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Eryn Montero

Flooded Lakewatch: The Drain || Day 5: Afternoon || @PlatinumSkink@Gardevoiran

Eryn grinned. “Exactly! It’ll be a good place to test our strength and get stronger, and it’s on the way, too. The long way, but still.” She shrugged as she joined Skylar in stepping towards the Abra, eyes wide with delight as she watched the floating psychic-type closely. This was her first time teleporting, and she was both curious and excited, but she barely got a chance to react to the flash of light before it was over.

“Hey Quagsire! Nice to see you’re doing good too!” she said, grinning and waving excitedly back at the bipedal swimmer. Wilhelm’s smiling face kept her grin on her face as he rushed through his words, and she had half a mind to tell him to text her about his findings when she recognized the unknown third figure who’d no doubt come with Skylar and Vivia.

“L-Lin?” She hesitated, searching for some sort of excuse to give. Torchic pox? A terrible haircut? Some long-lost lover who’d called her home? None of those sounded right, and she sighed, giving the swimmer a sheepish smile. “You got me there,” she admitted as she rejoined Wilhelm and Quagsire, retrieving the trinkets. The knowing look Lin flashed her communicated her suspicions with a small but visible smirk, and Eryn could only offer a shrug back. Eri wasn’t here, and the gig was up anyway. She hadn’t meant to lie or mislead, but she’d done both to help keep Eri’s cover, and she’d do it again soon enough, no doubt. After all, she wasn’t about to go back on her word, and Eri needed to look like a trainer to get practice being a trainer.

Once they were back on the coast, Eryn reunited with her Pokemon with a big smile, calling out and picking up Tula so she could pull as many of her team as she could into a team hug. “I missed you guys,” she said as Dei gave a protesting “Char” from being mashed too close to Kylie, who looked more amused than anything despite her agreeable, singsong “Maw’s.”

While tucking away her new finds into her backpack, her eyes caught on something shiny in her bag, and she fished it out, jogging over to Skylar with a grin. “Here, take this,” she said, shoving the Dawn Stone at him. “I dunno whether you’re planning on a Gallade, but here’s something to help keep your options open. Consider this a helping hand from one quest buddy to another, and if you must know, I think Gallade’s pretty cool,” she said, winking at Jojo.

Turning to Vivia, she smiled. “Hopefully I’ll see you around then, and if I don’t, I’m only a call and some running away.”

The joke sounded better in her head, but she rolled with it, laughing. When she turned to Oaken, though, she paused. Earlier, she’d wanted to battle him, basically made up her mind to issue a challenge, but after everything in the cave, the thought gave her pause. Even if she hadn’t directly battled him, she’d still beat him by getting chosen by Azelf, and it seemed like bad manners to challenge him so soon after that. That said, she still wanted to see how she measured up against him, so she settled for a sort of middle ground—in her opinion, at least.

“So, you gonna wait in town then? I’m tired today, but what do you think about a Pokemon battle sometime tomorrow? Bright and early like the good trainers we are?” Her grin was genuine but it was also sharpened by an edge of competitiveness. Though she knew it was rather silly to consider someone so ahead of her a rival, she did. She could blame it on their first battle in front of Kalmia’s lab, or she could blame it on her competitive spirit, but either way that was the way she felt.

Finally, the only people who were left were the people who’d brought her to the drain in the first place, and she turned to them with a grateful smile. “Thanks so much for taking us down, Quagsire. I couldn’t have asked for a kinder, or goofier, underwater guide,” she said, giggling. “And thanks, Wilhelm, for putting the idea in my head. Lemme know if you come up with any breakthroughs, but otherwise I’m just glad we both got something out of this!”

And with that, she bid the group goodbye, walking off, changing back into her normal clothes, and making for the Wet Caverns. “We’re gonna go find your parents, Peri! You excited? And please tell them good stuff about me. I’m too young to be a pancake!”

Peri’s grating laugh filled the air, and Eryn grinned, squeezing Tula with her Pokemon at her side. Today really was some sort of day.





Brandon Unicorn


The figure responded, spurning his questions, which Brandon was not completely surprised at. Though he’d asked, he had not expected answers, if only because that would’ve been too easy. Still, as the figure went on, Brandon noticed that their voice changed briefly, but was distracted by the content of their words as they continued. He was dead. Was he surprised? The thought had crossed his mind, given the pain constantly hounding him, and he hadn’t thought it too impossible that he was now in some strange purgatory. He’d seen too many oddities since he woke, and he’d woken in a tomb, no less.

As the figure continued, though, Brandon felt a pool of alarm well in his gut, and nausea scratched at his insides. He’d been taken by Necromancers. Killed and reanimated by Necromancers. The thoughts dissipated his nausea, leaving him only an empty feeling. He had his soul, but what of it? His body was dead, and he would no doubt follow suit when his fel-fueled shell crumbled away. In his current state, there was no telling where his soul would go after its container gave way, but he doubted there would be peace for him in the afterlife.

The figure waved a landscape from the darkness then, and Brandon looked over, recognizing the bridge and ring from earlier. Marcel Brunnerstadt—the name was unfamiliar to him, but it seemed like the figure was offering him a quest, a chance at redemption and at making a mark before he left the world entirely. He was the youngest Unicorn, the only one who lacked achievements to his name. Whoever this figure was, he was the only one who’d stopped to speak to him, and as naive as it felt to trust them at their word, Brandon felt he should anyway.

“I’ll ask them on the road,” he said, straightening as he felt he should. “I, Brandon Unicorn, will see to it that these followers of Marcel Brunnerstadt understand that there are consequences to their actions.”

Eryn Montero

Flooded Lakewatch: The Drain || Day 5: Afternoon || @PlatinumSkink@Gardevoiran

The visions Azelf showed her endowed her with a new sense of responsibility. She now knew what needed to be done and how it could be done, and all that was left was getting strong enough to be able to do it. Though she was not completely alone on this quest, there was no doubt that she and her team would have to shape up, and by the time the visions ended, she was left holding some crystals, her mind acutely focused on the path ahead.

After the Azelf finished its final address, Eryn nodded, glancing at the other trainers before giving it a secure grin. “Don’t worry, we got this. You keep doing whatever you need, and we’ll do the rest,” she said, her eyes drifting to the dormant giant towering above them.

At some point, Skylar asked permission to take a photo, which caught Eryn’s attention. She hadn’t even thought of taking photos, and when she saw him lining up his Pokedex with the camera, she couldn’t resist racing over with a grin.

“Cheese!” she shouted, leaping into the frame from the side with her arms raised. Landing in a stumble, she straightened, jogging over to check the picture out. It turned out that she was only half in the frame, but her face had made it in, and she was happy enough with that.

“I approve,” she said, giving Skylar a double thumbs up.

Skylar detailed his plan forward then, and Eryn frowned. As much as she liked the sound of heading along with him and Vivia, she still had some unfinished business in Lakewatch.

“Meeting Uxie sounds smart, but I still have some stuff I wanna do in town,” she said, flashing them an apologetic smile. “I still need to bring my Onix to meet her parents, and I’d planned on heading to Raremine next to challenge their gym. I guess that’d be taking the long way ‘round, but,” she said, glancing at Azelf, “I also think that’d help me prepare my team best.”

She shrugged, then looked back to Skylar with a grin. “That said, I definitely think we should coordinate heading into the base together. Mt. Strength sounds like the way to go for me, given that it’ll be like a surprise attack, but we don’t need to decide now. Let’s trade numbers and coordinate when the time comes,” she said, pulling out her Pokedex.

An Abra teleported in then, and Eryn turned to stare at it, grinning. “Sweet, I’ve always wanted to try teleporting!”




— Arva Casalino —
Interlude

Ferris & Octavio

Year 4256 | 4th day of Olfaccium | Morning | Collab with: @HokumPocus@Pezz570

The role of bodyguard was nothing new to Ferris. Since the role was a broad one with many different definitions and job descriptions, there was a good chance every mercenary had played some sort of a bodyguard at some point. In Ferris’ case, it was just a matter of the pay and the person paying; if the money was good and the person wasn’t overly difficult, he was inclined to accept.

For today in particular, it was information he was after, not money. He had a decent grasp on Malkev and his role in town by now, but what of the Kharu-Natjer? Though the Kharu appeared to possess significant power, influence, and wealth, he also seemed to operate entirely from the shadows. The questions Ferris wanted answers to how and why the Kharu maintained such a role, and the alternative to asking for the Kharu’s goals was examining his actions. Serving as bodyguard to one of his servants was a lesser extension of that given that the Kharu’s servants were cogs in an overall machine. Every servant would fit into the system somehow.

Today’s outfit of choice was a hooded cloak, which was testament to the secretive nature of the task. The plan was the same: Three bodyguards would accompany the slave on their tasks, one keeping step with the slave and two bringing up the rear from afar. The plan was straightforward enough that there wasn’t reason to provide a map. The guards were simply to accompany and protect the slave, keeping their eyes on the crowd and the crowd’s eyes off the slave as they moved.

Floral and woody scents swirled in his scarf as he waited in the designated bend in the tunnels, the group’s meeting spot marked by a trio of jade candles nestled on a tunnel ledge. Spotting two hooded figures moving down the tunnel towards him—the slave and one of Malkev’s guards, most likely—Ferris straightened from where he’d been leaning against the wall. He had his scarf today, at least, and a hood wasn’t too poor of a replacement for his hat.

Octavio approached the meeting spot with an ever familiar pang of adrenaline. It was a feeling he embraced, however. The man had spent enough time relaxing to the point it was beginning to feel strange. He figured a career that involved putting yourself in constant danger did that to a person, if the many warriors he had met throughout his life were any indication. He assured himself that it wasn’t the case with him, that he’d just take part in some quick task to entertain himself, nothing more. There’d be no hollering of blood and battle, especially not with the fine set of robes adorning him. However, he settled on a more utilitarian appearance for today, swapping out the usual finishing touches with either nothing or intentionally bland accessories. The heavy cloak that would only rest on his back was now hitched on his shoulders, covering a wider area of his body. It wouldn’t do to dress so extravagantly with a slave at one’s side.

The slave. It didn’t bother him as much as it should have, as it wasn’t the first time he’d dealt with them. It was easier to enact his warped sense of justice on a noble, he figured, when you weren’t spending every waking moment fretting over the well-being of every cook and maid. He avoided eye contact with it, instead treating it like someone’s expensive possession.

“I take it we´re ready to go?” he asked, fidgeting with a pouch on his necklace. He’d stored his earrings in it, and was tracing the hard lumps with his thumb.

The guard looked to Octavio and then the slave. The slave, a young male in his late teens, frowned at Octavio’s words. The boy’s head was mostly shaven, save for some hair towards the back of his head, tied in a knot.

The slave shook his head. “Freshlanders...” He said. “All same.”

His words were crude, adding extra syllables where there were none. The slave walked passed Octavio, bowing his head just barely as he did so. Silently he positioned himself towards to the front of the cart and pulled out what appeared to be a small crystal from his cloak.

The crystal was quite odd. It was clear as water, yet at the same time it reflected light much like a mirror. The slave clenched his hand tightly around the crystal. His eyes closed as if concentrating. His appearance wavered for a split second. And then…

The boy’s skin no longer had that orange hue. Instead it was a light tan. And his hair… it had become black as soot. The crystal had vanished. Seemingly merging into his body.

The slave opened his eyes and looked to the guard. The guard nodded back.

“Now go.” The slave said.

One of the guards positioned himself to pull the cart, but the slave raised his hand stopping him. “You.” He said, pointing to Octavio. “Cart pulling need be. Your job.”

Ferris watched the slave speak. Like some of the others he’d seen, this slave was educated in the language, which meant he was important. Considering that the current group was meant to protect this slave, that made sense, but Ferris was distracted by a familiar, faint, but vexing scent in the air. He’d noticed it first in the bathing area, of all places, but it wasn’t like any scent he’d encountered before. Rather than remaining a definite smell, the scent kept shifting, as if slowly transforming into different smells as the seconds ticked by. The only thing keeping Ferris from thinking he was going insane was the fact that he didn’t always smell the scent. In fact, here was the only place he’d smelled it outside the bath, which kept his attention sufficiently distracted from the slave that he didn’t register the crystal until the scent in the air suddenly grew significantly stronger.

Pulling down his scarf, he watched as the crystal merged into the boy, watched as the boy changed completely. Though his features remained the same, all the colors were wrong, just as the sharp rubber scent in the air shifting into a sweeter, fruitier one was wrong. It was magic, then, not a figment of his imagination or some strange incense burner put out to distract him. Somehow, the combination of the boy and the crystal had resulted in magic. Was the boy himself a magic-user? It seemed unlikely, given that a skill so strange and unique would be highly valued and deserving of more protection than just the three-man crew present. A better explanation would be the crystal serving as a repository or conduit for magic.

The slave spoke, first to the group, then to Octavio. For some reason, he’d nominated Octavio to pull the cart, which confused Ferris for a second. It’d be common sense to delegate the laborious job to someone who seemed better suited for the task, and while Octavio was by no means frail, he was not as built as Ferris or the guard. On second thought, though, perhaps that’s exactly why he nominated Octavio; of the trio, Octavio looked the least familiar with the battlefield, which Ferris knew to be a partial lie. Octavio was just better at hiding his experience, and his magic made him stronger than any stray guard without magic.

“Octavio needs his hands free to use his magic,” Ferris said, looking to the guard. “Do you have access to magic as well?” Ferris was counting on a no, which would lead to the conclusion that the guard was better suited staying closest to the slave and the wagon since both Ferris and Octavio had magic that allowed them to bridge the distance if they stayed behind the slave. However, it seemed that pulling the wagon meant staying closest to the slave, and Ferris still wanted to ask about the crystal.

“I can pull the cart. My magic doesn’t require my hands to be free,” he said, replacing his mask as he looked to the slave. Separating him from the guard seemed a good bet if Ferris was to get answers to his questions. That said, Ferris had a sneaking suspicion that this slave was not the naive sort and that answers would not come easily in broken words

“Man can be grabbing cart. Man can be release cart. Magic then can use. Job make Man better.” The slave said in matter-of-factly fashion. “You can be help. Required it be not.”

Octavio stood and watched the exchange unfold around him. The only requirements for his magic were sufficient light and the chance to concentrate, both of which he figured would be available. He tried to focus more on the words of others, even more than he’d previously done, as part of his attempts to be more committed to his surroundings.

“If all this’ll be is pulling a cart, then I can definitely summon illusions.” He ran his fingers through his hair in a way that betrayed the humbler choice of clothing. “I’d rather not, of course. Is it important that I be the one to pull it?”

He figured the only realistic possibilities were that the slave chose on impulse, or was given special instructions to choose Octavio. The latter implied a strategic benefit to keeping him occupied, which he found ridiculous. The former made more sense.

“Depends.” The slave shrugged. He turned to the other guards. “Today Men not be wanting moneys?” More than one of the guards eyed Octavio pleadingly. “Replacements be needing?”

The guard who entered with the slave nudged Octavio. “Just play along friend.” He whispered. “They get very stubborn about things like this.”

Ferris listened with some amount of surprise. He’d assumed that the slaves got along with the guards, or were at least intimidated by them. From the looks of it, though, the opposite seemed to be true, which just served to show how much power the Kharu really wielded. Given that the guards seemed to be following the slave’s orders now, it was pretty clear that this was a side job for them unrelated to their day jobs, but how much of that was due to the money?

Looking to Octavio, he pursed his lips. He’d tried, but it seemed that the slave was set on Octavio pulling the cart. Why Octavio was anyone’s guess, and Ferris figured that’d be revealed sooner or later, unless it was actually irrelevant.

The guard beside Octavio met his eyes, shrugging, and Ferris nodded. “Let’s go.”

Octavio wordlessly gripped the cart, eyes focused on the slave. The irony of being a man who defended a familiar raising an eyebrow at a slave ordering someone else around wasn’t lost on him. It’d be an act of total hypocrisy to try and contest the boy’s command, he realized. “Of course.”

The slave nodded in approval. “Now be going.” He said.

The guard smiled and walked up beside Octavio. “My gratitude.” The guard whispered. “He won’t have you doing this for long… probably.”

The group set off. The slave at the head with the guard acting as a guide. It was a rather mundane and uneventful walk. A few villagers would stare from time to time, but out of curiosity or cautiousness rather than ill will.

After a time, the guard in the lead fell back, pacing himself with Octavio and Ferris. He nodded to Ferris and looked to Octavio. “Hey,” He said. “How are you holding up?”

“Fine,” Ferris said, looking to the slave ahead, then to the guard again. Neither of them seemed winded, yet the guard was checking in with him and Octavio. If Ferris had to guess, it seemed like the guard was trying to make conversation, which was rather helpful, actually.

“Do you take jobs from the slaves often?” he asked. From the looks of the villagers they’d passed, it didn’t seem like seeing a group of hooded figures moving together was a common or welcome sight, so the Kharu probably didn’t send his slaves out too often. Still, soldiers trying to pad their income wasn’t a novel concept, and they’d look elsewhere if they couldn’t find jobs with the Kharu.

The guard laughed. “Nobles mostly. Or rather one noble in particular. We are personal guards of Malkev… personal off-duty guards, that is. We’re just here for the extra pay.”

The guard smiled. “To be honest, I’m not even sure ‘slave’ is the best term for these people. Some of them seem to act more like a slave then others... Ones like him though...” The guard smirked. “Well… you’ve already seen how they're like.”

Octavio whistled to himself to pass the time, clearly not content with the mundane nature of his task. He met the stares of the occasional curious villager and tried to internally guess what they were thinking, basing his conclusions more on an overactive imagination than anything grounded in logic. The guard asked questions, made conversation, and he was too caught up in a particularly interesting set of thoughts to answer the man. When he at last wanted to contribute with something else, he realized it’d be a lot more difficult with the slave being able to hear everything that came out of his mouth.

“These so-called slaves are more like messengers or representatives, I take it,” he added, dryly, his words aimed at the slave as much as everyone else. “Even if he is your typical slave, it’s like something expensive that knows it’s expensive.” An image of Lynx flashed before his eyes.

It was always the more spirited guards that made his former life easy. They weren’t loyal to much apart from coin and beer, so all it took was either a bribe or waiting for one to sneak off for a drink before staging anything. Any not swayed by either would receive a special visit from a voluptuous illusion to compliment arm muscles and ask for directions to places that didn’t exist. This eager guard seemed to belong to the third category. It’s been awhile since I’ve given anyone the bustling Bertha special. he thought.

“Expensive, is not. Is important. Word is better.” The slave said while still looking ahead. “Freshlander language be small. No good is words.” The guard gave an uneasy chuckle and shrugged.

Ferris listened to the slave quietly, his eyes flicking over the slave’s face and garbs. The slave said he was not expensive, but what did that mean? Was he easy to replace, then, or was it just that the average slave was spare change to the Kharu? As for being important, there were different shades like being precious, valuable, or useful. The word seemed to imply all three of those, but the slave also admitted that the word did not fully convey the meaning, so where was it lacking?

“What language do you usually speak, then?” Ferris asked, looking between the slave and the townsfolk around them now. It was clear that they were not from around here, and perhaps they were not from any of the major lands either. But where, then, did the Kharu source his slaves? Was that how he’d accumulated his wealth and influence, or was he merely partaking in an existing trade?

The slave turned his head ever so slightly. Just enough to give Ferris a look of uncertainty.

“They don’t usually talk much.” The guard whispered over to Ferris.

The slave frowned at the words and turned his gaze back ahead. “Is called Kharu-Nhatkel. ‘Voice’ be kharu. Home is Nhatkel. ‘Nhatkel’s Voice’ is meaning.”

“Kha... ru... Nhat… kel.” Octavio spoke slowly, enunciating each vowel with an unnecessary amount of care.

“Never heard of it.”

“‘Kharu-Nhatkel’ word is Kharu-Nhatkel.” The Slave said without a moment’s pause. “Man did be hearing of it.”

The guard bellowed out a laugh. “Here, I thought you people had no sense of humor. It appears I was wrong.”

The slave glanced back at them. There was a faint look of satisfaction in his eyes. The boy smothered it quickly and looked back ahead.

“Was rude. Is wrong. Proper it be not.” The slave said. “Kharu-Nhatkel not be from freshlands. Be from far lands.”

“Far lands?” The guard repeated.

“Be south-east.” The slave said. “Past sands that rot… Or be through waters that burn.”

“Waters that burn?”

The slave looked to the guard. “Freshlanders not be knowing waters that burn?” The boy asked. The guard shrugged, prompting a shake of the head from the slave. “Freshlanders be Freshlanders.” The slave sighed.

Ferris considered the slave’s words, sharing in Octavio’s lack of knowledge. While he could be said to be well-traveled due to his mercenary jobs, that was only within Saencila, which was self-sufficient enough that he’d never heard of a far-off “Kharu-Nhatkel”. As for the term “far lands”, he had come across it before, as well as the concept of sands that rot. Many people told similar tales of the deeper parts of the Dead Sands, though Ferris had never paid much attention to them. Similar to waters that burn, he’d passed them off as tall tales told by drunk men regaling strangers with exaggerated stories of their youth. Ferris no sooner believed these tales than he’d believed tales of mountains of water or forests of fire, and it was unclear just how seriously the slave was taking this conversation. As far as he was concerned, the slave might have been traded at such a young age that he was only passing along tales he’d heard from others, but then again the Kharu’s slaves didn’t seem to have a sense of humor in general, so perhaps all these tall tales held truth.

More than the introduction of Kharu-Nhatkel, Ferris was caught by the statement that “Kharu” meant “voice”. The Kharu-Natjer, then, meant “voice of something,” and Ferris looked at the slave, wondering whether there was any harm in asking.

“What does the Kharu-Natjer’s name mean, then?”

“Not name.” The slave’s tone darken. “Is of The Hemtypt-Natj-” The slave cut his words off and shook his head. “-is title… one of titles...” He said. “Kharu-Natjer never be having name. Lost. Name be cut away...” The slave folded his arms and looked to the ground. For a while he said nothing.

“God...” The slave said uneasily. “Natjer is God. Good, not be word. Is good enough.”

There were certainly a lot of implications Octavio could have drawn from a slave calling its master a god. The first and most obvious was assuming the Kharu-Natjer was far more hungry for power than he had assumed, going as far as commanding his slaves to worship him. Or it could’ve been a cultural difference. He’d read enough about the world to know that some people interpreted one’s given name as something sacred and important, and the whole explanation behind titles and names could have been less spiritual and more about formalities. It was much to think about.

“Is God another title for him?” he asked. It was best to keep his words short and simple, lest he get more questions than answers.

“God word be not good.” The slave said in a firm voice. “Only be good enough.” He paused for a moment before continuing. “One title, Kharu-Natjer be having. Title be Kharu-Natjer.”

The slave looked to Octavio. “Kharu-Natjer be not god. Be only man… He be not first. He be not last... When Kharu-Natjer dead, new slave be Kharu-Natjer.”

The guard frowned. He look more than a little uncomfortable. He obviously hadn’t expected the conversation to go in such a direction.

It was a language barrier, then. A title that signified something close to a god, but bore no relation with the concept of being some sort of deity. This did nothing to satisfy Octavio, as he now began to mull over the implications of the power one had to have if people’s first instinct was to describe you as a sort of god. Even at his most narcissistic and power-hungry, Octavio’s visions of what he’d look like after amassing a dragon’s hoard of gold tended to consist of vapid materialism. That people would go after the approval of others to the point of turning humans into something similar to furniture was something that he had never understood.

“...So the man we know as the Kharu-Natjer used to be a slave?” the words came out with ease, in a light tone that he wore to hide his now ravenous curiosity. He was crossing a line and he knew it.

The slave met Octavio’s and frowned. He did not reply, however.

The slave’s unease wasn’t lost on Ferris, but he supported both Octavio’s questions and the way they were delivered. In a way, Octavio was much better suited to asking such questions than him, given his more direct approach. He disliked the concept of beating around the bush, and although he knew that a gentle touch was necessary at times, he hadn’t been in so many situations where he’d been doing the delicate questioning. Proud soldiers and hardened warriors were his most common conversation partners, and they respected directness much more than others. So, Ferris decided to remain silent, meeting Octavio’s eyes and giving him a subtle nod to communicate his respect and agreement.

“All men is being slave.” The slave said at last. “More slave than other men, some be. Kharu-Natjer? Still slave. Bodyguards? Slave. Packmakers? …” The slave raised his head at the pause. His gaze, expressionless. “Packmakers be slave.”

“Sir,” The guard interjected. “this is the place.”

The slave nodded and raised his hand to signal the others to stop. The group had stopped in the back of an ordinary looking building. It wasn’t very big or old, just… ordinary. The slave walked up to the door and knocked. He waited a moment before knocking again. Still no answer. One more knock. This time the door opened to reveal a hunched over old man with almond shaped eyes.

“Yes yes yes! You’re at the door. Only knocked a dozen times, didn’t ya? Did they take our bribe to-”

The old man paused and adjusted his spectacles. He looked the slave up and down, before taking in the guards behind the slave. “What do you want?” He asked.

“Salt.” The slave replied.

“Salt?” The man repeated flatly. “You’re telling me ya came here with a load of guards just to buy some salt?” The old man shook his head. “Not buying it. What did that rascal do this time?”

The slave sighed and pulled out a large pouch at his side. He loosened the pouch’s string and let it drop to the ground. Gold coins spilled out from the opening. Other than a minor raising of his brow, the old man did well to hide his interest in the coin.

“What’s that supposed to be?” He asked.

“Moneys.” The slave said.

“Oh, yes! Money! Of course!” The man replied sarcastically. “You think me daft boy? I can see it’s money! I’ll make far more than that for the salt once I reach my buyer!”

“Not buyer.” The slave said. “Supplier.”

The old man’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “Who are you?” He growled.

“Not matter.” The slave replied, his hands clasped behind his back.

“Doesn’t matter?!” The old man spat. The slave frowned at the man’s reaction. He looked to the guard from earlier and gave him a nod. “You come here, uninvited. Asking for my product. Product I haven’t informed anybody of. And you to top it off y-”

The guard pulled the cover off the cart they brought with them. It was full of barrels and crates. The old man’s words trailed off. His eyes widened. Grumpy expression replaced with surprise.

“Supplies.” The slave said, waving his hand to the cart.

“Supplies...” The old man repeated in a whisper.

“Dyes. Paints. Tools. All there.” Said the slave.

For a moment, the man’s mouth gaped in awe. With a shake of his head, he reluctantly tore his gaze away from the cart and recomposed himself.

“Doesn’t do me any good.” He grouched. “Can’t leave the city. They won’t-”

“Moneys.” The slave repeated. Using his foot, he nudged the coin pouch he dropped to the ground. “For bribe.”

The old man blinked. He looked to the slave dumbfoundedly.

“Not be enough?” The slave asked. “Have more.”

The guard approached carrying two more large pouches. He dropped the new pouches next to the other pouch.

“Why-” The man started.

“Not matter.” The slave repeated. This time more insistently. “Salt matter.”

The old man looked to the slave, the gold coins and then the cart. “Let me see if everything checks out. If so, we have a deal.”




It took the remainder of the morning for the exchange to be made. Most of it was spent reviewing the supplies to ensure everything checked out.

Twice, the man tried playing hard ball. Perhaps in an effort to see if he could get something more out of the slave. Both times, the slave pushed back. The second time, he threatened to leave the old man with nothing. That ended any additional negotiation. The old man knew he was on the better end of the deal. Pushing further wasn’t worth the risk. When everything was settled, the man thanked the slave for his business and left the group with a smug smile on his face.

“Trade done.” The slave said to the group. “Back we be going.” He looked to Octavio. “Good, man did. No more be pulling cart. Extra moneys all be getting.”

The guards cheered merrily at that. Many of them patted Octavio on the back as if he were a hero. And with that, the group headed off. Back in direction they came from.

Octavio hid his bewilderment with a skill only someone who had spent the better part of their lives being morally questionable could have. It wasn’t just getting the job done, but additional moneys? Gold, the lubricant for the soul that made people do bad things. He flashed a winning smile and knew there was no better reply at that moment than to shut up.

Ferris listened to the guards cheer without feeling much himself. While getting paid was nice, money had never been his goal. Still, he’d come along to learn more about the Kharu-Natjer, and in a way he’d fulfilled that goal. He’d learned that the Kharu lacked no money and served a kingdom from far away, but that made his presence in Saencila that much stranger. Why was he here, then? The slave’s insistence on calling everyone slaves of some sort made it seem like the Kharu, too, was serving someone or something, but what? Him helping the Land of Sight defend themselves seemed too good to be true, and Ferris didn’t believe in pure goodness. There was an endgame here somewhere. Ferris just had to find it.

“Does your homeland have entities like the Sightless?” Ferris asked the slave. He was indirectly seeking an answer to his question, but judging by how easily the slave got offended earlier, he figured taking it slow and assuming good intentions first would be good.

Octavio set his eyes on Ferris, noting the lack of attention he displayed towards their reward. Huh. So he really wasn’t the type to care about money all that much. He knew that snooping for information about the Kharu-Natjer was their unspoken little goal, but he couldn’t help but wonder about Ferris’ intentions as well. It was something to get in a fight with Lynx about later.

“...No.” The slave said hesitantly. His pace seemed to slow. His gaze turning vacant. “Have… other things… broken things...”

Ferris watched the slave’s body language shift, watched as his eyes turned empty, and figured he’d touched another sensitive subject. The slave seemed to know more than he was letting on, but why wasn’t he talking? From their conversations so far, he seemed to be the type who liked correcting misconceptions and clarifying things for “freshlanders”, yet he was holding back now.

Deciding that he’d try pushing a bit further first, Ferris pursued the point. “What do you mean?”

The slave looked to Ferris warily. There was a troubled look in his eyes. “Nhatkel… land is broken… Horrors everywhere… Bug-eyed creatures be wearing man skin… Steal memories… Devour family…” The slave shivered. “Plants that crawl… they be infecting, eating then infesting… Living mists…” The slave shook his head. “Many things be with powers over mind… turn mind against...”

The slave said nothing for a while. Instead he simply stared straight ahead. “... Nhatkel… Not be wanting to talk more.” He said in a soft voice. “Freshlanders talking too much.”

The slave quickened his pace. Pointedly staying ahead of Octavio and Ferris.

“Sounds like things are bad no matter where you are.” From the man who had spent his whole life running, the words carried a weight that would have gone unnoticed. In a lower voice, heeding the slave’s warning, he continued. “Then again, if they’re setting up shop during times like these, it makes sense for their home to be like that.”

There was much more he wanted to say, to get some ideas circulating with the others. He was well aware that this slave would most likely relay anything important back to the Kharu-Natjer, however, so he held off. He thought of Svephraey, who had no qualms with showing some of her hand within the man’s territory. Did her utility outweigh a risk like that, or was the Kharu-Natjer less aware than he seemed? The recent memory of the pouches of gold rang in his mind. It was the former. Probably.

“Yeah,” Ferris said, watching as the slave quickened his pace. Pushing further hadn’t been the best or smartest move, perhaps, but he’d gotten valuable information from it. Whether the slave would tell the Kharu what they’d been talking about didn’t matter too much. They were curious about who their allies were, which was natural for anyone in their position, especially given how little information the Kharu had given them.

“It makes you wonder whether they were driven out of their home, or if they chose to leave it,” he said when the slave reached the head of the pack. From what the slave had said, it sounded like their home was in an even worse position than Salencia, so it was only natural that they would’ve wanted to leave. Were they truly slaves, then, or was that just a more innocuous label than “settlers” or “refugees”?

“At least we have a better idea of who they are now,” Ferris said, glancing between the slave and the guards, who seemed rather preoccupied with discussing after-work celebrations. “And we know that they don’t like talking about their past.”

The remainder of the trip was uneventful. The cart made it back safely. The slave gave everyone a fair share in coin. And the soldiers said their farewells.

“Get rest.” The slave said, handing Ferris and Octavio their pay. “Big day, tomorrow is being.”

The slave gave the two a nod and turned to make his leave. As the slave left, his features returned to normal. Whatever magic he used to change his looks, now gone.

If anything the venture had been a good distraction. A distraction from the battle that was to come.



Alice Takigawa

Mushroom Forest || Night

Hearing her username made Alice relax a little. “Yeah, it’s Alice,” she said, getting her phone out to switch on the flashlight function and point it at where the voice was coming from. It was a feminine one, and pretty high-pitched too, which didn’t fit with Alice’s mental image of Afton, but Afton was the only other girl, as far as she could tell, so she gave it a shot. “Are you Ephie? Afton?”

The person that stepped out of the bushes was indeed a girl, but the digimon at her side was markedly not a Hopmon or Monodramon. Rather, it was a Muchomon, and if Alice remembered correctly, the person who with the Muchomon line in-game was—

“Clockmaker?” She blinked, looking the young and very much not male girl up and down. “I-I thought you were a boy.”

At her side, Doru looked the pair over, seeming more interested in the digimon at the girl’s side. “Hi,” he said. “I’m Dorimon, but you can call me Doru.”

“Yeah, um, hi, I’m Alice, nice to meet you,” she said, bowing, pausing mid-bow, then straightening and awkwardly offering a hand. Handshakes were how they did it in America, right? “Should I call you Clock then?” she asked. She understood privacy and all, especially given the girl’s age. Her parents were pretty protective too, but what they didn’t know couldn’t hurt them, and they knew enough about social media to accept most of it.

Looking around again, Alice could see why Afton and Asher hadn’t stuck around. As pretty as purple looked on the screen, purple in real life was pretty unsettling, especially when paired with the damp and dark.

“Oh, before you got here, I was about to digivolve Doru,” she said, glancing at Doru, who nodded, then at Clock. “That’s okay with you, right?”

After getting confirmation, she got Doru to stand a little away from them, then looked down at her digivice. With her phone’s light, she could see that it was white with purple-blue buttons, and she pressed the one Afton had mentioned in the messages earlier, then looked up. “Doru, is anything happening?”

Doru hesitated for a second, looking down at his feet, then looked back up again, eyes wide. “Y-yeah. I think something’s happening.”

In her hands, the screen of her digivice lit up, words writing themselves across the screen: Dorimon digivolve to: Dorumon At the same time, a beam of light enveloped Doru, rising until it disappeared into the dark clouds overhead.

“Doru!” The light contrasted their surroundings enough that Alice raised a hand to shield her eyes as she peered at it, and from under her hand she saw it retract into itself, coalescing into a form that stood hip-level instead of knee-level. Now a Dorumon proper, Doru was a truer purple than before, and he took on a bipedal stance that better suited his new fangs and claws.

Flexing his front claws, he glanced at Alice. “This is more comfortable.”

“Yeah,” she said, eyes wide as she walked over. “Can I?” she asked, checking before she touched his head, running a hand down his fur. He felt much like any coarse-haired dog, though she could tell his hair was much thicker than the dogs she’d petted before. The jewel on his head glinted in the moonlight, and she refrained from reaching for it, choosing instead to step back with a smile. “Good. Now you look ten times cooler.”

Doru blinked. “I do?” He looked over himself again, then looked back at Alice, his eyes just as confused as before. Still, he didn’t push the issue, instead opting for a nod, and Alice again got the impression he was choosing to do the mature thing. She had half a mind to call him out right then and there but thought better of it since Izzy was present.

“So, Muchomon, do you have a nickname?” Alice asked, looking at the colorful bird, whose demeanor showed their relative immaturity. At least they seemed like the type to speak their mind, unlike some other digimon, but she wasn’t complaining. Who could complain about someone being mature?

Afton Reimer

Los Angeles || Morning

Afton scoured her house for supplies, her pace brisk as she walked from closet to kitchen. Beside her was Monodramon, who, because he was now much bigger, could now keep up with her much more easily. As such, he was now more prone to getting in her way, and she found herself pausing multiple times to allow him to amble out of her way.

“How about I get you something to eat or drink?” she suggested after another second of mounting irritation, very aware that her voice had taken on a note of annoyance. There were certain emotions she had a harder time reining in than others. Annoyance was one of those.

“Pizza? I want pizza,” Monodramon said, his fangs glinting as he followed Afton towards the kitchen. “Or bacon. Bacon was good. I’ll accept more bacon.”

Afton eyed him out of the corner of her eye. Though she couldn’t recall ever seeing a digimon get fat in the game, the game likely wasn’t a comprehensive source for information on digimon, and Monodramon certainly didn’t look lacking in the weight department.

“How about some chicken tenders?” she asked, pulling open the freezer and retrieving the box of frozen chicken strips. “Chickens are a bird. Meat. And they’re good,” she clarified immediately when she saw confusion forming on Monodramon’s face, which quickly returned to delight when he heard her words.

“Human food is pretty good, so I’ll try it,” he said, watching eagerly as Afton popped a few frozen strips into the toaster oven. When she turned to return the rest into the freezer, she found him waiting in front of the oven, his eyes boring into it intensely.

“Stay here and keep an eye on it,” she said, washing and toweling her hands off. “Let me know when the timer rings.”

Monodramon turned to look at her, confused. “Timer?”

“It’ll ring,” she said, walking back towards the closet to retrieve the backpack she’d been packing. The goal was to travel light, and she had lots of experience with packing for track meets and team hikes, but this was a bit different. Bringing a change of clothes seemed rather unnecessary, though she left in the waterproof windbreaker, and she opted for straight water instead of gatorade, throwing in a few granola bars for good measure. In went a small flashlight, an obnoxiously pink can of unused pepper spray, and a flimsy keychain compass roughly an inch wide.

Just as she was confirming she had all her bases covered, Monodramon burst out from the kitchen, his running gait reminding Afton strongly of how she imagined penguins could run if they had joints that weren’t made for streamlined swimming.

“Afton, the chicken is ready! It made a ringing sound! I heard it!” His eyes were bright as he came to a stop beside her, and she zipped up her backpack, staring at him. If she was estimating time correctly, which she usually did, it’d been roughly ten minutes, and she’d set the timer on the oven to fifteen. What, then, was the sound he’d heard?

“Did the sound come from the chicken?” she asked, walking towards the kitchen.

“Yeah,” Monodramon said after a brief moment of hesitation, prompting another glance from Afton as she rounded the corner. “Yeah it did!”

Despite the protesting firmness in his tone, Afton returned to find the timer still ticking down. A glance around had her eyes catch on her phone, which was charging on the counter’s corner, and she picked it up, opening it.

You feeling better?
Drink more water.
Dad

Afton looked at Monodramon, silent. There were a lot of things to unpack here, and she didn’t feel like getting to all of them right now. It was only day one, and she needed him not to be upset or hurt for the moment.

“What?” His voice came out scratchy and defensive, but it held a tenor of nervousness, and Afton relented, dropping her gaze, then looking back up at him.

“Don’t lie to me, Monodramon. I’m honest with you, so be honest with me,” she said, her tone clean as she looked down at the dragon digimon, who looked more peevish every second. Then, bending down, she laid a hand on his head, letting it pause there, then dropped it, turning back to the toaster as it dinged. As soon as she retrieved the strips and put them in a bowl for Monodramon, they were on their way to the backyard, bowl and all.

“Afton,” Monodramon started as she crouched in front of where she’d found the portal earlier that day, but she snapped her eyes up to look at him, quieting him.

“Don’t apologize,” she said, reaching for his shoulder. “Just eat and do better.”

And with that, she touched her digivice to where she believed the portal to be, letting it suck her in again.

Cavan Maynard

Mushroom Forest || Night

“You know, I never thought about if the sun rises in this forest. It was always night here in the game, and… Yeah,” Cavan said, shrugging as he led the way through fungi-splotched forest. “Guess I just never thought about it. ”

At his side, Bax, who’d digivolved into Black Gabumon moments before, stalked along, his shoulders tense and his front claws at the ready. Personally, Cavan was of the opinion that merely being black made Black Gabumon eons cooler than the normal Gabumon. It was sorta like shiny Pokemon—they were rarer, so obviously, they were cooler. Plus, Black Gabumon had the virus attribute, giving its concept a darker vibe that Cavan appreciated. Vaccines were cool, but viruses? Definitely cooler.

“You know, I spent a ton of time here in-game,” Cavan said as he walked, looking around with a grin. “Mostly because I was dumb and couldn’t figure out what I needed to do originally, but my friends clued me in at school the next day. You just need to talk to Blossomon and ask it to let you use its portal.” He laughed, shaking his head. “The game told you and everything, but I didn’t get the hint. I mean, I wasn’t even ten. How was I supposed to know the crazy-looking flower was a good guy?”

Beside him, Bax cocked his head. “Blossomon?” He frowned, then sniffed. “Never heard of him.”

“What? You said you’ve been here right?” Cavan asked, his brows furrowed. “You’ve been here and you haven’t heard of Blossomon, the guardian of the Mushroom Forest?”

“No,” Bax said brusquely, twitching an ear.

“Huh. I thought everyone who comes through here meets him,” Cavan said, frowning. Then, after another moment of consideration, he shrugged. “Well, maybe real life is different from the games.”

Bax grunted, not bothering to respond, and Cavan grinned again.

“Well, this place is still pretty much the same,” he said, stopping and pointing to a tree. In its bark was a clean-cut X, sheared deep enough into the bark to leave a permanent mark. “This is Ninjamon territory. They’re ninjas, so they stay hidden until they need to strike. Kinda spooky, but I’ve never seen one in this forest,” he said, shrugging. “I always thought it was weird that this place was supposed to have them but didn’t. Guess the devs wanted to keep Champion-level digimon out of the beginner dungeon.”

Bax paused beside him, leaning forward to sniff the tree, then turned to sniff the air behind him. His eyes widened and shot up to the branches overhead, and he managed a growl just as several small red figures dropped out of the tree, landing beside him and Cavan with swords drawn and pointed. One of them dropped onto Cavan’s head, surprising him enough to make him duck, but it clung on even as he stumbled back, and he froze when he felt something cold press against his neck.

“Who are you,” the Ninjamon on his head squeaked, its voice scratchy but not intelligible. “Why have you trespassed on Ninjamon land.”

“I-I’m Cavan! And he’s Bax,” Cavan said quickly, hands raised in surrender. An awkward glance down showed that Bax had been pinned down by no less than three Ninjamon, and more had their blades out and pointed at him beside them. “We’re just exploring! We didn’t mean to trespass!”

A series of high-pitched chitters started, the Ninjamon repeating Cavan’s name and words. Then, after another moment, he felt the Ninjamon on his head shift imperceptibly. “We do not know of any Cavan within this forest. Are you a Mushroomon spy?”

His words jolted something in Cavan’s memory. Mushroomon—those were the mushroom digimon that also lived in the forest. If he was recalling correctly, they didn’t get along well with the rest of the inhabitants, and there were a lot of them. It was called “Mushroom Forest”, after all, but they weren’t in a position to take control of the forest. Blossomon. It was because of Blossomon.

“We’re here to see Blossomon!” Cavan burst out, looking around at the Ninjamon, who’d frozen enough for Bax to shake one off him. But then the second passed, and two others leapt onto Bax and pinned him down again, and Cavan felt the cold blade against his neck touch his skin.

“We do not appreciate your cruel jokes,” the Ninjamon on his head said. “We will take you to the Flower Council. They will decide whether or not you are spies.”

“Follow,” another Ninjamon said sharply, breaking the darkness, and Cavan did, casting worried glances at Bax, who was being prodded along between snarls. At this point, he had no idea what was happening. Some parts of what he remembered of the game checked out, but others didn't. Now, he just had to follow and see. Maybe Blossomon was on the Flower Council and would be willing to help, or maybe he’d just screwed himself royally by wandering around the digimon world with his digimon.

Seriously, what was he thinking?

Brandon Unicorn


The helmet slipped on smoothly, its weight guiding it down until it settled snugly on his armor. When he opened his eyes, though, all thoughts of the helmet were replaced by the sight in front of him. In place of the barren plains, he saw a stone bridge, which stretched towards a ring of light in the distance. Confusion as to how he got there was interrupted by a voice emanating towards him, which was neither familiar nor comforting. Still, he felt his worries drop away as his legs carried him towards the light, moving without reason. When he tried to pause his step, he found himself unable, but the calm in his mind was not interrupted. The sense that something was wrong failed to worry him, and instead he waited as he walked closer to the light, the voice continuing to speak to him.

The world turned white, then faded into color again, revealing a stone circle in the darkness. Illuminated at the center was a man taller than anyone Brandon had seen before, who wore armor that glowed with a godly blue. Brandon’s mind reached to the titans of myth, who were said to be strong enough to seize lightning bolts and use them as weapons, then on the angels, who were known to be earthly incarnations of Elrath. While the man’s feet were obscured by his tabard, Brandon got a strong sense that he was floating, yet he lacked wings.

The man spoke then, his voice echoing in the darkness. Despite the man’s helmet, Brandon felt as if he could tell the man’s expression, his raised brow, and he realized then that his own helmet had disappeared. When he reached up to confirm this, his arm moved easily and without pain, and it hit him that his aches hadn’t bothered him since before he arrived here. Was he dead, then? Awaiting judgment before he passed into the afterlife? It certainly felt that way. The man had said his name, phrased as a question or not, and there was clearly something unhuman at work here.

That said, there was nowhere to run here and no option but to answer, not that Brandon would’ve run anyway. He was calm now, but the aches and pain that had wracked his body earlier were still fresh in his mind, whether or not they had gone now. This man, whoever or whatever he was, seemed to be helping him, and Brandon had neither a place to run to nor another to turn to.

“Yes, I am Brandon Unicorn.” His voice was steadier than his mind, the calm inside him helping, no doubt. “May I ask who you are, and why you have brought me here?”

Kenny Sokoloski

Rushford: Jenkin’s Diner || May 7th

Kenny shifted in the booth she lay in, her eyes closed in stubborn hope that sleep might come again. It wasn’t until the smell of coffee hit her nose that she finally sat up, accepting the faint sunlight. From what she could see, Karen was up, as was Katie, the former digging through a creamer basket and the latter looking as tired as she was the day before, if not more. Though Kenny doubted any of the group slept well, Katie seemed to be having an especially rough time. There were little hints—the disarray of the diner, her general lack of liveliness, the shovel beside the mop in the hallway—but Kenny hadn’t asked, hadn’t wanted to ask. They’d all taken blows in the last week, and asking about someone else’s forced her to consider her own.

“I’ll help too,” she said after Lena’s offer, sliding off the booth shakily but readily. Her hands went up to adjust her ponytail as she walked towards the kitchen, glancing at Katie and Karen. She wasn’t much for making food, but she could grab ingredients and set up silverware just fine, and she’d done the same for the past few days.

“I think I saw some milk in the back,” she said as she walked past the counter. “Not sure about creamer, but I can check.”

The storage room was markedly darker than the main room of the diner, lacking windows aside from a single one on the door in. Overhead were lights Kenny chose not to turn on, opting instead to head straight for the fridge, which thankfully had its own light. Inside was a meager assortment of ingredients as well as two jugs of milk, one half-empty and one unopened. Shifting those aside, she managed to retrieve a rather light bottle of french vanilla creamer. A shake confirmed it was almost empty, and Kenny shut the fridge door behind her with some resignation before heading back to the front.

“This is all I could find,” she said, sliding the bottle across the counter towards Karen. The smell of coffee was still in the air, distinct and comforting, reminding Kenny of the weekend mornings when she’d bring her brother by for a free brunch. Old Man Jenkins was kind enough to not bat an eye, provided their mother cover their table, and Kenny enjoyed watching her brother drown his pancakes in syrup.

All that remained of those days was the smell of coffee, which hadn’t changed a bit. It was almost strange how familiar the smell was, how warm yet cold it made her feel, and she forced an easy smile that didn’t touch her eyes when Henry spoke. “Sure, lemme pop those in the toaster first.”
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