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Thread: Lisa the Legend: Chapter 82 - Last Night on Earth now up! (24th June 2013)

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  1. #1
    Elite Trainer
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend: Chapter 73 now up! (4th October)

    That was an epic chapter. Very reminiscient of the Half-Blood Prince. The surface of the lake, pulling out the sword (although I guess that's more Chamber of Secrets/Deathly Hallows), what happened at the end... I was actually quite suspicious that Suicune was lying. Just because it seemed that we could no longer trust "revelations". But after what happened at the end, I don't see how Suicune could have been lying. And I wonder whether the guarded power will ever be revealed to us... because we can't pin it down, it seems more horrible than anything that could be put on paper. I really enjoyed the Jenna O'Brien bit, injecting a bit of humour at a crucial point. But it seemed like Lance and Sarah were acting way too young -- especially Sarah, who actually acted like a high school girl. And the phrase "I assume you are still young enough to believe that power and wealth can be dangerous and corrupting things" felt awkward. It felt like Suicune was saying that Lisa was naive for believing that, and that the truth was that power was not corrupting. Like when people say "you are still young enough to believe in the tooth fairy".

    Looking forward to the next chapter!
    mistysakura
    2007 Golden Pens: Co-winner of Best Poem (Rain Eternal) and Best Reviewer
    2007 Silver Pencils: Winner of Best Poem (Death Sonnet -- Untitled)
    2004 Silver Pencils: Winner of Nicest Fanficcer & Least Likely Couple (with PancaKe)
    Former 3-time winner of Most Dedicated Reader at the Fanfiction Forums
    Also Keeper of the 'A'ctivator Unown

    Brimstone Diamonds. The Artist. Tightrope. Solitude. Autopsy.
    Glitter (one-shot).
    Listen to Rain Eternal -- a song.

    Random thought: 2+2=5.

  2. #2
    Master Trainer
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend: Chapter 73 now up! (4th October)

    Just caught up with everything. I'm in awe at how much of your recent work ties in with that you've written at the very beginning. It's a true testament to your vision for the fic that this has become so much more than a Pokemon fic.

    The last chapter was interesting, especially the notion that Lisa's loved ones and ancestors lied - but not conventionally. All the information passed down over 700 years had to suffer, especially with Suicune's notion that humans have intentions and traits which he does not.

    I'm curious about this vast power - I'm thinking it's something very unusual as opposed to a huge force. Could it be something supernatural? All I can think of is something really comic book-y (mind reading, precognition, something with death?) but Suicune noted it was a terrible power.

    Gripped for the next chapter!

    Show-Off
    Contest fic
    *Chapter 37 up*
    Posted September 22nd, 2013


    ________________________________________________



  3. #3
    Elite Trainer
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 74 now up! (19th October)

    What I love about this fic is how some plot twists simply scream "you should have seen this coming". Seriously, after we found out what happened to Lisa in the Sepulchre, we had all the imformation to piece together what Marina had/had not done, and yet it's still such a surprise. But I have a bad feeling about Marina and Gavin splitting up with Lisa. The tension between Gavin and Lisa was done really well; it stil surprises me how Gavin seems to take everything so lightly despite all he's been through, but it makes sense that he doesn't let his sombre side get to him. And I'm okay with the length of "previously on".

    Probably shouldn't be expecting a new chapter until next month, eh?
    mistysakura
    2007 Golden Pens: Co-winner of Best Poem (Rain Eternal) and Best Reviewer
    2007 Silver Pencils: Winner of Best Poem (Death Sonnet -- Untitled)
    2004 Silver Pencils: Winner of Nicest Fanficcer & Least Likely Couple (with PancaKe)
    Former 3-time winner of Most Dedicated Reader at the Fanfiction Forums
    Also Keeper of the 'A'ctivator Unown

    Brimstone Diamonds. The Artist. Tightrope. Solitude. Autopsy.
    Glitter (one-shot).
    Listen to Rain Eternal -- a song.

    Random thought: 2+2=5.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 74 now up! (19th October)

    Hola readers,

    I just finished writing the epilogue to Lisa the Legend.

    There was a moment of numbness, followed by a few unexpected tears (I rarely cry, so this is a big deal) and, now, a bottle of champagne and some generalised numbness.

    It's now 2am, so I'm tired and wired and rapidly becoming tipsy, so I don't have my thoughts in order about all this yet, but I just wanted to share with you all who have stood by me and this story for so long that after ten whole years (TO THE DAY!) of Lisa the Legend being posted here on TPM, I have finished it at long last.

    That means no more months of waiting between chapters; I can now say with confidence that chapters will be regular, because they are all written.

