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Chapter 32 - Again

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.20900

Chapter 32: Again
CWs: Sexual assault, gore
Odette learned, what could have been a century ago, that the awareness of assault arrived like a shower in hot tar. A burning pin in the middle of the crown that slowly but surely crawled down the head, face, shoulders, chest. Before you knew it, it was all over you; a slimy, scalding filth that couldn’t be washed off no matter how hard you scrubbed.

In her newest cocoon, all was suspended. Seconds no longer moved, things around her no longer had voices, nerves were dulled into a harsh numbness, the type that made victims squirm. The only thing strong enough to break through was that burn below her belt. She didn’t know what she was supposed to do with it, but she did know that she wanted nothing more than to run away from it.

She couldn’t find it in herself to move. She’d returned to the alcove and couldn’t get out. Lips and hands she never consciously consented to held her down. They left marks, took on fistfuls of her precious skin, pulled on her zipper, left her indecent. Again.

Nausea rocked her back into awareness. She would have let it have its way with her, again, did she not find herself looking up at the ceiling of a car. The sacrilegious gauze around her brain made taking in her surroundings difficult, but not impossible.

A nice car. Not luxury, but nice. A coiled ginger head peeking up over the head rest of the driver’s seat, joined by angular, freckled cheekbones. He was speeding. She didn’t know how she knew that; she could just tell.

“How much do you think he gave her?” he said. His thick Germanic accent was murky in her ears but still comfortably familiar.

“He must have put an obscene dosage in there. She took one sip; I watched her.” She felt Val’s voice rumbling in the small of her back, just as her anger usually did when a drug wasn’t presumably muting it. They could have been two of a kind. His tone was working at the exact same intensity.

“You watched her drink a spiked drink?” the driver asked.

Even with her head in his lap, Odette could see that Val’s glare was homicidal, with intent to disfigure, disembowel, and dismember. “Maxence, with every ounce of my respect for you, if I could sucker punch you in the face right now, I would,” he menaced, a spidering crack in a crystalline glass. “Obviously I wouldn’t have let her fucking drink it if I thought for even half a second that it was drugged! This was an open Enigma party; there wasn’t supposed to be any free-for-all Sacrilege on the premises. That’s why the Board agreed to let her go in the first place!”

Max’s over-the-shoulder leer was a potent one. I’ll remember that for when we get through this, it said. He exhaled slowly as his otherworldly patience took the reins on his demeanor.

“You need to tell me where we’re going. Hospital or home?”

An arrow of clarity tore clear through her core. Clammy hands grasped Val’s sleeve for dear life.

“Val,” she whined. His polemical expression settled into something akin to a ragged, overwhelmed service worker trying to keep their cool.

“Yes, Sweetness, what is it?” His palms felt cool against her burning cheek. Her hands moved to grab at his wrists instead, trying to find reprieve in his touch.

“No hospital,” she said. “I want to go home. My home.”

He pushed some of her dampened bangs out of her face while his lips quivered down to a tight grimace.

“If Dorien goes looking for you, that’s the first place he’ll go. I’m so sorry, but we can’t risk that.”

She could finally feel her panic again. She didn’t know whether that was a good thing or not. “I want my team. I want my family. I want Noel.” She sniffled, feeling a burn in the corners of her eyes. “I still can’t hear Odile.”

“I know, Sweetness, I know. We’ll get you to my place and we can figure out what to do when this is out of your system. I don’t know how much he gave you, but it shouldn’t be enough to last more than a couple hours,” he said.

A couple hours. A couple hours of sitting in her own filthy heat, repeatedly being pushed back to that alcove where Dorien explored her without a sober yes. Being unable to hear or even feel Odile. She’d promised that she would handle things if they got out of hand. If she could have, she would have. So why didn’t she?

“I can’t hear her,” Odette sobbed. “She was supposed to help. She couldn’t help.” Val brushed her tears back with his thumbs.

“It’s probably the drug. Dorien’s reactions to sacrilege were always far more visceral than anybody else’s I’ve seen. I don’t know for sure, but I would bet everything that it's correlated.”

He didn’t want her to have that line of defense. He wanted to render her completely powerless. Again.

Again. It was happening again.

She couldn’t stop it. It all came rushing back, clear as the wretched day it all happened.

~+~​

"Do you want us to go with you? Morale or whatever?" Noel said.

“I have plenty of pieces of my mind to give,” Acadia agreed.

Her first instinct was to shout “Yes!” The thought of being alone with Professor Deschamps made her restless. It was bad enough having to listen to him lecture about her favorite subject, especially when he was giving her his asshole reasons for grading her so low. Without the buffer of her other classmates, it was a whole new frontier she was hesitant to explore.

But she knew better. If Noel and Acadia were there, he wouldn’t take off his mask. He’d keep his gas light running. He’d act like he had no idea what she was talking about, like he tended to when she called him out during class, or tried to reason with him at the end. No, unfortunately, this was a battle she had to take on alone if she wanted to see it won.

“That’s going to defeat the whole point,” she sighed. She’d begun to rub her arms, as if that would sand down the anxious goosebumps percolating just beneath the fabric of her jacket. “Can you hold my bag, though? I don't want to have anything in my hand that I can break his teeth with. I also don’t trust Ange or Isaur to not come out and wreck the auditorium.”

She would give it five minutes. Just long enough to wear him down enough to admit to what an asshole he was. Then she could take that as the “proof” the Dean of Students needed to reprimand him. Hopefully he’d let her hold off on this course until another professor was available to teach it. Maybe petition to revoke his tenure and finally fire him. The girls of her class would certainly come after her with torches and pitchforks—it thoroughly disgusted her how much they liked him—but until they were all being wrongfully handed D’s and F’s for aced assignments, they could take their weird obsession and shove it down their no-taste throats.

"Okay...if you're sure. I'll be right outside the auditorium. We'll all go get lunch at Honey Gather after," Acadia said.

Noel smiled and flashed a thumb. “Give him hell.”

She planned to. And then some. She wasn’t going to let his bizarre vendetta against her be the one thing holding her back from graduating with honors; entering the theater scene with the accolades she deserved. She was good. She had an above average range and she’d worked her entire ass off to get to a point where she could hit complex dance counts without losing a single breath to an equally complex phrase. That was impressive. Plenty of instructors before Deschamps had said so. Of course, she’d gotten her fair share of criticism—she wasn’t pigheaded enough to think her performance chops were completely infallible, nobody’s were—but nothing like Deschamps’.

Odette, I’m starting to think you’ve never read this material. You’re completely missing the point of the lyrics.

She’d studied the musical, Sweeney Todd, an all-time favorite of hers, cover to cover.

Belting really isn’t your strong suit, huh?

In her class just before, her professor had used her as an example of, quote, “a roaring powerhouse” and “how a good belt is supposed to sound.”

You dance like a newborn deerling. Who taught you?

When she retorted that she, Noel, and Acadia had gone to the same dance instructor for over a decade, he gave her a condescending tut, shook his head, and laughed to himself. Well, Noel and Acadia were clearly in class much more than you were.

Some people are born to be Momma Rose. Others,
he’d made hard eye contact with her when he said it, are just made for the ensemble.

She hadn’t wanted to hit somebody in a very, very long time. That day, she thought about the sounds his bones would make were she to run him over with her motorcycle hitting the top of its odometer.

Fleurrh University’s auditorium used to be a source of inspiration. A calling for what was to come in her life; her name soon in lights as she toured headlining the biggest shows in the world. Now, it was shrouded in a miasmatic smog, brought upon by her one and only wretched Musical Theater Mastery professor. He was exactly where he usually was during his office hours; at his stupid little makeshift desk, down stage left. He had a classroom, but it was as he liked to say, in a wistful breath that made her classmates swoon and her stomach rock: “I feel most at home here!”

He didn’t look up when she approached, a move that had something hot burning in her lower back. That was a sensation she welcomed back like an old toxic frenemy. She hadn’t felt it in a long while. Her therapist would be ashamed. This man really brought the primordial worst out of her.

When she cleared her throat, he only offered her a short glance from over the thin rim of his rounded glasses. Those brown eyes of his made her grind her teeth as she thought about poking them out with a sharpened pencil.

“Miss Odette.” He was annoyed to see her, as if she was inconveniencing him. He shuffled whatever bullshit papers were sprawled across his bullshit desk. “How can I help you today?”

“I want to talk to you about my grade.”

He huffed expectantly, leaning back in his too-small chair to cross his arms over his tacky red tie. It suited him. It went well with his ugly gelled hairstyle and his ugly chocolate-colored getup.

“Oh?” He might as well have been talking to a yippy crusty-eyed purse dog. He looked at her with no more dignity than one. “What about it?”

She couldn’t stifle her hard laugh. It wasn’t the most professional thing, but she couldn’t say she gave a fuck. “Uh. I’m failing? And I really don’t think I should be.”

He adjusted his glasses. Scrutinizing her. She wished she had her bag so she could try to break his teeth. “Why do you say that?”

It was probably nearing five minutes. She could tell by her waning patience. “Deschamps, I’m good,” she blurted. Months of unfair classes finally poured over her tongue. “I already have agents interested, I’m lined up for three real auditions, I’ve been doing this since I was six and haven’t gotten half the critiques you’ve given me before. What did I do to you?”

“I don’t have the faintest idea what you’re on about.”

That burn at the base of her spine screamed. For the first time in as long as she could remember, her cool stumbled and fell.

"I know for a fact I don't deserve the grades you've been giving me. That last test? Margot forgot her routine mid-way and I didn't miss one fucking beat. You gave her an A and I got a D. You and I both know it's all bullshit."

Odette sensed the regret before she felt it. She knew the moment she resolved to approach Deschamps and fight him for her grade—and perhaps whatever was left of her dignity—that she needed to be smart about it. Cursing at him right off the bat was hardly being smart. She could hear her therapist’s voice, an old ghost residing in the back of her mind. Anger isn’t a bad emotion to have. It reminds us that we’re human. But sometimes, you need to watch when you use it.

Before it could swallow her whole, Deschamps stood. She tensed when she saw the sparkle in his eye, the awe in his smirk. A bait, taken.

“How badly do you want to make it in this business?” he asked. Odette squinted, unsure if it was rhetorical. He left it open just long enough for her to realize it wasn’t, and her anger propelled her forward.

“Don’t ask stupid questions. I wouldn’t be here if it were anything less than very badly.”

Deschamps laughed with the most humor he’d ever directed toward her. She wanted to see it as a good sign, but all it did was exponentially grow her discomfort. Everything about him did. He crafted such an amicable demeanor that everyone, even Noel and Acadia at first, seemed to inhale like a Michelin-starred meal. But there was something about it that was just an iota off to her; just ever-so-slightly rotten. She didn’t know what it was, but she knew it was there. It was the whole reason she didn’t want to take his class; why she was prepared to hold off graduating until somebody else offered Musical Theater Mastery. Then the Dean of Students convinced her it was all in her head. Now he needed “proof” that it wasn’t.

“I like you a lot,” Deschamps mused, wagging a finger at her. She wished Ange were here to burn it down to a stump. “You’re feisty. Never had one like you in my class.”

“You sure as fuck don’t act like it.”

That awe bloomed across his face. What, did he want her to get this pissed off? Why?

“Look, Odette.” He was walking toward her now. Each tap of his loafers against the polished wood of the stage made her soul shrivel into itself. “You are pretty good. And I like how confident you are in that. I can tell how much this means to you, all of it, so how about this…”

Tap, tap, tap. He stopped before her, hands in his pockets, brow cocked like he was certain he had baited her instead.

“I’ll raise your grade. I’ll even guarantee you an agent—I’m extremely well-connected, see—and access to more exclusive auditions. In exchange, I just ask that you do a couple things for me.”

The change in his tone raised her hackles. Like everything about him, it was just an atom off. Just enough that it dropped the temperature in the already freezing theater to absolute zero.

She stepped back without realizing it. “Like what?”

“Just a few things. Here and there.” Now he was close. Way too close. She was becoming far too aware of just how much taller he was than her. She hadn’t noticed until that moment, when she nearly snapped her own neck to stare up into eyes that had gone completely dark. “We can begin now, if you’re interested in getting a head start.”

She noticed the Lustful coil in his lips just before he ensnared her wrist. His lips lunged down to hers as he dragged her hand to the front of his trousers. A swell of adrenaline exploded through the top of her head as she wrenched herself away from him, too stunned to speak at first

“Woah, woah, woah,” was all she could say. Horrified astonishment mutated into a broiling rage that she could feel roaring into every obscured nook in her body. “You are absolutely fucking derranged if you think I’m sleeping with you.”

To her terror, he didn’t look deterred in the slightest, only following her as she fled. “No. I’m just realistic. You want to make it, don’t you? To up your grade?”

“Not like that! Never like that!” He reached for her again, just a half a second too slow. “Don’t fucking touch me!”

I’m gonna make this motherfucker’s life hell, she thought. This was far more proof than she wanted to bring to the Dean, but surely it would guarantee revoked tenure. Blackmailing students into fucking him by tanking their grade was hardly best-performing-arts-school-in-Kalos worthy. That was, of course, assuming her grandfather didn’t lock him in a cell and give the key to Toulouse to melt first.

She turned to flee this hellish auditorium, certain that she was never going to return. Whether she came back to the school at all would remain to be seen. There was an emergency exit just backstage; it’d be a lot quicker than trying to go back the way she came.

Deschamps, unfortunately, read her movements like he would one of his stupid playbooks. Her heart launched into her throat, fired from a cannon. She couldn’t breathe through his arms, latching her body to his chest while his unconsenting hands took the liberty of exploring her. She felt his nose against her hair, his chest rising and falling as he took in a deep whiff. She suddenly had no voice; lost to a debilitating jolt of shock.

“C’mon,” he said into her ear. His breath felt slimy against her cheek, but it was nothing compared to his hands. They were a plague, inundating the parts of her that she’d yet to welcome a single soul into.

“You’ll never get anywhere unless you do things like this, Odette.”

The scream that got caught on her stalling fight-or-flight reflexes finally broke free, along with her will—her need—to fight for her life.

“I SAID DON’T TOUCH ME!”

It happened in a single fluid motion. His malign hold on her broke away. A ripe pain blossomed over her palm as it made dead contact with his jaw. He reeled back. She froze.

She wished she hadn’t froze. How she wished she hadn’t froze.

The tiny speck of blood that trickled from the corner of his mouth would have brought her the utmost satisfaction, had he not turned to her with a very honest, very real intent to maim. She knew in her heart of hearts that those eyes, dark as the fear that bottomed out on her stomach, were going to haunt her for the rest of her life.

"Oh. You're going to regret that."

Like a blitzle before a hungry pyroar, she bolted.

There were two things she was certain of: he was chasing her and she needed to get away, and the emergency exit was three quarters up the upstage wall. She knew exactly where it was; how fast she’d need to run to get to it before he caught up. She’d passed it enough times to make note— "Always make note of your emergency exits,” Grandpa said more times than she could count—but she never figured she’d really have to remember.

Things like this didn’t happen to people like her. She’d had a rough enough go of it. More hospital stays than she could count in her twenty-one years, hopping primary schools due to her uncontrollable anger problems, the works. Then she found dance, singing, her friends, Pokemon training, and she thought the worst was behind her. Hadn’t the universe toyed with her enough?

She’d played roles like this in the many shows she’d been cast in over the years, but not once did it ever occur to her that this kind of fiction could leap the fourth wall right into her own already-tumultuous life.

She brushed the border curtain as she ran past it. Deschamp’s breaths, sounding closer to growls to her, were right at her heels. A costume rack streaked by. Then the hole in the wall, the one maintenance was taking their sweet time to patch after dealing with the leak inside it. She nearly tripped on the extra piping they left out; the fucking lazy assholes. Then the glowing Exit sign; a beacon.

A beacon that was just a moment out of reach.

Deschamps grabbed her wrist so hard that she cried out. There wasn’t enough time for the understanding of true doom to hail upon her. Not before her head slammed into the brick, knocking the consciousness clean out of her.

Somewhere in the sea of blissful nonexistence, there was a dim awareness of what was happening to her. It was a smothered awareness, but awareness nonetheless. With it came the ultimate desire that she never wake again. Let herself never know the pain of what it was like to be violated. She couldn’t take it.

As she learned in life, most of her prayers usually went unanswered. This one was no exception.

Blinking the haze from her tearful eyes, Odette found herself standing. Her joggers were in tatters, hanging around her ankles by thin strips of fabric and fraying threads. Her jacket was gone. Her shirt had only just fallen back into place from where it was bunched around her collarbone. She shook with the pain she felt in her limbs, her neck. She tried to ignore the ache between her legs, fully aware that it was no use. It would never truly leave her, not tomorrow, not a year from now, not even a decade from now. She’d been forever tainted, she knew. Yet somehow, that wasn’t the worst of it.

She noticed the blood on her hands before she saw the pipe clasped between her trembling hands. Splattered up her arms, bruised beyond belief already, reaching her chest. She felt it on her face, around her lips. For a moment she thought it was her own. The end of the pipe, coated in an unhealthy helping of bilious pink blobs and so much more blood, pointed to the actual culprit.

The only way for one to have known the body on the floor was Deschamps was his chocolate suit. The ensemble Odette found so ugly now looked infinitely more so, with his nethers exposed through his open fly and his own brain matter splattered across the shoulderpads. There wasn’t enough of his head left to identify him otherwise. His neck now ended in a puddle of mashed gore that was slowly seeping over the wood.

Her first coherent thought was good. The next one was when did this happen? Followed by oh no.

Then she screamed.

~+~​

The scream transcended her past and arrived in the present along with the rest of her. Odette returned to her blackened mind with an even harsher reminder that autonomy was far too much for somebody like her to ask for. Her flesh belonged to others; Florent, Deschamps, now Dorien, even Odile, wherever she was. She killed Deschamps when it was too late. She couldn’t kill Dorien without butchering her one lead to Florent. And Odile...well, that was more complicated. At least Odile gave her a choice when she could. But when she didn’t, it was for a bigger, more dangerous reason.

Odette understood at that moment that she missed Odile. A lot. Her head, especially now, was a horrifying place to be without the Wrath entity there to light it up and give her the mental companionship that she so desperately needed. It had indeed become the new normal, and in the excruciating minutes without her, she wanted that normal back.

All she could do was sob. Sob, hyperventilate, repeat. Keeping it together was no longer in the cards.

“Max, stop the car.”

The G-force of the moving vehicle faded to a skilled quick brake. Val opening the back door to the chilly woodland that bordered whatever highway they were racing down was a reminder of just how stuffy the car was. With energy she didn’t realize she had, not at all matching how deeply her vision was swimming, she was up and sprinting into the treeline with Val at her heels, Max not far behind.

The burst didn’t last very long. She had to stop, doubling over with her hands on her knees while her stomach threatened to lose whatever was left in it. Her wailing was only goading it closer and closer to going through with it.

There was a hand on her back, a calming voice in her ear. “If you need to throw up, don’t hold it. It’ll help purge your system faster.”

She imagined herself responding; maybe an “Okay” or a “Thanks.” But she just continued to cry. There was no getting a hold of herself. Nothing of hers belonged to her; not anymore. It was all so far out of reach and there was nothing left to do to catch it. It hurt. It angered her.

No. It infuriated her.

The onslaught of rage that overtook her wasn’t just an assault. It was a complete declaration of war. Every muscle in her body stretched taut to near distension as she shrieked months—years—of torment right into the grass. Her physical form longed for the scratchy embrace of the dirt but her broken soul forced it onward. It was an unwilling vessel for the rush of pressure that finally found release.

She wanted to leave again. She wanted to float up to the branches, or perhaps something a little further, like outer space, and watch the mess play out from that safe distance. But something, not Val’s hand, not his voice, not the occasional sound of a car cruising by, held her in place. It was a dull heat, deep in the pit of the small of her back. The moment she noticed it, it flared into something that was uncomfortable, then unbearable. White, hot, excruciating.

When she screamed again, it wasn’t just her.

Her body pulled taut involuntarily as a brilliant, fiery light erupted from her skin, traced down to the hell she’d just sunk to. It washed out the dreary blacks and blues with vibrant, scorching hues of orange, red, and yellow. She tensed her already-flexed muscles in anticipation for a continuation of the scalding burn that never arrived. It was hot, but not painfully so. In fact, she found reprieve from her anguish in it, like a lively fire amidst a raging blizzard. There was just a short second where she felt okay. Comforted, even. She felt like she was receiving a hug from a person she needed a hug from most.

Then it was gone, along with the final drop of adrenaline that was keeping her awake. As darkness regained its reign over the woods, it overtook her too, dropping her into a very long overdue slumber.

The last thing she felt was not one, not two, but three sets of hands catching her.
 
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Chapter 33 - I'm Going To Be Okay New

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.20900

Chapter 33: I'm Going To Be Okay
CWs: Vomiting, talk of suicide

A sterile bathroom she didn’t recognize. A toilet that reeked of stomach acid and half-digested cake pops, the only thing between her and the cold tile floor. A stomach that wouldn’t settle. A hand holding her hair back.

Sweat flooded into Odette’s pores and gathered beneath the tight fabric of her dress and the hair clinging to her face; an unpleasant reminder of her struggle. Her nails dug into the plastic toilet seat with such ferocity that they bent. Another gag tightened around her esophagus and spilled saliva over her tongue long before she realized she’d started to vomit again. There shouldn’t have been anything left for her to expel, yet it came in a relentless tidal wave.

She heard Val through her coughing. “I’m right here.” She felt his fingers readjust around their grip on her disheveled hair. “It’s going to be okay. It’ll pass soon, I promise. I’m with you.”

She could only bestow so many screaming malisons or sob through so many declarations of “my stomach hurts,” and “I want to die” before they all began to bleed together. Even when she attempted to catch her heaving breaths, she found no pause. No respite.

“Odette, breathe,” Val encouraged. “You need to stop hyperventilating.”

“I can’t,” she cried. “I can’t. I can’t. I want to die.

The abrupt reply didn’t come from Val.

“No you fucking don’t.”

Odette gasped with whatever breath she could gather together, pulling her face just far enough out of the toilet to see her own doppelganger’s beautifully horrific glare.

“Stop talking like that. That’s some bullshit quitter talk, and I know you’re not a quitter.”

Forgetting her discomfort for a short blissful moment, she smiled.

“Odile…” she said in her tearful, dazed warble. “I missed you.”

Another hand landed on her opposite shoulder. Still not Val’s. Not Odile’s, either.

“You can’t die. I won’t allow it.”

Tension pulled her taut again. Unlike the discomfort or terror it typically came with, a sprinkling of hope dusted over her instead. She didn’t want to turn toward the voice, afraid that what she was hearing was just a nightmarish hallucination there to kick a broken girl while she was at her lowest. But she needed to know. She wanted more than anything to see his face.

Unlike her, Noel had the skill to be a pretty crier. With his flushed, textureless cheeks and gleaming amber eyes and sad grin of the best-kept teeth in Kalos, he was beautiful. Even more so, having been so certain she was never going to see him again, not even in a dream.

He squeezed her with that Noel-brand affection she knew, loved, and longed for. “I’m here now,” he said. “So, shut up with that nonsense, please? You’re going to be okay.”

No further words were needed. His presence alone was enough to melt her back into a state of relaxed solace, something she thought impossible just a second ago.

He’s here now.

They’re all here now.


It was suddenly as if she never knew pain.

“I’m gonna be okay.”

~+~

When she woke, she knew she was safe. There was nothing to run from, or scream at, or meticulously think her way out of. There was just the comfort of the thick blanket draped over her and the decadent mush of the pillow that cradled her head. Seriously, what was it made out of? She wanted ten of them.

Shaking the sleep off was a chore, but one that she took slowly. She’d been nonstop for months, not realizing how badly she needed the rest until she was coming out of it. She owed it to herself to enjoy the respite that she’d convinced herself was long gone.

I’m gonna be okay, she remembered. And she did feel okay. Despite where she’d been, what the past weeks had brought her on a rusty spiked platter of fucking bullshit, she felt held. Maybe it was just the bed—gods, was it comfy. Comfier than her own by a mile—but she’d take it.

“Hey,” greeted a voice that sounded like how a good pastry tasted. “Sleeping gorgeous returns to us.”

Odette’s eyes fluttered open. She, thankfully, wasn’t blinded by the dim light of her accommodation. Not that she could be; she was blind to begin with. She reached up to rub her eyes, groaning in annoyance while the voice, belonging to the moving blob before her, uttered a shrill, “Oh, wait!” It shuffled a little, then her glasses were in her hand.

With the clarity of her lenses came a lot to take in. The room was, at first glance, top-of-the-line luxury. Definitely not something she could afford to stay or live in on her own. She couldn’t be assed to observe it much when all her attention was pinned to Noel, lying beside her well within her arm’s reach.

He’d been there for a while. The depth at which he’d nestled himself beneath the blanket and the dogeared coding book he’d left in his lap indicated a coziness that only came with a few hours of lazing. The gentle smile on his face showed no hint of the acrimony she’d last seen him in the waking world with.

Her arms wobbled under her weight as she pushed herself up to gawk at him, trying to gauge what kind of mirage this was. She felt corporeal, she felt conscious, she felt rested, she dared to admit. There wasn’t enough exhaustion left to make her hallucinate as far as she could tell.

He sat up with her, shrugging on a little more solemnity as he took her hand. He felt as real as the mattress beneath her backside and the satin pajamas she wore.

“It’s okay, don’t freak out. We’re just in—”

She didn’t bother to let him finish. Her vise-like hug took all the precedence, nearly knocking him backward with the sheer intensity behind it. His laugh laid the remaining unease down, and his returning embrace, as impassioned as hers, effectively smothered it. Still, she sobbed. Probably soaked his shoulder almost immediately.

“I’m sorry,” she wept. “I’m so sorry. I—”

Noel was also crying now, drenching her neck. Never had tears been so welcome. “No. I’m sorry. Sorry doesn’t—”

“—said so many things I didn’t mean, I was just so angry and—”

“—even cut it. I was overwhelmed and acting like a jackass; I just—”

“—you didn’t deserve it; I was being such an asshole, to you and Acadia, and—”

“—hated seeing you like that, and I hated lying to our friend, but I get—”

"—I hope you know I didn’t mean anything I said, I was talking out of my stupid ass—”

“—why we had to. And what I said was…awful, and I regretted it immediately—”

Odette figured that her words were getting lost in their collective blubbering declaration the same time Noel did. When they both went quiet, she laughed. Then he laughed. They were laughing and crying and hugging and caressing each other like their fight, their loathsome exchanged words, had never happened. As far as Odette was concerned, none of it had.

Val was right. There wasn’t a damn thing that could change what they were.

“Sorry. You were saying?” Noel said.

“I just…” What could she possibly tell him to embody what she felt? “I didn’t mean anything I said. You’re the only reason I was staying afloat, you’re the only reason I even made it this far in the first place. I was just mad. And I wanted to take it out on you when you weren’t the person to take it out on.” Her sigh trembled. “These past few days, thinking we weren’t friends anymore, have been just…I can’t describe it.”

“Hell?” he offered.

She nodded. “To put it very lightly.”

He sniffled with his nod. “Yeah. That about sums it up for me, too.” He’d taken to playing with her hands, looping his own fingers between hers in a mindless way. “I know we both said some shit, but I…really went for your throat. I know I can’t ever take that back. But please know that I don’t think you’re a demon. Like, at all. You’re just my best friend who was possessed. Which I still think is really cool.”

“Consider it taken back, then.”

Noel chuckled, though it sounded more like a release of pressure. He suddenly looked lighter. Only then did Odette finally look around the room and take notice of the ultramodern grey walls, accented with pinks so pale they almost looked white, the furniture that looked to be pulled straight off a UFO, and the gargantuan bed they occupied. It could have comfortably fit at least four other bodies in it.

“How long was I out?” she asked, slapping her marshmallow of a pillow.

“If I had to hazard a guess,” he tilted his head to find his prediction, “you were nearing about twenty hours.” Defensive hands waved like marshaling wands when her face fell. “It’s okay. You needed it. Doctors said you’d wake up when you wanted to. Val’s had guards stationed at your door to keep people from bothering you, which I told him wasn’t really necessary since I’m here, but he insisted.”

Twenty hours, she thought in awe.

Hearing Val’s name aloud reminded her of what he did for her. He denied calling her his damsel in distress, but if what she remembered of her last evening was accurate, then she truly couldn’t think of a better title. The stupid damsel in distress and her inconspicuously feral silver knight, there to protect her from the consequences of her own actions and steal cars at his leisure.

Again, Val was right. He was building an annoyingly solid track record.

Before she could run off with that shame, her body tensed with another hard realization. “My team,” she gasped, suddenly frenetic. “They’re at my flat; if Dorien goes looking for me, he’ll go—”

Noel’s hands landed on her shoulders, where he went to work massaging the agitation out of them. “They’re here. They’re all here.”

“Here?” she asked, trying to find her breath.

“Yes. Max got them when he came to get me. Along with your essentials. You made it easy for us; you had it all packed. Solene and Enora knew exactly what to grab.”

“Oh my gods…” Her hand settled on her chest, reminding her heart that it was okay to rest. She didn’t know where she was, nor did she really know how she got there, but she’d known from the moment that she awoke that she was safe. She didn’t need to know that there were guards cycling by her door or that Noel was keeping watch in her bed. She felt it in the natural tranquil silence. The lights that were dimmed to a restful illuminance. The dense yet weightless comforter that had been snugly tucked around her.

This was what awaited her on the other side of the threshold she refused to step through.

“Do you want to go see them? They’re just in the other room.”

She responded by leaping from the bed. The bedroom’s layout felt intuitive enough without needing Noel to guide her; a flat chaise at the foot of the bed, a mounted eighty-inch screen encircled by a custom wall unit, a duo of oversized armchairs off in the corner, and a polished silver door, reaching the length of the high ceiling. The extra pep in her step helped, too. She forgot what a good night’s sleep felt like.

The living room flowed neatly with the decor of her starting point. A cursory scan proved that she was indeed in an apartment, appearing astronomically bigger than Val’s. Because Solene, Enora, Isaur, Ange, and Loic congregated on the U-shaped couch, tucked into the conversation pit beneath a curling monstrosity of a chandelier, she didn’t need to look too hard to find them.

Ange noticed her first. “Ah!” he inhaled, his flames expanding with a flare of excitement. “Guys! She’s awake!”

Odette didn’t feel the tears on her face until she had them all in her arms. As they showered her in overlapping exclamations of “I’m so glad you’re okay!” and "Does anything hurt?” and even the odd “If I see Dorien again…”, she allowed herself to truly feel the peace; the knowledge that what she needed in the moment was right in the room with her. Wherever they were, they were together. Not Dorien, not Florent, nor Team Enigma were getting to them.

“Slept long,” Loic said. He was already settled on her shoulder. His burlap scratching her cheek felt like home. “Slept good?”

“Yeah. I think I did. I feel…”

“Rested?” Isaur interjected. “For once?”

Odette scoffed even as she laughed. “Shut the fuck up.”

“We were in a bit of a rush when we left, so we picked up some of the clothes boxes you packed, plus some things we knew you’d want.” Solene gestured to the sprawling quartz island in the kitchen, where four familiarly brown moving boxes were stacked neatly next to it. “Hopefully it’s enough.”

“You
here is enough,” Odette said, pulling her dear starter into another embrace that was reciprocated far tighter. Considering the hysteria she’d nearly fallen into thinking they were still at the flat, her clothes could be damned.

Enora looked about ready to explode with the apology she was stockpiling. “I’m sorry that we—“

“No.” Odette raised her hand. “Don’t. There’s nothing to be sorry for.” Her breath wavered, though she wasn’t sure why. She meant what she had to say. “It was an oversight on my part. And I’m fine.”

Enora’s ears faltered, unlike the rest of her. She decided that it wasn’t worth arguing about right now. Not when things felt so light and easy. “Well, you look better,” she said. “And you sound better.”

“Definitely all of the above. Sleep is a vital part of human function, did you know that?”

Enora certainly didn’t want to find the remark funny, but a reluctant grin curled up her snout anyway.

“Tell about new teammate,” Loic said. Before Odette could really bask in the pleasantries of her team, together in true safety, it was stripped away by the uncertainty that fell over them. She waited for an elaboration, instead watching them glance between one another with looks she couldn’t read. Not bad, but not good either.

“What?” she said. Isaur popped her tongue. “New teammate, what are you—“

Clarity typically struck like a gush of ice water the first time around. The second time, it was more of a hard smack in the jaw. She inhaled.

“Odile.” Fingertips pressed to temples. “Odile? Odile? Are you there?”

“Stop talking to yourself; you look like you’re on something.”

Odette’s relief was instant, but it was short-lived. She was too startled to feel it.

Odile’s voice, it wasn’t coming from inside her head. It sounded more corporeal than that, like it was out in the open for everyone to hear. Behind her.

Odette’s body understood the implication before her brain allowed itself to. There was a part of it, small and buried beneath her sense of long-awaited calm, that was afraid she really was dreaming, and this was the part that would make her realize nothing was real. Her feverish curiosity overpowered her.

The doppelgänger she’d come to know and expect looked strange set against a real-world backdrop. Having only seen Odile in the amorphous, nightmarish plane of her bloodstream, it was hard to imagine her occupying a space bordered by normal walls and decorated with normal furniture.

What— Odette thought. She caught herself, realizing there was no point. The thing she was trying to communicate with was mere feet away, leaning on the wall and wearing a grin that was far too soft for her uncanny features. Somehow, it still worked.

“I can hear you just fine, by the way,” Odile said. “But I think most people would find it one, rude, and two, really weird if we just kept speaking in your brain when I’m standing right here.” She broke her gaze to acknowledge the others. “That’s a thing we did when I was inside her.” A frown; harsh, perturbed, and entirely amused. “Ha, hollup. That sounds wrong. I meant—”

Whatever it was could wait. Odette didn’t care about anything except the hug she threw around her wrong-yet-right copy’s neck. She felt Odile hesitate in her grasp, arms coming to a slow tie at her lower back. When they settled, they constricted into an embrace that nearly shifted Odette’s entire ribcage. She grunted out of instinctual discomfort despite wholeheartedly welcoming it.

“I was trying to talk to you,” Odile said after they stood there long enough for both of them to feel sated. “I promise, I was there the whole time. Sin essences are weird; they affect vessels the worst…”

“I know. That’s exactly what Val said,” Odette replied. “I’m sorry; I didn’t know what else to think.”

Odile’s ironic laugh came out in a breath. “Fuck, he really does know too much. It was also the first time you’d ever had any, so…” When she laughed again, it was less amused and slightly more homicidal. Odette thought Odile’s hug couldn’t have gotten any tighter, but it did. “Obviously nobody was expecting a laced cocktail.”

Odette finally pulled away, keeping her hands on Odile’s shoulders just to remind herself that she really was present, in the stolen flesh. Her almost carbon copy skin and her black tracksuit were real against her palms. Not mist, not an astral projection, but solid. Even so, Odette had a hard time believing it.

“And you’re…here? Out here? I know what we said, and I swear I didn’t mean to go over the edge. I…”

There were no words to describe what she experienced. She did her best to find the closest ones.

“I lost it.”

Odile really had a sudden knack for tender smiles. Odette wanted to ask her whose lips she’d stolen to pull it off.

“It’s okay. I was pushing for it before you did. It was kind of working at first; slapped some sense into you,” she said. “It was the only way I was getting through to tell you I was still with you.”

“I couldn’t hear or feel you. I thought you left. Which I know in hindsight you wouldn’t have, but it was—”

Odile was careful to not claw Odette’s temples as smushed her cheeks together. Black eyes flared with a gravitas that she’d never shown before. Again, Odette wanted to ask who’s face she had on just underneath, but she froze under her mirror’s gaze.

“Never. Not unless you told me to.”

Her eyes widened. Shoulders hiked to earlobes as she sank backward, now sporting an uncomfortable demeanor. “I think,” she said quickly, as if trying to backtrack. She tried to smirk; the toothy, obnoxious grin that she’d crafted solely to bait rage out of whoever received it. “Hard to say, y’know? But I’m used to you.”

It faltered. She started wringing her hands, her claws raking white lines over her skin. Her black shoe scraped against the tile as her brows knit together; the only sign of an internal battle that she was very visibly losing.

“I like you,” she declared, nodding like she needed the reassurance that it was okay to admit out loud. “Very much. So, yes. I’m not going anywhere.”

Before Odette could adequately respond, she felt a soft nudge against her leg. Enora sat at her side, proffering something dark in one of her tendrils. It just looked like a strange black sphere, but with closer inspection, Odette saw it was a pokeball.

It wasn’t one she’d seen before. Where most balls were easily recognizable as such, this one looked more like an occult relic at first glance. Raised piping traced partial grids around the sphere’s diameter, coming together to lock at the gold recall button. A deep, sanguine red colored the top half, a light-defeating vantablack the bottom. Rendered speechless by its immaculate build, Odette peered back at Enora, her jaw hanging.

“Made specially for blood types,” the sylveon explained. She mindlessly traced a claw on the grout. “I was looking more into the research Virtue Corp has done on them while you were asleep. They made that for you to use when you were ready. I was asked to keep it on hand until then.”

Odette inhaled sharply. “This is mine?”

“That’s what she said; were you listening?” Odile scoffed. Her moment of softness was effectively gone, and she seemed relieved about it.

Taking the ball in her hand, Odette tried to get a feel for it. How it sat in her palm, how to position her fingers around it, how it would fit in her pocket. The nontraditional design felt clunky at first, but it didn’t take long for her to know for sure that it was entirely right.

With a grin of resolution, she approached Odile.

“Then, if it’s all the same with you…” She held the ball between them. “I need a sixth teammate.”

~+~

When Odette tried to imagine how the exterior of the apartment looked, a labyrinthian underground facility did not come to mind. Noel really did try to tell her—”It’s crazy; you’re not going to believe it!”—yet she’d doubted him more than she should have.

“Woah.”

“Yeah. Welcome to Virtue Corp.”

It was a fortress built of titanium and concrete. Sterile white light poured from the spotlights built in grids on the seemingly mile-high ceilings, bouncing off every metallic surface and making Odette squint until her eyes adjusted. It illuminated the multitude of floors her unit’s front door overlooked, connected by pipe-laced towers of stairs and elevators. The uncovered hallways ended at the lowest level, where rows of tracks led off in directions that faded out of view. The only specs of color to be seen were coming from the flower boxes that traced the railings of every floor’s hallways, sprouting sparse yet neatly-kept bushes speckled with bugbane. They felt like an afterthought, as if whoever owned this facility wanted to remind its inhabitants that colors beyond white, grey, and desaturated dark blue existed.

“Can you believe that this is all under Val’s flat?” Noel asked when she finally closed her mouth.

Odette scoffed to herself, recalling the way she’d wracked her brain trying to figure out why somebody of his socioeconomic class lived in such a modest-looking building.

“So he must own the whole thing,” she muttered.

“I thought the same thing,” Noel mused. “The elevator in there came straight down here. No way it isn’t at least owned by the org.”

Odette thought about and heard his name enough to decide she’d staved off another donphan long enough. She swallowed.

“Speaking of. Is he—?”

Noel laughed outright, startling her. “He’s totally out for fucking blood if that’s what you’re asking,” he said, none the wiser. He’d busied himself with some raunchy daydream involving her…minor fling? Barely-situation? Whatever it was.

“Wants heads to roll; downright homicidal. It’s actually so sexy.”

“But is he mad?”

“Did you not hear what I said?”

“I mean is he mad at me?”

“What?” Noel asked shrilly. “No. Not even a little bit. He was checking on you every hour while you were out. If anything, I’d say that he’s mad at himself.” The half-second pause was palpable. “Primarily Dorien, which…”

His bubbliness popped, leaving behind the anger that he never wore but somehow still suited him.

“Yeah. If I see him, I’m going to prison and they’re throwing away the key.”

“Not if I can help it,” Odette grumbled. “I’ll get to him first, anyway.”

“Well, it bears no thinking. I’ve cried enough about it.” When Odette looked at him, he sighed. “Are you really okay? Like, really really?”

“I think so,” she said without a second thought. “Rest is actually an insane brain reset, if you didn’t know.”

“I’m sorry I wasn’t there. I really am. It’s like when—“

She grabbed his wrist; his off switch. “Uh-uh. You didn’t do anything wrong. Not at Fleurrh, not now.”

“Still, if I was just there…”

“I probably would have still drank the drink.” She squeezed his pulse, realizing it was more for herself than it was for him. Okay, so maybe she was still a little on edge. But who wouldn’t be? “I probably would have still ended up upstairs with him. In the end, I got away before anything worse happened.”

Her conviction worked on him, at least for now. “Right,” he said. She tightened her fingers around him again, solely for him that time, holding it there until her investigative soul caught up with her and made her hands jolt.

“Oh my gods. The phone! You have the phone!”

To her surprise, Noel appeared chagrined. “Yeah, I was…” He scratched behind his ear with such force, Odette watched it flush red. “I’ve been working on it since you brought it to me. Val got me in contact with Virtue’s cybersecurity department. I found a tracker in it that would have been triggered had I tried to force reset it. We figured out how to disable it safely and get into it.”

“In so little time?”

“It’s not that crazy,” he snickered. As quickly as he smiled, he was overcome with something somber. “But Dee…”

She didn’t appreciate the tone change. She’d only just started getting used to the idea that things could be calm and happy for more than five seconds.

“Team Enigma’s been on you since secondary school. There’s a lot of hard implications that it’s been even longer.”

She cut him a sidelong look, brow scrunched over her lids. Her jaw instinctively clenched, sounding off all the weak denials she couldn’t bring herself to say.

“We have all of his message transcripts. You can read them for yourself if you want.” Noel reached out and clamped around her wrist now, like he was trying to brace her. “But Dorien was almost certainly not their first attempt to get to you.”

“Well,” she breathed after locating her voice. “At this point, I wish I could be surprised. Plus,” she laughed derisively, “let's not forget that there seem to be plenty of gaps in my memory.”

“That’s another thing.”

“Oh gods, what?”

“They have an antidote ready.”

She blinked. Thousands of words compressed down into one scoff that gave out into a groan. “You’re fucking killing me. I just woke up.”

Of course. Just because she was out for 20 hours didn’t mean the world was.

“There’s no pressure!” he insisted. “You’re the calmest I’ve seen you in weeks; I don’t want to get you all riled up again.”

“No, you’re just catching me up. Nothing to get riled about.” The way she massaged the forming wrinkle between her eyebrows told a different story; one Noel read one too many times.

“But?”

“Gonna be honest,” she chuckled in spite of herself, “I forgot about it until now. And now that it’s ready, I think I’m actually terrified of what’s going to come up. What else could there possibly be?”

Noel couldn’t respond before Odile invaded the small gap between them, making him start. “Whatever it is, I think the past few months have adequately primed us for your imminent un-brain-fucking.”

“We need to put a bell on you,” Noel exhaled, patting his chest where his pearls should have been.

“Good idea, I’m hungry for a little snack. Make sure it’s real brass, not that shitty alloy mix that I hate.”

Behind Odile tailed the rest of their teammates, as well as Noel’s (thank gods they were also here). They all came to rest against the railing, also surveying their brutalist-industrial chic hideaway while Odile and Noel devolved into some nonsensical and frankly off-putting conversation about Odile’s dietary preferences. Odette was only half listening, as the other chunk of her working cognition was occupied with thinking about that antidote. A milky wash over a metaphorical burn, then suddenly, bright and utterly horrific clarity. The last time had only been a day recalled, so how was she going to fare against remembering an entire school year and then some, if she was really unlucky?

Blue-ribboned ears came to a stop at her side. They were a pause on that spiral, a barred entrance from a deep buneary hole.

“So,” she breathed. “You’ve been looking into blood types?”

Enora blinked. “Hesitantly.” Her ears flattened. “I know enough. I didn’t exactly come from a good place, as you know.”

“I definitely gathered as much when I met you.”

“But Canary said it would be a good idea.”

Yes. The other blood type on the periphery of her arsenal. Now that Odile was corporeal, would she follow suit? What did she look like? What were her unfiltered thoughts on what had happened thus far?

“What's the consensus on that recommendation?” she asked.

“She was right,” Enora announced, firm as usual. “They’re doing some amazing things here for beings like us. Research and training and…things even Canary never expected for a long while.” She smiled with enough relief that some of it overflowed into Odette. “I met others like me.”

“There’s other shinies here?”

“Quite a few. Rescued out of the trade, met in the wild, all kinds of backgrounds. I was pleased to find that many of them had similar stories to mine.”

“Holy shit, that’s awesome.” Not everything about Virtue Corp’s facade of a website was completely false.

The idea of having a community of peers who’d suffered the same tribulations sounded nice on paper. People you can confide in, people who get it. Surely Enora would thrive with that; she needed those kindred souls to crack her open a little more. Odette almost wished it for herself, until she considered it for more than a second.

Sitting in a room full of people like her sounded hell-equivalent. An echo chamber of cursed bastard children with possession problems, finding out the hard way that they were living in a cloud of lies since birth? Filling it with their misery, compounded by the hopelessness of each other’s stories? No fucking thanks.

“Hope to meet some of them soon.”

“Speaking of meetings,” Noel said, effectively ending that tangential conversation. “We need to find your boyfriend.”

“He’s not my boyfriend,” Odette replied; speaking like it was a compulsion, not a simple answer to a ridiculous observation. Then she stopped to think about it, only realizing she’d zoned into her own head—recalling their kisses, their evening alone, the way he held her hand, dear gods—when she noticed every pair of nearby eyes was on her.

She nodded, sure that she was extremely unsure. “What? He’s not.”

“Right, and I’ve never flossed my teeth with charizard intestine,” Odile heckled. When the eyes turned on her, rightfully horrified, her middle fingers soared. “Oh, fuck off. I hope all your stupid, ugly faces freeze like that.”

Making the executive decision to ignore her, Noel put forth his easiest smile as he slung his arm around Odette’s shoulders and led her back inside their living quarters.

“He didn’t tell me where he was heading off to, but the concierge is very helpful; I’m sure they could figure it out.”

“I didn’t realize we were in a hotel.”

“I mean, toss out the Industrial-Revoltion-2.0 aesthetic, throw in some more tasteful shrubbery, and you basically have a more…avant-garde Ritz Carlton.”

A bad comparison, but she snickered anyway.

“But before we do anything…” He placed his hands on her shoulders, squeezing them like he had bad news to share.

“You need to shower and brush your teeth. You still smell like twenty hours of sleep.”
 
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