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Arukona

A Scribe Penning His Brainworms
Location
Ardalion
Pronouns
He/him
Partners
  1. aggron
  2. sceptile
  3. lucario
Summary

The world has fallen to ruin, as the planet’s paralysis holds time in its stagnating shackles. Darkness reigns, water does not flow, and the sun and moon no longer illuminate the blackened sky. The world has turned to banditry and craze, with the prospect of salvation naught but a pipe dream as hope is suppressed and despair spreads.

Ninetales Nina witnessed the world fall when she was a Vulpix living in Treasure Town, and her heart has wallowed in despair for three centuries as she evades the endless pursuit of Dusknoir and Primal Dialga. Her innocence crushed, she has grown into a hardened vagabond known as the Ashen Fox, crushing anyone who gets in her way.

Only upon encountering a human and a Grovyle does her cold demeanour melt when they raise her a cause to believe in.


Notes
Welcome, everyone, to Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Prelude in Darkness! This is a prequel of PMD: Explorers of Time/Darkness/Sky, taking place in the Dark Future before the hero and Grovyle have travelled back in time to halt the collapse of Temporal Tower. Thus a calamity occurred, time stopped, and the planet became paralysed.

But what did that mean for its inhabitants, and especially a nervous Vulpix who aspired to join Wigglytuff's Guild but could never work up the courage to do so? Without a human for her to pluck up courage with...how could she ever deal with the great disaster that would befall the world?

It's an AU that doesn't try to diverge from Explorers canon too much, mostly filling in blanks where a story could be told. I always wanted to do this idea, and funnily enough, a Drabble Bingo from the 2025 TR Anniversary Event gave the opportunity to do it. And now I'm ready to present that idea to you all.

Fair few content warnings, as a heads-up. Violence, blood, death, themes of post-apocalypse, depression, and suicidal ideation are among them. This fic will get grim at times, as it would in a setting where little hope exists.

Special thanks to @Spiteful Murkrow for beta reading this.
 
Prologue - Paralysed Planet New

Arukona

A Scribe Penning His Brainworms
Location
Ardalion
Pronouns
He/him
Partners
  1. aggron
  2. sceptile
  3. lucario
Prologue
Paralysed Planet

There was nothing.

Not a breeze blew across this land. The air its inhabitants breathed was stale and stagnant. Water, be it waves by the shoreline, cascading waterfalls, or winding rivers, did not flow anymore. Nor did the sun, moon, or stars ever grace the land with any of their presences.

Once upon a time, this land was a continent filled with boundless life, bountiful harvests and beautiful vistas. Societies, towns and villages grew from the fruits the land provided, and in the forests, deserts, mountains, and grasslands, wild Pokémon laid claim to those lands and formed their own tribes and packs. The Grass Continent, as it was called, had once been befitting of the name. A land full of verdant pastures and great jungles, and a place that many Pokémon were proud to call home.

But now it was no more. Now it was a barren wasteland devoid of the life that once filled it.

This was a land where hope withered and died, snuffed out by the vacuum of despair.

This was a world condemned by fate and left behind by its gods.

All except one: a primordial entity who’d possessed the shell of Dialga, the god of time, and turned him into a mindless beast. It came to be known as Primal Dialga, and his descent into madness signalled the world’s descent into chaos. Time completely ground to a halt, and the march of life stopped for all but those who inhabited the world.

Over the centuries, the beautiful grasslands wilted into barren wastes, and no area was graced by natural sunlight ever again. For its inhabitants who soldiered on, they were left living a punishment worse than death, and the dark barren wastes quickly became its own kind of hell. Survival of the fittest was the first and last principle that governed the Grass Continent, and there was much strife and turmoil over what precious little resources remained.

Any hope at reversing this mysterious malaise withered as the ranks of the virtuous thinned, and in their place came domination by Primal Dialga and his henchmen, with bandits and outlaws picking over the remains and plundering where they saw fit.

Pessimism and despair set in even among the righteous, and within time, rebellion against Primal Dialga’s will fell to a silent whimper. The rebellions that did sprout were crushed before they could blossom, and amidst this dark world where the sun never rose, most had resigned themselves to bleak and meager existences.

Among them was a Ninetales, who stood alone on a hillock, looking down at the barren wastes below her and shaking her head at the sight.

