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Chapter 26 - Strays

Sinderella

Angy Tumbleweed
Staff
Premium
Location
In Guzma's Closet
Pronouns
She/Her
Partners
  1. sylveon-shiny
  2. gothitelle
  3. froslass
  4. chandelure
  5. mimikyu
white-swan-jpg.19063

Chapter 26: Strays
CW(s): Strong Language, Implied History of Sexual Assault
Odette had gone from a lavish gala, to a posh garden party, to a ritzy yacht gathering, to an underground battling match in a matter of weeks. It was taking place at a mansion, easily as big, if not bigger, than the first one she’d been invited to, so calling it “underground” was a bit of a stretch. But, with the low, strobing light, hollering horde of feckless elites likely high on the newest drug craze, and the enormous caged arena set up right in the middle of the ballroom (seriously, why did so many mansions have a need for ballrooms so big?), she might as well have been standing in some seedy club down a gross Lumiosian alleyway.

It was the first time she was able to attend one of these Dorien-sanctioned outings in normal clothes. Well, semi-normal. He’d advised her to wear something “edgy” or “urban,” whatever the hell that meant. She’d opted for the high-waisted black leather skirt Nana got her for her last birthday, a snug turtleneck, her best black coat, and knee-high boots to match. When the first thing Dorien did was gawk at her hips, she figured, with growing revulsion, that she’d understood the assignment. Upon arriving, she was pleased to find that again, she had managed to aesthetically wiggle herself right into the aesthetic.

Maybe it was the wealthy Lambourne blood that gave her such a nose for fitting in at these gatherings. The thought made her irrationally angry, even for her standards.

The converted arena went up in another bout of raucous applause as the Pokemon she vaguely recognized as Vilyga, a grotesque humanoid thing with a severe case of scoliosis and an alarming lack of nose, launched itself at its opponent, a gorgeous yet vicious avian type Pokemon that she remembered being called Septulent. The vilyga enclosed its horrendous underbite around the septulent’s wing, causing it to release a pained shriek as both toppled to the ground in a mess of wrinkled skin and black feathers.

Odette felt Dorien’s body press into hers as he leaned forward to yell along with the wall of people that surrounded them. He had just enough pull in this crowd to get them right up next to the cage. “The best view in the house,” he’d called it. She was more inclined to call it an ensured trap. Or a fire hazard. She was completely boxed in at all angles; strangers flanking her sides, a fence in front of her nose, and Dorien coiled possessively around her from behind.

She felt relatively safe knowing Ange was close by; in his ball and shielded from the horrors before her. She might have elected to have him out, like some of the other attendees had with their more rowdy partners, but Ange was incapable of being subtle. He’d gawked at the first set of fighting blood ‘mon like the term “act natural” went against every aspect of his higher thought, giving her no choice but to hide him away in his ball until there was a break in the gory action.

As much as Odette tried to refrain from doing so, she would occasionally catch herself scanning the festering crowd for a head of silver, or a set of icy blue eyes to meet. Her heart would clench on search, and a part of it would subsequently disintegrate when she came up short.

She didn’t know why. She didn’t want to see him. Or, rather, that’s what she told herself.

When Dorien took a moment to lean away from her to speak with one of his Lansat groupies, she snuck a glance at RotomPhone. She’d yet to dismiss the notification alerting her to the last message from Valentin. It was reckless of her to have it showing so close to the enemy, but she couldn’t bring herself to get rid of it. Or open the message itself.

Are you going to the battle event tonight?

He knew about this gathering. Whether he was invited or not was a story she wasn’t prepared to find out yet. However, that wasn’t why she’d opened the phone.

Pulling up her camera app proved fruitless. The DISABLED pop up greeted her just as it had when she tried to open it upon arriving at this degenerate party. Equally as upsetting and slightly more unnerving was the lack of signal bars in the upper right hand corner of the screen. A blood-curdling NO SIGNAL sat in their place.

Even if she wanted to respond to Valentin—which she didn’t—there was no way to. Calls to the authorities should still be able to go through, but if Team Enigma had gone the lengths to figure out how to remotely disable every camera phone that entered the premises of one of their parties, then she wouldn’t put it past them to have an anti-cop-calling failsafe in place. She wasn’t keen on testing that theory herself.

She wanted to keep browsing through, Dorien’s arms coming to a noose-like knot around her waist as his head dipped into the crook of her neck had her sliding it back into her purse. Rotom didn’t need to be subjected to such a hideous display.

“Are you having fun?” He spoke directly into her skin, which pebbled up with goosebumps under his growling breath.

“The most,” she replied, the words toxic sludge on her tongue.

The battle soon came to an end, though Odette was too focused on Dorien’s throttling weight on her back to catch who had won. Thankfully, the emcee called for a break, but she had no chance to shove herself into the dispersing crowd before Dorien dragged her back to the set of plush leather couches set up near the arena fence, where his entire entourage was free to lounge and bother the wandering scantily-clad waitresses for more bottles of thousand-euro liquor and glasses of colorful cocktails. She tried to sit herself as far away from the group as she could, forgetting Dorien had a sixth sense for tugging on whatever threads of nerves she had left. He had her snug in his lap before she made it more than a step out of his reach.

This has to be what hell feels like, she thought through the garbled laughter that wrapped its grubby fingers around her head.

Nah, Odile said. There’s a little more fire, a little more brimstone, a lot more darkness, and a whooooole lot more blood. Throw in some ancient horrors, you basically have the old world. She sighed with a sense of longing. Miss it.

Yeah, I think I’d much prefer that over this.

Touché. This guy would give the things I used to fight with a run for their gonads.

I want to say that I don’t believe Dorien is worse than a bunch of ancient eldritch horrors, but then I’d be lying.

Odile’s laugh was quiet, but it was warm enough to rise up over the chill of the eerily jubilant chatter. Odette figured that she would never swallow to the idea of having entire conversations with a demon in her head, but here she was, content with admitting she'd grown used to it. Grown thankful for it, really.

No, Odile was no less certifiable in her ravings, nor was she particularly versed in staying quiet when she should be. But she was a good distraction. She was even good at catering to Odette’s intrusive thoughts. Naturally, Wrath would be skilled at stroking the violent ideas of the girl with severe anger issues.

Maybe they were the perfect partners.

The tea she sipped on was equal parts delicious and repugnant. She wasn’t surprised to find that it was aromatic, perfectly seeped, and just the right temperature. Her dry tongue, however, only tasted steaming sewage as she tossed it back in steady gulps. Being unable to enjoy one of her favorite beverages around him was a new low reached.

She was extricated from Dorien’s lap when he and his friends stood up and sauntered off on the muddled insistence they needed to head out front. Assuming it was something puerile, Odette made no effort to get up and follow, leaving her to the mercy of the 10 other young strangers sitting among their circle of couches. They were all far too invested in the garrulous affairs of kissing each other’s asses and discussing items of an eight-figure bank account nature to notice her sitting by her lonesome; a blessing she did well to not thwart. It was all she’d wanted the entire night; a second by herself to give her wilting façade a break.

Her eyes unwillingly began to skulk around again, moved by the subconscious need to seek out Valentin. The low lighting and densely packed crowd made it almost impossible to tell a head from a tail, and she was beginning to fear that not even silver hair would make him easy to spot. She eventually caught herself in her contradictory state of mind and anchored her eyes onto the couch cushions, deciding they’d be safest there. What she didn’t expect to find was a cell phone, nearly wedged in between two of the cushions. She chanced a subtle peek at the others around her, and when she was certain nobody in the near vicinity was paying attention, she picked it up.

Sitting among the richest citizens in Kalos, she was less than surprised to see it was the newest Applin phone. As she turned it over in her hands, the screen flicked on. Splashed across the glass was a selfie of her and Dorien; the one he’d taken of them during the private jet ride to Gloire, which seemed like years ago now. She was minutely impressed at how content she looked in the photo, with her head resting on Dorien’s shoulder and a diminutive grin in the crook of the left side of her lip. An uninformed party could look at this picture and assume they were a very happy couple.

She was holding Dorien’s phone. It must have fallen out of his pocket, and being that he’d yet to return for it, it was safe to say that he didn’t notice it was missing. Or he just didn’t care yet.

Reflexive thought considered giving it back, but investigative realization overrode it with the understanding that she now had a trove of evidence sitting in her palm. Her fingers slipped into a fugue state, tapping the screen to bring up the pin pad. Starting with the most obvious, she attempted to punch in his birthday (she was ashamed to admit she’d memorized it). When that failed, she tried hers. Another failure. Cycling through the rest of the common pin patterns proved just as fruitless and resulted in the device locking itself for 60 seconds.

“Dammit,” she muttered.

The Cinq-Mars malison for poor timing reared its infuriating little head, with Dorien’s boisterous laughter striking her even over the lively din. In a split second decision, she powered the phone off and slipped it into her purse alongside RotomPhone. There was no time to sit in any regret; just enough to settle into a natural slouch and sip some more of her sewage tea. The noise around her did a fantastic job at eclipsing the sound of her blood pulsing in her ears, and the muted lighting helped mask the way she anxiously dug the toes of her boots into the marble tile.

What the fuck did I just do?

Congratulations! You just stepped into the wonderful world of kleptomania. Don’t make a big deal out of it.

She didn’t know what else she expected from Odile. When Dorien approached to giddily pull her to stand, she gained a prompt understanding of what the Wrath god was getting at. His chipper mien and lack of concern for anything except her arm locking with his was enough to play off of. He was none the wiser to his phone hiding in her purse, and wouldn’t so long as she didn’t lose her cool, or waste any precious mental energy stressing about when he was going to notice.

“We’re leaving?” she asked as she sat her half empty teacup down. “Is the party already over?”

“Yes and no,” he said. “Lionel knows about another party back in the city that’s supposed to be much better, so we’ll be taking a ride.”

Odette had risked a lot agreeing to once again subject herself to the whims of Dorien’s transportation. That had been under the precedent they were attending this party and returning home. Diverging to a different event wasn’t anything she’d planned for, and she felt uneasiness beginning to percolate in her stomach.

“That should be fun,” was all she could manage as he led her through the sea of bodies to the ceiling-high double doors they’d come in from.

In the heat of the ballroom and her stale-tasting tea, her body had forgotten how nippy it was outside. Her outfit was a weak bulwark to the chilly pins that poked through to her skin. She was captivated by the sight of her faint eddying breaths, to the point that she didn’t notice the cars Dorien was leading her toward. She stopped dead when she caught the colors, familiar in the most rankling way, in the outer edges of her vision. Not expecting the abrupt stop, Dorien staggered on her resistant stance, whipping around to see what was holding her up.

“Oh, impressed to see these things again?” he queried with a smirk that asked for a smack.

“We’re not taking a limo?” she replied, fingering his bicep as if he had an intelligence switch hiding somewhere on the muscle.

His squinch was worthy of a homicidal lashing out. “Were you expecting to? I figured a scenic drive would be better for us. I know you’ve never really experienced the speed of cars like these before, since you graciously dodged last time.”

“The odometer on my bike says otherwise.”

“That’s not the same.”

The white Bugatti’s engine bellowed to life, much to Dorien’s audible glee and Odette’s tanking composure. Lionel, in all of his quaffed-headed and sharply dressed pomp, emerged from the vertically raised door and waved them down, veneers blinking on the headlights.

“He’s ready for you two!” he called. “We’re going the back roads so we can get a little speed going.”

As Dorien signaled back, Odette squeezed his arm tighter. If there was ever a time for that intelligence switch to appear, it was now.

“Dorien, it’s going to rain again any second. Didn’t you read the forecast?”

He laughed with the inflection of a man who believed he was invincible. Knowing him, that wasn’t far off.

“I’m a great driver, Doll. I can handle a little rain.”

“If you’d actually read the forecast, you’d have seen it’s not a little rain; it’s a fucking storm.”

Relax!” The placating hand he raised toward her had the exact opposite effect. “You’re getting yourself worked up over nothing. Get in the car, and I’ll show you you don’t have anything to worry about.”

Except she had everything to worry about. Her life as she knew it was crumpling more and more every day, she was currently operating without a backup, and now she was facing the very real possibility of getting into the same car that nearly killed her and Noel with a torrential downpour looming somewhere off in the night sky. As if to confirm her suspicions, a murmur of thunder sounded from behind the trees covering the mansion’s secluded driveway.

Drawing in her hand, she took a single step back toward the front door.

“No. It’s the limo or a cab. I’m not engaging in your racing games on a night like this.”

Never had she seen a smile vacate somebody’s face so fast. “What?”

“You can go alone. I’m not coming.”

He seemed disoriented by her refusal, pausing to silently sort through whatever thoughts were invading his mind while casting a dumbfounded look over at the Bugatti. When he met her eyes again, he was smiling without an ounce of mirth.

“Are you serious?”

“Limo or cab. Or I’ll walk home.”

“You’re doing this again?” he fumed.

“I’m not doing anything,” she said, razor-sharp stoicism undercutting her words. “I’m giving you my options. Whether or not you take them is your prerogative.”

“You can’t honestly look me in the eye and tell me you’ve never driven your damn bike in the rain? How is this any different?”

“I’ve never done it willingly. But at least I know my driving skills and my vehicle. I can’t say the same for you or your car.”

A hydreigon would have squirmed under the sub-brow chafing glare Dorien gave her. Her hand slid into her purse, brushing past his and her phones to press the release button on Ange’s ball. The chandelure, although nonplussed by the change of scenery, came to a trained and steadfast stop at her side. With his protective presence to ease her, she swallowed down the dread that had overflowed into her mouth.

“Limo. Or cab. Final offer.”

The horn of the Pagani squeaked, making all three of them blench.

“You guys coming or what? We need to get a move on!” shouted Lionel. It was followed up by another honk.

Dorien pressed his lips together, turning back to her like he was building up the suspense for a dire announcement.

“Then I guess you’re walking home, huh?”

She didn’t answer.

“Well. You have fun with that, Doll.”

The sneer he left her with dropped the temperature around her to a subzero point. She forced herself to stand with it until the last tail light of the asshole car trio disappeared down the driveway and through the tunnel of trees. Even after they’d long faded, she remained still, listening to her breaths shallow and pick up pace with the pre-storm air scratching at the back of her throat as she struggled in vain to settle them.

“Are you okay?” Ange asked, his voice mousy.

The shrieking invective she let loose, accompanied by the manic kicking of dust and pebbles, was enough to answer his question. She only stopped when another rumble of thunder, closer and louder this time, snapped her back to her senses.

Okay, Odile enunciated slowly. Before you completely snap, let’s take an inventory of just how fucked we are and go from there.

Dorien had left them stranded with no signal and no immediate means to get home. The mansion seemed to be a few kilometers east of BFE, with the nearest additional sign of civilization nowhere in sight. Ange would need to keep her warm, but with the thunder trekking closer, he wouldn’t be able to when the rain started without risking his health. She could go back inside and try to find a closer means of calling for a car, but that was more than likely to put her back in front of Enigma operatives keen on getting their hands on her now that Dorien had distanced himself.

The spark of positivity within the ensuing crisis was that she’d successfully gotten ahold of Dorien’s phone. If he had any idea, he didn’t let it show.

“We’ll walk until I get a bar or find another house,” she declared on a quaking exhale. “Then I’ll call a ride.”

“But the rain…” Ange muttered.

“I’ll put you back in your ball. You’ll be fine.”

“And you’ll freeze to death!”

She wasn’t going to argue with him, instead taking off down the pavers and letting the contrition chase her all the way to the main road. The further she got from the brightly lit mansion porch, the more her surroundings benighted her. The tree line, running parallel to the road, was too thick to see more than a couple feet past the first layer of trees, and was alive with crickets screeching for the arrival of another helping of rain. They were the type of woods that guaranteed she wouldn’t reemerge if she stepped foot into them, even with a partner like Ange with her.

Before the regret tagged her, the crunching of car wheels wrenched her senses out of their depressive slumber. She and Ange turned just as an unexpected beam of LED light engulfed them. Odette had to raise her arm to avoid immediate blindness.

“Are you sure you want to do that, ma’am?”

Under the protection of her limb, her eyes went wide. Peeking between the gaps in her fingers confirmed what she didn’t want to see.

Valentin. Dressed in a coat that probably dwarfed the cost of her entire outfit and standing near the open driver’s side door of a running SUV she didn’t recognize. He’d always been a sight for sore eyes. In this case, he also had a large hand in that very eyesore.

“You know, shining your brights at somebody without a good reason is widely considered rude,” she twined.

“I’d consider walking off down an unlit road with no phone signal, on the precipice of a deluge, no less, a very good reason.” He sounded far too cool for her liking. “So I’m going to give you an option. You and your partner who’s name I do not know can get in the car now, or we can sit out here in the impending rain until you give up and get in. Your choice.”

“Ange,” Ange greeted rosily with a raised tendril. “It’s just Ange.”

Valentin nodded in acknowledgment. “A pleasure, Ange.”

Through their exchange, Odette began to feel the icy pokes of a drizzle landing on her sleeves. Before he could respond, Ange jolted.

“I definitely vote to get in the car now,” he barked, wrapping that waving tendril around Odette’s arm and trying to pull her toward him. She jerked herself free, thinking with nothing more than her raw contempt for the supposed partner who lied to her.

“I’m not a damsel in distress, Valentin. You don’t need to swoop in to bail me out every time there’s an issue.”

Valentin gaped at her, equal parts astonished and concerned for her intelligence.

Who gave you the idea that I thought you were a damsel in distress? I’d like to ask them how the back of my hand tastes,” he groused. “If you really wanted to get technical, I’m more your damsel in distress than you are mine.”

“Huh?”

“I enlisted you for help; not the other way around. So ‘bailing you out’ is just my way of keeping up my end of our bargain where you’re doing most of the heavy lifting. Or at least it would be if you responded to my messages.”

Kubrick himself would have commended her for her take on his iconic stare. “You think I can’t run?”

“Why the hell would you run when there’s a running car right in front of you?” Ange asked, bewildered. He knocked his balled nub against her crown, which was met with no movement on her part. She was running on rage auto pilot. “Hello, are we home upstairs? You’re supposed to be the smart one! Stop being so angry!”

Valentin snickered, unmoved.

“In those boots? I don’t doubt your skills walking in heels, but I can’t imagine they’ll get you very far. Besides, this thing has obscene speed for an SUV.” He patted the door. “You can do the math.”

Indignation hardened in her chest and pushed her shoulders back. “Math’s my worst subject.”

“Odeeettteee…” Ange groaned, sinking to plant his face on the ground in toddler-like defeat, dragging his limbs down her side as he went.

Valentin looked dour now; a small win in her book of astronomical losses.

“Odette,” he carped. It was the most curt she’d ever heard him. “Can you please get in the car? If you almost catch hypothermia on my watch again, Halton’s going to think something’s up. And if not for you, at least for poor Ange, who will inevitably get sick if you keep him out in the rain, even if you don’t.”

“I like the way this man thinks,” Ange insisted, springing back up to tug at her once more. “Car sounds nice. For both of us! Please, Odette, do what he asks. Just this once. I don’t wanna leave you out here, but…I really don’t want to spend a night at a Poke Center.”

She took another inventory. This was a road any trained serial killer would call heaven. The drizzle was gaining speed, and the temperature was dropping with the telltale wind. Whether she cared to admit it to herself or not, she had been looking for Valentin the whole night. He was here, with a safe way home. No danger for Ange, and no battling the weather and possible remote dangers for her.

With her molars splintering against one another, she stomped toward the car. Ange rushed ahead, rightfully eager to get to cover. Valentin was courteous enough to walk around to open the doors for them.

“Heater’s on,” he said as she climbed up into the passenger seat.

“Aren’t you sweet,” she sneered.

She practically melted as soon as her rear hit the thick leather seat, like a pat of butter landing on a fresh pancake. Although most of her frustrations remained, her stress trickled away, making extra room for her guilt.

“I’m sorry. I wasn't trying to get you sick,” she said, peeking at Ange from the corner of the rearview mirror. Thankfully, he also appeared to be settling in comfortably. He was already messing with some strange buttons on his door.

“Hm? Oh. I’m good. Look at all these knobs and stuff!”

At the expense of her anger and maybe some of her Pride, she, and more importantly Ange, were safe inside a car that was as extravagant as they came. Wood accents on the dashboard, a built-in screen fresh out of a sci-fi film, and a center console fitted with more bells and whistles than it probably needed. There were even twinkling lights built into the soft black ceiling; an aesthetic extra wasted on the enmity that subjugated the cabin.

“So,” Valentin smashed the silence about five minutes into the drive, preceded by Ange gasping in awe at the ceiling lights, which had begun to twinkle. “The silent treatment continues?”

Odette wordlessly watched the rain, now coming down in gushes, streaking over the tinted window.

“That’s fine. You know how good I am at talking,” he continued. “I could have an entire conversation with you without you responding once.”

Her hush ensued. She felt him rise to the challenge.

“What should I talk about? The weather? The car? I know you’re more of a bike person, but I could school you on this one to pass the time. It’s a Bentley.”

“I’m car’d out,” she grumbled into the butt of her hand. “But thanks.”

“Thank gods. I stole it, so whatever I told you was going to be a complete ass pull.”

She knew it was an attention grab and she balked at him anyway.

“You’re driving a stolen car?”

“Technically.” He clicked on the blinker as he worked his way around a sharp turn. “It’s my brother’s, so unless he goes out of his way to sue me for grand theft auto, however, I’m not counting it.”

“This is Halton’s car?”

“No, it’s Gaëtan’s. He has ten. I told him nobody needs that many cars and he wouldn’t notice if one went missing. He disagreed. So I took one, and I’ll give it back when he realizes.”

She really didn’t want to engage, but he was remarkably good at piquing her interest. She didn’t know he had another sibling; one that sounded so insufferable, no less. “How long has it been?”

“A month,” he smirked. "Safe to assume I was right."

After a pause bursting with disbelief, Odette scoffed. “I don’t know whether to call that petty or unhinged.”

“No need to be frugal with the tags. It’s both.”

She had to study him for a beat, trying to file through her feelings. He was as candid as ever—one of the things that made her crush skyrocket in the first place—but this was a different side of that face. She supposed anybody who was capable of assuming the identity of a dead man and successfully worming half way into a cult was bound to have some sort of delinquent side.

She loved the idea that he was a bit of a societal menace underneath the strait-laced, blunt exterior, and she hated that it was transcending her sense of betrayal.

“Since you’re actually speaking to me now, care to tell me what that fight was about?”

Her body stiffened against the back rest. “You saw that?”

“Obviously.”

“Lover’s quarrel.” There was a new pressure on her wrist now, where the wrap hiding the faint bruises Dorien left her with clung to her skin beneath her sleeve. She shifted uncomfortably, a move that had Valentin sneaking a double take. “It’s our second one this week. Feels like routine.”

“The second one?” he mimicked.

She vacillated between slipping back into her mute dissent and subjecting herself to another view of those bruises. They were nowhere near as dark or pronounced as the last set that marred that very wrist just over a year ago, but they were still there. Inflicted by another man who intended harm.

“Odette, what happened?”

The question made the decision for her. He wasn’t going to let it go unless she came clean.

It was easy to pull up her sleeve and unravel the compression bandage. It was almost impossible to look at the marks, forming the vague outline of Dorien’s index and middle finger, without feeling her stomach flicking her gag reflex. She could taste her sewage tea in the pit of her throat and had to look away to keep it down.

“He’s finally showing his true colors, at least,” she said.

Although Valentin was driving, his eyes lingered on her arm a moment longer than was responsible. His face, normally calm and collected—even in the case of the micro expressions that gave him away—twisted into a look she could only dub as absolute fury. She’d witnessed the subtle snide looks and hints at animosity during his conversations with Dorien, but she’d never seen him clench his jaw so hard, nor had she ever seen true fire ignite in his eyes. In the dark of the night before them, it was practically the only thing visible.

They came to a gradual stop on the side of the road. The breath he released was calculated and level even though his expression cursed with a malicious objective.

“Ange…” he spoke on a strained inhale, angling himself so he could peer into the back seat. “I don’t mean to be rude after just making your acquaintance, but would you mind giving your trainer and I a moment alone?”

Ange blinked. Without missing a beat, he turned to Odette and tapped her shoulder.

“Do I mind?”

She very well could have said yes. Raw curiosity for where this new Valentin-grade anger would go drove her to shake her head.

“No. It’s okay.”

When the light of Ange’s return beam receded, Valentin directed all of his broiling vexation toward an interrogation.

“When were you planning on telling me he hurt you?”

“I was hoping to just forget it happened.”

“That’s—“ He threw up his arms, clearly unsure what to do with them, before he settled for thumping them on the steering wheel with his forehead coming to join. “If he’s starting to lay his hands on you, that’s a substantial problem. I needed to know that.”

“You know now.”

He shot stock straight. “Before you ended up in another altercation with him. What if he did it again?”

The image that came to form in her head made her laugh once. “He wouldn’t have an arm.”

“No.” Valentin oscillated on the fine edge of flat out yelling; something Odette didn’t think he was capable of. After she relaxed out of her startle reflex, she affixed him with a wide-eyed glare while the fuse of her temper burned shorter and shorter. “That’s not how this works. Your safety is the concern here, but we already agreed to approach in a manner that ensured we wouldn’t need to harm him until we had the necessary means to do so. I can’t keep up my end of our agreement if I don’t know what’s going on. Him grabbing you so hard that it left bruises is unacceptable, and you shouldn’t have been in his vicinity if that’s how he’s decided to operate now.”

“You know what else is unacceptable?” she barked, slamming her palm on the center console. She basked in the satisfaction of watching him flinch. “Lying to my fucking face. Let’s talk about that, since you wanna lecture me like I’m five.”

He seemed to recover quicker than she had, going as far as to lean over to her side of the car. “You’re right. It is. And I don’t know how many different ways I need to explain that I didn’t want to lie to you.”

“Don’t bother, Grandpa already got that covered.”

“And?”

“I know he wasn’t full of shit, if that’s what you’re asking,” she murmured, slinking away to cross her arms.

“So if Bernard explained it to you, and you believe him, why are you still upset?”

“Because!” she shouted, having finally reached the explosive. Even with it going off, she still found herself at a loss of how to answer.

“It’s…different.”

Valentin surveyed her with narrowed eyes. He also crossed his arms, along with a cautious nod.

“Okay. Please explain to me how it’s different.”

Because I’ve been wanting to jump your bones since the moment we met and I couldn’t stand the thought that the object of my disgusting Lust might have been capable of lying to me.

Well, good job for admitting it, Odile praised. Her applause was the most irritating thing Odette had heard the whole night; a true feat on her part.

Yeah, don’t get ahead of yourself.

“...we agreed to be partners,” she iterated carefully, following a few breaths that maxed out her lung capacity. “I’d known my grandpa was keeping stuff from me, but with you…I expected more from you. And when you didn’t meet my expectations, I got more angry.”

With each word, Valentin’s shoulders slouched lower, until he was slumped in his seat with a lackadaisical hunch. After pinching the bridge of his nose with implied intent to snap the bone, he sighed out whatever chagrin he had left.

“Odette, I really did want to tell you. It was just such a bullshit predicament to be in. I didn’t want to put Bernard in a precarious situation with you, but I simultaneously didn’t want to fuck up our rapport.”

It was sincere. So much so that she felt shame rising up to fight with her feelings of deception.

“I crave what you have with him. I wish, probably more than anything, that my emotionally unavailable father showed me even a quarter the affection Bernard shows you. I decided that I didn’t want to have a hand in blemishing that.”

The sheer intensity of the confession brought on a clarity reminiscent of a regretful libidinous romp, much to Odette’s guilty horror. It made sense, with the way she’d only momentarily heard him speaking of his father. If that was any indication of their relationship, of course he felt that way.

She suddenly felt terrible. So godsdamned terrible. After her treatment of Acadia and Noel at the beginning of the week, she was on a well-deserved downward trend.

“At your expense,” she said.

Valentin laughed. It was hard to tell if he genuinely meant the humor behind it. “My daddy issues are stupidly enervating.”

At least she wasn’t the only one in the car with a debilitating relationship with their father.

“But I understand how that decision looked to you, and I cannot apologize enough. I never…” he sighed, remorse shuddering his breath. “I didn’t want to give you any reason to not trust me. Because you can trust me.”

Unlike when Dorien apologized to her for clawing her skin, Valentin’s held no trace of deception. There was an aspect of it that was almost imploring.

“I’m sorry he put that on you,” she said. “We’re fine now, after we talked. We would have been fine either way. He’s kind of the best father figure I’ve got, you know,” she added with a dubious laugh of her own. Valentin’s smile reached his eyes, but quickly dropped back down a size as he looked her over again.

“But are we fine?” He sounded nervous; like he knew just questioning it would further jinx the already jinxed.

She made herself think about it. Tab through the feelings of betrayal, heartbreak, and outrage, all stifled by the limpidity of the conversation.

“We are.”

The fact of the matter was that she couldn’t stay mad at him. She’d never been one to be so easily swayed by apologies; at least not from people she’d only known for a couple months, and yet facing another bout of his sincerity rendered her a spineless puddle on the high-quality leather seat.

This man had ruined her in more ways than one. She was welcoming it wholeheartedly.

Thunder shook the road, vibrating up through the wheels and into the floor of the cabin and making both of them start. It wasn’t enough to detract from the repose that had softened the air around them.

“Come on.” Valentin shifted the car back into drive. “Let me get you two home before this rain gets any worse.”

With the distraction of their imminent fight out of the way, she remembered a far more important detail that needed discussing.

“Before you do that…”

Dorien’s latent phone was a hot coal on her palm, though she presented it like a diamond she’d mined from one of the pits of hell with her own two hands. Valentin’s face lit up with prompt recognition.

“Is that—“

“Dorien’s. He dropped it and I just never gave it back. I don’t think he noticed it was gone, but I turned it off just in case.”

She handed it to him, watching as he flipped it between his fingers. His eyes searched it like it was the key to unlocking their entire inquest. If they were lucky, maybe it would be. She could only imagine what they would find on it once they could safely get it unlocked, and was almost certain she’d be best off not knowing.

That was forgotten when Valentin grinned at her.

“I maintain my damsel in distress stance. You’re definitely doing all the legwork here.”
 
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Chapter 27 - Spectrums

Sinderella

Angy Tumbleweed
Staff
Premium
Location
In Guzma's Closet
Pronouns
She/Her
Partners
  1. sylveon-shiny
  2. gothitelle
  3. froslass
  4. chandelure
  5. mimikyu
white-swan-jpg.19063

Chapter 27: Spectrums
CWs: Strong Language, Light Sexual Content
Somewhere in the midst of their discussion about Dorien’s phone, Valentin decided that the car was still too quiet for his liking. Odette was mid-insistence that Noel would know what to do with it when he connected his phone to the bluetooth and set his chosen music streaming app to shuffle. Of all the songs she was expecting to hum from the high-end car speakers, No Diggity by Blackstreet was not on that list.

She stared at him with slackjawed astonishment. “Blackstreet?” she laughed. “You know this song?”

His lips flattened against one another as he slid her a sidelong squint. “Of course I know this song.” Her lack of immediate acknowledgment made him scoff and thump the steering wheel. “Do you think because I was raised with a silver spoon in my mouth, all I know is…what, classical and jazz?”

“Pretty much.”

“You insult me, Miss Cinq-Mars,” he gasped with feigned offense. “For your information, I happen to be a major connoisseur of R&B.”

You’re an R&B fan?”

“Enormously so. If you must know, I can sing this song all the way through.”

“That sounds like a challenge, Mr. Ménétries. You better watch yourself.”

She knew rap parts from the countless times she harmonized it with her friends, when she spoke the verses with no rhyme, reason, or regard for her volume. They rang with a cheery, lighthearted nostalgia that left her grinning. Valentin carrying on along with her, matching her ardor, had giggles intertwining with her rendition while they returned her to a time when all she had to worry about was passing her exams, sweeping dance competitions, and what parts she was going to be cast as in her after-school musical theater program.

She suddenly had a voice again. It followed through the vibrato on Teddy’s first verse, the smoother notes on Black’s follow-up, all the way to the short belt at the end of Queen Pen’s rap, where reality finally found her again and doused her forehead in a cold sweat as involuntary fright constricted her heart.

Although his eyes were on the road, the smile Valentin wore would have gone long past his eyes if it could.

“Oh, you’re not just a singer. You’re a singer,” he commented with a commending laugh in his throat.

“I-it’s something I did for a while. I told you, remember?”

“I haven’t forgotten. But putting the voice to the claim gives it a little more meaning. Please, don’t let me stop you.”

Her heart was set to burst, and not in the feel-good way Valentin’s compliments normally resulted in.

“I’m a little rusty,” she said. “That plus getting stuck in the cold isn't a good mix. That’s all I got for you tonight.”

She hoped, wished, and prayed that he’d catch on to the stench of desperation that was now wafting off of her. It was a feeling she loathed, with the way it weighed down her spirit and shrouded the car in a dark discomfort that had no business existing.

His grin twitched downward. It was just quick enough to be played off with a more pleasant nod.

“Some other time, then.”

He eased the conversation into more about music preferences, which resulted in additional surprises on both ends. Valentin’s predilection for R&B was matched by one for Latin and anything that spawned from Eurovision, which he called a “holiday week” for himself, much to Odette’s genuine amusement. He was bewildered to learn of her fondness for rap and indie folk, and less so when she mentioned grunge as well. Upon comparing indie folk to the likes of ”twangy country,” he earned a very passionate lecture about the differences that he seemed to take to heart.

Their spirited chatting was only occasionally broken up by Valentin asking for clarification on directions back to her flat, quickly leading her to punch her address into his phone GPS to cease the interruptions.

Odette could practically count the minutes to her garage entrance when Valentin defied his GPS’s directions and turned down a side road.

“Wrong turn, genius,” she teased.

“We’re making a pit stop, genius,” he mocked. “My ops still need time to stake out your building and make sure it’s clear to return.”

He either saw the face she made or picked up on her alarm buried in her silence. “Don’t worry. I have eyes tailing him and his stupid entourage to their party, but we’re just trying to play it safe. Nothing to be scared of.”

Safe. She’d felt so content with him that the thought of her own safety felt guaranteed; a boneheaded idea in hindsight. Regardless if she was directly under Virtue Corp’s supervision, there was always a looming threat to look out for so long as Dorien was alive and kicking and Enigma was dead set on getting Odile back.

“I’m not worried and I’m not scared. I’m just fed up.” Her intestines knotting around her stomach said otherwise. He didn’t need to know that.

“Rightfully so. And you don’t have to deal with him anymore tonight.”

If nothing else, Valentin always knew exactly what to say and how to say it. Her guts untangled, and she realized just how plush the leather seat felt against her backside.

“So where are we going?”

“Nowhere crazy, although I’m almost certain you’re going to judge me,” he said.

She didn’t mean to laugh, but something about Valentin being afraid of her judging him when he’d essentially only interacted with her at her lowest points struck her as comical.

“I guess it depends,” she admitted. “But I think I’m a little too poor to have any judgement of how you spend your time, so you shouldn’t care what I think.”

A mordant smile thinned his lips. “Unfortunately it’s not that simple. So I’m going to just do what I do and pray for your gracious clemency.”

“Gracious clemency from the vessel of Venira? Good luck.”

The heat of embarrassment crawled up the hairs on the back of her neck as her shoulders hiked to her earlobes. She turned her head just enough to meet Valentin’s identically goggle-eyed look. She wasn’t sure how long they stared at one another; all she could register was the laughter that suddenly spilled from both sides of the car.

Aw! Odile chirped. Sounds like you’re warming up to the idea, huh?

A thought cut the intensity of her giggling. She had said it so casually, like it was a fact she’d known all her life. Before that discomfort could ruin her heightened mood, the car slowed to a stop in a miraculously open spot in front of a storefront. Le Boulangerie Doux Voile.

“A bakery?”

“Not just any bakery.” Valentin was undoing his seatbelt with anticipatory glee. “The bakery with the best donuts in Kalos. I need to replenish my home stock, or I’ll go nuts.”

She almost didn’t believe this is what their pit stop was. Until she actually began to think about it.

“Wait…oh my gods,” she wheezed after a beat. “Powdered Sugar. Glaze. Sprinkle. Donut. Did your team really agree to let you nickname them after fucking donuts?”

“Do not start with me.” That wasn’t a no. She began laughing like Valentin wasn’t glaring serrated daggers at her.

“You’re an addict!”

“Gracious clemency, remember?” he twined, kicking open his door.

“You know the first step of addiction recovery is admitting you have a problem?”

“Oh, I know I have a problem.” She was concentrating so hard on not reducing herself to a cackling mess that she barely noticed how close he leaned toward her, set on getting his point across. “I just don’t have the slightest interest in trying to rectify it!”

“I suppose I could think of worse things to be addicted to.”

He was trying to seem annoyed, but not hard enough to mask the amusement scrunching up around his eyes. With a drawn out huff, he leaned on the doorframe.

“Flavor preferences?”

“You’re including me on your stash restock?”

“No, I’m writing an op-ed about general Kalosian donut preferences, obviously,” he retaliated.

Her appetite had long run off, but the idea of Valentin treating her to a batch of pastries slowly lured it back.

“Something red velvet sounds great right now,” she said. “No frosting. Chocolate is a close second, and Ange likes jelly filling.”

With a smile coming to full form, he patted the roof. “Be back in a moment. Don’t move.”

His attention was always a treat, but watching him go had its own perks. Her head fell back against the seat once the door shut, a besotten sigh rising up over the woosh of the blasting heater.

“I think I’m in love.”

If you’re only just now realizing that, I have some bad news about your IQ, Odile said.

He eventually returned with not one, not two, but three large boxes, all neatly finished with bows you only found tied by the hands of businesses who cared about that personal touch. He dropped them into her lap, checked his phone, and got the car rolling again. She stared at them, unsure whether to laugh again or question him about his blood sugar.

“We’re clear. And before you say anything, the top one is for you.”

Her body chose to laugh, both out of relief and admiration for his brand of ridiculousness. “Oh okay, so that just leaves the other, I assume, two dozen for you.”

“It’s as I said. I have no interest in trying to rectify this particular issue. Besides, I do share with my team, thank you kindly.”

For as much as she joshed him, she found glee in this candid example of his resolve. The fact that he was comfortable enough to show this side of himself to her was enough to strand her at the precipice of tachycardia.

“I tried to stick to Ange’s and your proclivities, but I may or may not have thrown a couple of my personal favorites in there just for you to taste,” he continued, his words a little more honeyed.

A wash of her infatuation soaked her cheeks as she looked down at the box again. His personal favorites? He was comfortable enough with her to want her to try his personal favorite pastries?

She thought she was going to faint for sure.

I think I’m in love.

“Well, if you’re as big of a donut connoisseur as you are an R&B connoisseur, I’m sure your tastes are immaculate,” she said, blinking the fuzz out of the edges of her vision. Her dumb smile was evident in her voice.

The rest of the drive back to her flat building went by a little too quickly for her tastes. This dip into Valentin’s personal side had left her hungry for another course, and pulling into a parking spot near the elevator felt like a dish being taken away before she was done.

You could just ask him to come upstairs, Odile suggested over the sound of a nail file. You have free will, you know. For the most part.

Odette blanched at the concrete wall that greeted her through the windshield. Are you fucking crazy?

Of all the dumbass questions you’ve ever asked, that one takes the cake. Or…donut. I should get you a trophy.

“Are you alright?” Valentin’s question sapped whatever color remained from her face. Even covered by the heater, she suddenly felt chilly.

“Never better!”

Her response was too forceful to seem natural. From the way Valentin quirked his brow, Odette knew he realized that.

“Something Odile said?”

It warms my dead heart that he already knows, Odile gushed.

“No. Not this time,” she partially lied. “It was just…”

She began tugging at the hem of her skirt. The suggestion felt like an awful idea in the first few seconds, but now that it had latched onto her, she couldn’t shake it off. She imagined him strolling through her flat, looking at the furniture, taking in the boxes, perusing her pictures, her fucking baby pictures, seeing her bedroom, her bathroom…

The color returned to her cheeks with added fire. She had to resist the need to cover them.

“Just?” he repeated.

She’d seen some of the inner workings of his life. Was it only fair now that he saw hers? Would that solidify their healing rapport? Would it be too weird after just coming off a fight?

“I hope this isn’t going to come off as too strange or out of left field, but…”

She hesitated. Maybe it wasn’t a good idea. Then she felt a harsh pain coalesce in the center of her crown, as if someone was driving their knuckles into her scalp.

Spit it out you fucking pussy!

“…want to come upstairs with me for a bit?” The pause that followed was too heavy. Too charged. “To enjoy some of your donuts, of course.”

The round-eyed look Valentin gave her could have stopped time. Odette could only wish that it would, just to alleviate the lump in her throat effectively stopping her breath.

“That sounds great.”

She’d have fallen over were she not already sitting. “Really?”

“Yes? Unless there’s a reason why—“

“No, no! It’s all fine!” She could barely hear herself talking over her blood hammering on her eardrums. “You can just…follow me.”

The elevator ride up was excruciating. On top of it moving at a glacial pace as it passed between floors, every last drop of air within the moving eight by eight cell fell into the gravitational pull that was Valentin’s presence, leaving none of her. Her lungs practically screamed when the doors finally slid open again, only for them to shrivel up again on the walk down to her door.

Having not been expecting anybody, Odette’s teammates were understandably startled when Valentin tailed her inside. Alarm receded to warm acceptance once the familiarity set in, with only Solene needing a formal introduction.

“This is very nice,” Valentin complimented, trying to fight Loïc off from crawling up his pants leg. Odette was briefly mortified by the interaction, but she decided, after processing Valentin’s humor and the lack of aggression in Loïc’s demeanor, that she was happy that the mimikyu had also let bygones be bygones. “It’s just you and your mother and partners?”

“Yep. It’s no penthouse, but we have our own bathrooms and everything.”

He seemed to give up, as Loïc promptly overtook his right shoulder. “That’s all you really need. I’d be in a much smaller place if my partners weren’t so damn big.”

Odette left him to the mercy of her gremlin partner to frantically search the fridge for any refreshments that wouldn’t taint his billionaire palette. She would be lying if she said she wasn’t also looking for relief from the red-hot rouge on her face in the freezer.

“Can I get you anything?”

When she didn’t receive a response, she peered over the bar top, catching Valentin ruminating over the agglomeration of family photos adorning the hallway to her side of the flat. Gulping down the lump that continued to afflict her, she approached to see what had him so enthralled. She was less than enthused to see that it was one of her early primary school photos; namely the one where her five-year-old self had insisted on mean-mugging the camera.

“I have never seen such a prominent case of RBF on a child under 10,” he mused.

“I was an angry kid, what can I say?”

“Nothing at all; I’m extremely impressed. What made you so crabby?”

With a huff, she regaled him of the tale of her excitement for that particular picture day, as Vienna had bought her a new pair of shoes and a matching headband. She’d felt so pretty. It all went to shit when that prick JP Galopin spilled his chocolate milk all over her feet during lunch hour, after Odette insisted that strawberry milk was better. He received a stern verbal warning, but she was sent to detention for dumping her ice water down the back of his tucked shirt in retaliation.

She sulked through the remainder of the day, including the photo, out of spite.

Finding the whole thing infuriatingly hilarious, Vienna spent an hour and a half after the school day strategically verbally assaulting both the principal and teacher for the unfair treatment of her daughter. When the picture arrived in the mail two weeks later, she framed it immediately. Odette was formally asked to not re-enroll at that school not too long after, something Vienna called a “blessing” through a string of profanities she shouldn’t have said around her 5-year-old.

Vienna had been a good mother then. Why that disposition didn’t extend to the rest of the circumstances of Odette’s life, she’d never understand.

With her rising unease sticking a wrench in that conversation, they gravitated toward the couch to break open the donuts. Odette was expecting the world, based on Valentin’s obsessive review, and was pleased to taste that her first bare red velvet donut fully surpassed her expectations.

“Good, right?” He was watching her chew with a level of excitement she typically only saw on children inside toy stores.

Really good, actually,” she replied, cheeks full and palm hovering above her lips. “You, Valentin, are indeed a donut connoisseur."

“Did I give you any reason to doubt me?” He snagged another bite of the classic chocolate frosted flavor he was working on. After he swallowed it down, he regarded her again while he wiped his hands on his napkin.

“Also, please call me Val. It sounds like you’re chastising me otherwise.”

Her heart stalled on a beat, along with any possible logical response. “S-sorry,” she managed. To think something that had been bothering her for weeks was a mere side comment to him. A sign that maybe she really was thinking too hard about him. Them. “I wasn’t sure if–”

“Don’t worry about it. Usually my friends call me Val, and the full name is reserved for the angry and typically nonsensical shrieks from my grand family patriarch.”

His scorn ground on the edge of his voice. He had to shove a larger bite into his mouth to hide it, but the familial unease had already found him, too.

“Looks like we’re both in shitty places with our folks, huh?” Odette said.

He stopped chewing for a moment, studying his lap as if his most hated donut flavor sat in it. He released a sigh that was thick with whatever discontentment was bubbling within him.

“A gross understatement on both sides,” he agreed.

In another attempt to push along the awkwardness, Odette flipped the television on to a showing of the film Atonement that Valentin—Val—expressed muted verve over. That opened the segue into discussing film preferences, a topic that had them bouncing a shared zeal between one another. Between Val’s raving insistence that period dramas were the supreme genre, Odette, while willing to concede that period dramas were high on her list, still maintained her stance on horror being her number one.

“I feel like,” Val said, animating his words with hands clasped in a phony prayer, “horror movies exist on a spectrum.”

“Uh huh.”

“You have your run of the mill gore-sex fests on one end, and then you have these uncanny avant-garde-esque flicks that are so lofty, it’s hard to find much fear in them unless you really think about it. Then there’s a middle ground where it tries to do something different and falls flat in some aspect, usually characters. The problem with a lot of them is that they can’t find any fucking balance.”

“So where do Sleepy Hollow or Dracula stand?” she queried, canting her head with humorous intent.

“Come on, don’t do that to me.”

“They are horror movies.”

“But they’re so good as period pieces,” he whined. “Sleepy Hollow less so, but it has a special crevice in my heart.”

“So, not the middle ground?”

“Katrina gets a pass for being a hollow idea of the damsel archetype because she knew how to dress.”

A pause gripped the space, quickly broken by them speaking simultaneously. “And had a great wig.”

Their hysterical laughter swelled over the television speakers and the rain ricocheting off the balcony. Odette’s stomach began to ache with the pressure of her wheezing, and she toppled over onto Val’s shaking shoulder as she clamped her hands over her mouth

It felt good to laugh so hard. It felt even better to laugh so hard with him.

They shared in the slowing sighs, sinking into the backrest of the couch as their bodies processed the calories they just lost to their surprise ab workout. The euphoria of finding so much glee in one instance left Odette void of tension in her muscles. There was no urgency to scramble off of him, his sighs drawing her into the cut curves of the muscles lining the side of his torso. She was always certain nothing would top the comfort of her own mattress, but the outer edge of his pectoral was giving it a run for its money.

“Well, I think it’s safe to say we both needed that,” he chuckled, rubbing his eye with a knuckle.

“All we needed was a wig.”

“One that’s much prettier than mine.”

Odette’s stomach rocked with another swell of giggles. She pushed herself to sit up, hoping that moving would stop them in their quest to knock her down again. She twisted to find leverage and her gaze fell into line with his.

The world came to a quiet halt. That space between their faces was the only thing she could perceive for a short eternity, with her eyes drawn to the high-definition appearance of his features. They traveled over the barely-there texture across his angular cheekbones and aquiline nose and counted each one of his unbelievably long lashes. She took in the straight arch of his manicured brows, silver as his intentionally messy hair, before she lost herself in the kaleidoscope of gold and auburn that were his natural eyes. She preferred them over the colored contacts any day.

He was perfect. He was there. He was beside her, reminding her what it felt like to laugh like a normal person. Helping her exist like life wasn’t falling apart. The look she cast at his lips was fleeting, but the desire to meet them hit like a runaway train. She had to seek out a distraction from her swooning in his frown.

“You okay?” she asked.

“Yeah. I’m…” He exhaled slowly, shaking his head once. “I’m trying to figure out how spectrums work.”

Their momentum carried on at a much slower pace. Movie speak gave way to silly childhood stories and a tangential sidetrack about shower routines, where they unanimously agreed that everyday was an everything shower day. She asked him what his favorite billionaire pastime was—meticulously hunting down designer clothes to fill his overflowing closet with—and he asked her why she drove a motorcycle instead of a car—because she simply liked the freedom of a bike over a car. There was no conceivable way for them to run out of things to talk about.

The clock soon read 1:12 AM, and Odette’s teammates had long snuck back to her bedroom.

“Wow, I did not realize what time it is,” Val said, peeking at his watch. He was slow to spring up, and she insisted she walk him out to the hall, more to touch on the topic of conversation that had missed them.

“What do you want to do about the phone?” she whispered as she leaned against her doorframe.

“Hang onto it,” he said after quietly considering the options, aggravated they hadn’t discussed it more in-depth. “Talk to Noel about it, but don’t do anything until I speak to my ops. Keep it off; it’s almost certainly trackable.”

“Right,” she said. “Keep me posted, then.”

“Of course.”

They kissed each other’s cheeks goodnight. She got a whiff of his cologne as she leaned over his shoulder, and the heavy notes dug up a primordial carnality from the darkest depth of her belly. Its heat inundated her, rushing to the highest point on her face and the lowest crevice below her belt.

“Text when you get home,” she said, clawing her nails into her palm.

Pig, she lambasted herself. She knew watching him head back toward the elevator was the best she was ever going to get, and she still couldn’t help herself.

Not at all, Odile interjected. I think you’re showing insane restraint. If it were me, he’d be under me already and I’d be in his—

Fuck off.
Her pillow and 8 hours of unconsciousness now sounded infinitely more inviting, provided nothing of a Lustier nature soaked her dreams.

“Wait.”

A breathless Val, winded from sprinting back up the hallway, stumbled to a stop on her doormat just before she made it back through her threshold.

“Do you remember that conversation we had at my place? About the spectrum?” he asked, eyes rounded with a soft urgency.

“You mean the one where I chewed you out beyond repair?”

“That one.” He scratched his neck so hard that his blood flushed bright against the marks. “Well, it’s…it’s been fluctuating a bit.”

She tilted her head. “Is that a good thing?”

“I think so? That’s why I wanted to—“ Although his mouth gaped, the sound was interrupted. “I wanted to ask you if—“ Again. Whatever he wanted to say was taking more willpower than he might have had on hand.

”I’m sorry,” he groaned. His palm settled atop his bangs as a grimace deepened the lines in his forehead. “Usually I can’t shut the fuck up, but around you, I might as well be a defensive cloyster.” Fear veiled the light in his eyes. “That’s not an insult, by the way, you’re—“

Concern took root in the pit of her stomach, covered by thickening anticipation, while she watched him sputter over himself. Seeing this man—this man whom people practically broke their necks to look at when he entered a room, who commanded such a captivating presence in every group conversation he was part of, who held himself like he could snatch the world up in his palm if he wanted to—reduced to stammering shambles was nothing short of rapturous.

It wasn’t just her.

“There’s a lot I want to say. And I’m scared of saying it wrong. So if I’m off base, you are more than welcome to just…” He mimed clocking himself in the jaw, popping his tongue for added emphasis before he continued.

“But…there’s something here, right? I mean, as in…you feel something between us?” he said, voice straining on the uncertainty behind his confession-question. “Or is this investigation making me that crazy?”

Anticipation bloomed into a field of unbridled hope. “You’re not crazy.”

His eyes momentarily slipped shut with a relieved sigh. “Okay. Then…would it be alright if I tried something? Please don’t feel pressured to say yes; I know that’s a weird question.”

She prayed to the gods that he couldn’t hear the high-velocity frenzy her heart was kicking into.

“It’s okay. I trust you.”

It wasn’t short enough to be a peck, but it wasn’t long enough to meet the first kiss fantasy she’d scrupulously crafted over many sleepless nights and heavy days. She was to blame in part; feeling his lips on hers was utterly paralyzing in all of the right ways. Up until then, she’d only savored it in the pall of her degenerate dreams.

He pulled back to survey her foolish expression. Waiting for a comment that never came. All that existed was a languorous pause that thundered to life.

Fuck it,” Val breathed.

Lips smashed to lips like there was no possible way to pry them apart, sending a galvanized charge up through Odette’s toes and into her heart before it came to a sensational head at the tip of their ardent kiss. Months of silent pining and a Lust unlike anything she’d ever felt before inundated every last battlement of her restraint, driving her lecherous fingers into Val’s silky hair and pushing her rattling chest into his. They were magnets, naturally gravitating to the half they’d been searching for.

He didn’t feel close enough. She wanted to be on him. One with his skin. She raised herself to the tips of her toes, feverishly trying to get to his height, or pull him down to hers. She didn’t have the self-control to pull away and speak her mind. The breathy whine that slipped out was all she could manage.

His arms tucked beneath her legs, hoisting her up against the closed door. She hooked her ankles around the small of his back, using that new leverage to arch over him as a searching hand clawed over her rear, up her back, and to the nape of her neck. He held her in place like she wasn’t desperately trying to keep them locked, a move that shot an unchaste throb straight through the valley between her legs. The haze that ensued had her reaching behind her to paw for the doorknob. If they could just get inside, the couch was right there. Or, no, the bed. She could shoo her team out for a few hours; they could go squat with Noel—

Instead of her hand finding the knob, her belt loop did. The door jolted with a jarring thump as Val tried to readjust her, wrenching them apart before either of them were ready for it.

“Oh, shit,” Odette panted, breath returning in shallow gasps. “Probably…not the place for this?”

With some help and soft laughter, Odette freed herself from the cockblocking restraint. The heat of the moment began to dissipate, leaving behind a flurrying warmth that she could have gotten drunk on.

“I’m sorry. I was trying to—“

Val pushed her back against the door, his thumb tugging down on her lower lip. “Please stop talking.”

His third kiss didn’t hold the wild vigor of the second, but maintained a depth of unrestrained longing that the first lacked. It was like he couldn’t get enough of her. Like he feared that if he stayed up for air too long, she’d disappear. She tried her best to show him, with her roving hands and eager nips, that she was as good as his. She had been since the night they met under the nicotine cloud at that wretched party.

They parted again, only far enough for their foreheads to settle against one another. Odette reveled in his sweet steady breath on her face and the blinding twinkle in his eye. The emotions traveling across his face fluctuated between bemusement and exhilaration; too muddled for him to settle on either one.

“Whoa,” he breathed.

She nodded. He’d taken the word right out of her mouth. Along with her breath, her soul, and her restraint.

“Too much?” she asked.

“No. Not enough.”
 
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K_S

Unrepentent Giovanni and Rocket fan
Here for blitz and for chapater 5,

Having seen the warning i'll try to be gentle.


The collective brightness of Noel’s four computer monitors seemed to overpower the light being emitted by the lamp next to his bed. Odette hung off the back of his ergonomic chair as her eyes locked on the words he’d managed to pull up.

Virtue Corp is an organization dedicated to protecting and rehabilitating Pokemon that have been exposed to and otherwise harmed due to the disgraceful shiny trade. Our goal is not only to protect these mistreated Pokemon but to abolish the shiny trade as a whole.

He fell back against his backrest with a dazed huff, and Odette slowly crossed her arms.

Huh sounds a little like PETA, but a tiny bit more tame. Wonder if they have any links with PLASMA?

“Well, there you have it. Official website and everything,” Noel said.

She raised her hand to her cheek and began to scratch it pensively. “And nothing about J.L. Ménétries?” she asked for the third time since she’d gotten to his house.

Noel exhaled gruffly and leaned back over his desk. He began to click through the rather elegantly crafted website. Odette noticed the accents of pastel pink that appeared against the sleek white background; it matched perfectly with the color of the wax seal.

He pulled up the menu titled 'Our Main Staff' and scrolled through it hastily. The random set of names flew by, accompanied by walls of text that might have been these people’s life stories, but nothing that matched the name she’d seen at the end of the note.

I mean this is probably the evil teams fake social front... I seriously doubt that it would have useful information...

“I told you, nothing’s here. There isn’t even a person on here who has a name starting with a J,” he explained. “I know that doesn’t mean shit because a pseudonym could be anything, but you know…”

He clicked on another area of the website and began to skim it over. “I couldn’t find anything about a ‘J.L.’ anywhere else. Nothing tied him to something like this. So as far as we know, the guy doesn’t exist.”

“Right arm, or wing, red!”

There's a mood breaker. But if Odette's miku' is playing, would it be tenticales? Or would fabric squares count, and would everyone else have to play blindfolded?

Odette and Noel turned to look at the far end of the room, next to the closet, where Enora, Isaur, and Solene were playing Twister with Noel’s partners, Elton, his talonflame partner Freddy, and his vullaby partner Ru. Solene, the leader she was, had taken to spinning the wheel and making the calls. The latter five were already twisted and turned all around each other. A series of groans fell out of them at the new instruction, right foot red apparently, and suddenly, Freddy lost his winging and fell flat on his face.

Wonder why it's winging and not taloning? I can only imagine the madness a ditto would be on that scene..

Dammit!” he cried. Being friends with Noel for so long allowed Odette the time to come to understand his bird partners a lot easier.

You're out, Freddy. Better luck next time,” Solene replied coolly.

