gone. With a temporary contract, of course.”

Brute perked up from behind the desk.

“Sir? Y-you’re leaving? You said you’re leaving, right, sir? For how long? Oh, um, I’m sorry, it’s just…” He trailed off, staring into the space between Solder and Larcen. Solder could see his jaw clench beneath his scales, eyes dilating to pinpricks.

Haxorus spared him a soft, knowing glance.

“It seems I forgot to tell you.”

“No, no. Nonono. It’s not that, I-I mean…”

Haxorus turned back to Solder.

“Sorry, you two. I meant to make this part of an announcement tomorrow morning, but I suppose I should’ve told Brute earlier. I suggest you leave us alone for now. As for Solder, you seem acquainted with Larcen so I’m sure he’d be willing to show you around and help you with anything else you may need. Feel free to ask me any pertinent questions tomorrow, before I leave.”

With a grim smile that really showed off the contours of his blades, Haxorus shooed them off. They stumbled out of the office and let the door creak shut behind them, pushed by the wind.

Solder did not move for several minutes. Not out of a desire to eavesdrop—though he did end up catching an earful of hushed, intense discussion muffled behind the door—but out of thought. He had to sort himself out, kicking around information in his mind until he could open his eyes again and walk down the stairs without fear of falling down them. Most importantly, a nagging thought still remained.

And since Solder waited, Larcen waited too, first trying to strike up conversation (with no response), then staring at the view out the window, then tying his tails into knots.

It was out the window, on finally spotting the boats that It hit Solder like a rock. The strings in his mind started slowly braiding themselves together again...

“I never told her my name,” he said, enunciating with painful clarity.

Larcen had lain down on the staircase and he craned his neck up, catching a full view of Solder’s chin. He raised a brow at Solder.

“So? Think I did, maybe. Wait, who is this?”

...the left string folds over the middle…

“No, I mean… I made it up. On the boat, I came up with Solder then.” Solder squinted, staring at the glistening waves of the harbour through the window. He recalled… waking up, the bruises and rocking pulsing through his body. He had no name, back then. While he slumped in bed, he and a crewmate talked.

“You probably just remembered it. It’s like, ingrained.”

But that still didn’t sit right. Solder screwed his nose up in thought, trying to recall the exact details. He’d cracked open his eyes in bed, focusing through the mucous and fever and meeting the keyhole-shaped smile on Klefki’s face. She’d brought a bucket of fresh water to drink and clean himself off. Every time she visited, they shot through a round of names.

It took two days. Calm waters let Solder sit up. He tried to nibble at a giant blue fruit, but the sweetness mixed horribly with the bitter taste in his mouth. Klefki was there. She cleared her throat and it sounded like wind chimes.

… the right string folds over the middle. Then left, then right over and over again.

...well, how’s about Solder? It’s a strong name, you know…

“It wasn’t me!” Solder shouted, too loud—the voices stopped whispering in the office. His heart hammered away in his chest, beating like fists on a drum. “Klefki—one of the sailors—suggested it! I just… it connected.”

“A klefki? Weird pokemon to be a sailor. Ah… klefki don’t really have hands. Nothing wrong with that, but you can’t really haul ropes without hands.”

Solder would have kicked himself, but he was too busy staring at the harbor, trying to pick out the ship he came in on from the others. No luck, they all looked like dead leaves from this distance. Larcen joined him in silence.

“She must know me.”

Larcen nodded vigorously.

“What’s the boat’s name?” He asked.

“The Amarinthine.

Solder did one final pass of the harbour. He and Larcen shared a silent, knowing glance.

In perfect sync, they scrambled down the stairs.

+------------------------------------------+

Seafolk harbour at evening: sketchy, eerie, still miserably wet.

In any case, it couldn’t quell the rush of Solder’s heart as he pounded down the docks, nipping at Larcen’s heels. They’d sprinted the whole way, delirious and panting—twisting around corners and skidding down the slick cobblestone streets. Solder barely remembered the way but, luckily, Larcen took the lead. He kept up despite his own reservations—enough that they made it before the sun touched the horizon.

They scanned over each two-mast ship—the schooners, based on Larcen translating Solder’s description—picking up names until they cursed and moved on. Most were empty husks waiting for their crew to return, but a few had just disembarked in the harsh light of the distant lighthouse, spilling pokemon onto the docks. No dice.

Then, in a brief spark of recognition, Solder spotted the bench he’d rested on that morning, now struck by sunlight and carrying a small group of pokemon. A penguin, otter and what looked like an overgrown crustacean lounged in the fading light, passing around some sort of pipe. Solder spared them a glance that was returned with a waggle of the pipe between the otter’s lips.

“Should... be here.” Solder said, padding to a stop. The memory of running still ached in his bones, pounding in time with his panting as he blearily scanned the boats nearby. But looking out into the harbour, the dock he came in on lay empty.

It took him a painful minute to realise the Amarinthine had disappeared.

Solder felt like he’d popped, flopping to the ground and dulled to the painful chill of soaking wooden boards pressing against his belly. He groaned and rolled over, head in paws half out of disappointment, half from the adrenaline crash. Larcen crouched beside him, paws on knees.

“All this way… for nothing,” he said between gasping breaths. He lifted himself up, shading his eyes with a paw as he scrutinised stray boats floating near the jutting islands a little further out.

Solder, finally aware of his wet fur, grimaced and crawled to his feet. A grunt sounded behind him and he turned to the grizzled face of the otter. He rubbed at the stiff scruff of fur around his neck and hit them with a grin filled with missing teeth. It seemed edgy, if friendly. A warning.

“Wat’re you boys lookin’ fer? Nothin’ wrong, I hope.”

Solder took a moment to catch his breath.

“A ship. The Amarinthine? Have you seen it?”

“Dunno,” he said, turning to his crewmates, “we’re docked beside it, yeah?” He got a round of nods in return. The penguin beside him took the pipe from his beak and tapped it out on the edge of the bench.

“They’ve gone. This morning, not too soon after docking.”

Solder groaned and turned back to the sea. So they’d missed the boat after all. And as much as tried to scan the horizon in case it still floated out there, his fading hope told him he wouldn’t be able to swim there even if he found it.

“Did you see a klefki?” Larcen chimed in. The otter pursed his lips, whiskers twitching in the breeze.

“Aye. Think so. Hard ta miss, must’ve been off th’ ship. Anyone seen ‘er?”

A shake from the lobster-creature, a nod from the penguin.

“Seen her come down,” he said, voice frail, “didn’t see her come back up. Didn’t see her on the docks again. Y’know, if she comes here, she must’ve a reason. There’re better ports up th’ west coast if yer lookin’ fer a trip to th’ cities.”

Solder felt the swell of hope wash over him again. There was a chance. Even if he had to search the stacks of Seafolk, there was a chance. He shared a fleeting glance with Larcen and a brief spark told him they’d had a similar thought.

“Hey! Thanks, guys,” Larcen said, breaking away from the connection and striding towards the sailors. At first, they were weary, drawing up their arms and shifting in their seats. That is, until Larcen shook their hands. One at a time, he took an arm, yanked it up and down once, then moved on, finishing with a long uncomfortable hug for the penguin. Solder shared a bemused look with him, who sneered and smoothed his ruffled feathers as soon as the buizel broke away.

With a final wave, Larcen hooked Solder’s arm and dragged him away from the sailors and into the nearest alley, ducking back into the main road before Solder could react.

“Are you always that touchy with strangers?”

“Hey, you’ve met me. I’m just friendly.”

Larcen smiled at him. Widely, but Solder could see his whiskers twitch. He could feel how his arm jittered under his own. Then he spotted Larcen’s other paw clenched tightly in a fist, hiding shyly beside him. A polished black stick stuck out between the crook of his fist.

“What’s that?”

Larcen’s smile dropped as he followed Solder’s gaze. He sighed. In resignation, maybe. Then he presented the sailor’s shiny black pipe between his fingers.

Solder could tell the buizel expected some sort of outburst, but really he just stared dumbly at his own reflection on the surface of the pipe, his soft features twisting into a confused scowl..

“How? Why? It’s just a dirty pipe.”

There was a moment of silence. The sun finally passed the horizon. As Solder finally started to feel the chill of night, Larcen tried to shrug it off.

“It’s fun.”

Solder let the sound of waves crashing against the dock fill the space between them. Larcen squirmed beneath it.

“Look, don’t worry about it. See?” He tossed it, flinging it behind him like it was nothing. It clattered across the cobblestones and came to a rest with some other trash, in a pile of dead leaves. “That’s not important. What about this klefki, huh?”

Solder was tempted to stand his ground, to force his way past Larcen’s smile and scratch at whatever was actually going on. But at the end of the day, klefki was more important.

“Fine,” he sighed, “how do we know she’s still in Seafolk?”

“Well there’s only one road out. Aside from the boats, obviously, but if she went back on the boat we’d never find her.”

Solder hummed. The logic made sense, but he couldn’t help but get caught on the mountains around Seafolk—or, their fading silhouettes as the sun disappeared.

“What about through the mountains?”

“Nah. Seafolk is shut in by mystery dungeons, might as well just walk through the valley.”

Oh, gods, did he even want to know?

“Umm…”

Larcen seemed to sense his confusion. He took the opportunity to goad Solder into following him back up the street, passing a couple of pokemon chatting in their arched doorways or putting out lanterns in their windows. They were settling in for the night, and Solder took the last-minute opportunity to watch. If life was kind, he’d have spotted Klefki in the first one, but…

Yeah. No.

“Dungeons are … well, Auloin calls them ‘anomalies’, like breaks space and time and yadda yadda…” He clapped his paws together and mouthed along to them. “You go in one place, get spit out another, hours later than you expect. I can show you one someday, if you want.”

“Why would anyone want to see that?” Solder scowled. Larcen shot back a mocking scow of his own, but he couldn’t hold it for more than a second.

“Because they’re weird and fun and weird, fun things are… ah… weird.” Larcen pursed his lips and looked up. “And good. Y’know, I think that sailor had a point. Why come here unless you have business in Seafolk?”

“I don’t know. Why did I come here?”

“Sounded like you came here to see your dad’s friend. I dunno, I only met you this morning.”

Solder wilted, hating how much he resembled that sentiment.

“Hey! Chin up, kid! Auloin’s a creepy weirdo that keeps track of the pokemon coming in and out, so we’ll just check with her, and you can look around the city without worrying.”

Solder should probably be more cynical—It’s not like Seafolk was a small city, and Auloin wasn’t omnipotent as far as he knew—but Larcen’s smile had quickly grown on him over the course of the day and he found it catching on. He threw back a wink. It felt jerky and awkward, but it got Larcen to chuckle, at least.

“You think she spends all day in that bush?”

“Maybe. She talks about setting up ‘psychic triggers’ that tell her when pokemon come and go, so probably not.”

“Well, her weird obsession will help us, at least. Shame to be anyone else.”

Larcen let out a quiet giggle. Then they wandered. At first, it seemed like their path led back up the hill, in the direction of the guild, but eventually Solder realised that neither of them were leading, really. He turned left, Larcen took another left and all of a sudden they were back on the dock; if Solder dared to creep to the edge of the dock, he could peer around the corner and see the sailors still chatting. They were alone, now. The ships were sleeping in the bay and more and more lights flickered off in the rickety windows overlooking the ocean.

They turned around again, committed to doing nothing for a couple more hours. Naturally, Larcen filled the silence with chatter while Solder scanned the faces of pokemon around him, shamelessly peering over window sills for a telltale glint or metallic jangle.

Eventually, they got tired and decided to sit down on someone’s front porch.

“Wanna get some food? I’ll pay,” Larcen said, swishing his tails through a pile of dust and watching a group of pokemon side-eye them from a bench across the street.

A little farther down, a little nook on the corner was still lit. Solder could see a line of stools and tables through the open door. It was too far to tell, but if he sniffed, Solder could catch the whiff of something sweet.

Right on cue, his stomach rumbled. He nearly jumped, so used to the nausea and lack of appetite from the ship that he hadn’t wanted to eat anything for days.

“Yeah. Thanks.”

“No problem! I think I’ve been here before, it’s pretty good.”

As they turned, Solder gave one last glance into an empty room across the street. As if it could sense him, the shutters rattled shut a moment later.

Solder found himself fairly content in the face of the shutters. He shouldn’t be, really, since his situation hasn’t changed all that much. But he had something to work towards—which was infinitely better than nothing—and the longer he spent off the boat, the more normal he felt. Food seemed enticing now, new smells and tastes an actual joy instead of another reason for his stomach to revolt.

He trailed behind Larcen as the buizel barged through the restaurant’s doorway.

There’s a reason to stay, at least.
 
Chapter Three: Morning

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter Three
Morning


By the time Solder and Larcen got back to the guild it was late, the dusky grey sky melting into a pure black. Larcen had shuffled back onto his couch. He’d conked out the second he sank into the cushions, kicking up a cloud of dust that Solder watched settle back onto the floor.

Meanwhile, Solder couldn’t sleep. He stretched out into his blankets, stared at the ceiling, hummed a little tune, turned over, then went back to stretching. Over and over again, watching other guild members slowly trickle in and settle down. They were bleary and tired, passing over him as they filtered into their own rooms—or into other secluded portions of the lobby each sequestered by their own walls of furniture and junk.

Solder could pretend he’d got enough rest earlier, and that’s why he couldn’t sleep. It wasn’t. Mostly, nighttime seemed like the perfect time for his mind to dislodge thoughts he accumulated throughout the day, like flecks of mud spitting off a spinning wheel.

Most focused on finding klefki.

It should calm him, maybe. A nice, easy path to success. Instead, he felt this anxious itch at the back of his mind. Thoughts of meeting his brother for the first time drove that itch deeper.

Still, he would find her because he had to. And he would meet his brother unless he found klefki first and bailed out of Seafolk.

That insidious thought dangled above him. Tempting. Very tempting. He shut his eyes, barely noticing a change in the darkness, and exhaled slowly, blocking out the snoring and shuffling and sounds of sleep around the room.

But he had nowhere else to go. And Larcen was willing to run across town for him, pay for his food and talk with him for basically no reason—gods knew he wasn’t worth it.

Solder tamped everything back down so he could ignore it, leaving him with the daunting task of entertaining himself until everybody woke up.

One stubborn idea rattling around in his brain was type. He spit fire, he remembered—a very normal and unconcerning thing to do. He should be able to do it again. So, naturally, he practised. He sat up on the couch. He huffed. He moved muscles in his throat he didn’t know were there. He coughed—quietly, so Larcen didn’t wake up. Eventually, with a sore throat and beaten spirits, something clicked; a brief tongue of flame flicked from his mouth and across his chest. The loose threads of fabric from his blanket curled in the heat and the brief ember splashed a bit of light over the room.

Enough to reflect in Larcen’s eyes, cracked open slightly in a dark corner of the other couch.

Turns out he was awake. They spent an awkward few moments staring, then another few fumbling around in the dark until Larcen stumbled to his couch with a half-melted candle, yawning and adjusting his collar. Solder took the hint, lit the candle, and they started talking.

It started as an excuse for Solder to learn something—mostly about the eighteen types of pokemon and random trivia about seafolk. Enough time spent talking in the flickering candlelight floated the idea of reading between them and they decided they’d spend the rest of the morning trying, picking up a random pamphlet shoved between the stack of crates behind them.

And they did try. Really.

“What?! I told you, Th— th—- not ah—

“That was a smudge. You said that was a smudge.”

“It was red! It obviously wasn’t part of the rune! Are you blind?”

“Shut up, weasel. So that’s the shuh— “

“No! No! Ugh… that’s an accent...”

“It’s the same. Stupid. Rune.”

“You’re an idiot! It’s in a different direction!”

“Looks the same. It’s not my fault your writing sucks.”

“Yeah, well it’s not my fault you can’t read!”

“—Excuse me?”

A gruff voice cut in from across the room. Solder and Larcen stopped whisper-shouting and shot up to stare at the towering form of Haxorus standing next to the pit of broken furniture. He lumbered in silently, somehow. Or, as Solder noticed that the guildmaster must have stood there for a while, they were a bit distracted.

“I’m glad you two are so excited about reading, but I’d appreciate your attention,” Haxorus said, giving them a warm smile and a condescending bow.

Solder blinked and surveyed the room. While they were busy, the lights had turned on and the room had filled with pokemon. Well, filled was a strong word. Five or six pokemon collected themselves in a rough ring around Haxorus. Landy relaxed in his own chair, combing through his sleek blue tail, but he was one of the only pokemon Solder recognized; the other being Brute, hiding behind the guildmaster like an unwanted guest. He stared off into space, red goggles hiding his eyes and his claws clasped before him. Yet, despite how tense he seemed, that couldn’t hide the jitters running through him. Even from far away, he looked like a wreck.

Solder yawned and stretched out on the couch. A quiet gust ushered the smell of morning dew and grass through the entrance tunnel.

“Sorry guildmaster,” Larcen muttered, smoothing out his whiskers and tossing the pamphlet to the floor. Solder said nothing, not quite over how intimidating Haxorus was.

The guildmaster fixed his stare on them for a few more moments, then cleared his throat. Still, it couldn’t clear the heavy gravel from his voice.

“Good morning, everyone. I know it’s uncommon for me to speak to you all as a group these days, but recent developments made it necessary. Plus it’s not often I find so many of you collected here.”

It must have been meant as a joke, but it barely got a snicker. Haxorus’ smile seemed to wane.

“In any case, I’ll start with something light.” He gestured toward Solder, “We have a guest! He’s Solder the quilava and he’ll be staying with us for the foreseeable future so please, everyone, treat him with respect.”

Solder didn’t like the pleading note he ended that sentence with. As much as he would rather relax back into his bed and ignore the room, that wouldn’t be a strong introduction. He popped his head over the back of the couch and shot the crowd his best neutral face; some pokemon said hello, but most just threw up a quick wave.

“Alright. Now, I’m sure some of you have already heard that I will be leaving. However, I’ve not really explained why until now. To begin, I intend for this to happen in a couple stages. First—“ He held up a claw. “I’ve discussed this with Brute—” He gestured towards the flygon. At his name, the Brute jolted, wings buzzing behind him. “and, unfortunately, the urgency of the situation requires that I can’t stay here long past noon. I’m not certain how long I will be gone for, but it shouldn’t take more than a month. In the meantime, I will trust Brute to carry out the daily operations of the guild in my stead.”

That caused a bit of a rumble around the guild members; Solder caught Larcen pulling a face beside him.

“Sir, may I ask a question?” Landy spoke up. Then, without waiting for Haxorus’ mouth to open, continued. “Why Brute? In my professional opinion, he’s incompetent and unstable. He’s barely capable of functioning in everyday life. Frankly, the guild would collapse with him in charge.”

Oh, Solder could feel the atmosphere shift in the room, like a storm just rolled in, enveloping Brute and wiping the smile off Haxorus' face; he collected himself a moment before responding.

“I chose him because we work together very closely, I am certain he understands my duties, and I trust him completely to be the best pokemon for the job. Is that clear enough?”

Placated but visibly unhappy, Landy scowled and sat back down.

“Unfortunately.”

“Good. As for my reasons, I’ve needed to get my Guildmaster’s Certification settled for quite a while now. I’ll admit to putting it off, which is my fault, but that’s also why I simply can’t anymore. I’ll be travelling to Treebow and will only return once that is completed—”

He stepped forward, opening his arms in a welcoming gesture to the lobby and tried smiling again.

“—This is all in preparation for some big news I received not too long ago.” He paused—again, for some sort of reaction. Solder had no clue why when nobody had given him much of anything yet.

“Some of you might know of the ruins a major earthquake recently uncovered under the Jawbone Mountains just outside Seafolk. Well, other guilds have finally caught wind of it, and have collected themselves to make the journey. Before anyone asks, I’ve tried dissuading them, I’ve tried stalling them, but the best I could do was limit the number of members they sent.”

He sighed deeply, tracing the edge of his axelike tusks with a claw.

“We will need to prepare for a camp of nearly a hundred pokemon—from all major guilds, but mostly from Treebow. They will arrive in a month’s time as well. I plan to come alongside them, if I can’t make it earlier.”

The chatter increased. Not enough for it to be an uproar, but more than Solder would expect from less than a dozen pokemon. And Brute wasn’t the only pokemon falling apart anymore — Larcen, at least, groaned and flopped back onto the couch, paws cupping his muzzle in disbelief.

Despite it all, Haxorus stayed stoic, surveying the room for interruptions. A faint cough sounded from behind the crowd. He focused on that one spot, and most pokemon not talking or having a crisis on the couch followed. Solder himself didn’t see them at first, but once he craned his neck up and peered past some stacks of wicker fishing baskets, he spotted them. A short(shorter than him, for once, thank the gods), impish pokemon with dark brown skin, amber eyes and a massive puff of frizzy, white hair bigger than itself leaned against the wall there. They leered over the room with a brightness suited for the morning, arms crossed and hips askew.

“Actually, I do have a question, Axy~,” they said in a sing-song voice that Solder found faintly familiar.

Larcen jolted out of his funk at that, turning to Solder. Solder just raised a brow at him.

“That’s Bastaya, a whimsicott,” he whispered, “he runs the morning radio. You’ll probably get to hear it later. Ready for a shitshow?”

So that’s where he recognized the voice from—the morning he arrived in Seafolk, Solder remembered hearing an energetic radio broadcast crackling away by his bench on the docks. Bastaya fit the voice perfectly.

The whimsicott sauntered from his spot by the doorway, leaped over a couch and drifted like a wind-caught leaf until he hit the ground in front of the guildmaster. He didn’t disturb a speck of dust as he landed, seeming almost weightless. Solder watched, slightly bemused, and resolved not to be surprised by anything anymore.

“Now is not the greatest time for this, Bastaya,” Haxorus said, voice dropping as he stared down a pokemon less than half his size.

“Oh, but I disagree. You only sacked Zazz two days ago! Maybe Treebow flexed their big, strong muscles and tried to keep us from exploring the ruins, but—oh no, she won’t back down! What to do~?” He cocked his hip to the side and smirked, though it seemed more malicious than playful.

Whatever attempt at levity Haxorus had concocted vanished. All he had left was a tired frown.

“To be perfectly clear, the ruins exploration restrictions were of my own initiative. And the battle between Zazz and I was a mutual decision, no matter the results.” An expectant sigh crept into his voice. “Is that all?”

“You knew she wouldn’t back down. Aaaaaaand she wouldn’t take it well. But you didn’t know she would quit, and now you get to go on a nice vacation, ignoring the poor peasants here.” Bastaya’s smile turned grim.

“That’s enough.” Haxorus lifted up a leg and brought it down, hard, on a stray piece of wood. It shattered, spitting splinters across the floor. Bastaya stood strong, but Solder noticed a flinch. “I’ll admit to mishandling things, but I will not entertain your accusations. Now, I will ask you not to share my news on your show, at least until the guild is settled. Understood?”

“Can you stop me?”

“No. That’s why it wasn’t an order.”

Haxorus stepped back, clasping his hands behind him and staring out on the crowd with a strong jaw, a note of finality. There’s a final standoff where the two face each other in silence, then Bastaya huffed and spun around. He faced Solder for a brief moment and, with a brief sparkle in his eye, sent him a wink.

“So you’re the newbie, huh? Cute, but a bit stern. We can chat later~”

Then he floated off again, back towards the door he came through. Solder followed the path with his eyes, as if waiting for another chat. Nothing came. The weird imp disappeared around the corner. Solder huffed.

“I’m not that cute, really, Cute things don’t breath fire.” he said to Larcen. It got a ‘nah’ back in response, the buizel too busy staring at bumps in the ceiling.

The rest of the meeting wallowed in unmotivated silence, groups of chattering pokemon breaking up and slowly trickling out of the lobby as the minutes ticked by.

“That will be all. I’ll return to my office to pack, if anyone needs me.” Haxorus turned, tail scraping across the floor with enough weight to leave jagged white scratches in the stone. He stomped back up the stairs.

The guild did not settle easily into the announcement. Brute seemed nearly catatonic—sitting in a chair and staring at the ceiling, the rest sat with concentrated expressions. As Solder scanned the faces of the remaining pokemon, an air of worry etched into their features. Even Landy showed hints, scratching at the button nose at the end of his blue muzzle, eyes scanning the air as if reading.

Larcen didn’t fare much better.

“You okay? Something you want to talk about?” Solder said. Larcen didn’t answer, but he tilted his head and fixed Solder with a flat stare over his yellow collar.

“Yeah, I’ll talk. Let’s just take a mission or somethin’. I need to get some air. Ah… exciting morning, though. Right?” Larcen got off the couch and waved Solder along behind him. He hit him with a smile, but his energy seemed slow to return.

Larcen led them through the maze of furniture and up to a rack of hooks nailed into a wooden post. He took one of the leather satchels, yanked open the flap and took out a dented brown canteen before throwing the strap over his shoulder. With a few adjustments, the bag rested on his hip. He took a second to uncap the canteen and take a swig.

What was in the flask got answered very quickly—Larcen scrunched up his face and shook his head like he’d just smelled a dead body.

“That’s some strong water,” Solder said.

“It's ah… pinap juice. Kinda gross when it’s warm. Here, take one.”

For a second Solder thought he’d get his own canteen, but instead Larcen unhooked another bag and tossed it to him. It hit his chest with a thump. Empty. Well, at least he had something to keep his possessions in if he ever got any.

“You want to talk?” Solder pushed.

Larcen smacked his lips. He took a deep breath, then wilted like a dying flower.

“Yeah. I guess you’re wondering what the big deal is.”

Solder nodded.

“Bastaya’s kinda right, I guess. Zazz discovered the Seafolk ruins in the middle of nowhere and came right to Haxorus, so he must’ve told the guilds and they got him to close off the ruins; big guilds’ll want to be the first to explore. Then they’ll turn it into a historical site or a spelunking area or somethin’…” Larcen busied himself by sorting through his bag, maybe just to keep himself from fidgeting. “But they need to develop it first, y’know? Build some stuff in the valley so travellers can make the journey, bring their guild system over here. Fix our guild. Whatever.”

Oh.

“Are They really that ah… prestigious?”

“Sure.” Larcen shrugged. “Treebow saved the world once.”

It was the type of comment that took a while to process. Solder heard it, it bounced around his head for a second, then it slapped him in the face.

“What? How?”

“I dunno. It was before I was born, probably like three decades ago when a group of pokemon stopped mystery dungeons taking over the continent. So, yeah. There’s a pretty high bar.” Larcen stuck his paw in the air, high above his head. “Like, this high. We couldn’t make it if we tried. And that’s only if they don’t sack everyone immediately.”

Solder wished he could say something to that. Despite how casually he talked about it, Larcen’s distress was obvious. He wasn’t smiling, for one—and his tails were dragging limply on the dusty ground. The best he could do was give Larcen a halfhearted pat on the back.

“I’m sure you’ll be fine.”

A disturbing silence reigned for a couple of seconds. Larcen took a swig from his canteen. Solder awkwardly adjusted the bag’s strap around his neck. It smelled antique, somewhat comforting and perennial.

“Let’s just get something to eat and do a mission.”

+==========================================================+

“~about that, big changes are coming. Yes, very, very big changes. A little dragon gagged me—not literally—but you’re in for a treat tomorrow morning. Can’t say why, of course, I guess that would ruin the surprise~ So I’ll just ignore it and move onto more important things, like the weather. For an update on—”

Solder’s first true experience with Bastaya’s radio show confirmed a lot of things. First, that it was possible for so much passive aggressive energy to be crammed into a tiny radio transmitting a tinier imp’s words. Second, that the conflict between him and the guildmaster was very earnest. Almost uncomfortably so.

“Why not just fire them?” Solder said, eyes on the radio. He and Larcen had finished in the guild and wandered to the notice boards in the courtyard outside. The radio sat on a shelf in the guardhouse, chatting away through an open window on their side of the structure.

After the meeting, Solder and Larcen had stopped by the guild’s kitchen—empty, seemingly for a long time based on the dust—and snagged some big, blue fruit from the larder. They were sweet, almost sickly, and the juice matted the fur around Solder’s mouth and chin into sticky tufts. Even a wash from a wet cloth didn’t get it out completely.

Outside, the early morning sun didn’t quite reach into the valley that housed the guild, instead bathing it in a dark shadow that ended in a crisp line of light on the other side of the road, drawn against the cliffs. That and the dew-flecked tall grass brushing against Solder as they idled beneath the notice board left him with a bit of a chill.

“We don’t have a lot of staff,” Larcen responded, toying with his whiskers and combing over the posts on the notice board. “Landy is the closest thing we have to a medic. And Bastaya’s show is super popular in town. Wouldn’t be a good look. Guildmaster has to play nice.”

Solder just hummed and tested Larcen’s reading lessons on the board. No luck. Whatever information he got that morning filtered through his mind like water through a sieve.

“What are you looking for?”

“I want to take you to a mystery dungeon.”

“Sounds terrible.”

“It’s a great place to teach you to fight.”

“Did you hear what I just said?”

Larcen snickered. He tore off a couple leaves of paper off the noticeboard, scrutinized them, then tossed them to the ground.

“You gotta learn sometime, kid. What if that klefki wants to scrap? They don’t look like much, but they can be kinda annoying. ”

Solder disagreed heavily with that; the thought of fighting any of the pokemon he’d seen so far was stupid. But that seemed like something he’d want to keep to himself. Larcen could do all the work.

“I’m a pacifist.”

“I dunno. That letter made you sound pretty cool.” Larcen said, and hit Solder with a side-eye as he tore down another couple notices.

Solder paused. Thoughts of his brother flitted through his mind. His brother. Yet he didn’t feel it, at least not like in the letter. He felt like a ghost walking in someone else’s skin. An imposter. Thinking back to the docks, to when he first saw the reflection of that sharp-eyed quilava in a puddle—did that look like him?

Or maybe he was broken. Solder had spent most of his last few weeks gathering his shattered mind. But brokenness implied fixing.

He felt ill at either idea, a sudden chill washing over him like a wave—the memory of breakfast on his tongue. Torn between running away and leaning into the illusion. So he liked to fight, right?

“I’ll… give it a shot.” Solder sighed. Larcen’s returned wink made him feel marginally better, at least.

“Great! Y’know, the best way to not hurt pokemon is to learn to fight—so you can control yourself.”

Solder blinked.

“That’s kind of wise. For you.”

“Hey, I’ve got like, a thousand anecdotes! I know things! I know a lot of things!”

“Like what?”

“Like how to read.”

Little bastard.

Solder knew the irritating buizel was smirking before he even saw Larcen’s face. He fixed him with a sharp glare. This was not going to be a trend; he wouldn’t allow it. He raked his mind for a comeback, but as he stared past Larcen’s cocky grin, a strange, black mass on top of the guardhouse distracted him. It took a moment for his eyes to adjust in the darkness. Then something flickered and he found himself staring at another pair of eyes—golden and piercing.

“Hello?” He asked. It came out as a whisper.

The black mass stretched out and Solder took a big step back, but as he squinted and his eyes adjusted, he relaxed.

“Don’t mind me,” Veille said, unfolding herself from the shadows.

Turns out Veille had taken to the guardhouse roof as a prime napping spot. She laid on top of it, stretched across the edge like a liquid trying to flow down. Black and blue blended in with the shadows, although the fearsome illusion was ruined somewhat by her sleep-flattened mane showing as she lifted her head to greet them. At this point Larcen noticed her as well.

“What’s… up?” he asked.

“Torturing Auloin—” She yawned.

Solder, very concerned with where that sentence was going, took another step back.

“ —she’s been irritating lately. So I hid. She’ll wonder where I am all day, but she’s too stubborn to search.” She rolled over on the roof, knocking off some dead leaves and letting her star-tipped tail flop over the side.

Solder sighed, caution evaporating.

“How sinister,” he said.

“It’s what endless numbers do to you eventually, I suppose.” Veille glanced at Larcen. “Destroying evidence again, Larcen?”

Larcen paused, dropping a fistfull of notices he’d been holding. He didn’t bother to pick them back up, just leaned closer to the board and hummed a little tune. A gust of wind snatched one up and whisked it over the gatehouse. Veille twisted upside down to watch it go.

“Has he explained the boards to you?”

Solder was a little too busy scrutinising the growing pile of torn notices at Larcen’s feet to respond.

“The board on the other side,” Veille continued, motioning her tail to the other side of the square. A couple stray papers fluttered on two identical boards. “Is for more serious jobs—criminals and such. Or higher paying labour. Not much there, as you can see.” She rolled over, craned her neck over the edge of the gatehouse. She didn’t smile, but there was a curious, childlike air to how she regarded them upside down. “These notices are for petty grievances, low paying work. You know, escort requests, item retrieval, reports of theft. Things of that nature.”

It didn’t take Solder long to connect the dots. Larcen hadn’t stopped combing through notices the whole time and the little pile by his feet grew to an alarming size, like white leaf litter fallen from an autumn tree.

“It’s alright, I know already,” Solder placated. It didn’t seem to help; Larcen snatched a listing from the board with entirely too much force.

“This looks pretty good! Let's talk to Auloin on the way out, alright?”

Solder didn’t get a chance to react as Larcen brushed past him, scampering straight for the gate, bag thumping against his side. He could only offer Veille a quick word before turning to follow.

“Thanks for making things harder, Veille,” he sassed. She let out something like a purr in response.

“Oh, anytime. I suppose you’re joining the guild? If so, good luck.”

Solder snorted, waved her off and followed in Larcen’s footsteps, meeting up with him again at Auloin’s bush. He prodded Larcen on the shoulder, but the buizel shrugged him off with an uncharacteristic frown and muttered a quick ‘later’.

“Hey, Auloin?” he asked. It remained quiet for a moment, then an invisible power bundled up the branches of the bush and peeled them back. They spread apart like a blooming flower, revealing Auloin to be the stamen.

She sat over her folded legs, scribbling something onto her clipboard. She seemed pristine, somehow—pure white and green without a hair out of place. The only hint she’d moved was the flattened grass to her side.

“What can I help you with?” she asked, still focused entirely on her writing.

“Have you seen a klefki pass by since yesterday? It’s kinda important.”

She considered for a moment, pursing her lips and flipping through pages on her clipboard. She poked a line of runes, hesitated, then flipped through. Forward, then back again.

“No, unfortunately,” she said, “There’s been three this year, emigrating; however, the last one went a month ago.”

“That’s… good. Could you tell if one does, please? I’ll give you…” Larcen tugged his bag open and made a big show of sorting through it, though Solder was sure there wasn’t much in there besides his canteen. He came back out with an empty paw. “A hug? I dunno, I’ll think of something.”

“It’s certainly not going out of my way to do this for you. Data is meant to be used, after all—if not by the guild, then who? I’ll notify you if I come across a klefki.”

She gave a brusque gesture with the tip of her charcoal. Larcen smiled at her, then Solder, who answered with a cross of his fuzzy arms. Larcen’s smile wavered.

“Thanks, Auloin. C’mon, let’s go.” And he stumbled out of the bush, barely avoiding getting caught in the reaching branches.

Solder watched him go, the buizel wandering down the path a good ways until he realised the Solder wasn’t following. Once he paused enough to glance over his shoulder, he turned and threw up both arms like he was a stranded pokemon signalling for help on a desert island.

Solder sighed, held up a paw, and turned back towards Auloin just in time to catch her rearranging the mass of the bush.

“Thanks,” he said, “Veille’s hiding on top of the gatehouse, by the way.”

Auloin snapped to him and he winced, feeling like he was about to be slapped. He hadn’t seen her eyes much before, but they glowed, an eerie pink energy spilling radiating from them and casting an unnatural glow over her cheeks.

“Oh, is she?” she asked, voice taking on a cold edge. Solder nodded and she directed her power towards the gatehouse. Nothing happened for a few seconds, then a sharp yowl and sudden crash echoed across the valley. “I should’ve figured. For a horrible second, I thought she had abandoned her duties to laze about inside the guild, but oh, the betrayal. I imagine she couldn't even step across the foyer.” By the time Auloin finished talking, an invisible force dragged Veille from around the corner as if by an invisible hand, her tail leading her limp form across the path and straight through a dense part of the bush. She emerged next to Auloin, eyes wide and mane a nest of branches.

“So you told her, huh?” she asked, pawing a wild bit of mane from her mouth.

“Yup.”

She yawned.

“Fair enough.”

Then the branches slapped shut. Solder stumbled back, hitting the dirt path with a winded grunt. Bits of spit leaves and a harsh vegetal smell followed him down. It was all he could do to stand up, brush himself off and pointedly ignore the sharp scolding coming from the bush.

Larcen eyed the path of flattened grass and displaced dirt with a raised brow.

“So you ratted on her, did ya?” Larcen asked, taking point down the path leading back to town.

“Sure. Partners are supposed to enact petty vengeance, right?”

“Is that advice your dad gave you?” Larcen gave him a quick smirk, his tails whipping into a spin behind him. Solder huffed a hot breath through his nose.

“Are you ever going to shut up about that?”

Larcen ignored him.

“You want to know what my dad told me?” His smirk only grew. “Don’t steal.”

Damn it. Solder kept all his attention on the high-growing bellflowers swaying at the side of the path. He had to bite his cheek to keep from smiling.

“Thanks, Solder.”
 
Chapter Four: Fall Apart, Together

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter four
Fall Apart, Together


While it would be fun to ignore all the warning signs, Solder felt awkward sitting on a pin as obvious as Larcen’s theft. They hadn’t known each other long, but it seemed like they’d be sticking together and Solder wasn’t excited to get pinned as an accomplice because it turned out the buizel was a master thief or something.

Sure, Larcen reassured him he wasn’t, but he did it clumsily.

A simple: “Why do you steal?” got something like: “ Well, uh… stealing’s not a super big deal right? Not like I’m killing anyone, huh? Ha! Bet you were a shoplifter before you got here. Nobody’s gotta be perfect.”

Naturally, “Why do you hate your dad?” didn’t get very far, either.

So Solder sighed and bore it, putting his thoughts aside so Larcen could explain the job. Something simple and uninspiring. They had to pick up some feathers for a fisherman by the docks.

They wandered down the valley, stopping only at a small mountain stream to fill their canteens. The morning seemed to have taken its toll on Larcen, leaving him unusually silent. He still shared whatever thought was on his mind, but with half the energy, an uneasy scratch at his collar and way too many wistful glances back at the guild, even after they’d turned the corner and all they could see were the towering walls of the valley.

“Eh, I’ll be fine,” Larcen said, unprompted, as they turned another corner and returned tentative waves from a pair of armoured turtles passing by. “Just gotta recover from the morning announcement. I’ll be right as rain! A month? Who cares! Just…”

Solder wasn’t too worried about Larcen before—busy enjoying the fresh air, the way the sun rolled over the mountains and dried all the morning dew still clinging to his fur—but maybe letting his mind run on its own hadn’t led anywhere good. He raised a brow at the buizel, but Larcen had stopped in the middle of the path, a defeated look spreading across his face.

“You okay?” Solder asked.

“...I think it’s all just hitting me now. A hundred pokemon. Huh. This is gonna be so embarrassing; you think Treebow would hire me as a clown?”

Solder tried to imagine the buizel with plaster-white makeup and rosy cheeks.

“Try janitor, first.”

Larcen took a deep breath, held his eyes closed, then released, shaking the tension out of his body like he’d knocked off a layer of snow. With a renewed twinkle in his eye, he skipped forward before Solder could react and threw an arm around his neck, along with his body. Solder struggled not to collapse, a pained grunt slipping out under Larcen’s weight.

“Alright! I’m back! Who’s ready to go dungeoneering?”

Solder wasn’t. And he made himself known with a particularly deep growl. Not like Larcen noticed; he kicked their journey into motion again.

Larcen pointed them towards a crag in the east-side cliff, close enough to Seafolk that Solder could see the path slope down into the village. It climbed up the rock face, zigzagging across the grey slate, breaking up carpets of emerald creepers spilling over the rocks. It didn’t look like much at first glance, but as they pushed through the tall grass lining the road and were swallowed by the valley’s shadow, it opened up into a wide gap that let them pass through side by side—cramped enough Solder felt more comfortable dropping on all fours so his pointy ears wouldn’t scrape the ceiling.

It was closed in, but not claustrophobic. Light seeped in from the other end of the crag, where the rocks sloped up into an open field. Solder just had to scamper up some rocky shelves, avoiding the cold streams of water dripping from the ceiling and sending chills down his neck as they soaked into his fur. Larcen slapped a paw on his shoulder right before the exit.

“Whoa. Guess you’re excited, after all,” Larcen said, giving Solder a condescending pat on the head. Solder scoffed and shoved him into the wall. Barely phased, Larcen hopped onto a rock, pointed his muzzle in the air and spread his arms wide. “This is it. Welcome to the dungeon!”

Solder looked around the tunnel flatly, not much standing out from the dingy grey stone and bits of dying grass hiding in shadowy corners. He expected a lot more out of a mystery dungeon based on Larcen’s description.

Larcen must have noticed his scepticism, because he fixed the quilava with a sly grin.

“We gotta walk through the tunnel, kid. It’s called Secret Field not… hidden cave? I dunno. C’mon, let’s go.”

But turning his attention to the exit didn’t reveal anything new. Just more tall grass—a little garden fenced in by cliffs. Definitely not anything he associated with a dungeon. Still, Larcen waited for him to climb up beside him, then grabbed him by the elbow and dragged them both out into the sun.

No paradigm shift happened as they crossed into the field. No great reveal, no drawing of curtains. It felt like a blink. Like waking up from a dream. One second, Solder stood in an enclosed alcove, the next it morphed into a wide open plain.

Solder binked and worked his jaw up and down. He scanned the horizon in disbelief. The towering cliffs fencing them in were just… gone. Replaced by nothing—blue skies and swaying fields as far as the eye could see. And even the sky felt alien. A pure, flat, blue colour, not a cloud, nor the sun to populate it. Just blue. Yet everything drowned in an even light. As solder held up his arm, he expected to see a shadow wrap around the underside where the light couldn’t reach, but it was all the same even cream colour. His fur disappeared into itself, seeming flat, lifeless.

Solder whipped around, a brief lapse of panic seizing him.

It spiked again once he saw the same landscape behind him.

He let his jaw drop open, his brow furrowing in confusion. He pieced together every bit of his surroundings—all flat, repeating scenery. Like they’d been dropped from the sky in the middle of nowhere. Larcen—now sitting in the grass and humming a song to himself—his only anchor.

“Crazy, huh?” Larcen asked, as if this was just another sunset.

Solder could only nod dumbly.

“How do we… get out?”

“Just keep walking. Eventually you’ll pass through the edge and pop back out the crag. Don’t ask. Nobody knows.”

Solder finally managed to shut his jaw with a sharp clack. He had so many questions running through his mind, but none of them led anywhere. The dungeon just… defied existence.

“Great,” he said—the one word that floated to the top of his mind. Larcen responded with a chuckle.

“I heard there’s another dungeon inland that’s pitch black. Like, you can’t get a fire or a torch or anything to work in there. This is pretty tame compared to that.” Larcen gave Solder a comforting smile. “This is the baby dungeon. Used to come here and scuffle with ferals when I was a little scamp.”

“And you want me to do that now? Beat up some birds and pluck all their feathers?”

Larcen sniffed, wrinkling up his muzzle.

“You don’t need to be weird about it. We only need a couple’a feathers.” He stood up, stretched his arms to the sky, and turned to Solder. “C’mon! It’s fun! Plus, the faster we go, the faster we can leave.”

Solder supposed that was true enough, so he sighed, let Larcen slap him on the back and followed dutifully behind as the buizel skipped off in some random direction.

Which only highlighted the strangeness. As he followed the path Larcen carved in the grass, sensation seemed to disappear. The sun’s heat didn’t warm him; it didn’t sting his eyes and force him to squint. The wind didn’t ruffle his fur. Even the feeling of dirt and grass cushioning his paws as he stepped felt numbed. The coolness of the morning gave way to a perfectly neutral temperature.

As a test, Solder concentrated, focused on the fire he’d summoned yesterday, and let a tongue of flame escape his mouth and spread over his forepaws.

Nothing. Even before, while it didn’t hurt, he’d felt a nice warmth. Now, the fire died alone and cold in his paws.

Solder shivered, focused on his heartbeat, and resolved to push on. This seemed like the type of place that would drive a pokemon insane. At least Larcen took it well. Sure enough, the buizel continued as if nothing was wrong, gleefully flattening grass until he stopped at a seemingly random point, holding up a paw. Solder took a few tentative steps to his side.

“Over there,” Larcen whispered, pointing a bit in front of them. A colourful bird with a white ruff and tall black crest nested in a swirl of grass, beak dug into its wing as it snored lightly.

“Feral chatot. That fisherman thinks they have the best feathers or whatever. Just give it a bit of trouble, hold it down, and we can grab a handful. It’s pretty easy; I used to wrestle these things into a headlock without using my type. You’ll do fine!”

Solder stroked his chin and examined the chatot. He gave himself a couple points right off the bat; it was certainly… smaller than him. And it looked pretty frail. He wasn’t exactly thrilled, it almost seemed unfair, but he’d give it a shot. And although he wouldn’t admit it out loud, Larcen’s winning smile and pat of approval helped.

So Solder snuck up to the bird’s nest until he stood close enough to grab its crest like a door handle. Hesitating only a brief moment, he lunged forward, throwing his whole weight behind the attack.

Even though Solder had no interest in hurting the bird, it seemed he didn’t need to at first. He wrapped around it with his arms, pinning its wings down in a stiff hug. The chatot took a moment to wake up—one blissful moment where the rapid pitter-patter of its little heart and ticklish feathers brushing Solder’s nose made it seem fine. He tensed as it ruffled a bit, then it settled down.

Oh. Easy enough.

…only to blast him with a bone-rattling shriek.

Solder held on. If anything, he gripped tighter, teeth grit against the violent ringing in his head. But the chatot thrashed, existing only as a ball of fury and feathers. It let loose again, one wing slipping free and battering Solder across the face. Another scream ripped through him and he couldn’t stop his muscles seizing. He hit the dirt. The chatot fled from his grip with a parting squawk, vanishing in the grass.

Solder shuddered, heaving breaths shooting bolts of pain deep into his bones. He felt a wetness around his mouth, around his eyes. A shaky paw came back wet, but not red.

Solder felt like he’d fallen off a cliff. What kind of demon was that?

“O-h… oh fuck!” He hissed, gritting his teeth. He slapped his paws to his eyes and groaned as the impact echoed at the back of his skull.

“Should’ve grabbed his beak,” said that idiot buizel who did nothing during that whole scene.

Solder felt irritation pound in his head, cooperating with his headache.

“Shut up. You could’ve told me it could do that!”

“Figured you’d try and fight it, not grab it. They’re more ah… excited when you surprise ‘em.”

“You told me to grab it!” Solder removed his paws—thankful, for once, that the sun wasn’t there to blind him—and let them flop into the grass. He rolled his eyes up to watch Larcen’s muzzle wrinkle in thought.

“Oh, yeah… huh. That’s weird. Oh, well!” Larcen bounced back quickly, hitting Solder with an unapologetic grin.

Solder tried to roll his eyes, but winced at the sting. Thankfully, while the initial pain was excruciating, all this time lying on the ground left him with little more than a dull ache. He managed to get to his feet with little more than a muffled groan, fixing Larcen with a flat glare.

“I’m not fighting any more,” he said fatly.

“Fine. I can show you how a master battler does it. But—” He cut himself off, strolled over to where Solder had been defeated and plucked a few blue and white feathers from the grass. “At least we still got some feathers.”

As if that was supposed to cure Solder’s headache. But he didn’t comment besides a raised brow, he just let Larcen wave him back on the same path they’d been heading before.

It didn’t take very long for them to find another chatot, this one taking a moment to preen itself, blissfully unaware of what happened not too far away.

For Solder, no bliss helped it anymore. It gave them the side-eye as it preened, and he swore a glimmer of challenge shone in there. Even though he stood more than a safe distance, Solder still scowled and took a few steps back.

Solder couldn’t tell if Larcen noticed his hesitation or was just excited to fight, but his tails kicked into a twirl behind him. He gave Solder a knowing look, and smoothed out his whiskers as if they’d stay flat if he combed through them once or twice.

“Watch and learn, kid,” he bragged, straightening his back.

A snappy comeback floated in the ether somewhere, but Solder couldn’t find it. He’d let the buizel have his day in the… complete lack of a sun.

“Impress me,” he said. Larcen hit him with a wink.

There were a couple of seconds where silence filled the void between them. Larcen snuck forward a little, testing the chatot, waiting to see when it tensed. At a couple metres, he stopped. Solder couldn’t see much—just the wild tuft of orange fur spiking from his head, the swell of muscles in his back. At first it seemed like he’d taken a deep breath.

Solder’s only experience with Larcen’s abilities were pretty mundane—Just some minor firefighting. He couldn’t expect much so, when Larcen launched a blast of water with enough force to drive him back, digging two deep trenches with his feet, Solder almost choked on his tongue.

No matter what he’d already seen, he could barely process a violent plume of water launching from the much smaller weasel.

The chatot had been eying them, but it couldn’t give more than a startled shriek as the shot slammed into it, sending it spiralling into the grass as a sopping mess. Larcen didn’t give it time to do much more than pointlessly flail its wings; he already entered mid-sprint by the time it hit the ground. With a twist, Larcen slammed it with his tails. Inexplicably, it looked as if the chatot folded under the weight of a club rather than a tail, sending it crashing through the brush. The sharp sound of whipped grass followed it down. It didn’t get back up.

“Brutal,” Solder whispered. Larcen turned then, paws on hips.

It’s the type of moment that forced Solder to reconsider a lot of things, like growing up and realising what was in his father’s canteen instead of water. Solder had very little to base that off of, but he had a feeling it sat parallel— that and the sour feeling in his throat. If anything, he was less excited to learn to fight now, if this is what it was supposed to be like—if even the most mundane creature can knock him on his ass.

Or maybe he was being unfair. He had a new respect for Larcen, at least.

The buizel took to plucking a couple handfuls of feathers from the downed chatot and stuffing them in his bag. In the brief lull, Solder managed a swig from his canteen.

“Want to try the next one?” Larcen asked. Solder watched his tails spin behind him, as if they weren’t just used to bludgeon a bird into submission.

He was torn. Truly. Going toe-to-toe with Larcen’s ego was worth something. But another bout with those damn birds? He considered it, squinting at the downed blue figure sprawled in the grass, humming thoughtfully to himself.

Then Larcen shrugged at him, shot him a sly grin, and his own ego was slain.

“Alright, fine.”

~(0)~

The second attempt didn't go very far. Neither did the third. There was something to be said for Solder avoiding the chatot’s brain-rattling screeches, but he came out of it with fewer feathers than gashes from hard beaks and sharp talons.

The fourth attempt they made a discovery. Solder already knew he could spit fire, but his ability didn’t seem to extend much farther. All he got were a couple weak embers, no matter how much he pushed. But in a fit of frustration, facedown in the grass as a particularly persistent chatot swooped down and battered him, Solder felt all that heat building in his chest burst out, sparking from his back. It was a weird sensation, but between the heat and the screech that followed, a satisfying one.

Solder couldn’t see with his muzzle buried in the ground, but by Larcen’s account—which he somehow made sense of between his excited rambling and face-breaking grin—a great plume of fire erupted from his back.

So there were some weird, red fire-vents lining Solder’s spine. Larcen had no clue what they were for, and it’s not like Solder could see his own back easily, so it’s not surprising they went unexamined. Of course, Larcen took the first opportunity to prod them, goading Solder to try again.

Solder craned his neck far enough that he could see those bright red patterns for the first time. They looked innocent enough, like little red islands on a sea of turquoise fur. Then, feeling a twinge of power, an invisible muscle in his mind, Solder flexed it and watched a wave of fire burst from his back. Just as casual as he’d like.

He couldn’t help a crooked grin, feeling a bit deranged. In that way only someone with a weapon could. In a way, he finally got what firestarter meant: Dangerous, unyielding. He could understand why some townsfolk shied away from him.

For the first time, Solder could look at himself and feel that subtle, cutting fear he felt watching other pokemon use their powers.

Oh, those birds didn’t stand a chance.

Until they did.

As it turned out, the chatot weren’t much more afraid of him when he wreathed himself in flame. No, they just circled above him or screeched until he couldn’t draw any closer without risking ear damage. Even when he got a lucky shot in or managed to come close enough to singe one, the feathers they dropped were useless little bits of ash. Larcen’s enthusiasm dipped with each failure. Solder’s plummeted.

All Solder had to show for his efforts was a deep scowl, a headache, and a trail of charred grass that followed his limping gait out of the dungeon.

At least Larcen had the sense not to say much, all his enthusiasm left at a simmer, hidden between awkward glances and sympathetic frowns. Once they’d collected enough feathers Larcen gave him a pat on the back and they trudged forward until they passed through a barrier like the one they entered from.

In a blink, they were outside, facing out to the road. Solder didn’t have it in him to be surprised.

“I’m not doing the fighting anymore,” Solder spat, a tongue of flame following his words.

“Aww, c’mon. You just need a bit of practice!”

“I was terrible, I didn’t enjoy it. I’m not doing it anymore.”

And that was that; Larcen rolled his eyes, but let him simmer. Solder knew he was being childish. He knew the next day he’d probably weaken with enough pushing, but in the moment the heat in his face refused to die down no matter how much fire he released.

“You uh…” Larcen started, eyeing him, “wanna get cleaned up? How do fire-types even take a bath anyway?”

Solder ignored his irritation for a moment to look down at himself. Sure enough his fur was a patchwork of grass stains, fresh pink scratches and dirt. He sighed.

“Let's finish the job first. Then we’ll figure something out.”

That may have been a mistake if Solder cared how he looked at that point. The sight of a beaten quilava scowling at the distant sight of Seafolk like he hoped it would sink into the ocean must have tweaked some knobs in passing pokemon. They all gaped at him and took a very wide berth. Some had the nerve to stop at the path’s grassy shoulders as if they’d walked all the way up the path to look at violets.

Solder couldn’t blame them. He couldn’t blame himself for hoping they got an allergic reaction, either.

At least Larcen is here, became an increasingly common thought—if only because Larcen still smiled and waved to everybody like nothing was wrong and every once in a while some hell dog or walking plant would pause. Then Solder could watch the confusion hit in real time. Should they be nervous or welcomed? What did that buizel do to him? Most of them just stopped and let the duo pass, but the idea that they had to rationalise this somehow became a welcome distraction from Solder’s headache.

Until, of course, they padded onto the stone pathways of Seafolk’s slopes and everybody was too busy to be confused, scattering across the streets as the noon sun hung directly overhead. Then they’d have to find the fisherman's house. Looking out over the stacked wooden buildings, some sections were so dense they seemed like termite mounds, each window a little hole into someone’s life. Solder felt a sinking feeling in his gut imagining going to every door until they found the right one.

Luckily, Larcen had an address. 1042 Argot street. By the bay, apparently, which made Solder frown—memories of slippery boards and the smell of sea rot making him shiver, the taste of salt lingering on his tongue. At least they knew where to go. He shook it off, forcing a tired smile at Larcen’s worried frown.

That didn’t last long. Solder quickly discovered that the street numbers weren’t always easy to get to. Some plaques were scratched up or unscrewed or otherwise in the wrong order. They carried on into the buildings, too. The duo wandered through the mazelike hallways that meandered around the bay’s towering homes and spat them out in a confused blur, often to a different street.

It must’ve taken hours. Solder kept track by the sun, watched it slowly crawl down the horizon until it slipped behind the mountains—like it knew he didn’t want to know. Like it knew he was too weak to not check. Even Larcen’s energy died. He stopped talking, his tails stopped spinning. Whatever good will he garnered evaporated as every pokemon they passed in the halls and on the docks took very conspicuous steps out of their way.

But they found it. Eventually. Infuriatingly enough, at the very end of the street, nestled in the corner between the docks and the mountains. A quiet little niche laying on slabs of rock. A shallow, underwater beach trailed off the end of the dock and reached the pier via a set of stairs carved into the slate. It was a relaxing little place hiding under the shade of the mountain and Solder imagined it must be nice at low tide, when he could actually walk on the beach.

It managed to get a quieting collective sigh, at least.

Larcen knocked on the door and waited for Solder to stroll up beside him.

“This is why we don’t do a lot of small missions,” he mumbled. He tried to muster up some enthusiasm, but could only give a tired nod.

Solder didn’t answer. He slumped on the doorstep and rubbed his eyes. A moment of darkness convinced him he could go to sleep—his headache had other ideas.

A couple moments, a mumbled shout from inside and heavy footsteps. Then the door flew open, nearly scraping Larcen’s button nose. His whiskers twitched, but he smiled at the doorway like he hadn’t almost been assaulted.

A giant… amphibian… stood in the doorway, he hulked over them, upper body all thick blue muscle, leading to a flat head, a fan of orange-gilled cheeks, and two sharp, discerning eyes. The set of fins crowning his head knocked him up easily twice their height and made him seem like a king. It didn’t help how he squinted at them. Or rolled his shoulders like he’d expected trouble.

“Waddya lookin’ for?” He said, voice a wet growl.

He must’ve crawled straight from the ocean. Solder’s exhaustion curbed his flinch, but as the giant’s gaze wandered over to him, his head snapped to look straight ahead.

“We’re here for your ah… posting?” Larcen responded, “about the feathers?”

“Took ya long enough.” The creature huffed, then stepped aside. Larcen took the invitation with a grateful smile, but as Solder got to his feet to follow, he found the blue mass had shifted back into the doorway.

“Not you, firestarter. You wait out here.”

Solder blinked. He’d been busy looking at the ground, but he chanced a second glance at the giant’s face.

He wished he hadn’t. There was a chilling scrutiny there. A narrow-eyed glare and set frown that kept too long. Solder didn’t like the challenge in it.

“Whatever,” he said, sighing, turning and slumping back against the wall.

The giant followed him all the way, waiting nearly a minute after Solder sat down as if the quilava would leap back up when given the chance. Then he nodded and turned around.

But not if Larcen had anything to say about it.

“Seriously?” he asked, “just let him in. You gotta problem?”

“I’ve got things to worry about in there. Now, ya got ‘nough feathers?”

Larcen clutched his overstuffed bag to his side. He frowned.

“C’mon! He’s harmless, you’re seriously gonna do this?”

“You want ta get paid?”

Solder felt exhaustion wash over him as they bickered. All he wanted was to be done, but here Larcen was more interested in pride or whatever. He felt his nerves fraying like they were being strung across a knife.

“But…” Larcen continued.

“Stop!” Solder snapped, digging his claws into the wood doorstep, “shut up! Just go in, I don’t care if I come or not!” He turned to Larcen. The buizel had the gall to look hurt, shoulders falling in defeat.

So the giant grumbled something under his breath, and moved aside, and ushered Larcen in. He left Solder with a hurt look and they disappeared beyond the doorway, two steps of footsteps, one soft, one heavy.

Solder breathed a sigh of relief. He leaned back against the cool stone wall of the house and closed his eyes. Breathed in and out. In and out. The heat didn’t clear. It swarmed in his body, little metal slivers rattling around his skull, melting through his insides. Some of it escaped, sparking from his back and against the wall. It helped. Barely.

He tensed, opened his eyes and tried not to bite his tongue.

Maybe he had anger issues. He still wouldn't entertain the idea of fighting, but that left him stuck. Thoughts kept cropping back up even as he culled them. Eventually, he had to open his eyes and focus on the distance, watching waves crash against the ribs of ships. If only to take his mind off himself, off his brother’s letter. He almost wished he hadn’t read it.

Then he heard Larcen’s telltale steps as the buizel came back through the door. He turned. Larcen’s bag was empty, a refreshed smile graced his muzzle.

And there was something new tucked in the crook of his arm.

“Ready to bounce? Maybe we can swing by a cafe or something? I dunno,” Larcen said, shrugging. “He’s just gonna get our pay and we’ll be on our way. Good rhyme, huh?”

But Solder couldn’t take his eyes off the thing in Larcen’s other arm. It looked like a… vase? Maybe? It was a stout little blue thing with wobbly handles and a choked neck, molded like something from a kids pottery class.

“What’s that?” Solder asked.

“Oh, this?” Larcen held up the vase like he was only just seeing it. Quickly, nervously, Larcen tucked it into his now-empty bag. Solder simmered, already seeing where this was going. “That’s nothin’, I just picked—”

“Put it back.”

There was a pause. A moment where Larcen tripped over his words enough that waves filled the silence as they slapped gently against the pier wall. Larcen’s whiskers drooped, but his eyes turned sharp.

“Didn’t you say partners enact petty vengeance? What happened to that, huh?”

Solder tried to wrap his mind around that as he scrutinised Solder’s bag, desperately trying to find the logic in there, somewhere.

“Are you kidding? This is your client! Not your lazy guildmate! I didn’t want you to do this!” he sniped, jabbing a paw at Larcen, “I don’t want to get caught up in your shit!”

“Maybe I just wanna keep it? Not like you cared about stealing earlier.”

“Guess it wasn’t for me then, huh?” Solder said, revelling in the awkward shift it got from Larcen. “Not like I ever told you to steal, either. I told you I’m not making this my problem.”

Larcen held himself, clutching the bag to his chest and letting his tails curl around his feet. He looked out to the sea, a faint sparkle in his eyes reflecting the light on the waves. Solder could feel the way Larcen’s chest rose from across the doorstep. And by the gods, Solder could feel the offence pouring from him. He looked posed. He looked like he was waiting for someone to come up beside him and throw an arm over his shoulders.

And Solder hated it. Anger choked him, caught his tongue at the back of his throat. To him, Larcen looked like a whimpering animal, waiting to be put down.

Little bastard.

“I don’t want this to be your problem. All those questions were getting annoying. I’m not telling you. Stop asking,” Larcen said.

“Stop doing it!” Solder got to his feet, forced himself at Larcen—glared down his muzzle. “Are you stupid? You’re not subtle, you keep pushing like this is some stupid game! I don’t care about your life, but you don't either, apparently!”

That was enough, Solder knew. Larcen shifted uncomfortably in his own fur. But then he looked at Solder with this alien expression, wide-eyed and new. Solder growled.

“There’s some fucking bolt loose in your head, Larcen.”

Larcen turned. Hugged harder. Couldn’t look Solder in the eyes anymore.

“I’m going back to the guild,” he said, a weak quiver in his voice. A pause. A heave of the shoulders. Then, he padded slowly down the stairs, across the dock, and wandered all the way along the street, shrinking into the distant crowd until he was just an impression of orange. Solder watched the whole way, heart pounding in his ears.

It didn't make the fire go away.

“You, there.”

The giant had returned while Solder was distracted, lurking over him with narrowed eyes. Solder didn’t get a chance to respond before he continued.

“Knew ya were up ta somethin’. You were in there when I was with yer friend.”

“What are you talking about?” Solder snapped, barely in control enough to not raise his voice to the giant in front of him.

“That was my daughter’s,” he grumbled in return, “I don’t like thieves.”

It took a second for the implication to slot into place.

“Does it look like I stole anything?”

Solder could tell a ‘yes’ was waiting to escape from the giant’s mouth. Yet a moment of scrutiny must have revealed Solder was empty handed, because he lifted his head to track the street.

But Larcen had left and the giant must have realised he wasn’t going to get what he wanted.

They stood beside each other for a while, neither willing to move, Solder wishing the other would just give up, hand over their money, and go inside already. Eventually, the giant turned.He held up a giant blue hand, revealing a little leather purse. He shook it, letting it bounce in his palm with a metallic jingle.

“Forgot to pay ya.”

Solder blinked, relaxing slightly. He stood up and took a step forward, holding out a cautious paw.

In a slight motion, with barely more effort than he’d take to swipe dirt off his arm, the giant slung the purse underhand, sending it sailing across the dock, slapping against the stone lip of the pier and tumbling into the water with a faint splash.

“Fetch,” he said. Then, without any theatrics, he turned and went back inside.

Solder stood for a very long while. Stood and stared at the spot their money fell over the edge. He worked his jaw, waiting for a scream to come out. Tried to pick out something loose on the pier to smash against the rocks. He clenched his fists. Dug too deep. Felt his claws jut out and cut into flesh.

Of course.

He padded to the edge of the dock in complete silence, drawn by the waves. He got on all fours to peer over the edge. His reflection looked back, grim and scruffy, fur matted by the spray of saltwater from the ocean; it scowled when he scowled and only disappeared when he spat at it, flooding it with ripples.

A quick scan revealed that the purse landed gently in the sandbar, a foot underwater and just a hop down into the beach. No problem. Solder was pretty adverse to water since he’d woken up—mostly it chilled him, made him slow—but a minute in the shallow end of the ocean seemed like no big deal.

He reassured himself by glancing at the stone stairway a little to his left.

With no greater thought, Solder slid off the side until his feet dangled inches above the surface of the water, then dropped into it. His lower half dunked underwater with a splash and an all-encompassing chill. He gasped—fully, involuntarily—as a shot went up his spine and rained violent shivers down his body.

He took sluggish steps forward, trudging through sand and water. By the time he reached the purse, only a couple steps, a numbness started, tiny needles forcing themselves through his legs. He lurched. He ground his teeth, dreading having to reach into the water.

But he had to.

He tried to be quick about it, just reach in and get out, but the cold seized his legs and pitched him forward. He caught himself on all fours and the water soaked into his arms. It splashed over his shoulders, slapped against his chest. Even as he forced himself back up, it clung to him. He clawed at it almost involuntarily. The shivering turned violent.

Whether he had grabbed the purse didn’t matter anymore; Instinct shouted over everything.

But he’d lost all feeling in his legs. Even a shot of hot panic and the pained sputtering of sparks along his spine didn’t help. He begged to walk, to move. Instead, he tilted backwards. Felt the harsh crack of stone against the back of his skull. Darkness shot through his peripheral. There was a voice, a shout or something, but he couldn’t hear over the roar of his heartbeat. He started sliding down the rocks, tried to force his spine straight back to wedge himself against the wall, but it did nothing. And nothing could stop the aching cold.

The water covered his chest, his neck. He tried to call out, but water flooded into his maw, choking him in salt. Liquid ice poured down his throat.

It swallowed him.

~(0)~

Solder didn’t die, though it felt like he had. In reality, he woke up on a couch back in the guild, squinting at the ceiling, a blue cat’s face staring down at him with a condescending frown.

“If you wanted to attempt suicide, I might’ve recommended a locale with less civilians around to save you,” Landy said, button nose twitching.

But Solder could barely think. Between his eyes, squinted from the stinging light inside, and his ears funnelling every word into his skull like marbles pouring into a glass jar, he flooded. His headache dimmed as he came to his senses, but he still felt the aching cold—even beneath the thick blanket smothering him. He shivered, and it must have looked like a nod, because Landy continued.

“It used to be that I’d recommend a session or two with me, but I imagine there’d be some sort of friction between coworkers that would exacerbate the problem.” He waved his paw in dismissal. “Oh, well. I presume you’re not dying?”

Solder nodded absentmindedly, brain still catching up to Landy’s words.

“Someone let you be a therapist?”

To his unbelievable credit, Landy did little more than deepen his flat stare.

“Of a sort. It’s not as if suicide is a popular recommendation of mine.” A glow spilled from Landy’s eyes. Solder felt a renewed warmth surround him for a moment, then it vanished. “Although, in your case, you’d be a credit to your species. You thought you could go for a swim? Really?”

Solder felt his headache returning. Oh, he was sick of this cat already.

“I wasn’t planning to drown.”

“I figured. Compromise is our friend here, however. Simply commit to not reproducing and it’ll have the same effect.”

“I’m not committing to anything.”

“Exactly.” Landy shot back, voice a wasteland of humour. “In any case, as enjoyable as it’s been, I’d rather not talk to you anymore. You should rest, but I’m not particularly concerned about your health, so feel free not to.”

Without waiting for a response, Landy turned, picked up a little shoulder bag he had at his feet and wandered off. Solder sat up on his couch with a groan, blanket pooling around his waist. Then he’d spotted Larcen sitting on the couch across from him.

The buizel sat by himself, tails pulled into his lap, combing through them with the care he’d give to a newborn. He was a picture of serenity, really. Someone who’d had a long time to come to terms with something.

Or maybe Solder was struck by melodrama. He stared a while, straight faced. There had to be a good way to approach this, but the motions were lost between his chills and growing discomfort.

“Hey,” he settled on. With a rough cough for good measure.

Larcen glanced up and graced him with a slight smile. Soft, but not comforting.

Solder considered the distance between them. He watched the lines draw themselves into Larcen’s face. Nobody said anything for a while, the silence filled by them reading each other—Solder wryly reminded himself that other pokemon were the only thing he could read at all. And he wasn’t even good at that.

“Should I apologise?” he asked.

What a stupid thing to say.

Larcen raised his eyebrows, pursed his lips.

“I should’ve shut my mouth; I shouldn't have asked,” Solder amended, before Larcen could give a response, “I’m sorry.”

“That’s what you think the problem is? You asked?” Larcen said.

Solder couldn’t hear the intent in his words; Larcen seemed so calm. He hesitated, reconsidered himself.

“You don’t have to tell me anything.”

Once again the eyebrows raised. Once again Solder tried to keep his face straight, holding Larcen’s attention. If it broke, Solder wouldn’t be able to meet his eyes again. Larcen sighed.

“That’s right,” he said, “I don’t. And you don’t get to judge me if you know nothing’.” He sat up, shuffled off his couch. A brief pause made it seem like he’d leave, squeeze out of their little cluster and vanish into the guild. But he didn’t. Instead, he padded over to Solder’s couch—nestled into the nook between Solder’s feet and the armrest. Solder clutched his blanket to his chest. There was a feeling there, one in the bags under a father’s eyes, one where he'd come into the room to check under their kid’s bed—that brief moment before he reveals what’s been hiding under there all along.

Larcen took a second to compose himself.

“I’ve got… impulse issues. I guess,” he said, one paw toying with his whiskers, “Did I tell you how long I’ve been at the guild? Like, fifteen years. My dad thought being out in the mountains would help.”

“What a help that was.”

A cough. A sharp look. Solder bit his tongue, tasted iron and clutched his blanket to his neck until it dug into his fur.

Stupid. He’s such an idiot.

“Sorry. Fuck, I— Why is it so hard to be sincere?”

He’s not used to this; that’s what he told himself. Every interaction with Larcen had been jokey or ironic or… well, every positive interaction. Now, a fog enveloped him. He’d latched onto the first words he saw swim into focus.

“I’ll shut up. I won’t say anything,” Solder mumbled. Larcen rubbed his face with both paws. He snickered.

“Calm down, kid. You’re trying too hard,” he said. Still, Solder kept his lips shut. “Anyway, you’re kinda right. Helped at first, but I never really got better. Dad always thought I just wasn’t tryin’ hard enough.”

“You think it’s kleptomania?”

“What? Dunno what that is.”

Solder tried to think of a way to explain Larcen’s own problem back at him. In the end, he decided he had nothing useful to say.

“I guess I don’t know, either.”

“Oh.”

“Oh.”

So they just sat in their insecurity, Solder certainly not comfortable enough to continue. The blanket started to feel like it was cooking him, but he never drew it below his chin.

“So… are we cool?” Solder said. He sounded like a child, he felt his skin burn under his fur and anxiously avoided Larcen’s gaze as the buizel’s smile grew.

“Eh, we were both frustrated. Sooo… I dunno. Maybe if you give me a real nice smile.” Larcen demonstrated, drawing his paws across his mouth and giving Solder a faceful of teeth.

Solder’s caution evaporated; his face hardened.

“No. you’re not serious.”

“Guess we can’t be friends, then. Sucks.”

All of a sudden they were back. Larcen slipped into goofiness easily, Solder let his blanket drop and felt a familiar dry irritation well up. It’s interesting how quickly he slipped back into pace, but it felt good. Familiar. Now, if only Larcen wasn’t asking the impossible. But, fine. Solder could sit in bed like a rock until Larcen got bored and stopped teasing him, but he had a feeling Larcen didn’t have much else going on.

So Solder sighed a little too deeply, tilted his head back and gave an honest smile.

“Ha!” Larcen cheered, “got another one! I should be keeping score! Two for me, zero for you.”

“Whatever. We’re good, then? Can I get some sleep?”

“Yeah, we’re good. But next time you hurt me, I’m gonna blast you.”

Solder shivered, the lingering sensation of water rushing over him still fresh in his mind.

“Fine.”

He settled back down, slumping into the lumpy fabric of his bed, watching a broken beige thread escape its seam. He turned over Larcen’s words and watched the bugs crawl out from beneath them.

Next time. He hated that pair, what it implied. But he couldn’t turn himself back to face Larcen. It should've been so easy just to say he wouldn’t lash out again. Say sorry again, there will be no next time. Say something. Anything.

It’s not like he liked being angry. But he had no better advice, and kept himself up trying to gather enough courage like he gathered little balls of blanket fleece in his paws.

All this just to turn around.

By the time he did—minutes, hours, might as well be years later, Larcen had fallen asleep.

Solder spent half the night watching his chest rise and fall against the arm of the couch.
 
Chapter Five: Outside

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter five
Outside


The guild lobby lay empty as Solder and Larcen woke up and went through Larcen’s morning routine. Food? Check. Bags? Check. Grooming? Well, Solder had had enough of that yesterday. He could stand to look a little scruffy. Sure, Larcen tried to tease, but the buizel couldn’t get his fur to cooperate no matter how hard he tried. Even after an hour of preening in a half-broken mirror leaning against a stack of crates, he managed to look worse than Solder, who just rolled out of bed and decided that was good enough.

“Just say it was the hurricane,” Solder said as they emerged from the larder. He couldn’t be sure if it was because of the juice from their breakfast, but Larcen dragging his paws over his cheeks got the fur to stick in every possible direction.

“What hurricane?” Larcen responded, finally giving up, slapping his paws to his sides. He moaned. “Ugh, this always happens to me.”

“The one over your bed. It was very localised.”

Larcen rolled his eyes and went back to obsessing.

As they passed through the lobby Solder couldn’t help but wonder how many pokemon actually worked at the guild. He’d seen what, seven, maybe? And two of them didn’t do anything. That seemed pretty light for a building of this size. Of course, he could always just be waking up after them—scanning the lobby, he saw the tracks of sleep, made and unmade cots and couches, stray mugs, some still wafting steam. Signs of life. But the only actual living body in the room was Brute.

And as Solder paused to watch the flygon, ‘alive’ seemed relative.

He hadn’t moved since Solder last saw him at Haxorus’ announcement. Or, maybe he had. Hard to tell whether the half-empty crates of paperwork around him were always that way. He’d created a throne from broken furniture and he sat, slumped over the arm, wings drooping over his back, looking as discarded as anything else. He stared off into the distance, and although his red goggles tinted his eyes, Solder imagined his eyes would be red beneath them, too.

When Larcen tried to pass by, Brute jolted up, one arm shooting towards them, the barest hint of focus returning to his expression.

“Oh! Wait. Please, please wait just a second,” He said, the manic, half-awake energy in his voice setting Solder on edge.

Larcen was the one to respond, hitting him with a nervous smile.

“Hey… ah… what’s up?”

“Please, it’s just been, oh—” He flinched, like he’d been slapped, then cradled his head in his hands. “I’ve been trying and trying but the whole bloody lobby is swamped and it— and it needs to be empty for the contractors and guilds but I can’t— I just can’t! Haxorus left all his paperwork, all the budgets upstairs and I can’t clean up down here and finish his accounting and keep everyone up to date. Oh, by the sea, I need to make an announcement still!”

He deflated once again, speech trailing off with a wheeze. He came back with a harsh inhale, claws now clutching his chest so tightly Solder was worried he was having a heart attack.

“Are you dying?”

“And was there a… question in there?”

They let him recover for a moment, sharing a concerned look. Solder couldn't make out half of what he said, but none of what slipped through sounded good. Thankfully, after a worryingly long time his breathing calmed. He took a deep breath and gave a pleading, watery-eyed look at them.

“Sorry. Sorry. I’m sorry, I just… I just need some help around here,” He croaked. “The lobby needs to be cleared out ASAP, but I’ve… well, I’ve had a bit of trouble recruiting anyone to help.”

“Aren’t you the leader now? Why even ask, just tell someone to do it,” Solder said.

Brute’s thin frown dipped.

“Oh, no, I don’t… don’t think…” He shook his head slowly, drunkenly. “Haven't I asked anyone? I thought I asked you?”

Solder and Larcen shared a look. Solder scooted up beside the buizel.

“I think he’s having a meltdown,” He whispered, “maybe we should help, he doesn’t look too good.”

“I can stay. We were only going out for your thing so…” Larcen responded, “eh, whatever. I’ve been putting off guild chores.” He looked around, taking in the sea of trash that would have to be taken care of. His shoulders slumped, as if the weight of the task was sinking in. He turned back to Brute. “I’ll give you a hand, see if I gotta rope someone else in.”

Despite Larcen’s enthusiasm not extending beyond a limp fist-pump and uncharacteristic frown, Brute still managed to find some energy, staggered to his feet, and grabbed Larcen by the shoulders. His wings buzzed behind him.

“Oh, thank you! Thank you! Thank you, thank you!”

And that’s how they split up for the first time in days. Solder waved goodbye, which went entirely ignored by the flygon and only numbly returned by Larcen, wandered through the maze to snag his canteen from the hook by the door, and stepped outside.

He stood by the entrance to take in the sunlight and feel the valley around him. He cleared his throat, adjusted the strap around his shoulder, frowned at something vague on the cliffside for no particular reason. A sharp caw sounded in the distance.

Having a break from each other made sense. He felt like Larcen needed it more than he let on. Unfortunately, Loneliness felt different this time. Sure, he still had a goal: he would find klefki today, period. And he felt good. As he padded through the courtyard, his limbs worked the way he assumed they should. At the gatehouse, he stopped to look back at the guild.

Nothing happened. Nothing had changed since the day before. The sun still shone, the grass still waved in the breeze, the guild’s stone archway hadn’t moved. But something felt off. Solder felt… shifty. Uncomfortable in his own skin, fur like a coat he couldn’t take off.

Maybe he needed a break from himself, too.

“Fuck off,” he whispered, mostly to himself, convinced it could be a phrase powerful enough to fix his memory, attitude and general personality. The breeze—the only thing listening—washed over him, but didn’t respond.

Solder sighed, clutched his canteen to his side, and set off to look for klefki.

~(0)~

Seafolk didn’t stop being a confusing maze when Solder was on his own, turns out. It took no time at all for his ‘concentrated search’ to become ‘aimlessly wandering around’.

But the frustration wasn’t there. There was a great sense of freedom in just… walking around town, getting a lay of the land—and if he got tired, he could just relax at one of the parks, lay in the sun, bookshelved by two wooden buildings, and watch the pokemon stream by.

Waiting for klefki seemed as good a strategy as any, and if Solder was being honest with himself, he had none otherwise.

Asking around would have worked, but the more he tried to talk to pokemon the more self-conscious he became, the more his frustration spiked. Most were fine. Solder especially liked talking to an elderly red octopus who used to be some sort of pirate. Well, supposedly. Solder couldn’t tell how much he embellished, but with how frantically those tentacles gestured, his guess was mostly.

Still, that was a highlight. Most questions ended as soon as they began, some pokemon ignored him, some looked through him like he wasn’t there. There was always the stray smile, condescending and tight. Then Solder would get annoyed or frustrated, his cheery mask would slip back into flatness, a spark would escape his mouth with his words, and their posture would shift. The conversation would die and they’d slip back into the crowd.

Firestarter was a word thrown around a lot; of course he understood the hesitation, the danger of fire and why they looked at him like they did, but it’s not like any of them saw his performance against the chatot. Yesterday, he finally managed to harness some of his power, even if he couldn’t use it. Today, he wished he hadn’t. Solder’s discomfort crept up from behind him, closer with each clumsy word until it rested its claws on his shoulders.

So he sighed, gave up and sat on his bench instead, tucked in a little grove by the street where he could let the world pass by. No luck, of course, but it gave him time to calm down.

Then came the time to move on. He wandered streets, pushed through crowds, peered through open windows until the mon inside gave him a dirty look and slammed the wooden shutters closed. He passed the steep cobble street up to the guild, the market, the sun drenched docks, the market… again.

Until he ended up by a little line of restaurants, sign boards lined up neatly outside clusters of wood tables of various heights. Some had matching chairs, some were low enough they needed woven reed mats.

In his search, Soder spotted a somewhat familiar cloud of white hair parked by one of the shorter tables. He hadn’t really talked much to the whimsicott, but he seemed open, at least. With one more glance down the street, Solder padded up to the table.

“Hey,” he said, plopping himself on a mat to Bastaya’s right. There was another pokemon at the table—some green lizard with a spiky crest running over his eyes and lips that looked drawn-on with red marker. “You’re Bastaya, right? I’m Solder. I had a question for you.”

Bastaya blinked, one hand holding a steaming mug of some herbal-smelling drink halfway to his mouth. Then, with a stray smile, he placed it back on the table and adjusted some of the fluff around his neck.

“Indeed, that’s me.” He gestured across the table, which the lizard returned with a wave. “ And that’s Unico, in case you haven’t met. He’s a guild member, too. If you haven’t seen him, he’s just a little… busy sometimes.”

As Bastaya pointed, the pokemon’s already wide smile stretched to its limits

“Yes! Hello! Hello! I’m Unico kecleon, but you can call me Unico!” The ah… kecleon responded. He leaned, practically throwing himself, over the table, took Solder’s paw before the quilava could react and slammed it on the table a few times in an approximation of a handshake. Bastaya’s mug rattled and sloshed in response. “It’s great to meet a new member! You know, me and Soleiro were the newest before you, but that was a couple years ago. Ha! A couple years, a couple days, what’s the difference? You get what I mean? It’s quite Funny how that works!” He finished what might have been a joke with a hearty laugh that neither of the other pokemon returned.

Solder had no clue how to respond except glare dully at the wrinkles lining Unico’s perpetually happy eyes. It did nothing to stop them. Nor did it stop the lizard’s smile growing manic.

Solder could count on one paw how many minutes he could imagine tolerating Unico.

“Ah… yeah. Okay.” He said, pointedly turning back to Bastaya.

The whimsicott hadn’t flinched, despite the kecleon’s outburst drawing stares from other customers. He picked up his mug by the dry side and took a sip.

“He’s a bit excited. Always~” Bastaya swiped a puff of cotton hair away from his cheek. “Anyways, want something to eat? Looking a little scruffy, aren’t you?”

Solder didn’t bother to look at his fur. He knew it was a jungle. Not like any of Seafolk’s sailors wore suits or anything, but if he had money maybe he’d buy a comb. Speaking of money…

“You’re paying,” he drawled.

Unico slapped the table and laughed way too loud.

“Oh, of course!” Bastaya said, “what kind of host would I be if I didn’t? See anything you like?” He poked at a piece of paper on the table, clutched inside a little wooden holder.

So, probably a menu. Solder sighed, staring at the incomprehensible scribbles.

“Uh… I don’t know this place. You order for me.”

Through pure accident, it seemed like Solder stumbled on some sort of magic phrase because Bastaya’s amber eyes shone like real, polished amber.

“Baby, you’re not ready. Waiter!” he called, quickly summoning a bipedal dog with a notepad and pen. They went back and forth a couple times until the dog scribbled something down and fled back into the cafe. “You like fish, right?”

Solder had no idea, so he just nodded.

“Well, while we’re waiting, what did you need?”

“I’m looking for a klefki.” Solder said. Bastaya hit him with a blank stare so he struggled to come up with something else to say. “She’s new, I guess. Only came into town a couple days ago.”

Bastaya’s stare didn’t shift.

“Oh, I used to know a klefki!” Unico jumped in, “She was great, really stand-up. Or maybe float up’s more accurate. Ha! She always tipped well, and you know the best tippers are always very polite. It’s a shame, sometimes, that we closed up shop if only because we never got to see her anymore. Of course, she moved out ages ago, so I suppose that wouldn’t have mattered anyway.”

Despite all those words, Solder thought Unico had said absolutely nothing. It did manage to flood his brain, leaving him to quietly work his jaw for several seconds before responding.

“I said days, not lifetimes,” Solder sniped. Still, Unico’s mood refused to dampen.

“Oh, I know! I thought I'd just add a little anecdote!”

Cue awkward silence. Bastaya took a long drink of tea and let the crowd speak for them.

“Alrighty,” he cut in, “well, it’s a shame I can’t tell you where she is, buuuut I can help you find someone who might.”

“Who?”

“Nuh-uh~ not yet! You thought you could barge in and put a few extra coins on my tab without punishment? Why not chat a little first? You still have to eat, after all.”

Solder gave him a flat stare, but the whimsicott said nothing, hiding a smile behind his mug. Solder supposed meeting his guildmates wasn’t the worst thing in the world.

“Sure.”

As they chatted, Solder had to wonder how he always met up with the chatty pokemon. Bastaya was definitely more… conventional than Larcen—offering details about his life and asking in turn rather than going off on tangents—but it came across very planned, like the whimsicott had a list of topics to run through. Given Solder couldn’t answer anything beyond three days ago, he slogged through their casual conversation and silently pined for Larcen’s charms, wishing the klefki would materialise in front of him so he could get this over with and go back.

Unico was the real star, though—jumping in at the worst times with vague anecdotes that meant nothing to nobody. If Solder asked how long Bastaya had been in Seafolk, you bet Unico would jump in with an overly sentimental memory of his father. Is Bastaya asking about Solder’s hometown? Better jump in halfway through the question to tell everyone what he ate for breakfast. It was hard for Solder to be annoyed when he spent the whole conversation wondering if the kecleon was doing it just to screw with them. Still, he felt close to exploding by the time the waiter slid a couple trays of food and drink onto the table.

By that time, Solder must have made it clear what he thought of Unico because the kecleon pulled up a timepiece and gave an exaggerated whistle.

“Well, it’s been great!” Unico said as soon as the food hit the table. He stood up from his rug, wandered around the table to shake the hands of Solder and Bastaya, then picked up his bag. “Wonderful to meet you! Fantastic! Unfortunately, I have to go find Soleiro, he’s wandered off somewhere, who knows where, and with the guilds coming we can’t afford to not open up shop again. Imagine the profits!”

Then he was off, barely giving a second look to the full plate of fish still steaming on his side of the table.

“Don’t you worry,” Bastaya drawled, probably noticing Solder’s slack-jawed look at the kecleon’s coiled green tail retreating into the crowd, “he’s always like that.”

Solder let his jaw clack shut.

That’s worrying.”

Still, with Unico gone, it gave Solder a chance to eat in peace. True to his word, Bastaya ordered him fish—redfish, according to him—laying on a bed of greens. First, steam wafted the smell of butter and herbs and grilled meat over Solder. Saliva filled his mouth as he realised how hungry he had been. It was a whole fish, red skin crossed with grillmarks, belly stuffed with herbs and sliced nomel berries. Juice glistened on the bits of white meat peeking out from charred skin. Even as the fish’s one glassy eye stared at him, Solder didn’t feel sorry for carving out a chunk of skin and meat with his claws and stuffing it into his muzzle.

It was, without the irony of his situation, the best thing he’d ever eaten. As alright as the berries and bread and cured meats he’d eaten from the guild’s larder were, nothing stood up to the tender, juicy texture and sweetness of fresh fish.

Solder tore into it, barely conscious enough not to throw himself on the plate. A minute later he leaned on the table in a post-food haze and sucked on a nomel rind, a rack of bones all that remained of his meal. But even though he felt the warmest and comfiest he had all day, he still had some focus left over for his task.

“So, the klefki,” He drawled, picking his teeth with a bit of fishbone.

Bastaya paused a moment, chewing on a bit of salad off Unico’s abandoned plate.

“I think you should leave.”

Solder blinked owlishly.

“Oh, sorry, that came out weird. Not now, I mean.” Bastaya waved off Solder’s concerned look. “Seafolk won’t treat you right, you know. I’d wager you’d have a better time ah… somewhere else. Basically anywhere.”

Solder figured he had some idea what Bastaya was talking about. Still, even with his discomfort, a few harsh words were nothing he couldn’t handle.

“It’s fine. They’re just scared of… fire or whatever. Fair enough; doesn’t bother me.” He shrugged, scratching his muzzle to hide the way it wrinkled. Bastaya hit him with dry groan.

“Oh, goodness~ Don’t tell me you’ve internalised that already. I figured you were sheltered, but seriously. Seafolk is so much more dangerous to you than you are to it. Didn’t you nearly drown yesterday because you had the audacity to stroll along the docks? Or did the swampert push you in? I wouldn’t be surprised.”

Solder had nothing to say to that; he just continued to idly pick at his teeth. Bastaya’s smile sank into something disapproving.

“Anyone can start a fire. Anyone.”

For the longests time, Solder just stared, letting Bastaya pick at his food in silence. Watched someone knead dough on a counter in the cafe and worked his mind over it in kind.

“See that feraligatr over there—don’t stare, just get a peek at that necklace.” Bastaya bobbed his head to the side, cotton fluff gesturing to the towering pokemon beside them. Some sharp, steel charm bobbed against its chest as it talked to a waiter. “He slipped that sweet thing on the moment he saw me. I’ll bet it’s pure steel.”

“Alright.” Solder drawled, not quite getting the picture except for vague memories of Larcen telling him fairy didn’t deal well with steel types.

“Look, admittedly us fairies got into some weird stuff in the forest a couple centuries ago.” Bastaya waggled his eyebrows in a way Solder couldn’t decipher. “And some folks got it into their thick skulls that if they wore steel charms they’d repel us, somehow. As if real steel and steel energy aren’t different things. But it’s still happening, baby. Here, in Seafolk. Other places, too.” He finished by leaning his arm on the table, rolling his eyes at his own suggestion. “ There are places like Seafolk everywhere: isolated, ignorant. But the guilds coming here are a magical rainbow force of multiculturalism only overshadowed by their own egos. They make a point to spread out their type coverage and think optics are for babies. I bet they’ll bring like, five water types max. But Seafolk hears about them and think they’re sending all the ‘good ones’, aka: burly sailors and swimmers. Kin, you understand?”

Solder pursed his lips, starting to see the problem. He imagined the reaction if nearly a hundred of him came into town, asking leading questions and parading around as if they hadn’t just arrived off the boat.

“I don’t know how long I’m staying. Definitely not forever,” Solder said. He scratched his chin, not satisfied with his own answer. It was true, sure, but he liked Larcen and certainly owed him more than to just… abandon him right before a big change.

“When the guilds come, you’ll be stuck between a town that hates you and a guild that doesn’t need or want you. Our guild will fail, get absorbed, and all the useless stuff—ergo, us—will be thrown onto the streets. Think you can rent a place here? Hold a job? Good luck~”

As Bastaya let a sardonic smile cross his face his amber eyes dulled and Solder saw for the first time a hint of real, unfiltered frustration slip into his expression.

“Larcen told me you weren't useless. That your show was popular.”

Bastaya scoffed.

“My show, sure. But most pokemon don’t even know who I am. And I don’t do enough for the guild to get a free pass—I need to get some money and turn independent before my show gets inherited and I get sacked.” He slumped back down, frowning around a bit of berry.

And as Bastaya let them sit in his pessimism, their table surrounded by a little bubble that the smell of cooked food and happy chatter of other pokemon couldn’t slip through, Solder finally felt a genuine connection between them.

“So it’s over. Nobody thinks they can fix the guild.” Solder added.

Bastaya nodded.

“Meh on Larcen. Brute’s the only one gung-ho about it. And that’s Haxorus’ fault.” He paused to pick up his mug for another sip, but frowned as he tilted it back. With a quick twist upside-down, he revealed the mug was empty, set it on the table and sighed. “Listen, if you’re crazy enough to stay, then become something indispensable. If not, leave and take Larcen with you.”

Solder snorted, imagining himself dragging Larcen through the valley by his tails.

“He seems to like it here.”

“‘Course. This is all he knows. He deserves better, though.” The whimsicott finished with a wistful sigh.

With that, the enthusiasm drained out of both of them. Mostly, they watched each other, neither finding anything else to say. Then the time came for them to split. Bastaya paid and let the waiter clear their table with a wave of his hand. Solder watched it all go back to the kitchen. Neither of them fidgeted, but a stray gust of wind did it for them, messing fur and hair alike until they were forced to tidy themselves up with stray paws.

“Why are you here, then?” Solder asked.

“Well,” Bastaya returned, standing from his rug with a practiced grace, “a boy can dream, can’t he?” He stopped beside Solder as he passed. “To answer your question, Soleiro can probably tell you where klefki is.”

“Unico’s brother?”

“Yeah. Twin. Looks exactly the same, but purple. I never told Unico where he was because…. Yeaaah, no thanks. But he’s probably skulking around in some alley by the docks. If you manage to find him, have fun~ He’ll give you a hard time.”

He floated off without much else but a wink and a wave, whisked down the street by another stray gust of wind.

Solder sighed and stood up, taking a second to stretch.

Bastaya had given him a lot to think about. Maybe too much. Still, finding Klefki would make the choice to stay or go a lot easier. If only he knew himself—what pre-damaged Solder would do.

Solder tried for a grin. It felt uneven and caused a passing pokemon to side-eye him, but it got him in a decent mood.

Progress. Finally.

~(0)~


What would Haxorus do?

It’s a phrase that never stopped crossing Brute’s mind. It felt even more intrusive now, pinging through his thoughts like an alarm every time an obstacle came up. They were more and greater than ever before, now.

He had a moment’s reprieve from clearing out the lobby thanks to Larcen, so he migrated upstairs, to the guildmaster’s office, to bury himself under a mountain of paperwork. He’d crept in an hour ago, taken a tentative seat in the chair and felt like an utter stranger in a room he practically lived in the past few years. He couldn’t stop his wings buzzing behind him. Couldn’t stop the brief spikes of fear as he picked through the budget. Sometimes he had to remind himself to breathe. Normally, he had a seat beside the desk, but it looked dreadfully empty now. The room, too. Toying with some of Haxorus’ old trinkets from when he was a traveller normally comforted him, but it only left him with a sinking feeling now.

He scratched down a number on his paper, then realised he forgot a zero and let out a deep sigh. Twelve pages in and he wished for the dullness of hard labour downstairs. At least clearing out trash felt productive.

With only a brief pause from squinting down his muzzle at the guildmaster’s messy scrawl to finish a glass of water, he sighed and slumped in haxorus’ chair, wincing as it creaked.

There was just so much to do. So much to fix with no hands, no money, no nothing to contribute. Maybe he should’ve started hiring first, so he had some workers, but who would want to work here? Solder was right, of course, he had to stop asking and start demanding, but the thought made him ill—walking up to someone like Bastaya and demanding anything.

Brute shivered. He’d only felt a fairy’s full energy once, but he wouldn’t be looking for that experience again. He had better memories of living on the road, Haxorus by his side and nothing but a dream to guide them. He paused, remembering the way Haxorus tried to describe colours to him after learning that flygon saw everything through a red tint because of their lenses. Good times. He managed to centre himself on them for a while—staring at a photo of him, merely a vibrava, perched on Haxorus’ arm.

Then he realised he’d been staring for almost an hour and he turned his eyes back to the desk. Weary thoughts slipped in.

Better get back to work…

Well, he would have if he wasn’t interrupted by a rhythmic knock at the door. He paused a second, brain catching up to the sound.

“C-come in…” He stuttered. Despite just drinking, he still felt like he’d been eating sand.

The door slid open, wrapped in a blue glow. It revealed two blue ears poking just above desk height. They twitched, leading down to Landy’s unimpressed frown and soul piercing eyes.

Brute struggled to keep a groan from leaking out his mouth. He wished he hadn’t said anything. He should’ve just hid under the desk and pretended not to exist.

“Landy,” He said. He gave an awkward cough, subtly shifting back in his chair as the meowstic sauntered up to the desk. Only Landy’s face was visible from Brute’s seat, but that didn’t make him any more comfortable.

“I’ll not waste either of our time, Brute. I’ve come with a proposal.” Landy pulled out a couple papers and slapped them on the desk, making the mountain that much higher.

Brute sighed. Another proposal. Brilliant.

“What is it?”

Landy tapped the paper and stuck up his muzzle, nose twitching. He must’ve seen Brute’s firm stare and realised the flygon wasn’t going to read it because he huffed and stepped back, paws tucked behind his back.

“I’m seriously concerned about your mental health.”

Brute couldn’t even pretend to believe that.

“I’m serious,” Landy pressed, “As much as I’d rather you not maintain sole ownership of the guild in Haxorus’ absence, there are some things even I cannot change. Alas, we are forced to tolerate someone far, far less than ideal, but that hardly means I can’t work to improve the situation.”

Brute shifted in his chair. It was hard to tell how any of that came across as concern

“You know I was a psychic therapist, correct?”

Brute nodded meekly.

“The tendency for innovation to be stifled for the sake of a profitable status quo means my research was not well received by more traditional medicine, but I can assure you it worked. And it will be a great boon for you.”

Trying to reconcile whatever that meant with what Brute knew actually happened would take up all his mental energy, so he rubbed the bridge of his muzzle and ignored it. Of course, he couldn’t ignore his own suspicions. No chance Landy had decided to do this out of the goodness of his heart.

“W-what do you want?” he asked.

Hardly a twitch of the whiskers betrayed Landy’s thoughts.

“Good to see you’ve decided to skip the meaningless small talk. You’re right, of course; this won’t be pro-bono. Everything I propose is in the papers.” He nodded towards Brute’s stack of papers.

The flygon’s eyes watered at the sight. An extra pleading glance didn’t budge Landy, so it seemed like Brute would be reading the papers after all.

There's an art to skimming. Brute wasn’t quite an academic, but he knew the technique, squinting, tracing a crease along the page with his claw. He picked up on sentences from a blur of words until it formed a hazy picture in his head. He lost the joy of reading in that haze, but it had been so long since he last read for himself he couldn’t tell if he would even recognize the feeling anyways.

And finishing the papers certainly didn’t fill him with joy.

“You want— I mean, y-you… feral rehabilitation?” Brute said, lingering on the phrase at the end of the neatly-blocked paragraphs.

“That’s right,” Landy responded, completely unconcerned, “really, it’s a benefit for everyone, even ignoring the greater implications. You get an extra guild member which you desperately need to reach the minimum. It fills space on my team that otherwise would be difficult to fill—I’m aware of my reputation, after all. There's no reason not to accept. ”

Right. No reason. Except Brute remembered Haxorus rejecting this idea. And he could already feel the delayed headache from cleaning up after a feral. But Brute could not stop rolling the idea over in his head, even as it itched at him. Bugs crawled out from under each roll and filled his mind to spilling.

“Maybe we should start with your first idea,” Brute mumbled.

“Excellent. You’ve heard of psychic triggers, yes?” Landy asked, then continued before Brute could respond, “They’re a sort of tripwire, detecting stimuli and reacting in set ways automatically, often disconnected from the original user.”

Brute mulled that over for a second. “Is that what you did to haxorus’ windows?” He turned, reaching out until his claws scraped the solid glass of the window. It slammed open after barely a glance, shuddering and creaking as it hit the wall and let a cool breeze wash into the room. “It— it happens every time a leaf floats by, every time it rains I… it’s a little annoying.”

“Ah, I see. You’re right, surprisingly. My treatment operates under the same principles.It senses anxiety or stress and… tightens for lack of a better term, preventing overwhelming panic, breakdown and etcetera.” Landy waved his paw flippantly. “I’d rather not draw this out. Will you or will you not accept my offer?”

Brute considered. Or, he pretended to consider—chasing his claws around each other under the desk. But if he was honest with himself, truly honest, he’d admit to saying yes because it would get Landy to go away.

So, “y-yes. Okay,” came out despite all good judgement.

“Excellent,” Landy said. Brute almost expected a chilling smile to creep across the meowstic’s face, but Landy didn’t react beyond a word. He continued, “Some breathing exercises will help the process. I’m sure you’re familiar. Inhale five seconds, exhale five seconds, inhale, exhale, and on and on…”

Brute did. He focused on his breathing and studiously avoided Landy’s eyes to stare at the space between his ears. Breathing exercises were nothing new to him, sailing beyond routine and into reflex—which, he supposed, might defeat the purpose of them in the end. But that’s fine. Things were fine. Just breathe. In, out, feeling the swell of lungs in his chest, pressing up against his ribcage until it strained and settled back down again. Actually, that reminded him—

“We’re done.”

Brute blinked. Looked down at himself, then back at Landy. “That’s it?” He paused, furrowed his brow trying to reach for whatever changed in his mind. “I feel… alright.”

“I suppose that’s the goal of all medicine, isn’t it? I’ll return every few days to re-examine the trigger and make adjustments if necessary. Now, about the proposal.” Landy took the opportunity to pick up his papers with the faint blue hand of his telekinesis, dangling them over Brute’s snout.

The flygon sighed. He tried to bat the papers away, but they floated out of reach like particularly annoying flies.

“Yes. Okay,” he mumbled, finally catching the papers, “you can— you can get your feral.”

“I’ve requisitioned the use of a cell.”

A cell? Brute had almost forgotten they had those. Maybe on purpose. He’d never liked the idea of criminals lingering in the belly of the guild.

“Which one? The broken one?”

Landy squinted, tilting his chin up at Brute. “Obviously not. A broken lock isn’t much security.”

“So… you’ll clean out one of the others?”

“I suppose.”

“Uh…. good.”

“And I will need assistance capturing the feral.”

“I don’t— I don’t know how to help you with that. Ask someone?”

For the first time since entering, Landy’s expression dipped into a pout—petulant for just a moment before bouncing back. But Brute caught it. And as Landy tilted his head, a flash of thoughts streaming across in his eyes before he turned to leave, Brute let something bubble up from his aching chest.

“See how far burning bridges gets you?”

He mumbled it so quietly he could hardly hear it over his own heartbeat. And as soon as it left his lips he threw himself back into his papers wishing he hadn’t said it. But Landy still paused, one paw on the door. He still turned.

“I know who I am,” he said, flat, but right on the edge of something tall and dark. His voice seemed to teeter as he spoke. “And I’m aware of what I don’t have. This is my choice, I suppose, the same as anything else is. But what about you?”

“Your precious haxorus has burdened you with a guild that hardly concerns themselves with you, a group of pokemon who can’t or aren’t willing to help you. They pity you. Did you know that? And yet here I am, who hates you, who hates your weakness—and I’m the single pokemon in this guild who has the skills and willingness to help. What bridges do you have, after all? How does that make you feel?”

Brute felt himself tighten, a twist of wire rubbing against itself until it threatened to split. He grit his teeth, clutching his head and waiting for the pain.

Then, nothing. Not even an untightening. One second, he edged on breaking, the next he evened out—the coil vanished, sinking into the ether.

So, how did he feel?

“It’s working,” Brute mumbled.

“Excellent.

The door opened. The door shut. But Brute hardly paid any attention to it or the empty space where Landy once stood. Whatever Landy did worked. Now all he was left with was an empty office and simmering conscience.

He almost hated it more that way. Sitting in all these memories of better times, Landy had to come and help him and ruin everything.

But with not much time to spend on hate, he cleared his throat, shook his head and buried his nose back in paperwork
 
Chapter Six: Lock and Klefki

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter Six
Lock and Klefki


Seafolk’s alley’s were almost a relief compared to the docks. Cramped, piled with nets and traps and other old fishing equipment, lurking under the shade of the buildings and towering platforms jutting from the roofs, really, they weren’t that inviting.

But the bay wasn’t getting another visit from Solder if he could help it.

He must have looked like a lunatic walking around the docks, sidling alongside the seafront buildings and sending nervous looks out to sea whenever a wave crested the dock and splashed against the stone. Honestly, taking a minute to slide into the spaces between buildings was a great relief from the docks. He didn’t get much trouble, thankfully, and the alleys weren't the shady crime dens he expected. Mostly, they were too open, enough that any passing pokemon knew what was going on in them with just a glance.

And in a rare stroke of luck, Solder’s search hit on something quickly.

It started with a blink. A flash of purple at the end of some shady valley between a boathouse and a row of apartments. He paused, climbing onto a doorstep and lifting himself to two feet to peer over a stack of chipped bricks and rain-soaked furniture. It vanished around the corner almost as soon as he saw it, but he did see it. He clambered down the steps and into the alley, shivering as the shade washed over him. Grit clung to his fur in the muddy, sand-piled edges of the buildings but he just grimaced and bore it as he snuck around the refuse.

But it didn’t seem like anything was there. He blinked, looked over his shoulder, back to the docks, then around the corner into the darker passages further into the mass of buildings. Nothing.

He huffed. But just as he turned, a clattering sounded from further in. He snapped to it, watching a tin can roll into view.

Not suspicious. Sure. He figured letting himself be known would probably be a good idea.

“Hello?” He asked, edging closer, craning his neck out for a better view. The can stopped rolling, seemingly the only thing that had heard him.

Still nothing. He waited a second, brows raised, then shrugged. Oh, well. There’s—

Something sharp. Cold and solid resting against his neck. He hardly even noticed the claw until he tried to turn and felt it dig into his windpipe. It’s wild how aware you become with a claw riding your adam’s apple—Solder had never heard his heartbeat pounding so loudly.

“Let’s take this a bit deeper in, eh?”

Without much to say, Solder gave a shaky nod and let himself be dragged into the darker recesses of the alley. He didn’t get much to look at—just the fading light of the docks and the faint glint of claw against his neck. The smooth press of scales settled against his back. And the voice rang a familiar bell in his mind.

The grip only lessened once they were fully out of sight.

“You’ve been hitting every alley by the harbour. Someone tell you where to find me?”

Solder just stared down a stain on the far wall, thoughts racing through his head too fast to voice them. Then, just as quickly as it came, the claw drew away, leaving nothing but a phantom pressure where it was.

“Oh. You’re just the new kid.”

The instant the claw disappeared, Solder threw himself away from his attacker, scrambling to shove himself against the wall and out of reach. He sucked sharp breaths through his teeth, eyes bugging from the pressure. He got a good look, at least. Another lizard lurked at the corner, blocking his escape. He looked nearly identical to Unico—same coiled tail, same head crest, even the same wrinkles lining his eyes. They only differed in colour. While Unico was a lush green, this one had stoney purple scales. The shade made him seem to be covered in pebbles.

“So who told you?” he asked, voice a low drawl. “Nah, not Unico. Landy? Does he know where I hang? Yeah, like he’d tell you.”

This must be Soleiro. Unico had made such an impression it was almost hard to shake off the image as Solder watched his twin, but at the same time Soleiro didn’t seem like a pokemon who had ever smiled, even sarcastically—a far cry from Unico’s manic grins.

“Why… do you want to know? Solder finally choked out, rubbing his throat to relieve the pressure.

“Are you listening? I bet it was Bastaya, huh? I’ll have to get him back for that.”

Solder paused, trying to search for an out. Honestly, now that he’s found Soleiro, he’d prefer to be surveying the streets again. But Soleiro sat right in the middle of his path out, and Solder didn’t want to take his chances sprinting into the maze behind him. He had to entertain the kecleon. Unfortunately.

“You’re looking for something,” Soleiro said. As he took a couple steps forward, Solder took the same back. “Nobody ever taps my back unless they want something. You want to ask or should I guess?”

Solder worked his jaw to say something, but he couldn’t dredge his thoughts for anything coherent before Soleiro cut in

“There’s a certain klefki you’re looking for, eh? Not many klefki out here, don’t know why anyone would start at seafolk.” Despite sounding teasing, Soleiro had all the enthusiasm of a corpse.

They share a blink.

“You know,” Solder said, caution creeping into his voice.

“I’ve heard some things. Here and there. Some pokemon like to talk a lot, is all.”

But that didn’t really mean anything. Solder cocked his head, trying to figure out the kecleon’s angle—where their knowledge started and ended, but nothing came from their staring match. The faint buzz of adrenaline still shook him, but the promise of klefki kept him in the alley. He tried to straighten his back and push up against the wall for a bit of confidence. Not like Soleiro seemed impressed.

“Tell me where she is.”

“Have you met the mayor? If you haven’t, that’s good. He’d hate you,” Soleio said, waving off Solder’s question with a limp hand’ “He’s started cracking down on… stuff recently, so I’ve been taking odd jobs. Course, it’s always odd when someone comes begging for a place to hide. She even got it for free. If you know what everybody wants, where they are and what they’re doing, you can get away with anything, eh?”

Solder clicked his tongue. “Just tell me where she is.”

“She doesn’t have anything you want.”

“You don’t know that. Or me. You’re fucking with me.”

For the first time, something different crossed Soleiro’s features. Some mix of a sneer and a squint. He shrugged.

“I guess not. Sure, I’ll tell you.”

All of a sudden Solder was back on his haunches. Nothing in his tiny life had gone well so far; this seemed far too easy. But what could he do? Say no?

“You’ll just… sell her out like that?”

“She gets what she paid for.”

Solder matched his sneer. The more he talked to Soleiro, the more difficult it was to choose which kecleon sibling he’d rather not have to talk to. Maybe he just hated everyone. Shaking off his melodrama and the faint greasy feeling settling over him, Solder gave a tight-lipped nod.

“There’s an abandoned house up in the hills, you walk right before the valley to the guild and you’ll find it in a copse of trees a kilo or so out. Pretty hard to find if you don’t know where to look. You could’ve been searching for months.”

Soleiro picket at the scales on his palm, this odd, listless air sneaking into his voice like he’d gone all in and lost.

Solder recognized that tone. He sighed “What do you want for it?”

As quick as it came, it fled. “Good. You’re quick. Just a favour. Collection. With interest.”

“I’m not going to kill anyone for you.”

Soleiro snorted. “If I wanted someone dead, I’d kill them myself. Or hire someone with the guts.”

Comforting.

“Don’t worry about it, too late to renege anyway. We talk more, I’ll find your limits eventually. I’ll come back with an option you can’t say no to.” Soleiro continued.

So, not much better.

After finishing, and with a satisfied nod, he moved from the middle of the alley and settled into a corner—leaning into the mass of an ivy climbing up the wall. Like he’d granted permission for Solder to leave.

Which Solder reluctantly took—edging around the far corner, not daring to take his eyes off the kecleon for a second.

Unfortunately, it seemed Soleiro still had something to say.

“You ever read The King of Clear Waters? Oh, sorry, who am I talking to? You ever had someone read it to you?”

Solder froze. He knew. He wasn’t bluffing. He’d thought all the vaugeries meant Soleiro was just screwing with him, but he had to have known. And what was that look? A sneer? Some suppressed pain? It was jagged and awful on his face, looking more like a wound than an expression.

“... but those who look in the pond for ripples exhibit an ability to envision something greater. It’s not for us. Neither does it exist on the walls of our king. It’s a great piece. I think you’d find a bit of yourself in it.”

Solder scoffed, not even bothering to play his game.

“You knew. You weren’t bluffing.”

“People talk. What, you don’t remember seeing me around?”

Remember? What the fuck did he think?

“What a stupid question.”

“I guess.” Soleiro shrugged, letting the tendrils of vines fall over his shoulders. Then he… vanished. At first, Solder blinked, thinking he’d sunk back into the mass of plants. But no, he simply evaporated, nothing left of him except the rustling of leaves, the clicking of claws against stone and one last smear of purple rounding the far corner of the alley, just at the edge of Solder’s vision.

Solder smacked his lips, mouth suddenly very dry. A couple nervous sparks escaped from his back. He had to reign himself in before slowly inching backwards out of the alley and back into the streets.

Then everything was back to normal. Pokemon passed back and forth, the ocean exploded into his vision and drowned his thoughts of Soleiro.

But those thoughts still bubbled from the bottom. Little questions streamed up, eroding what little confidence Solder had.

Soleiro had talked to klefki. No way he knew anything about Solder otherwise. But that just made Solder wonder what the kecleon had found. It seemed like he didn’t want Solder to talk to her, but it’s not like there was any attempt to stop him.

Solder sighed, rubbing his temples between two paws.

Only one way to find out.

~(0)~

True to Soleiro’s word, Solder never would’ve found the house on his own stuffed as it was into its own little corner at the base of the cliffs round town. It looked like a decades-old hurricane victim, tilting dangerously to one side, windows blown out and whatever material used for the roof long since peeled off and scattered. The only thing holding it up was the rows of trees it leaned against, leaves spreading out to shelter it from the blazing sun and reducing it to a green blur from the distance. Even as Solder reached it, he took several minutes to parse the walls from the forest around it.

Doubtful that the klefki took shelter there. Solder would rather sleep on a park bench, himself.

But he did his due diligence. The wind spurred him on, down the slope, rustling the leaves around him and hiding the crunching of his steps on fallen branches. He crept around the house, doing a full circle. He never dared to get close but a quick glance through skewed windows showed him a flickering light—a candle, maybe: something unsteady but warm.

Then he reached the door. It, too, sat on a slant. A crack split it, large enough to feel the wind but not to see through. Should he knock? Why bother?

Solder shrugged. Without any fanfare, he shoved through the door with his shoulder, a splintery, cracking sound following it as it slammed into the wall and spat him inside. He landed on all fours (yes, on purpose. Definitely) and let the tension in his chest spark a mane of fire across his back.

He heard her before he saw her. A sharp cry; the familiar jingle of keys shaking against each other. He snapped to the corner of the room. There: she huddled in the slanted corner of the room, hovering over her bedsheets and rucksack and the ashy remains of a campfire.

But as Solder crouched low to the ground, staring up at the wide eyes of klefki like a predator waiting in the bushes, he recognized her.

Words fled his mind. He hesitated.

“Y-you,” she chimed, voice ethereal, prodding the soft parts of his mind. She seemed to share his hesitance. “ Oh, goodness gracious, it’s just Solder! I— uhm… how have you been settling in, sunshine? I, well, I’ve heard you’ve been looking for me?”

Solder just realised he’d never experienced knowing someone before—having distinct memories of them sitting beside his bed, speaking softly to distract him from his own nausea. He’d spent a whole week with her, which he couldn’t pretend was a lot, but it was something. And now, here she was. Real like in his memory. Her appearance struck him. stupid. A fire lit under his fur.

“You…” He sputtered, caught between fleeing and rushing forward.

He lurched forward. He only made a few, awkward steps, but it drew a worried whimper from Klefki. She backed further into the corner, the bulb of her head turning to the window across the room.

“Don’t,” Solder said.

She froze. The keys hanging off her loop swung under their own momentum. She’d found her escape. And Solder wouldn’t be able to sprint across the room in time to tackle her. He doubted she’d stay frozen for long.

“I didn’t come alone.” Solder lied. “Soleiro’s waiting outside. Don’t even try it.”

That got her. All attention shifted to him.

“W-what can I help you with?”

“You know me. You knew me.”

“No, no, no, look I—”

Total garbage. Solder didn’t even need to hear her half-mumbled excuse. He took another couple steps forward, letting his flames spill out, the heat lifting the leaves above him. She squeaked, dipping lower to the ground until her keys scraped the floor.

“No. Shut up. Let me get this out. Guess who got a letter from his brother? And guess who addressed me by name? Now, take a swing at who told me my name first when even I didn’t know?”

She didn’t need to answer, of course, but she still turned left, then right, searching as if anybody else was there.

“M-me.”

Solder waited for her to continue. Whether for an answer or another excuse, he didn’t know, but it became clear quickly she wouldn’t. Solder grit his teeth, his last threads of patience snapping.

“How do you know me?”

She continued to look. And sink. And look, jerking back and forward, desperate for someone to step in. Her breathing shuddered.

“I-I-I’m—”

With a great inhale and a heave, she wailed, pitching backward. Her flat black eyes narrowed, but no tears came. Still, her metallic jingling shifting into something harsh. It echoed painfully through the room, vibrating through Solder’s bones.

“I’m sorry! I didn’t— I didn’t know what to do! You were hurt— and then you said you couldn’t remember a thing and it was just too cruel to leave you like that, so, oh, goodness, even though Linch told me not to, I had to tell you your name at least! Please don’t hurt me! I’m sorry! I’m sorry, sorry, sorry! Please!”

The sobbing continued. Klefki seemed pitiful lying in the corner, as discarded as the house she’d taken shelter in. That awful metallic wailing ground against Solder’s eardrums.

The whining didn’t help. He jabbed a paw at her. “Don’t talk if you aren’t going to tell me what happened. I don’t feel sorry for you—I just want to know who I am.”

That certainly didn’t stop her wailing. She kept going. For minutes on end, leaving Solder’s paw to float aimlessly. His glare wavered until it broke. What’s the point? Times like these he wished he looked like one of those monsters stomping down the docks. But he wasn't. He couldn’t even tell if she’d broken out of fear or guilt.

His anger settled like sediment at the bottom of a river. But it still waited to be stirred up again. As the crying mellowed into sniffling and hiccups, Solder took a few cautious steps forward and sat in front of Klefki, paws open and resting on his lap.

He sighed. “I’m not going to hurt you. I just want to talk.”

For a while, it didn’t seem like anything would change. They sat in the snivelling and sounds of wind rustling through the leaves. Brief spears of light piercing through the foliage and scattered over them. Klefki eventually calmed—enough to lift herself off the ground and face Solder.

“Sorry. I’m sorry. I’ll— I’ll talk.”

Finally. Solder let out a deep breath through his nose. All this anticipation had built up inside him. He leaned in a bit, clutching his paws together so they didn’t shake.

“Then start. What do you know about me?”

“We met on the boat. Linch and I—she’s the feraligatr, you must remember her.”

He nodded. Linch was that hulking blue alligator that prowled around the deck, steadfastly avoiding him. Whenever it stormed and she took shelter in the cabin with them, she sat on her bench in the far corner, her head tilted, eyes so narrowed she looked asleep. If she ever passed by his bed, she growled so lowly he could almost mistake it for the creaking of the boat.

He couldn’t say he was a fan.

“She and I—we were uhm… smuggled into Seafolk. We met you on the boat. Oh, everything was great for a few days, but you found out somehow and started yelling at her about it. And— and—” She paused, trying to raise herself higher only to slump back down. “Oh, you two had a big, big fight below deck, with all the shouting and the crewmates scrambling; I was so, so scared. She almost drowned you! You were… different when you woke up. Linch wanted me not to tell you anything, but that seemed so cruel…”

“Like leaving someone with no memories alone in a town they don’t know?” He scoffed. “Whatever. I’m not trying to be your friend. Where’s Linch? I need to find out what she did to me.”

“I-I just told you: she drowned you…”

“Right, but— Okay. Fine. Just tell me where she is.”

That got a nervous jingle out of her. Her… eyes widened, shifting back to the window.

“She’s— oh, have you heard of the ruins that opened up beneath the city?”

“Yes.”

“She was very, very interested once she heard about them. She kept trying to drag me along, but I was a little nervous so she went off on her own to investigate. Then… she… disappeared.”

All of a sudden Solder felt the familiar shock of water rushing over him, smothering and frigid. He shivered.

“What?”

“I swear, I checked all the entrances, but they were blocked off or way, way too small for her to get in so she obviously didn’t go in and, I suppose, she could be waiting or went inland to find some of her buddies, but she didn’t tell me anything so now I’m stuck her waiting for her and, oh, I’ve been so worried…”

And that’s that. Solder felt his vision tunnel, narrowing to a point between her eyes. He slumped back.

“So she could be anywhere. Literally anywhere in the whole fucking world.”

“Not— not really…”

The awful current continued to run through Solder, kicking sediment off the bottom of his river. He felty cloudy, each grain of dirt stuck in his fur dug into his skin, itching and cutting. Klefki must have seen it in the way he grit his teeth. She took a deep breath, voice shaky.

“She doesn’t know you. We only met on the ship. I don’t— I don’t think she can help you.”

“She did something to me, she had to.”

“She drowned you! I told you! Please, believe me, she’s just a normal feraligatr. It was an accident!”

An accident.

“An accident?”

An accident.

That’s it. He felt the crushing weight of it on his chest as he leaned back. He slammed his head against the floor, but that didn’t matter. It gave him time to search the leaves above as if the answer would fall from the sky.

Had he even considered that before? Had he considered anything or did he just try not to think about it and hope some random Klefki would have all the answers for him?

“I-I’m sorry,” Klefki mumbled, “I wish I could help more, but— maybe it’s time for me to leave. I’ll just… uhm…”

“Just leave. I don’t want to see you anymore.”

“O-oh. Alright.”

He couldn’t tell if she actually ever left. He stared up, hoping to catch a glimpse of the sun again. All he heard was the jingling of her keys. The sliding of something leather and fabric rubbing against each other. Then, nothing.

He waited. And waited, spread eagle on the floor, emotions spiking in him until he forced himself to breath. Slow and deliberate.

“I just want to know who I am.”

A gasp sounded from behind him. He tilted his head back—the upside-down form of Klefki floated in the doorway. Sunlight gleamed behind her, forcing her metal to shine. She almost looked like a halo.

“I thought you were brave,” She mumbled. “The way you tried to stand up to Linch even though she was so, so much bigger than you.”

Solder shook his head. “Or stupid. Just a stupid pile of garbage. And now he has a screwed up brain. Useless.”

“Oh…”

“Weren’t you leaving?”

It was hard to see with the wash of light, one moment Klefki shone in the doorway, the next she was gone, leaving just a faint impression behind until Solder blinked it away. He turned back to the leaves.

He wished this creaky, old house would just collapse on him already. He wished it would rain. He’d be miserable, sick and numb, that familiar tightness clutching his chest and the frigid cold smothering his fire. At least then he’d know the reason..

He’d wait for whatever came first.

~(0)~

By the time Solder got back to the guild the sun had begun to sink into the mountains. That seemed ideal, apparently, because even from down the road Solder could spot a handful of Pokémon lingering outside the guild. Unico and Bastaya picked through the bulletins, Auloin had escaped her bush and relaxed on a chair beside the gatehouse, Veille snoozing at her feet. He caught the tail end of Larcen heading back inside. Even Landy stood, deep in thought, in the shade of the mountain.

Solder’d cooled down a bit since meeting Klefki. Or maybe that was the wrong word. He’d… flatlined? Normalised? Sure, normalised. He’d realised that if he had no expectations for anything he’d never be disappointed again. He could sit back and let the numbness take over. Maybe then he wouldn’t be so irritated all the time.

But he hated himself for that, too. Every time he imagined a conversation with that flat-faced quilava in his reflection he winced. Imagine getting flatter. Worse. No thanks. At least now he could look other Pokémon in the eyes without wanting to torch them.

He saved his concern for what Larcen was doing. And food; his stomach ached as he crested the hill towards the gatehouse, walking past Auloin.

“Ah, Solder. I’ve got something for you.”

Solder blinked, turning to the gardevoir. Her one leg crossed over the other and she leafed through a stack of papers in her hand. Veille snored, body twisting to fit underneath her chair.

“What?” Solder didn’t mean for the bitter note to slip into his tone, but he wasn’t in a great mood for talking. Still, she was so engrossed in her papers she didn’t notice.

“Veille?”

Auloin prodded the luxray with a foot. She rumbled something unintelligible and uncurled like a sprouting fern. Those golden eyes pierced through Solder as they connected. Then she hit him with an aching yawn.

“Good morning,” she said.

Solder spared a quick glance at the moon peeking over the other side of the valley.

“Sure.”

“It’s morning somewhere. What can I do for you, Auloin?”

“Could you fetch the item for him, Please? The one that Klefki left for him? Oh, Solder, the Klefki you were looking for stopped by to give you something. I imagine she’s left by now. There certainly wasn’t anything I could do—ethically or legally—to stop her, so I apologise for that.”

“That’s fine. I talked to her already.”

“Well I apologise for not being of assistance in finding her.”

“Whatever. It’s not like I got anywhere with her.” Solder spat, biting his tongue.

Auloin must have felt his frustration; the trace of her finger slowed across a page on her lap, paused, then folded itself back in her hand. She gave an understanding hum.

“Veille?”

“Don’t be impatient, I’m awake,” the luxray said. She stretched out, shaking her mane to whip it back into shape. “Follow me, Solder. Come see our house.”

For a minute Solder thought she’d walk all the way back into town, but she turned back towards the guild, took a sharp right, and led him to a door at the other end of the gatehouse. The door swung open under the weight of her shoulder and she padded inside, swishing her tail to wave Solder in.

Solder had never seen the inside of the gatehouse. Not with the road-facing windows always being shuddered. To be honest, it was never really interesting enough to think about—if it was part of the guild, he expected it to be a disaster, too.

So when entering it felt like walking into someone’s bedroom, he did a double take.

The shudders were closed, but a lit fireplace stood in a stone alcove in the corner. It bathed the room in a warm glow. Two desks rested under the windows—one tall, another half-size, presumably for Veille. The far wall was filled with rows of cabinets that, while cluttered, still seemed organised, stacks of paper tied with twine and placed in evenly-arranged baskets. A sleeping mat spread out in the far corner, rucksacks and bags lined up between it and the fireplace—a big enough space for two.

It looked Cozy. Surprisingly cozy. Solder wondered why Veille seemed to sleep everywhere but the bed if this is what her room was like. He wouldn’t mind crashing here every once in a while. Maybe he and Larcen could storm the place and take it for themselves.

“You live here? I thought the guild owned it.”

“We don’t own it, we squat,” Veille said, regarding Solder with a faint grin, “better than being homeless, I suppose. Now, where’d she put that bag?”

Veille skimmed the back of the room, then wandered over to the cabinets and began pulling drawers open with her mouth. Solder just sat in the entrance and stared at the sway of the luxray’s tail, ears pinned against his head.

Homeless? The duo struck Solder as many things, but homeless wasn’t one of them. He voiced the same thought out loud.

She shrugged, face buried in a drawer. “We’ve saved some money. But a psychic and electric type in Seafolk? Not a comfortable proposition for most.” Despite seeming flippant, an edge lined her voice. “The napping scene isn’t there, either. It’s either the streets or the parks, both too noisy. Perhaps homeless makes it sound unappealing, but we like it out here in the mountains.”

Solder didn’t have anything to say to that; he just watched her go about her business. Yet the thought stuck with him—he’d met a good number of guild pokemon so far, but they all seemed… uncomfortable with Seafolk in some way. He hadn’t yet heard a good thing about it and the more he went into Seafolk, the harder it was to visualize someone like Landy or Brute chatting with sellers in the market or lounging on the docks.

Solder took a step back. It felt like a fog had cleared from his mind, but the landscape behind it was no less blurry.

“Why are you here?” he asked, “Why is anyone here? What’s the point of this guild?”

Veille popped her head out of the drawer and flashed him a wide smile. Solder couldn’t help shivering at the gleam of her teeth.

“Have you ever wondered what I do most of the day?”

“Sleep.”

Veille let out something between a purr and a chuckle. “I sort through job requests from the morning mail. Used to be, pokemon would come up here and post, but that didn't last long. The proximity… well, how about I read you a selection of rejected letters?.”

Before he could answer, Veille dove into the bin beside her cabinet and pulled out a stack of letters, spreading them across the floor with her paws. She squinted, nose inches from the text.

“Ah, here: Stop wasting our money! That's a classic, shows up every day, You did good work for my cousin, but I don’t want to see those psychics walking around in the streets where my kids play, oh and this next one’s just a suicide mission to the Green Bay mystery dungeon. They want morning dew, but if you enter the dungeon early to collect, the tides will rise while you’re inside and you’ll drown.”

Solder grimaced, wondering what other opinions made their way into the garbage. Suddenly, he felt very nervous taking the requests of random strangers.

If Veille shared his discomfort, she didn’t show. She pushed her papers back in a neat little pile and slid them into the trash again.

She continued “I almost feel sorry for Haxorus sometimes, even if he’s insufferable. Rejected by the mayor from Seafolk, but he had pull inland. Money, too. The mayor couldn’t say no, so he stuck us out here. Oh, he’s tried to embrace his outcast status. Unfortunately, the fringe pokemon our guild attracts aren’t always fringe in decent or sensible ways, yet this is where they collect because they can’t in Seafolk—and Seafolk is not unique. So which is it? Is the guild a dysfunctional mess because of its own intrinsic failures, or was it simply set up that way?”

Veille paused, staring deep into the firelight across the room. Resolute. She knew the answer. Solder had a feeling he knew, too.

He cleared his throat. “What’s your damage, then?”

That got a chuckle, deep and rumbling. The first he’d heard from her.

“I suppose you can know. Perhaps I’m more lazy than most luxray, but did you know we’re one of the few electric species with no need to actively discharge electricity?” She punctuated the thought with a quick discharge, sending sparks scattering across her fur. “Long hours of sleep are healthy for us. Unfortunately, in an integrated society, it’s difficult to be healthy and compete with other, more active, species—especially other electric types.”

She shrugged, but Solder could see her claws slide out, glinting in the light as they dug into the wood floor.

“I won’t bore you with all my trauma. In summary, Auloin is the only pokemon satisfied with my existence. I love her, and I know she loves me back because despite me not having much to offer, her askings are not greater than I can give. So I follow her. Where she is, I’m home.”

Maybe she saw the unspoken question on Solder’s lips, because she continued.

“And for some reason I couldn’t say, Auloin loves it here. Maybe it’s the history; she inhabited an ecstatic work ethic after learning about the ruins.”

And that was that. Solder frowned. Maybe he struggled to relate—as much as he liked Larcen, he wouldn’t follow him literally anywhere—but he also couldn’t help being a little disappointed by the explanation. He struggled to dredge up a thought that didn’t make him itch under his fur—like, what could he say to that? He was happy to share the moment with Veille, though. To bear witness. They hadn’t talked much, but she seemed alright. Willing to tolerate him, at least.

The ambient crackling of the fire spoke for the room, Veille giving him a lazy smile until he got uncomfortable and looked away.

“Ah,” Veille said after a while, turning to snap onto something across the room, “Turns out I didn’t need to search so hard, the bag was just over there.” She padded over to her bedroll, picking up a shoulder bag laying in… plain… sight.

There’s no way she missed that entering the room. Solder raised his brows as she came back over, dropping the bag at his feet.

“Oops. I suppose I was just wasting time. I apologize for that. Also for—well, that klefki said maybe a little more than she meant. I’m sorry about your memories.”

Solder paused, caught on her last sentence. A sudden swell of irritation caught him.

Oh, that overgrown keychain better hope she doesn't meet him again.

“You… know?”

She hummed an affirmative. “Not that it bothers me. This whole time, I considered lecturing you about trails—something Auloin says a lot. That someone’s trails are the most revealing; where you’ve come from determines where you are and where you’re going. Perhaps you don’t want to hear it, but it’s all the help I can offer.”

Solder brushed off her kindness, slumping down on his haunches with a tired sigh. If she was right about one thing, it’s that he didn’t want to hear it. Not after a day of thinking the same and being proven wrong.

“Again, I apologise. But I don’t bring this up for no reason.” She pawed the bag closer to him, sliding it between his legs.

Solder stared dully at it—some sort of old leather satchel. Stained bronze clasps held the straps on and capped the edges of each pocket. The leather was stuffed and lumpy and stretched to the point of cracking, sending little spiderwebs across it like a shattered window. And the soot—Solder almost refused to touch it with all the black smears coating it but a cursory wipe revealed it to be baked in.

He held it, flipped it over, felt the weight in his paws. Something warm tingled in him as he slipped the strap over his shoulder. It settled nicely, sitting in a comfortable nook above his hip. Turning to stare over his shoulder, the sootmarks seemed so much more deliberate, matching perfectly with the vents on his back, like just another part of his body. He petted it. Drew his claws across the seams and felt the gaps where some had snapped. He breathed. Settled.

“This… is mine. This is mine. I own this.”

“I figured so. At least that’s what klefki told me.”

But Solder was so engrossed the words barely reached him. He brought it back into his lap and it settled with some sharp clinking. It held something. He shook it again just to make sure.

“This must be why Auloin’s so fascinated by the ruins,” Veille said.

Solder broke his concentration to give her a questioning look.

“It’s the stuff they left behind; the objects ancient pokemon used to impress upon their world. How do we piece these things together? Who were those pokemon? What does that say about us now? In your case, you exist as both the dead civilization and the archeologist. I suppose you’ve got it rougher than most, but it happens to everyone, eventually—the person we are now dies and leaves us to pick up the pieces. I prefer to live in the present, personally.”

Veille hit him with one last smile. Then it broke out into a yawn.

“I apologize. All this talking exhausted me. I’ll be going back to Auloin.”

Solder nodded numbly, clutching his bag closer and watching her leave the room without another glance.

He wanted to open the bag. Desperately. He wanted to be the archaeologist, but at the same time he wanted to wait. He couldn’t pretend he hadn’t been given clues to who he once was, but… did he like that pokemon? Did he want to be them? Maybe. More than who he was now, probably.

Though as he felt the shifting lumps in his bag and thought on Veille’s words, he realized it wasn’t him who would decide who he used to be. He could only choose if he wanted to follow that.

So Solder was alone. Just him and the fireplace.

~(0)~

“So, you gonna open that thing yet?”

Larcen became Solder’s first priority. It took no time to spot the buizel at the back of the lobby, relaxing on a couch. A new path had been cleared straight across the room, enough that the scuffed stone tiles revealed themselves and Solder didn’t need to weave in and out of castles of trash.

Larcen looked like he’d been working. A coat of white dust dulled the orange of his fur and had certainly not made it any less scruffy than the morning. He looked close to nodding off, whiskers drooping, as Solder approached, but perked right back up again once the quilava threw himself on the seat beside him.

Then Solder explained the bag.

“I don’t know.” He shifted it into his lap, clutching the strap tighter for the brief second it left his hip. “I kind of regret talking to klefki. I guess I have nothing to lose now, though.”

Larcen grinned, leaning into Solder until they were both shoved into the corner of the couch. Solder grumbled, tolerating the sudden weight without the energy to throw him onto the floor.

“C’mon! This isn’t a little exciting for you? Solving The mystery of the missing mind?”

“How long have you been working on that one?”

Larcen shrugged, throwing an arm over Solder in the process. Solder flicked his ear in annoyance as a paw grazed it.

“Eh, Brute bailed on me a little after you left, so I was by myself all day.”

“I can tell.”

Larcen ignored Solder’s venom. “Open it already! This is boring. You’re boring.”

Solder shook his head; he should’ve done this on his own. He grunted and wiggled under Larcen until he got the hint and sat back up, letting Solder turn the bag to face him. He ran his paws over the clasps. With a couple deep breaths and some impatient prodding from Larcen, Solder finally flicked them open.

As the flap slapped against his legs a burst of odour spilled out—something old and woodsy, yet burnt. The smell of a forest fire, maybe. Or the ash left over after a cookout.

Solder took it in. With shaky paws he turned the bag over onto the couch. A pile of assorted junk tumbled out between him and Larcen, landing in a chaotic mess. But it all fit, each item waiting for Solder to appraise it.

He picked through them: a rusty utility knife that he had to pry open with a grunt; a small collection of chain necklaces, melded with bits of gems; a canteen, brush and empty coin purse. Finally, Solder stumbled on a dented metal…. Item. Something square, blooming with distortion and barely holding together between a hinge and flimsy latch. He popped it open with a swipe of his claw.

A photo.

Solder blinked. The photo stared back at him, two quilavas side-by-side, posed in the entrance of some building with an arm each over each other’s shoulders. Two smiles—one skewed and awkward pressed against the other, placed under two pairs of narrowed eyes. The scene drew a warmth over him, like a blanket. A feeling of familiarity like he didn’t experience often. But something drew him back to the photo.

Solder blinked again, returning the squint in the photo. He bit his lip and tried to piece together the static bits of expression with what he remembered of his own face.

“Which one am I?” he asked, holding the photo for Larcen to see. After a moment of silence, he turned.

Larcen stared back open-mouthed.

“You’re kidding, right?”

Solder frowned. He shook his head. Larcen pointed at the one on the right.

“That’s you, for sure. Same pointy face, same posture. And your fur colour’s a shade greener.”

Solder turned his arms over just to confirm; sure enough, very green compared to the dark blue of his… brother. Presumably.

He couldn’t for the life of him figure out how Larcen figured otherwise, though. Solder picked apart his image, tilting his head back and forth as if he could get a better angle. But he never saw what Larcen did.

Maybe it was the smile. Solder tried to copy it, but it slid off his face like oil on ice.

Smiling just didn’t come easily to him.

“Yeah. No, you’re right. I see it,” he responded. He sighed. Then, before they could dwell on it, snapped the case shut and threw it back on the pile.

Larcen took the opportunity to slide back into his personal space.

“Excited to meet your brother? He’s comin’ in what, a week or so?”

Yes. No. Solder had no clue. He wanted to know who he was, but he didn’t want to ruin some innocent pokemon’s relationship. He didn’t want to be someone else to Cauter. Just thinking about it made Solder curl his hind paws, desperate to wrap himself into a cocoon , stuff himself into the crease of the couch and vanish from the world.

He couldn’t. He sniffed, tensing all his muscles. Other thoughts crawled out to bury him, returning him to things he’d put off. Unfinished conversations. All Solder’s cowardice and failure and he still needed to say what he felt to Larcen.

“Solder?”

“I’ll never hurt you again.”

A pause. A beat. Solder held his head so firmly he could feel the muscles bulge, pulse pounding in his ears.

“What?”

“I hurt you yesterday. I meant to say this yesterday, too. I’m never going to hurt you again.”

“Oh, the… argument. umm—”

Solder wanted to turn and look Larcen in the eyes but he barely had enough control to keep his breathing steady.

“--I kinda forgot about that.”

Solder snapped to him. Quickly enough to wrench a muscle in his neck. Larcen shrugged, an odd, uncomfortable tilt to his grin. For a moment, it felt like they were in a void, alone together except for the sound of their breathing.

“I’ll never hu—”

“Stop!” Larcen shouted, paws flying up out of his lap, “Just… okay. I don’t want to hear it anymore. I get it.”

Solder couldn’t tell what had happened. Larcen’s mood cratered for no reason and left him fumbling, his confession smashed to pieces on the cold stone floor.

“What do you mean stop? I’m doing this for you.”

“You can’t keep that promise.”

That really lit something up in Solder. He couldn’t explain where the sudden spark came from except that it fuelled the fire on his back and dented a scowl into his face.

“I’m trying to be honest with you,” he spat, “now you’re calling me out on it. I was sitting on this all day and now—”

Stop. No. Stop it.

“Getting a little upset, huh?”

Larcen’s tone was gentle, but Solder still broke eye contact, shoving himself into the corner of the couch and staring down the barrel of the guild’s entrance as a rising heat spread over his face.

He just needed a moment. Deep breaths—remind himself why he’d tried to make the promise in the first place. He was thankful Larcen gave him some space to level out. Let him preserve some dignity as he rubbed his paws across his muzzle.

“My dad was a drunk.”

What?

Larcen’s words struck Solder. He froze.

“He sailed with a lot of crews—job didn’t matter, just the money. Anything he could get, really, and the sailors ah… weren’t a great influence, I guess. Ha. Drank more whiskey than water, y’know. Anyway, he’d be gone most of the year, get a couple months off to come home and…”

Larcen’s tired sigh washed over them—it sounded like sitting in bed alone, under the creaking of neighbours upstairs and the roar of waves through the open window.

“He’d drink out the house. And all the money he made. He’d… well, you can guess. Then, when it all ran out, he’d come crawlin’ back. Oh, please, I’ll never do it again! I promise! Whatever. Next time would roll around and he’d be back to the shouting and the fighting.”

Larcen paused to take a breath. His voice hitched. Solder turned to him. He seemed like a different pokemon, someone older and smaller, his tails drawn up into his lap, laying peacefully as he combed the dust from them.

“Yesterday I said he thought being in the guild would help me. That’s not true. I’m here because he didn’t know how to deal with me. He only wanted kids so they could grow up and go on benders with him; not that it matters anymore. He’s dead. He hurt me more than anyone ever will, and maybe he really wanted to change, but then he just fucking died.”

Solder had a lot of things he could say to that. None of them were great. These were things he couldn’t help, and every time he tried opening his mouth the smart part of him forced his teeth back down on his tongue.

“I’m really sorry, Larcen,” he mumbled. Finally.

The buizel tried to smile. It didn’t fit with the sheen in his eyes.

“So I don’t want any dumb promises from you. I don’t want apologies. If you say you won’t hurt me, you’ll be hurting me and lying at the same time. What’s the deal, anyway? Where’d this come from?”

“I just… want to do better,” he mumbled, taking his paws off his muzzle. He tried to sit up a little straighter, but his arms shook as he planted them on the couch. He felt like he could break if he stood up too fast. He had to remind himself to be strong.

“Better than what? My dad? That’s not hard.”

“Better than myself. I want to know who I was and be… that. Or better than that. Or something.”

“I dunno, Solder. If you gotta change, that’s fine. Just… do it. Next time you want to tell me about it don’t say anything.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.”

“But I don’t think that matters. A fight is a fight—I’m over it. And you’re you. You’re pretty cool. I like you, I like being around you, I like talking to you.”

Solder felt exhausted. Drained and strung out. Drunk.

But he would stay strong. He’d ignore the closing throat. The wet eyes and wavering frown that threatened to sink him. He’d stay level.

Then he caught a glimpse of Larcen. The buizel returned to what Solder knew of him. In the persistent, stony grey of the guild, Larcen wiped his eyes and shook off sadness and glowed brightly. Solder ached.

He couldn’t do it.

With a swipe of the paw, Solder grabbed his metal picture box and popped it open again. His own image stared back at him, confident, smiling. As he traced the lines of his face, he sniffled. Struggled to keep his face flat. His ears pinned to his head and the quake moved from his arms and into his face.

“Solder?”

He would keep strong. He would be strong.

“Are you crying?”

He might’ve done it if Solder didn’t feel Larcen’s weight shift closer to him on the couch. If Larcen hadn’t wrapped him in an embrace and Solder found himself shoving his face into the crook of Larcen’s collar and shoulder. Warmth bathed him from all sides.

“What are you doing?” Solder asked. He couldn’t help leaning into Larcen despite himself. “Y-you should be crying. You’re the one with the dead dad.”

Larcen’s chest rumbled against his as he chuckled.

“Eh, it’s okay. You gotta be tired.”

Solder broke. For the first time, he found himself returning the hug, wrapping his arms so tightly around Larcen the buizel’s breaths turned into a weeze. Tears streamed down his muzzle, soaking into his fur.

Why was this happening? Why was he crying?

Solder hiccuped, only clasping harder against the confusing swirl of his emotions. Shame and anger and grief mixed into a nauseous slurry inside him. But he was out. Every time he tried to put himself back together, tried to extract himself from Larcen, he’d feel the same punch in his gut and collapse again.

They stayed like that for a while—Solder only dimly aware of the awkward shuffling of pokemon going in and out of the guild. Eventually, he levelled out. The tears stopped and despite his sore throat, he felt like he could breathe again. Still, he held onto Larcen for longer. His shame won out over everything at the end of the day, so he hid himself against Larcen’s shoulder until he could stand to be seen again.

Unfortunately, it had to happen at some point.

“You alright?”

Solder’s face flushed as he turned away. He wiped his face with his paws. “Sorry. I don’t know what’s wrong with me.”

Larcen hit him with an excited grin before it melted into something more gentle.

“Hey, I cry all the time. Don’t worry about it!”

It didn’t do much to comfort Solder, but he appreciated the effort.

Nobody seemed sure of what to do after that. They rested next to each other on the couch, exhaustion keeping Solder rooted and quiet. Separated from Larcen and with night fully here, he could finally see the pokemon trickling in. Or, he could see them watch him. It didn’t help the shame, but he’d recovered enough to hit back with a flat glare.

“Maybe I’d like to… be better, too.” Larcen broke the silence after a while. “We can do it together.”

Solder nodded beside him, head feeling like a rock as he bobbed it. He yawned.

“You want to stop stealing?”

“Something like that. Just… can I ask you to keep me in line when we go out together? I can get you back. I’ll just give you a little soak when you start sparking.”

Solder shivered at the thought. “Don’t you dare.”

“Will you do it, though?”

Larcen poked Solder in the ribs. He winced. Turned, greeted by a sincere bob of Larcen’s whiskers, expression turning into something pleading.

In that moment, Solder knew Larcen wanted this. Truly. He saw something in the buizel that reminded him of himself—a spark of desperation behind the eyes, eager to get out.

“Yes.”

Solder tried to smile, which Larcen returned.

“You hungry? I’ll go get us something to eat before bed.”

Solder nodded again and off Larcen went, leaving Solder alone to relax, limp on the couch. The air seemed a little cleaner, the guild a little less cluttered. He opened his photo one last time before shoving all his stuff back into his shoulderbag.

He couldn’t help the shame, though. It latched onto him like a parasite, swimming through his body. Even now, feeling as clear as he’d ever felt, the parasite found something new to latch onto.

With thoughts of his brother and his old life popping up again, he wondered how much Larcen would hurt once he had to leave.

In a moment of weakness, Solder crouched behind the back of the couch, peering into the buzzing light of the larder as Larcen threw some ingredients in a bowl, humming a jaunty tune as the meal came together. The image made Solder forget the thought, if only for a second and remember himself.

He didn't know what to think of himself anymore. Of any of the praise he’d received. The criticism—mostly from himself, as well. He could take these thoughts, transmute them, turn them into something tangible and hold them up to the light. He could shock himself with the way they changed colour. Drop them to the floor and hope to find answers from them.

No answers came. Solder just hid behind a couch until Larcen noticed and gave him a wave.

Maybe it wasn't Larcen he should worry about.

But he knew that already, didn't he?
 
Chapter Seven: Teams

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter seven
Teams


Some days passed after Solder’s breakdown. Luckily, few cared. Or, if they did, didn’t think to mention it. He and Larcen hung around the guild, mostly. To recover and relax. Solder still struggled with his thoughts on Klefki, but in some sense they also released him. He didn’t have to worry about her anymore. Or town. Turns out Seafolk might be cursed because with just a couple days away from it and absolutely no plans to return, Solder had a new energy he hadn’t felt before. He held himself higher, food tasted better. He might have laughed once or twice.

Even being saddled with guild chores didn’t dampen his spirits. Early on, Brute noticed them loitering and took the opportunity to ask (aka: beg, hand on knees, green wings drooping behind him like wet paper) them to clean up the guild. They agreed. Only to quickly regret it.

It was a nightmare. A dusty, mildewy nightmare with no end in sight. Even through the strain of hauling trash and as he stood on the cliffs outside, lording over his burn pile of broken furniture and fishing crates, the guild still seemed full. Plus Solder couldn’t tell if he preferred Brute to hole himself upstairs and leave them two hands short or anxiously hover around them as they dragged trash outside, muttering with a nervous intensity Solder didn’t expect from the flygon.

Still, Solder savoured his own energy. Larcen seemed to notice, too.

“What drugs have you been doin’, kid?” he asked, watching Solder happily sweep the entrance. He shook his head. “Can’t believe you’ve been hogging them all. If you’d share like a cool friend, then maybe we’d be done by now.”

For Brute, the two of them didn’t seem like enough. He never stopped trying to recruit more guild members, but they were either busy; not actually busy, just pretending; or free and not bothering to hide how little they wanted to talk to Brute. The flygon seemed more and more distracted as the days passed. Something earnest and resolute built in his posture. He showed up less, with fewer words and more frustrated sighs.

So it wasn’t entirely surprising for Solder to wake up and find Brute’s sleeping form on a couch blocking the guild’s entrance.

Larcen and Solder decided to keep on working until he woke up, one eye pinned to the sleeping flygon

Then an hour passed.

By the time their patience wore thin, everyone else’s had, too. A small crowd of pokemon had gathered around the entrance, milling about, chattering and waiting for someone to wake him up.

Solder was shocked to find he knew nearly everybody gathered around. He was equally shocked that nobody just pushed Brute off the couch, but a quick break in the crowd revealed why. Brute had already woken up and stared, dishevelled but serious, back at the crowd.

“We’re having a meeting,” he croaked, wiping some grit from his goggles. He leaned off the couch, freeing his wings and giving them a quick buzz to straighten them out.

The crowd mumbled back. They must have all realised he wouldn’t move soon, because one by one they sat themselves on the closest thing to a chair they could find. Solder and Larcen grumbled to themselves as they had to settle for the stripped wooden frame of a chair. The harsh angles dug into Solder’s side and the seat was small enough that only one could sit on it fully, but it beat the floor.

Once everyone sat down, Brute seemed satisfied. He nodded and stood, moving into the harsh, artificial light of the guild. He seemed more… put together than the days before—or at least not on the verge of a panic attack—but his eyes were so squinted and red they stuck out even behind his red goggles.

He took a deep breath. “We need to pull this bloody guild together. We need to— to divide and conquer. Organise, raise money, recruit more members and— well, there’s so, so, so much more, but that’s good enough for now.”

He broke off from his speech, clasping his claws together in front of him. He probably meant to seem stoic, but his claws had a mind of their own. And if he’d expected a response, he got a mixed one. Solder shared dry looks across the room, Bastaya rolling his eyes between a disinterested Landy—and Unico, who’d taken the news with the enthusiasm of a hurricane. Some others gave halfhearted mumbles.

“F-first off, we need teams,” Brute continued, “of four. Each. We don’t— I don’t think we have enough right now for everyone, but that’s where recruiting can fill in the gaps. So… okay, go for it. I’ll be back with the forms.”

Brute scampered off. And he must have know the bomb he dropped because he fled up the guildmaster’s stairway right as the muttering crowd morphed into shouting, everybody scrambling to choose teammates before each other.

Thankfully, Larcen being clingy actually proved useful. Sure, the buizel didn’t need to throw himself over Solder’s lap the second Brute spoke, but Solder also didn’t need to use his collar as a cozy new armrest, and yet both things happened. Solder sighed as Larcen wiggled around and gave some weak protests. Eventually, he calmed down. Or fell asleep.

By the time Brute returned with a stack of papers and a pen, most pokemon had sorted themselves out. But not into quads. He looked over the lobby and sighed, fixating first onto Landy. The meowstic stood alone, flipping through a book as if he hadn’t even noticed.

“Who are you with?”

Landy paused, closing the book and folding it under his arm.

“Auloin and Veille are certainly the only pokemon I trust to keep up with me.”

“Are you… on speaking terms?”

Landy waved that off. “We should be once I elaborate on my plans for the feral who will, as we’ve agreed upon, be rehabilitated as the fourth member of our team.”

Before Brute could respond, the chattering started up again, all fixated on Landy. Larcen extracted himself from Solder to glare at the meowstic.

“You’re crazy, Landy, a feral? Oh, boy. Can’t wait for that to blow up in your face,” Larcen said.

“Oh, but it might be worth it. Our poor, blue baby’s going to meet his maker,” Bastaya chimed in from beside Landy. He gave a playful swat of Landy’s tails. “Tell me what he’s like when you get there, would you?”

Landy growled. His eyes lit up a pale blue in response. “Does nobody understand word choice? Rehabilitated was the operative term in the sentence. Also, Brute and I have already agreed upon my terms. I would not advise breaking them.”

His attention turned back to Brute. Everybody’s attention turned back to Brute. Solder still didn’t know enough to share the guilds anger; instead he took the opportunity to twist Larcen’s head fur into tiny braids while the buizel wasn’t looking. Still, if his experience with the chatot was any indication, a feral sounded like suffering for anyone remotely close to it.

He could be thankful for not wanting anything to do with Landy, at least. No Landy, no feral.

Meanwhile, Brute shivered under the sudden pressure. “Y-yes we already made a deal. I suppose I could sign you up as a foursome, but! But you’re going to break the news to Auloin and Veille.”

Landy nodded. Despite his reception, he walked up and accepted one of Brute’s forms.

Still, even though everyone looked like they had more to say, Brute ignored all complaints, avoided eye contact and moved on.

A group of four Solder hadn’t met stepped up next. Some long black-and-white, scarf-looking ferret lead the pack, with what might as well have been a walking ice sculpture standing beside it. A weird rodent perched on the head of the tall, purple lizard behind them. They caught Solder’s eye, gave a lazy salute, then went back to chatting with their friends. They moved like their own little gang already stepping up in formation, snatching a paper from Brute’s hand, then moving back to their little corner of the guild far, far apart from everybody else.

“Unico?” Brute asked, a shy note in his voice. “You’re ah… with Bastaya, right? And your brother?”

The green kecleon nodded so eagerly the clacking of his teeth echoed through the room.

“Oh yes! Yes! Yes! Absolutely! Bastaya’s eager and ready; my brother will be too next time I see him, I’m sure! And— oh, have you heard we’re setting up the shop again? It closed down so long ago I thought we’d be stuck in this rut forever, but this is just the push we needed, I think. A valuable opportunity! And plenty of profits for the guild, I assure you! You know, my father believed uncertain times were—”

“Yes!” Brute shouted, voice cracking, wings flaring behind him. In great news for Solder’s mood, it managed to shut Unico’s trap. “Thank you, Unico. I— I get it. You’ll need another member, but that brings us to—”

It was Solder and Larcen’s turn now.

“You two. You’ve done great work cleaning up, but…” Brute’s new almost-confidence crumbled a bit as he looked away. “Well, I mean, we ah… w-we still need new members. Two for your team, and one for Unico’s at least. So— so that’s your job now.” He held out his claws as if giving them a present.

Solder grit his teeth, jerking Larcen’s fur by accident and drawing a few tufts of orange and a sharp yelp from the buizel. Recruitment. He flashed back to all his attempts at basic conversation in Seafolk. Was there a worse job for him?

Landy, for his part, jumped off Solder’s lap in his defence. “Hey! That sucks! Cleaning’s a better job. Actually, why can’t we just team with you and haxorus? Easy! Now you’re the new recruits.”

Brute sighed. “Guild masters and their assistants can’t be on an active team, in case an emergency requires their attention at the guild,” he recited, as if from a script, “and, really. Can you make the money we need in time? Or take care of the paperwork? Everyone’s going to be cleaning, s-so please. Just try. Three Pokémon at least.”

Larcen held solid for a moment. He looked back at Solder.

Solder refused to look anything but miserable. Still, he shrugged, just wanting the meeting over with. They could always harass Brute about it later.

“…fine,” Larcen said.

He slumped back down. Right on Solder’s paw.

A sharp pain shot up his arm. He ripped his paw from under Larcen with a growl, cradling it to his chest and giving the buizel a withering look. Most of Brute’s response got lost in Larcen’s apology, but Solder gathered it was something about team names.

“Numerical designations are the most efficient idea, I think,” Landy said, suddenly interested, “I can take team one, for instance, and the other teams can fight over two, three, etcetera. In the name of pragmatism.”

“Oh, you’re exhausting. Where’s your imagination?” Bastaya said.

“This is about efficiency. It’s not as if any of us are town icons, so why bother?”

“I-okay, well, when you two decide…”

As they argued and Solder slipped out of pain and back into boredom, Larcen caught his eye. A sly grin slipped onto his face.

“Wanna be team Weasels?”

What a stupid name.

Solder snorted. “Sure.”

Larcen jumped up, one paw raised. “We’re team Weasels!” He shouted.

“Thank you, Larcen,” Brute responded with a relieved smile. He scratched his pen across his clipboard.

Landy broke off from his argument with Bastaya. He levelled a glare at Brute. “No, stop writing— it’s a terrible name that doesn’t fit with the theme. Neither of you are technically weasels, either.”

All he got was a nervous shrug.

Landy huffed, looking for a moment like he’d continue arguing. But he relented eventually, swishing his tails behind him. “I suppose we can still organize alphabetically.”

“Oh!” Unico jumped in, leaping from his seat with both arms spread wide. “Oh! Bastaya had a wonderful, brilliant idea! We’ll be team one, but the numerical one, not spelled out! We agree with Landy!”

Landy’s ears tilted back. He glared at Bastaya’s shit-eating grin. Fortunately, landy’s response was drowned out by Unico giving an over enthusiastic round of applause.

“T-that’s good. Easy to remember.” More scratching of the pen from Brute.

Landy looked miserable now, to everyone else’s joy. He stood, book closed between both paws, squinting in the distance like a solution waited outside. Meanwhile, the group of four Solder hadn’t met yet registered their name as Kill Point, complete with a group chant that absolutely shattered Landy’s dreams of a coherent naming scheme.

Considering how the cat had treated Solder so far, he revelled in Landy’s pure irritation.

Finally, Landy sighed, muttered: “I will get back to you,” in a slow, deliberate drawl and wandered off.

Brute shrugged.

“That takes care of that, I guess. Ah— back to work, everyone. We’ll be meeting every morning from now on, so— so be excited for that.”

Nobody spared Brute a second glance as they wandered off.

+=================================================+

Solder and Larcen did end up following Brute back to his office to argue some more, but the flygon refused to budge. That and the lineup of other guildmembers waiting to argue with him got the duo kicked out of the office before too long. The best they got from Brute was a stack of old recruitment posters. The paper had yellowed with time, and according to Larcen they were about a decade out of date, but Team Weasels certainly wouldn’t be making new ones so they had to make do.

And unfortunately, recruitment meant wandering back into Seafolk again. Needless to say, Solder’s mood cratered.

“We’re not gonna recruit anybody if you’re glarin’ at them like that, kid.”

Solder shifted in his seat, flexing the muscles in his face. He hadn't even realised he’d been scowling.

They’d taken refuge in a little restaurant on the outskirts of town, sitting on a mat between rows of planters. A great awning shaded them and the towering mountains faced them from across the street.

But Solder was focused on something else. Larcen had already finished his food and was now wiping crumbs off his collar. Solder still hadn’t got his. He’d been glaring at the lombre waiter—who balanced plates on his leaf-hat as he wandered from table to table, and had served three tables before even looking Solder in the eyes.

“Nothing good ever happens in Seafolk,” he said, growling as the waiter took a plate from inside and beelined to the other side of the patio. “And everyone sucks here.”

“I’m here.”

“You suck, too.”

Larcen rolled his eyes. “Okay, grumpy. we’re supposed to be keeping each other in line so maybe chill out a bit? I can rough somebody up in the kitchen if you want, you just sit there and relax.”

A tempting offer, but Solder let his silence speak for itself. He squinted at the served table, spotting a salad. A salad. How long did it take to make a salad?

Then a shift, a gust of wind. He shivered, struck by the uncanny feeling of being watched. He blinked, looking up, turning his head around. He caught a flash of blue around a corner, but just as he turned it vanished.

“You okay?”

“I’m fine.” Solder leaned forward, trying to get a better view. “Was someone watching us just now?”

“Uh, like half the staff?” Larcen pointed inside the building.

Solder followed his point. Sure enough, a collection of faces watched him through the entrance, squished into the narrow slit of a serving window. Once Solder noticed them, they all jerked back, awkwardly stumbling into each other to get out of the way. As if he wouldn’t notice. Solder grumbled, rubbing his muzzle and trying to keep his flames in. Still, some sipped out. He could feel them dance across his head, briefly scattering through the top of his vision. He tried rubbing his fur as if that would keep them in, but it didn’t do much except make him look feral.

He sighed. Ever since he’d figured them out, his flames had actually become harder to control. He needed more focus now, just to keep himself reigned in, than if he’d try to light himself on fire. And since there were no fire types nearby all the advice he got was useless. Just… focus, was all they’d say, shrugging like it was the most obvious thing in the world. Maybe he’d find a book about it sometime.

Oh, wait.

And Larcen tried. Really, he did. Solder appreciated that. Sometimes, it even helped. Just a kind word and good energy to remind Solder that happiness existed. He’d been invaluable for keeping Solder from blowing up at the waiter, for instance. Or Brute. Or Landy. If Solder had been alone then…

Well, better not to think about it.

The clattering of doors sounded from inside. The waiter came out again. The waiter went back in. Solder wanted to slam his face into the table.

“Am I getting worse?” He mumbled, mostly to himself. Still, Larcen fixed him with a gentle smile.

“Nah, c’mon! What did we talk about?” Larcen said. “Don’t worry about yourself, that’s what I’m here for!”

Solder took a deep breath and hummed in agreement.

These things helped a bit.

Eventually, Solder got his food plus a two-word apology and insincere bow from the lombre. They ate, didn't leave a tip, then bailed.

They came to town with two options: wait around on some corner and harass pokemon into joining the guild or awkwardly pin posters on every available surface until they either ran out or got shouted down. Since there were two of them and Solder made himself very clear what he’d rather be doing, Larcen convinced him to split the difference. Larcen got to do all the talking, leaving Solder with the posters. After a long back and forth, they decided to start at the market and work their way around.

True to his memories, the market was chaos. The frenzied shouts of hagglers filled the air, drowning out the quieter conversations between stalls. The smell of fish and salt made Solder wrinkle his nose, but Larcen didn’t seem to mind, practically skipping through aisles, offering a wave to every pokemon that looked his way. He also didn’t seem to mind jumping into conversation whenever possible—waiting behind shopping pokemon until they turned around. Then he hit them with a smile, shook their paw or flipper or… whatever and launched into his speech. Completely unpracticed, too. The buizel had an ease of speech that Solder envied.

But Solder wouldn’t be practising. He was happy to give encouraging nods from the sidelines, sticking by the wall and keeping an eye on the buizel as he shared laughter with a group of… Golduck. True to his theory, pokemon were too busy here to do anything but give him sideways looks as he tacked posters to the walls and stands of the market.

It didn’t take him long to finish his section. Then all he could do was wait patiently for Larcen.

As it turned out, the buizel’s enthusiasm had drawbacks.

“Whatd’ya mean, be pickier? We can’t afford to be picky! And I didn’t think any of my picks were too unpicky. They’re all great candidates.”

Solder raised his brows. Great candidates? Who? The old frog walking with the cane? Or the pack of kids that accidentally kicked their ball into the market?

Larcen seemed to read Solder’s mind. His whiskers twitched, tails swirling behind him.

“Well, okay, maybe not the kids, but everyone else sounded great.”

“I hope that old woman doesn’t fall for your pitch.”

“Oh, she was so cool! Did you hear she once swam all the way around the continent?”

“What? That can’t be true.”Solder blinked, turning to where she left. She might’ve been more spry than she let on, because she already finished filling her bag of groceries and waddled out into the street.

Wait.

There, in the mass of pokemon crowding around a fruit stand, Solder spotted a familiar shade of blue. He caught a tuft of fur, a tail, blue and white, before a hulking turtle cut through the path.

By the time the turtle moved, Solder had lost it again.

He clicked his tongue. “Someone’s definitely following us. Someone blue. And white. With fur.” He shared a meaningful look with Larcen.

It didn’t take long for the buizel’s eyes to widen.

“Really? Landy? You think so?”

“Who else could it be?”

Larcen didn’t answer. He just slid up beside Solder.

“Eh, whatever. If he wants to, he can just come up and chat. Not like anything’s stopping him.”

They paused, just watching. Side by side. Then Solder reminded himself that they had a job to do.

It didn’t take long to settle into a groove where Solder finished around the same time Larcen did. Thankfully, he also stuck to pokemon that could actually do the work. In no time at all, Solder looked back and realised they’d made it halfway through the market.

It wasn’t exactly stimulating work, though. He couldn’t be sure when the monotony snuck in. It settled on Larcen’s face, in the bags under his eyes and the more frequent frowns. Solder already knew the problem—like they’d already discussed, nobody wanted to join the guild. It was impressive how quickly a pokemon could disengage themselves once they heard Seafolk Guild, transitioning from a polite smile and tilt of the head to this dead, glazed-over look, like they’d just washed ashore after a week out to sea.

Whatever drove Larcen early on vanished. He slowed down again, caught by something in the crowd.

Larcen stopped in front of a booth—empty except for some scattered trinkets on a red tablecloth. Nobody sat behind the counter, either, but Larcen still seemed so focused on the empty wood stools. Then he edged himself closer, leaning his elbows against the table. Solder caught a flash of motion. He blinked. An empty space stuck out on the table.

Solder shoved his way through the crowd, sparing no apologies even as some of the larger pokemon fired back at him. At the table, he caught Larcen by the wrist. Sure enough, he’d already wrapped his paw around some weird purple vial, contents sloshing from the motion.

“Hey,” Solder said, trying to be subtle as he moved to shade Larcen’s paw from sight. “Let’s get going, alright?”

But then Solder saw his face. It never looked natural to see the buizel’s expression screwed up like that. To see furrows etched above his brow, aging him.

“Larcen? Come on. Are you doing okay?”

“I mean, it’s fine if nobody’s there, right? It’s not even stealing anymore, I’m just… taking it so I can find the owner again. No big deal.” Larcen shook his head. But even as Solder pried, his grip didn’t loosen.

“Put it back.”

Larcen tucked the vial closer to his chest. “Did I ever tell you how it feels? It’s like… you feel like you’re gonna be sick and you know somethings going wrong, then…” He mimed an explosion with his free paw. “There’s that little thing in the corner. It’s worthless, but it’ll feel great when you get your paws on it.”

Larcen tried jerking it out of Solder’s grasp. Neither pokemon would budge.

“Just like, gimme one, please! We can— start tomorrow. I just don’t want to feel like dirt today.”

A desperate, pleading look struck Solder hard enough to catch him off guard, loosening just enough for Larcen to snatch the vial back and scoot away with a relieved slump of the shoulders.

Solder blanked at the behaviour. Didn’t Larcen want help? He didn’t seem like it. Yet there was clearly something wrong, because the buizel was acting like a completely different pokemon.

Maybe he just needed to be a little more forceful.

He pushed forward, reaching just as Larcen twisted, back to him. Solder huffed.

“Stop. If I let you have it, you’ll just pull the same shit next time.”

“Nah, it's just one for old time’s sake, y’know? A souvenir! No big deal!”

Solder tried catching him on the other side, but he twisted again. And moved, scurrying to fit himself in the space between stands, back against the wall. It must have been spurred by some instinctive force in his mind, because the second Larcen realised he’d cornered himself, his eyes widened.

“Solder…”

He looked so small in the corner, filtered through the power of crowd noise and heat of the sun. He curled up in it like meat cooking in a pan. Hit Solder with a face close to pain.

Fine. Solder couldn’t tell if his frustration came from Larcen himself or whatever cosmic force let shit like this happen, but if he had to be the bad guy, he’d be the bad guy.

“Give me the fucking vial.”

Larcen tried to bat him away as he pressed forward, but he could do little except hold tight as Solder tried to wrestle the vial from him, struggling under the force of limbs as he tried to keep it away. Solder shoved his arm across his chest and, with a quiet grunt, finally got hold of it again.

Solder had to remind himself they were still in public, so their tug of war became something awkward and close. Just quick jerking of the limbs, yanking each other back and forth. Until something finally gave. The vial slipped from Larcen’s hand, sending Solder tumbling and it flying, clattering across the street until it smashed against the far wall. Some yelps sounded. Some growls, too, forced from the crowd.

Solder allowed himself a quiet moment to feel the stone dig into his back, pressing against his beating heart. Only then was he comfortable knowing nobody cared. He took a deep breath, glancing over to where the bottle broke.

Blue. Blue fur, white tails. Landy.

Solder blinked, waiting for the illusion to break, but no. Landy watched them from across the street, half-visible shaded by the red-striped awning of jewellery stand.

“Landy? So you were following us.”

The words didn’t reach him at first. Or maybe they did; Solder couldn’t tell what went on in those dark eyes of his, and he hung around like a stain on the brick wall across the street. Nobody paid him much attention even as he used his powers to tilt the awning further above his head.

The meowstic waited a moment before crossing the street. He padded across without a care for the pokemon walking through. There, he lingered above Solder, casting a long shadow over him as the crowd flowed around. Larcen rejoined after a while, sitting shakily at Solder’s side.

But Solder didn’t pay much attention to that.

“Why are you here?”

“What reason do pokemon usually have to participate in the marketplace? Obviously, I’m shopping.”

Solder glanced at Landy’s side, at his overstuffed bag and coils of… rope? Did he have any room left in there?

“You were following us, though. We saw you.”

“Not all of us are so narcissistic to believe the world revolves around them. I’ve been in town. So what if you saw me? Hundreds of pokemon have seen me, yet I still wouldn’t be stalking them.”

“Okay. Fuck off, then.”

But he didn’t. He didn’t seem to expect the rejection either with the way he shifted nervously on his paws. He folded his arms under his ruff of fur.

Solder ignored him, getting off the ground and dusting himself off.

“You two are in charge of recruitment, correct?”

“Sure.”

“That means your duties necessitate helping me catch a feral. I could use a fire-type.”

Solder paused, sharing a brief, baffled look with Larcen. He mouthed an emphatic no back.

“I told you to fuck off didn’t I?”

A deep rumble sounded from Landy even as his face stayed flat. It was eerie how still the cat’s expression was, deep in the shadow of his ears. He sighed deeply.

“I’ll give you two thousand P.”

Solder was about to repeat himself, but Larcen cut in early.

“We’ll do it!”

Unbelievable. Solder shot Larcen a glare that he shrugged off like rain. He wasn’t really comfortable being the fire type, let alone helping someone like Landy with his nonsense.

Solder scrambled to his feet, pulled in close enough to Larcen that he could whisper.

“Larcen. No.”

“C’mon, that’s like, ten jobs!”

Ten jobs? Solder froze, putting it together in his head. He couldn't’ pretend to be comfortable, but was one day of discomfort worth that much? He eased away from Larcen, rubbing a paw on his chin.

“...fine.

“Excellent,” Landy responded, not missing a beat, “to be clear, I’d rather not work with you either. Regardless, I’m expecting you at the guild before the hour’s over, so hurry up. I refuse to reward slackers, so don’t expect any recompense if you’re late.”

He flicked his ears. Then he padded off, lugging that heavy bag at his side and pushing back through the crowd. Literally sometimes—Solder spotted the telltale blue glow of his powers, an invisible hand shoving pokemon to the side as he passed. Larcen hit Solder with a grin as the meowstic left, energy returned as if the past ten minutes hadn’t happened. Some sort of twitch or tilt made him seem uneasy, but Solder didn’t get a chance to scrutinise before Larcen shrugged and followed in Landy’s path.

“Let’s go, Solder. You heard our awesome, nice, very cool friend Landy, maybe if we’re fast we can come back and get some fancy grub before everything closes.”

He didn’t even wait, wasting no time to skip into the streets and leave Solder behind.

For his part, Solder was baffled by how fast Larcen had recovered.

Then he glanced at the empty market stall.

He couldn’t confirm anything, but even aside from the missing vial, he swore it seemed emptier.
 
Chapter Eight: A Cat

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter eight
A Cat


“We’re going to the entrance plains.”

It was the first thing Landy said as Team Weasels met him at the guild. It can’t have taken them more than a half hour, but he still scowled and shook his head as if they were late. Before either of them could respond, he sauntered off down the path.

Landy was as eager to follow as he was to do anything, but a stray thought struck Solder as he watched the meowstic’s tails sway behind him. That thought pinned him to the ground. Landy had it easy. He basically walked right into what they were doing and dragged them away with the promise of some pocket change. Not that Solder was above that. Landy was, though, based on the way he acted. Always. He had this insufferable air about him as if he was leagues ahead of everybody else. But that wasn’t true. Not if he was desperate enough to stalk Solder all morning.

So Solder shrugged and cleared his throat and crouched down in the tall grass beside the road, plucking handfuls of cornflowers from the vines that snaked around the path. He huffed a breath of fire and watched them turn to ash in his paw.

Just to prove a point.

Landy only noticed halfway around the far corner. He hesitated, Larcen stumbling beside him. He turned. Spotted Solder lounging in the stray grass. Crossed his arms like a disappointed father.

“So you need me,” Solder said.

Landy lingered for a moment. A brief twitch betrayed his grim expression. “I neither need nor want you.” Maybe he realised his own lie, because corrected it just as quickly. “ A fire type would be helpful, however.”

“Go, then. If you’re so impatient. You don’t need me. So what?”

Landy sniffed, turning his nose up at Solder. Shockingly smug for someone with noone else to turn to.

“What inane nonsense would you like me to do, then? Grovel? I could, but if that’s what satisfies you, it’s fittingly pathetic.”

Solder dumped the ashes on the path, wiping his paw on his chest. He fired back with a glare.

“Maybe a little respect would be nice, since you’re so desperate. And half the payment. Now.”

Cue the staring match of the century. It lasted longer than Solder would’ve liked—long enough his legs started to cramp from his crouch, the stiff shafts of grass itching at his back. But some sort of understanding formed where their gazes met—an agreement. Eventually, Landy sucked in a great breath, reached into his bag and pulled out some coin, slapping it in Larcen’s paw. Larcen had just been awkwardly standing around, watching his own tails, but he took the cash eagerly.

‘Well,” Landy said, visibly restraining himself, “Shall we go, then?”

Solder scoffed.

Yes, they shall.

+====================================+

Solder didn’t mind Landy’s newfound silence as they swerved through the path inland. It gave Larcen an opportunity to chatter and let Solder admire the scenery, gazing up with an open mouth as the valley cliffs drifted closer and closer to the path until they towered overhead, letting just a sliver of light through with how close they were. The path inland seemed to be almost carved through the mountain rather than over, exposing earthy layers of rock on either side and filling the path’s shoulders with loose boulders instead of plants. Too dark for much to grow besides some odd vines.

It could have been a relaxing walk, but the feral lingered on his mind. And Landy did too, hovering annoyingly close to him and Larcen as they talked. He kept his mouth shut—living true to being silent if one had nothing good to say, Solder supposed—but still shook his head or rolled his eyes at exactly the wrong times.

Solder almost regretted telling him to play nice. At least he was honest before. Now all Solder could do was guess what was on the meowstic’s mind.

After a while of walking, the cliffs parted again, splitting like an opened book to reveal a field. Although field seemed like a small word. The mountains spread out, presumably to encircle them, but they were spread far enough apart that the atmosphere swallowed them in a blue haze. And the field—the waves of grass waving in the wind’s current—sloped just enough to be noticeable, tilting off in the distance, following the direction of the road. If Solder laid down and started rolling he could imagine himself going for hours.

Solder gave a low whistle. Well, he tried. It came out thin.

“Cool, huh?” Larcen said, “It’s like days of walking to get past the mountains, but once you’re out, it’s crazy. Only been once and saw more pokemon in an hour than I’ve ever seen here.”

Solder gave a lazy hum, hoping Larcen would read joy into it. Personally, he’d prefer the field.

“We’re not concerned with that, today,” Landy cut in—the first words he’d spoken in a while. “I’ve given a lot of thought to which feral we should abduct and I believe farfetch’d is an adequate choice—the coastal variety. It’s local, obviously. More importantly it’s strong enough to be a worthwhile proposition without also posing too much of a risk—consider that it’s small enough to handle and less offensively threatening without its leek. If there are any objections, I’d like to hear them now, because I refuse to enter more than one dungeon today.”

Solder blinked, turning to Larcen for help.

“Farfetch’d?”

“It’s a… small, brown bird. Got an angry face and a big ol’ leek it carries around. Hard to miss.”

“Okay.”

Landy hiked the bundle of ropes further up his shoulder.

“I’m assuming you two are ready.”

Nobody needed to nod because Landy went on without waiting for an answer, cutting a straight line down the path and through the grass. It swallowed him, leaving only the white tops of his ears visible, tracing paths through like crabs in the sand.

Solder just let him go for a while. Larcen didn’t seem eager to follow either—he had to hype himself up with a little clap of the paws and shake of the tails. Then he took off, tumbling down the hill and crashing through the sea of grass. Solder sighed, considered whether burning a path through made sense, then slapped himself in the face and took off after them.

The rest of the journey would be spent in isolation. Following behind posed no issues, considering Landy carved a trench through the plants, but catching up proved to be near impossible. The wind composed a great wall of sound through the dry rustling of the grasses, cut through by some jaunty tune Larcen took to whistling on his own, but it always seemed to drift, sometimes close enough to reach with a brief sprint, sometimes so far away Solder had to tilt his head to catch it. Although pounded down by two pairs of feet, the grasses were still loose enough to trip him up, too. He spent a lot of frustrating minutes spitting out leaves and kicking knots off his legs. Sometimes he’d just stare up into the clouds and wish he didn’t have to be stuck to the ground.

Overall, not a great experience. It didn’t last long, but even a minute was too much. Eventually, he broke through the wall of grass into a flattened clearing and spotted Landy and Larcen sitting at the edge of a rope fence.

Solder took a moment to stare at Landy. Green stains smeared his normally pristine fur and he looked rabid with the mess of stalks and leaves making a nest out of him. Shockingly, he didn’t seem to mind. Didn’t even notice, just stared at Solder with that condescending glare. Solder figured he’d be more neurotic, but—

“Is there an issue you’d like addressed?” Landy cut in.

Solder caught himself. He crossed his arms. “You haven't explained anything.”

“We’re going into a dungeon, what’s to explain?”

Oh, well. Maybe he’d just shut up, then.

He looked to Larcen instead.

“The entrance plains are another dungeon. They’re just that… area in the fence. Kinda weird, but dungeons are like that.” He shrugged.

That explained the fence, at least. Solder wandered up to it, putting his paws on the rope. It felt rough, bleached by the rain and sun and spiralling into the loose threads it was made from. If he pushed down on it, it creaked but barely moved. Too stiff. He looked back, as if for permission.

“Unfortunately, it’s ideal to enter linked to reduce risk of separation,” Landy said, face screwed up in thought. Or disgust. Hard to tell. “I’ll grab… Larcen’s arm, he can take yours.”

As if the buizel needed instruction. A big, stupid grin split his features. He reached out from where he was sitting, paws kneading the air like a needy toddler begging to be picked up.

“Okay, try a little harder next time,” Solder said. Still, he rolled his eyes, took Larcen’s paws and yanked him to his feet. The buizel slumped in Solder’s arms.

And Landy watched on.

“Fascinating,” he said, tone dry as bone. He approached. Gingerly took one of Larcen’s arm like it was a rotting fish.

“Let’s hurry this up. I have things to do.”

Landy had a shocking amount of strength, as it turned out. Enough to pull the duo under the fence by Larcen’s arm. Solder could feel an odd, unnatural force on top of it, but he had little time to complain as the safety of the fence posts got left behind. The scene changed. Once again, no feeling accompanied it, but Solder saw the blink this time.

For the briefest moment Solder inhabited a blackness between. Just for a millisecond—the shortest sleep of all time—but he couldn’t get it out of his head. Like the universe lagged for a moment, struggling to place them.

And the world it decided to shove them into was as odd as his previous dungeon.

The grass had been cut. It no longer looked wild. In fact, it looked painted onto this soft floor made of… made of what? He dug his claws into it, feeling the soft bristles of grass. A green smell wafted through the area, but it quickly became overwhelming. It didn’t ebb and flow like it should, though that could be the lack of wind.

As he picked himself back up he noticed the walls, a massive simulacra of mountains ringing close around them, stuck into the ground like pieces on a diorama. A sun hung in the sky. Bright enough, but clearly fake considering Solder could stare directly at it and feel no warmth or light.

He sucked a hissing breath through his teeth, smacking his lips as a vegetal taste filled every nook in his mouth. Not pleasant. He couldn’t understand how Landy and Larcen didn’t react at all. They just waited around for Solder to finish, kicking at the turf.

“So you aren’t familiar with dungeons,” Landy said. Something lurked, barely restrained, under those words.

“I don’t know why anyone goes into these things,” Solder shot back, still trying to get the taste out of his mouth.

“Eh, they can be kinda fun. You never saw an abandoned house and went ooooh, I wonder if I could go crazy if I looked around there for too long? Me neither, but I bet I’d do it, someday.”

Solder perked up. But it wasn’t the weird fantasy that interested Solder.

“Crazy? What are you talking about?”

Landy wrinkled his button nose, fixing Solder with a condescending glare. “I regret taking you along if basic aspects of mystery dungeons elude you.” He held up a steady paw. “There’s a certain mental degradation applied to those who enter dungeons. The effects are varied—too complicated to explain to you—but needless to say that the ferals who live here were not born from nothing.”

Mental degradation? Solder pictured himself wandering through the fields, the smell of grass drowning him, this sterile, toybox world chipping away bits of him until he was just a froth-mouthed, gibbering beast. He shivered.

“Alright. Let’s blow through this place so we can leave.”

“I can agree with that sentiment, at least.”

“Don’t know how I always get stuck with the snoozers when we go spelunking,” Larcen snickered, “but alright. Get the bird, get out. Let’s keep our eyes peeled!”

With that rallying cry, Larcen pushed on. Not one to let anyone enjoy themselves, Landy stomped forward and left Solder, once again, to struggle at the rear, just watching Larcen and Landy’s tails bob back and forth. He watched, waiting for them to sync and ran over every concrete fact he knew about himself.

Just in case.

And bless his heart, Larcen had some contagious bug in there that might have infected Solder if it weren’t for Landy’s overwhelming patronising aura. It did not take long for pots to start boiling over. Specifically, when Landy told them he wouldn’t lift a paw.

“What do you mean, you aren’t fighting?” Solder spat, squinting at a pokemon in the distance—some dirty, grey rabbit. It was the firsts sign of life they’d found and although it wasn’t a farfetch’d, it crouched right in the middle of the path forward, between two oddly placed mountains. It chewed on the grass and kept a wary eye on them.

“My powers are not tuned for battle or brute applications. It’s why I brought you,” Landy said.

He punctuated the statement with a limp wave, dropping his bag to the ground and using it as a seat, legs crossed.

Useless. Great. Trying was too much to hope for from the meowstic, apparently. If only he knew who he’d hired, Solder might’ve laughed.

Solder stared down the rabbit, fixating on those massive, empty eyes, the stumpy limbs and tattered whiskers. He dropped on all fours, crouching low to the ground. The rabbit did not break eye contact. He crept forward, letting his flames crest along his back. A tentative growl built in the back of his throat. He hoped to scare the rabbit off, but if anything he had the opposite effect. Its chewing slowed, then it shifted into position to match his, warning chitters sounding from it—not taking a step out of place.

Dropping the aggression, Solder coughed and grumbled and sat back on his haunches. Larcen came up to pat him on the back.

“It’s a fucking bunny. How do I screw up intimidating a bunny?”

“You’re cute, man. I dunno.” Larcen shrugged. “C’mon, let’s go chase it off together.”

Solder wanted to say he wouldn’t fight, but…

He shifted uncomfortably in his own skin, not sure what to do with himself. He was a battler. He was strong and brave and stupid and reckless. He ran his tongue across his teeth, feeling how sharp they were.

…Maybe he’d keep trying. It helped that Larcen joined him.

Unfortunately, Landy must have sensed hesitation.

“If you leave all this to Larcen, I’ll refuse to pay you,” Landy cut in, “ I asked for a Fire type, so I expect them to participate—unless you’re broken or incapable, in which case you can leave.” He lounged on his bag, leaning back into a stretch as if he’d done any work—unconcerned by the continued snarling and snapping of the bunny. “It’s just a bunnelby. Honestly.

This version of Landy—the one perched on the fence between civil and insulting—sucked. Solder now fully regretted making that part of the deal. The barely-hidden disdain grew so strong that unspoken insults seemed to appear above his head like advertisements on a billboard.

Solder growled, trying to put the cat out of his mind. He returned Larcen’s pat—albeit awkwardly.

“Let’s go. Can I get first shot?”

Larcen smiled, raising a paw.

“That’s the spirit! Glad you’re gettin’ into it!”

Okay, well he wouldn’t go that far. He gave a nod in response, then got up and brushed himself off.

Larcen didn’t hesitate to approach, waving Solder forward with a warm smile. The quilava followed the direction, getting in position on his side of the bunny—Larcen flanking on the other side. It jerked between the two, uncertain, the massive, dirt-stained ends of its grey ears curling. Larcen gave Solder a look. Go on, it said. But the aches of those feral chatot’s screams `resonated in his mind.

Solder winced, wrinkling his snout and gritting his teeth against the echoes.

It’s okay. It’s fine.

An awkward beat passed as he recognized that still didn’t know how to approach this.

The bunnelby had no such reservations.

Just as he stepped closer, the feral leapt, giving Solder just enough time to yelp and slam himself to the ground. He instinctively let a burst of flame crest from his head and a pained squeal joined the whip of wind as the bunnelby sailed over him. A thump sounded in the grass behind him. He scrambled to face it, pedalling back, grass scratching across his legs.

The bunnelby recovered at the same time, a black smear across its belly proof Solder hit it. Not much to savour between his leaping heart and the roar of adrenaline in his ears.

The bunnelby’s ears stiffened and it crouched for another leap. But while Solder braced himself, a blast of water soared above him. It didn’t hit—instead cutting through the grass as the bunnelby leaped to the side. No effect beyond a spray of mud to join the clumps of dirt in the bunnelby’s fur, but it gave Solder a moment to stand.

“Don’t you know flamethrower?” That obnoxious cat cut in from the sidelines.

Solder was a little preoccupied, but he could imagine Landy relaxing, book in hand, the thinnest, ugliest smirk on his muzzle as he relaxed. Insufferable.

He channelled that. Cracked his muzzle open as the bunnelby righted itself. Felt the heat well up in the back of his throat—all the hate and frustration of the day flooding him like boiling coffee. He released.

But something stuck, twisting into painful knots inside him. What should have been a great burst of flame limped from his mouth, splashing across the grass without even making it halfway. Solder coughed. A tongue of flame fled back inside as he sucked in a great breath and, as the heat seared the back of his throat, he retched. Slammed his eyes closed and planted two paws into the ground and heaved until the reflex stopped.

Once he opened his eyes again, a facefull of ears greeted him. Then, pain—screeching, the grinding of dirt and rocks, tearing of fur and skin along his side. An awful moment passed of just staring into the mountains, mouth open like fish, gurgling and gasping. Air wouldn’t come. Even as he choked, forcing his lungs to work until he felt like they might collapse.

Larcen shouted something beside him. Then, the rush of water and the brief chill of mist.

Finally, the strain in his chest lightened. He sat up, wrangling stiff limbs like they were dangling from puppet strings.

Only to spot Larcen standing bashfully over a sopping wet mound of fur and mud. He scratched at his cheek, as if embarrassed by his own speed.

“Uh, you doin’ okay?” he asked.

He hissed, picking at the stray bits of loose fur from the scrubbed patches on his side. A sharp sting still drew brief twitches from him, but at least he could breathe again.

Solder opened his mouth.

“Ridiculous. You can’t be serious, certainly.”

Then shut it just as quickly, nearly slicing the tip of his tongue.

There goes Landy, not one to let a moment rest. Solder glared back at him. Sure enough, he hadn’t moved from his little seat, arms crossed and tails fanned out behind him, as if framing a king on his milk crate throne.

“That was an atrocious, embarrassing display. I can’t imagine your clan is proud—having my own suspicions, this only confirms them. And how you landed in Seafolk in the first place,” he said, voice not raising from a calm monotone. “A broken, useless quilava. Figures I’d be forced to employ you, what other talent could the guild even draw?”

Solder… did not know how to react to that. Maybe the lack of oxygen had only just caught up with him, but his brain sputtered and creaked, words caught in the gears. It struck him that he couldn’t deny it, he already thought he was useless. He already knew. But where did Landy get off talking about it? What had he done?

As with most times, all his thoughts funnelled down the same tubes.

“Would you shut up?” he snapped, “you dragged us into this. You’re too useless to do your own work. How many pokemon did you ask before us? Or did you really just follow us around all morning?”

“I don’t need you, if that’s what you’re implying. And obviously, you can’t offer me anything.”

“That’s convincing.”

“Don’t think I’m concerned whether or not you break our agreement and leave.”

“You already fucked it up when you opened your mouth! And all your passive-aggressive shit—concerned. As if I couldn’t figure out how concerned you were. I should torch you.”

“Torch me? With what fire?”

“Or I can just bite your throat out you—”

“Ooooooookay!” Larcen cut in, literally jumping between them with a clap of his paws. A forced grin split his features, the violent swing of his brows punctuating the bobbing of his head. “Let’s all just ah… cool it. Take a seat or uh… stand, for Landy, and then we can leave and Landy can have a little lonely parade for himself!”

“No.”

Everyone looked at Solder. Even Landy, who’d been pointedly watching the horizon, broke for a moment.

Solder hated him. Maybe that was self-evident, but in a world of firsts Landy was the first pokemon Solder would be glad to make unhappy. He had no good reason to stay with Landy. But he could see the way the meowstic drew into himself the longer Solder talked. He was nervous.

“We’re finishing the job. Why not? What’s the problem? It’s fine. The money is just that important, isn’t it, Larcen?”

“Uh… no? You doin’ okay?”

Solder forced a smile—too wide, with too many teeth. He couldn’t help the low growl building at the back of his throat.“I’m great! Are you ready to get that fucking farfetch’d?”

Larcen paused. Gave him a long, disturbed stare.

“...suuuuure? Need a break? I can take care of it if you want.”

“Why would you even ask me that?”

Larcen turned away. Something uncertain played across his face.

Did Solder intend for the bunnelby’s ragged panting to be his last words? No. Not really. But it was too late to back down. And he still didn’t know how to use the manic energy that built up inside him. That old paranoia about dungeon madness set in again. He bit his cheek. Rolled his shoulders and cracked his neck. Neither of his companions were paying attention anymore—pointedly ignoring him to focus on themselves.

Oh, well. Too late to back down.

He refused to let his face soften, watching Landy’s back until the meowstic sensed him and turned around. Landy, too, betrayed nothing.

“Get up. We’re moving on.”

Solder could tell thoughts streamed through Landy’s head, but he couldn’t decipher them through the twitching of his ears. In the end, both said nothing, Landy sliding off his bag and slinging it over his shoulder again. He took off, stepping over the bunnelby’s body like a pile of rocks.

The bunnelby twitched.

And really, what kind of garbage ran through that cat’s head anyway?

+=================+

Landy hated to be cowed by such a pointless creature.

He’d be less bitter about it if they could get him the farfetch’d, but the chances of that happening were slim. Their only capacity so far had been in the form of a mental breakdown. As if he hadn’t seen enough of those in his career. It’s true, he could stay silent. He could follow behind, despite the total lack of stimulation—watching two broken creatures traipse through an empty meadow in the shadow of mountains.

He rarely felt dulled these days. Moments like these—lost in the dungeons, practically on his own—forced him to reflect. To remember.

And he remembered everything.

Which should satisfy the time it took his companions to subdue the float of hoppip they’d run into.

He settled down again, perching on his bag, combing the fur from his eyes and passing over the quilava’s spluttering ember to trace the mountain’s outline in the distance. His feral would be out here somewhere, ready to set Landy apart from his peers.

It’s not his peers that filled his mind, however. He remembered his father, most of all. Strong images of the hypno lounging on his porch, watching over his fields as they turned golden in the sunset. Cracking one eye open to watch young Landy try to put his broken tools back together again. He never succeeded. And his father eventually grew frustrated enough to send him picking on the opposite side of the field. Landy didn’t mind.

The hoppip were all defeated, some floating off into the distance, but most nursing wounds on the ground. No thanks to the quilava, who contributed little and now stood around awkwardly with this concerned look on its face. Then, on to the next field.

Odd to think Landy respected his father. He didn’t do much to set himself apart from the other yokels out in Pleasant Valley. He took more care of the farm than himself, later life giving him thinning fur and a permanent squint. He spent days off on his rocking chair, a baffling lack of interest in any books or games—content just to… sit there. Nights he spent at the bar in town.

It was not a lifestyle Landy understood. Nor was it something he wanted any part of. But he could only look back fondly, for whatever reason.

Finally, Larcen spotted the telltale brown feathers of a farfetch’d in the distance. Landy let the two chatter, some sort of plan coming together. It wasn’t good, but Landy didn’t bother to correct them. They could fail on their own merits.

Landy observed the farfetch’d recognizing them. The unknown pokemon, the threats. It moved like a machine. Scrappy, yet workable. Hard to tell health from Landy’s distance, but these things were fixable. Mystery dungeons were surprisingly sterile places and given the outward health of the feral, he doubted it would have picked up any diseases.

So, fixable. A new creation without the scars and scratches that came with age. Like furniture. Like his father said—the way he understood the body—each feature contributed to the overall function. It’s easy enough to deconstruct the body into parts. Like a chair or table.

His father had developed hundreds of ways to deal with ferals: how to quieten them when they were too loud, trick them into believing the crop was rotten, turn against each other, he could change seasons in their mind, cut them off from their type. Disable them. Kill them, if he had to. His reach would terrify the townsfolk, even Landy’s old colleagues—those cowards. Really, their discomfort drew from insecurity. The line between them and the ferals was extremely thin—imagine learning your decisions were nothing but a collection of impulses, your body materials to facilitate an ongoing, pointless march. And some marches were more pointless than others.

At this stage the quilava and his friend had begun trying to surround the wary farfetch’d. It drew its wing around its beak, using the other to swing its giant leek in a wide arc as warning.

With only a few more moments wasted on posturing, off they went in a burst of feathers and fur, fire and water. Landy sighed and watched from the sidelines. The kickoff was not promising. Larcen gave Solder far too much leeway, allowing the quilava breadth to attack. Which, naturally, it could not follow up on—too much flailing, absolutely no understanding of the inherent weakness of the farfetch’d. It should have been obvious once Landy said it; simply remove the leek and the farfetch’d was powerless.

And then the buizel caught a stray swing trying to leap into the fray, sending it sprawling across the green in a blaze of orange fur.

At this point, Landy could only hope the farfetch’d would be so tired he could apply some psychic tamperings uncontested.

That old flaaffy sprang to mind as solder coughed up a pale smokescreen that faded quickly in the light.

Herds of flaaffy were most common back home. They wandered in and out of the valley, streaming from dungeons in the summer months when the crops were good. They were not particularly aggressive, but an utter nuisance; they blocked roads and shops and trampled through fields recklessly. They weren’t easy to stand up to either, not with the amount of static they could generate between each other.

In some great irony, one had been caught under a fallen trunk after firing a stray thunderbolt at his father. Someone made a decision and not too long after, it had been given the haybarn as its hospital. Landy had ended up as the caretaker. He visited once a day, at first. That became twice, then, after a month, he’d taken all his books into the barn and lived there.

He’d never liked the barn before that. It creaked under its own weight.. Age stripped it of its paint, skewing the panels to let thin slivers of light scatter across the ever-present carpet of dust and overspilling piles of hay. The loft had holes, which both cleared the stench of age and opened the space to the outside. It was neither free nor private and Landy had sequestered the flaaffy into the far corner. There, he set up walls with bales of hay and worked.

The flaaffy died. Not two months in, as Landy cared for it. As it limply struggled in a bed of blankets and hay, Landy’s psychic connection feeding him the electrical spasms of a fading mind. An odd moment struck when he simply couldn’t connect anymore—when he’d try to read it and his connection would feed back to him that it didn’t exist anymore. That would be his first experience with death. And through the process of infection and sickness and fever. By the end he couldn’t tell whether he’d ever wanted to care for it or if his father had forced him.

None of that mattered. Growing older had revealed to him all the ways he could have prevented that particular death. It would have died later anyways, but…

Landy saw the spark.

Something absurd and poetic, eminently hateable in how unqualifiable it was. That flaaffy, It feared. All those hours of connecting, teaching, lying in solitude with a sapient pokemon—something had rubbed off on it. And in those final moments, Landy had to decide whether his cruelty was worth it. The flaaffy would live just long enough to realise it would die.

He would try to avoid that mistake with the farfetch’d. His knowledge of medicine had grown considerably since, so he had enough faith in his own abilities.

Of course, he was not the issue.

Between the quilava’s inability to do more than annoy the farfetch’d and the buizel’s baffling hesitance, no progress was being made. Under all the feral’s ruffled brown feathers, Landy spotted the glimmer of annoyance. It looked increasingly like the feral would flee.

Like usual, Landy had to step in to fill the void of competency.

But he… could not fight.

Well, could not, perhaps, was the wrong way to phrase it. If he tried, he imagined the fight would be over quickly. However, with powers as refined as his—and maintaining so many psychic triggers at once—that was not going to happen.

Still, as the quilava coughed another sputtering flamethrower, plowed through by the blunt end of a leek and sending it skidding across the grass, Landy had a revelation.

An idea.

He allowed the slightest of smiles, lifting his ears a fraction and reaching out with a rabid spark of psychic energy. He moulded it as it travelled. By the time it reached the floundering form of the quilava, it had become something like a needle. He took no time to push it inside. The quilava wouldn’t feel a thing, especially not in the throes of pain, groaning, only just able to drag himself to all fours.

Landy prodded, subtle pulses of feedback informing him of the quilava’s functions. His whiskers twitched as he felt around the heart—in time with the beating. The wheeze of his lungs rattled through his connection. He skipped the fire gland; it must be malformed and underdeveloped and overall useless to produce such poor results. Eventually, he reached the diaphragm and spread out, leaking up the throat and vocal folds and seeping into the spinal column.

He established connection. For an unrestricted moment, the buzz of thoughts overwhelmed Landy. They were meaningless, though. Always, to be fair—mind-reading was not anywhere near refined enough to make anything coherent of the brain’s signals. Landy suspected he wouldn’t find anything coherent in the quilava’s mind, anyways.

He pared them down, shutting out each thread of information until it faded into a dull buzz.

Then he got to work. A twinge of feedback hit him as the quilava winced, shaking its head. Landy held back a moment, fearing the panic. It settled. He continued—introducing some motor function, tying psychic triggers together like threads on a spiderweb, passing them back through the throat and down the fire trap. Then…

Wait.

He expected the fire gland to be underdeveloped, just a shrivelled raisin lodged somewhere in there, but instead the opposite was true. Compared to samples he’d seen earlier in his career, it was exceptional—large and clearly exercised. Landy held himself back. Just for an instant. He let his ears flare slightly.

That was enough.

An outpouring of power flowed through his connection—too much to mould or dam. Landy held. He tried smoothing it, but it was like balancing a full bucket without spilling. The pulses of feedback got louder, more focused. An attack. Landy flinched, grip wet and slipping. Then he watched the quilava recover, head shaking faster.

There, in the corner of his vision, the farfetch’d turned away from a blast of water and faced them once more.

Landy bit his tongue. He couldn’t keep this up. Any attack at this stage would be disastrous, the feedback potentially damaging his own abilities, or at the very least—

The quilava growled. Loud enough Landy jumped. Before he could withdraw, it drew back and attempted another flamethrower.

Too late. He couldn’t back out safely. Landy simply severed the connection. To him, it felt something like blood loss. One moment, he was stable, the next a dizzy spell bowled him over. He slumped back, landing uncomfortably on his tails.

The quilava did not have as much luck. One moment it reared back, poised to attack. The next, it doubled over itself. It looked up, eyes wide as the farfetch’d descended upon him. It opened its maw, ready to shout.

And perhaps the most massive plume of fire Landy had ever seen poured from its mouth, easily dwarfing himself and the farfetch’d in a corona of heat and light—enough to send a hot draft rushing across Landy’s fur. Across the battlefield, Larcen dove out of the way just in time, hitting the ground with a panicked shout. It was overshadowed by the harsh wails piercing through the plume.

Just as quickly as it came, it vanished, nothing left but a plume of acrid smoke in the wind. A moment of silence reigned as the fire dissipated. The still form of the farfetch’d lay in a patch of burnt earth.

Finally, something he could work with.

Landy turned away. He threw open the flap on his satchel, digging through the contents until he found his first aid kit—all bundled and separate and rolled into its own bag. On shaky steps, he ambled down the hill and into the carnage.

Really, drawing closer felt like entering some microcosm of a warzone. Larcen stood by, still as a corpse, whiskers drawn back as wide eyes took it in. A black stain tarnished the grass, cutting a path across it. It stained the quilava, too, who cowered in a patch of ash. It shivered, paws tightly gripped around its muzzle, eyes clenched tight.

But Landy beelined for the twitching mass between them.

The farfetch'd had taken it the worst. Another black sear peeled ragged strands off its leek—which must have blocked the brunt of the attack, considering the duck wasn’t featherless and crisp. But the smell of burnt flesh still wafted through the air and large patches of feathers had vanished across its back, revealing angry red skin. As Landy approached it squealed and writhed, barely conscious.

Landy set down his kit, wrapping the tie around his paw and tugging to release it. The whole setup unfurled in the grass.

“Solder?” Larcen whispered over his shoulder, voice shaky. He approached. One small step at a time. He glanced between the quilava and the farfetch’d, uncertainty etched over his muzzle.

Landy ignored Larcen and set to work—plucking burnt feathers from flesh, wiping away ash and blood with a sanitised rag, gathering his rawst poultice and working quickly to cover the affected areas. Did he take his bandages with him? Yes, of course he did.

A growl cut him off as he started to work his way around the wounds. He glanced back, awkwardly gripping handfuls of untied bandage. The quilava glared at him, pure, red fury glinting in its eyes.

What a hassle. Landy wouldn’t turn his back on a creature like that, but it wasn’t worth his time to address. He simply twisted around to the other side of the farfetch’d and worked from there, refusing to break eye contact.

The quilava didn’t seem like a particularly intelligent creature, but it had to know that Landy had done something to it. Nevertheless, it wouldn’t be getting anything from Landy, so what was the point?

Unfortunately, the buizel picked up on the eye contact as well.

“You— I— what did you do?” He asked, still caught. Eventually, he decided to go to the quilava, approaching it like a cornered animal.

Landy didn’t bother to answer, instead taking a handful of sleep seeds, dropping them into his mortar, and mashing it into a paste with a little water. It took no time at all to spoon the paste through the ducks’ chattering beak. Even before he could force it to swallow, the chattering lessened and it slumped over into the grass. It gave Landy an opportunity to relax, testing his work, washing the blood and feathers off his paws. He’d have to sanitise later, but for now he could focus on getting the feral back to the guild.

As he turned back to his companions, an unintended consequence revealed itself. He had an escape orb with him, but that still required a degree of cooperation.

And his companions were nothing if not obstinate.

“You uh… okay, Solder?”

The quilava had recovered enough to stand. He hadn’t broken eye contact with Landy, his whole body heaving. Slowly, very slowly, he peeled his paws off his muzzle. Opened his mouth, perhaps to say something.

Instead, the briefest flicker of fire lashed out. Eyes wide, the quilava snapped its maw shut with an audible clack.

Then it was back to clutching its muzzle and staring at Landy like the meowstic might evaporate with enough effort.

“Well, it’s good that nothing was lost, at least,” Landy said, tidying up his kit and searching his bag for the escape orb. “Now, everyone gather close so the orb catches you. If you aren’t included I won’t be returning to rescue you.”

Landy expected his companions to snap back into their childish antagonism once the commotion had settled, but instead something odd had settled over them. The two other pokemon regarded him with something layered—an odd mix of stern brows and dilated pupils. Empathy (psychic or otherwise) had never been Landy’s focus, so he had little clue what to make of their reaction. He was equally uncertain how to navigate it.

“We’re leaving.” He repeated. Did something desperate slip into his tone? He tried to keep it at bay, but the scrutiny made him itch.

“What did you do to him?” Larcen pressed.

“Why assume I had any involvement? A defective pokemon—”

“Nah. Shut up, I know where that’s going. It’s all blah, blah, blah, not my fault! You clown, answer the fuckin’ question.”

Despite the implied threat, they would not move. The farfetch’d withered between them. The grass grew and Landy’s heart pulsed lowly where his paw kneaded his chest.

He did not have an answer to the question. He had many theories, but suspected his companion’s flattened ears wouldn’t perk up at the sound of them. Bitterly, he knew his father could talk his way out of this, but for the first time in a while, Landy was lost for words.

Not one to fidget, he furrowed his brows and dug his paws further into the dirt. He palmed the escape orb, holding it between them with a meaningful look on his face.

The quilava tried to chime in again. It went about as expected, leaving it coughing in Larcen’s arms. The buizel held it like Landy held his flaaffy as it died.

“Fix him!”

“Considering you’ve held up your end of the bargain, I’ll pay once we’ve left.”

“Oh, who cares about the money anymore? Answer the question!”

“And I’ll reiterate—if you aren’t in contact, you’ll be left in the dungeon.”

“Bet you can’t, can you? Just screwin’ around with other pokemon’s bodies like it’s no big deal, and you can't even fix it!” Larcen threw his paw wide, pointing down at the farfetch’d. “And look what happened. Probably won’t even survive.”

“Of course I can fix it. It was already broken so—”

“It?!”

Landy jolted as Larcen stepped forward, stumbling back a step and nearly dropping the orb.

“And the feral will be fine. It will survive. I— it has to.” Landy clamped his mouth shut with a sharp mewl. He hadn’t meant for that to slip out.

He hadn’t necessarily meant for things to turn out this way, either. All he wanted now was to use the orb. Escape. Escape. Sit and tend to the feral in the basement cells, shut himself off from the world for a month and not bother with all these emotional shipwrecks sinking around him.

“It’s easy to diagnose you, Larcen. Your condition is obvious but you can’t fully accept how it impacts you and the pokemon around you and will never be capable of recovery because of that fact. Everyone knows, too. You act like we don’t notice when things disappear, but we pay attention.”

Larcen shook his head, jaw briefly slack. He nearly dropped the quilava in shock, but recovered enough to stare at Landy like the meowstic had folded himself in half.

“Wha… what’s that got to do… with anything?” He paused, waiting for a response that Landy didn’t have.” Are you insane? Is every fuckin’ pokemon gonna have a breakdown in this dungeon? Am I dreaming? Tell me!

Briefly, a vision of the flaaffy flashed in Landy’s mind. Greasy, blood-stained wool; dark, pupil-filled eyes; the lost and dying.

He stood, baffled, attention turned to his tight-lipped reflection in the blue of the orb. The curve of it made him seem so distorted, bug eyed and alien. It became an impasse, freezing him in place for a few seconds.

Then minutes.

“Fine.” Larcen sighed. “We’ll bounce. Really fucked this one up, huh Landy? Your fault, y’know. Don’t know what to tell you.”

Landy glanced at the quilava.

Ah, a failure to assign responsibility correctly. Really, it… well, it should have… he knew—

He huffed minutely. Oh, he gave up. The smell of burnt flesh and dirt soaked him in nausea. He was tired and uncertain and felt completely alien. Still, Larcen waited for an answer.

Landy could only respond by holding a paw out for him to connect with.

“Not touching you.”

Larcen ignored the paw and grabbed the quilava—whose gaze held disturbingly long—dragging him by the armpits to plop him down by the farfetch’d. Gingerly, he held a paw next to the feral’s beak. Solder followed suit. Landy did, too.

With one last glance at his reflection, Landy tilted his ears and let a surge of strength flow out, crushing the orb into gravel. The familiar wrench of its power followed, like an invisible hand wrapping around his neck and yanking him through the earth.

In the blue miasma that followed, he swore he could hear bleating.

+-------------------------------------------+

Brute was… actually making progress.

It was almost incredible. The paperwork had turned from a punishing mountain to a light coat of snow covering haxorus’ desk. With a new lightness in his chest, he could finally look at the photos of him and haxorus displayed on the wall without the usual pang of shame and disbelief and questions of how he even got here and why he deserved it and...

And there went the block again. Brute blinked, taking a rag and wiping the sheen off his goggles. He might even have to thank Landy. He’d been getting more headaches than usual, plus an odd edge he’d been feeling since the psychic triggers were put in place, but for the most part they worked great.

The thank-you would be metaphorical, of course. And from very far away.

For once he had the opportunity to stretch his neck, push his chair away from the desk and spend a little time admiring the view out the window. It was always a wonder to watch the tiny, toy boats float in and out of Seafolk no glittering waves. He’d even had time to make himself a lovely cup of tea. He took a quiet sip, letting it warm his chest and fill his mouth with the dry taste of pine.

Then something harsh pounded against his door.

He blinked, unconsciously drawing in on himself. He set his cup on the desk. The knocking sounded again, louder this time.

Should he open it? He was having such a good day; maybe he could just ignore it and they’d go away and, wait, nevermind, he forgot to lock it.

The door swung open before he could even decide, slamming against the wall and sending haxorus’ trinkets rattling on their shelves. Solder stood in the open doorway, huffing, hunched like he’d welcome a threat to attack, this feral edge ringing his eyes.

“Oh… S-solder. How can I help you?” Brute asked, trying to keep the disappointment from leaking into his voice.

Solder shuffled into the office and shoved the door shut behind him, but for an uncomfortably long while he said nothing, face screwed up in concentration. Brute looked around the room because, surely, he hadn’t done anything that wrong, right?

With a dull growl, Solder opened his mouth, flexing his jaw up and down. It took him a baffling amount of concentration, but the words finally seemed to come to him.

“Fire that fucking—” He started. A brief spark flashed in the back of his throat and he threw his paws around his muzzle, but Brute waited patiently for him to finish. “Landy. Fire him.”

Oh. Brute blinked. The quilava seemed to coil up at the name.

He’d never had a complaint like this. He scratched at his scales. He needed to go back into business mode, but that, well— what could he say? He had no right to fire haxorus’ employees. And they really, really needed warm bodies to fill the guild.

Unfortunately, no didn’t seem like a word Solder could hear right now.

“Um… okay. You can— well, you can fill out a complaint? And I’ll get it to haxorus when he gets back, but aside from that, well…” He gave a jerky shrug, mouth caught between a smile and grimace. “You’re only here for a little bit, right? Do you think you could just… be okay with it for a bit longer?”

Solder’s glare deepened. Fire sparked across his back. But once again he took forever to speak. From what Brute knew, the quilava rarely hesitated to make himself known so this new, feral version set him on edge. Brute cleared his throat, swallowing dryly and tracing his claws on the still-warm handle of his mug.

“I’ll kill him.”

Brute flinched as the words forced themselves out Solder’s throat. Is this what going feral looked like? He’d heard of it, but dungeons didn’t usually affect pokemon so quickly.

“Do I— do I need to get you help? What happened?”

Solder seemed eager to explain. Or, his inner fire did, spilling out of his mouth with gusto and across the front of haxorus’ desk. Brute yelped, leaning over to inspect the damage. He slumped, the desk’s hard lip digging into his ribcage. The swirling, floral engravings that decorated the front were maybe a little darker, but he couldn’t spot any damage.

“Could you back up a tad?” he asked. Then he remembered who he was talking to.”I mean… I can’t afford, you know…”

“Landy fucked with me.” Solder growled.

“I don’t know how I can help you with that.”

Solder shook his head, slapping his paws against his cheeks. Then again. And again…

“O-okay, maybe I can—”

Your job! Do your job! Oh, Landy’s a psychopath? If only someone had the power to do something about that! Damn. finally, I can say more than—” Solder coughed, faint streams of smoke shooting out his nostrils. He held, tears beading in his eyes “... fuck.”

His job. His job. Solder must be uninformed, because being guildmaster’s assistant didn’t let him have free reign over the staff. Sure he was filling in, designating responsibilities, doing things haxorus might do, but really he wasn’t much more than a shade waiting for the owner to return.

“I mean, mostly I just do the paperwork…”

“You’re the guildmaster.”

“No, I’m just— I mean, hiring the contractors and going over the rules and budgeting all need doing. So I do them. I’m not— I mean, there’s not much I can do.”

Solder paused. He seemed… calmer. Well, maybe not. Maybe something closer to the eye of the storm, eyes tracing a swirl of thoughts around him, too distracted to really focus his anger on something. Yet.

Brute really should find a way to shoo him away.

“Then hire an accountant,” Solder ground out.

“We don’t have the money.”

“Then cut. Fire Landy and use his.”

No. No no no. Brute grunted as he felt a dull headache knock at the back of his skull. He traced the furrows of his brow with a claw, noticing how much deeper they were now than when he first evolved. He couldn’t. He really couldn't, the guildmaster would come back and look around with that awful, sad frown he always wore when something was off and he’d ask—

The feeling of Landy’s psychic trigger flicking on in his mind was familiar enough he sensed himself levelling out before it happened. He straightened himself. Tipped back his mug of tea and finished the whole thing. Lukewarm and disappointing, all the bitterness condensing in the bottom and making his mouth feel like cotton. He smacked his lips.

“No,” he said, a note of finality forced into it.

For his part, Solder did not have the meltdown Brute expected. Actually, he seemed unfazed.

“What if I just said no? What if anyone did, next time you want something? You can’t even fire Landy.”

Brute’s newfound confidence slipped, mask falling off his face. He had no answer. Nothing he could give except hope that they wouldn’t. All he knew was that he couldn't sack anyone and if the paychecks stopped coming, well…

He’d had thoughts about it before, staring at dark spots on the ceiling as he tried to sleep on his foldable cot. He looked at them like stars, clawing at invisible designs on his old blanket—the one he’d taken from home. He couldn’t lie to himself and say anybody was particularly productive. Not when he’d seen guilds inland, where teams often took multiple jobs a day, then got back just in time to clean the mess hall. On a good day, Seafolk’s bulletin would be missing three or four notices and he’d hear Bastaya insult them on the radio for an hour in the morning. Then, nothing. Until the sun went down and he’d look over the dozen or so pokemon sleeping in the lobby like he would at a homeless shelter.

Haxorus always had big dreams for the guild and the pokemon in it. He believed in them, even if they didn’t return the favour all that enthusiastically. He faced them with a raised chin and a warm tone.

Brute just needed to keep everyone around for when haxorus came back. One loss would be disastrous. Even economically—he couldn’t skip a paycheck, couldn’t acquiesce.

So what would he do if someone wanted to leave?

Beg.

But that didn’t seem like an answer Solder wanted to hear.

Instead, he said nothing.

One silence fought another in the stale air of the office. Taking it as a sign, Brute waved a claw to open the window and propped a stick against its frame so it wouldn’t close again.

A cold wind blew through.

“Whatever,” Solder huffed and gave Brute a dismissive wave. He headed back for the door, looking back as he opened it. “I’m only still here for Larcen.”

“Seems he likes you.”

Solder didn’t acknowledge that. He kneaded a paw on the doorknob. Something softened him, shoulders drooping, eyes widening.

“Haxorus went off to renew his guild… thing, right?”

“Um… guilmaster certification, yes.”

“Maybe you could have done that and he stayed here, if he's so important. Just a thought.”

Solder shrugged, glare settling back onto his face.

Brute blinked.

“Wait, c-could he have done that?” he asked.

The door slammed closed before he could get an answer.

Only then did he realise that Solder wouldn’t know that answer, either.
 

Flyg0n

Flygon connoisseur
Pronouns
She/her
Partners
  1. flygon
  2. swampert
  3. ho-oh
  4. crobat
  5. orbeetle
  6. joltik
  7. salandit
  8. tyrantrum
Here for catnip!! Read chapter 1.

I have to say, this was a rather unusual start. I've read my share (or at least started on) a good few PMD stories. I'm always a sucker for classics of the waking up somewhere, or talking to some ethereal voice, or a quiz, and meeting a plucky partnet who maybe dreams of joining a guild and such. But it was also really cool to kind of skip and dance around that to open in a very different way.

We get to open instead with Solder what is a little while after his first awakening instead. It was a bit confusing initially, but by the end of the chapter I think it served the story well. We get to skip some of the typical bits of first adjusting and instead catchup with him as he's still slowly coming to terms with his strange world.

I think the writing and the and style of prose works really well here to build a sense of character and atmosphere of the area, as its feels very quirky and alive, and has that sort of oddball pokemon charm thats so fun.

I also enjoy Solder. He's very much different from the sort of spunky shonen-esque energy I sometimes see. He's kind of snarky, kind of tired, and kind of dry, but a bit of temper. Wonder if typing does really affect disposition a little in this world perhaps. Also found him pretty fun to see his attitude and confusion clash with the other characters.

“I guess you didn’t hear me, I wanted to go to this guild, not Treebow. In fact, I never even mentioned Treebow. Maybe I should’ve screamed,” Solder said, a soft venom to his voice. “But, okay. Yeah, yeah, trees, flowers, whatever—can you give me directions or not?”
I love this bit, I feel like this interaction was my first glimpse at Solder's character up until this point. Also relatable lol, jsut give me directions bro!!! lol

There, across the street, some sort of yellow rat with a big wedge of teeth jutting from her muzzle sat on the dusty ground, clutching a brown bag against their side. Jewelled pins lined her shoulder-strap. They scrambled to their feet, scolding the orange, two-tailed weasel who must’ve knocked them over.
This part did confuse me with pronouns? At first the rat (Raticate) is referred to as 'her' and then immediately in the same sentence 'their'? I would assume that if Solder doesn't know Raticate he would use 'their' (unless I suppose he subconsciously did know, and used her?) but then in the following sentence it says 'her' again. And then they, so I'm not sure if this is an error or perhaps Solder just doesn't know what to call the Raticate?

“Hey, you… stop,” he said, good criminal-stopping words lost on him. He couldn’t muster up the enthusiasm for it either, so his voice came weakly, like he was reciting a speech. “Drop the pins, weasel.”
Clearly Solder is a smooth talker :mewlulz:

“You—”

“That’s right! Welcome to Seafolk guild, home of me! And other pokemon, too, but I’m obviously the most important.”
OOOHHHHHH lol. I also just realized this, so this was a fun 'twist'. it kind of makes way more sense in hindsight, if Buizel was a regular thief I was wondering why he's showing Solder to the Guild.

“That’s… not possible.”

“Yes… it… is?”
Eheheheh I love the confusion here, I feel like I could hear this dialogue exchange in my head. Poor Solder is so confused.

“You couldn’t have just told me?”

“It was funny.”

Solder decided it was best to just breathe. Sit there, take in some clean air and calm the nausea and frustration and quaint little urge to do violence to a weasel.
:mewlulz: I love snarky little quipbacks like this, the dialoue in this story is really good. It feels quite casual and personable.

Solder did his best not to let his persistent headache lay him out. Or his jaw hit the floor. It was fine. Everything was fine. Lions can see through walls! Weasels can spit elements! Telekinesis exists! He was certain these things weren’t supposed to happen, but he couldn’t fashion a single reason why not. And now the fresh mountain air started to taste a bit sour.
Oak voice: Welcome to the wonderful world of pokemon! Another funny bit I really liked. Something that I always enjoy in an isekai is seeing how the protagonists perceptions of reality clash with the established world. Even without his memories poor Solder is so confused by all this but its quite enjoyable to read.

Honestly I really dig this as a start to PMD story and I'm really curious to know what the story here is going to be! I quite like Solder and Larcen and their developing dynamic, and the world has a lot of personality and the hints of how there's all the other guilds and the Seafolk one is apparently disgraced gets me wanting to know more. Hopefully I can circle back around to this.
 
Chapter Nine: Rainstorm

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter Nine
Rainstorm


Routine was good in Larcen’s book. Kinda boring, but hey, not everything had to be a battle—though that would make life more exciting. The mornings where he could follow a script and not think about it at all were, unfortunately, the best ones. The ones he functioned best.

It rained the day after team weasels’ excursion with Landy. The meowstic had holed himself in the basement, with the cells and his feral. He’d thrown all the junk from down there back up into the lobby, but Larcen didn’t feel much like complaining. Sometimes he wanted to check on the feral, but then the smell of cooking flesh—appetising for the moment before he remembered the origin—would creep through invisible cracks in the floor and he’d back off. Solder hadn’t been in a great place since coming back, either. He struggled to speak normally. And had a weird fixation on the basement door, watching it from across the room, from his bed as he fell asleep, paws still clutched around his muzzle. Today, he sat in the shade of the guild’s entrance, watching rain splatter mud against stone.

Larcen let him. He ached for the quilava, but had no clue what to do or where to go. Nothing to give him but pats on the back and empty words. So like always when he had too many thoughts, he went through his morning routine and let it sit.

Easy enough to make his bed. Especially when that bed is a couch. Easier still to comb his fur so long as he didn’t ever look in the mirror and disappoint himself. Then he got himself breakfast, practically force feeding Solder as the quilava sat in his little funk. He started taking stock of his bag just as the radio perched in the larder’s little stone window hissed and spat out Bastaya’s airy voice.

“~gooood morning, Seafolk! As you might have noticed, rainy season has come to kick us in the ass once again, and boy is she starting out with a flood! And it’s not just literal, baby! With time draining away until the big guilds come, Seafolk’s not showing much initiative. Shame, shame—”

Larcen sighed, tuning out the radio as Bastaya droned on about guild drama. He’d never understand what the whimsicott got out of being so negative about them. Best to just ignore it.

Everything was in order, at least. Leaving him to just… sit. He hummed a little tune, drumming his paws on his lap as he lounged. His tails twirled off the edge, kicking up a stack of papers haphazardly perched on a fishing crate and sending them floating to the floor. He watched with a small smile—those things had a life of their own sometimes.

A crack of thunder sounded from outside, echoing through the hall.

That smile dropped. He wouldn’t be getting anything done today, would he?

Normally he’d welcome the excuse, but the approaching guilds left him anxious. Just sitting inside, lazing around, felt wrong.

And then there was Solder. Larcen watched him from the safety of his couch's backrest. He hadn't moved for almost an hour, just… watching the rain. Still as the fishermen perched on the docks. Those nutjobs would probably be out in the storm, too.

Larcen wasn’t sure what to do with him. Best he could do was talk to him. But whatever Larcen had didn’t seem to be enough. Just like with his father.

He felt something sick crawl into his throat.

No, he wouldn’t think about that. Not like he was stupid, he— he knew there was maybe a little more to why he stuck by Solder so fiercely. Some drunk, rambling, floatzel-shaped hole in his life. But admitting that would be confirming that yes, he was broken and clingy, just like dad always whispered in his mother’s ear when he thought Larcen wasn’t listening. It wasn’t true. He didn’t believe it, so it couldn’t be.

He just liked Solder for his happy disposition.

He snorted to himself. Then sighed when he remembered he hadn’t said it out loud and noone was there to laugh.

Really, he liked the quilava. He was outspoken and approachable and, yeah, a little stubborn. A little grumpy. But that just meant he had spine. Sometimes Larcen would be left alone in a room with Haxorus or his siblings—as much as he loved them—and just slip into yawning boredom from how safe and agreeable every conversation became.

Still, despite Solder’s uh… honesty—patience not lasting beyond a quip—that quilava had no clue how to express himself. Larcen was used to his father’s outbursts, pokemon like his mother who tried to look strong by turning him in circles with their elaborate word games. Solder was the only pokemon he knew that genuinely seemed to have no idea what he was feeling or how to express that.

Mostly, he seemed sad. But he needed to look strong so he got angry.

At least that was Larcen’s take on it as he watched the quilava look back at him, the sharp glare cut into his features softening a bit before he turned back to the rain.

Maybe that was the amnesia’s fault.

Sometimes Larcen wished he could forget.

The thought came unprompted. His tails stilled below him.

Yes, Larcen liked his morning routine. The worst part of every day wasn’t so much waking up, but the transition. That moment where he still curled up, cocooned into his little nook on the couch, mind empty and waiting for him to break out.

Every morning he felt sick and tired and new. Remembering everything again—how his life got to this point—felt like reliving it. And every time he traced his steps back, he felt giddy thinking something might change. But they were just memories. He became the same pokemon every morning.

Forgetting was an old thought, though. And if it left him like Solder, then ehh… maybe not.

Actually, what was he doing now?

Solder just walked outside into the rain.

At first Larcen watched on because, well, that’s insane. It must be some other idiot quilava skipping merrily into the worst deluge this year.

But there were no other quilava. Larcen sat up, gaping at the empty doorway. A sharp stab of light flashed from outside, harsh lightning reflecting through the wet spots on the tunnel.

He— he what?!

Larcen scrambled. First, through a pile of scrap fabrics for something, anything to cover Solder —settling on some old throw rug, red threads knotted and thin. Then, to the doorway, rug dragged behind him, shouting in alarm even knowing the sound of rain would drown him out.

A wall of water met him at the entrance, the thundering sound of it spraying against the rocky cliffs enough to drown out Larcen’s thoughts. Wind whipped the rain back and forth, sending occasional sprays stinging into his eyes. He only got feeble protection trying to hold the rug between him and the weather.

With a tired grumble he stepped out. The instant he did, he was drenched. Cold and so soaking wet it was hard to believe he would ever dry off. As he staggered out, his fur whipped in the wind and every call for Solder was an invitation for water to fill his mouth.

Luckily, he didn’t have to search very far. He spotted a brief flash of sputtering flames, Solder’s telltale teal fur splashed against the greying wooden gatehouse.

He’d collapsed in the sopping grass, wearing a healthy coat of mud and grass already despite only being out a couple minutes. He pressed himself against the wall, under the slight awning from the roof. Hoping it would block some rain, maybe, but the flood created a stream that ran right under him, so…

First things first, Larcen tossed his rug over the shivering quilava. He yelped, but clutched onto it tightly the moment his paws brushed against it.

Larcen crouched beside him, looking into his eyes. They were wild, reflecting flashes of lightning from the storm.

What’s wrong with you?!” Larcen shouted over the rain. “Go inside, you idiot!

Solder shook his head, glare unrelenting, hiding deeper under the rug. It didn’t do much. In hindsight, maybe Larcen should’ve picked up something that didn’t soak up all the water.

Larcen tried. He really did. He sat with Solder, going over every rational thought he had—and several dozen irrational ones. He tried dragging Solder back by the leg, but that earned him a swift kick in the chin.

He could only watch with a pitying frown. Watch as the shivering grew more violent, delirium taking Solder’s faint attempts at speech. He wouldn’t die, according to what he heard from Landy after the drowning incident, but this couldn’t be healthy. Not to mention whatever mental breakdown led to this.

So, great. Another episode. At least Larcen wasn’t being belittled this time. He shook his head, the streams of water pouring around his eyes and muzzle flinging everywhere.

No. Solder was not his father. He just… needed to find a long rope. A sled—something to drag the big baby inside so he didn’t get sick.

But just as he turned and passed the gatehouse door, it flung open beside him. He couldn’t react before an invisible force latched onto his arm, yelping as it dragged him inside and threw him to the floor. Lying there, groaning in a slowly growing puddle, a flowing white something filled his vision and he briefly wondered when Veille got silk curtains. Wiping the rain from his eyes revealed it to just be Auloin. She stared down at him with a stern frown.

“I can’t understand what would compel you to be out in this weather, Larcen.” She placed her hands on her hips, looming over him like a disappointed mother. “Honestly, you’d be shocked by how many pokemon are struck by lightning each year. Not to mention the other risks. You can stay here until it blows over.”

Without the constant sound of rain pounding at his skull, Larcen had to take a moment to focus.

“It’s Solder, he’s— I dunno, something’s gone weird with him. He’s collapsed just outside and won’t come in.”

Auloin raised a brow, looking to the door.

“I should fetch him, then.” Her psychic flared once again, a faint glow caressing the door, cracking it open wider.

Larcen flinched as he saw it.

“Could you… ah, not grab him with psychic? Probably won’t react well to it.”

“I see. Was it Landy?”

“Got it in one.”

“Alright. Just give me a moment.”

She slid through the doorway, consumed by the rain. Larcen watched the empty space, taking the pause to comb the water through his fur. He swore he heard a commotion—some sort of scuffle under the rain—but in record time Auloin reappeared inside, door closing by itself.

It took a moment for Larcen to realise the lump struggling under one of her arms was Solder. He couldn’t help snickering, the quilava held like a soaked pillow.

Solder grumbled dully as Auloin deposited him at the end of the room, in front of the fire. Must have been hot, because the moment Solder’s belly hit the stone nook housing the furnace, he sizzled, steam wafting around him. It… didn’t sound comfortable, but the way he cuddled into the hot stones refuted that. So even if Larcen grimaced and the phantom smell of cooked flesh once again forced itself into his nose, he’d let the quilava lie.

Larcen crept up to the fire, taking tentative steps until the heat started to make his eyes water. He sat himself there, right in the middle of the floor. He would’ve taken the bed—even soaking wet—but he’d just noticed Veille splayed across it.

It’s the first time he’d ever seen her sleeping in a bed, actually. Weird.

Auloin dragged a chair up beside him, perching on it as if to keep watch over Veille. She had no papers, no clipboard. She seemed content to sit in the fire’s aura and let the muffled beating of the rain speak for her. Larcen took her example. Anxiously, maybe, with his trying to comb the knots out of his tail, picking individual flecks of mud out of his fur as they dried.

He watched the fire, too. The furnace looked like a weird imp in the corner, a big grate-toothed frown on its face and four chunky black legs keeping it up. The fire within it roared in anger, but it couldn’t do much with a big chimney staking it through the roof and into the floor. Larcen leaned back on his paws and stuck his tongue out at it. For no particular reason.

“Landy said anything to you yet?” he asked as he waited for the furnace’s imaginary response.

“No. He doesn’t make much of effort to talk to me. Or anyone, I suppose. Is there something I should know?”