    Writing the climax of the series was amazing, and I hope you guys enjoy it when it finally comes around. I just got Cadmus (aka. my bf) to read over the epilogue and he thinks it's a fitting conclusion to the entire series, and, might I add, "way better than the epilogue to Harry Potter" (though, as that was roundly criticised as being somewhat awful, that doesn't really praise my epilogue as much as say it's not horrible. But I'll take it.)

    This feels fantastic.

    This NaNoWriMo has been the biggest writing exercise I have ever undertaken. I wrote 120k words+.

    More chapters coming soon, then, now that I no longer have to worry about plot holes!

    I will reply to all your posts above when I am more coherent.

    Thank you all for all your support over the last decade, and happy 10th birthday, and happy completion, to Lisa the Legend.



    Cheers!
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 74 now up! (19th October)

    Hello readers,

    Although I finished LTL nearly two months ago now, it took me this long to be able to open the word document again. I think I needed time away - even though all I needed to do was proofread and edit each chapter before posting it. In any case, I've done it now, so here's the next chapter.

    Three quick notes:

    1. Firstly, now that I've started posting, I've decided each chapter will go up EVERY SECOND SUNDAY. I've hesitated to post regularly before for fear that nobody will read in time and will get left behind, but I'm doing it now, so please be advised that chapters will be fortnightly from now on.

    2. Secondly, as chapters will be regular again, this chapter (chapter 75) will be the last one with the "previously on" segment beforehand. It's a bit time-consuming and won't really be needed now that updates are regular (I might include it when a chapter harks back to a really old chapter, though).

    3. I'm reverting back to the other title for Book III of LTL. It's Lisa the Legend III: Rogue once again. You'll see why soon enough.

    Without further ado, here's chapter 75 - hope you enjoy it! Chapter 76 will be up in two weeks!

    Cheers!

    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

    Previously on Lisa the Legend:


    Lisa discovered the truth of her relationship to the Legend ...



    Her father was still speaking, but Lisa heard his voice as if he were calling to her down a cold, dark well. “When you were four years old, Suicune bound itself to you, Lisa. I was there … I saw too late what happened … there was nothing I could do … And so the same thing happened to Lance and Azura … Darius became bound to Entei, and Marina to Raikou … everything changed … by the Legend, it means you kids … the three of you … are now the ones bound to protect the secret … guard the legendaries … you are the ones …”



    ... and the truth of her relationship to Suicune:



    “Exactly,” Dad said. “The only way anyone can take the fragment of key hidden within the Sepulchre of Suicune is to have you enter it, Lisa, as you are the guardian of Suicune. That’s why the Union tracked you down so vehemently over the past four months, Lisa; that’s why you’ve been the object of their attacks so many times. Once they possessed you, they could effectively force you into the Sepulchre of Suicune, once they found it, and lo and behold, they’d be a step closer to having all the keys and finally having access to the secret in the shrine of the legendaries.”



    Lisa, Marina and Gavin escaped the reaches of both the Union and the Guard to attempt to fulfil to Lisa's new mission:



    “Lisa’s bleached her hair and gone into renegade action-fighter mode,” Marina said dryly. “We’re gonna break into the Sepulchre of Suicune and get the key fragment ourselves! Come along for the ride, it’ll be heaps fun!”

    Gavin’s face had gone slack. “Wait – what?”

    “I’m not going back to the safe house,” Lisa said.

    “Why the hell not?”

    Lisa fought the urge to snap at him.

    “Because I’m so sick of this constant running, the constant hiding from the Union, hoping they don’t find me,” she said tersely. “And I’ve realised the sooner I get the fragment of the key that’s in the Sepulchre, the sooner the Union will have no use for me anymore.”




    Lisa's date with destiny came to a tragic end:



    //A little further down – yes, right there. Hold the sceptre tightly, Lisa. Now, make the cut// Suicune’s voice echoed calmly in her pounding ears.

    “Okay, here goes,” Lisa said in a terrified voice.

    She gripped the sceptre tightly in both hands and, murmuring a silent, jumbled prayer, she pressed the diamond blade into the soft skin. A thin red cut began to open up.

    “N-nearly done,” Lisa quavered.

    All of a sudden, Suicune gave a guttural growl and threw all his weight down onto the blade. The sceptre burst through his flesh and tore his heart into a hundred pieces. Her arms trapped beneath his bulk, Lisa watched in horror, her scream mingling with his almighty roar, as crimson blood exploded in bucketloads from his chest, his violet-black eyes reeling backwards as he fitted violently, legs and head flailing in agony, until the ice-white aurora on his back extinguished itself and his dead, broken body went limp, leaving Lisa alone to a private eternity of terror.




    And Lisa discovered that an old diary, left in the Sepulchre of Suicune decades ago, belonged to none other than her dead grandfather:



    Lisa struggled with her own sense of restraint for a moment before flipping frantically to page 61. An amused smile crossed her face when she saw that her grandfather had even written a header – Vital information for quick reference – and underlined it twice with his fountain pen. Her eyes scanned the page greedily, but page 61 was a disappointment: the scrawled text was in the form of antiquated glyphs. A little nervous, she flipped over to page 62.