Odette was suddenly happy she’d taken Ange and Loïc home first. She learned the hard way that Freddy and Ange together always ended in something catching on fire, and Loïc playing Twister was just a disaster waiting to happen. The Monopoly fiasco from the night before was enough. Plus, Noel was scared of him as it was.

I mean why? He will only maim you a little.


“Come on, man! You had that,” Noel huffed.

The sound of the door creaking open prompted them to turn toward it. Standing in the doorway was Noel’s father, carrying a tray with two full wine glasses.

“Sorry to bother you two, but I bring refreshments!” he said gleefully as he sauntered into the room. Odette grabbed her allotted glass faster than she cared to admit. She didn’t care about the possible hangover that would plague her at rehearsal tomorrow. She needed that buzz in her system pronto, and she’d let future-her deal with the consequences.

If Od' keeps making choices like this, future Od' is going to make a time machine (or bribe Cel' or another time-traveling 'mon) to smack her past self upside the head...

“The cherrim at the winery worked hard on this one, we just broke it out of the vault this morning!” Mr. Massé said.

She chugged it in one gulp.

“They did a good job,” she said through a deep exhale, setting the empty glass back on the tray. Noel giggled into his own cup.

“You...know you’re supposed to sip it, right?” Mr. Massé said hesitantly.

“She did,” Noel said. “It was just a big sip.”

Mr. Massé opened his mouth to speak but decided whatever he had to say wasn’t worth it. He simply sighed. “Nevermind. Are you staying for dinner, darling?”

“No, I couldn’t--” she started to say.

“Not sure why I asked, yes you are,” he cut her off with a playful edge in his tone.

Between Mr. Masse and Noel she will get three nice meals a day. And probably a place to crash post nom. She seems to gather the nurturing types..

Her expression fell into a deadpan. “I don't get a say?"

"Well, we're not going to send you home empty-handed, adult or not! Dinner will be ready in forty-five minutes, I hope you like ratatouille.” He winked at her before turning on his heel and heading back out, pulling the door shut behind him.

“Did he say dinner?” Isaur called in a strained voice. Her head was against a blue dot, and her arm was arched over Ru, touching a yellow dot. Of course, she’d still heard ‘ratatouille’ over all of that.

I think Od' is going to be massively outvoted about staying the night... Gotta agree with Isaur there, wonderful taste in dinner options, lingering highly recommended.

“Forty-five minutes,” Odette repeated. “Focus on your game.” Gods knew she needed to focus on her own issue at hand herself. She had to sort out her thoughts before bringing her team into it.

With a groan and already starting to feel an alcoholic fog forming in her lightweight brain, she dove face-first onto Noel’s unmade bed.

“I’m going to scream,” she said, her voice muffled by a pillow. “I just wanted an easy day. Was that too much to ask?”

Yes. it's the cross ever 'mon potag has to bear.

“Oh, always,” Noel cracked. “Though you could have just not looked at the letter.”

She turned her head to shoot him a look. “Can you look me in the eye and tell me you wouldn’t have looked at the letter?”

Fuck no, baby, and I’d have torn apart the whole office looking for more,” he said, setting his glass down on his desk. “Because that was clearly an ongoing conversation. I’m absolutely quaking at the thought of all the juicy information we’re missing...”

He suddenly threw his hands up triumphantly as another thought occurred to him. "And I'm just stoked as hell that I figured out the cops were skirting the press before this. I'm so good."

Odette almost wished she had torn apart the office. But that surely would have woken Toulouse up. More importantly, she’d have had to explain to Bernard why his office looked like hitmonlee had raided it.

“Well, you know what has to happen now,” Noel said darkly, leaning far back in his chair and folding his arms over his chest. The sudden change in his tone made Odette force herself back into a sitting position.

“No, you’re going to have to educate me,” she said.

“Come on, Dee. Look at the facts here,” he said. He slid the chair over to the bed, stopping when his knees touched hers. “It has to be so much more than a crazy coincidence that all of this nonsense happened on the same day.”

“I think it’s only a crazy coincidence.”

Od' can sense the incoming corkboard with red string, and she's bracing herself...


“Hear me out, though.” He raised a finger. “You happen to run into Dorien, who's apparently in the fucking shiny trade. You never told us that; is that why you stopped hanging out?”

“Yes,” she replied confidently, despite not feeling so. Noel was her best friend, but she somehow couldn't find the words to explain how she had forgotten that fact. "Didn't want to talk about it."

Noel narrowed his eyes for a beat but let whatever thought had come to him go. “Shame because y'all would have made such a hot couple. Drugs and abusive trading methods aside, he's gorgeous."

Cue Od' wishing she had more to drink to blot out Noel's interest in Mr. amoral...

Odette swatted at him. “Continue, please.”

Noel raised another finger. “He threatens you and your ‘mon in battle and freaks you out.”

She pressed her lips together silently, and he took that as a sign to continue.

“Then, you visit your grandpa, the chief of Kalos PD, the man headfirst in the sacrilege cases, only to find he’s in contact with some mysterious man who happens to be involved with an organization dedicated to shutting down the shiny trade, who pretty much admitted to Team Enigma existing.” He paused, seemingly for dramatic effect, and held his hands out to his sides.

"And also admitted they were warding the press off of something involving shinies, which confirms your find," Odette added in a monotone. He was treading dangerously close to having an extremely valid point.

Exactly. They know some shit that they don’t want us to know,” he said.

Her head had been spinning since she left Bernard’s office, and not even the wine stopped that. This wasn’t something that was just going to fade.

“Look, I’m just saying. There’s some pieces here,” Noel insisted. “I think we can make them fit if we start mining for more.”

Noel is a terror, and I don't think Od' is prepared for the sheer intensity his concern and fascination is going to kick up.

She raised her brow at him. “Are you saying we should get involved?”

He leaned back in his chair again, kicking his legs up to rest his sock-covered feet in her lap. “Nosy trainers get involved in police affairs all the time. Hell, the cops even enlist trainers for help once in a while. We wouldn’t necessarily be out of line.” He shrugged again before resting his arms behind his head. “We have a legit concern, we’re not getting answers, and now we have some pseudo-legit leads. I say we run with it.”

I'm imagining a Noel/Oddette investigation industry... they'd only work days, nights are for acting gigs, bad life choices, and chasing the spotlight.

That'd be one heck of a sequel to Detective Pikachu.

Odette lowered her brows at him before pushing his feet off her lap. “You really should have been a detective. Or a hacker, at the very least.”

He laughed airily. “And let my powerhouse voice and strong dancing legs go to waste? I see you’ve never heard of multitasking. Who says I can’t do both? I need my pretty sidekick to get started.”

His jesting smile signaled a joke, but she knew him well enough to know there was a part of him that was serious. She’d only wanted to see an end to the crisis for her grandfather’s sake, but now it was very clear that he had a bigger foot in it all than he was letting on. That concerned her even more. And how much had they found out? J.L. Ménétries made it seem like they were right on Team Enigma’s trail, yet it was looking like nothing was changing as of late. As far as she could tell.

A quiet syndicate is a scary syndicate.

Was it possible that the Virtue Corp was, in fact, in cahoots with Team Enigma? Were they working alongside each other for some strange reason? Were they stringing the cops along? Were the cops in on it?

I'd vote yes to all three, they seem as competent and entrenched as MANGA/Adventures Rocket...

That thought made her stomach hurt.

It had to be just a coincidence that Dorien had decided to pop back into her life on the same day. He and his no-good shiny trading ways, flaunting it all like it was nothing major. She allowed herself to think back to their battle once again. The feeling she got, how her entire body told her to vacate the premises, and how he spoke.

But was that enough to run with? Her gut and her reads on people were usually not wrong…but even if she wanted to go with it, did she want to spend more time with Dorien just for the slightest chance he was possibly involved with sacrilege, and even worse, Team Enigma?

I know you say you’re fine, and it has been almost a year since everything happened, but maybe you could try focusing on something completely new?

She was certain this was not what Bernard had meant when he said that, but this was certainly pretty new. She thought back to his tired eyes, the way he’d fallen silent that one week, and how he so seamlessly lied to her face about what he knew.

Bernard is going to have kittens if Od' picks this as her new passion project. Little spiny, on fire kittens, maybe a jolteon/pyroar hybrid...

Her wary gaze cut over to her Pokemon, who were still quite caught up in their game. She could practically hear Solene and Enora screeching in her ears about how this was a bad idea. Isaur would most likely be all for it. Ange would simply go along with whatever, and she was still fairly certain all Loïc could consciously think about was pecha berries and crawling in the air ducts. She wasn’t exactly concerned about breaking the news to him.

She decided, then and there, she didn’t care about the stern talking-to in-store by her oldest Pokemon friends. She needed something else to do, and really...perhaps this was it.

Maybe it was the buzz, but she didn’t care at the moment.

“Alright. I'm in. Need to run it by the crew, but I'm in.”

***​

Sitting around the coffee table in her living room, Odette watched, unsurprisingly, as Solene got in her face.

"Are you insane? You have to be insane. Please tell me you've fully lost it; it would be easier for me to swallow," she screamed frantically, grabbing Odette by her shoulders and shaking her.

"You heard me," she replied. "I thought I was pretty clear."

Solene's expression fell, and she settled back into her spot on the couch. Her jaw was clenched, and her stubby hands were balled into fists. The expected worrywart mode that Odette had anticipated since she resolved to discuss her decision with her team.

"You're going to give me a premature heart attack," Solene said in a drawl, raising a hand to rub the side of her face. "I might be skittish, but I'm sure I don't have to lecture you about how dangerous this is?"

"You don't have to tell me that you think it's a dangerous idea, I'm pretty damn aware of that."

Oddette's just P.O.ed, in a quiet, passive way, that's going to likely wreck her region to the bedrock...

"So then why is it even on your mind?" Solene snapped back, whipping her head around to give Odette a wide-eyed look.

"Because!" Odette retaliated, curling her fingers with the intensity of her words. "It's like I said, there's some shit happening here. You saw some of that battle, I showed you the picture of the note, and I told you what Grandpa said and what Noel and I found, there is something. Happening. In Kalos," she stressed. "And I want to figure out what it is."

And she wanted to figure out where exactly her grandfather stood on it. If his lying had gotten a little too out of hand. She wouldn't say that out loud because she didn't want to speak it into existence, but the more she dwelled on it, her curiosity overshadowed her apprehension.

"If not to uncover what's going on with Grandpa, then for my own head."

"What about your temper? I can't imagine this is going to be good for that," Isaur interjected cooly, speaking between the bites she took from an apple. Odette paused to consider her words.

"It's better my exploding anger be channeled into getting Dorien thrown in prison and figuring out what the fuck Grandpa's sitting on than going to work and thinking about...everything else," she said.

She fell silent as her more intrusive thoughts started to seep in, but she quickly shook them off.

That was exactly why she needed to do it. She wouldn't have time to dwell on the past if she were sleuthing; at the very least, her flaring anger could prove useful in keeping her determined. Somehow. Maybe.

Probably.

"I appreciate the concern, but I've made up my mind."

Isaur appeared to accept the answer, judging by her shrug as she exchanged looks with Ange, who's eyes glowed with interest.

"What would we be doing? Would we be able to do some cool espionage stuff?" Ange asked.

Love how only one of her team is going all "no nope no" and everyone else is like... "sounds fun, lets!"

I'm waiting for Loci to chime in ,asking for the blood of debt dodgers who try to use them, and those who try to hurt Od'.
"You'd come along with me. To wherever I went, with or without Dorien. You'd help me investigate and provide me with more physical backup if we had to fight. So, I suppose, probably."

The flame on Ange's head flared up, and he clapped his tendrils together in excitement. "That sounds like fun! I'm in!" he gasped. Well, that was one.

"I'm inclined to agree, I could use the excitement outside of apartment packing," Isaur agreed. She downed the rest of the apple, core and all, and held up a thumb. "I'm down."

Two. The easy ones up for a change of pace.

Solene was shocked that Isaur had agreed and flailed her arms in her direction. "You have got to be kidding me," she sputtered, earning her a shrug.

"For once, no. She's got a point, I think I want to see where all of this leads," Isaur said, causing Solene to cover her eyes in disdain.

It was there that Loïc scurried out from under the coffee table, the remnants of three pecha berry stems hanging in his shadowy hand. He proceeded to scuttle around, looking for a place to put them, and when he couldn't find one, he settled for hopping up onto the couch and settling into Odette's lap. Once there, he politely set them on her thigh.

"Kyu," he declared, nuzzling down into her legs to get comfortable. Odette stared at him, unamused by the fruit remains staining her pants leg, but set a hand on his fake head nonetheless.

"Thanks for that, Loïc. Appreciate it." She used her free hand to toss the stems onto the table. She'd grab them later. At least he was for it, but that was also expected.

All was silent again as Solene and Enora had yet to vocalize their stance.

"I should also note that I'm not going to force any of you into going along with this," Odette said. "I'm giving you the option, but I understand our creative differences. Don't be obliged to tag along on my account because it's settled, I'm doing this for me now. My brain. My head. My distraction. I'm armed and in a better headspace, and I will figure it out. Noel and his team will be coming along too, so I won't be alone even if you decide to back out. That's a promise. I know better."

There was still no response until Odette felt Solene shift uncomfortably next to her. With a grouchy groan, she settled into the back cushion.

"Fine. I will get on board," she huffed.

Welcome to the S.S. Titanic, Oddette will be your captain tonight... Do not mind the incoming icebergs labeled "secrets", "relations", "conspiracy theories", and "bad impulse control", Noel with his featherheaded crew, will be her Second in command. Thank you for your confidence in this upcoming journey of bad life choices.

An agreement. A reluctant one at that.

"Are you sure?" Odette pressed. "I'm telling you, you can say no."

Solene fell silent again as she wrung her hands together nervously.

"Sol, I'm serious. Tell me what you're thinking."

Solene looked to be deliberating with herself. Mulling something over in her head, trying to figure out a good response. Her brain gears were practically screaming. She squeezed her eyes shut at one point, inhaling the deepest breath she could muster, before nodding once.

"No. I understand where you're coming from," she declared, sounding more determined than before. "I won't lie and say I'm not afraid, but I want to offer my help. And be a voice of reason, because gods know you four tend to be lacking there."

Solene's speaking nothing but truth...

Odette quirked a brow at the change in tone. "And you're sure?"

A firm nod followed, and the gothitelle was met with approving, proud pats from Isaur. "Yes. This hits close to home for all of us. I will be of help."

Odette couldn't argue with that, and her surge of confidence she wasn't going to refute. She liked when Solene remembered what she was capable of.

"Alright. But just know if you lose your nerve, you can back out at any time."

Solene gave a rough shake of her head. "None of that; not anymore."

Odette couldn't help but smirk at the response. She then looked over at Enora, who had her eyes trained on the floor for most of the conversation. Her lips were pressed together into a taut line. She was disgruntled. And thinking hard about something.

"I know we've already said it," Odette said softly, "but this definitely hits the closest home for you. These are shinies we're talking about, but I would understand why it would make you uncomfortable."

Still nothing.

"Enora?"

"Well, if you're going to force me," she said sharply. She hopped off her cushion and walked toward Odette's bedroom. As she went, the tips of her tendrils were engulfed in a faint blue glow, which traveled to the pecha stems. They levitated off the coffee table, toward the kitchen, and into the sink.

Odette sucked her teeth and rolled her eyes. "Enora, come on," she called after her. "Don't be like that, I'm not forcing you to do anything! She paused. "And I was going to grab those!"

The sound of the bedroom door shutting was the response.

Enora wasn't on board, and Odette could have figured that out even if she hadn't spoken. So, then why the hell was she begrudgingly agreeing to come along?

Concern, affection, wanting to make sure you don't get offed by Evil Teams... you know, the small stuff.

Odette pushed herself to stand. "Enora!" she shouted, walking toward the room. "If you have a thought, say it! I want you to tell me what's on your mind!"

No answer.

She ground her teeth together, trying to ward off any oncoming anger. Losing it here wouldn't make the conversation any better. This was rough territory.

Odette had found Enora has an eevee, and aside from the moment they met in the alley next to Marieanne and Bernard's townhouse, Odette had no idea where Enora had come from and was never one to prod. Much like her, Enora wasn't one who liked to dwell too much on the past. That's where they got along.

Odette couldn't help but wonder if this reluctance was stemming from that unknown past.

Enora's refusal to speak wasn't giving her much to work with, so that was what she was going with. "Okay. Until you specifically ask to come along, I'm taking this as a hard no. You let me know when you're ready to talk about it."

All was still silent on Enora's end. That was that.

Pushing her bangs back, she trudged back over to the couch and fell back into it, taking a moment to shut her eyes, massage her temples, and collect herself. When she peered back out at her team's concerned gazes, she sighed.

"It's just gonna be the five of us. But we got this."

This was a fun chapter. Thanks for sharing this tale.

Until next time!
 

canisaries

you should've known the price of evil
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Stovokor
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Hey!

(text quoted to make the Blitz counter not count these words unnecessarily)

So, uh, before I say anything else: I'm sorry. I happened to look through my previous reviews in this thread and happened to notice what a massive dick I was being in them. Sort of par for the course for 2021-2022 canisaries, but time passing doesn't really make it okay. I just hope it wasn't too enraging back then.

Anyway, over the past few months or whaveter I've been slowly rereading this fic from the beginning, not that I was terribly far the first time. I can say that I really enjoyed the new prologue and do consider it far better than the previous prologue, not that it really had anything wrong with it despite what my reviews claimed. Today, though, I'm here to talk about Chapter 3, as I never got to it all those years ago and now have had the opportunity to read and review.

Let's get to it.

It was colder today.
(looks outside, where it is currenly -17C with moderate wind) i got you beat i think

Odette pushed her glasses up on her nose. “Isaur’s been training with a Focus Sash since she was a snorunt. She can take a powerful hit,” she said. “In which case, she uses Destiny Bond. Now my foe is stuck between switching out themselves or losing another Pokemon and being down two.”
This chapter (well, this chapter and that one Exquisite Corpse entry of yours) really taught me you know your stuff when it comes to comp. I can't say much more about it, though, because I'm one of those people who didn't use a status move until she was well in her twenties, but from an external point of view, it's impressive.

“RotomPhone, any updates on the latest sacrilege OD?” she asked her phone as she turned and started walking for the battle gym. Her screen displayed a loading screen before Rotom’s frowning face popped up again.

Bzzzzzt! Nope, nothing! Bzzzzt!” it said. "It's only been a couple of hours since the last, so I doubt anything would come out so quickly."
You know, Rotom is kind of like ChatGPT if you squint and hate yourself.

Dorien?" she asked, cocking her head to the side.
(deafeningly loud alarm with a post-it saying "CHUD ALERT" goes off until i scramble to turn it off) haha sorry i dont know what could have caused that

Why didn't we ever become official? she thought to herself. Now that she was thinking about it, it was strange. They just...stopped hanging out for some odd reason that she couldn't quite recall.
I don't know if the reason she can't recall is for some 🤫 spoiler reason 🤫 or she simply just forgor, but I'm going with the former.

“That being said, I’ve got my partners Ferrothorn, Togedemaru, Corviknight, Pangoro, Toxicroak, and Bewear,” he listed, raising a finger with each passing name. “I tend to swap between them because I also have Excadrill, Poliwrath, and Conkeldurr. I also have Houndoom, who doesn't really fit with the group, but he's been with me since I was a kid.”
You can really tell he just thinks of Pokemon as playthings and tools the way he has a zillion of them that have no nicknames.