Larcen silently weighed whether he should tell her about her new teammate. Looking around the room made him realize it would probably ruin the mood.

“Nah. Nevermind. Supposed to be his job to tell you.”

They returned to silence. For Larcen, the itch to do something came back. By the time he was dry, it seemed like he’d organized each individual strand of fur into perfect lines on his tails and a little pile of dirt had been swept between his legs. He glared jealously at Solder, who seemed supremely comfortable on his hotbed, eyes closed and mumbling gibberish to himself.

“Would you like to talk?” Auloin said after a while. She eyed his little pile, then eyed him. “You seem anxious.”

“Nah.” He waved her off. “I’m just sittin’ here and sittin’ here, plus I got a lot of sittin’ here to do.” He gave her a smile, drawing a little circle in his mound of dirt.

She didn’t take the bait. She just… stared.

Truly, he had no way to combat that.

“Okay, fine. We’ll do therapy.”

“I don’t intend to become your therapist, I’m hardly qualified. Truthfully, I’m bored as well. Normally, I’d meditate but Veille is the only one I’m comfortable enough with to do so alone.”

“Eh, sorry for stopping you.”

“I’d still rather be working. You certainly aren’t responsible for the rain.”

And as if it heard her, a crack of thunder answered from outside.

Auloin shrugged. These things can’t be helped, it said. Larcen bit his cheek, watching Solder roll over onto his back and stare at the ceiling.

“I dunno where to start. Never like talking about myself that much.”

“How about Landy? You said he’d done something to Solder?”

Oh, That was something he could complain about all day. And complain he did, taking no time to launch into a story.

Auloin had this calming aura about her. She didn’t even have to do anything, just sit on her chair, listening. Come through every once in a while with a simple question, a nod, a frown. That’s all, but it got Larcen talking about things he maybe shouldn’t. Maybe that was a gardevoir thing; their whole deal had something to do with empathy, he thought.

He started by tiptoeing around the previous dungeon trip, expanding until he started recounting his entire day with Solder, Landy’s whole mess, every possible thing that went wrong from the very start of the day. He hardly realised he’d started flailing his arms around, all his energy caught up to him. Then he got to Solder.

“--and he says no! Gets every chance to bounce out of the fuckin’ dungeon—even Landy doesn’t want him anymore—and he says no! I just— he’s so stubborn at the worst possible times. Barely even know what he wants to do half the time and the worst thing is I don’t think he does, either.” Larcen slumped, out of breath after talking for what must have been an hour. He coughed, throat dry.

“Sounds a bit like your father, yes?”

“Yes!” Larcen threw up his paws. Finally, someone else got it.

Wait. He froze, casting a furtive glance at Solder. His ears flicked, but he didn’t seem to be paying attention. Good.

“That’s messed up! I can’t say stuff like that!” He hissed.

“Why not? You were clearly thinking about it, what’s the harm of speaking it out loud?”

“I already told him about my dad; don’t want him thinking he’s some kinda drunk slob.”

“Do you think Solder would take poorly to alcohol?”

“Yeah, I—” Larcen caught himself, glaring at Auloin who hadn’t lost that serene smile illuminated by the warm light of the furnace. “Why’re we talking about this? Rather go sit in the rain again.”

“Why shouldn’t we? Is this not comfortable for you? I find confronting these things often makes me feel much clearer. I make an effort to express what frustrates me to Veille.”

Larcen couldn’t even be sure what she was talking about. He looked to Solder, hoping he’d recover already so they could talk about something else.

“Would you mind if I said something cruel?” Auloin asked.

Larcen didn't know how to respond to that. He didn’t know what she wanted, with that pleasant but enigmatic expression peeking beneath her bangs. The longer he waited to answer, biting his cheek and crossing his arms, the more curious he got.

“Go for it. Why stop now, y’know?”

She paused, tilting her head back as if uncertain. Whatever wall she faced relented. She turned to watch Solder.

“You remind me of your father, too, sometimes.”

Oh. She said she’d be cruel; she didn’t say she’d crush him.

Hearing that made him feel sick: greasy and frail and collapsing on some doorstep at midnight. He drew his knees up into his chest and braced his chin against them, waiting for the feeling to pass.

She continued.

“My mother wasn’t particularly warm, either. Once I left, I thought I’d surround myself with friends and cast her off me, but instead I found myself drawn to solitude, her cruelty blooming, too, within me. It’s odd. To grow up and look in the mirror and realise the influence our parents have had.”

Larcen extracted an arm to point at her.

“It’s not like that; I won’t let it be like that! I’m not kicking anyone away for bothering to talk to me! I’m not showing up days after I’m supposed to, raving! Who do you think I am?”

Really, it’s not like he’d ever tried not to emulate his father, besides the drinking. He’d just ended up hating a lot of the things surrounding him—the flakiness and anger. There wasn’t anything worse than learning someone else saw that in him.

“It’s not about that,” Auloin replied, no interest in defending herself. “It always struck me he didn’t welcome affection beyond his own terms.”

“Affection? That’s all I’ve got to give. That’s all I’ve ever wanted. Think I’m scared of givin’ a hug?”

“Well, I think you haven’t seen your mother in a while even though she remains in the city. And your old friends—I still see them coming and going sometimes.”

Larcen withered, biting his cheek. He debated whether to ask if she’d ever talked to them, but decided against it.

“And what becomes of Solder once you get bored of him?”

“That’s not gonna happen, Solder’s—”

“I’m leaving,” Solder mumbled from his place by the fire.

Larcen froze, at first thinking the quilava had been listening but his eyes wandered, unfocused, blinking slowly. He stretched, humming something and closing his eyes again. It looked like he’d fallen asleep, but he came back a second later.

“He okay?” Larcen asked, putting his discomfort aside for the moment.

Auloin hummed something, getting up from her chair and crouching by him. She waved a hand in front of him, lifted his eyelids with barely a response. She felt his forehead with the back of her hand.

“Fever, it seems. His body temperature dropped enough it’s trying to overcorrect. He’s delirious, but should be fine; for the moment, let me get him something to drink..”

She stood again, wandering off.

“You’re blurry,” Solder mumbled. He looked like a discarded puppet, with his head awkwardly twisted to face Larcen. “Who are you? You look like Larcen.”

“There’s a… good reason for that,” Larcen responded.

Solder paused. Gave one slow blink.

“You’re his brother?”

Larcen snorted. He looked nothing like his brother.

“Sure, kid.”

“He calls me that sometimes,” Solder snickered. “Don’t tell him I’m leaving, okay?”

“Where to?”

“My brother’s going to pick me up. Then… I don’t know. I can’t remember.”

Larcen rolled his eyes, scooting closer so Solder didn’t have to crane his neck so much. He did anyways, still staring off in an ashy corner of the roof, somewhere between wooden rafters.

“Bet Larcen already knows.”

“He doesn’t know know. I already made him cry, I don’t want to do it again.”

Solder smiled. It seemed so odd on his face—as much as Larcen wanted him to smile more, this seemed lazy, drawn on as some rictus grin. The buizel frowned in response, lifting his chin off his knees. He felt the sudden urge to stand up, to tower above Solder and force some sort of recognition. He doubted that would work.

Mostly, Larcen didn’t want to hear these unfiltered thoughts. He itched as they escaped, looking to the door even as the rain pounded harder.

Did Solder make him cry? When did that happen? He hadn’t cried in months.

“Uuuuh… no. You cried a couple days ago, though.”

Soder’s eyes widened in genuine, childlike shock.

“No. No, I never cry. But Larcen’s like…” He stretched out for something from his stone island, to an invisible pile out on the wood planks. “He’s like a baby bird.”

Larcen waited. It seemed like the sentence would continue, but Solder curled back into himself and mumbled something under his breath.

Really? Is that what Solder thought of him? He couldn’t pretend to be impressed, sharing a flat look with Auloin across the room. She shrugged, spooning some powder into a mug and swirling it around. He sighed.

“Sure, kid. Why’d you go out in the rain? Can you tell me that?”

“It was so hot and I didn’t know how to cool down. I was going to hurt someone. I was going to hurt myself.”

“Well uh… don’t… do that.”

“I deserve it.”

An odd tunnel vision crept up on Larcen; he barely felt present anymore. Like midnight had passed above him waiting at the kitchen table, rolling berries across his plate with his nose and eyeing the storm outside, waiting…

Always waiting.

Another crack of thunder snapped him out of it and he found himself shaking, staring at the veil of grey out the door’s window.

He should leave.

“N-nope,”he said, voice cracking,

“I’m sorry,” Solder responded.

Any moment now, that door would open.

“Don’t— I don’t… Would you shut up already?”

“I’m—”

Solder was about to continue, staring up at Larcen like a child, but Auloin came to the rescue, sticking her mug under his nose. He crossed his eyes to see it. Then instinct took over. He drank without prompting and, without any time to catch himself, blinked slowly, tilting until he slumped to the stone, asleep.

“Just a little sleep seed to help him rest.” She smiled. It might’ve just been an attempt to save the mood.

Whatever. It only kind of worked.

“I told him to go to the guild. I liked him before—I wanted to spend time with him before I knew he was leaving,” Larcen stuttered out. It was meant to be a save, show how much he cared—that he could make friends and keep them. It was true. It was all true. But if he expected Auloin’s face to light up in acceptance, he didn’t get that.

“I believe wanting a connection and allowing oneself to be abandoned are not mutually exclusive feelings.”

“Guess I just kidnap him. Force him to stay. Then we’ll be all buddy-buddy, skipping through the meadows. Oh, look at us go, the dream team!” Larcen snorted, trying for a shaky smile or whatever was left he could salvage out of this conversation.

She shrugged.

He couldn’t stand this anymore. He’d be fine outside—rain was his element, the storm his friend. He knew what Auloin would think, but that feeling like she’d stuck a finger in his brain and swirled it around drained him. He needed a good swim, to feel the current of a river take him along and deposit him into the sea. He wanted to look up through the fragments of waves and make out the domes of ships bobbing against the docks, to tug on the empty lines of fishermen and watch them struggle to reel in nothing.

“I’m leaving— I know what you’re thinkin’ and it isn’t like that, I just… I told you this wasn’t gonna be a therapy session.”

“I apologise.”

But she only looked down at Solder, hands folded serenely on her lap. She didn’t seem that apologetic.

And said nothing as Larcen threw open the door and vanished into the storm.
 
Chapter Ten: The Mountain

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Chapter Ten
The Mountain


Larcen had something to prove.

He spent a couple days happening, as he did. Mostly he watched—Solder somewhere in his peripheral, sweltering beside a trail of Larcen’s own muddy pawprints. He focused on those.

Something had to happen here. They had to stop thinking about the guild—separate themselves from it entirely. Not forever. Just a day or two. Solder got a little control back after his breakdown. It helped a bit, but he didn’t talk as much as before, happy to communicate in glances.

Frustration came as Larcen sat beside him one day, both staring out at another rainstorm, having not said a word for an hour. Only once he looked to Solder and saw the questioning frown on his face did Larcen finally realise that he hadn’t wanted to say anything that whole time, either.

That was enough.

They didn’t speak a word as they got on the road. Not beyond, either. They hired a cart, two stoic mudsdale hitched across from each other, the wooden wheels and boards beneath them creaking and rattling as they worked over potholes and stones.

The fields looked so much nicer from up high. Larcen watched over the sea of grass, the wind making convincing enough waves he thought he might see fish leap out of the green. Solder relaxed on the other side, stretched against the guardrails. Serene.

They shared a look. A… smile, almost. He knew. Maybe he’d known since Larcen paid for the cart through charades. This had become a game, somehow. And with the mudsdale preferring to speak with their hooves, they might go the whole day without a word.

Larcen let his smile grow. It felt fractured, put together from pieces of a broken mirror, but he hoped it still worked.

Solder tilted his head back, resting on the bench. He closed his eyes.

~0~

Solder didn’t know where they were going. Nor why. He sat and watched the clouds, the fading sunlight reflecting off the bottom of the sky.

Hey, maybe it could be nice not knowing.

He’d been sick. He remembered the fever and hearing a lot he shouldn’t have. He tried not to hate himself for the things he said in turn, but they grew wild inside his head ,threatening to curl out of his eyes and nose and pool around his feet. By the time they approached a new set of mountains, Solder recognised he should probably hate himself more for going out in the storm in the first place.

He couldn’t. He barely knew who that person was. An unkind something had inhabited his body and forced him to crawl outside and hurt himself.

In the mix of things said and those words lost to the blur of sickness, he thought he deserved the pain.

The idea that hurting himself had been the goal remained silent.

So they clambered off the cart and stretched their aching limbs and paid for the mudsdale without a word or look in turn and felt the mountain breeze carry them through the little border town they’d stopped at for the night and watched, distantly, as the sun flickered and put itself away for the night and here came the moon.

He felt strange to be eating dinner in some dinky little inn, in the corner, under the shadows of lamplight. They built another world there—away from the bartender and scattered others that trickled in as night fell. They made it out of empty glasses and the little piles of crumbs off their plates. And back again in the morning—stumbling down the staircase with bleary eyes.

Hard to say they were in each other’s company while they ate. It had been a couple days since either of them tried to say anything. Odd how easy a time he had. When he’d picked up on Larcen’s little game, he thought they could only last a couple hours, but temptation hadn’t struck yet. Even after a turbulent week, he could still be happy to lay himself out in the corner of some unknown inn and silently enjoy being by himself with Larcen.

Fucking crazy.

~0~

They climbed the mountain the next morning.

Dawn pulled them up alongside them.

It had been a long time coming.

~0~

Larcen had never been on the gateway arch—the last layer of mountains that kept Seafolk from the outside world, ringing all the way from one coast to the other side of the continent. Even on maps they looked huge.

So they could only manage the smaller cliffs on the outside. Plus, these smaller cliffs had walking trails that wound up and around the chunky spires of rock that built into a higher plane.

They ate once they reached the plateau. There, they could watch the shadows of taller mountains creep away as the sun settled overhead. They could sit on the flat edge of a rock—still cool from the morning—and open the packed lunch they bought from the inn. If someone else came along, they stared at them solidly until the pokemon got a nervous twitch in their eye and left.

Larcen wanted to say something. For the first time in a while. He just couldn’t tell if he deserved the first word.

They had a great view as they waited, at least. No true forests grew out by Seafolk, so looking out to the greater world felt like hovering above an alien planet. The hills rolled and tumbled over each other, collapsing occasionally into a wandering river or grey smear of road. All those lines drew to the forests in the distance. Some scattered homes and ranches followed, too. Far enough in the distance, the spires and faces of buildings only just peeked from the treetops. Gatetown. One of the satellite cities orbiting Treebow. Larcen had been a couple times when he was much younger—he couldn't say Gatetown had much to offer. As a lumber town, they were industrious and didn’t bother catering to tourists or having much for a young buizel to do.

Mostly it was on the road to Treebow. That was the draw.

But Larcen didn’t really want to think about Treebow.

Alright. He’d had enough.

“Thought we could start something new,” Larcen said.

“Yeah?” Solder confirmed. He’s picked up on the conversation quickly—it may as well have ended a week ago, but he came back to it like an old friend. “What’s new about it? I thought we were going somewhere you were familiar with.”

“Nah. Never been up here. Only through. Heard lots about it though.”

Solder hummed in agreement.

That’s that. He thought he might have more to say, that breaking the dam would release a flood of ideas, but up on the plateau it felt like time bent for them. As if they’d already been sitting there for the eternity that created the mountains, and would be there until eternity destroyed them. He’d be happy to be long dead by then.

An odd tickle brushed against Larcen’s side. He’d been staring out over the landscape so long he barely noticed, but Solder had sidled up to him on the rock. He blinked. Froze as he felt Solder perch an elbow on his shoulder.

Huh. That’s different.

Once Solder noticed him staring, the quilava shrugged and leaned in further.

“You said you wanted something new.”

Oh.

But he didn’t quite know how to respond. It would be weird to lump on the affection now that Solder was taking initiative, right?

“Oh, don’t tell me you’re shy now.”

Well, alright. Larcen tilted his head against Solder’s arm. He found no comfort in the bony elbow or how Solder’s scratchy, dust-covered fur tickled his whiskers, but—hey, the kid wasn’t an expert yet.

“Anything we should talk about?”

Yes. But what to choose? Larcen had desperately wanted something warm and unconditional and spread out before him like this landscape—he’d wanted it, so he told himself, since before his father died.

Auloin’s truth came back to him. He could’ve had that. In so many ways. His stealing has always been an issue, but he couldn’t pretend to think that deeply about it all the time, and neither could he pretend it prevented him from getting friends or having a loving family.

He also knew the happy, warm things he pretended to want would not help him or Solder. Maybe they could be a reward. Or maybe he could get nothing. He thought, somewhere in the future, he’d be old enough to be happy getting nothing.

“Yeah,” Larcen said, “tell me the worst thing you’ve thought.”

Solder turned to him. His flat expression distorted against the tilt of Larcen’s view from his arm.

“We’re going to ruin the view.”

“Never been here before. If we gotta ruin this new thing we’ve got right away, that’s fine. Kind of the point. It’s our place to destroy, now.”

Solder snorted. He sniffled, shifting uncomfortably against Larcen’s side. But he didn’t draw away.
“I hate myself.”

Larcen kind of expected that. Hearing it was something else. He felt a little tight in the chest. Weird to be sitting there, talking as if validating it, making it normal and expected even for how awful it was. But, really, should he make a big deal out of it?

He didn’t, but not because he found some great insight.

“You don’t have to make an argument,” Solder continued. “I guess I know there are worse pokemon, and you like me, so I’m clearly doing something right, but I always feel like such a useless idiot. It doesn’t even matter if I get my memories back. That Solder seems like just as much of an idiot.”

“You want to be someone different?”

“I do.”

“You’re fine by me, for the record.”

“I know. I’m not doing it for you.”

Oh. That’s probably for the best, but Larcen couldn’t help sighing as he heard it.

“Your turn,” Solder said.

Larcen hummed, hesitating. He should’ve expected that. But for some reason, he never thought Solder would be that interested. He welcomed the appearance of a lone pokemon passing by on the trail. It gave him some time to think. He watched the stray pokemon take a few moments to look out at the view and sigh, only opening his mouth as they took off.

“Sometimes I’m happy my dad died.”

He said it. Hard to believe the words left his mouth—exiting like a sickness. At the same time, having someone else hear them made him shiver, feeling so much lighter afterwards.

“Really,” Solder said. Casual, responding as if talking about the weather. “I thought you loved him? Well, wanted to love him, I guess. Is that easier if he’s dead?”

Yes, it was. Something he didn’t want to admit out loud was thinking about a world where he didn’t die—constantly. Not an image or hallucination late at night when he can’t sleep, but a daily fantasy. An annoying thought when he should be eating or shopping or working instead. What if he hadn’t died?

Does life continue on as if years of heartache never happened? Does his father even fix anything? Even in the wildest, most optimistic fantasy where he breaks down the door, smile breaking across his muzzle, arms open and ready, can Larcen take it?

He taught Larcen how to swim. It took years after for him to feel comfortable in the water again. He found himself stuck needing to be with someone else, floating down as bubbles rose and broke against the sun.

Even if everything went right, loving him would never be simple again.

“Can I tell you a story?” Larcen asked.

Solder nodded.

“When he first started coming back to port, he’d talk about bein’ on the boat a lot. He hated Seafolk, I think. Something about the natural beauty of the mountains and how it got ruined by all that development—I dunno. He had this thought, about how he could hold up a paw as the boat came in and block out all the things he didn't like—all the ugly buildings and dirt stains and stuff.”

Larcen mimed the idea, holding a paw up against the landscape, letting it waver between the rivers and the roads. It cast a long shadow against his collar and down his chest. Just as it began to shake, Solder took the initiative to prod it down until it sat on his lap.

“I wish I could do that for him—hold up a paw to my memories and just… not see the bad anymore. Easy enough then, huh? Even if he lived, got no worries about facing him anymore.”

“You’d be happy when I leave. That would be easy, too.”

“Yeah.”

Larcen almost regretted saying it, but as he looked in Solder’s eyes, he knew they were on the same page.

“I can’t believe I’m happy to talk about this shit,” Solder said after a while. He let out a small huff of laughter. “I actually feel good, for once.”

“Yeah. Oh yeah.”

A caravan rolled through the forest somewhere in the distance, kicking up a flock of birds and sending them scattered into the sky. Even kilometres away, the screeching and cawing echoed through the mountains. As they disappeared off into the distance, the sound went, too. It only highlighted how serene the mountains were.

Larcen should do this more often. All his problems were away, back in Seafolk, across a field and far away. Even if he wanted to dive back into them, he couldn’t. Not from here. Kind of weird for him; he was used to sticking around the same places.

As a soft breeze picked up and brushed across their fur, Larcen took a deep breath and sighed.

Yep. He felt pretty alright.

“Are you as bored as I am?”

.”Eh, yeah. I probably shoulda picked somewhere more interesting.”

“And that cart ride screwed up my back.”

“Alright, so maybe It was a little bumpy.”

“That sandwich was trash.”

“Oh, come on! Don’t start complaining now, it was going so well!”

Solder looked back to Larcen with a smile. He felt faintly giddy at the sight.

“Ready to go?” Larcen asked.

“I’m not taking the cart again.”

“And what, just walk two days back?”

“Yes,” Solder answered. But he paused just as fast, breaking eye contact and staring down the mountain. “Sorry, It’s a stupid idea, isn’t it?”

Well, they did have a lot of things to do at the guild: the recruitment and cleaning, primarily, plus some personal stuff Larcen wanted to take care of in town. And he couldn’t imagine the walk would be great. They didn’t bring a tent, they’d have to sleep out in the grass, they’d be tight on supplies—not to mention the possibility of encountering ferals wandering outside the dungeons.

Overall, just another dumb impulse decision.

Fuck it, why not?

“Nah, let’s do it. And if it goes wrong, you can apologise to me as much as you want.”

Solder laughed. It was nice to hear, nice to know Larcen could make at least one pokemon happy. Not too long after, they made their way back down the trail.

He’d come to the mountains meaning for something to change. Or to find out what had changed. He didn’t, he only found they were drifting somewhere either way.

If only he could figure out where.
 

Z102eternal

Bug Catcher
Location
United States of America
Pronouns
He/Him
Hello! I’m here to give a chapter review of your story! For this I’m going off a chapter by chapter basis, so my reaction will be in real time for the most part! Anyway, let’s get started!


Chapter 1 - The Sea

So first things first, for an interesting change of pace we find ourselves in the shoes of the protagonist, a quilava, after he’s already been isekai’d to a new world. Of note is off the bat we get a taste of the technology, with there being a radio system, as well as the initial structure. By that, I mean the guild system. 4 named locations, with three being highly praised and the last (Seafolk) has something very wrong with it. Soldier proceeds to sniff around for info on the guild and- I’m sorry I just really love the prose in this story already, more on that in a bit. Next, he has a not-so-nice encounter with a eccentric buizel thief.
The buizel grunted and put more pressure on Solder’s chest, forcing a jolt of pain through his lungs, exhaling harshly into the paws clamped around his muzzle. The buizel opened his mouth again.

Then Solder watched his pupils dilate, catching on something at the mouth of the alley. The sharpness of a brief exhale echoed from behind Solder and he craned his neck, struggling to wrench himself from the buizel’s grasp. Still, he managed to catch an upside-down glimpse of another yellow duck standing behind them, a deep spark of fear in its eyes.

“I’m not kidnapping him!” The buizel snapped, jerking backwards without releasing Solder. “I’m not! We’re just— wait, no! Not that! Ah— wow, there’s really no way to make this look good, is there?”


Nice try on that, buddy. Already loving the humor in this story.

Well well well, despite the rough first impression, Soldier has a guide to help him get to the guild.

“I got a lot of pokemon tiptoeing around me in town.” He asked, strolling beside Larcen. They’d stopped dangling off each other as they entered the valley. Now, Solder glowered at Larcen’s back as the buizel waded in the neck-high grasses growing from the cliff base, picking flowers as he passed. “A merchant was talking about ‘my type’, whatever that means. Do I look like a punk to you?”

Larcen turned, staring at Solder with a quirked eyebrow. His whiskers twitched. A limp bouquet of irises dangled from his paw.

“It’s ‘cause you’re a firestarter,” he said. Then he gave a small smile, as if what he said made sense.

And we already have anti-type bias as a theme in the story hmm? I really like the following conversation for how it establishes typing as having a pretty big effect on how someone might be seen, as well as another showcase of Soldier’s lacking knowledge on pokemon. Also Larcen is a character and a half, def ticking my likable character boxes!

After a quick moment involving Soldier learning about his body’s natural flame ability, its time to enter the guild! Immediately there’s a sleepy Luxray and grouchy Gardevoir, nice to get a first taste of some of the guid’s characters.
Solder pushed through the bush, Larcen, mumbling a goodbye to Veille and Auloin. The gardevoir waved them off without a word as they padded down the hill, Solder almost sliding down on a patch of wet grass. Larcen didn’t laugh, to his credit, but Solder still caught his smile.

“Auloin is a psychic type, that’s how—“

“No. Shut up. I’m serious about lying down. Guilds are supposed to have places to sleep, right? Just let me get some rest.”

Larcen only shrugged, unoffended.
Lord, these two. Can tell that Larcen’s gonna be a great foil to Soldier’s lack of tolerance for the wackiness of pokemon.

And thus chapter 1 ends with Soldier finally having a place to sleep well, at least for now I'm guessing.

Anyway, great start! Simple but very effective first chapter, gives us a starting point to bridge off with our protagonist, a glimpse of the world around, and a happy go lucky thief as a potential partner pokemon!

Though this isn't my first experience with your writing as I've read some of your Latios-centric fic, this one is another wonderful showing of your writing skills. I adore the descriptions in the prose, as well as the character dialogue. It feels snappy and to the point while giving enough detail to feel immersive! I don't have much else to say other than look forward to me coming back for more!

And no I promise I'm not bias bc I love PMD fics, this one is interesting enough to keep me curious!
 

Ambyssin

Gotta go back. Back to the past.
Location
Residency hell
Pronouns
he/him
Partners
  1. silvally-dragon
  2. necrozma-ultra
  3. milotic
  4. zoroark-soda
  5. dreepy
  6. mewtwo-ambyssin
As promised. I don't think you've seen my reviews before. For these things they tend to be stream of consciousness bulleted points. So let me know if you have any questions.

1
-Interesting decision to skip over the isekai portion itself and just have Solder already having been a quilava for an unknown period of time. Opens things up for later mysteries. It's also neat that he seems to not know what pokémon are, though that could be the amnesia. It's also a double-edged sword, in some regards, because I find that most folks (myself included) are not all that great at figuring out how to describe a pokémon without bogging down the chapter pacing. It's easy enough for something like a klefki. Not so much for, like, many of the assorted animal 'mons. "Blue birds with V-shaped tails," did not immediately ping "Tailow and Swellow" in my head, so I stopped reading to check Bulbapedia. I guess it's not that big a deal when they're background elements. But it is for my poor ADHD brain.
-Zazz? What are the Deadly Six doing in a PMD fic? :P
-Poor baguette has height envy. :sadbees:
-Very oceanpunk descriptors starting things off. Which would make this the, uh, third PMD fic of this flavor I've looked at. And second this week. Something something Doofenschmirtz nickel meme.
-Buizel employing the ol' "Oops, how clumsy of me!" pickpocket technique. They'd be good at Sly Cooper, me thinks.
-For me personally I always find it a bit curious when pokémon refer to themselves with actual animal terminology. Because it brings up worldbuilding questions. Is "weasel" just a category that a bunch of 'mon get lumped into? Where did they come up with it? Do actual, plain old animals exist to give them a frame of reference? I'm sure most aren't bothered by it like I am.
-No, Buizel, Solder's a baguette. Know the difference. 🥖
-Buizel's such a bad liar I imagine him sounding like Derek Stephen Prince as Kokichi Oma. GGs.
-This baguette's picking a fight and doesn't even know about type advantages. Where are Hop, Nemona, Carmine, Kieran, and the BB E4 when you need them?
-I wonder if you could've just referred to Buizel as a proper noun here without constantly using "the." I'm sure he'll get a name eventually, but it's perfectly reasonable to do that for the sake of flow.
-Just FYI using punctuation to end dialogue does NOT mean you capitalize the dialogue tags that follow. And you shouldn't end dialogue in periods unless the next sentence is not going to involve a dialogue tag. So ["I got a lot of pokémon tiptoeing around me in town." He asked...] should really be ["I got a lot of pokémon tiptoeing around me in town," he said]. You still keep the pronouns for the dialogue tag lower case even if you're ending with an exclamation point or question mark.
-Two weeks, huh. How has Solder, like, survived? I guess the ship people took pity on him.
-And, wait, Larcen's claiming he's part of the guild? They really do be on hard times if members resort to petty thievery.
-If the species names are acting like surnames I thiiiiiiink they should be capitalized. Namo and I do a similar thing, but in reverse where species name comes first. So, like, Dreepy Yuna, Charmander Owen, etc. A similar thing would apply to "guild" in "Seafolk Guild." It's a proper noun in this case, like other professional groups IRL, for example the Pokémon Company or the International Olympic Committee. Alone, "company" and "committee" are just standard nouns, but as the name of a business or enterprise they become a proper noun.
-Lol nocturnal luxray. That's a new one. Though I guess mischievous cat does mischievous cat things.

2
-"Don't you have something better to do?" Your Flowey impression needs work, Solder.
-I do like the interplay with Solder's general grouchiness (fueled in part by confusion) and Larcen's childish energy. He feels very... like the Super partner. A mischief maker with too much energy.
-Flygon and a haxorus, huh? 50% Tetra and 100% Namo approved! XD
-Language, Solder, you only get one F-bomb per T fic! :screm:
-Ah, and I see I was wrong about the isekai stuff. No wonder it wasn't brought up. Solder's always been a pokémon, then? And he lost his memory to getting assaulted? Wonder what really happened. :sadwott:
-The name thing certainly does pose another interesting mystery. We don't even need the dungeons for mysteries. :V
-Oooh so someone calls dungeons anomalies here. Friend! :veelove: Anomaly and mystery dungeon become used interchangeably much later in PoV.
-Decent amount of mystery layering here for the first "day" of this fic.

3
-Aww, Solder's self-doubt tugs at the heartstrings. And with the whole missing memories, one has to wonder how much of this is what Solder's really like. Because if this is his usual attitude, that'd be quite tragic.
-Landy must have many friends. He seems like such a swell person. /s
-A one-hundred 'mon expedition base camp? Dang, that's impressive. Practically platoon-sized!
-Radio broadcaster was actually a guild member? Neat. Also neat that there's radio technology here. Then again, Super gave us PokéFacebook with the Connection Orb, so who really knows.
-I disagree, Solder. Baguettes are cute. :3
-And so we have the first mentions of this guild merger stuff that was in the summary. It... does bring to mind some of modern day corporatism and this constant stamping out of the little guys. An interesting subject to explore in a world of cute, colorful magic creatures.

4
-Language, Solder! Now we have to bump the age rating! :screm:
-Congrats, Solder, you found your butt fire! 👏👏👏
-Despite being a PMD author I will concede I'm not a big fan of dungeon crawling on the whole. Fortunately, you don't really tutorialize this like many PMD fics (including my first) do. Instead it's just a comedy of errors on Solder's part. Which makes it different. Sad, but different.
-The seaside town racist toward the fire-types that they easily have the upper hand against? Golly, that sounds familiar.
-Solder's attitude thus far doesn't entirely give him the moral high ground over Larcen when they start arguing. Though it shows they've got some stuff to work on going forward. The fact that it was Solder who had to deal with the consequences of Larcen's actions is also narratively biting.
-Landy would make a great Grey's Anatomy doctor. Terrible bedside manner.
-Hmm. The narration kinda lampsahdes how quickly they fall back into their dynamic from the first three chapters. But the way the end of the last scene implied that Solder had nearly drowned makes me feel as though this shouldn't have gotten brushed aside as easily as it did. I'd have kinda expected Solder to freak out about a near-death experience a bit more, too.

5
-This flygon's a very anxious boi. Give him some Xanax.
-LANGUAGE, SOLDER :screm:
-A kecleon NOT running an item shop? Blasphemy!
-It's kinda funny even the narration feels Unico is annoying enough to just essentially hit the fast forward button on the whole conversation.
-Oh, so it's not just fire-types they have problems with, then. This place is starting to feel more like the boonies; full of superstitious hicks.
-Hmm. So guild members, much like many ground-level employees, see absorption as inevitability. :sadwott:
-Suddenly Brute POV! Looks like he and Haxorus have had a rough go it and built themselves up from nothing. Which makes what's hinted at for the future more painful.
-So, not only does Landy have no bedside manner, he views his work as the next best thing since sliced bread and wants to see it flourish no matter what. Only great things can come of this.

An enjoyable start. Definitely a smaller scale and scope, but I appreciate the focus seems to be more on the characters and the dynamics between them and less on the traditional "dungeon venturing to do the things." If you haven't looked at it already, you might like windskull's Places We Call Home. I think it has some similar themes going on, even if there's no amnesiac protagonist.
 

K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Chapter 1
Review for blitz and catnip

Ohf our p.o.v solder is wrangling nausia and displacement, that quite a double whammy. Per location i kinda suspect we might have amnesia as well.

(I avoid the summary -except the trigger warnings- so i can guess as i go its part of my idea of fun)

You know i'd probably hate that voice on the radio so much right now... Wonder how sol's gunna take it... Agressive ralphing perhaps?

Odd mutations? Sounds like hes a mon oblivious soul then... That or these mon are very different from canon. Nah he just has no clues. A quilava? A secondary evolution? thats pretty unique for a p.o.v. in a mon setting...

Glowing tale verses between the line crit of what sounds like police brutality and freedom curltailing... I'm gunna take a stab and say "utopia" might be debatable...

Yeah i'd be scared spitless of a feraligator smiling if i were reincarnated as a fire type too. Memories not required. Those choppers.

Shudders.

Man the market sounds like a mad house. And water types be shunning Mr. Firetype. Grass types lowgrade freaking out over fire types...

Unfriendly seems to be an understatment.

And sold' s really an altristic firebug isnt he? Going from "meh let it happen" to "i can use this to get an in".

Love how they both get into a "how much of a weasal they are" measuring contest. And sol's stop thief reciting to himself scaling up to said contest made me laugh. Also this thief is not a smart one... By any stretch.

Granted sol's not making smart choices but thats because he doesnt know any better. He's getting an education, and love how types are stereotyped... When the town klepto starts taking you under thier wing and is being reasonable despite being an idiot and morally questionable... And it looms more attractive than the (possibly problematic and definitly aloof) local guide there is a problem..

Laughs. ok i wasnt expecting larcan to be in the guild. Plus the reaction to his fire attack, sol' is tipping his hand hard i dont think hes going to be disbelieved here.

The guide seems as much of a madhouse as the town does. A pretty madhouse but still...
 

Blackjack Gabbiani

Merely a collector
Pronouns
Them
Partners
  1. shaymin
  2. dusknoir
First chapter for Catnip

Ah, seasickness. A relatable central character already!

Well of course Klefki can handle the sea--they FLOAT

Ah, Solder must be a player character sort if he doesn't know what species he is

I like the radio as narrator, with the news stories that feel both natural and relevant. Haxorus seems highly unpopular and dangerous but are guild masters really chosen by who remains undefeated?

Being so low to the ground, Solder's motion sickness should get better soon.

Also it's taken me this long to realize that his name isn't "soldier" haha. This makes a bit more sense given he's a fire type

He's got a big mouth for someone with a type disadvantage

Some passages are a bit hard to follow. Like right here:
That explains the fins...

“Why the collar, then? Weird fashion choice; can’t you swim?”

Larcen grinned, giving his collar a firm tug.

“I can’t take it off. It’s a part of me, actually.


There are two lines of dialogue and two narrative lines but they're divided up so oddly. Why not put single perspective lines together? Like so
That explains the fins... “Why the collar, then? Weird fashion choice; can’t you swim?”

Larcen grinned, giving his collar a firm tug. “I can’t take it off. It’s a part of me, actually.”

It'd be a lot easier to follow and keep track of things because the narrative and speech would shift together.

Solder hasn't seen any pokemon moves during any of that time? Goodness!

Anyway it's a nice start, though I'm curious how he's been there for a few weeks and hasn't found out some basic stuff.
 

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
it's march 8th, which means it's time to respond to some reviews. Figured I'd tackle the easy fic first.

Here for catnip!! Read chapter 1.
Thank you for the review! Unfortunately I've red so much PMD that I've grown little tired of classic waking up/discovering bod/becoming friends dynamic. There was a good period of writing trying to figure out how to kick this thing off so I'm glad you enjoyed it. And the prose! Prose is definitely something I love to hear about. The one may hold up to pokemon, which I suppose is part of the point, but I also wonder if that's a double-edged sword considering some of the darker stuff coming in later chapters.

Solder was also a bit of a gamble. he and Larcen's dynamic is not that strange to writing, I think, but I worried a little bit that people wouldn't like him so much. glad to hear that isn't the case.

Anyway, thank you for the review!

Hello! I’m here to give a chapter review of your story! For this I’m going off a chapter by chapter basis, so my reaction will be in real time for the most part! Anyway, let’s get started!

I'm surprised that people like my humour actually. Is that strange? writing definitely feels like one of the more difficult mediums to convey humour and given I tend to like dry/awkward situational stuff I always worry it won't come across. that doesn't seem to be the case, thankfully, I'm glad you liked it. Same with the characters. It's always nice to hear that other people like the same things I do lol.

As for the anti-type bias I almost egret including it. it's too embedded now to do anything about, but this fic was written a little bit before I knew my own feelings on allegorical racism and have since worried about including things that push this too close to real world analogues that they can't feasibly compare to. Oh well. I think it's a couple places above something like Detroit: become human at least.

Glad you liked it though! My first fanfic love was PMD so writing this was a lot of fun.

As promised. I don't think you've seen my reviews before. For these things they tend to be stream of consciousness bulleted points. So let me know if you have any questions


Holy Moly chunky review.

We are ADHD friends. I definitely understand your frustrations because halfway through writing this I sincerely regretted making Solder forget about all pokemon and trying to describe each like I would to someone not in the fandom.

As for the animal descriptions, pretty much all my worldbuilding regardless of story includes normal animals in there somewhere. Definitely couldn't introduced it more evenly especially considering I don't think any have shown up through the course of the fic but oh well.

Solder definitely got a lot of pity on that ship, even if he hated the actual journey.

Definitely a lot rough edges to patch up here and there. This fic is shockingly old despite only being released last year and I keep saying I'll go back and edit my writing. These are promises I have to make to myself, I guess. and like actually do the editing, too. Someday.

I'm so happy everyone likes Solder and Larcen : ). They were easily the most fun dynamic to write, probably from all my fics. There's something about a guy who's too earnest and a guy who's completely unengaged that makes every situation into a comedy. Until the self esteem issues come out, I guess, then it just gets sad. I'm glad you're speculating on the "real" Solder, too. the push and pull of who he wants to be and who he thinks he is is a big part of his baguette-shaped arc.

Haha, corporatism is the least of everyone's worries to be honest. Sometimes I wonder if I should classify my fanfic as political dramas or something. There's enough of it to go around for sure lol.

We might be the same person becaues I'm also not a huge fan of dungeon crawling. Mostly because it feels weird in the tone of my own stories and I'm never sure how to beef the journeys up into meaty dinners rather than light snacks. Maybe I'm comparing myself too much to chonkers like SIlver Resistance but they've got some fun dungeon stuff I've always envied. idk.

Landy's a great guy, I'm not sure what your problem is we're best friends in real life I
ll have you know : )

Thank you for the review!

Review for blitz and catnip

Radio boy's definitely a character for sure. Modelled off my own experience being forced to listen to the radio in the car lol.

I always liked the idea of using second stages for PMD. it feels more... young adult, I guess? Just verging into the twenties? It's something I stole directly from PMD Rebirth, to be fair, they had a charmeleon protag who I liked. it's a different vibe, I guess.

And yes this is no utopia. Madhouse is a good word for it. I want to go for something of a PMD Kafka situation lol and nobody's too much of a trraditional PMD good boy (At least in Seafolk).

Thank you for the review! You killed review bliz btw, it's unfortunate I didn't get more done and couldn't return the favour but I got very tired and then school happened lol.

Seasickness based on real events where I went ocean fishing with my dad, brother and stepbrother but we forgot the motion sickness pills and regretted it deeply.

There's some wacky stuff going on with the guildleader but their fight a sort of special circumstance thing rather than the norm. Don't know how well I got that across but then it's been a while since I've read the early chapter so it's probably on me.

hmmmm I should probably go back and reformat some things when I get the chance. the interplay between dialogue and action is what I struggle with the most usually and i never feel quite happy with it.

I figured he was confined to bed, sick for weeks and therefore unable to do or think much of anything lol.

Anyway, thank you! Glad you had a good impression of the fic!
 
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K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
I wont say its universal (with the world having access to podcasts/personalized data therefore cuting doen on the impact/exposure of casual boradcast) but radio boy's angle is common enough to be a nice draw into this pmd world/set up that feels very familiar and makes it stand out for our poor seasick protag.


Considering how rare young adult perspective is for the pmd angle is... Either veering away per persuing the xenoform fiction angle to its fullest or having kid protags through and through... The idea of a young adult to middle age cast with middle evolution mon is interesting to say the least.

And it presents tons of new issues to wrangle with. Which is fun for all. Also i like how Sea' is less of sugarbowl happy land than common mon tales dole it out to be. We got fair odds of politics and deeds mix matching all over the place (something i like) that will hopefully be more evolved then the darks types are all bad/villians (which is a huge pet peeve of mine in mon stories).

I really liked the cast/premise and hope you've had fun expanding it as it goes (this tale is on my "continue when i can list"). My time is just stupid tied up so i haven't had a chance to do more then tackle the first chapter....

And no worries about lack of reviews in return. I, of all people, am not going to bemoan being too busy to write. Its life,life happens. If and when you wanna poke at my tales go ahead. Otherwise no worries.
 
Part Two, Chapter Eleven: Introducing Killpoint

tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Part Two

Chapter Eleven
Introducing Killpoint


“Vol?”

Volaphomet took in the sky. A big, open hole let it in through the guild’s square. Here, it got a perfect frame between the cliffs, a perfect rocky line surrounding her. Some mailbirds passed above, squabbling and loud. They cut through low clouds and vanished, but left strips of white fluff trailing after. They reminded her of prison.

“Vol? Hey, Volaphomet?”

Images of cells played across Volaphomet’s mind. Repetitive stripes of bars and repetitive bricks making walls that led her through repetitive days. Gray food and walls and even outside, it seemed like the clouds were there most days.

“Vol? You in there?”

Volaphomet blinked, drew her paw away from her chin and snapped back to the present. A quick knock on Sewall’s shield-like purple scales let the nidoking know she was listening. He nodded in response, letting Volaphomet dip and hike back up as she rode on his head.

Luckily, being an emolga prepared her for the motion. Pokemon as small as her felt everything ten times as strongly as everyone else. Probably. Not like she’s asked literally everyone.

Yet.

“Yo, Vol, ya hearin’ us? All that static pluggin’ up yer ears?”

Darn, she was slipping away again.

“Yes, b’y, gotcha, bud. I’m hearin’ ya,” she shot back, peering around Seawall’s horn. Azazel and Hiudix both watched her from below, one lounging in the grass and one standing at attention respectively. She liked the view from on top of Seawall. Both others were like spiky little mountains from on her perch—Azazel’s harsh black-and-white stripes contrasting hard against the ground, the linoone’s fur sticking out every which direction from either end; and Hiudix’s, well, spikes. Hard to miss the jagged ice splitting from the sandslash’s back. “Whaddya at?”

“Got the gist of it? The meeting?”

Ah, the meeting. She was so used to sitting in the back, being passed over and flying under the radar, she hardly thought to pay attention. But it seems all the rain had washed in something new, because things seemed to be changing.

It started with them being woken up and kicked out. All bleary-eyed, shouted up before they could even get their things. She only got smart gathered around the square outside and in the shade of the gatehouse, watching lines of ground and rock-types march through and into an empty guild. No patience for the flowers, them. They trampled all the cornflowers into blue paste at the grassy shoulders of the path.

Those were the contractors, according to Brute. And the guild couldn’t get back in for a couple days. Which meant finding some other shack to squat in. Should be good for the big ol’ bug. Or not, who’d know what goes on in his noggin—he had something feverish about him that morning, raving and anxious and wrapping his claws around his head even as he started the meeting.

“Team weasels is missing,” he muttered, staring out at the gathered pokemon like he was giving a eulogy.

“Did Larcen not leave a note?” Aulion said.

“Y-yes, but he said a couple days. That’s two! It’s been three days!”

Thereabouts set the tone for the rest of the meeting. Turns out Landy’d locked himself in the basement cells with his feral, so Brute couldn’t get his drugs or whatever Landy gave him that was keeping him stable, and there they were. It came to an end once Auloin took him to the side and with the heavy feeling that they’d gone nowhere.

At least team Killpoint got something out of it.

“Check the board,” he’d said, sitting on the brick lining of the square’s planter, calm enough to actually address Volaphomet. “The important one. We finally have some jobs up there, and since you’re the only fully functioning team we have right now, I’d like you to take them. Please.”

Seawall nodded and led the way, stomping up to the board as Volaphomet clung to his horn and their partners trailed behind.

She couldn’t remember the last time anything had been posted there. Grey rainwater stains cut squares into the surface of the wood, the only signs it had ever been used—and not very well, by her ideas. Two postings waited for them, One snatched by Hiudix, grumbling as Azazel snaked around his spikes to read alongside him. Seawall got the other, perching it on his horn so she could read it.

Formal was a nice word for it. Rotten. It got the mayor's stamp prominent, right on the face of it, wax dripping down the nice folds that must’ve fit it in an envelope. Guard duty for some rally of his, down at the park. Volaphomet could tell he’d written it himself not only from the nasty cursive ruining good, clean paper, but also because he wouldn’t stop yammering about the rally— his politics, his importance, his love of the blah blah, yadda yadda. She could imagine the way that slowking would clack his teeth together, run his mitts along the rim of his frill, snort and wave them off like they’re gutter-trash.

They were gutter-trash, to be fair, but he was worse. Not born rich, yet rich.

She snorted, standing up to pin the notice on Seawall’s horn so it pierced that rotten pokemon’s wax seal. He grumbled below her, but said nothing.

“I got not much good up here. Mayor business. How’s ye down there?”

“There is a missing child,” Hiudix said. He’d pinned the notice, letting it dangle like a caught fish between two icy claws. “He vanished two days ago out by the mountains. The notice comes from his mother.”

Volaphomet perked up, sparks crackling off her. She let her enthusiasm shine out her eyes and oet Hiudix shifting nervously as she grinned at him. Great news! Well, not the missing kid, but the opportunity they offered. She’d thought the guild would deal in more stuff like it, but instead they got the petty requests—the item fetching and thefts (and all those were Larcen’s fault anyway) with which the mayor’s request belonged. Here, though, was real work. Important work. Something to prove herself with.

“That’s the one! Hand it up here, b’y.”

“We were told to do both.”

She met his blank, icy stare with a grimace.

“Eh, not interested. Not in one.”

“Heh. you tell ‘im, we ain’t licking that bastard’s paws—not today,” Azazel chuckled from beside him, still up in Hiudix’s space, worming around him to snatch the posting.

Seawall grumbled from below her, reaching one massive paw up to snatch the letter from his horn.

“Vol,” he said. A lingering disappointment sat below the word. Sad and pleading.

Darn, she hated how easy he worked on her. She sighed, patting him on the head.

“Fine, fine. Hiudix takes Azazel to the mayor, I get Seawall.”

Predictably, they met her with two blank faces.

“Truly, sir? Azazel?”

“Hey, don’t talk at me like you’re the good one,” Azazel responded, pointy black snout wrinkling in derision even as he stuck his tongue out. “And why do I never get to ride Seawall, huh? We’d make a great team.”

Volaphomet rolled her eyes and hefted herself up against Seawall’s horn, posing one fist at her side, sparks dancing off her cheeks.

“Who tells me what I looks like?” she asked, surveying her team.

Hiudix and Azazel looked at each other, pointy noses almost touching.

“Our leader, sir.”

“A boss, boss.”

And Seawall nodded beneath her.

“You’d be right! And boss boss gets her picka the litter, eh? So toss'er here.”

She could tell they still weren't jumping off the rocks in excitement, but Hiudix let go of the paper, gave it to Sewall and took what he offered with not much but a warning glance to Azazel. It went unheeded—the linoone wiggled eagerly at the opportunity to be an annoyance.

“We’ll regroup tonight fer a bite, eh?” Volaphomet said. “Break?”

The others nodded. Pride swelled in her as any doubt fled from their eyes. Even Azazel found a still moment and met her head-on. Not that it lasted long. He also used the distraction to take Hiudix’s paper in his mouth, tear off down the path, cackling, and scrambled around the corner in a cloud of dust. For his part, Hiudix only groaned. He cut his claws together and grumbled something under his breath and though he tried searching for help, nobody could help him against Azazel. That chirpy cackle faded away down the valley.

But as Hiudix turned to catch up, he paused. Scuffed his footclaws into the ground and curled on himself slightly—the twitching of his ears barely visible through the translucent blue sheen of his ice spikes.

“I trust you will handle this gently.”

Then he broke away, flinging himself into a roll to keep up.

Volaphomet blinked off her confusion for a minute. There was a bit of nostalgia watching them scamper off—how long had it been since she got out? Barely a year, bet. But boy, does she fly. A self-satisfied smile broke out over her face. She patted Sewall on the horn and felt him let out a low rumble.

“Any ideas?” he asked.

She took the moment to scrutinize the job. Unlike the mayor’s garbage, this letter was frantic, played out on an old invoice with thick black text and speckled with inkblots. It’s odd that a case like that would be dropped on the guild’s lap, though. Seafolk usually went to the mayor’s police first. Not for nothing; they locked her up, after all. Did some good, there. But a creeping dread buried any enthusiasm as she read.

Missing sneasel child: went exploring one day and didn’t come back. Living on the outskirts of town (but where else would a sneasel live?). Lots of uncomfortable stuff around this one. Volaphomet grimaced and read over the page again to bury her discomfort.

It made sense, unfortunately. Hiudix would feel some kinship with his clan, and she doubted the mayor’s flunkies would be willing to do much about a missing Cirrian child.

“Vol?”

She shook herself. Blinked. The paper’d put her in a funk, but her routes were still open. She’d do what she’d always done.

“We meet up with the ol’ boys. Gets ourselves some info—they like lurking around the mayor’s office, bet the kid’s mom stopped there in the first.”

“Sure they’ll let me in?”

She scoffed, scooted forward to drop down and peer into his eyes. Scratches layered themselves into deep grooves all around his scales, but they sunk most deeply around wide eyes. Still so innocent, too. But he didn’t see himself all the time—and not years ago. Sometimes it seemed like he forgot how scary he could be. She smirked. Upside-down it must’ve looked strange.

“Yes, b’y. You’ve got your muscles. They’ll think you got a good head fer catchin’ me.”

He smiled back. So, so small. Poor man wasn’t used to it yet.

“Let’s off, then. Kick’er into gear, eh?”

He grunted. Then strode forward. Taking his horn in hand, she leaned back and let the valley usher them through.

Thoughts of herself pulling a sobbing sneasel into her arms filled her mind. Of taking them alongside her and dropping them back in their mother’s arms, soaking up the praise and adulation, the applause, and she’d smile and know her own place in this world. Finally, after all this effort, she’d stop finding flecks of red under her claws.

She’d be no hero—not to the town—but a hero she’d still be. All those stains were nothing compared to that.

~(0)~

Hiudix would never find comfort in his homeland. Any trip to Seaflok became a reminder of society erected not by him—not by his clan or those, even, who owned the land in the first place.

Of course, Azazel faced no such dilemma, being a come-from-away himself. He relived his younger days as a zigzagoon, scampering back and forth across the path in an effort to be as obnoxious as possible, waiting just out of reach with teeth clenched around the mayor’s letter and with back turned to the wagons traveling through that were forced to wait and shout him down.

They shouted down Hiudix, too, as if Azazel were his responsibility. As he looked into the eyes of the wartortle—one sitting on a wooden hayride drawn by a testy mudsdale—he had to remind himself. Though there were many unkind things he could say, this was not the wartortle’s fault. He would get nowhere lecturing them. He ushered Azazel off the path and let them pass by, accepting their condescending glares with dignity.

They were supposed to meet the mayor and his entourage at Center park. From the road, it remained cloistered in the city. If it was still possible to travel through the mountains, he could imagine it as a great, green island in the ocean of brown and gray between the mountains and the sea. But although he dreamed of climbing often, he’d perhaps lost some of that spirituality that drove some to return to the peaks and likely lose themselves in the dungeons.

Some would call it pragmatism. Whatever it was, he mourned the loss it represented.

And resisted the urge to say something as Azazel scampered through the city and the residents looked at him as if he were the tourist.

The first signs of the park were a welcome relief. To the grass-types as well, likely. Their work was evident—great willows pushing up against wooden buildings, vines and wind-swept flowers and creepers and grasses that all exploded from the ground in great disregard to the carefully-laid bricks that wound from the streets only to be consumed by the wild.

The only competition was the ugly wooden stage being erected right in the center, flowers being trampled by the burlier sorts, all overseen by a hulking swampert and the slowking wandering boredly beside him.

That would be the mayor and his chief of security. Alexander and King, respectively. They barely parted, though Hiudix had it on good authority that it was not because of any friendship. He could see it the way they bristled against each other, the warning glances whenever one arm glanced against another.

These were the leaders of the coast. They hardly inspired.

Not that it stopped Azazel. As soon as he spotted them, he went trotting up, a shit-eating grin on his muzzle and leaving Hiudix to watch from the path.

Hiudix couldn’t afford to wait. The precious seconds Azazel had on his own were often more than enough time to ruin whatever he decided to stick his nose in. And he seemed to have already worked his magic. By the time Hiudix caught up, the two mons’ posturing turned to him full force—not that it slowed him down. If anything, the way Azazel propped himself on his hind legs and drew himself into Alexander’s face spoke of an overconfidence that most left behind in childhood. Hiudix, at least, could remember a time he’d leave his clan’s camp and go into town just to start a fight. But those days had fallen in the sea and drowned.

“Well, Azazel, it seems you found them promptly,” he said, coming around to place a warning claw on the linoone’s shoulder. Alexander met them head-on, face sinking slightly as if trying to recognise them. “We’re here for the posting.”

Alexander tilted his head back, heavy crown dragging it down and that ruby gem glinting in the sun as if it were watching also. Then he waved off King from behind. A slow, pink paw dragging through the air with invisible currents spiraling off it. The swampert rolled his shoulder, muscles flexing, but he trundled off after a moment to shout orders at a group of pokemon relaxing in the shade.

”Well, I guess I should’ve expected guild pokemon for posting at the guild. I don’t know why they sent you,” he drew a paw across his frill, fixating on the linoone in Hiudix’s arm.

Azazel’s tongue dangled from his maw. He bristled in the attention, digging fur sharply into Hiudixi’s arm and getting him to yank it back with a hiss.

“Heh. You love us. I sees the kind of pokemon comin’ and goin’ from your little castle.” He shimmied back to the ground, taking a few hyperactive leaps around and ending up in the same place—to no reaction. “Bet you’d like to know what I’m thinkin’ of that, huh?”

“No.”

“He’s got a freaky side, isn’t he?” Azazel practically hip checked Hiudix with how excited he was. The sandslash grunted but stood his ground.

Alexander snorted. “I’m not happy to get either of you. You should be thankful my normal security is on strike and there’s no quicker options available.”

Should he? Hiudix felt demonstrably ungrateful at the moment. He would never allow himself, but he had the sudden urge to spit at the slowking’s nubby little claws.

“I would like to get this over with as well.”

“I’ll brief you. Normally, I’d get King to do it, but I’m not sure I trust him to have my best interests in mind.” He paused to pay special attention to Azazel. “Though perhaps I’ll end up regretting this. Don’t make me.”

Hiudix mumbled something like agreement and let the mayor walk them up the newly-constructed staircase to the beginnings of a stage. For the first time, it seemed he had a presence. Other pokemon noticed him. Workers nodded their heads lightly as if unsure how to react, bystanders drew closer together. Whether from him or Azazel or the mayor, he couldn’t tell.

Alexander would like not to regret this, yes? Well, they’ll have to see about that.

~(0)~

Volaphomet hadn’t lost her touch, at least. She finessed as finessers did and drunk in the adrenaline with a puffed chest and cheeky lean against Seawall’s horn.

Con did stand for confident after all. Not that she was proud of it, she’d just started weaning herself off, is all. A couple years in the clink, a couple years after to tiptoe around in the shadow of Seawall and her parole and the city, y’know. She had some time, is all, and time enough to smile again and remember the good times. Even if she was a worse pokemon back then.

Was the first time she’d been out to the east side of Seafolk in years. She recognised the storefronts, tilted tent structures and heavy steps chunking down the road instead of a gentle slope. The always-wet mud mixing from the sea and the nearby cliffs those homes were built into. The smell of dirt, of rotting wood and lime dust. The pokemon still hadn’t moved on: that golisopod who ran the general store and kept her other cashbox under the counter looked on from her window; the group of lombre who liked to hustle by the docks, and plotted in a dingy stairwell until they met her with wide eyes; the scrafty who ran his own dojo, the one with the tattered shed bundled around his legs who always shot her a wicked grin. His name was… Saba! Well, she thought. He lingered around another storefront, hunched on an upturned fishing crate, sorting through layers of bandages. Just the mon she hoped to see—Saba’d been here ages longer than her, knew each resident, probably.

Today, Saba’s grin turned unbelieving. He faltered, paws moving on autopilot through the bandages until they worked to a crawl and settled. She met his energy, sparks flying off her cheeks and scattering across Seawall’s plates like thousands of tiny fireworks.

Seawall must have noticed her energy. He reached a giant paw up and prodded her in the cheek as if to remind her. He could still keep her in check.

“Oh, hell, you’re back,” Saba said, but couldn’t stop smiling.

“Nah, not me. This girl’s a different boy, she’d tell ya.”

He blanched more, if that was possible.

“It is you. Fuck me—”

“Ah!”

“Sorry, frig me sideways, Vol, you’re a surprise,” he said. Then must’ve noticed Seawall beneath her and that violent grin quirked. “And uh—”

“Sorry.” Volaphomet waved him off. “Big guy’s Seawall. My Parole officer.”

He rumbled beneath her. Oh, she knew how he got about that ol’ thing. Parole officer. Not for years—yeah, she had that kinda charm. Even Saba stuck around longer than his smile.

“Ah— right, well.”

“I says I’m changed, I mean it, Saba,” she huffs. “But there’s no time to chirp, I’ve got questions. We's catchin’ up so might as well.”

“That’s chirpin’, Vol.”

“Eh, well.”

Saba barely relaxed. He managed to sink back against the grit and stain of the wall behind him, and put his feet up on the crate he'd been sorting at, but his arms still fell naturally into a fold.

“Well, hit me with those questions, then.”

Vol put on her professional face— the kinda thing she imagined an ol’ gumshoe liked. Furrowed and serious, nose itching from her own twisted whiskers. She tutted, patting Seawall’s horn.

“There’s a missing kid we've been searching for. Figured momma’d swing by the mayor’s at some point.” She sneered, pink bastard’s face tumbling through her memories. An ugly smear in a picturebook of other ugly smears. “You lads keepin’ up down there, eh?”

“Sometimes,” he said. He shrugged. “But not recently. He’s getting security.”

Sure. She knew that from the morning. Probably shouldn’t let it slip she shared dorms with that same security, though. Something she’d have to remember wandering around the slums like she still belonged—none of her folk at the guild would slide in nice here. Or not anymore if they used to. She shrugged.

“Never stopped ya.”

He chuckled. “You’re right on that account. The kids have been all anxious—needling him and poking around his office. Something going down, though I couldn’t say what.”

“Kids, yeah. Haven’t heard’a the big guilds pourin’ in?”

The way he screwed up his face said he had. He wore his mood on his face easily, always, and Volaphomet could track it. It settled somewhere in the gutter, in the stray whiffs of old seawater and wet concrete and molding paper.

Interesting news, besides. Not really what she wanted, but she could resist no gossip. Anyway,

“Not here fer that, b’y. Wes lookin’ around for a missin’ sneasel kid. He one’a yours?”

Saba’s already strained frown turned rotten. He ran a paw nervously through his mohawk. Tried turning his attention back to the bandages but not a couple seconds of trying weakened until he only sat stilly over them again. His shadow coulda darkened, leaning like a shipwreck over the rocks that wrecked him. He cleared his throat.

“Shame about that. Nobody knows where he’s gone. You’d know—pokemon go missing sometimes, but you don’t expect it to be kids. Mom’s a wreck. Security’s not helping, mayor’s got nothing. Probably wasn’t him else someone would’ve done something about it already.”

Volaphomet sat back, Seawall adjusting beneath to keep her pitching backwards. He mumbled something under his breath that she didn’t quite catch. Then, he often liked to talk ‘round himself.

Times like these reminded her why she wasn’t much of a detective, despite her efforts. She couldn’t make much out of this and the more she thought the more she reminded herself of the gravity. Not fun at all—all she could think was to speak to the mom.

And as if to read her mind, Seawall chimed beneath her,

“We should speak to the mom,” he said.

She looked back out over Saba. Noticed the dulling scales and fraying ends of his mohawk. The wrinkles that sat deep in his scales. How old could he be? How old could anyone be around here? They either made it young, go jailed or old. Suddenly the sights of old friends muddied. Those lombre looked skinny, the golisopod shaken and wired.

And Saba hissed lightly, lips wrapped tight to reveal just a crisscross slit of teeth.

He shook his head. “She’s gone too, sorry to say."

Volaphomet blanched.

“What? Gone? Like the kid?”

He shrugged. “Normally she’s in that apartment between twelve and thirteen. No number on it, but anyone’d point you. But…” He hiked up the shed skin bunching around his waist. “Friends told me she’s worried. Gone off to live with a relative and look on her own.”

“So she thinks the kid’s out of Seafolk.”

“I guess.”

But he didn’t seem so solid on that. Not suspicious, exciting as it would be. Saba was a pokemon that would sooner run than lie.

That didn’t leave her anywhere. Something about that was still lies. So they'd check the apartment, but there wouldn’t be much point. And pokemon living here wouldn’t be sharing locations readily if they went off to hide. Or run. She shared a silent, thoughtful hum with Seawall beneath her. They must be thinking the same thing—why go? The mom must know something if she’s so certain not to find the kid here.

The goal stayed the same then. Not much point wading in muddy puddles, best to get goin’.

Volaphomet pointed and fired a couple sparks in Saba’sdirection. He watched them fry and fizzle away at his feet.

“Well, thanks Saba. Hopes to see ya.”

Still, he managed a final chuckle, puffing his chest just slightly and trying to get his hands back into work.

“Hope not, if you’re as changed as you seem. Don’t see many of us hanging around their ah… parole officers.” He pointed at Seawall. Big guy didn’t manage much reaction, but his plates tightened beneath Volaphomet.

Eh, maybe he was right. She kinda liked to slide back into her old spaces, ugly and dingy as they were, but they didn’t change much alongside her.

So she just waved him off, set her sights back down the path, through tumbling awnings and sly glances over cracked windowframes, and patted Seawall onward. To momma’s house.

~(0)~

Setup went smoothly. It wasn’t like Hiudix expected much else, if he respected one thing about the workers of Seafolk it was their shocking efficiency. Only after a long break and a stern word from the resident swampert of course, but such was the life of the standard contract labourerer, he supposed. Azazel fell into much of the same pattern. The second it became clear that Alexander would not rise to his bait and the bustle of pokemon trampled over all attention he would get jumping from the bushes, growling, he instead mingled with the unearned breakers. Or fell asleep somewhere close by and forced Hiudix to stomp over and drag him up before they got in trouble. Besides these typical issues, he caused little trouble.

The stage erected seemingly by itself, complete with unfurled banners in dull pinks and whites and splattered with an illustration of Alexander at his most genteel. Lording over the square, surely, arms still infamously stuck behind his back and a hint of psychic glow in wide, friendly eyes, but almost kind compared to usual. Flower garlands grew under the paws of grass-types and were cut and strung up in turn, wafting a fragrant, floral thing that Hiudix still had not gotten used to even years living in the grown parts of the mountains. Attendance ebbed and flowed but close to speech time, the burly contractors were vastly outnumbered by a wave of civilians, some of which brought their poor children to suffer in boredom. As Alexander took place behind his podium and waited for King and Hiudix and Azazel to mark the entrances, the crowd coalesced in the open meadow. A sea of faces on the edge of curling into frowns and hissing and spitting.

Hiudix couldn’t tell whether to be insulted that he, specifically, was picked out by Alexander and pointed earnestly to the very back alley entrance, conveniently out of sight from the crowd. Even Azazel got point at the other edge of the stage, letting him bite his tongue at bystanders without restraint.

Regardless of his feelings, Hiundix had a job to do. And with a vague glance, he could at least trust Azazel to stay put. If only for the entertainment of the crowd.

So he took post at the crumbling brick edge, choked by ivy and whose shadow fought damp moss for dominance along the floor. The perfect place to blend in and catch interlopers off guard. He huffed a final relaxed breath, forced his posture straight, brought up his quills and put on his sternest frown.

And waited.

Alexander had the ambitions of a big-city politician but it had never been more true that he could not reach those. Hiudix could not remember his last speech. He may have attended it. But in trying to appear friendly onstage, Alexander’s words simply slid through his mind. Washed over the crowd. Even those who approached the front of the stage ready to bite seemed to deflate—old balloons left out for days. By the time Alexander got past his introductions, his credentials and acumen, and into his development plans, even Azazel seemed bored—slumped over, halfway off the edge of the stage and watched over by a hulking King.

Hiudix did not feel the pull of sleep. But he could only pay attention to those plans. Those were the only words that stuck—that drew him back up and fixed his posture as it slipped.

“...and build out the harbourfront, of course, in both directions. New drydocks on either end, a dozen new piers, and we’re building up along the cliffs…

It ended up being less interesting than he thought. No mention of the East end or the mountains. Not concerning Hiudix, then. Of course, common sense said Alexander would not speak openly of more controversial matters. He certainly cleared his throat a lot, folding his frill over and over and openly ignoring any raised paws. Hiudix supposed things continued as they started. This low drone in the background, mixing with the oncoming winds brought over by an overcast. Alexander’s snout wrinkled as the clouds showered his ceremony in shadow, but beyond that nothing interesting drew Hiudix’s attention away.

At first.

Until he noticed movement.

It began with a shimmer. A glittering in the grass that he might have mistaken for the sheen of dew. Which he did, at first, or the glimpse of movement drawn out by the wind. Until he realised he could follow it, eyes squinted, quills up. He shuffled forward, tracking the subtle shifting of grass. Once it passed by his corner, he struck. Claws out, he leapt, soundless, catching something smooth and scaly between his claws. The flash of reveal was drowned out in the movement, but by the time he dragged the intruder back into the alley it’d come from, it formed into creature of purple scales, hackles equally raised but now hidden from the crowd behind Hiudix’s wall of quills.

It took a moment longer to realise.

“Soleiro,” Hiudix whispered, leaning back like a rattlesnake waiting to strike.

Hiudix caught a faint glimpse of something feral meeting his eyes, but Soleiro recovered quickly muscles relaxed and sinking back against the brick wall and meeting his threat with a flat stare.

“Ah. Didn’t think you’d be up for Alexander’s detail. Changed sides, huh?”

Oh, of course. Hiudix did not let up. Every second around Soleiro needed some sort of pressure. Not to keep him in check, really, simply to not let anything out. If he could mimic a statue for a while, they might part having learned nothing from each other—and all the better with someone like that. Soleiro had an unfortunate knack for gathering information that Hiudix was not ready to test.

So, “Leave,” was all he decided to say. Dipping his voice low and husky like he remembered his elders did, snouts underlit by licks of spectral fire rising with the moral of their oral mythtelling.

Soleiro pretended to think in response. Or perhaps he did think—but with a tilt of the head that seemed almost sarcastic.

“I’ve just come up with a deal for you,” he said, placing his claws against Hiudix and attempting to pat them out from around his chest. Hiudix did not budge. “Alexander has a safe in his office. The key to that safe is hanging on his waist right now. You let me past, I’ll take it and we can pretend that I was never here.”

A terrible proposition, certainly.

“I’m not interested in his money.”

Soleiro shook his head.

“I think Alexander should’ve become an architect if he actually cared about helping pokemon,” he said, “this is about blueprints. Plans—little diaries he likes to write in when he thinks he’s alone at night, the most solitary author I’ve ever seen. I’ve never caught a glimpse of what he’s planning, but I know he only does it with the door locked. It’s interesting, isn’t it?”

Unfortunately, that happened to interest him. His nose twitched. Barely, but Hiudix clocked it as a mistake the moment he felt Soleiro relax further.

“You know how I work,” Soleiro said, “I’ll let you in on the information. And consider the price paid already. If you let me go.”

Hiudix held his breath. Swallowed and tasted iron. Many others would dismiss Soleiro as creepy and otherwise avoid him. Hiudix suspected that was the strategy—the method he used to pick up so much information and use that to his advantage. That and the camouflage. He could map himself to a background, watch dully from the corner of a room and simply absorb what he needed to and slip away like sand dragged from the beach and into the sea.

And yet Hiudix wanted to lean his way for once. For all his knowledge, Soleiro did not have power. Perhaps he could gain some this way, but that remained the only reason Hiudix still hesitated.

“The speech is almost over,” Soleiro drawled, pointing up at the stage where Alexander finished talking about policy and had begun to rub his throat, wincing.

Hiudix fidgeted. He tried to keep stoic but couldn’t help his free claw wandering to scratch at his chin. Sharp, but it put his mind in focus. While nothing good could come from letting Soleiro have that key, given the changes rapidly approaching Seafolk, he doubted much bad could come from it either.

Of course, his hesitation did not vanish. There was a reason, after all. He couldn’t simply do the deed himself beyond sounding like a stuck windchime when he walked.

“I won’t tell Volaphomet.” Soleiro chimed in, reading his mind.

This did not settle much. Volaphomet might not care about Alexander, but she did care about her newfound moral crusade and as exasperating as that could be in the heat of the moment, Hiudix couldn’t deny buying into it to some degree.

Only, when he looked Alexander in the face and tried to see the thoughts behind that sneering mask, Hiudix found himself not caring as much anymore.

Still, Volaphomet would not forgive him for a while.

“Fine. So long as I remain uninvolved.” Hiudix softened, grip slack around the kecleon’s waist, letting him slip through. “Where will you share the… plans?”

Soleiro brushed him off, sliding around Hiudix and against the brick and ivy. In a blink, he vanished. Replaced by a disembodied voice and a parting shimmer cutting the air.

“Oh, you’ll get them eventually—I know what you’re looking for. Just keep on your toes for a while.”

He got lost instantly, passing from the overgrown edges of the park and into the open shade, with shorter grass and moss choked out by overhangs of foliage. Hiudix only noticed him again on the stage. Alexander was in the midst of turning, propping up a point with an open palm and underlining the result with a limp stamp of the foot, shaking the boards beneath him. He paused a moment, silent, and Hiudix held his breath. But then continued, whipping around to reveal one less key on his belt.

And that was that. Hiudix let his breath go, rolled his shoulders, glanced quickly out at the crowd and hoped nobody noticed.

This was a bad choice, he recognised. But out of his claws now. And ultimately not strange to the average day in Seafolk. Volaphomet would not find out. Nothing would come from it. He would perhaps discover Alexander wishing to build a gilded statue of himself for the other guilds to be unimpressed by and that was that.

He could only hope.
 

Kbludoh

Bug Catcher
Location
Brazil
Pronouns
he/him
Hey there! This is for the PMD Writers United Review Tag thingie!

I am reviewing specifically Chapter 1, and many of my observations might regard something you either have evolved from, or might be things that are already addressed further in the story. Regardless, those are my personal opinion only, and as such, please do take with a truckload of salt.

First of all, I'd like to open by saying that this fic *is not* an easy read. The descriptions are lengthy and detailed, the word choice is heavy and diverse, and it is easy to get lost in it. Even the small bits of physicality between dialogue tags is cramped with very specific vocabulary to be extremely precise, which again, makes it a waaaay more difficult read than the average thing you would find anywhere else. This is not a judgment of merit on whether this is a good or a bad thing, it is just a statement.

Now, what I do believe is that there is so much detail and there is so much description of the location that it bogs down the pacing by a lot, and most of it do not feel like they were filtered enough by Solder's lenses. Up to a certain extent, describing the Pokémon they see as a weasel or a rat, or a bird with x and y features is a way of filtering, but saying they are "fascinated by a certain feature" of a character. It is kinda like "interesting", which means something and nothing at the same time. There are tons of little places with situations like that: the Sunflora's enthusiastic conversation with its potential customer when Solder is waiting for his turn, the description of Seafolk which just speaks of the city's features but do not reflect the *specific* feelings evoked in Solder. It is like there is a disconnect between description and character that makes it hard to connect with Solder, which is further exacerbated by the lengthy and dense prose and description that makes it feel even longer, like we have to eat two pounds of potatoes before we get to our steak, but by them we are so full of potato that we can't even enjoy the steak that much.

Solder is hard to read: he seems grumpy, stressed, and lost at the same time, which is understandable considering his frustration about his amnesia and his exhaustion due to the prolonged seasickness, but at the same time does not give an immediate hook as to why he is looking for the guild that compels us to create any sort of bond with the character. You can infer that he is looking to find the guild to maybe figure out more about himself and his past, but it is never outwardly spoken, and it is never given a reason as to why he'd rather join the guild instead of simply asking for help. There is no sense of urgency and no explicit conflict driving us forward in the story that is compelling enough to keep trudging on, I feel.

Larcen, however, feels good. He is a nice foil, he is charismatic, funny, and quippy. He bounces really nicely with Solder, and his mere acts already puts a question mark in what the heck is happening to Seafolk's guild and the clear red flags being waved around about it. I'd argue he is the highlight of this chapter.

Despite my review seeming like a harsh critique of the fic, I do believe there are a ton of great features. The cast is cool, the setting has a ton of details and small bits of worldbuilding sprinkled around that makes it feel alive, and the approach is refreshingly different from what is found around. I just feel like I was not ready for the steep difficulty in the reading I was about the get myself into.

Either way, I hope this review is helpful in any way, shape, or form. Keep on writing and keep bringing your ideas into reality!
 

Blackjack Gabbiani

Merely a collector
Pronouns
Them
Partners
  1. shaymin
  2. dusknoir
Back here for Catnip! Chapter two now!


Solder continues to be far in over his head, doesn't he? That seems to be his lot in life for the foreseeable future.

Nice scene setting, with the arena/lobby being an abject mess.

And so is the rest of the building! He's never gonna be able to rest, is he? Ah nope, nope, he's got to deal with The Couch. Probably bare springs in it too.

Love that he's barely aware that he's a pokemon but he's still got the first reaction to *growl* which makes me think this was something he did as a human too.

Energy dripping out like blood from a wound...ooooh that's good! Very evocative.

Like I said last time, it would be easier to read if the descriptions and actions were on the same lines as the concurrent dialogue.

I love the bit about "but you smiled!" "That was a smirk" Haha you cannot keep yourself from the merriment, Solder! Honestly I'm starting to get some Squall Leonhart vibes from him.

"drifting like blood cells" now...huh that's...ominous, especially with the previous part I excerpted...

I wonder why the guildmaster just goes by species name instead of personal name. It's also rather funny to me that "dragon?" is what comes to mind for Flygon but not Haxorus when they're both dragons that don't especially look like dragons.

Wait so Solder isn't a human? He has a pokemon brother with another fire name? Was not expecting that one bit!

ooh! But the Klefki made the name up on the boat ride...and yet someone else knows it?! The plot thickens! This is a wild ride.

I'm starting to think Larcen picked his own name too what with all the theft going around.

A nice little look into the world of PMD!
 
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