Nina didn’t know why she was still dwelling on how things had come to this when she knew full well that it did little more than to wrench her heart and sap her will to keep moving forward. It had been three hundred years at this point, or at least that was her best estimate. It wasn’t as though time mattered anymore - without the sunrise and sunset to mark the day’s beginning and end, who had need for clocks and hourglasses?

It was an endless era of darkness in which not even the years could be marked. Summer’s long days and winter’s long nights could not be traced anymore, and so one long never-ending season of dormancy reigned that would never abate, binding its inhabitants tight in its freezing shackles.

“...If only there was a way,” she murmured to herself. “A way out of this cursed existence…”

Nina let her words carry off into the gray, frozen distance. Were she still her old self, she would have broken down there and then. But this world was never a place for such weak Pokémon. She’d grown over her three hundred years of life, and as the stopped world around her had done to everyone else, it’d hardened her. Scars flecked her body, and her once golden fur had dulled to grey, matching her with the blackened landscape around her.

It was just as well. Whatever shreds of innocence and hope she once possessed had crumbled away with the flow of time. Nina’s heart twinged at that, wishing it never came to this. It felt like an eternity ago that she had felt happy and had all the comforts she needed.

Alas, it had been long enough that memories were starting to elude her. Warmth and happiness felt utterly foreign to her now, to the point that she could hardly remember the feeling when it was shared to her in the past. There were certain faces from back then she couldn’t recall clearly, nor their species or voice.

But one event from back then rang clear as day in her mind, even all this time after it had happened.

The day that it all fell apart.

That, she remembered like it was yesterday.
 
Chapter 1 - The Last Sunrise New

Arukona

A Scribe Penning His Brainworms
Location
Ardalion
Pronouns
He/him
Partners
  1. aggron
  2. sceptile
  3. lucario
Chapter 1
The Last Sunrise

Three hundred years ago…

Vulpix Nina watched the sun creep over the horizon, the sea glinting as the first lights of the day bathed the ocean in front of her. Her hideaway, just under Sharpedo Bluff, provided the perfect refuge from the elements in rough weather, and on fair days like this one, it was a great place to watch the night sky shift to dawn and to watch the Wingull and Pelipper flap about at sea before coming onto the shore.

It was the dawn of a beautiful new day.

Another day in which she still wasn’t a Guild apprentice.

That reminder made Nina’s heart sink like a stone, as her ears flattened and she gazed back at her bed, tempted to rot in it for some time longer.

It’d always felt like such an easy thing to do, to march in and request to join up with them. But the ‘what ifs’ would always sink in. What if she wasn’t good enough? What if Chatot Kiripito saw her floundering? The Guild’s deputy had always been a stern type; if she failed, surely he’d give her an earful. And even if she didn’t fail, what if she got complacent and in over her head? What if she fell to either a Mystery Dungeon or an outlaw’s claw?

The constant fears gripped her, and no matter how hard she tried, courage had always evaded her when she began walking up that hill. But it was if her fears began physically weighing her down for every step she took upward. Chief of which was the fear of making the first step into the unknown, and with that lone thought all of her fears would be overwhelmingly magnified.

The fear of being told she wasn’t good enough.

The fear of being ushered in and being given a challenge she wasn’t prepared for.

The fear of being laughed at for not being good enough. She’d already gotten that from a mean Skuntank who saw her running from the Guild one day.

“You really think a wimp like you has what it takes to be an explorer? Chaw-haw-haw! Dream on, kiddo!”

The snide remarks like that she’d earned from the Guild always being a step too far for her didn’t help one bit. And so every day, Nina would remain where she was: stuck in her status quo of being too weak, too scared, and too inadequate.

… Maybe she was being too harsh on herself. At least she was resourceful enough to get by, doing smaller odd jobs around town and helping ‘mons out with menial tasks. Thankfully the merchants tended to be nice and allowed her to work with them, with the exception of Duskull Banquo, who was a bit of a recluse. No one really knew what to make of him, but at least he wasn’t oppressive? He was just odd.

Nina’s favourite merchant was Matrona, or ‘Auntie Kangaskhan’ as some were fond of calling her, particularly young kids. The wise motherly Pokémon, rarely without her joey, always gave a warm tender smile to the Vulpix anytime she came to her stall, and even when Nina was feeling down, Matrona’s warm personality never failed to make her smile too.

But all the same, she never let her dream to become an explorer die.

Today would be different. This would be the day she’d go on in and join the Guild.

Yes, she didn’t have her Relic Fragment anymore, and her heart ached for it. But she had to be strong; she couldn’t let that loss weigh her down. Sheer determination would see her through!

She preened a paw through her head fur, and breathed in and out to steady her nerves.

“Come on, Nina, you can do this!”

She attempted to force a confident grin over her face, but a look at the mirror told all; she couldn’t hide the uncertainty weighing her down. A couple more deep breaths were needed before the Vulpix could muster the will to climb the stairs upwards. From there, she made her way into town.

Except things hadn’t been the same recently. It felt as though a sudden tension had come over parts of the town as of late. Suddenly, explorers from Wigglytuff’s Guild were around town less, and the merchants all seemed to be pensive about something, discussing in hushed tones about rumours that escaped from the Guild and the town bulletins.

Nina couldn’t fathom as to what was bothering them. She just knew that it worried her. If the famed explorers of Wigglytuff’s Guild had discovered something ill, and if ‘mons much stronger than her fretted over bad omens…

If something happened, what could weak little her do?

Nina shook her head at those thoughts. She couldn’t baulk now!

And so onward she headed into town, until she turned her head leftwards and froze on the spot.

The first stall to her left – a Kangaskhan’s tent, indicating it to be Matrona’s – was completely empty.

What? Nina’s ears pricked in alarm. Matrona rarely leaves her stall. She’s always there every morning until she closes! Concern crossed her brow as she looked ahead, across the bridge over the brook where the din of a crowd drifted through the air.

A gathering was up ahead, and among them, she recognised the Kangaskhan’s looming figure above the rest of the townsfolk. She breathed a sigh of relief – at least nothing had happened to Matrona.

Meanwhile, up on a podium addressing them was…a Xatu?

“…It shall be today. In no uncertain terms.”

Yogen? The appraisal merchant? Nina couldn’t help but be more confused. His shop was out of the way and he wasn’t one for communication. He was as odd a bird as Banquo was, and though he wasn’t malevolent, he did give off odd vibes, almost like his guise as a merchant hid something deeper.

One time she went by his place to unlock a locked box she’d been gifted, and he had said something to her before she left.

“Shun the phantom and protect the archer at all costs.”

What did that mean? She’d shrugged it off back then as his odd mutterings and got on with her day.

But now here he was, front and centre, alongside a Torkoal, Wigglytuff and Chatot. Three very famous figures among Treasure Town’s denizens.

Elder Wischard? Guildmaster Makena? Deputy Kiripito? What’s going on here? Nina squeezed her way to the front, trying to get a grasp on what the topic of the day was about. She noticed the varying expressions of worry on the crowd’s faces, and the tension felt thick enough to cut with claws.

“The calamity will be upon us soon. I can feel its presence encroaching, and before long…time will stop in Treasure Town, just as it has elsewhere on this continent.”

Nina’s ears pricked in alarm, and around her, the crowd’s worried clamour escalated to shock.

“Wait, what?!”

“‘Time will stop’?”

“Seems those rumours were true…”

“Gods, I thought they were telling tall tales…”

But Nina wasn’t fully in the loop, and so she caught Makena and Wischard’s eyes and asked them.

“Wh-What’s happening? Is this to do with why everyone’s been so tense recently?”

“Oh, you haven’t heard, young miss?” Wischard looked down at the Vulpix. “In various places around the Grass Continent, time has slowed to a standstill, and all the life has been sucked out of them. Worryingly…they seem to be the same places that house the Time Gears.”

“T-Time Gears?”

Nina had heard about those – legendary artifacts created by the Timekeeper himself to control the flow of time in the world, or so they said.

“But I thought those kept time stable?” the nearby Ursaring asked, cocking his head.

“W-Well, they should,” Makena spoke up.

Until that day, Nina wasn’t sure if she’d ever seen the normally cheery Guildmaster look so pensive. No, something was really wrong right now. She didn’t know why the others weren’t just being open about it, but if even the happy-go-lucky Guildmaster Makena was troubled by this, then…

“But we cannot find the root cause of the matter,” the Wigglytuff went on. “We had thought a nefarious thief might have done the unthinkable and pilfered a Time Gear for themselves.”

“But in our various expeditions around the continent to figure out the cause, we found that not to be the case. The Time Gears remain undisturbed.” Chatot Kiripito stood on a perch near his Guildmaster, as steely-eyed and serious as ever. “We have everyone on the Guild working double time to figure out where the problem of this stems from…but so far, nothing. Not a shred of a clue.”

Nina’s ears flattened. Even the Wigglytuff Guild couldn’t find anything? The peerless explorers she’d always looked up to had come up short?

How? They always seem to know what they’re doing…But if it goes beyond the Time Gears, if it’s something that’ll overwhelm our world, then…even great heroes like them wouldn’t be able to do anything, would they?

“S-So that means…” The Vulpix began to quiver. “Time will stop here too?”

“I am afraid so,” Yogen replied, closing his eyes. “I do not know if the power is within us to reverse it. Perhaps…hm.”

“Is there truly nothing we can do?” Matrona pleaded, looking between the four. “Please, there must be something! Some way out of this!”

“Yeah! There was a calamity with a meteor over on the Air Continent a while back, but they had heroes that saved the world!” Electivire Hadad, the Link Shop owner, shouted from the rear of the crowd. “We can’t just sit here and call it quits!”

“…Mrngh.” Wischard seemed to flinch. “I have tried to summon all of my wisdom I’ve gained in my long years…but even I cannot think of anything. Curse this memory of mine!” He stamped a foot in mild anger.

Nina could in that moment sense the worry and fear of the townsfolk all around her – people she was well familiar with by this stage. It was a feeling that struck her deep too, especially upon seeing the faces of the leaders before them.

Was there nothing they could do? Truly nothing?

Was she truly not going to be able to become a Guild member in the end?

But before she could think her next thought, Yogen suddenly let out a shrill squawk, making Nina jump in shock.

“Collapse!” he cried out. “It’s upon us! But brace yourself, panic not, for we–”

The Xatu didn’t even get to finish his sentence before the ground began to shake beneath them. Shouts immediately pierced the air, as a panic took hold of the crowd.

“E-Earthquake?!” Nina cried.

“What in blazes?!” Wischard cried. “An earthquake?! Here?!”

“Get everyone to safety!” yelled Matrona. “To higher ground, at once!”

“My dojo!” Marowak Knoch, the dojo master, cried. “It’ll collapse in on itself!”

“My bank!” Banquo wailed. “My dear funds!”

Above the din, Kiripito’s call was shrill and echoed across the square.

“Stay calm! Stay calm!” the Chatot cried to the panicking crowd. “To higher ground! Evacuate orderly!”

But those words seemed to fall on deaf ears – at least, to Nina, who had broken out into rapid breaths as she watched the chaos unfold around her.

Her mind was too panic-stricken to register anything right now.

Earthquakes – they were all too haunting a sensation for her. Memories of a Ninetales’ hurried cries entered her mind – from memories she didn’t ever want to recount again.

“Run, my girl! Go!” a fatherly Ninetales yelled at her, his tails pinned by a large rock.

“But Dad, what about you and Mom?!” Nina pleaded.

“Don’t worry!” Her father shook his head. “Just get yourself and the heirloom to safety!”


She didn’t want to relive that right now, not when the ground shook with a force much greater than the ground back then.

Please. Not again! Not again! I don’t want this, I don’t want this, I don’t want this–!

She bolted, her legs nearly giving out from under her from the quaking as she dashed away from the crowd and the town. The bridge over the brook was splitting apart, but she was able to get over it with only a mild splash of river water on her paws.

Matrona called out to her, but she didn’t make out her words. It was all a jumbled mush amidst the panic that had developed among the townsfolk, Nina brushing past panicking crowds and legs threatened to crush her among a growing stampede.

Nina’s vision blurred as she ran west, towards Sharpedo Bluff. Stalls to her side, including Matrona’s, were splitting and dislodging wood, quickly collapsing, while screams added to the already intense tumult.

This was all a nightmare, it had to be! She just had to wake herself up, and then everything would be alright again.

That was her prevailing thought before an almighty shockwave suddenly rocked the surroundings.

BOOOOOOOOOM!

It was as if the whole world trembled from it, and gods was it powerful – enough to halt Nina in her tracks and throw her back.

“Aaagh!” the poor Vulpix cried. She lost her footing and hit the ground with a tumble, landing on the edge of the bluff with her rear legs sticking over the edge.

“No no no no!” She yelped in fright at the lack of ground under her paws, and scrabbled to safety again.

But just as she got to her feet–

BOOOOOOOOM!

Another shockwave. This one threw the Vulpix onto her side, with Nina not having the strength or bulk to stand her ground against it along with the constant shaking. She fell to the ground in a heap, a quivering mess against the shaking ground.