“Well, I was going to say,” he chuckled, “a shiny sylveon would bring in enough money to last you a lifetime if you sold it at an auction. But, maybe not the best idea if you’re only running five.”
I already showed you my reaction to this but here it is for those that aren't in the server or otherwise didn't see it:

brosell.png

He scoffed. “Yes, but what, no gimmick?” he said. She could hear the grin in his voice.
Actually, Dorien, there is this gimmick we have where whenever a fuckboy loses a battle we kill him with hammers. Good luck!

Mrs. Chuquete scanned her board for a moment before speaking again. “The slated opponent today was Muraoka Knowles, but she’s called in sick. So I'll give somebody a chance to volunteer before I move down the list.”
Yeah it was the strangest thing. I heard she "fell down the stairs" and "shot herself twice in the back of the head". Hope she gets well soon!

---

Really good chapter. Feels tightly constructed, for one - we learn Odette's grandpa is a cop (sorry if this was established before, it's been a while since I read the previous chapters) through the TV, and the story gets Odette closer and more personal with the drug ring through Dorien's involvement. Dorien is also expertly set up to be a hate sink but it never gets so comically that you'd think "okay, get real". No, he's just a rich asshole and a creep and I 100% believe a guy like him would exist.

What really impressed me, though, was the battle scene. The reason I'm so impressed is because I, as a reader, really don't care about battle scenes, but this one got me hooked because the setup was so strong (you so desperately want this fuckass to lose) and because there was the escalation of stakes in the middle through the drug reveal. It was also really cool to see up close just how fucked up these mon get when they're on the sacc, although I imagine we haven't even seen the half of it yet. Anyway, it was like, an edge of my seat experience. Kudos!

As a last although pretty tiny note, I also liked the domesticity with Odette and her mon at the beginning. They feel like roommates.

That's all I have for now. Good luck in writing onward, and see you around!
 
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Flyg0n

Flygon connoisseur
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  4. crobat
  5. orbeetle
  6. joltik
  7. salandit
  8. tyrantrum
  9. porygon
  10. giratina-origin
  11. houndoom
something “edgy” or “urban,” whatever the hell that meant.
extemely dorien thing to say lol
When the first thing Dorien did was gawk at her hips, she figured, with growing revulsion, that she’d understood the assignment
Ew, good grief. He needs to be strung up, he's so slimy in every scene he's in.

Vilyga, a grotesque humanoid thing with a severe case of scoliosis and an alarming lack of nose, launched itself at its opponent, a gorgeous yet vicious avian type Pokemon that she remembered being called Septulent. The vilyga enclosed its horrendous underbite around the septulent’s wing, causing it to release a pained shriek as both toppled to the ground in a mess of wrinkled skin and black feathers.
Eeeuuggghhh creepy. Effective descriptions here without lingering too long. Gives a good vibe description without lingering on specifics since its hard to give an exact description.
She didn’t know why. She didn’t want to see him. Or, rather, that’s what she told herself.
Sure sure, Odette.
She wanted to keep browsing through, Dorien’s arms coming to a noose-like knot around her waist as his head dipped into the crook of her neck had her
“Are you having fun?” He spoke directly into her skin
Man what a disgusting little sleaze. Love the way this is described her, paints such a slimy picture
She was holding Dorien’s phone.
Oh hoh HO this could be a significant break
she powered the phone off and slipped it into her purse alongside RotomPhone.
:copyka: Lets hope Dorien takes a long long time to notice... and lets hope find his iphone in this world sucks
“We’re leaving?” she asked as she sat her half empty teacup down. “Is the party already over?”

“Yes and no,” he said. “Lionel knows about another party back in the city that’s supposed to be much better, so we’ll be taking a ride.”

Odette had risked a lot agreeing to once again subject herself to the whims of Dorien’s transportation. That had been under the precedent they were attending this party and returning home. Diverging to a different event wasn’t anything she’d planned for, and she felt uneasiness beginning to percolate in her stomach.

“That should be fun,” was all she could manage as he led her through the sea of bodies to the ceiling-high double doors they’d come in from.
Oh no, getting some real bad vibes from this
“Oh, impressed to see these things again?” he queried with a smirk that asked for a smack.

“We’re not taking a limo?” she replied, fingering his bicep as if he had an intelligence switch hiding somewhere on the muscle.
man your prose feels like its leveled up a LOT??? 'a smirk that asked for a smack' is * chefs kiss*
“No. It’s the limo or a cab. I’m not engaging in your racing games on a night like this.”
Thank frick. I was sacred honestly for her but I was so glad she put her foot down because yikes that can go bad, not just because of the weather and trash driving skills but also just because going somewhere else with Dorien is Nope.
Her hand slid into her purse, brushing past his and her phones to press the release button on Ange’s ball.
Man I'm glad Agne is here.

I was a little surprised Dorien didn't push back harder, or get mad, especially with her sending out her poemon but I guess thats their toxic dynamic.
The mansion seemed to be a few kilometers east of BFE,
I had to look this up lol, then I was like "wait Egypt exists here" then I was like "oh wait yeah it would"

“I definitely vote to get in the car now,”
Listen to your pokemon Odette!!!
“Ange,” Ange greeted rosily with a raised tendril. “It’s just Ange.”

Valentin nodded in acknowledgment. “A pleasure, Ange.”
The worldbuilding around this probably changed but at last I could recall you can only understand pokemon related to your specialty?
Agne is ghost/fire, but Val is ice/bug I think?

Unless this is layover from uh.... does he have Frosslass? I forget. or maybe the worldbuilding changed and I forgot, in which case ignore me.
With her molars splintering against one another, she stomped toward the car.
Oooo thats some evocative description
She practically melted as soon as her rear hit the thick leather seat, like a pat of butter landing on a fresh pancake. Although most of her frustrations remained, her stress trickled away, making extra room for her guilt.
and that prose is buttery.
His face, normally calm and collected—even in the case of the micro expressions that gave him away
I enjoy that she's smart and able to read microexpressions
“No. It’s okay.”
I am like that Agne checks with her first
She suddenly felt terrible. So godsdamned terrible. After her treatment of Acadia and Noel at the beginning of the week, she was on a well-deserved downward trend.
:( Relatable, that she was mad this whole time but the understanding of the situation made her go from piseed to less mad and more understanding
“We are.”
I appreciate how they resolve this and it's not really dragged out, except by length of time they don't see each other. Odette runs hot but she's capable of rationality, and when she was able to express her feelings (well, some of them) it helped a lot. Also she was able to realize that Val wasn't the main object of her ire.

Hot dang I gotta say it feels like your prose has leveled up so much (either that or its just been too long since ive read your work). Buttery, smooth and plenty of variance. It feels fun to read and has a nice flow to it without falling into being confusing or weird for the sake of being weird. There's some delightful bits I highlighted above and the whole thing is just great.

Its wild to see just how much Odette has gone through, especially in the first paragraph that highlights it. And its only been what, a few months? And to think this all is the tip of the trauma iceberg. Oh poor Odette...

Dorien continues to dial up the sleaze and disgusting possessiveness and skeeviness and pure eevilness. There's something particularly nasty about his brand of evil compared even to like... Florent or something.

The flow of time through this chapter and emotional resolution to her and Val's qualms felt pretty satisfying. The situation was a good excuse to put Odette into a sticky situation, with Dorien trying to play chicken with a rainstorm and Odette refusing. Stuffing two people into a car ride together is a really good way to force them to hash out their issues, and Odette's anger in the initial parts is both palpable and understanably petty. I'm glad Agne was there to drag sense into her.

We also go a breakthrough potentially with her nabbing his phone which I am worried may or may not backfire. We'll see.

She knew rap parts from the countless times she harmonized it with her friends, when she spoke the verses with no rhyme, reason, or regard for her volume. They rang with a cheery, lighthearted nostalgia that left her grinning. Valentin carrying on along with her, matching her ardor, had giggles intertwining with her rendition while they returned her to a time when all she had to worry about was passing her exams, sweeping dance competitions, and what parts she was going to be cast as in her after-school musical theater program.
Awww singing together is such a cute moment for them. Love moments like this of characters being able to just be comfortable around each other!
where reality finally found her again and doused her forehead in a cold sweat as involuntary fright constricted her heart.
:copyka::unquag:
“Wait…oh my gods,” she wheezed after a beat. “Powdered Sugar. Glaze. Sprinkle. Donut. Did your team really agree to let you nickname them after fucking donuts?”
This kills me every time lol, I love that for him. Also I like that they "let" him.
t I may or may not have thrown a couple of my personal favorites in there just for you to taste,” he
< 3 awww sharing his favorite donut flavors! Another nice moment of vilnerability, even if its something small.
“You have your run of the mill gore-sex fests on one end, and then you have these uncanny avant-garde-esque flicks that are so lofty, it’s hard to find much fear in them unless you really think about it. Then there’s a middle ground where it tries to do something different and falls flat in some aspect, usually characters. The problem with a lot of them is that they can’t find any fucking balance.”
Okay but he's RIGHT. Like my opinions differ slightly but the gist is very similar. A lot of horror stuff doesn't scare me either and the CHARACTERS are DUMB. And then those snobby avantgarde garbage... nah bruh thats whatever.
“No. Not enough.”
oh wow they finally did the thing huh. I was kind of surprised Val went all the way but I think it tracks if thise is the first time for him experiencing proper attraction I guess, since his past relationships were always for some benefit and not real.
--
Oh boy things really come to a head in this chapter! More juicy and flowing prose, with a great use of mixing in proper scenes with summarized patches of time. Man I actually really want to absorb what you did here, skipping chunks of dialogue and landing on others to highlight it. Its a good balance between dry summarization of events and spelling out a whole scene, and makes time flow nicely, so that when the audience sees its gotten to 1AM that passage of time feels natural.

The rapport she has with Val continues to be quite pleasant and there's a great sense of chemistry between them, even outside Odette just being incredibly horny lol. And thatsimportant to me as a staunch anti-romo type lowkey, ahahah. You do a good job selling me on Odette's POV even if the idea is foreign, and then a nice job setting up genuine moments of relatability between them and enough shared and contrasting interesting to make them an interesting pair.

It's enough to make a girl not gag super hard at them making out lol. (/lh). High praise I swear.

I'm glad that the "will they wont they" isn't dragged out! I think the length of time it took to get to this point makes a lot of sense, especially with Val's previous bad experiences and the time it took to build some emotional intimacy and chemistry between them. Also idk if I've ever said this but it is pleasantly refreshing to see the man be more hesitant and much less lustful (well, ignoring the lus drug bit hah). It's a bit tiring sometimes to see stories where it feels like every male character just jumps the gun you know?

Having a situation where the girl actually wants him bad but has to try and respect his boundaries as he figures out where he stands is a nice change of pace.

Also like I said dadgum girl your prose is once again hitting great. Excellent mix of complexity, readability and ryhtym. Rhythym. I can spell. Your work is paying off methinks. After the emotional roller coaster I remember from previous few chapters with the fallout from the Yacht bit, all the crazy reveals and her arguement with Bernard, at least she's getting some... breathing room of a sort I guess, and a nice payoff for her patience.

I am sure it will not last long at all. I keep coming back to it but I am so scared either he'll reverse track the phone. Or worse yet, Dorien leaving the phone is actually part of a master ploy on his part to test her loyalty or something. Either way I sense dark things ahead.

Did you want crit??? too bad. I don't think I have any here ahahaha. Everything in these two chapters was really solid, and there wasn't really any bits I snagged on or felt out of place.

gud fic pls update.
 

canisaries

you should've known the price of evil
Premium
Location
Stovokor
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. inkay-shirlee
  2. houndoom-elliot
  3. yamask-joanna
  4. shuppet
  5. deerling-andre
  6. omanyte
  7. hizzap
Heeere for the exchange! Chapter 4, for everyone else reading.

The Lumiose City Police Department was a towering block of a building. Odette had been told countless times the structure was hundreds of years old, and it truthfully still looked the part. Same degraded gray bricks and mansard-style roofs bordered with stone druddigons that glared down upon anybody who dared draw near. A huge stone arch surrounded the front double doors, which opened and closed as people arrived and left. She brushed arms with maybe five or six people before actually going inside. She hoped her grandpa wouldn’t be too swamped to meet.
This visual is really cool. A police station with grotesques. Feels urban fantasy core almost, even if I'm sure there must be real places like this.

To make sure she was doubly aware, he’d enroll her in some peewee self-defense classes, the curriculum ranging from saying no to strangers and, if that didn’t work, how to break out of bindings or how to disarm an attacker. The classes got more intense as she got older, eventually tapering off into a gun defense class that landed her a permit to handle a concealed firearm. It was only then that she realized the master plan behind him bringing her along to his work as often as he did, and she supposed it made sense. The overprotective cop must ensure his granddaughter is equipped to handle anything nefarious.
The mention of extensive self defense classes is a surprise tool that will help us later!

She couldn’t help but notice that some of them still spoke to her like she was six, but she guessed that was just out of habit.
fuckin reeeaaal i had to ask my family and relatives to stop using my kiddie pet name well after i was 18. which i suppose is also on me partially for not speaking up earlier but. whatever.

Her eyes then travelled to the corner, where Bernard’s trusted arcanine friend, Toulouse, lay curled up, fast asleep.
(on the phone, in tears) mom.... they had a chapter with a big fluffy dog.... but no one pet it.... i dont know if im going to make it

She wanted to say so much but decided to keep her answer simple. “I really had to look you over, but I think it’s your gait.”
"yeah.... it was more of a virgin walk than a chad stride this time...."

With that, she began to empty the contents from the bag: two bottles of Moomoo milk and a large pack of Oreos. Bernard’s face lit up, as expected.
1. people carry around unrefrigerated milk?
2. my signature look of superiority at these oreocels when i am a noble dominochad

“Mine takes up the whole thing,” Bernard grinned. He showed the cookie to her, and the filling circle indeed covered it almost entirely to the edge.

“I win.” He then bit into it.
I think sometimes this chapter had instances of the same speaker speaking but being separated into two different paragraphs. I feel like this is pkay and good when the person has a lot to say and you don't want a wall of text, but in this instance you have very little, so it initially to me looks like the speaker has changed on the next line. This only causes a second of confusion when the dialogue tag pointing to Bernard is right after the second line (and contextually it only makes sense for Bernard to be saying he won), but it might be something to consider.

She shook her head as she pulled the cookie apart. “No, it wasn’t like that.” She paused. “I mean, we did win, but when I say bad, I mean...bad bad. Like, you should lock him up downstairs bad.”
I mentioned this on the friendcord but for everyone that isn't there: my ass legitimately first thought this meant a chastity cage. Have fun with that mental image, everyone!

Bernard flexed his lips,
I don't know what this means. It could be because I'm ESL, but this sounds like it's just as likely to mean pursing as it is a mouth tightening.

“And what will you do if you can’t get your pokeball out in time?”
IM ALWAYS SAYING THIS IN CONVOS ABOUT GUNS IN THE POKEMON WORLD AND THEY DONT BELIEVE ME

She stared at him with a deadpan expression. “We had the voice activation keys installed on them for that reason.”
now imagining someone making their key "RATIO" and just shouting that and then their charizard comes out and incinerates everyone

Then just that morning, she’d missed a light on the way to school and beat her fist on her handlebar so hard that she almost broke her broken handle.
Wait, so like, broke the already broken handle further?

"Well, repetition helps, you know. And meds are off the table..."

That got a scoff out of her. "They were never on the table to begin with, Grandpa. My body's fucked up as it is."
noooo no no you have to get on antipsychotics and gain 60 pounds. signed: been there

Doctor visits chalked it up to anger management issues resulting from a certain hormone deficiency--the same hormone that left her so underdeveloped and somehow caused the mutation that left her with red eyes--as the doctors had put it.
im always hearing about the hormone that causes you to mutate into having red eyes. (i know this is probably a coverup dw.)

She remembered her last day of preschool, right before they moved out of Brackish Town. Some asshole kid in her class kicked a wild bidoof for walking off with the playground soccer ball, and she lost it on him for being so cruel. She'd only meant to twist his hand until he cried, but she couldn't control herself. She could still vividly remember how red her vision had gotten, and she snapped his finger in the heat of the moment.
Odd. You'd think she would have done something disagreeable with how this is presented.

(this is a joke)

But she never broke another person’s finger again.
notice how were only saying "finger" 🧐

Then quit your job and do an internship here.
(gasp) le népotisme?

where he had his horde of family photos out and about for all to see.
Did you mean to type "horde"? Legitimate question, because while I would assume you'd want to use "hoard" here, I think "horde" is also valid in this context.

---

Alright! The plot thickens, as they say. I have to admit that you totally caught me off guard by first showcasing this really true-to-life grandfather-granddaughter relationship and making me think this was a lighter chapter just for characterbuilding and then actually moving the mystery plot thread forward anyway. Obviously, I should have seen this coming as a police station in fiction is almost always a place where you get more information for your investigation, but I just failed to be familiar with your game.

Speaking of your game: I don't know if I've pointed this out before, but something that blows me away about your characterwork and your dialogue is that you seem to have a vast pool of mannerisms to pull from to insert inbetween the lines of spoken dialogue. In contrast, I feel like I have, like, five that I keep recycling - crossed arms, looking away, looking back, frowning, smiling. Basically, the prose never seems repetitive. Then there are also other details that breathe life into things, like Odette and Bernard having this Oreo game they play (I don't know if that's a more widespread thing where you come from, but even then the choice to include it is what really matters) or how the other cops at the police station react to Odette.

Anyway: great chapter as always. I really couldn't see any kind of dip in quality despite the remark that this wasn't betaread. Good luck writing onward, and I can't wait to see what you think of Kills-Other-Humans~
 

Tango

Mascot of the Doduo Alliance
Location
beyond the Nexus
Pronouns
He/him
Partners
  1. doduo
Chapter 3: A Bad, Bad Run-In
Alright, I'm now ready to dive into chapter 3 after so long! I've delayed it for a bit since it was an 11k chapter, but at this point, I've dealt with longer... :copyka:

Considering I have now reviewed 18k chapter monstrosities, even a 15k chapter from you will be unable to deter me!

Now that we have an exchange going, I'm hoping to read this far more often. It's been a while since I read the last chapter, so please be patient with me if I seem to stupidly forgetting some stuff! 😖

Odette’s forehead hovered centimeters over the floor as she pointed her toes. She exhaled deeply, feeling the effects of her straddle wash over her. The knot in her lower back began to loosen, and her glutes began to scream a little. In a good way, of course. There was no better way to start a busy day than with a solid stretch.

A loud sizzling noise rang from the kitchen, and Odette pushed herself upright, keeping her legs straddled. The smell of vegetable omelets started to waft through the apartment, and she felt her stomach rumble. Instinctively, her hand travelled to rest on it.

“Smells good, Sol,” she said. "You really didn't need to cook today, though. I was planning to stop at the food court before class."

Nonsense; Nana showed me a new recipe the other day, and I'm eager to see what I can do with it,” Solene replied sweetly. She was always looking for an excuse to use the stove, so Odette supposed she couldn't blame her.
Aw crud who is Solene again?? Is she one of her Pokemon? 😵‍💫

Ugh! This is what happens when I am away from a story for too long! :copyka:

...Fine. I'll go back and re-read your previous chapters. Why? Because I want to understand what is going on and who these people are and you deserve a better informed 'me' considering how great your last review for me was.

...

Re-read of the previous two chapters complete. I forgot how funny the mon antics were in chapter 2! :mewlulz: Loic is an absolute menace.

Ok, Solene is the goth mon. I can't remember what it's called its some kind past gen 4 so it's the goth mon since it looks goth and the name is obviously inspired from it! :unquag:

From her spot on the floor, perpendicular to the coffee table, Odette turned and eyed Isaur as she slowly flipped through the TV channels. She was using the arrow buttons on the TV set itself, and she’d been at it for almost five minutes.

“Just put on the news and be done with it, goddamn,” Odette said. She thought for a moment. “And where’s the stupid remote?”
I bet Loic took it. :alien:

A hiss rang from behind her, somewhere near the table. She heard something slide across the floor, and it struck the back of her leg. She shot a look at it, only to see it was the missing remote. She narrowed her eyes before looking over her shoulder. Loïc was sitting under one of the chairs, staring back innocently.

“Very funny,” she said.

Yes,” Loïc replied.
Loic is my favorite. :mewlulz: So dramatic too. Perfect for Odette. She even appreciates his craziness to help her stave off depression! :veelove:

Odette picked it up and typed in the number for the news channel. The screen flipped to it, prompting annoying grumbles to rise from Isaur. The familiar jingle played over the speakers as she hovered over to the couch, and plopped herself down between Ange and Enora. Ange was blinking drowsily, still trying to wake up, while Enora took to idly grooming herself.

“There, was that so hard?” Odette asked.
I like the way how all Odette's mon help make her more of the star. It's her apartment and her mon. She makes the rules and she gets the final say. None of them have a problem with it because that's how mon and trainers are. The mon are there to support and follow the trainer and the trainer cares for them and leads. It's a neat way to give more narrative importance to your main character and in works in a way that I don't expect readers will fight you on. Instead, I'd say it draws them in even more!

Also, I really like seeing all the personalities and quirks of her mon, especially Loic. Considering what Odette went through and is still going through, seeing a team of generally supportive mon around her to keep her company is a real feel-good thing to see. Yes, they each have their own faults and aggravations, but that just makes it more entertaining!

Also, I like it when Odette gets treated well. I'm sure there will be times in the fic where things will get real bad, but I imagine those moments will highlight the good ones all the more.

“Always. There's never anything good on at this time,” Isaur said defiantly.

"All the more reason why you should save your energy,” Odette said. She sat the remote on the coffee table, next to her idle phone, before lowering her chest back to the floor. She exhaled, concentrating on her stretch while partially tuning in to the sound of the TV.

“We are still receiving updates regarding the gruesome discovery made early this morning. The Lumiose PD received a tip late last night and made the bust early this morning,” the reporter said. “According to the reports we have so far, ten trainers and their Pokemon partners were found dead at the Pangoro Packing Storage Facility on Crabhammer Road. LCPD Police Chief Bernard Cinq-Mars has been on the scene with detectives securing the area."

Odette’s head snapped up at the sound of her grandfather’s name.

Sure enough, his familiar face popped into view: short, well-kept salt-and-pepper hair and a neatly trimmed matching beard framed a pair of tired, somber-looking brown eyes. Despite that, he held himself confidently and spoke with an air of determination that could only be found in somebody as passionate in their job as he was.

“We’re still in the process of investigating what's happened here, but...it's not looking good right now,” he said.

“Can you confirm that this is another case of a sacrilege overdose?” asked the reporter behind the camera.

Bernard’s face fell ever so slightly as he contemplated the question. He soon shrugged. “We'll have to see what the toxicology reports come back with, but I'd say it's more than likely,” he replied grimly.

There was a cut back to the reporter, who continued rambling through her report. However, Odette heard none of it, and her head had begun to buzz: first, with relief that her grandpa hadn’t been hurt and still seemed in good spirits. And then, with some concern: she’d scrolled through her news app for fifteen minutes yesterday on her lunch break and only found the one repetitive OD story. Now, there was a new one. Well, at least ten, more specifically.

She began to scratch her cheek apprehensively. “I should probably call--”

The words had barely left her before her phone began to ring from the coffee table. It morphed into its Rotom Mode and floated up to her face.

"Bzzzzzzzt, an incoming call from Marieanne Cinq-Mars! Bzzzzt!” it said.

She grabbed it hastily. “Thanks,” she said, then answered as she wriggled out of her straddle.

“Are you watching the news?” Marieanne gasped on the other end.

Odette blinked rapidly but couldn’t help the slight smile that began to form. “Good morning to you too, Nana,” she greeted hesitantly.

Marieanne laughed. “Oh, silly me. Good morning, little Swanna,” she said. "Now, are you watching the news?

Odette usually preferred keeping her discussions of sacrilege issues between her and Noel, but she could stand to humor her grandma for a few minutes before she headed off to school. She eyed the clock hanging just above the balcony door and found they weren't due to leave for another thirty minutes. She had time.

“I was. I was getting ready to call you myself,” Odette said, standing up and wandering over to the couch. "Might actually go see Grandpa after class after seeing that, honestly."
Hmm... Looks like she will be seeing her grandfather soon. I bet that will be interesting for her sacrilege investigation. :eyes:

***​

It was colder today. It didn’t help that another round of thunderheads had come out to play. Odette had barely made it inside the building of the Santalune Pokemon Academy before the downpour started. Now, sitting in the lecture hall for Mr. Songmin’s Battle Tactics class, she could hear the rain pounding on the building outside. Thunderclaps would shake the classroom every now and then.

On most days, she was a very attentive student, especially in this class. Mr. Songmin was one of those young teachers who prided themselves on being on good terms with their students. He always put effort into making sure his lectures--no matter how boring the subject matter-- were at least moderately entertaining, so the moldable minds in his presence would be more open to listening. Odette particularly enjoyed his enthusiasm. She also loved how his Kantonian accent shone through his Kalosian words once in a while. She found it charming.
Yeah, seems like a good teacher!

However, today her mind buzzed with thoughts of the morning news. No matter how much she tried to shake it off, it was like her brain had magnetized to thinking about it. She had to resist the urge to pull her phone out and see if there were any updates. But she doubted it would be that simple, making her eager to delve more into it.

It's absurd, she kept telling herself. From talking to Bernard about all the cases he’d worked on, she knew it wasn't abnormal for drug epidemics to cause deaths. But at the rate they were happening with this sacrilege stuff, it was starting to feel like they were dealing with something much more intense. Were groups of people found dead in strange places while overdosing on opioids? Or meth? Or anything else, really? What was Team Enigma even trying to accomplish with this sort of thing? Wiping out a whole socioeconomic class, maybe? And why was it so targeted at shiny Pokemon, anyway? She'd need to have Noel look into the file notes when--

“Cinq-Mars, I didn’t know the lecture was on the ceiling.”

She hadn’t realized that she had leaned back against her chair and was staring into space. She slowly sat up.

“I don’t have to be looking at you to be listening, Songmin,” she replied easily, hoping to play off her inattentiveness.

Mr. Songmin smiled broadly as the class collectively chuckled. He sauntered over to his desk, which was stationed right in the middle of the lecture hall. He then sat down on it, crossing his legs and folding his hands politely in his lap. “Mm, then tell me,” he said. “You have a froslass partner, correct? Isaur? What are froslass known for in competitive battling?”

“Their speed,” Odette answered.

“So how would you tactfully use Isaur's speed in a battle scenario? Say, you’re up one, but the partner you currently have out is struggling.”

She folded her hands on her desk in a somewhat mocking fashion. She started to tap her fingers on her knuckles as her mind began to run with adequate answers.

“I’d switch into her in a case of out-speeding. I’d swap her in while the opposing Pokemon was distracted because of whoever was in before or charging up.”

Mr. Songmin nodded along slowly. He didn’t say anything for a short moment. “Fair, but what if the opposing Pokemon again out-speeds her? Froslass most certainly aren’t the fastest competitive Pokemon, and surely there are ways for your foe to knock her out in one hit?”
Ah, I was wondering if things were going to center on Pokemon. :eyes:

Odette pushed her glasses up on her nose. “Isaur’s been training with a Focus Sash since she was a snorunt. She can take a powerful hit,” she said. “In which case, she uses Destiny Bond. Now my foe is stuck between switching out themselves or losing another Pokemon and being down two.”

He pursed his lips and nodded slowly. “Good answer. I’ll pretend I didn’t catch you daydreaming,” he said playfully before standing up again. He returned to the whiteboard and launched into something else about using Pokemon stats to one’s advantage. Odette exhaled quietly. She could shake off zoning out in lectures like this, but she’d have to be on her A-game in battle class.

That class came to an end without much other incident. At the very least, Odette could say she now knew that a pachirisu could be a good staller. If she ever decided she wanted to deal with the pain of electric types, she’d have to remember that.

The giant class filed into the hall, where some other older students loitered. As Odette exited, she was cut off by two youngsters, their raticate friends in tow, as they bolted back to their classroom from gods knew where. She sometimes forgot that kids as young as five also attended the academy with bright-eyed partners. The advanced classes were normally held in a building separate from the young kids, and Odette’s classes had primarily older students. But it wasn’t uncommon for some Pokemon prodigies to end up in them. Hell, she had two eleven-year-olds in her advanced monotype class. It was quite jarring to feel like she was back on a university campus, only to find herself sitting next to a primary school-aged kid on some occasion.
Yep! Mon world be like that! :unquag:

She scoffed at the thought, then withdrew her phone to check the time. 12:34, eleven minutes to battle class. She might have had time to get something to eat from the cafeteria before getting her team from their HM class, but her will to eat had faded when she remembered today was an exhibition day.
Oh! That means her mon are learning HMs! No one can properly get around in the world without those.

Every Friday, her battle teacher would randomly select two students to go head-to-head for an exhibition 3v3 match while the other students took notes on what they did right and wrong. The winner would receive extra credit. They were a month into the semester, and she hadn’t been called on yet. Each Friday that passed, she was sure she was getting closer and closer to having to pit her skills against one of her talented classmates while the others looked on.

It caused a hole to open in her stomach every time she thought about it.

It was so invigorating to witness other people go at it, taking in their expressions as they struggled side by side with their partners, hoping to come out victorious. She was usually okay battling it out in her smaller classes, but...in Mrs. Chuquet’s class of thirty-five students, that proved to be a little more daunting.

She rolled her shoulders. She wasn’t sure what was making her stomach hurt the most. The thought of losing or the thought of battling in front of such a large group.
I get the feeling today is going to be the day she battles. :eyes:

“RotomPhone, any updates on the latest sacrilege OD?” she asked her phone as she turned and started walking for the battle gym. Her screen displayed a loading screen before Rotom’s frowning face popped up again.

Bzzzzzt! Nope, nothing! Bzzzzt!” it said. "It's only been a couple of hours since the last, so I doubt anything would come out so quickly."

Her frown deepened, and she sighed.

“I know, but I can still--”

"Bzzzt, watch out!"

Suddenly, her shoulder made contact with somebody’s arm. Somebody’s buff arm. The person she’d bumped into was at least a foot taller than her and was moving quite fast, so they sent her stumbling back. She would have very much fallen on her butt had they not reeled around and caught her by her arm.

“Whoa!” he yelped as he grabbed her. He pulled her up to stand, slipping an arm around her back in a protective manner. “I am so sorry,” he sputtered once Odette was still.
Hello~! :mewlulz:

She stood stiff, staring straight ahead and blinking as she tried to swallow the bout of rage that had shot up through her back. “Why don’t you watch where you’re--” she began as she tilted her head up to peer at the guy. Her gaze caught on a set of handsome green eyes, downturned with concern. A pair of expensive-looking Praltz sunglasses sat on his head, the same ones this guy used to wear daily to school.

The familiarity of his face caused her rage to subside tremendously.

Dorien?" she asked, cocking her head to the side.

His smile grew more excited with each passing second. "No way,” he gasped.

He released his grip on her and took a step back. “Odette, holy hell,” he exclaimed. “I knew I recognized those braids. You look fantastic, my god." He laughed to himself. "How long has it been?"
Well this is interesting! :eyes:

Odette adjusted her glasses, taking a beat to look him over. Everything about him looked expensive. She was so used to seeing him in their assigned secondary school uniform that she forgot he had the money to spend on such high-end outfits. The prestigious logos embedded into his clothes seemed to shine like the diamonds they were probably worth. Praltz, Louis Vibrava, Roll-X...
Always nice to see some mon-inspired brand names! :quag:

“I…” she stammered. “Yeah,” she finished. "I think...it's been, like, five years since we graduated, yeah?"

Dorien exhaled sharply as he pushed his hair back, minding the sunglasses. “Man, I hate the passage of time. Rodin's chem class feels like yesterday."

She nodded along. "It does. Best partners in that class."

He beamed at her, and it caused some heat to travel up to her cheeks.

"You know it," he agreed.
Ooo! Odette seems to be interested! :eyes: As a fan of romance, I wouldn't mind seeing something develop for her.

That was certainly true; the two of them never got anything less than A’s on their projects together. Where she sucked at math, she made up for it with her fantastic presentation and PowerPoint-making skills. His strong suit was the numbers and wooing the teachers with his gene-instilled charm.

She remembered how stoked she was to have him as a lab partner. He was easily one of the best-looking straight guys at Lansat Preparatory Academy, and she wasn't the only student who thought that.
Oh... so he is straight, huh? :mewlulz:

Still, the way she words it makes it sound like roughly half the class or more wasn't straight.

But she was the lucky one. Seeing each other in chemistry every day and having to do so many projects together allowed them to get rather...close.
Rather close indeed. :eyes:

They were almost a thing. Or, perhaps, kind of a thing. She'd been so caught up in her musical theatre studies that having a boyfriend had never crossed her mind. She felt like she didn't have the time or energy. At least until she met him.

Why didn't we ever become official? she thought to herself. Now that she was thinking about it, it was strange. They just...stopped hanging out for some odd reason that she couldn't quite recall.

Suddenly, she felt a little bad. He was a package; what the hell had she been thinking about letting it go?
No time like the present, Odette! :quag:

The warmth was spreading over her nose and was only growing more intense. It startled her, but she figured that not acknowledging it would cause it to fade faster. Scratching at her cheek awkwardly, she decided to ask the age-old question.

“What are you doing here?”

Dorien raised his shoulder gleefully, then flashed a piece of paper that depicted a class schedule. “Late enrollment, believe it or not. I start today. I kind of hit a rough spot in my training and decided I needed divine intervention,” he added dramatically. “I’ll admit, I was kind of worried at first, but I’m so glad to have a really familiar face here.”

A smile began to curl her own lips. “I guess you were jogging because you’re late?”

He exhaled sharply and peered at the slip of paper. “No, actually. Well, not yet. If I can’t find the room, I will be,” he said. He handed the paper to her. "Help?”

She leaned over to examine it, roving her finger over the 12:30 time slot.


Battle Performance - Building A Gym - Tania Chuquete


She blinked in surprise. “Oh, lucky you,” she said. “We’re in the same class.”
Score! :veelove:

Oh wait... they are going to battle each other, aren't they? :copyka:

Dorien’s face lit up, brighter than it already was. “Lucky me for sure,” he said eagerly. Almost too eagerly. He was always easily excitable, but she didn’t remember it being this excessive. She raised her brow dubiously.

He must have seen her expression change because he rubbed the side of his neck bashfully. “Sorry, like I said. Excited that you're here.” He flinched suddenly and rushed to correct himself. "That I know somebody, I mean."

More heat. A cutiefly hatched in her stomach and tried its hand at flying.
Yeah, she definitely wants him. It looks like he would totally go for her too. Go get em, Odette! :veelove:

I'm glad she didn't just start with a boyfriend. Getting to see a relationship start is much more interesting. :eyes: (Assuming that is where things are heading.)

Odette shook her head abruptly, deciding to brush the feeling off. “No, don’t worry about it. I am, too,” she said. “I’m headed there anyway, so you can follow me. My team will meet us there.”

“Sure thing. Lead the way, then.”

She walked ahead, figuring it was best to keep up with the small talk. Asking how he’d been, how he was faring the weather, small stuff. He had no issue talking her ear off. Frankly, she didn’t mind. She’d rather ask him about himself than vice versa, lest she end up in that bad place again.

“What kind of team do you have together?” she inquired as they rounded a corner, maneuvering through a crowd of loitering teenagers.

“Well, I have a thing for steel and fighting types, surely,” he said. “But, I’m trying to keep my group well-rounded, you know? Counters for everything.”

She pursed her lips. “That’s always smart,” she said. And so baseline, she thought.

“That being said, I’ve got my partners Ferrothorn, Togedemaru, Corviknight, Pangoro, Toxicroak, and Bewear,” he listed, raising a finger with each passing name. “I tend to swap between them because I also have Excadrill, Poliwrath, and Conkeldurr. I also have Houndoom, who doesn't really fit with the group, but he's been with me since I was a kid.”
Quite an array of mon Mr Hunk has!

Odette nodded. All primary and secondary fighting and steel types, plus a bonus primary dark type. An interesting combination. If and when she ended up in a battle with him, she’d have to watch out. Those steel moves would send Enora, Loïc, and Isaur to the emergency room at a Poke Center if she weren’t careful. But, she could solidly counter those fighting types...

“What about you? I know you always had a neat team--gothorita, lampent, snorunt...and a...shiny eevee, right?”

“Oh,” she said. “They're still around. Well, they’ve evolved since then. Gothitelle, chandelure, froslass, and sylveon. I also recently had a mimikyu join as well. And, of course, RotomPhone here, but he's not a battler. Just on rehab from an injury, so he's helping me function from inside my phone for a bit."

"Bzzzzzt, howdy!" RotomPhone greeted, waving one of his jagged arms.

Dorien nodded in approval, then began to scratch his chin as a thought seemingly occurred to him. "Pleasure to meet you," he said. "But, no battling sixth?”

“I’m having a hard time finding someone who’d fit into my team dynamic,” she said quietly like she was embarrassed about it. “Loïc...” she paused. “I mean my mimikyu friend,” she corrected. “Was a fluke as it is. My maman kind of saddled him on me, but he’s...made himself at home. Pain in my ass, but he makes things very lively."

“Well, I was going to say,” he chuckled, “a shiny sylveon would bring in enough money to last you a lifetime if you sold it at an auction. But, maybe not the best idea if you’re only running five.”
Well, Dorien. It was nice knowing you as potential boyfriend material. :unquag:

Not just oof, but MEGA oof! :wowzard:

Odette’s eyes went wide. What an absolutely audacious thing to say. She heard RotomPhone buzz in alarm next to her.

“Excuse me?” she said. A mix of intense anger and an undying urge to laugh stirred in her chest. She started to let some of those laughs go, but she stopped when she remembered how Dorien's family, the Bonhommes, got their fortune.

Dorien came from a clan of shiny hunters, and they were active members of the shiny trade. Active proponents of keeping it alive, too.
Well. Yikes. I guess that relationship is out the window now. This might be a good opportunity to gather intel on her investigation though, at least.

Wait.

Now it made sense. That's why they'd stopped hanging out. A whisper of nostalgic horror filled her gut as she vaguely remembered how his familial occupation came to light. How she'd been blissfully unaware of his involvement until the end of the year.