    And her heart almost stopped.




    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+


    Chapter 75 – Destiny Fulfilled.


    Lisa stared in utter disbelief at page 62 of her grandfather’s leather-bound diary. The words on it encompassed a lifetime, surely; they certainly encompassed hers.

    In her grandfather’s slanted fountain pen scrawl was written:

    Locations of the Seven Keys


    Key 1 – buried beneath the only mixed deposit of Moon Stone and Sun Stone located in cave m1-r3 of Mt. Moon in Kanto region. (see page 11)

    Key 2 – secured beneath a glyph-engraved tablet in cave w3-b12 of Mt. Fairfax cavern system in Johto region. (see page 15)

    Key 3 – planted within the Sacred Statue of Celebi, found in Ruins of Alph, grand mausoleum, later moved to foyer (!) of Blackthorn Museum of the Arts Goldenrod Radio Tower’s Museum Wing. (see page 22)

    Key 4 – secured beneath a glyph-engraved tablet in the most blinding cave in the Silver Rock Island network. (see page 34)

    Key 5 – still undetermined; but I have two main theories (see page 63)

    Key 6 – 1/3 Sepulchre of Suicune (Lake of Purity Lotus Lake); 1/3 Sepulchre of Raikou (the Ikoswit Gorge, near Emerald Plains); 1/3 Sepulchre of Entei (Mt. Fairfax). (see page 47)

    Key 7 – the most perplexing mystery of all.

    The Iron Lock


    It is written on a turquoise tablet that we found within the Ruins of Alph, in their ancient language:

    “He who opens the Iron Lock will obtain the fire of the Phoenix.”*

    *Hudson, Westwood and I have discussed this at length. It could mean ultimate power or eternal life or the ability to resurrect dead souls. Or all of these?


    Lisa glanced at the final page of the diary, but it had been torn out.

    “Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God!”

    Lisa repeated the phrase what felt like a thousand times. She read and reread the information contained in the pages before her, completely mindblown by the enormity of her grandfather’s work. So was this what Suicune had referred to before they had entered the Sepulchre? Ultimate power or eternal life? They didn’t sound so horrible.

    Disappointment tempered her excitement suddenly: here was the empirical proof that her grandfather had, indeed, known full well about the Legend and the Guardianship. Suicune had been right in assuming that he had lied about Bernard Hudson’s alleged ‘rediscovery’ of the Legend – he had played dumb, either for money or some other motive. With a mild surprise, she noted that Westwood, Hudson and her grandfather had evidently all worked together: that explained why the Union had been so keen to kidnap Westwood. Lisa realised, with another jolt, that it also explained why Westwood had been so hospitable to her, allowing her and Gavin to stay at his mansion in November: though he had never addressed it, he had known who she was; he had been friends, or at least colleagues, with her grandfather.

    Lisa re-examined the diary. Unless her grandfather had been mistaken, he knew even more than the Guard seemed to about the power within the Iron Lock. Lisa’s mind buzzed. Eternal life? It couldn’t be. The ramifications of that would be too titanic to fathom …

    Her skin broke into gooseflesh. The thought of eternal life danced before her brain. What did that mean? Eternal life for the person who opened the Iron Lock? Eternal life for all? How could that be the same power that Suicune described as terrible?

    For the first time, the fire within her flickered. If she tried to dispose of her key fragment, or hide it somewhere unfindable, the Union would never be able to access the ‘fire of the Phoenix’. At the same time, it would be her decision for the world to never discover the full extent of the magic within the Iron Lock.

    She shook her head, trying to clear it of the clotting confusion, and instead flipped back and forth through the diary, amazed. The work that must have gone into acquiring all that knowledge must have been tremendous. How had he discovered so much? And why had he kept it a secret, and not passed it on to Ryan? Why had he decided to store it, of all places, in the supposedly never-to-be-entered Sepulchre of Suicune?

    Flabbergasted, Lisa stared at the description of the third key’s location. Had she really been mere metres away from the Third Key, back in October? The Museum Wing was an opulent annex of the Radio Tower, standing slightly separate from the tower proper. Lisa frowned. Had the statue survived the Radio Tower’s collapse in October? Had it been destroyed, blown to pieces, perhaps, and the Third Key found by a staff member or, worse, a Union agent?

    Her heart, almost vibrating, was attempting to occupy her throat: if the statue hadn’t been destroyed, did that mean the Third Key was still located in this very city, only a few kilometres away?

    She had to find out.

    After noting with dismay that the last page of the diary had been torn out – and roughly – she flipped back to the front page of the diary and stared curiously at the dedication. Something definitely wasn’t adding up … but now was hardly the time to dwell on it. