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Arbee

Bug Catcher
Pronouns
he/him
Disclaimer: Graphic Depiction of Violence

Chapter 20 - Fear to Tread

"Some things are better left buried."



"Come on, Garnet!" Grookey clapped, cheering up his little buddy, his hit-pitched voice cracking with excitement. "Don't trip this time!"

"He's going to trip..." Sobble let out a merry chuckle.

"Here goes!" the bunny shrieked, psyching himself up, his wide eyes locked on a tennis ball perched on the sidewalk. Patchy, chewed, barely holding together. But it was theirs.

He dashed. A little too excited to impress his older friends. His foot hauled off, putting all of his strength into the strike. What he lacked in might, he made up for with sheer enthusiasm.

The child hit the toy with all his strength, spinning awkwardly as he fell onto the grass. Despite the tumble, his snout sprang up, watching the ball fly.

It wasn't just off the target. The ball flew over the garbage can they used as a goalpost and took flight into the second-story building next to theirs.

"Whoops..." Garnet managed a bashful smile. His heart skipped as the projectile struck a window.

A loud bang of breaking glass echoed. Shards fell to the filthy pavement down below, each piece adding to their chagrin.

The kids froze. Stuck between the fight and flight, they watched the shattered frame. One second passed. Another one. Then... Nothing.

The lights inside didn't spring to life. No sounds escaped the balcony.

"So, uh..." Scorbunny tittered, paw rubbing his scraped knee. "What do we do?"

"We get the ball back!" Grookey pointed at the toy stuck between the double-layered sheets of glass. One broken, the other partially destroyed.

"Priorities!" Little Sobble backed him up.

The monkey awkwardly looked around for any whistleblowers. A couple of passersby stopped to peek into the dirty alley.

"They're gonna see me if I climb..." he whispered, watching the people gather up behind the fence.

"I got it!" The lizard tapped his shoulder, slipping between the bars. Her blue scales changed color, turning dull brown, spotted white. A hue of salt the coastal wind carried over from the sea.

She couldn't help but let out a chortle, vanishing amidst the trash cans and roof drain pipes.

Another day. Another game. It has been such a long while. But life has finally started to feel normal. The bones of the past were buried deep under the warm quilt of joy and laughter.

Her little hands scaled the wall, slipping from one sill onto the other. Until she disappeared in a downspout, safely tucked away from prying eyes.

The lizard waited for a pair of Pidove to pass by, spooked by all of the commotion. She rolled out of the pipe, pressing herself into the wall and hiding under the faded awning. Stray beams of morning sun struck her blind. But she pushed forth. Her only silent witness, a bright blue butterfly perched on the shattered frame, took off, playfully brushing against her crest.

"Don't tell anyone," she whispered to the monarch with a giggle.

Her friends watched her in quiet awe, peeking from behind the fence. Sobble's fingers pried the ball out of the broken glass. The evidence was gone. Before anyone could notice. Perfect.

She teetered on the edge, picking a safe spot to take a plunge into a drum full of water underneath. A chuckle quietly escaped her lips. She paused. For just a fleeting moment. One single second to take the sting out of it. One second that would change everything.

The eyes of half a dozen passersby, still chittering away, were locked on the shattered window. Her tongue slipped out to tease the clueless fools. But it turned out she wasn't the only one seizing the distraction. Somewhere below, a figure slipped behind the rubbernecks, chin tightly pressed into his chest, his sailor's hat pulled down low.

He disappeared as quickly as he came into view. Another face amidst the crowd. Another stranger among many. But one thing caught her eye. That briefcase. That damnable locked case that burnt its way into her memory. Old, patchy, and unmarked. Yet unmistakable.

She froze. The smile slipped off her face, stripped clean by a ghostly wind of memories. And for the moment, the whole world vanished.

"Psst," Scorbunny whispered, clicking his fingers to get attention. "Opal?"

"Yeah?" The lizard snapped out of it, still fiddling with the ball. "Oh, right..."

She plunged off the balcony, landing in the water with a quiet, almost weightless puff. Her scales changed color yet again, perfectly blending in.

The child slithered back between the bars. This time without enthusiasm. Like she was on a walk of shame. The tennis ball slipped out, bumping into the bunny's foot.

"You're the best!" Grookey shared a wide grin.

"That was SO cool!" Garnet proudly remarked.

Opal tried to smile, but couldn't. Her gaze drifted outside. The specter vanished, but the pull of memories remained.

"You wanna go play tag now?" Scorbunny awkwardly shifted from one foot to another.

Silence.

"Opal?" Mal blinked.

She turned around, batting her glassy eyes. "I think I want to rest now."

The two friends exchanged a look.

"Are you okay? Did you hurt yourself?" Garnet faltered, guilt creeping into his high-pitched voice.

"No. Just... Winded," Sobble laughed it off. "I'll join you later. Promise."

It seemed to satisfy the bunny. His eyes moved to the friend. A moment of awkward silence. Before his paw tapped his shoulder. He dashed away before his friend could yelp. "YOU FIRST!"

"HEY!" Grookey pulled a pout, dropping his stick in a hurry. "THAT'S CHEATING!"

Another day, another game. It didn't take long for both of them to get carried away. But not for Opal. The ghost was there. Somewhere. Calling.

She turned around, watching her friends vanish behind the house, one chasing the other. Their screams and laughter made her pause. That precious carefree laughter wiped her slate clean.

Her hand slipped between the bars. One part of her held back.

Why now? Why, when the grave was put to rest?

The pull was stronger than the sense of reason. Perhaps it was a trick of her imagination. Perhaps it wasn't him. Perhaps, she'd track the stranger only to find out that it was all a fantasy. That sounded right.

Sobble slithered out into the alley. The specter had a headstrap. And so she ran. Some grandma shrieked when she slipped past between her legs. A child dropped his glass of soda. Wind brushed against her scales, cold and salty.

Colors, buildings, windows, and the scattered stalls passed by. A blur. Something within her stirred, convinced that it was an illusion. A figment of her young imagination, nothing more. But that creeping urge pushed forth. To put her racing heart at ease. At last. To let it beat again, assured that the past is gone for good.

Time stretched out. She didn't even notice how she made it all the way up to the docks, taking turns at random and picking the direction that felt right. Still nothing. What was she hoping for? What were the chances?

Sobble stopped, looking at the rusty wall of an old warehouse. She sighed, then closed her eyes. A quiet laugh escaped her. It was a dumb idea after all. A game of tag was what she truly needed.

The lizard turned around. Embarrassed by herself. Only to catch the ghost standing a mere dozen feet away.

She froze, ducking behind a trash can.

There he was, scanning the alley to make sure no one followed, that cursed briefcase in hand. The sailor knocked on the metal door, shifting his valise from one sweaty hand to the other for too long, until footsteps thundered on the other side.

A spyhole opened up. The bars clicked. A warehouse gate creaked open. No words exchanged. No questions asked. The docker stepped inside.

The lizard took a deep breath. Now or never. She knew she shouldn't. She knew it was a bad idea. But curiosity and shame forced her hand before the force of reason could.

Opal's lips curled. A jet of water shot out of her mouth to knock a bottle over.

<What->

It bought her but a second. A split-second opening to move. She dashed through a broken cart and leaped, silently clutching a lamp pole and landing on the doorframe. Too small. Too light to draw attention.

<It must have been the wind,> the docker croaked.

Sobble slithered in without making noise. A mere fraction of a moment before the door slammed shut. Her scales turned black to merge with the gloom as she crawled her way across the ceiling, disappearing amidst the rusty pipes.

The lights were scarce. Nothing but a couple of kerosene lamps flickering their last. A few more people. A pair of them moved crates into an unmarked van. The other man popped screws out of a license plate, using the spare ones on the floor. A painfully thin vulpine dutifully passed the tools. Little Eevee looked like a ball of grease and diesel, her brown fur painted black.

<Not this one, idiot. That's for hex sockets,> he groaned. <You really want to make my job much harder, don't you?>

<Hah!> One of the people let out an exhausted laugh. <Consider giving it your Ice-Stone. If it can't handle finding a screwdriver, we might as well save up on coolant.>

<I'll think about it,> the mechanic shot the miserable thing a savage grin. <Get back to work. I asked for one with a cross. A CROSS, you dumbass.>

"I'm sorry," the wretched creature whimpered, skittering off towards a toolbox.

Somehow her voice sounded... Familiar.

A lanky man with a black scruffy beard wiped his oily hands on a rag and tossed it aside, finally addressing their guest. <Took you long enough.>

<Sorry, Walter. Complications. I thought the bobbies were paid off. They weren't supposed to give me trouble.> The sailor took a deep breath of relief.

<They are. Half the district looks away for profit. But there's always that one asshole who's too good to make cash,> the roughneck explained, fixing his duckbill cap. Grease-stained hands left oil on gray overalls. <It's none of their business what's in your briefcase unless they have a warrant. Play by their rules.>

<Noted,> the docker huffed, shaking his little package. <Got some fresh meat for you.>

<Really? What are we having?> Walter shared a nod, wiping sweat off his forehead. <If this one's like the last, we're set.>

The sailor paused before unlocking his precious little valise. <About that...>

<Ah, and here I was with my high hopes...> the roughneck sighed.

<I lost a contact a few months ago. Used to bring me loads of good stuff. It's not the same since he left,> the docker admitted quietly. <Now I get what I can from clueless kids willing to haggle.>

Sobble's heart skipped a beat as she pressed her back into the pipes a little harder, trying to remain unseen.

<Jail?> Walter idly inquired, sifting through the stack of Poké Balls.

<Accident. Apparently. That or the poor sod couldn't handle the pressure. Perhaps it's guilt.> The sailor took a guess.

<Pfft... Guilt,> the roughneck laughed. <Now everyone's going to pretend like we haven't farmed Pokémon for ages. Furs, meat, and leather don't grow on trees. Lest we start acting like we invented faux along with the tools of iron.>

<Eh. It's one thing to buy trinkets made of Pokémon. Sending one to the slaughterhouse yourself is different. But I digress.> The docker shook his head. <How's the last batch?>

<Not too shabby,> Walter idly replied. A disappointed sigh escaped him as he went through each and every sphere. <Ten out of twenty went on their merry way to meet the butcher. We put the other half to train. Six didn't last. The rest are fitting well. Somewhat.>

<I figure,> the sailor shot a glance towards little Eevee digging through the toolbox. <Still kicking, huh? What's with the cats? My contact said those two are special. Can't find any like that in Galar.>

Sobble's breath hitched, a wave of dread flooding her. Last batch. It all made sense. Those little friends she had helped catch.

<Mhm,> the roughneck groaned, tapping on the pocket on his chest. He slipped a wallet out to count bills. <One of the reasons we keep them both around. For now. If they learn well, they'll earn us more than we invest.>

He shoved the payment into the sailor's hand, reaching for a pack of smokes. <Sixteen. Seventeen. Come say hi.>

A broken meow cut through the echoes in the warehouse.

"No quiero..." A small, whimpering voice rang from the car's cabin.

"Vamos, Kuo," Another one, much calmer, soothed. "They aren't going to hurt us if we listen. Please?"

A pause. A painfully long one.

<Did I fucking stutter?> Walter got annoyed, shooting a glance towards the car.

"Vale," the smaller one replied, squeezing out a miserable sniffle. "Okay..."

Two kittens slipped off the front seat, their bodies gaunt and trembling. Both alike as two reflections in a mirror. Only a brand marked one Sprigatito from its twin. A fresh, pink scar shaped like an R was burned into their pelts where the little friend's marks used to be. The boy wore his upon his thigh, the girl upon her chest. They circled their master, the movements stiff, the misery impossible to hide. Their eyes, haunted and empty, flicked up with silent pleas for mercy no one would give.

<They lost some weight,> the sailor cackled, shoving the cash into his pocket. Something slipped out and bounced off the floor.

The lizard squinted.

A coin? Pendant?

Just then, a rough piece of metal stamped with crimson paint caught her eye. Sobble sprang into action, creeping down the pipe.

<No shit. They have to train harder if they're to earn their meals. I don't like freeloaders,> Walter brushed him off. <Besides. Your precious contact did a number on them.>

Sobble crept behind the two, barely a shadow. Her fingers closed on the iron chip. A token marked red R. She snatched it up, retreating to the door. Too many of them. Too few of her. She couldn't right the wrong. But maybe she could find someone strong enough to try.

<He knew his stuff. That's why I miss him,> the sailor said. He didn't notice. <His lizard knocked them out cold before they knew what hit them.>

Opal squeezed her eyes shut in shame. She didn't know. He told her to. Because some little friends were apt to harm.

Excuses.

She ran, hands shaking as she scaled the old drains. Perhaps to find help, perhaps to flee from crushing guilt. Her grip tightened until her knuckles burned, the iron token all she had left to hold onto.

She ran away, scaling the old drains. A flash of light in the musty windows struck her blind just as her hand reached for the sill. The sounds faded. The chatter turned into a distant hum, signaling she'd left that world behind.

Inteleon winced in her sleep. Her golden eyes popped open, staring at the screen of a transmitter perched by the filthy mattress. She pushed herself off the ground. So sudden that the whole room went quiet.

Opal sprang up so frantically that her head slammed into the ceiling as she straightened up, sending a sheaf of dust sprinkling down on the floor. Her hand rubbed the scales with a groan.

"Is everything okay?" A piece of bark slipped out of Jasper's paws.

Inteleon blinked, looking over the shelter in drowsy stupor.

Flint and Agate stirred up, disturbed by her abrupt awakening. The rest... Weren't there.

"Been better," she huffed, dusting herself off.

"Bad dreams?" Floragato asked, picking up his unfinished project and wiping the dirt off the carving.

Opal didn't answer. Deflecting. "Where's everyone?"

He sighed, setting the art piece aside. "Left to scout ahead. Mae wanted us to look over the wounded."

"Naturally." Inteleon lowered herself back onto the filthy mattress. Her restless eyes drilled the tattoo. She drowned back into her thoughts.

The feline sniffed a potion, his expression twisting into a grossed-out scowl. He bit the cork off, paws awkwardly hoggling the flask. A pulverizer bottle wasn't exactly made for someone lacking thumbs.

"Stupid..." The cat hissed at the frustrating tool, struggling to push the button. With limited success.

A stream of liquid hit him straight in the face before he could readjust the aim. Floragato gagged, letting out a miserable cough. His eyes watered, tears streaming down his face. "Ugh..."

After a few failed attempts, it finally found the target, pointing at the hare's knee. The bones crunched, squeezing a yelp out of her. As if the two ends of a fracture moved back into place. Her fingers grabbed onto the mattress. One quarter of a potion wasn't enough to mend the damage. But it was a start.

"There. Better," Jasper moved onto Meowth.

The cut, splitting Flint's face from top to bottom, closed up, leaving a glistening red line. The eye, however, fared much worse. A mere touch of potion turned the gray tint a little whiter. The wound was closing. But at what cost?

Floragato let out a shaky sigh, watching the mauled feline curl into a wretched ball to get some rest.

The silence fell again. Only the sound of the transmitter's screen filled the void around with a faint hum of rustling static.

"Opal?" Jasper looked around to make sure they were alone.

"Petals?" She idly replied, tearing her eyes off the mark. As if the act of looking in itself was some sort of a sign of weakness.

"Can I ask you something?" Floragato's question made her crest wince.

"I don't know. Can you?" Inteleon bounced back. Her fingers quietly squeezed up. Her posture stiffened.

"I always wondered..." His words made her tense up harder.

She turned around. Something stirred up in her painfully impartial eyes. A tinge of dread. It came unnoticed. It always did. Her brow creased higher. "About?"

"About Mal," the cat confessed.

Inteleon's rigid form eased, if only for a heartbeat. The relief never lasted. She knew he'd find out. Some day.

"You know, it's... Something I was afraid to ask. I'd talk to our bunny. But it's really hard for him," Jasper whispered, inching a little closer. "I wonder what the team was like before I came along."

Opal didn't reply.

"I... Really want to help him. But I don't know how. Until I hear the story," the feline quietly pressed on. "We're friends. We lived together for more than half a decade."

Her eyes drifted off. Towards his brand. Then back at him. She folded. "I hear you."

"So..." Floragato nervously clenched his paws, fiddling with the vine.

"Sticks. Mal. He was the first of us. Our oldest," Opal finally divulged. "He found our soon-to-be calamity wandering the woods alone. Somewhere in Dappled Grove."

"Our Raboot grew up wild?" Jasper's eyes blinked. "How come I didn't know?"

"Grew up? Hardly. He was a kit, too young to fend for himself. The campfire drew him in. Because he must have thought that burning coals meant it was safe," she explained. "And for a while, it was the two of them. Thick as thieves."

Opal paused. For just a moment. Her eyes traced the brand again. It kept her talking. A sore, nagging wound that'll never put the ghosts to rest. A living, walking, breathing shadow of the past.

"That hits close to home," Floragato tittered, anxiously licking his paws to straighten up the lazy flocks of fur.

"That was before my time with the team. I joined years later. But I've known both for long enough before one didn't make it home." Inteleon kicked back, blankly staring at the empty screen and watching the waves dance across it.

"What... What happened?" Jasper's ears perked up.

"I wasn't there. Flames came running back, a weeping mess. The story changed each time he told it." Opal swiped her crest. "A dragon coming from the clouds. A whole pack of wilds hounding them. The more, the merrier. Enough heroics to make a bard with poor standards blush."

She shared a shrug.

"And yet the truth that hid between the words has always stayed the same. One ran. One stayed. End of story," Opal concluded.

"He still blames himself for it... Doesn't he?" The feline's eyes filled with lead.

"Go figure. He's never been the same. Like seeking death will somehow right the wrong." Inteleon tore her gaze away. "Atoning for the only reasonable thing he could have done."

"You really think so?" Jasper stuttered. "I... Didn't expect you to say this. Of all Pokémon."

"If he'd chosen to stay, I would have had to help our trainer bury two instead of one." Her answer made a shiver run down Floragato's spine. "Did you expect a clueless kit to win a fight? Or did you expect me to scold him for surviving?"

"No. No, it's just..." A heavy sigh escaped the cat. "You aren't really..."

He struggled to pick the right word for it.

Opal's brow arched.

"Never mind. You're right," the feline conceded. "But guilt is not an easy thing to reason with."

Inteleon went silent. The pause stretched out longer than it should have.

"I suppose." Her answer barely drifted out. Jasper didn't notice the crack in her voice.

Floragato lowered himself back, struck by another fit of nausea. "We keep on running from ourselves. But we can't outrun the past. No matter how hard we try."

Opal did not reply. The words cut deeper than intended. The silence fell again.

***

The forest path narrowed into a tunnel of black cedar and old twisted oak. The rain wouldn't stop, slipping between the branches and drumming against the frigid, muddy ground. A flash of gray and orange fur moved silently amidst the trees.

Raboot stopped on a mossy rock to look around. Every trail seemed alike. Every grove, every meadow, every swamp they passed. He let out a sigh, his half-lidded eyes staring at the wall of dark gray clouds above in quiet annoyance.

<Alrighty,> Mae paused behind him, her Helioptile circling around. <Don't go cruising for a bruising. We'll make sure the ridge ahead is clear and head back to the camp.>

Raboot flicked one ear back without bothering to face her. "Yeah, yeah. Whatever."

He hopped off a rock and plunged into the undergrowth with a splash, paws shoved deep in pocket. The little bear galloped after, skidding over the wet stones.

"And THEN!" the child proudly proclaimed, nearly tripping over a sprawled root. "I grabbed the Beedrill nest and swung it so hard it exploded!"

Raboot shot a glance at him. Amber bloomed with infantile enthusiasm; the only saving grace that made the rain feel a little less infuriating.

The bear marched beside him with his chest puffed up to impossible proportions. "There were like... Ten Beedrill! No, two dozen of them!"

<Keep up, team!> Mae pepped up. Her hand reached out to scratch the bunny's head. But he shied away from an unfamiliar scent invading his space. His gray fur bristled.

Garnet snorted through his nose, quickening his face. His posture stiffened. "Uh-Huh. And I bet you punched every single one."

"I DID!" the child valiantly squeaked. "One flew at me! It went like WOOSH! But I wasn't scared! So I went BAM!"

He punched and clawed at the air, getting so carried away that he stumbled over each and every bump, nearly losing balance. "But THEN! They closed around me! Three dozen!"

<Whew.> Behind them, Mae pushed through a bush with an exhausted grunt. <Turn it down, hip. The sound travels far.>

Raboot's ear twitched in quiet irritation. He didn't turn, ignoring her.

"I thought you said two dozen," the bunny pulled a grin, barely holding back a fit of laughter.

Teddiursa froze mid-step. His face scrunched into concentration. "They... They called for help! They got some rainfurcements!"

Garnet barked out a laugh before he could stop himself. "Rainfurcements? How devious of them."

The little bear beamed, convinced he'd just said something astonishingly clever. "Yeah! And then there was this REALLY big one!"

Raboot stepped over a broken cedar trunk. "Lemme guess. As big as Snorlax?"

"Bigger!" the child yelped. "It had a pair of red eyes and extra stingers, too! Its wings went FWOOSH!"

Amber spun his arms so wildly as he spoke, his paws smacking his grown-up friend.

Garnet bit the inside of his cheek to hold a cackle back. "Sounds terrifying."

"I didn't care! I climbed a tree and jumped right on its back! HYAAAH!" The bear scaled a rock to demonstrate. But his foot slipped on the dew.

"Whoa-" The kid pinwheeled straight past Raboot and vanished muzzle-first into a muddy puddle. A loud splash ended his heroic tale prematurely.

Mae stopped behind them. Her Helioptile raised his brow.

Silence.

Teddiursa slowly pushed himself out, a leaf glued to his face. "That... Uh..."

"It's all Beedrill conspiring against you." The bunny stretched his paw, helping him get back up.

"YOU'RE SO RIGHT!" The child clutched the excuse like a lifeline. "Why didn't I think of that?"

"You let your guard down," Raboot chortled.

The bear gasped in response, frantically looking around.

<Come on, team. Burn rubber,> Mae chimed in. Her cheer sounded unlike herself. As if she tried to copy someone more familiar. <We got this.>

"Pfft..." Garnet rolled his eyes as he took off.

"Ohhh..." Teddiursa leaned a little closer. "You don't like her?"

Raboot shoved through a fern patch harder than he had to. "I didn't say that."

"You made the face!" the child giggled.

"What face?" He quickened up, refusing to look back.

"The grumpy face!" Amber tittered with amusement.

"That's just my face," the bunny groaned.

"Oh! You DO dislike her then!" Teddiursa smirked, still shadowing his friend. Smart little rascal.

<Stay sharp, you two,> Mae glanced over at them as they chittered.

"Oh, shut UP!" Raboot's eyes twitched. "You aren't my trainer. Get back to fiddling with radios."

The bear froze. His eyes peeped at the bunny, then at the human, walking past him. And for a second, the child's expression turned completely mortified.

But Mae did not react. The only one who did was Helioptile, glaring daggers at him.

"Sometimes I wish she'd understand me," Garnet scoffed.

"What did she do?" The kid caught up, his tiny paws slapping across the puddles.

"What didn't she do? Drag on this stupid island, get herself trapped, and let our trainer walk into a death trap all alone," The bunny vented. "And now she's acting like she's the one in charge?"

Teddiursa curiously rubbed his chin.

"She's friends with Mom and owns ONE Poké Ball. That somehow makes her qualified to tell me what to do. Ridiculous," Raboot groaned. His eyes met with Helioptile, still staring him down. "What are you looking at?"

Citrine's frills twitched. The lizard squinted with enough venom in his eyes to curdle milk.

Raboot glared back. "Must have been cozy staying home while we struggled to survive, huh?"

Helioptile jabbed his claw at Mae, then pointed at Garnet. His grabber did a circling motion like he was winding up a punch.

"Ohhh," Teddiursa whispered. "He's mad."

"Sounds like his problem." Raboot shoved his paws into his pocket. "He has done nothing since we came here. Save for shoulder cruising."

An arc of static ran through Citrine's fingers. His frills drooped.

"Prove me wrong," the bunny challenged.

Helioptile bobbed his head towards the radio, still clipped to his owner's belt.

"That was about the only thing you did to help. Because Mae asked you to." Garnet's expression turned painfully sour. Pent-up frustration spilled out like water through a broken dam. "You don't care about whose life is on the line. The only one you care about is Mae. Maybe that's why you never even bother to step up unless she asks."

The bunny stomped the ground and quickened up to take the lead. Amber dashed, his eyes full of concern.

The fog congealed. The meadow ended in a ridge that overlooked the valley down below. Or it would have if not for all the mist. Another set of ancient ruins, this time little more than piles of rocks where the standing stones once were. Long-looted and destroyed by time.

"I hate it. I hate being treated like a bunch of stupid kids. I hate that we're keeping secrets from each other." Smoke coiled out of Raboot's nose. His fists clenched at his sides. "After fighting for my life and getting them out of trouble, I'm still not good enough to know what's going on behind the scenes."

<Don't go too far.> Mae's ignorance poked right at the hornet's nest. As if the only one who heard him was the kid. <Stick close to me.>

"Let's play a game of getting out of my face. You go first," the bunny seethed. "We've survived without you just fine. I don't need advice."

<Garnet?> the blonde finally picked up. <You doing okay, chum?>

"No?" He turned around, stomping his foot into the ground again. A dead giveaway. His ears angled forward, brows furrowed in frustration.

<Someone's moody today,> she chuckled.

"Yikes, I wonder why," Raboot croaked.

<You're having a tough day?> Her hand slipped into her pocket, crumpling a piece of plastic hidden tucked within.

The bunny's nose twitched. He crossed his arms, watching her through squinted eyes.

<Here. Maybe this will help.> She tossed him a snack.

Garnet didn't react. Just stood there as the crunchy Pokémon treat bounced off his snout and dropped onto the ground. He looked at it. And then at Mae. His face twisted into an offended grimace, deeply hurt.

"What am I, a pet?" Another stomp, leaves flying. "You think tossing food wins me over?"

Helioptile shrugged, dexterously slithering off his owner's shoulder and happily eating the snack off the crumpled grass.

Raboot watched him in revulsion. "Suck-up."

Teddiursa pulled a pair of puppy eyes, staring at Mae. "What about me?"

"Oh, COME ON!" Garnet huffed, storming off along the ridge.

The bunny walked as far as the bluff went, trampling across the broken pavement. The only thing that had survived the passage of untold decades was a rough, half-wrecked statue, the sole witness to the ages. Umbreon with ears and tail broken off. The vulpine stared past them. Quiet. Solemn.

<Hey.> The blonde caught up with him, quickening her pace. Her hand tapped on his shoulder.

Garnet flinched. He pushed it off and spun around, seething. "Don't touch me."

<What's going on?> She wouldn't let it go.

"You are." Another cloud of smoke escaped his nose. His shoulders bumped into the old monument. He looked like a cornered prey about to throw a fit.

<You're mad at me?> It took her quite a while to find out.

"No shit." His ears twitched.

<I'm sorry, hip. I wish I knew how to communicate.> Mae let out a sigh.

"You aren't a trainer. You don't know jackshit." He motioned her to back away and give him space. She didn't understand the gesture. "This is annoying."

The blonde blinked at him. Not offended. Just slightly caught off guard, the way humans always are when something clicks three conversations later than it should have.

<I'm doing my best here, buddy,> Mae tried again.

"That's the problem," Garnet sighed, his back pressed against the statue, his fingers gripping at its edge. He stiffened like a hedgehog as she reached out again, invading boundaries. "Quit trying. Hands off. Get away from me."

For her, it all sounded like a string of rough chirps and melodic trills. Her shoulders sagged. And somehow, that only made things worse.

"See?" The bunny spat, ears flat. "You don't even know what I'm saying. You can't read body language. You keep on guessing. And talking down to us like we're kids. Or pets. Or both."

"She's talking?" The little bear gasped. It only hit him now that she was saying something. The sounds she made didn't click.

Mae paused, trying to read his posture. <You're stressed, huh?>

"Ohhh, this is so bad," Teddiursa giggled in fascinated horror of someone watching a cart run downhill without brakes.

"I AM stressed," Raboot snapped. "We've almost died six times in a row."

<Okay, yeah. You're upset.> The blonde's conclusion made the bunny slap his paw into his face. <Did I do something wrong?>

Garnet stared at her in disbelief. Then pointed dramatically at everything around them.

"The island? The monsters? This stupid expedition? Dragging us all the way across the sea without a plan? Getting yourself trapped? Letting our trainer wander off?" He threw both paws up. "Ringing any bells? What haven't you done wrong?"

The group followed his gesture. Their eyes moved off the ruins. A faint crunch of stones went unheard.

The only thing that Mae caught up in was an increasingly heated string of chirps. <I'll take it as a yes.>

"Great..." A drained groan escaped Raboot. His ears drooped. His eyes lost focus as he tried to prop himself up against the rocks, only to stumble into thin air. He barely noticed, still lost in frustration. "Took you long enough."

"Maybe, uh..." Amber chimed in. "Maybe you can speak in simple words?"

"That's not how it works, bud," The bunny waved her off. "You know what, forget it. Let's just-"

Raboot went silent in an instant. The statue that had been there was gone. Only the empty effigy remained.

"What in the-"

"Oh-oh," the child whimpered.

"Wasn't there-"

"We need to go." He grabbed the bunny's paw.

"What's going on?" Garnet huffed.

The child didn't explain. He tugged his friend away, eyes searching for the missing statue. "We need to go back now."

They skittered off through protests and confusion. Behind them, concealed between the trees, stone scraped against cold stone. And from the mist-chocked dark came the sound of thuds. A string of heavy footsteps rang where no one should have been. Where heroes... Fear to tread.
 
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Arbee

Bug Catcher
Pronouns
he/him
Disclaimer: Graphic Depiction of Violence

Chapter 21 - The Old Road

"How many journeys have these ancient trails seen?"



The endless maze of trees vanished. Gnarled oaks and weeping willows grew apart, turning a choking grove into a scattering of lonely trunks clinging to the slopes beneath a steep, broken ridge. Their roots clung to the dead soil like bony fingers holding onto something long lost to the tides of time.

Beneath the canopy, the silence changed. Out there in the woods, it was close and watchful. The woods felt like quiet, ancient halls closing overhead. But over the bluff, it became something else. Vast. Unnerving by the sheer size of the expanse stretching for miles around. Only hills and valleys sprawled under the sickly sun. Mist drowned a ravine below so thick it felt like sky. A white sea woven into the land.

It gathered among the hollows and rolled over the crags in slow, relentless waves. Waning. Waxing. Shifting like currents in the ocean. The distance lost its meaning. The sounds of the shore faded into the same void that claimed the coasts.

The mundane isolation of the woods turned into a different kind of horror. A gnawing feeling of being the only thing left alive amidst the vast open domain. Black earth beneath. White skies above. A deathly pale sun watched through the fumes like a single milky eye of a dead man. The light felt cold. It left a thin bristle of hoar on the bricks where it reached the ground, sapping the heat from everywhere it touched. Like laws of nature lost their minds, reverting to something eerie. Something alien. Uncanny.

Shapes emerged and vanished without warning. They bumped into view, then faded back into the fog. A cluster of gray, mossy bricks formed part of an ancient wall. Then it became nothing, just a few yards apart. Visibility stretched less than a dozen feet.

The road continued through it. Older than any road had any right to be. The earth around it shifted thousands of times and settled down twice as much, swallowing whole structures beneath the mounds of dirt. And yet the ancient trail endured.

Here and there, slabs of ancient stones budged through the soil, their edges rounded smooth by deluge and overgrown with lichen. No cart had passed this way. No footprint marked the ground. No campfires dared to stain the sidewalk. The trail ran as if it still remembered where it was supposed to go. Not why.

A melancholic solitude settled in. It came to stay, spreading over everything. Up northward, nothing moved. No birds that'd glide far overhead. No Wooloo that would graze upon the plains. No smoke that'd rise above the hills and ridges to mark a shepherd's shack. The clock has run its course. The world has died. Leaving the lonely travelers behind to wander through its quiet grave. The space squeezed it, crushing anyone who'd dare to tread like a riptide under the weight of long-lost memories. A gnawing sorrow for a place they never knew. A grief for things they've never seen. A mourning for the stories these dead plains took with them.

The valley lay abandoned in a different way than the buildings on the shore. Those ruins always clung to distinct traces of yesteryear. Little signs that spoke of those who left them. Whoever called this place their home, however, was erased, leaving only ghostly echoes of their passing.

The landscape was littered with remains, their meaning vanished long ago. A lonely column stood in the center of the hill. Wind and rain stripped it smooth. Its crown was chipped like the neck of a glass bottle. Stones dug up from the soil like broken teeth. They appeared for only a moment before the fog claimed them. Old wall fragments jutted from the earth, then turned into heaps of rock just a few feet further.

Those were not ruins so much as scars of centuries. No structure had enough left of it to tell what was once in its place. Castles? Temples? Cities? Impossible to know. Time swallowed everything save for a handful of broken relics still, forgotten and defaced. Stones. Shadows. Questions.

The only thing in this depressing valley that whispered quietly of hope was but a distant light, clawing its way through the clouds. A guiding star of the lighthouse. Weak. Fragile. But alive. The only grounded reminder that there was something left in the abyss.

"What is this place?" Floragato looked at the little bear marching forth, then at Lopunny, strong enough to move on her own. Or rather limp. The potion truly was a blessing.

The child shrugged, shooting an idle glance towards the ruins. "Dad used to say they were always here. But he was sad each time I asked. So I just stopped."

"I can see why," Jasper quietly admitted, his tail wrapped around his waist.

"How sentimental." Inteleon slowed down, her golden eyes scanning the plains ahead. Whatever little they'd reveal. No signs of movement. Nothing. Even the cursed lights that lay down traps for unsuspecting travelers stayed unseen. "Watch your step. We don't know if that creature is still hunting us."

There was something about it. Some silent tingling at the back of their heads. Not just a sense of danger. Not just a weight of grim foreboding. But something deeper, enticing existential dread.

"This place..." Agate chimed in, her breath too heavy. "Feels weirdly fitting."

"How so?" Floragato watched her stumble forth.

She stopped, her paw pressed against a lonely standing stone. The only thing that still remained of something that once was in its place. Wiped clean. Forgotten.

"Oh." He understood without words. The irony wasn't lost on him.

"What was that thing?" Raboot looked around, paws shoved into his pocket. The hoarfrost turned into beads of dew speckling his fur. His breath turned into clouds of white steam.

"We call them Blinks," the kid explained. "They love this place. Sometimes they come into the forest too. Dad used to say they bring bad things with them."

"What do you mean?" The bunny turned around, eyes drilling the sea of mist. If one still followed them, he couldn't tell.

"We are supposed to hide when we see one. Lest it brings evil things." Amber's voice trailed off into a cautious whisper.

"Brings evil things?" Agate took a deep breath.

He never answered. His perky ears spread out. His nose twitched. Still nothing.

A line of weathered pillars popped into view by the roadside. They marched away into the fog. Some fell. Some snapped in half under their own weight. Some clung to life, angling overhead. They served no purpose. There were no walls around. No gates connecting them. No monuments, awaiting at the end, nor pavements bristled between. Just naked stones.

Yet someone made them. Someone dragged them all the way from rocky bluffs and distant mountains. With hands and tools. Or paws and stubbornness of wild kin. But their intent had crumbled into dust. Before the memory began. That thought lingered like poison.

"I liked the forest better," Garnet confessed, his voice tense with unease. "At least it didn't feel so..."

He looked around again, trying to find the right word. "So..."

"Barren?" Jasper cut in, catching up with him.

Everywhere the eyes turned were signs that countless lives had once filled the sprawling valley. They lived here. Laughed here. Built here. Fought here. Mourned here. And yet no memories of their deeds remained. Only the old road knew where they went before the centuries wiped the slate clean.

It wound onward through the mist, disappearing over another lonely rise, another faint horizon that never seemed to end.

"Yeah. I think that's the word," the bunny quietly replied. His voice looped like a drumbeat in an empty barrel. The skies pressed down.

Floragato raised his paw, shielding himself from the pale, aloof light above. Frost scrubbed against his palm. The sun sapped heat like a leech.

Another pang of nausea washed over him. His knees buckled from exhaustion. He heeled over like, bumping into Raboot's back.

"WOAH!" The bunny flinched, catching him midway before his face could meet the ground as black as coal.

The group stopped dead in their tracks.

"Petals. You look like death." Opal glanced over at him as he struggled to stand up. A task far easier said than done. His fur turned a dark, swampy green like weathered grass.

His attempt failed. He slumped into his friend's arms, tightly clutching his shoulders.

"Jasper?" Garnet muttered, ears drooping.

"I'm..." He took a deep breath, paws trembling from exhaustion. His fingers reached out for the vine to ground himself, but it snapped like a brittle strand of dry hay. His plant-like features crumbled from the slightest touch.

The feline closed his eyes. For just a moment. To gather up whatever strength remained. The world turned blinding white. The ground beneath his feet vanished, turning into dust. The stones flew away like mounds of weathered sand. As if the valley reached its morbid and inevitable conclusion.

He shook his head, banishing the visions of the empty, hollow hereafter.

"JASPER?" The bunny tapped his shoulder, dragging him out of the delusion.

A taste of copper filled his mouth. His stomach twisted from a gnawing grip of hunger. "The sun... I need the sun. I can't go like this anymore."

That cruel reflection far above wasn't that. It was a mockery. A distant careless star, intent to tease.

The feline slithered his way out of Raboot's arms, flopping back onto the ground. His claws slid out, raking the cold soil. Wild and frantic.

"Come on," he whined under his breath. "Come on, please."

"What are you doing?" Agate heaved.

Mae stopped behind them, oblivious. <Team?>

He didn't reply. His talons scoured the soil. Searching for something. Worms. Bugs. Anything to stave off the sickness. But the dirt was as dead as the plains. The feline whimpered in despair.

"I need... The sun. Or I need prey," he squeezed out through gritted teeth. "I'm dying."

"No, you're not!" The bunny chucked in denial. "Come. We found some crackers in the camp. You can have mine."

"Crackers won't do a thing. Why won't you listen to me?" Jasper looked at him. Something inside his stare, feral and frantic, made his friend freeze.

It sparked something within him. Some sort of instinctual response, forcing Garnet to step back. The feline's fangs looked longer, his claws much sharper than they had any right to be. That unblinking look sent shivers running down Raboot's spine.

His foot stomped into the ground. He crouched, rigid, as if some urge physically forced him to back away. He recognized that look: the same desperate glare he'd seen in the eyes of a fox that claimed Mal. It was a gaze he never thought his friend would show.

"Flint... Flint is a cat too," he stuttered, unlike himself, his knees so tense that they seemed like he was about to bolt. "She's... She's doing just fine."

"I'M NOT FLINT!" Floragato snapped, his voice cutting through the tension. "That's how we live through winters when nature doesn't provide."

<What's going on?> Mae chimed in. Their screaming made no sense, but it was loud enough to worry her. Her question was ignored again.

"I didn't know you're like that. You don't-"

"Garnet, I'M GOING TO DIE!" Jasper cut him off, raising his voice.

The bunny went completely silent.

"What do you think my claws are for? What do you think my fangs are for? To open cans? To crunch of kibble?" He pressed on, unsure of how else to put it. "I'm sorry, Garnet. I can't change it."

Raboot inched back, torn between running and caring for his friend. His foot hovered in confusion.

"I'm sorry, okay?" the feline muttered, pushing himself off the ground and dusting his patchy fur. Hair fell out in clumps, fur crumbling like hay. "I'm sorry that I was born the way I was."

"There is... Nothing to hunt here," Agate cut in, as tense as Garnet.

He glared at her in anger, unlike himself. "I am aware. That's something... I'll have to figure out myself. Let's go."

"Maybe we'll find some bugs-"

"Keep walking. I'll deal with it." Floragato straightened up through pain and exhaustion, pushing himself far beyond his limits.

"You aren't... planning to eat any one of us, are you?" Raboot strained, his voice barely steady.

"WHAT?" The feline's eyes widened. "How could you... Who do you think I..."

Jasper looked at him in astonishment. Like he just said something so wild that it felt like an insult. "Do you hear yourself?"

The bunny pressed his paws into his head, his mind struggling to grasp it. He didn't reply, unsure of what to say.

"Hey." Agate interjected, softly bumping Garnet's shoulder with her paw. "He's right. We should go."

None of them moved, still staring at each other. Not in fury, but in sheer disbelief.

"Come on." She coaxed, softly tugging Raboot away before any more words could be exchanged. "Let's take a deep breath."

The feline let them get a head start before he'd follow suit. Until both herbivores were far enough to let slip a sigh. He eased for just a fraction when they were out of earshot.

"Oh boy." A chuckle escaped Meowth as she shuffled after them. "We didn't have enough things to worry about, did we?"

Floragato didn't respond, quietly marching forth at a respectful distance. He crossed his arms. Too many thoughts rushed through his head. Mae closed the line, trampling behind them. Drifting further out of place and touch. These Pokémon had more things going on than she could comprehend. No matter how hard she tried.

<Jasper? Are you okay, slick?> She tried to inquire.

"Leave me alone." He didn't bother.

They pushed through in silence.

"I'm hurt," he said almost to himself as their journey dragged on.

"Yeah, I figured," Flint awkwardly replied, fixing her eyepatch.

Jasper's ears flicked. His gaze drifted off towards the ground as they pushed forth. "I've known him for ten years. Almost."

"That long?" Meowth rambled on.

"Yeah. Ten years." His words came sharper than intended. "We had the same toys, slept under the same roof, and shared blankets on cold nights. We've saved each other's lives so many times we've lost count."

Floragato swallowed, the thought gnawing at him. "And now, once he knows I eat prey, he wonders if I'll eat him."

Neither Garnet nor Agate dared to look back. They were far enough ahead to miss the quiet conversation.

"You know what his first thought was?" The feline inched a little closer.

Jasper didn't reply. He quickened up the pace to get away.

"That you're starving." Flint shrugged, despite his silence. "The second thought was panic."

"That doesn't make things any better." Floragato's shoulders slumped.

"Yeah. It ain't," she continued. "But telling a rabbit that one of his best friends has to hunt is not a small thing."

"I never hunted him. I'd rather starve to death," he hissed, offended. "Who do you think I am?"

"I know," the other feline murmured, ears pressed down low.

"Then why does it matter?" Jasper stammered, eyes shying away.

"Instincts," Flint shot back. "You hear hunting, and you think of food. He hears hunting and thinks of being chased around the forest by something large and deadly."

Floragato held his tongue. His mouth opened up, but words didn't come.

"You know. We had to deal with Flops throwing tantrums when she saw us eating fish. All day, every day. For over a month since she came to stay with us in Hulbury," Flint cackled, pain lacing her laughter. "It was such a big fucking deal. Don't even get me started on her hiding in the closet each time she saw a speck of blood on my claws. From fish. We're built different. Instinct is a bitch."

A sad chuckle escaped Jasper. "Didn't know it could be that bad. At least our bunny didn't throw fits over fish. As long as it wasn't one of Pokémon kind."

"He's halfway there. Don't get me wrong, I still owe him a good old knuckle sandwich. Not because he dared kill someone while protecting his own, but because that someone was my friend. Or..." She said, shaking her head. "Whatever was left of him. Poor bastard. Didn't think I'd miss his stink this badly."

Floragato didn't answer, still struggling to process it. Too many things. And all at once.

"I wish that we were still in Galar," Flint mused, changing the topic. "Chewing kibble and watching the rain tap on the window. Sleeping next to an oven and shoving mugs off the table to poke fun at the old man."

"Tell me about it." A shaky sigh left Floragato's lips. "Boredom is a privilege. I'd rather be bored listening to cars outside our shack or pouncing on bugs than worrying about whether we'll live long enough to see tomorrow. It brings me back."

"Tea?" Meowth gleefully conspired.

"No. I'm not in the mood." Jasper staunchly shook his head.

"And here I thought we'd make fast friends," Flint playfully complained. The potion reignited enough life in her to push through. "Come on now, we cats should stick together."

"Mhm. Cats. Renowned for sticking together," Floragato grumbled.

"Pfft. Like Pops said once. The moment you toss three cats into one box, two are already plotting to murder one another, and the third is pretending to know nothing about it," Flint cackled. "It never gets boring."

"Sounds about right," Jasper mumbled, quickening his pace. "I just stay out of trouble."

"Oh, so you're the third one?" Flint wheezed despite the pain.

"Something like that," Floragato sighed. "We have enough things going on to worry about scuffling over which side of the campfire is mine or yours."

"See?" Meowth didn't relent, limping after him. "Progress. Last time we talked back at the docks, you looked at me like you were about to bite my face off. And now you're only sighing at me. We're getting somewhere."

"Don't push it," Jasper muttered, rolling his pink eyes.

"Oh, I absolutely will," Flint snorted, stumbling over a brick. "I'm a thief. Except I steal attention. Tinker ain't here no more, so I have to annoy someone else. Nothing personal."

Their voices echoed through the empty valley. Like claps of thunder, they filled the void with life. And for a moment, the old road didn't feel barren. Their thoughts drifted off.

Floragato walked without watching his surroundings, his mind too preoccupied. He failed to notice when the space between the groups closed, bumping into the hare in front of him.

He recoiled as if struck by lightning.

"What's the-"

Jasper didn't finish.

Agate and Garnet stared at the ruins by the roadside. Nothing but wrecked columns assembled into a circle. The soil swallowed the pavement. The ground engulfed the sockel in its center, dragging a monument down. Another statue. Blaziken, its hand raised up in a triumphant salute.

Dirt dragged it deeper, sinking the marbled wreck knee-high in mud, battered and splintered by the elements. The features blurred beyond recognition. If not for its leg shape and feather scraps, it could have been mistaken for a slab of stone. The crest at the bipedal bird's head had sheared away. Wind gnawed its beak down to a stump. Even the fist had yielded, arm halved, the rest eroded by the rain.

The group went silent as one. All eyes locked on it.

Nothing. No movement. No tremor. Just cold and dead stone.

"You think it's alive?" Agate quietly whispered.

"You want to check?" Floragato whispered, anxiety cutting through his foul mood.

No one moved. And, for a second, the statue seemed to watch them. Or perhaps it simply felt that way. It had no eyes anymore, both eaten away by the perpetual monsoon.

"No," Lopunny chittered.

The rain tapped on the rocks, filling the white void with a quiet hum of a lullaby. Still nothing.

Agate's shoulder relaxed for a fraction. "It's not doing anything."

"Yet," Raboot huffed, squinting his eyes.

The chunk of smooth stone was as dead as the rest. He recalled the last one. The sudden absence that followed when eyes weren't looking at it. Or were they?

"Let's..." The bunny took a deep breath. "Let's just keep moving."

"And leave it all up to chance?" Inteleon jabbed. "Surely, it has nothing vile in mind."

"You got any better ideas?" Garnet shot her a glare. "Want me to punch every stone that looks out of place?"

"We can punch stones together!" The child excitedly squeaked.

"I think we have enough broken bones per Pokémon," Meowth replied with a groan. "He's right. We should go."

No one dared to move yet again. As if taking off would somehow be worse than standing beside it.

"Oh, come on. We've got places to be," Raboot urged.

"You first," Opal wasn't so sure.

The bunny reluctantly turned around, marching across the road. A little slower than he intended. His ears angled. His eyes glanced at the statue again. Still nothing.

One by one, they continued their journey. Until only Floragato remained. He froze, staring at it. As if looking away would spill doom. Then took a step back.

His eyes flicked sideways for just a split second. Enough to probe the waters.

Nothing. It stood where it was supposed to stand. No movement. No signs of treachery.

The feline exhaled, backing out of the plaza. His eyes moved away, only to lock onto the statue again. He kept watching. Until he was sure it wouldn't lunge. Or whatever else it was capable of doing.

Just stone. Just ruins. Like the rest. Finally, he found the strength to walk forward, casually glancing at the faint shape standing between the columns. Nothing. Still nothing.

Blaziken's arm aimed upright. The shoulder was lodged out of the socket. It wasn't easy to tell which direction it faced in its original form. But now it pointed at the white clouds above. Into the void.

His friends did the same. Although they wouldn't admit that all of the pauses weren't just a breather. All of them exchanged cautious stares with the statue.

"We're wasting daylight," Flint groaned, cackling to herself.

That finally broke the spell. They kept on walking. Until the silhouette vanished behind the tides of milky white mist.

Raboot's ears strained. Expecting that sound again. A crunch of old stone. Earth shifting. Anything to catch his attention. But there was none.

Floragato allowed himself to relax. His eyes went elsewhere. His nose trailed the stones, trying to pick up a scent. Almost on instinct.

"How far away is it?" Meowth changed the topic. "The lighthouse, I mean. We aren't getting closer."

"A few days," Amber's claws tapped together. "It's hard to get lost. Follow the old road. It'll l lead you back towards the shore. Humans built lots of their weird wooden burrows all across. That's what dad used to say. I've never seen it all myself."

"There are humans still living out there?" Raboot perked up.

"No? I mean. Yes? It's uh..." The child awkwardly scratched his ear. "It's a really bad place."

"Bad place?" Agate inquired.

"Uh-Huh," the bear replied. "I'm not supposed to be leaving the forest. But don't tell anyone."

"I still can't get over the fact that you're allowed to leave home in the first place," Floragato complained, sniffing the rocks.

"I was hungry. And bored. That's why I started exploring," Amber trilled. "And no one was home to say no!"

"Where's dad?" The hare softly asked.

The kid looked at her, fiddling with a stick. His wide, button-like eyes blinked. One time. The second time. He shrugged, unsure what to say. "He's running late."

"Running late?" Raboot's brow furrowed.

"Mhm. Very late. He went to get food. And then... My siblings went to see where he's at," he explained, gaze drifting off towards the branch. A little too intensely. His ears drooped.

"How long ago was it?" Floragato chimed in.

The child didn't reply. Just shrugged again. He almost tripped on a twig, so deeply stuck in his thoughts.

"You think-"

"Hey," Agate cut him off. She gave the feline a look. Her fingers rose up as if gesturing to him to stop. "What kind of food do you like?"

The hare changed the topic before it went too far. Where they weren't supposed to go.

"Hm?" He glanced over at her. As if he didn't hear the question at all.

"What's your favorite snack?" Agate asked again.

"Oh! I love beetles. And sweet little taproots! And-"

"Hold on," Raboot suddenly stopped.

Another pile of remains came into view. A piece of an old wall, sunken so low that only the awning of one single section protruded from the soil. Another statue stood there.

"Am I tripping?" the bunny squinted at it.

Another Blaziken right over the corner. Both limbs were down, staring away from them. Somewhere into the distance. As smooth as a slab of naked gray stone.

Inteleon looked the shape from head to toes. "It's in a bad way. Can't say if this one's the same."

"So..." Floragato looked back to check. But the columns already vanished inside the fog. With features as faint as they were, it was too hard to tell.

"Keep going," Flint urged. "I don't know about you, but I'm not stoked to find it out myself."

Raboot stirred up, suddenly taking off. Not further down the road. But towards the statue.

"Garnet?" Lopunny shuddered.

"STOP!” Jasper tried to dash after him. But his trembling knees gave way again.

The bunny's paw stretched out to touch it. The group held its breath.

And...

Nothing. His fingers probed the smooth stone. Cold. Wet. Mossy. And painfully... Normal.

The figure didn't lunge. Didn't protest. Just stood there as it was, half-ruined and watching the mist.

Raboot circled around it, palm tracing the surface. Lichen and ash smears caked the rocks over untold centuries of neglect.

"I wonder..." the bunny mumbled under his breath. "Who are you?"

The features were gone. The beak was reduced to dust. Even the eyes were long gone; only their shapes, half-open, stared vigilantly ahead.

The hero of old didn't answer. The deeds died with them, swallowed by time.

Raboot tapped on the bird's chest, broad and stoic, ready to fight till the end. The end that never seemed to arrive, even as the whole world crumbled around it.

What battles that nameless heart has endured? What stories have those nameless eyes must have seen? None could tell anymore. The thought didn't settle down softly. It left a sour taste on his tongue. The statue outlived the tale it was supposed to tell.

Fear gave way to something else. Something gut-wrenchingly cold that twisted his heart.

Garnet pulled back from the marbled remains, giving a parting glance. "We should go. It's just... It's just a stone. Just an old stone.

"Yeah. Yeah, you're right." The feline hoarsely exhaled.

"We should find a place to catch ourselves a breather," Lopunny advised, squishing water out of her ears. Each time her foot touched the ground, she winced again and again. "We've been walking for hours."

None found the strength to protest, driven half-dead by exhaustion.

The statue remained behind them, quickly retreating into the fog, its nameless, unremarkable face still staring ahead to whence they had departed, keeping a silent, tireless watch.

Every pair of eyes searched for shelter. There was little, save for all the stones and bricks. The plains seemed to stretch for eternity. Empty hills. Empty roads. Empty space as far as the horizon.

Another ruin. Another story untold. Another set of forgotten walls that once must have seen battle. Ancient beyond comprehension. A ring of cracked stone bulwarks rose from the black earth, half-collapsed inwards. A tower, maybe? A fountain? A well? One couldn't tell anymore.

"That'll do," Inteleon let out a sigh.

"Looks like it'll fall over if somebody sneezes," Flint chuckled under her heavy breath.

"It stood here for centuries." Raboot folded over, fixing the sling of his silky backpack. “It can handle a couple more hours. I think."

"That's reassuring..." Jasper took a cautious step forward, nose desperately searching for scent. But there were none. As if everyone ceased to exist save for themselves.

The walls didn't block the deluge seeping through the bricks above. But the space seemed small enough to cork the holes with moss and debris, stalling the fog for just a little longer. They slipped inside one by one, the circle of bricks tight enough to make the space feel like a tin full of fish.

Agate collapsed on the floor. Meowth flopped on the dirt beside her face-first. "I'm not moving..."

"You say this every time we stop," the bunny exhaled, slumping over the stones.

No one had enough strength to keep up with the banter. No one bothered to block the crack in the wall, expecting someone else to take the initiative. And for a moment, only the sound of the monsoon and water drizzling on the floor filled the silence.

Floragato stood at the entrance, nose still tracing the bricks. He suddenly stopped. His eyes widened. His green tail flicked.

Another breath. Another faint whiff. Not quite dust. Not quite ash. Not quite the fetor of entropy that rolled through the ground. Something else. Something familiar. Something... Recent and fresh, the ocean of eternal stagnation.

His gaze drifted towards the crack in the wall. Surely, if they chose this place to serve as their shelter, they couldn't have been the first...

There it was. A single stain on the ground. Like someone's paw pressed into the dirt a little too hard. A little too careless. A little too... Unaware.

"You okay?" Raboot glanced over at him.

"Hm?" It took Jasper a second to process the question. The sheer weight of half-forgotten instincts made it too hard to focus on anything else. "Oh..."

"You've got that look." Garnet let out a tired laugh. It came off drained and forced. A little... Distant. The tension laced his voice.

"What look?" The feline didn't turn, eyes transfixed by the find. Tempted by it. Even the weakness finally lifted. His shoulders straightened for a fraction of a second. His mind drifted off, barely able to comprehend speech.

"Like you're about to do something stupid." The bunny went limp on the floor.

"I-I think I smelled something outside," he mumbled under his breath.

"Smelled what?" Flint croaked, so drained that she couldn't even bother to face him.

The feline's foot stepped into the print, wiping it clean, "Nettle. There might be some still growing around... Still worth harvesting."

"Nettle? I don't think it's going to help us one bit-"

"Yes, and you know the herbs better than Grass-Types," Inteleon cut Meowth off.

Floragato looked at her in confusion. "I'll look around."

"No way we're splitting again!" Raboot protested, trying to push himself off the floor. But Opal stood faster.

"Stay," Inteleon ordered, slithering back outside. "And do me a favor. Don't let her get herself killed, will you?"

She motioned at Mae, awkwardly huddling at the farthest end of the cramped circle. Completely oblivious as to what they were even talking about. Too tired to try.

An annoyed groan escaped Garnet, "For the love of-"

"No, seriously..." The feline's eye twitched as he insisted. "It's not a big deal. I won't go far."

She left before he could embarrass himself further.

Floragato let out a sigh, having no other choice but to follow. Opal stopped the second they walked far enough to muffle the noise.

She crossed her arms, shooting a glare at him. "You're a terrible liar."

"I swear, I-"

"I'll watch the road. You do your thing," Inteleon shared a shrug, turning away. As if on purpose.

"Thanks..." Jasper breathed a sigh of relief. But couldn't force himself to move even an inch.

"Are you going to take the whole day?" Opal jabbed without looking at him. "Search for your nettle before they're rested enough to remember that nothing grows here anymore."

"Right..." Floragato took a step back, crouched to the ground, and pressed his nose into the soil, searching for any traces of the scent.

His friends stayed inside, blankly staring at the damp ceiling in exhaustion. Their minds drifted off. The valley bloomed with a weird sense of lethargy. Thoughts slipped through their fingers.

The rain drummed against the stone like an aloof chime. Too constant. Too heavy. Too...

Crunch. A rustle broke the blanket of silence, cutting through the sluggish hum of a downpour. Raboot's ears flicked. Like something thumped across the damp stones. Too weighty to be a pebble.

The bunny's head sprang off the ground.

"Jasper?" He called out. But no one answered.

"Ugh..."Raboot pushed himself off the floor with a groan. "Hello?"

Silence.

Garnet crept closer to a crack in the wall, one facing the back of the ruins.

Still nothing. A mere dozen feet of uneven black earth by the roadside and clouds of fog stretching beyond the horizon.

He squinted. Still nothing but mist.

Raboot turned around. But just as he did, that sound came again. Like something heavy trampled the ground.

His ears twitched. He spun, paws pressed against the wall. His heart skipped a beat.

A shape in the fog. Right at the edge of vision. Far enough to merge with the clouds, yet close enough to make out. The same old figure: arm broken, crest shattered, beak chipped. This time... It faced the hole. The eyes, eaten by years of rain, stared straight at Garnet from across... The old road.
 
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Arbee

Bug Catcher
Pronouns
he/him
Disclaimer: Graphic Depiction of Violence

Chapter 22 - Fell Deeds Awoke

"Resigned to the end of things, they waited for oblivion. And still they wait."



The scent was old. Not the same as the ancient ruins dotting the dead landscape. Fresh enough to exist. And yet aged enough to be but a flicker of hope in the mist.

Jasper's nose skimmed the ground as he moved through the fog. Every few steps, he slowed to sniff the cold soil beneath. His back arched. His paws bent, forcing him to crawl on all fours through the damp shrubs. The trail twisted across the hill, slipping between collapsed walls and ancient columns jutting from the ground like broken fingers, ugly and gnarled. Grass barely stirred under his feet.

Another whiff. It made his head spin, kindling a warm thrill in his chest. The long-forgotten instincts returned like muscle memory, filling his weakened body with strength he had no right to possess.

Something lived here. Someone who called this place their home.

The feline's stomach twisted painfully, cutting off his breath and leaving him reeling. That pain. That burning ache of hunger and unbearable anticipation made each step hurt more. It occupied every thought, every sense, as if the world had ceased to exist.

Starvation had become his constant companion for such a long time. Green fur fell out in clumps. His whiskers curled. The plant-like parts of his body died off. A sense of trance washed over his mind, locking onto one purpose: survival.

Every scent became food. Every movement turned into an opportunity. Every strand of grass angling down made his knees bend, tempting the feline to pounce.

He hated it. The way it felt so mundanely natural. The way his limbs moved on their own when hunger took hold. Floragato wasn't supposed to think like this. And yet every instinct buried deep under the years spent in comfort and dulled by the fruits of civilization resurfaced. No matter how much time passed, he wouldn't forget how to do it. Too easy. Too perfect. Too... innate. Hardwired into his mind.

The trail slithered down a steep slope. The feline hopped through the slabs of stone without making a single sound.

Jasper froze. Another print on the ground. This one hasn't been washed off by the rain, huddling under a mound of old mossy bricks. Recent. Too recent. Three toes. Three little claws. Not as sharp as his own. Good.

Floragato's ears perked up.

The mist swallowed the world. Nothing moved. Nothing breathed. Nothing spoke. Only his own heartbeat kept him company. Their shelter was a few dozen yards away. He didn't notice the distance. His head felt numb. All thoughts shut down save for the will to survive. When hunger took hold, nothing else mattered. When death's door drew closer with each passing day, his nature urged him to act.

He crouched low to the ground, hiding behind a column, ears spread like two little antennas. Twitching each time a rustle of dust drizzling out of the cracks broke the dead silence. Until a pebble shifted somewhere ahead.

Floragato pressed himself into the dirt a little bit harder, his tail curled up. His snout peeked over the stones, his unblinking eyes staring through the mist. The movement happened before the thoughts did.

The whole world narrowed to one single spot up ahead, hidden beneath the clouds of fumes. Everything else disappeared. The sound vanished as soon as it came.

A second passed. Another one. Nothing.

He couldn't tell how much time had flown by. A minute, perhaps. A dozen, maybe. An hour? It didn't matter.

A shadow dashed between the stones, nimble and cautious. It disappeared from view quicker than his mind could process. But he didn't need it. Not anymore.

There.

He crept through the ruins, one tiniest step at a time. His eyes didn't blink for what felt like an eternity.

The scent grew much stronger, splitting into two distinct ones.

The feline rounded a chipped corner, twisting and turning through the cracks in the stones. Too easy. Too smooth.

He slowly peeked over the edge.

Nothing. Still nothing. But his instincts were burning. They knew it. Just knew.

Another few steps. Silence again. His nose tucked into the stones. Another scent mark. A fresh one. This was someone's domain, a sign of caution for the intruder and, as irony would have it, an invitation for those desperate enough to try.

His mouth drooled. He swallowed, clarity cutting through the haze of thrill long enough to reflect.

Pathetic.

The urge to pursue wasn't that much of a bother. The fact that it felt so right was instead. The feline couldn't stop. He followed the faint trail deeper into the ruins. The scent multiplied.

So close. So very near. The first thing he heard was the whispering voices. They made his ears twitch.

"I don't know who they are. They came out of nowhere and took our spot like they own the damn place," a hushed murmur rang from the other side of the mound of bricks. "Never seen them before. And I know every face who drops by."

"So... What do we do?" another one quietly replied.

"I've no idea," the first one sighed in exhaustion. "You tell me."

"Stay in the burrow. The specters will get them before the fog does," the second one reassured.

"Nah. They got help." A groan broke the silence. "That's the problem."

An urge to call out fell like rain on the feline's shoulders. But he stayed quiet, his eyes peeking over the corner.

Two Pokémon chittering by the hole in the ground, discreetly tucked between the old stones. Two brown-furred creatures, their short, rounded ears spread wide. Yellow stripes on their backs reflected the pale light from above.

"Doesn't matter." Yungoos peeked out of the burrow. "Let them pass then. We aren't looking for trouble."

"Okay, but like. We don't know who they are. We don't know why they are here. For all we care, they might be here to forage or hunt," the other one growled. "This spot is taken. We barely have enough for ourselves."

"So what's your plan?" the den mother sighed.

"I'll sneak closer. See what we're dealing with. And then we decide," her partner quietly trilled.

"Fine. Just don't get yourself killed, will you? I need you home. Soon," she urged.

The feline's ears flicked.

Yungoos skittered away through the rocks, heading toward their shelter. Floragato's pink eyes followed. His paw shifted, then froze, hesitant to take that last step.

They weren't monsters. They weren't beasts like they'd faced many times before. Just another bunch of wretched survivors, scrambling by. Just like themselves.

Jasper pressed himself into the wall. Thoughts raced through his mind, cutting through the haze of the hunt. Out there in the civilized human world, all Pokémon were supposed to be friends because there was enough food to be shared. But out here in the wilds, things became murky.

His hunger simply didn't care. Patient. Persistent. It washed over his body in tides of unbearable pain. A few days was the best he could hope for before his plant-like body gave up.

And for a moment, he simply stared, tracing the creature as it prowled to their camp. Thinking. Weighing his options.

The hunger twisted his stomach, reminding him how little strength remained in his legs. How little time he had left before it was too late. How Agate could barely stand. How Garnet pretended he wasn't exhausted and stressed out of his mind. How Opal vouched for him, knowing what he was about to do.

The instincts weren't new. Regret was. Returning to the roots was much harder than doing the deed. Days remained until he could press on no more.

He watched Yungoos creep between the stones, his own presence almost invisible. Watching. Waiting. Deciding whether he found salvation and bought himself life, or whether it was the first truly terrible choice this island had in store for them.

The pain grew stronger, stabbing his stomach. His mouth filled with saliva. He looked like a rabid stray, fur bedraggled and patchy, vines and leaves long gone from his body. A twisted mirror of himself. Yet one that could still be saved, at the expense of others.

He took a deep breath as the creature stopped by an old, broken wall, peeking over the top to spy on his friends. His attention elsewhere, pink eyes drilled into the stranger's back, each step as quiet as a whisper. Floragato stopped, torn between choices, teetering on the brink.

Another painful twist in his stomach. Each new one hurt more than the last.

The feline let out a breath he didn't know he was holding. His shoulders relaxed.

"I thought I smelled a cat..." Yungoos softly mumbled, prying through cracks in the stones. "Now where is..."

Floragato's tail tapped against the ground. His claws unsheathed themselves.

I'm sorry. I want to live.

He waited, and his waiting paid off. The stranger froze in his tracks. His nose twitched as if picking up an unfamiliar scent in the air. His head turned halfway, more in surprise than resistance. Too little. Too late. It was time.

The feline pounced, pushing himself off the ground faster than Yungoos could blink or process what happened. Sharp fangs aimed for his neck.

***

Garnet pressed himself into the wall, paws scrubbing the cold stones. His ears angled sideways, waiting for that sound again. But what came instead was another kind of crunch, like something wet snapping. This time, from a different direction just outside the walls.

He turned around, peering into the mist. But he saw nothing. His eyes strained, shoulders painfully stiff.

"Is it still there?" Agate quietly whispered.

"Don't..." Raboot's finger pressed into his snout, signaling her to stay silent.

His mind slipped for just a split second as he turned his attention back to the hare. It was enough. Another rustle of stones followed suit. A thump. As if something heavy had lifted its weight off the ground, the branches and twigs that had been forced into the soil lashed out as the pressure departed.

The bunny looked outside where the statue once stood, staring at him through the gap in the wall. Nothing. It disappeared as quickly as it popped into view.

"Where did it..." The bunny pushed himself off the mossy, damp bricks, scanning the cracks for the missing assailant. But it seemed to have vanished into thin air.

His fingers clicked, lighting a flickering candle at his chipped claw tips. His red eyes traced the walls, peeking through every nook and cranny that led outside. His heart pounded against his chest. Perhaps it was the poisonous mist, fueling paranoia; perhaps it was facing something unknown. He couldn't tell what those things were capable of.

Raboot's paw slipped across the gray bricks as he gawked through the fissures and gaps. Nothing. Still nothing. His palm scraped against a gash in the stones. His snout twitched. His eyes widened at the sudden realization.

He stood there, stunned.

"Garnet?" Lopunny muttered through gritted teeth.

The bunny took a cautious step back, then thoughtfully looked around with a newfound suspicion.

"Those..." he whispered, eye twitching from the grim revelation. "Those aren't cracks. Those are... Claw marks."

"Wha-" Flint croaked. Then traced the crumbling walls. It clicked. The gaps between the bricks weren't from weather or time.

A little too sharp. A little too rugged. Not the smooth kind that forms when rain chips at stone for too long. Monstrously large claws ravaged the rocks from inside, like something was trying to get out or ripped at the walls in blind frenzy as it entered.

Lopunny squeaked and shifted aside, her foot pushing an old rusty chain she sat on.

Shackles, perhaps. Although the shape was barely recognizable. Rust had grown over the iron in lumps, reducing it to an ugly, stiff fusion of oxidized metal and dirt. It broke off, brittle like strands of hay.

"We need to go. Now," Raboot mumbled under his breath.

<Is everything fine?> Mae picked up on the panic settling among the group. She noticed the way they all started shifting away.

Garnet squinted at her, viciously shaking his head.

<What's going on, slick?> She asked the same question again. One too many times. It was as frustrating as it was repetitive. A sign of an inexperienced trainer. Mae couldn't read the meaning buried under the sounds they made. Couldn't follow their eyes.

Raboot let out a sigh. He pointed at the claw marks all over the walls, so monstrously huge that one couldn't tell at first glance, then bobbed his head toward the exit.

<The walls are sturdy. The building won't fold in on itself if that's what you're worried about,> Mae reassured, missing the point.

The bunny replied with a groan. His short, stubby claws scratched at the walls where they bore the markings.

<I don't think this is a good scratching post,> the blonde replied with a chuckle.

"Why are you stupid?" Garnet threw his paws into the air. Perhaps something easier to stomach would do.

His fingers split, pointing between the cracks, then at his own eyes. He pulled up a deadpanned expression.

<Oh... You think someone's watching us?> Mae's brow slowly furrowed.

The bunny bobbed his head and swirled his finger, as if to make her ponder the thought.

<I don't get what you want us to do,> the blonde shrugged, looking through the same gap in the wall. Only to find nothing.

Raboot grabbed her sleeve, pulling her up. His paw aimed outside. His foot stomped the ground in a staunch demand.

<You want us to leave?> Mae's answer made his ears perk up.

"THANK YOU!" He crossed his arms in relief. "Now let's get out of here."

Lopunny pushed herself off the ground despite the pain. Flint helped herself stand, scaling the wall with barely enough strength left in her limbs. Survival waited for no one.

The group slithered out of their shelter, cautiously looking around. No signs of the statue. It vanished again, retreating back into the fog.

Inteleon stood by the roadside, still staring ahead. Floragato crouched beside her, washing his face in a puddle. A little too thorough.

Raboot glanced over at him in astonishment.

"What took you so long?" He grimaced.

"I was looking for nettle..." The feline recoiled, taking a few steps away. The scent of his prey still clung to his fur. Faint. But easy enough to smell if anyone stepped a little too close. His heart picked up the pace, mind sifting through the excuses.

Blood flushed to his ears, painting them cherry red.

"You said you'd be quick." The bunny spread his arms.

"I was... Just..." Floragato stuttered, words failing to connect with each other.

"We've been waiting for over an hour. There is a statue hounding us. There are fresh claw marks all over the wall. And you decide to take your time strolling about?" Raboot stomped the ground, tail anxiously flicking.

"Would you look at that? Flames is finally learning responsibility," Inteleon chimed in, cutting the tension with banter. "I am impressed."

"What?" Garnet glared at her. Buying the cat just enough time to rub his snout clean with a handful of hay to mask the metallic scent. "Do you hear what I'm saying?"

He never heard the response. Another loud thump of stones spun the whole group around.

The statue came back. This time, it stood on top of the bulwark, staring them down with those faded, unblinking eyes. This time it wasn't alone. Another one joined the pursuit. Umbreon, ears broken off, tail shattered, and eaten away by decades of rain. Both silently kept their watch. Both faced the living.

Inteleon's fingers snapped together on instinct. She aimed at one of the creatures.

It didn't attack. Not yet. It stayed still like a slab of inanimate stone. Not a single shift in its features. But something was terribly wrong. Broken, battered, and twisted. Thousands of fractures and cracks showed from under the moss, leaving the effigy beyond repair. And yet something kept them all moving. Some sort of intent.

A few seconds passed as she considered her options. Could they even be killed? Could something that was never alive in the first place be put to rest?

Agate inched back and tapped Opal's arm, urging her to take caution. "Let's go. Don't... Don't make things any worse than they already are."

Inteleon froze, then lowered her aim. A blast of water took off, making the hare flinch. It hit the awning instead, built from the same old stone. Just like the statues.

The stream barely chipped the cold surface. If they had survived millennia, they would survive her as well.

"Hm." Uncertainty flickered in Opal's golden eyes.

"What do you want from us?" Raboot squinted at them.

No response. The air whistled through the cracks in Blaziken's torso, turning a quiet huff into a whistle. As if the sentry blew into a ghostly horn.

"Shit," Flint frantically backed out of it. "Go. Start moving already. Before they call in more friends."

She broke off without waiting for the rest of the group. That finally shattered the spell. They retreated like vermin, running away from a car. Not because it was scary, but because no one knew what it was capable of.

And so the journey dragged on. No breaks. No respite.

***

Time stretched out. Twilight fell over the hills, painting the white skies into dark blue, ancient vistas quickly fading away. Footsteps rolled over the hills like cracks of far-flung thunder as paws and boots trampled the damp soil.

The statues took their sweet time, blending into the fog. Their outlines haunted from a safe distance, pushing through the gloom when they least expected. Just standing. Just watching. Just waiting for something.

All ears strained, expecting that treacherous sound of stone thumping against the mounds of soil. It didn't come.

The mist claimed its due. All that was needed was a chink in the armor. Lack of rest opened the gates. Anxiety summoned it in. It waited like a predator of its own accord. Just like the first time, patiently looking for a moment of weakness.

Raboot paused and looked around. What sounded like a twig snapping somewhere far away was blotted out by a deafening ringing in his ears. His head spun. Cold sweat caked his nose.

The darkness made things much worse, spreading through the weeping, turbulent skies. No stars lit the way. The flame in his paw was barely enough to shed light over the roadside. Shadows swallowed it whole, a mere few yards away.

The last rays of careless sun fled over the fading horizon, coloring the world blacker than pitch. They teased, peeking over the corners of ancient ruins dotting the landscape. Each one stood as a dark silhouette in the fog, wrapped in skittering glow, like stars during an eclipse. It made the ruins seem eerily malign.

Panic set in, but he tried to brush it away, taking deep breaths, one at a time, to calm his sizzling nerves.

"Not now," he whimpered, rubbing his head to come back to his senses. "Not again."

"We can't be running forever," Agate whispered to him, paw softly tapping his back. "We need to find somewhere to hide. Somewhere safe."

"There is nowhere to hide," Inteleon wryly admitted. "Unless you're planning to stuff yourself into a column."

The remnants of dead civilizations were nothing but hollowed-out bones, stripped clean by time.

"We can dig up a burrow," the feline mumbled under his breath, nose sniffing the shrubs. No scents. No marking this time. They were alone.

"And leave ourselves exposed?" Flint scoffed. "Yeah, let's just stand here shoveling shit and pray for the best."

"We don't even know if the statues are still following us," the hare quietly parried.

"Oh, believe me, they are," Inteleon grumbled. "You don't suppose they're just going to call quits because they got bored, do you?"

"So... What's your suggestion?" Lopunny replied, gritting her teeth from the pain. Walking still felt like torture.

"Keep going. We can't afford to stop now," Opal urged. She took off before anyone else could protest.

"Great." The bunny let slip a half-hysterical cackle. "This is fine! We're all fine!"

He could feel the fog scraping the edges of his mind again, like sharp claws slipping under his skin and viciously sifting through. For a moment, the outlines of old standing stones that hadn't been swallowed by darkness just yet turned into trees at the edge of his vision.

Raboot shook his head, brushing the hallucinations away.

Floragato stopped, softly bumping into the bunny's stiff shoulder. Whether for his own reassurance or for his friend's care. Garnet flinched despite the familiar scent. His eyes flicked sideways.

Nothing. Still nothing.

"Hey," the feline's voice sounded stronger than it did before. Like something caught life fleeing from him and breathed it back into his lungs. "We'll make it through. We always find our way out of trouble. Somehow."

The bunny closed his eyes, trying to cling to an anchor. A trail. A path. An imprint. A sign of their enemy's presence. Something to keep his mind off the crippling anxiety. Not knowing what to expect felt much worse.

The sounds grew quiet. His perception drifted off to somewhere beyond what he was supposed to feel. Just like he practiced.

This time, however, there was no reward. His sixth sense felt nothing but a boundless void stretching for miles around. Hollow, cold, empty void. No tears, no mourning, no echoes from the forgotten past. Oblivion. The old road outlived the meaning of it.

That revelation left him gasping for air, wobbling back and forth on his unsteady knees.

And right as he did... Another loud thump rang through the air.

Both friends spun as if they had been poked with a hot iron. The same two statues stood right behind them now, close enough to touch.

Their dead eyes were staring them down.

The feline let out a desperate hiss, launching into the air. His claw went for a swipe. But the tips simply broke off when they touched the stone, sturdy like iron.

Jasper recoiled. The bunny stood still in one place, his eyes neurotically twitching.

"What do you want from us?" He asked, almost hysterical.

The effigies didn't answer. The dead wights of old remained still.

"WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM US?!" Raboot screamed into the statue's motionless face.

Nothing. What did he expect?

"You want to kill us? To drag us kicking and screaming to whence you came?" His voice cracked. "Why won't you start, then? Why won't you attack and get it all over with?"

"Garnet?" the feline called out, dragging him away from the ghosts in the shell.

"They can't be acting at random," the hare chimed in. "There must be some sort of logic to how they behave."

"I THOUGHT there was logic," Raboot snapped, half-screaming, half-crying. "I thought they were simply out to get us. But these sick fucks are toying with us."

"Flames?" Inteleon called out, seeing him spiral. But he didn't listen.

"I'm trying, okay? They aren't making sense. I've been thinking about it until..." He went silent abruptly. As if struck over the head. "U-until..."

The bunny froze, jaws wide open. He stood still for a couple of seconds, processing his own words.

All eyes stared at him in confusion.

He suddenly turned around, wiping his cheek. The puzzle finally snapped into place. "Until I wasn't..."

"Is that... Is that what you want from us?" Raboot asked, gazing into the faded face of an effigy. "I get it now. I understand."

"Care to elaborate?" Opal took a step closer.

"They..." Garnet calmed down for a fraction. "They moved every time we stopped thinking about them. They acted when we were distracted. When they weren't on our minds anymore."

"Like ghosts," Amber raised his shaky, fragile voice, peeking from behind the feline. "They want us to remember."

"You..." Flint let out a mad cackle. "You glorious son of a bitch."

"Alright. Okay," Agate took a deep breath. "Let's see if this works."

They spun around. Slowly. Turning their frantic gazes away from the statues. Garnet took off the last, taking too long to look over the effigies. This time... It wasn't contempt. It was pity, budging its way through the rage that quickly faded away.

Those things were the last shattered remains of a dead civilization, outliving the past. The sole reminders of tales and stories the grave soil had swallowed. Nameless. Faceless. Alone amidst the ruins of what was once built by their toil. There was nothing else to remember save for these husks.

"I'm sorry." Raboot finally made an effort to break away. "I hope you find rest. One day."

There was none. Not for them. Not for a single soul that walked the old road.

***

The sun set beyond the horizon. The whole world drowned in black. The sense of unease didn't leave. But the ghosts seemed to have stopped their pursuit. No sounds broke the silence. No shapes of the dead peeked over the edge of the flame flickering in Raboot's paw. It seemed to be working. For now.

The cat walked behind, his paw softly tapping on his ruff in the dark. The apron was growing back. A pink little bud crowned the collar, slowly returning to life. The swirl of fragile fire reflected from his green fur. For the first time since forever, the verdant shine returned. His coat was recovering like a dry grove after rain. Slow. Tardy. But sure as day. Strength came back to his limbs, rolling over his joints with warmth. His body was slowly reknitting itself. But at what cost?

The thought settled down wrong. He got used to living a life without having to hunt anymore. But now, out in the middle of nowhere, nature reclaimed its due.

It wasn't just guilt gnawing at him on the inside. For how could one be guilty for breathing? It was another horrible thought that scraped against his mind.

He took friendship for granted. He saw it as something innate, something here to stay. But would it survive the test of the wilds? Would Raboot understand? Would ten years of friendship count for nothing when they saw each other for what they truly were?

"Hey." Jasper gently poked him.

"Hm?" The bunny didn't react, trying his hardest to focus.

"I just wanted... To say sorry. For snapping at you," the feline whispered. "I got carried away."

Raboot shook his head, his attention elsewhere. "Now is not the best time."

"I know. I'm just... Worried. Are you still mad at me?" He pressed on.

"Jasper." Garnet briefly turned to him, his eyes twitching from the growing unease. "I'm trying to focus, and I'm not good at it."

The bunny quickened his pace. The effigies might have lingered behind. But the fog still clawed at his head. He wiped a red splotch from his nose. His temples thrummed, already making the whole affair much harder. The ringing grew louder, swelling into a throbbing migraine.

"Okay." Floragato let out a sigh.

Perhaps it was the fog that fed the anxiety, turning his worries against him like it did the first time. Perhaps it was regret biting at him. Perhaps both. Now, with hunger no longer clouding his mind, clarity hit like a brick. And it wasn't kind.

"It seems to be working." Agate stumbled forth, chittering under her breath.

"Don't get ahead of yourself," Opal quietly warned. "We can't afford to slack now."

"If I make horrible jokes about those statues, does it still count as thinking?" Flint let out a chuckle.

"I would prefer if you'd keep your eyes on the road," Opal groaned.

"Don't be so... Stone serious," Meowth cut through the tension with an awkward joke. But it landed badly, making everything feel worse. Too tense. Too stiff. Too forced.

"Pondering the statues. I'm monumentally amused," Raboot picked it up. But he didn't sound much better, his voice too fragile to sound genuine.

They all felt it. Cold, slimy claws digging into exposed minds. The banter had become a last-ditch effort to keep the spiraling thoughts at bay.

"I hear it... Calling." Agate gritted her teeth.

"Hold it. Fight back," Inteleon reassured. But she didn't sound so confident.

"Enough," Garnet paused. "We need to stop. We need shelter."

"He's right," Lopunny backed him up. "It'll only get worse if we press on like this."

"There is no place to hide," Opal repeated. "And digging up burrows for half a dozen of us isn't a quick task."

"The sooner we start, the sooner we finish. We got the statues off our tails. And I'm not planning to get another lungful of poison," Meowth chimed in. The humor fled from her face.

Floragato stepped off the road, sinking his claws into the soil. It was soaked, cold, and dense. Worst kind to shovel. But there was no choice. He took a deep breath.

Raboot's heart quickened. The pursuit might have been called off. But the pressure didn't depart. It kept mounting. The mist congealed around them tighter, blotting out the flame. His head throbbed, making it hard to focus.

"Little help?" Floragato called.

"Yeah. Let me just..." Garnet turned around to face his friend. The ringing in his ears grew louder.

His vision flickered. The shape of the feline caught his eye, gaunt and bedraggled. A stench of blood crashed into his nose.

The bunny stumbled back, his jaw freezing wide open.

The feline's tail flicked. He looked over his own shoulder in growing confusion.

"Are you... Doing okay?" Jasper lisped, pushing himself off the ground.

Raboot rocked back and forth. Then took an awkward step back, his eyes glassy with white strands dancing within.

"Garnet?" The feline straightened up.

Raboot's ears drooped in quiet horror. His friend's fur was covered in blood from head to toe. His claws were out, long and sharp like glistening sickles. His fangs peeked out from behind his lips, far longer than they had any right to be. The soil beneath the feline's feet shifted. Instead of a mound of mud, something else cut into view: a little white bunny, pelt painted red and torn wide open.

All that it took was a seedling of doubt, now becoming a fruit nurtured by the mist-driven illusions.

"No..." Raboot whimpered, closing his mouth to hold back a gag. His eyes glanced over at the half-eaten prey. Then at the twisted form of his friend. The feline's lips were covered in bits of Scorbunny's hair.

"What's going on?" Jasper reached out, confused.

The claws stretched towards his friend, still wet with blood. Crimson beads dripped off the tips. The cat's gaze filled with that rabid hunger. The same one he saw in Ninetales' eyes one day. That stare of cold hunter's malice.

"GET AWAY FROM ME!" Garnet recoiled. For just a moment, his paw clenched into a fist. But the sight of someone he thought he knew broke something deep within him.

He slammed his foot into the ground, raising a cloud of dust and sending a sheaf of wet sand into Floragato's face.

Jasper coughed, reeling back from him in shock.

The bunny spun around and dashed across the road so quickly that the flame in his hand disappeared, blown out by the wind.

"GARNET!" The feline sprang into action, running after his friend. His swollen eyes refused to close, locked on Raboot in sheer disbelief.

Cohesion broke as the group devolved into chaos. Flint stumbled after the two. The child simply watched through a bewildered haze. Agate tried to catch up, but her injured leg gave out. Mae and Opal looked at each other, both too late to help.

"STOP!" Floragato croaked, half-screaming, half-crying in panic.

Their focus turned elsewhere. All the foe needed.

"LEAVE ME ALONE!" Raboot quickened his pace, sprinting as fast as he could.

Another thump. The bunny didn't get too far away.

Garnet barely had enough time to react before his panicked eyes caught the cursed statue ahead. He slammed into Blaziken head-first. His nose crunched.

Raboot fell on the ground, but didn't give up. He turned despite his broken snout, crawling away through the mud.

Floragato shuffled after his friend, tears streaming down his face. "Please?"

He didn't respond, pushing himself across the dirt with such desperation as if he were being chased by someone determined to hurt him.

Did he smell the scent? Did he somehow find out?

"Garnet! Please don't..." Jasper didn't finish. His paw hovered over the road. He froze in place.

"Oh no..." The feline sobbed. His eyes turned away from the two statues that had exploited the moment of weakness. "Oh no, no, no..."

<What's all the com-> Mae stopped behind him, a fliplighter's tongue dancing between her fingers. <Motion...>

They weren't alone.

More statues. Placed in rows across the sidewalks like an old exposition beneath a cracked triumphal arch. Some reduced rubble, some still intact. All turned to face them. Dozens of dead eyes locked on the intruders. Patient. Waiting. Too many to count. The winded cracked faces welcomed the guests into their lost domain.

<Shit...> Mae stumbled back.

The chase wasn't over. It barely began.

The trap was finally sprung.

Fell deeds awoke.
 

Arbee

Bug Catcher
Pronouns
he/him
Disclaimer: Graphic Depiction of Violence

Chapter 23 - Duty unto Death

"The dust has settled. The drums of war have gone still. But the watch carries on."



The first statue shifted. None of them saw it happen. It slipped beneath a moment of distraction, moving in a way none of them were used to. It simply ceased to exist for a split second and reappeared yards away, assuming a different pose. A little closer to the stragglers.

A monstrous lion carved from marbled stone. Half of Pyroar’s skull was missing, its mane broken off, its body almost cracked in half. Its shoulders straightened. Its chest puffed out. As if the creature were about to growl, and yet the sound never came.

Another one sprang into action. A shattered, headless canine was gone, and then it was back again, much closer, blocking the way they had come.

“Move,” Inteleon heaved, grabbing the freaking-out bunny by the scruff and pulling him back up.

Nobody listened. Or perhaps nobody heard. The fog closed in, rolling over the old road like a foaming tide.

A ruined archway stretched before them like a corridor. The cursed statues lined both sides of the trail, some still upright, some wrecked and reduced to heaps of rubble caked in moss. Others poked out of the mounds of black soil. Ancient heroes lost to time, devoid of any meaning. All facing them. All waiting.

Pyroar moved again. It took no more than their focus drifting elsewhere. It stood beside the cracked stonefront. The distance between them was halved. It blinked out of the way, as if to goad the travelers deeper into their crumbling domain.

A scraping noise rang from somewhere in the mist. Another. And then another. Rocks ground against rocks. The gallery was waking up, one sculpture at a time. Too many to keep track of.

The third one disappeared. A massive ape standing on top of a column like a gargoyle vanished. A granite wall beside it cracked. The corner of the statue popped back into existence halfway inside the bricks, bending space and re-emerging where it was not supposed to. The matter that had wedged itself into readjusted. Violently. The bricks shot out like shrapnel. The rocks erupted, pushed out of space to accommodate the shift. The display of their power was as surreal as it was horrifying. They destroyed things by teleporting them.

Opal took a stray shot. A blast of water barely left a scratch, defacing the surface with yet another battle scar.

The moment her focus slipped again as she aimed at the assailant, the others acted. More statues left their spots, first without a trace. Until they formed a semicircle right behind them, as if assembling into some sort of formation to cut off the retreat. Nowhere to run but forth.

Inteleon glanced sideways. They were surrounded.

“Over there.” She motioned them onward, planting a slap onto Mae’s face to snap her out of it. “MOVE!”

Raboot bucked on her shoulder, but her grip didn’t budge.

They ran. As fast as they could, the effigies stirred wide awake in morbid silence. No words. No growls. No battle cries. Just the quiet scraping of old stone.

Floragato tore a petal off his bud. It hit the ground, unleashing a choking blast of pollen to mask their retreat.

The creatures followed. A pair re-emerged on top of the triumphal arch, observing from above. The others pincered from both sides of the sidewalks. They didn’t act like opportunistic hunters. They acted like a pack in terrifying synchrony, an army standing at an undying watch.

Lopunny screeched, straining her injured leg. But fear dulled the pain. Damn the consequences. Her paw slipped under Flint’s arm, dragging him along with far more vigor than she had any right to have.

The fog pooled in pale banks, swallowing the road in sheets of white and midnight blue. The farther they retreated, the less they could see. The statues turned into faint silhouettes. Then shadows, lurking in the mist. And then a mere certainty that something followed them, keeping a steady pace.

Jasper risked a glance over his shoulder.

Pyroar stood atop the broken archway, jaws half-open. Its empty, faded eyes stared overhead, as if somewhere past them.

A tremor rolled across the stone beneath their feet. A statue of a knight decked in an ancient panoply of war reared ahead. Armarogue lacked half of its body, its helmet shattered and caved in. One arm was missing at the elbow, moss hanging off the stump. And yet it stood, despite the grievous damage, facing the mist ahead. Directly in their path.

The group screeched to a halt. Another sound stirred somewhere far away, not stone but something else: a hiss that turned into an echo. Loud. Ghostly. Booming. A moment of distraction did it.

The knight vanished from view. It didn’t move in closer, shifting sidelong instead. The wrecked figure re-emerged several yards off the road, lodged halfway into a collapsed wall. The bricks exploded outward, dust billowing into the fog.

It didn’t attack, opting instead to free the road.

“They’re toying with us,” Floragato huffed through gritted teeth.

“KEEP GOING!” Inteleon cut him off. There was no time for questions.

Another scraping sound reached them from somewhere behind. Beside them. From somewhere near, right over their shoulders. Yet never from ahead. They acted with cold deliberation, carefully driving their game where they wanted it to be. Flushing them out along the trail.

A crimson bead trickled from Jasper’s nose. The world spun, ears ringing from exposure to the mind-twisting mist. He felt it gnawing. Not enough to overwhelm reason yet, but enough to make it hang on a thread. The colors shifted. White murk became brown, like motes of rust swirling in a soaked cellar. The soil beneath his feet became rigid, as if his soles landed onto wet concrete, not mud.

Every breath tasted wrong. Damp, rotten, and metallic. The scent shifted with every step. The moist ground became mildew. Then old, rancid blood. The soil again, as if his own failing nose could not decide until it settled on something morbidly familiar: filth and decay.

Another tremor rippled through the ancient mounds of dirt. Less a sound and more a pulse that vibrated in the feline’s teeth. A distant impact, heavy enough to send dust raining down the walls. And then that hiss again.

The statues shifted, as if reacting to the noise. Pyroar re-emerged on the road right behind them, still staring ahead.

Floragato’s foot caught on a bump, breaking the pace. The child tripped over a hole in the ground, flying face-first into a puddle. Inteleon’s tail reached out, flinging the little bear up and hauling him away.

The farther they advanced, the more the trail looked like a battlefield, a place of some antediluvian war that ended before history began. Craters marked the sidewalks. Moss grew over the broken-down walls, and standing stones toppled into the mounds of dirt. The long-dead soldiers pressed their chase, driving the stragglers forth.

The road dipped, letting the desolate landscape swallow them whole. The old stones rose higher on either side, forming a swallow trench choked by roots and pools of poisonous mist. Whatever buildings stood by the trail millennia ago sank into themselves. The rubble was determined to wipe itself off, plunging deeper into the soil with each passing decade. The palisades of what may have been an awning, once a breathtaking bulwark, were little more than a short picket fence, jutting out of the dirt like chipped nails.

They leaped over the wrecked barricades, throwing themselves over the wreckage and tumbling down a steep slope. Moss dampened the fall somewhat.

Breath caught in Jasper’s lungs, squeezing a painful cough out of him. A taste of copper filled his mouth. His ears rang. The shapes kept moving, twisting, shifting. It was getting too hard to tell which movements were real and which were the tricks of his own mind, slowly falling victim to the visions.

Flint came rolling down after, colliding into Floragato, a screeching ball of claws and fur. She scrambled to haul herself up, eyes wild and frantic, and stumbled forth despite the wounds.

“Come on, Tinker…” Meowth hissed, holding her injured shoulder. “Don’t lag behind.”

Floragato stood with a hurt hiss. Somehow, it kept his thoughts from spiraling away. The bruises grounded him, reminding him where they were, what they were up against. Pain helped to sober up when reason failed.

The road split into two. Though calling it a road would be an overstatement. It was more of a serpent-like suggestion than a clear path through the plains. One side led deeper into the ruins. The other ran off into the hills. Before they could decide, the statues decided for them. The air thrummed. Dust, sand, and raindrops blasted outward. Another effigy arose, blocking the latter route.

A vulpine, standing upright, snout broken off, leaving the jawless head bereft of features save for the faded eyes. Delphox leaned on a wand, the lower half of which did not exist. Hanging moss draped its shoulders like an old, withered cape. One arm stretched out in a warning. The thing was covered head to toe in gaping claw marks.

And for a moment, nobody moved. Only the fog did. It rolled over the trail like an avalanche of snow-white delusion. A murderous essence of nightmares and oblivion, chasing the weakened prey.

Nowhere to run but deeper into this dead domain, pulled by whatever little sanity remained. The hills shifted. The vision blurred. All sounds turned into distant echoes as if they plunged into water. But there was no time for doubt or reluctance.

They ran across the road, tripping on potholes, stumbling through heaps of stones, and branding their pelts with countless cuts and bruises.

Time stretched out. It was hard to make any sense of the pursuit or if there was an escape at all. The only thing that still reminded them of hope was a bright burning star somewhere in the distance. The only anchor of stability in seas of boiling madness. The only one that still remained while the whole world twisted. The lighthouse.

Too late. Too far away. They’d lose themselves before the destination’s reached.

The foe was catching up. Thuds grew in strength and volume. Each time they moved, they moved a little closer. Each time Floragato’s thoughts turned to one, another creature ceased the moment of distraction, vanishing from sight and re-emerging right behind them.

The walls closed in. What had looked like a loose formation now turned into a circle of undead effigies surrounding them. The game was nearly over.

Lopunny broke into a chuckle as she folded over, eyes starting to go murky. Not there just yet. But close to slipping back into insanity.

She slowed her pace. Then stopped.

“Agate?” the feline croaked through the tears of madness. What seemed like a hill before turned into a musty crawlspace. Hallucinations slipped through the cracks.

The mirage disappeared like smoke, then hit again with thrice the vigor. Shadows, voices, and outlines of people chasing them across the mist. Reality and deranged visions merged.

“Go,” Lopunny spread her arms, offering herself to the creatures in a sudden bout of resigned clarity.

“You’re coming-”

“GO!” She sobbed, pushing him hard enough to snap back into it. “Thank you. For everything…”

Agate took a step toward the foe, then vanished in the mist before the feline could protest.

There was no time to think.

Floragato ran through tears.

Another loud thud broke the silence. This time, it ended with a horrid shriek from his unlikely friend. He bit his lip, holding back one of his own. Has it all been for nothing?

“Rest easy,” Opal muttered, squeezing out a cough.

She had bought them time. But there still seemed to be no exit from the maze. The road stretched forever, sprawled between the old standing stones, half-buried columns, and heaps of rubble resting under quilts of moss.

Their knees called quits. Flint slumped over first, stricken down by exhaustion. Mae grabbed Meowth’s scruff, dragging her through the mud. She stayed silent, eyes lost and hazy. Walking on pure instinct rather than a sense of reason.

An echo cut through the air. So loud it shook the ground and carried through the countless illusions. A wet hiss drifted into a ghostly howl. Half a dozen statues vanished at once, answering the noise from somewhere ahead.

For a moment, the ranks of ancient soldiers thinned. Then the momentum stopped.

An old acquaintance joined the fray. Blaziken cut through, emerging in the middle of the road. It reappeared so suddenly that Mae tripped over herself. The feline bumped into her back.

He turned around to look through blurry eyes. The circle closed. At last. The foe formed a full ring around them.

“End of the line,” Inteleon croaked, frantically looking for ways out. But there were none.

The blonde pushed herself off the ground, drooling like she had nothing left inside her head. If statues wouldn’t kill them, the fog would finish the job.

Jasper rose up, shooting a glance towards his friend, still flapping on Opal’s shoulder. Still cursing, shrieking, bucking in delusion.

He let out a deep, shaky breath.

So that’s how it would end?

The feline raised his paws, letting the claws out. Then tapped the bud, preparing for the last stand. Like that was supposed to help. Somehow. His eyes traced dozens of statues assembled all around them. Some still resembled creatures, tarnished by the flow of time. Some were wrecked beyond recognition, smothered by rain. Or perhaps by other victims. Many bore deep claw marks like battle scars.

“We can…” the child sprang up, chuckling to himself. But his laughter sounded hysterical. “We can beat them!”

He didn’t sound confident, desperately looking at the adults for some sort of reassurance.

The effigies froze in place, biding their time. As if waiting for something. Either to take a sting out of their desperation or let them share their final words.

No one replied.

Water enveloped Inteleon’s arm, slithering up like an ice glaze. It formed a blade of pure liquid, more as a last-ditch gamble. There was no hope in her eyes.

“Petals?” She choked out, backing into a column.

“Yeah?” The feline sobbed.

Mae leaned on the wall, completely out of strength. Helioptile on her shoulder spat lightning after lightning, white-hot arcs striking the statues. The electricity bounced harmlessly off, leaving only ashen scorch marks. Meowth tried to stand, pushing herself up. But her legs wouldn’t budge.

“I’m sorry.” Opal's response made the cat pause.

It wasn’t her tone that made him freeze. Unreadable under the weight of panic and delusions. But hearing her say this word, without any irony, for the first time in forever.

“What?” He turned around, taken aback. But only for a second. No time to let the guard down.

She wouldn’t return the favor, unwilling to look him straight in the eyes.

“I ruined you. But I shall promise that I will find them in death. And will haunt each and every one of them. I’ll drag that human scum back to the void where I belong,” she muttered under her breath.

“What are you on about?” the feline squeaked, switching his focus back to the statues.

<The burrow…> Mae croaked, foam bubbling at her lips. She rocked back and forth, barely clinging on. Her finger pointed at the gap between the stones, leading somewhere down. A crack thick enough to fit through.

Inteleon and Florgato looked at each other. Silence fell like a quilt.

But there was no time to hesitate. One of the statues moved, vanishing from view and reappearing in a pile of rocks. They blasted out like buckshot, raining down upon the road. More a warning than a show of strength. A sobering reminder of what they were up against.

Opal coughed, breathing in the dust. She shoved her friends in, tossing the bunny inside before they could make up their minds.

Jasper gave her a broken stare. But she did not reply. Just quietly grabbed his arm.

Before he could even yelp, he was sent flying down into the hole with such force that he barely had time to react. The world spun as he slipped across the wet, muddy slope.

The last thing he saw was his friend pressing her back against the gap to close the entrance with her own body. Then darkness swallowed them whole as they rolled through the rocky slant, stones and shingles cutting their pelts.

The feline hit the floor. It slammed against his ribs with a painful thud, knocking the air out of his lungs. His head smashed into the wall. The world went dark. But not for long.

A throbbing headache pulled him out of a stupor.

The visions ceased as the fog left them be, replaced with a horrific clarity. Somehow, the latter hit harder as his mind struggled to grasp everything they’d been through.

Jasper let out a chest-shuddering sob, his paws desperately probing the floor to force himself back up. A dizzying taste of blood filled his mouth. His lip had cracked on impact. Pain shot through his ribs like electricity. He hauled himself upright through the tears and groans. His head struck the ceiling; it was too low to fit beneath. The crawlspace was tight.

“Garnet?” the feline called out, desperately seeking something to cling to.

No response. The only sound that broke the silence was the rumble of stones and dust sprinkling on the floor.

“OPAL?” His plea turned into a scream.

No one answered. Somewhere above, from whence they came, that horrible thud rang again. No movement. No sound of fighting or resistance. Just cruel silence. It had all happened too fast.

Floragato let out a cry, dropping down on his knees. His eyes couldn’t see. The cavern they rolled in was as black as pitch.

Jasper’s palm tapped on the ground, frantically searching for something. Anything to make sense of where they were. His elbow found Mae’s unconscious body sprawled right beside him. His paws smothered the floor, scooping up the dust. Until his claws bumped into a damaged fliplighter, bent and mangled in the fall.

“Come on,” he whimpered, biting the lid off. His fingers, however, were too thick and unwieldy to make a strike. It seemed so simple when people did it. “Please…”

The feline fiddled with the human-made device, failing to kindle it. He almost gave up, opting to nibble on the wick instead. A rancid taste of gasoline made him gag.

He spat with nauseating liquid and pressed the frustrating device against the wall. The stones did what his feline fingers couldn’t, finally moving the wheel.

It sprang back to life like a star, striking him blind for a moment. The fire charred Floragato’s fur, but he squeezed in tighter, feverishly looking around.

It was hard to say what that place had once been. A cellar, maybe. A mausoleum. A dungeon. A place of worship. Only crumbling walls remained, with soil squeezing through the gaps between the broken bricks. Fungi and lichen caked the rocks, making it seem like a cavern rather than a building. Old cracked beams protruded from the soil. Centuries of dustfall and landslides had buried the chamber halfway into the ground.

His eyes moved towards the entrance. Dirt, sand, and silt already choked it full. He couldn’t make out a thing past the edge of the gaping hole that led back up. Opal was nowhere to be seen.

The feline bit the back of his wrist, barely holding the desperate scream. His snout turned towards the floor. Mae was knocked out cold, blood trickling off her bruised temple. The child flailed under her, squished by the weight. Flint and Citrine lay down, entangled in a ball of fur, stained red and scaly limbs.

Raboot rolled back and forth, paws holding his injured cheek.

The feline crawled a little closer, shouldering the unconscious trainer to free the child. He yelped, panting like a train out of fuel.

Floragato inched toward his friend, paw hovering over his shoulder. He stopped, too hesitant to touch him.

“Garnet?” the feline called, his voice as fragile as a sapling.

No response. The bunny squirmed, reeling from the shock and pain.

“GARNET?” Floragato tried again, desperate to hear his voice. Some sort of certainty is his heart-breaking chaos.

A groan escaped his friend. He turned around, his brow and snout split by the fall. His eyes were hazy. Yet the strands of mist inside were gone. There was no dread, only the daze of someone who had just awakened from a nightmare. Too fast. Without warning.

The feline pushed himself closer. The bunny didn’t protest. But he did not reply, still silent, save for the grunts.

Floragato collapsed onto his chest, letting the tears run free. Shock, grief, and pain crashed over him like a tide, breaking the dam as he sought comfort in the only place he knew would bring him some sort of semblance of peace.

The bunny lay completely limp, unable to form words. The cat didn’t need them. His presence was enough.

“They’re gone…” the feline wept, his voice cracking under pressure. Guilt, shame, and the sheer gravity of what had happened shattered his crumbling resolve.

“Garnet?” Jasper sniveled, looking him straight in the eyes. “They’re dead. I wasn’t quick enough.”

Raboot did not respond. He stared at the ceiling in dumbfounded stupor, mind struggling to process their retreat. Nothing made sense anymore. His paws twitched, finally moving in to lock behind his friend. On pure instinct rather than a conscious thought. His face didn’t change. A slight tic wracked through his eyes.

The ground rumbled overhead, dust sprinkling across Floragato’s back. The child coughed somewhere beside them, slithering across the floor. Sharp shingles bounced off the ground.

“I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.” Jasper took a shaky breath, tears smearing the sand stains on his face. “For everything.”

Raboot stayed silent, his mouth jammed wide open, grappling with thoughts too tough to wrangle. The image he saw in his delusions still burned bright in his mind. He knew it was a lie, and yet it still landed wrong, no matter how hard he tried to brush it away. Somewhere deep down, he knew it wasn’t just a mirage to dismiss. The fog showed him the fear that was already there. It didn’t vanish. It didn’t flee to whence it came. Instead, it moved into the darkest corner of his psyche. And it was there to stay.

He couldn’t bring himself to speak. So many things, and all at once, his mind struggling to hold itself in one piece.

That damnable sound of stone scraping against stone didn’t leave much time to wonder. Something shifted up on the surface, moving in closer, dirt shooting out of the crack in the ruined walls.

Amber yelped, stumbling back and covering his face from the debris. The foe was still on their tail, slowly but surely trying to make their way in. All safety was fleeting.

The feline slipped off, smearing the beads all over his face. His paw reached out to grab Raboot’s wrist, holding it tight to ground himself.

“I need your help.” The bunny didn’t reply. But his ears twitched. He heard him.

The cat pushed himself off the floor, grabbing Mae’s boot. Garnet took a few seconds to brace, his mind still reeling from the shock of what they’d been through. It barely felt real.

They grunted, dragging her farther down the slope, deeper in the tomb choked with mud, rocks, and rubble.

The bear clung to Meowth’s tail, trying to mimic the adults, and pulled, wheezing a grumbling from the effort. The only saving grace for both was the wet, slanted floor.

They slipped and stumbled, hauling their injured friends towards the bottom of the well. Until their backs touched a wall.

“Dead end.” The bunny finally broke the silence, his shoulders slumping in quiet resignation.

“No.” The feline shook his head. “No, we’ll get out of here. Give me some light.”

Raboot wiped his paw clean on Mae’s jacket. A fragile flame sprouted from his finger, shedding a faint orange glow over the wreckage.

Beams, columns, and splintered bricks filled up the room all the way up to the ceiling. Nothing remained, save for a tiny gap between the stones that they squeezed into.

The feline frantically probed the walls, seeking cracks to break through. But there was none.

“Please.” His palms smothered the dusty surface, searching for a nook to slip through.

The bunny’s snout turned cold and stoic as he stared at whence they crawled. He seemed to come to terms with their fate. There was nowhere to run. Nowhere to hide. No way to fight back. It was over. He was tired of fleeing. No more. “Funny. They could have killed us long ago. So what’s the point?”

“Garnet?” The feline called, snapping him out of it.

“Hm?” He replied without any kind of enthusiasm.

“There’s a vent.” Floragato's arm slipped through a gap between the old bricks.

“Too small,” Raboot let out a deep breath. Whatever hope there was left felt underserved.

“I can do it!” The bear suddenly chimed in, dusting his paws up.

He climbed the stones without waiting for permission, shoving the feline aside. His head dipped into the hole, legs helplessly flapping as he struggled to fit.

Jasper watched him flail around before taking a gamble. He shouldered the child, giving him a good push and sending him straight through the crack.

A faint yelp rang from the other side when the kid hit the floor. “OUCH!”

The corner of the bunny’s mouth twitched, pulling a broken, hopeless smile. Of someone walking straight into a grave. “You’d be an awful parent.”

“Thanks.” The cat tapped on the wall, barely coherent enough to think. “How is it going down there?”

“Uhhh…” the bear mumbled, tripping over something in the dark. “AW!”

“Stupid… Oh, I think I found something!” Amber lisped from behind the wall. “Oh no, it’s cobweb…”

“What do you see?” Floragato quietly inquired, feverishly looking behind his shoulder. Another scraping sound of stones came from up above. The creatures were catching up. “We’re running out of time.”

“I can’t see any-”

The bear squeaked again, bumping into the wall.

“Okay, that was a bad idea…” Jasper smashed his snout into the bricks, taking a deep breath.

Another thud rang from the entrance. The first statue forced its way through. Umbreon, wrecked and mangled, its earless head peeking out from the gap. Its paw reshaped itself, pointing at the vent they tried to open. A warning. As if it knew exactly what they planned to do.

“Forget it.” Raboot leaned on the beam that jutted out of the ground, accepting their fate. “This is where we make our last-”

“What’s this?” Amber stumbled over something yet again. This time, the fall was followed by the rumbling of stones, which turned into a dull, low echo that rolled off the walls.

Dust trickled from the ceiling. The bricks gave way with a grinding noise, retreating beneath the floor and revealing a cramped chamber hidden deep within. A puff of ancient, moldy air hit them straight in the face. Countless centuries old.

There was no time to think.

Without time to think, they pushed their unconscious friends and dove headfirst into the hollow.

Another dead end. The room appeared to be an atrium: a shape carved into rock with a stone grid in the center. An oubliette. Half-tomb, half-prison, rusted chains and shackles littering the floor. Unlike the ruins up above, this one looked somewhat structurally coherent, having been left sealed for what must have been millennia. Moss, lichen, and mold ate at the walls, but enough remained to be recognizable as architecture rather than loose mounds of bricks.

Raboot coughed, choking on a thick cloud of dust. “What now?”

“Light,” Jasper wiped the sand off his face. “I’ll try to close it back up before the statues get here.”

Raboot’s fingers clicked, reigniting the flame to shed a glow over a chiseled stone slate. There were no buttons, cranks, or levels. Instead, a set of paw prints marked the clay with marbled rings around them, lodged into granite sockets. Like they were supposed to be turned. Somehow.

“How did you open it?” Floragato nudged the child.

“Uhhh…” He rubbed the back of his head, his orange fur smothered in dust. “I just… Punched stuff…”

“Great…” The feline let out a sigh, meddling with the strange device.

It didn’t make sense, alien to everything they had seen back in the city. The statues shifted again. A thud of stone brought them closer. Still out of sight. But near.

“Give me a moment,” Floragato tapped on the rings and tried to spin them. But they wouldn’t budge.

Raboot took a deep breath, watching his friend struggle. His eyes drifted off towards the walls above, his fire highlighting the old carvings, faded by eons of moisture. More to distract himself from mounting pressure than to cut any sort of meaning.

They didn’t make any sense. Not at first. A mosaic with dozens of randomly arranged etchings, depicting Pokémon of all kinds. Until familiar shapes emerged from the moss, marked by all-too-familiar claw marks.

Blaziken. Umbreon. Pyroar. Delphox. Armarogue. Too precise to be random.

His eyes squinted, scanning the surface as his friend fiddled with the puzzle. The figures weren’t merely standing there as some sort of decor. They were fighting. Shielding the ancient buildings, palisades, and temples, hiding others behind their backs. Throwing themselves in the way of a dragon-kin army, bent to destroy what they had built.

The craters. The ruins. It started making an awfully morbid sense.

The longer he read, the higher his brows furrowed.

“Almost…” the feline tried to displace the rings, breaking his claws off. “Damn it!”

The bunny didn’t react. He kept staring at the painting, perhaps the only thing that still remained of the stories that were never told.

A war. A foe brought down low. They laid their lives immortalized in stone. Their foe, battered and broken, was pulled into tombs and towers to be chained for their crimes.

His eyes sprang wide open.

“They bring bad things, don’t they?” he muttered under his breath, recalling the bear’s warning. The last piece of the jigsaw snapped back into place.

He was right. But not the way it seemed at first. Remembrance wasn't what they thought. His heart skipped a beat.

“Damnation!” Floragato hissed at the plate. The lock refused to obey.

“Yeah? You saw what they can do!” The child squeaked.

Another thud rang across the cavern. The statue budged through the hallway, its head peeking over the edge of the door.

“Curses,” Floragato sprang up. It was too late. “Down the grid. Now!”

Raboot didn’t move.

“GARNET!” The feline grabbed Mae by her boots, struggling to drag her by himself.

“The bad things are what bring them. Not the other way around.” The bunny’s voice cracked with an almost maddening clarity.

“What are you talking-”

That thunderous hiss came again, one they’d heard before. This time, however, it echoed from below where they were heading. Before the trio could process the sound, the bars snapped, leaking shadows like black liquid. It pooled on the floor, flowing and swirling into slime-like shapes. Shapes of draconic limbs.

They stretched, twisted, and reached for the dumbfounded feline.

The statue behind them vanished. A thud rang through the room, raising a cloud of dust. It re-emerged in front of the stragglers, wedging itself between them.

The shadows sprouted from the hole in the ground, their spectral forms turning solid. Black claws sprang from the gloom. The creature rabidly lashed out, leaving a deep gash on the old effigy and shielding Floragato behind its back. It stoically endured, taking one mighty hit after another, each one strong enough to split the stones apart. Again and again. Over and over. Ripping one leg out of the socket and splitting the head straight in half.

“Turn your eyes away. Let your mind slip.” Raboot grabbed the feline’s shoulder, pulling him out of shock.

The realization fell like a landslide.

“Just… Do it…” Garnet shook his friend.

The moment their focus dared to switch, the statue shifted. This time inside the spectral shape. It imploded, vanishing into a cloud of tar.

Silence settled. Crushing. Heavy. The long-dead hero stood completely still, its shattered frame barely holding itself in one piece.

Raboot took an awkward step forward, rubbing the dust off his eyes. His paw stretched to touch the broken back of the mangled effigy.

“Don’t…” Floragato warned.

But he didn’t listen. His fingers traced the deep wounds on the stones. “It could have killed us long ago. The moment we set foot onto these plains. It didn’t.”

“I… Don’t understand.” The feline shook his head, as confused as ever.

“They weren’t hunting us.” The bunny took his eyes off the statue, this time at peace. “They were watching over us. Guiding us away.”

The statue didn’t move. There was no point.

A thud rang through the cavern. A few more of them emerged, forming a phalanx in front of the entrance, all facing away en garde for what may come.

Another one arrived, Lopunny sprawled in Blaziken’s broken arms. There was no triumph. No smile on its face. Just the same stoic expression, smothered by millennia of rain and ruin. Duty unto death.
 
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