Fucking seriously? she thought bitterly.

How the hell had she forgotten that so easily? She would have assumed something like that would have stuck with her for the rest of her damn life, yet...

Suddenly, her mind was racing again, this time with the thoughts of what Noel had found yesterday.

The wealthy, plus shinies...sounds like some shiny trade bullshit.

“It’s not the best idea, period,” she said. “I’m not somebody who's in favor of the trade. It should have been abolished years ago.”

She watched as Dorien rolled his eyes. It lit a fire in her stomach. “Come on, you sound like the rest of the world. You do know the rumors are fake, right? Pokemon in the trade want to be there.”
To Dorien's credit, I believe that he believes that.

That time, she let her laughs out with no stops. She reached up her hand, signaling RotomPhone to go into standby mode. He reluctantly raced back into her hand, and she put the device in her pocket. “It’s almost like the rest of the world is right. Even if the rumors aren't true, there's no need to have a whole institution around it. That just makes it easier to cover up any abuse."
I can see where she is coming from, but the world isn't always right about stuff. Still, she has greater insight into this than the average person, so her opinion has more weight behind it here and I agree with her.

Dorien’s brow furrowed momentarily, but he smiled through it. “That's a little assumptive, but not surprising. If you want, we could go grab dinner later and I'll explain to you how it actually is."

“I don't think that's necessary, I'm pretty set in my opinion,” Odette said harshly.
Well that wasn't smart, Odette. Dorien could give you further insight into what is happening. Perhaps if you explained your side, you could even gain an ally on the inside of things. And if it worked out, you could even get a hunk of a boyfriend!

“Well, then how about just dinner?” He added a smile that she assumed was supposed to be charming, but something about it rubbed her entirely the wrong way. She was getting ready to chew him out for his involvement in such a deplorable establishment, and he was grinning at her like she was flirting with him. Not that she could pull off flirting even if she wanted to, but that wasn’t the point.

“You're getting way ahead of yourself.”

He held his hand over his heart, turning his head away dramatically as if he were offended. “Oh, we're back to the hard-to-get act? You really like to toy with my emotions, don't you?"

She slowly sucked her teeth. The pleasantries of reconnecting with an old flame were fading very quickly. In fact, the sentiment was practically gone. All she wanted to do now was beam her water bottle at him. Perhaps she should have let her anger roll and decked him when he ran into her.

"You know me too well."
Dang it, Odette... Ugh. I get it, though. You have anger issues from your evil mon. Makes it harder for you to take logical approaches with things, especially when its stuff that ticks you off. Fine, you get a pass from me on this, Odette. And you know what? Maybe the evil mon isn't even at play here. Not everyone thinks about other angles like this. You might just not have thought of it, and that's ok.

She had a much more nasty remark lined up, but they arrived at the gym before she could let it loose. She quickly decided that that was for the best. She certainly wasn’t one to shy away from confrontation, but she was focused on keeping herself in check for this class. She didn’t need to get so riled up over Dorien’s absolutely fucked views of the trade. At least, not now.

She pushed the heavy double doors open and was met with the sight of some of her classmates sitting on the bleachers. The gym itself wasn’t what a standard school gym would look like. No basketball hoops, no volleyball nets--just a practice battle arena. The walls and ceiling were even padded with protection against stray projectiles. The bleachers themselves also had a protective barrier that could be activated whenever a showdown was going to occur. Truly, no expense was spared by the academy.

“Huh. Seems standard,” Dorien commented. His voice had a posh inflection, which made Odette’s nerves prickle in disdain. Maybe getting a little riled up wouldn’t hurt.

“Must be nice to be so rich that ‘state of the art’ is just ‘standard’ to you,” she cracked, her tone wavering on the line between reserved and downright biting. He appeared oblivious to her less-than-friendly demeanor.

“I guess it just comes with the territory.”

“Are you sure you’re not just a spoiled brat?” she queried as they walked across the vast space. This prompted another chuckle, this one a little louder.
Odette being spicy now! :wowzard:

“Maybe?” he offered. That same attempt-at-charming smile made a comeback, and she began to wonder if he actually was in the mindset that this was flirting. That didn’t make any goddamn sense to her. Not that she was the flirting expert; quite the opposite, actually. But she wasn’t so emotionally unintelligent that she’d take rude banter as something in the same vein as courting. She somehow didn’t remember Dorien being so oblivious, but what did she know? She’d forgotten why she stopped liking him in the first place, so forgetting how he was as a person wasn’t entirely farfetched in comparison. People change in five years, don't they?
Dang. Yeah, I bet he totally thinks she is flirting with him! :mewlulz:

A couple of the students already sitting there sent friendly waves and soft “hey’s” toward her as she trekked up the bleacher stairs to her usual bench. Dorien sat next to her and leaned back against the seats behind him, folding his arms behind his head.

“So give me the rundown. How does it work here?” he asked.

Odette diverted her attention toward digging through her bag for her empty pokeballs, which she shoved into her jogger's pockets. “It’s a battle class,” she said. “You battle. I would think it’s pretty self-explanatory.”

He scoffed. “Yes, but what, no gimmick?” he said. She could hear the grin in his voice.

She inhaled deeply and slowly turned her head to face him. As expected, he was flashing his teeth at her. She couldn’t help but notice how perfectly straight they were.
I still think he would make a good potential ally for you, Odette.

“Every Friday, the professor picks two students to showcase a 3v3 battle,” she explained. “In case your servants didn’t remind you when you woke up this morning, today is Friday.”

The intended insult flew right over his head. He seemed to show more interest in the idea of the showcase battle, judging by how his eyes brightened. He turned onto his side, fully facing her, and rested his cheek on his palm. “Oh, that sounds fun,” he said slyly. “What are the chances I’ll get grabbed today?”

“I haven’t even been called. So I highly doubt it.” With that, she turned her head back toward her bag.

“Oh, so maybe you’ll go? And I get to watch you battle it out with your little fairy and ghost friends?”

She flinched. His voice had suddenly grown louder and...closer. As if it were right next to her ear.
Personal space being invaded, dude. But he thinks it's flirting and he is attracted to her. He simply isn't understanding and is reading things wrong. It's not his fault! :copyka:

With her brows scrunched and a deep frown on her face, she turned toward him again, only to find that he’d leaned in close to her. Too close to her. Her cheek was mere centimeters from brushing his nose as she turned her head. Green eyes were narrowed in an all-too-sultry fashion, and his toothy smile had shrunk down to a smirk.

Instinctively, she raised her hand and pressed her palm to his nose, forcing him backward and out of her personal space.

“You can watch me from back there,” she said, emphasizing her last word as she pulled her hand away. “I’m not a fan of people getting so close to me, thank you.”

She watched him tilt his head to the side, his expression growing sad. But it wasn’t any sort of sincere sadness. It was a mocking sadness. Like one somebody might give a farfetch’d for throwing a tantrum over their leek losing a leaf. A fire lit in her veins, and she grasped the strap of her backpack to refrain from backhanding him outright.
I respect Odette's restraint here. It's not his fault, but at the same time, Odette gets triggered by stuff like this, so she had to do something.

“What?” he said, feigning a pout. “Come on, I figured we were doing flame rekindling here.” He exhaled deeply and leaned back into the bench behind him again. “Not to be so forthright after only re-acquainting myself with you ten minutes ago, but I liked our thing. I was hoping to talk about revisiting it, if I may be so blunt."

Not on your goddamn life.

Her grip on her backpack tightened. She was sure the skin on her knuckles would tear open, but she didn’t care. If she let go, his pretty little nose was going to break.
He doesn't realize the problems with the shiny trade, Odette. He doesn't know what you know. He is reading the situation entirely wrong here. I think if he knew about the problems with the shiny trade, I think he would even be opposed to it as long as he wasn't too hard in denial about it (which admittedly is a strong possibility). Also, he really does have a thing for you and if he was willing to take your side on the shiny trade, he would probably make a solid boyfriend.

Maliciously crafted words threatened to spew out, but the double doors opened again, and the remaining students, including Odette's Pokemon group, filed in with Mrs. Chuquete in tow. Mrs. Chuquete held her usual clipboard under her arm, and a baseball cap sat on her head of fluffy red hair.

Odette exhaled the shallow breath she was holding, almost feeling relieved that the start of class would save her from the absolute trainwreck of a conversation she was having. It would also save her from the probable expulsion that would come with absolutely pummeling a new student half to death.
It seems these two are destined to be enemies. All the more reason to make them battle, then.

“Huh, class starting?” Dorien commented like he was trying to fill the tense silence that had swelled between them.

Yeah, no shit, she wanted to yell. She bit her tongue instead, just in time for Solene, Enora, Isaur, Ange, and Loïc to join her on the bleachers. Solene was the first to notice Dorien, and she nudged Odette frantically upon recognizing his face.

"Hang on, is that--?" she whispered in shock.

Odette stiffly shook her head and waved her off. She wasn't in the mood to explain right now.

Breathe...keep it together.

“Alright, settle down, trainers, Pokemon,” Mrs. Chuquete called, silencing the low chatter. “I’d like to get this started quickly so we have plenty of time to discuss and practice ourselves. I know we also have a new student in here today, so this’ll be a good chance for him to see how we do things here.”

Dorien clicked his tongue in response to being acknowledged. It took everything in Odette not to growl at him.

Mrs. Chuquete lifted the front page on her clipboard to look at whatever was under it before dropping it again. “So I’ll keep this quick. First up on the chopping block, Odette Cinq-Mars.”

Odette’s heartbeat, which had already started to ring in her ears, picked up. She suddenly felt very glad she didn’t eat because she surely would have lost it at that point. Her skittish appetite did come in handy sometimes.

If she weren’t so angry, she probably would have had a harder time recalling her team to their balls and getting up to walk to the front of the bleachers. But she happily took it as a chance to get away from Dorien.
That's one way to handle anxiety.

Actually, it's pretty weird. She was involved in theatre. She should be used to crowds and performances. I understand why she is not for performing in a theatre setting due to what happened that resulted in her killing that guy, but I would think a battle would be different enough from theatre that she might handle it a bit better on average without the need for anger to replace anxiety.

Mrs. Chuquete scanned her board for a moment before speaking again. “The slated opponent today was Muraoka Knowles, but she’s called in sick. So I'll give somebody a chance to volunteer before I move down the list.”
Ah! Now it makes sense how this is going to happen! Nice way of setting this up to where it didn't feel like a ridiculously convenient event for the plot! :veelove:

Odette’s foot had just hit the arena floor when Mrs. Chuquete spoke. She stopped dead in her tracks, taking the moment to inhale a deep breath. Her eyes slipped shut as a grimace took hold of her features.

For the love of fucking gods, she thought bitterly. She knew what was coming.

“I’ll go!” she heard Dorien’s voice say.
Even Odette knew what was coming. :mewlulz:

Odette had half a mind to grab somebody’s backpack and throw it clear across the room. She was trying so goddamn hard not to explode, and she couldn’t remember the last time it had been this difficult. Singing "Jellicle Songs" wouldn’t solve this dilemma.

“Oh, the new student is eager, huh?” Mrs. Chuquete queried, raising her brow. Odette didn’t move from her spot, as she was too busy trying, and failing, to blink the red out of her eyes. She only returned to her senses when she felt a hand fall on her right shoulder.

“Odette’s a friend of mine, so I’d never pass up a chance to battle her!” he said.
Dang Dorien. You really have no idea. :copyka:

She jerked her shoulder away from his grasp and craned her neck to glare at him. The cocky smile he returned put her on the verge of an anger-induced heart attack if she wasn’t at that point already. She stomped forward, out to the middle of the arena, to configure which of her Pokemon she was going to send out for the battle. Something to keep her hands and brain busy for the time being.

“Fat chance,” she muttered to herself, shoving her hands into her pockets.

“Oh, friendly rivalry? I like that,” Mrs. Chuquete said. “Dorien, was it?”

“Yes, ma’am,” he said. “I’m really looking forward to this class, even if I did show up a little late in the quarter. Hopefully, you’ll be the divine intervention I’m looking for in my training journey.”
Why do I get the feeling Dorien's entire team will be shinies?

The way his voice inflected upward in such a playful fashion made Odette roll her eyes. That’s how he used to talk to their chemistry teacher too. Did she find it as annoying back then as she did now? Probably not, because that suave-speak had a huge hand in their straight A’s. But now? It sounded like mawile teeth on a chalkboard.

She heard Mrs. Chuquete chuckle. “Flattery will get you nowhere, but I like your enthusiasm.” Despite the words she spoke, she sounded bashful. There was an almost unnoticeable waver in her voice, but Odette picked up easily. That seemed to be the same response he got every time.
It seems he is used to his charms getting him what he wants.

She shook her head to herself as she stopped on the left side of the battlefield. She withdrew the three balls from her left pocket; Loïc, Isaur, and Ange. Enora and Solene were in her right pocket. She had to think this over because she realized, in her rage, that she was in a precarious situation.

One of the pluses of fighting a classmate was that she’d had the chance to observe them in previous classes. She could confidently say that she’d started to pick up on at least half the class's mannerisms whenever they battled, just from standing by and watching them work. She’d figured that she’d be lucky enough to get paired with somebody she’d observed closely by the time she was called for an exhibition. But no, there had to be a fluke, where she ended up battling the guy she’d never seen go at it once. It was a travesty because she could read Muraoka like a book. It would have been such a smooth victory.
Muraoka sounds like a Persona 4 reference.

The thing that amplified this problem was Dorien’s preference for steel types. He also had fighting types, proving to be a better matchup. But, she was hung up on the fact that steel wiped half her team if she didn’t play her cards exactly right. The battle would be a 3v3, and she wasn’t sure if that would work for or against her. She had to clear her head and really think.

An obvious choice would be to pick Solene as a lead, as she usually did. Psychic didn’t do much to steel, but steel wasn’t that much of a threat to psychic either. Plus, Solene could whip a fighting type easily. And with the way she'd always been arranging her astral shrine, with emphasis on attack resistance boosts on account of the ganlon berry offerings, Solene would have a nice edge on her ability to take hard hits, as usual.

She calmed down a little, knowing that at least part of her usual strategy wasn’t contested.

Another no-brainer pick was Ange. Fire being one of the only weaknesses of steel types, she’d be stupid not to send him in. He packed enough punch to take on whatever Dorien might throw at them unless he decided to send out a poliwhirl. Then that would be an issue. She’d have to hold her breath and hope he left that particular partner at home today. But, the liechi berry offerings should also further assist with his attack power, so his hits should lay on some hefty damage before they saw anything bad. Hopefully.

That left slot three, which is where she found herself stumped. Should she risk Enora or Loïc for the fairy advantage against fighting? If Dorien decided to go primarily steel, though, it would be a rough time for both of them, even with the astral shrine in effect. No configuration would make that matchup any less dire. Isaur, similarly, also saw the same problem but didn’t have the same advantage with fighting.

Odette had to wonder if they'd somehow have a harsher edge if she put some Arcean plates out on her shrine. Astral shrines only provided passive boosts and were by no means more useful than physical training, but it was good to consider what would prove the most advantageous for her battling. All the research she'd read stated that plates should be a staple for any astral shrine because of the level of power they held, but those fucking things gave her such bad headaches she couldn't be bothered.
Ah, probably due to the evil mon. (blood mon? dang I forget exactly what they were called. I'll probably have to go back and re-read chapter one at some point later)

Neat to see her consider her options and strategy in advance. Many battles are won before the battle even begins.

She'd been able to come up with a great power configuration using incense, whatever gems and gem shards she could get her hands on, and some orbs her mother had gotten ahold of for her, so she never saw the need. But she couldn't help but consider, in the face of what might be a pretty messy battle, some alternatives that might work in their favor in the future...

She’d been lucky enough thus far to have only run into the steel types among rounded teams. An almost-specialized steel trainer was rough terrain she actively tried to avoid, at least until she could find another counter that would fit her team or a shrine configuration that made all her fairy types entirely immune to it, which was pretty much impossible. She’d tried to steer clear of the two steel trainers in her monotype class, but there was no backing out of this unless she wanted to see a hit to her grade. She definitely didn’t want to give Dorien that satisfaction, either. If she couldn’t backhand him herself, she’d do it through battle.

Why was her head spinning so fast? She knew what she was doing. She'd battled people she'd never seen before; this shouldn't have been anything major to her. It was all normal. But the fact that it was Dorien...

“Trainers! Ready yourselves!” Mrs. Chuquete called excitedly. “The first three pokemon you send out will be the only ones you can battle with. Choose wisely!”

She hadn’t noticed that Dorien had trekked to his side of the arena. He spun three pokeballs in his left palm, tapping his foot as if he were waiting on her. When she finally caught sight of him, his smile widened.

“Much luck to you, Odette,” he said mockingly. Her jaw clenched, and she pocketed the balls she was holding and grabbed hold of Solene’s.

“Don’t need it,” she replied.

“You know what to do! Battle to the best of your abilities!”

Odette exhaled.

“Begin!”
Hmm... I'm really not sure which one will win. If Dorien wins, Odette will probably fly off the handle. That might get her expelled. If Odette wins, it will allow Odette to be shown as a competent battler, which is a good thing early on in this fic since this will be the first battle we see her in. From a narrative stance, I think Odette will win.

“Come out to play, Excadrill. Swords Dance!” Dorien declared as he threw his ball forward. With a flash of light and a roar, Excadrill appeared.

Cadriiiill!” it yelled. Odette hadn't had much exposure to excadrill, or ground types in general, so it was quite difficult for her to understand what it said. But, she couldn't focus too much on that. Dorien's callouts would need to keep her attention; not the potential language barrier.

Excadrill crossed its arms over its chest and began to spin around while a soft glow took hold of its claws.

“Solene, Reflect for incoming attacks,” she said simply as she tossed her ball out. Solene emerged in a beam of pink light.

Of course,” Solene said, sounding serious.

She clasped her hands together as if in prayer and held them to her lips. She began to mutter something incoherent, and a shroud of more pink light fell over her.

“Now, Iron Head!” Dorien said.

Odette watched as the dual type lowered into a crouch before propelling itself forward. In a split second, its head made contact with Solene’s stomach. The Gothitelle stumbled backward, grimacing, but she wasn’t fazed otherwise.
Sounds like you have the skills to write effective mon battles! Kind of reminds me of Flyg0n! :eyes:

“It’s close enough to Charm, go!” Odette said.

Solene unclasped her hands and used them to blow a swift kiss. This sent a stream of pink mist into the Excadrill’s face, causing it to stumble. It shook its head violently, trying to ward off the fumes. But the damage had been done. It reopened its eyes with dilated pupils and stared in awe at the Gothitelle before it.

Dorien gasped deeply. “Snap out of it, Excadrill! Iron Head again!”

“Hold,” Odette instructed quickly.

With slight hesitation, the Excadrill crouched backward again before launching into Solene’s stomach again. She trembled with the force of the attack but exhaled slowly before lifting her head.

“Nothing I can't handle,” she said.

“Good stuff, Sol,” Odette praised. She cut her gaze from Excadrill back to Dorien. He had that nasty little smirk on his face, but his brows had lowered in concentration.

“Wear off that Reflect, don’t stop hitting.”

Excadrill cooed in protest but quickly shook their head. The Charm had definitely done its job; as long as Solene kept her Reflect going, and Excadrill remained charmed, its attack power wouldn't be nearly as intense as normal.

Just a bit longer, Odette thought.

Excadrill flew forward again and went to town. Butting its head into Solene, slicing away at her skin with some hefty uses of X-Scissor. Solene took each hit like an attack dummy, progressively weakening but nowhere close to falling. She made no moves to attack back, allowing
Excadrill to land hit after hit. Odette made no move to instruct her otherwise either. She kept her eyes on the opposing Pokemon, watching its every move.

With a final punch, the Reflect barrier shattered, its glassy pieces of it falling to the ground before dissolving into a cloud of translucent dust and fading away. That was the punch that sent Solene sliding back into Odette. Odette caught her with ease and exchanged a look with her.

I feel okay,” Solene said, despite sounding winded. "I can hold out, I promise."
I really like how Odette's team can talk to her. It adds a unique and special element to the battles. :veelove:

As for the battles themselves, I really don't have any complaint. They are fast paced, yet descriptive. I'm finding it a very enjoyable read!

“I know you can; you're doing great,” Odette told her. Solene was wonderful at taking hits, and whether it was built resistance from their physical training or the little boosts from the shrine, it didn't matter. What mattered was the performance, and Solene was showing out fabulously. “I think we’ve backed them into a corner.”

She shot a look back at Excadrill. It retreated back to Dorien’s side of the arena, panting heavily. She noticed that one of Dorien’s brows began to twitch, and this time, she let her own smirk take over her face. Was he frustrated already? Good.

Solene nodded. “Agreed. They're quite annoyed."

“One more, into our next phase,” Odette said, patting Solene on the shoulder. Solene nodded, then stomped forward again. She puffed her chest out and clasped her hands together once more.

Let's go, we've got this!” Solene yelled.

Dorien lightly shook his head, exhaling with a sharp edge. “She’s weak. You can knock her down. Final Iron Head!” he hollered.

Odette slowly dove her hand back into her pocket, thumbing over Ange’s ball. She’d need to time this just right.

Excadrill let out a roar. It crouched before running forward.

“Solene, return!” Odette said suddenly.

Solene was absorbed back into her pokeball, only to quickly be replaced by the chandelure.

“No mercy, Ange!”

Ange manifested just before Excadrill's head made contact. It cried out in pain before scrambling backward. A blue flame took hold of its head; no matter how much it tried to fan it out, it was no use.

Gooooooooooood evening!” Ange shouted gleefully. He puffed out his cheeks, engulfing himself in a periwinkle flame that built until it shot forward and made direct contact with Excadrill’s face. It flew backward and hit the ground with a loud thud.

Odette could hear a deep breath Dorien sucked in as gasps echoed from her onlooking classmates. The tension filled the arena as Excadrill stumbled back to its feet, blue fire spreading up its arm.

“Can you still battle?” Dorien questioned evenly.

“Ex...ca,” Excadrill replied, resting its hand on the burn. It glared intently at Ange, before dipping into another round of Swords Dance.

Ange waved at the Excadrill before turning to look at Odette. “What're we doing?” he asked.

“It’s already burned, so it won’t hesitate to come at you again. It's powering up, so watch yourself, but take it down as quickly as you can. We don't need to see anything else it can do.” she said.
Yeah, getting hit by a ground attack would be bad news, I think.

Also, I just realized his team isn't shinies. Or at least he has one that isn't. Given how rich he is, it almost seems out of character for him to not have all shinies.

Ange nodded, then suddenly flew toward the mole Pokemon. Excadrill appeared to be caught off-guard by the sudden movement and dodged the oncoming blast of fire. They were soon trapped in a dance, Ange shooting flames left and right, while the Excadrill did what it could to avoid another burn. It was already struggling from the first one, and Odette knew it was only a matter of time before it couldn’t go on. Even if Ange couldn’t get another powerful hit, Excadrill was as good as out.

She watched as Excadrill ceased in its dodging to stare Ange down. Ange held its gaze, rocking slightly from side to side, waiting for retaliation. It crouched before running.

Iron Head. She recognized the pre-attack tic and settled to wait for the mole to jump for it.

But, she was wrong.

The ground began to rumble, and the force began to build intensity. Odette stared at the arena floor to find that fissures were beginning to form in the shiny finish.

"Earthquake..." she muttered. "Earthquake!" she alerted Ange.

Ange barely caught the warning before a pillar of rock shot from the floor. It would have pierced him, but he moved aside just in time.

As Odette held her arms out to her sides to keep her balance, a building sense of frustration rose in her. Her observation had been wrong. The stupid mole had constantly crouched before running in for an Iron Head, but that one time came the ace.

"Don't look so upset, Odie!" Dorien called to her over the intense rumble. "It just can't be helped that I'm one step ahead of you."

Those words sent a chill up her spine. She didn't know why, but it sounded like he was...threatening her?
Hmm... It does seem like there is perhaps some deeper implication at play, but I'm not sure what it would lead to later.

That chill was snuffed out by an angry heat. She gritted her teeth as she pointed toward Excadrill, still building the quake's magnitude.

"Shadow Ball! Shadow Ball, Shadow Ball, Shadow Ball!"

Her voice cracked under the force of her screaming. Ange shot her a worried glance, but she didn't register it. Not through the red she was seeing.

"Go. Now!"

"I don't like when you yell at me like that," Ange whined. Nonetheless, he charged forward, dodging pillar after pillar as he conjured a ball of darkness within his tendrils. He'd made it halfway across the arena without a hit, and it looked like he had a clear shot.

"But, I'm gonna win this," Ange declared as he reared back to shoot. "You two don't have anything on m--"

Shk. Shk. Shk. Shk. SHK.


Pillars upon pillars upon pillars. Shooting up from the ground, all entirely aimed at Ange. He had no chance to dodge any of them, and they all hit with such spot-on accuracy that it was unlike anything she had ever seen. This was only intensified by the shocked whispers echoing from the onlookers, which she could now hear because the rumbling had stopped entirely.

"Holy shit!"

"What magnitude was that? I've never seen such a dead aim!"

With a sharp exhale, Ange's shadow ball dissolved, and he fell over, out cold.

"A-Ange is down and unable to fight!" Mrs. Chuquete hollered. There was an air of shock in her voice that she didn't bother hiding.

Odette stared blankly at Ange's fainted body. Her mind was spinning so fast that she could not keep up with it. She'd gone completely numb, trying to make sense of what she'd just witnessed.

How did he...

She forced herself to look at him. Their eyes met, and he smiled. He fucking smiled.
Oh crap. :copyka:

Odette might be on track to lose if her anger gets the better of her!

But there was no light in his eyes. No crinkle in his cheeks. It was empty. It was downright bone-chilling how he could move his lips like that without it showing anywhere else on his face.

And as soon as it formed, it morphed into a frown. A very prominent one at that.

As if it were timed, Excadrill fell over. Its shallow breaths indicated it was in no condition to fight any longer.

"E...Excadrill is down and unable to fight?" Mrs. Chuquete called. Her confusion matched Odette's.

Odette hadn't known Earthquake to cause recoil damage like that. Then again, she hadn't seen such a powerful use of it like that before. Maybe once it reached such an intense magnitude, the 'mon got affected as well?

Or, perhaps...

In a swift motion, Dorien recalled Excadrill. He wordlessly pocketed the ball, then tossed out the next.

“Conkeldurr, I have some fresh meat for you,” he said darkly as the large Pokemon manifested from its ball.

What? Odette thought frantically.

Conkeldurr stood there, drool dripping from its mouth and drilling to the ground. It scraped its feet against the polished floor, clanked its two rocks together, then charged.

Odette didn't quite realize what that thing could have possibly been moving to attack until she realized that, in her haze, she hadn't recalled Ange.

It was going for Ange. Ange was out. Why would it--?
Weird. I'm starting to think Dorien feeds his min sacrilege to boost their battle performance and it has drawbacks causing his mon to faint. If that's what's going on, Dorien is most definitely NOT boyfriend material! :wowzard:

Without thinking, she pulled him back and threw out the first ball her hand landed on in her pocket.

"Attack! I don't care what you do, just beat it the fuck up!"

She pressed down on the release button. With a flash of light, Loïc manifested with his claws ready.

"KkkkkkkkkYUUU!" he spat. There was no hesitation as he sprung forward and landed scratch after scratch on Conkeldurr. Loïc played as rough as he could--going for the face, the neck, the stomach. He zigged and zagged around Conkeldurr, going at a speed that made it hard for it to land a hit on him.

Grinding her teeth and trying to steady her breathing, Odette watched the battle intently. Not who her first choice would have been, but it was a welcome one. It was an advantageous matchup. Why Dorien would send out a damn fighting type against her was beyond her frame of logic. With a team that was majorly made up of fairy types, and even one psychic, that was asking for a loss. Loïc clearly held the upper hand and moved much faster too. Conkeldurr was already starting to look really tired. The drool was coming in waves now, and it was blinking slowly--

Wham!

In a burst of speed Odette would have never expected from a conkeldurr, it whipped around to face Loïc and slammed one of its rocks down on top of him. The world stood still for a moment, and all that could be heard were gasps from the other students.

"Loïc!" Odette screamed. Her lips curled back over her teeth, and she glared daggers at Dorien. "You motherfu--"

A shadow shot out from under the stone. It looped up behind Conkeldurr, and a large clawed hand rose from it. With a heavy swipe, Conkeldurr flew into a wall with a loud crash. It hit the floor, unmoving, as Loïc rose up from the floor. His head was flopped over like it'd been broken, but he looked unscathed.

"Conkeldurr is down and unable to fight!"
Hmm... This battle is too easy so far. I get the feeling his next mon with completely ruin her. If she wins it will be barely.

"Okay!" Loïc squeaked. He scurried back toward Odette, who was quick to kneel down to his height. She held her hands out to him, and he sat right between them.

"Good fucking gods," she said in a huff. "I thought he got you."
I've got a request. Can you add the following?

Loïc nudged against Odette's face. "Is fine. Am good."​

Or something like that. I just feel like we need another Loic line in here!

Her breathing was rapid, she could hear her heartbeat in her ears, and she felt tears prickling the corners of her eyes. That was the most jarring thing--she wasn't a crier; she'd never been a crier. But the level of frustration she was feeling was something she couldn't quite contain. Nothing about this battle was making sense anymore.

How was his Earthquake so powerful? Why did Conkeldurr go for Ange like that? Why did he even send out a conkeldurr in the first place?

The battle was still going on, so she had no time to sit and dwell on it. She didn't feel in the right mindset to be either, with the way her anger meshed with her conscious thought, leaving her on the verge of damn tears. Absolutely pathetic.

As she tried to reel herself in and get back into the game, her conversation with Noel decided to rear its head.

The wealthy, plus shinies...sounds like some shiny trade bullshit.

Dorien was in the shiny trade. Shinies were the ones showing up in sacrilege cases the most. Sacrilege had exploded onto the battle scene and had caused some Pokemon to do some...horrid things. Like eating their opponents and displaying unnatural levels of power.

"Hm. Conkeldurr's one of my best 'mon. But, I suppose those type matchups do weigh in sometimes."

Odette blinked a few times, keeping her eyes on Loïc.

If Dorien were involved in the shiny trade, it wouldn't be farfetched to say he's had run-ins with sacrilege. In the case of what she'd just witnessed, it was almost certain he could be giving it to his Pokemon.
Sacrilege seems a little similar to the concept of shadow Pokemon from coliseum. I wonder if there is any connection to that?

"We fight?" Loïc asked.

Odette allowed the thought to linger before she shook her head.

"It's down to you and Solene. You're locked in because I threw you out, and Sol's already taken a slight beating. I need you to focus, alright?" she said firmly.

Loïc averted his eyes for a split second, then looked back at her.

"Pecha," he whispered.

"I'll give you five pecha berries if you can one-shot Shadow Claw this next one," she said. "I know we've worked on it a lot, so I trust you can do it."

Loïc hopped up and down a few times in joy before turning back toward the battle. Odette looked up in time to see Dorien pulling his last ball out of his jacket pocket. He popped it open, and with a loud roar, a ferrothorn took form.

“Ferrothorn,” Dorien said. “Your turn."

Ferrothorn didn't look particularly threatening. No drool, no signs of overpowering. At least from what she could see. But that still didn't make her feel any better. It was still a partial steel type. Not only could it take Loïc out, but it also wouldn't take much damage from Solene, and she was already in a damaged state.

Odette needed to take this slow. She couldn't rush into an attack again because that was how she lost Ange.
Yeah, this seems like it will be hard, but since it doesn't seem to be using sacrilege, I think Odette will win, but Loic is going to fall.

She stood up and sucked in a deep breath.

"Heavy Slam," Dorien said coldly.

"Substitute," Odette declared.

Loïc reached under his cloak and withdrew a battered pokedoll, which he threw forward. As the doll hit the floor, a beam of purple light manifested between it and Loïc, and Ferrothorn reared up and slam down on it. It didn't budge.

"Swords Dance," Odette said again.

"Break that Substitute," Dorien urged.

Ferrothorn flew forward with another slam as Loïc raised his hands and spun around. A light purple glow took over his tiny body, and he suddenly looked more energized.

"Now Bulk Up," she said.

She heard Dorien inhale sharply. "Ferrothorn, break the damn sub." He truly sounded frustrated.

Good. It was his turn to be.
This will likely get Loic to get some good damage in before falling.

Ferrothorn launched one more attack on the doll, and Loïc inhaled a loud breath. The glow that surrounded him got brighter just as the doll burst under the force of Ferrothorn's attack.

"You better knock him out!" Dorien commanded. "Again!"

"Shadow Claw, Loïc!" Odette yelled over him.

Loïc charged forward, bringing up his shadowy hands, which gradually grew in size. Ferrothorn launched upward again, growling with the intent to win it all. As it fell back toward the ground, it rolled out of the way Loïc.
Not sure what is happening in this last line, but I think you are missing 'of' right before Loic at the end.

He quickly righted himself and landed the clawed attack, and Ferrothorn skidded backward toward Dorien under the force of the hit.

"Good shit, Loïc."

"Iron Head," Dorien growled.

Odette's blood ran cold, but she decided to ignore it for now. "Beat him back. You can do it."

Ferrothorn drove itself forward without a warning, and Loïc did the same. Claws outstretched, Loïc managed to get the hit off. He performed a rapid maneuver, ducking under Ferrothorn's raised body, and slashed it again against the back.

"Nice!" Odette cheered.

Ferrothorn skidded backward, cringing through the damage. Just when it looked like it wouldn't continue, it flew forward again and retaliated with a violent headbutt that sent Loïc flying.

Down and out.

"Loïc is down and unable to fight!"
Alright, now Solene can hopefully clean it up from here.

Clearly, she'd celebrated too early. She'd known Loïc was most likely going down in that matchup, but she wasn't through yet.

She shot a glare at Ferrothorn. It was panting. It was still cringing. Loïc had definitely dealt some damage to it. They were on the last legs.

I'm not going to let you fucking win.

She pulled Loïc back and sent Solene forward. Solene blinked a few times, looking surprised that she'd been called out again. She visibly stiffened when she saw Ferrothorn, then sent a frantic look back at Odette.

"Wha--" she gasped. "What happ--"

Odette shook her head, effectively silencing her. "Heal Pulse. Stay alert for incoming attacks."

Solene paused, but she soon nodded. A pink glow immediately surrounded her, and she closed her eyes as she hung her head and began to mutter under her breath.

"Knock Off," Dorien commanded.

Odette bristled. "Watch it, Sol!"

Solene's eyes snapped open, and she rolled aside. Ferrothorn bounced off the floor as it attempted to make contact, and it stumbled backward, unable to right itself due to how weak it had become.

That was the opening.

"Psychic! Don't hesitate!"

Solene held her hands in front of her, and a ball of pink light manifested in her hands. In a single wave of her arms, the ball expanded into a beam and struck Ferrothorn, sending it back again. It shook off the attack, and in what looked to be a final burst of energy, it ran at Solene.

"Psychic! One more time!"

"Knock. Off!"

Boom.

The beam struck Ferrothorn. Solene was pushed backward. Both Pokemon were down.

However, after the tensest couple of seconds Odette had felt in a very long time, Solene raised her head.

Ferrothorn did not move.
Dang. That didn't feel like much of a win for Odette, but at least it was still technically a win. As for the battle itself, well done! If the other battles in your fic are around this level, I'd say your fic handles them very well!

Battle over! The winner, by one Pokemon, is Odette!” Mrs. Chuquete said. Applause from the class followed.

Odette let loose a shaky breath. She didn't realize she was trembling until she raised her hand to wipe sweat from her forehead. With the other, she recalled Solene.

“Great battle, Odette!” Dorien said. “You're proof that type matchups are just a small part of the game, huh?"

She cut her gaze to him just in time to see him sauntering over with a happy-go-lucky grin. As if nothing had happened. As if everything about that battle was perfectly normal.

He held his hand out to shake, but she didn’t accept it. Instead, she stared him in the face. Scanning, hunting for remnants of that hostility. That darkness. But it was gone. He was back to cocky, spoiled smiles. Acting like everything was okay. Back to thinking they were probably still flirting.

Odette turned, leaving him with his hand outstretched, and speed-walked back toward the bleachers.

Absolutely remarkable work, you two,” Mrs. Chuquete said as Odette approached. “That might have been the most exciting battle I've seen in this class for a long time!"

Odette brushed past her, ignoring the praise as she clamored up the bleachers to where she’d been sitting. She quickly shouldered her bag, then rushed back down, skipping steps as she went, before beelining for the doors. She avoided making eye contact with Dorien again as she passed him.

“Odette! Where are you going?” Mrs. Chuquete yelled after her.

“Bathroom. I’ll be back,” she replied, the words coming out in a rapid-fire slur. She was out in the hall after that.

That wasn’t necessarily a lie. She was headed to the bathroom. But the latter part was still up in the air. She wasn’t sure if she could sit through the rest of the class with Dorien in there, knowing what she thought she knew.
She's probably right about it too. :eyes:

She was thankful to find that all the stalls were empty upon kicking open the door to the girl's room. She rushed to one of the sinks and threw her bag on the countertop. She then leaned against it, allowing her head to dangle and giving herself a chance to come down from wherever the hell her head was.

She couldn’t even bring herself to bask in her victory. She was far too worked up about everything else that had happened. From the conversation beforehand to the battle itself, to how he was just...perfectly fine afterward. Well, as perfectly fine as he could be. There was something very wrong with him.

He had to be drugging his 'mon. That wasn't paranoia, was it? It couldn't have been. There was something very wrong with those Pokemon, too.

She lifted her head to stare at her reflection, watching herself take deep, steady breaths. Slowly but surely, her heart slowed, and her brain stopped spinning.

Maybe she wouldn’t go back to class. It was her last one for the day, anyway. She could say she had a bout of sickness and had to go home. Chuquete had a soft spot for the illness stories, and Odette knew she could pull it off well.

She also knew she didn’t want to be in there. She didn’t want to be in the building. Every fiber of her being was screaming at her to run.

So, she supposed it would be a good time for her to visit her grandfather instead.
Understandable.

Closing thoughts:
As long as the chapter was, it read a bit faster than I was expecting. Not bad at all! Battle was excellent and the stuff about sacrilege was very interesting.

All around a great chapter. I look forward to reading the next! :veelove:
 
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