Of course that was how it had to be. Weak, powerless, gripped by her own fears – of course someone like her would have no hope of resisting this calamity.

BOOOOOOOOM!

A third shockwave – one with enough force to throw Nina back and into the air. She landed hard, crying out with pain throbbing at the back of head.

But as she landed, she noticed a most peculiar sight.

In midair, the objects being knocked around by the quake were actively slowing down as they fell. And these were chunks of rock, heavier than her!

Her breath caught in her throat as she realised what this was.

This was the beginning of time’s collapse. It had now spread to Treasure Town, just as Yogen had predicted.

Everything was moving slower, like someone had cast Trick Room in the vicinity. Except this was no mere illusion cast by a psychic. This was stark, plain reality.

She tried to get onto her feet, but suddenly she noticed the sun right above her, as if it were midday. Nina looked up, dumbfounded at the sight.

Wait, but how? Was it not dawn a moment ago?

And just as she thought that, the sun was visibly descending into the sky west of them. The clouds were also moving a lot faster than they should’ve been.

Before long, evening had come. Not long after that, and night had fallen. The moon now rose in the sky where the sun had shone brightly only a minute before.

It was a freakish sight watching the cycle of day accelerating before her, and between this and the constant shaking underneath her, Nina could only behold it all in horror.

“Make it stop!” she cried, whimpering with her ears flattened against her head.

This was terrifying, seeing time go haywire and nature unravel in front of her. There was nothing she could do – she just had to sit there and watch it get faster and faster and faster.

Then the clouds suddenly began…moving in the other direction?

And the sun had risen back up!

I-Is time…rewinding?

It was. The evening sun shone brightly, blinding Nina’s vision and forcing her to throw up a paw to block it.

She heard distant cries of panic from the townsfolk at all of this. She felt the same way, only her reactions were one of quiet terror, the Vulpix now a quivering mess at the sight before her.

Then the sun moved back below the horizon, and the darkness of night descended again…

…Only for the sun to rise again in about a minute.

“I-It’s even faster!” Nina wailed. “It’s going out of control!”

The day moved past at a dizzying pace, the sun tearing across the sky before dipping below the horizon again.

Night seemed even shorter this time, with the next dawn approaching in only half a minute. Then morning seemed to only last a few seconds!

All the while, the ground still rumbled beneath her, and Nina crumpled on all fours again. She didn’t have the will to get up and run back to town.

All she could do was watch, transfixed, as time descended into chaos in front of her. It was gut-wrenching to witness, but all the same, she couldn’t tear her eyes away from it.

Another night. Another day. Another night. Another day. It was getting too fast to keep track of! If a clock were here, no doubt its hands would be a blur.

Right as a new night ended and another day dawned–

BOOOOOOOOM!

Another huge shockwave pulsed across the land, one that packed more force than ever. So forceful that Nina could feel the ground below her actively begin to fall apart. She looked down and yelped once she realised what was happening.

“Th-The bluff! It’s collapsing!” The Vulpix panicked, got to her feet and scrabbled to find steady ground. The bluff grew more fractured, and soon the whole mass began tumbling into the sea.

Except…it didn’t reach the water. Nina stopped mid-cry once she realised.

“It’s…slowing?”

Sharpedo Bluff…remained suspended in mid-air.

Everything suddenly slowed. Nina took this chance to leap upwards, back to the cliff edge. If nothing else, at least her movements hadn’t slowed.

Time had stopped accelerating, and was slowing to a crawl. It was now the middle of the night, and Nina couldn’t quite believe what she was seeing.

She could literally feel the effects under her feet. The rocks kicked up by the quake stayed raised in the air, and did not move. Leaves that fell off trees remained suspended mid-fall, and the pleasant sea breeze that always blew over Treasure Town had come to a complete halt.

Even in the dark of night, Nina spotted the world turning grey and lifeless around her. Her pupils dilated and her breathing quickened. It wasn’t just time collapsing, but nature too?

“Wh-Why…Why is it all falling apart like this?”

Right before it did, she caught the glimpse of the sun rising above the mountains to the east. Only for an instant, however, before a fracture suddenly opened in the sky and darkness poured rapidly from it, covering that last glimmer of light.

Tears streamed from Nina’s eyes, watching it all fall to ruin in front of her.

That had been the world’s last sunrise.

That had been the day the light died.
 
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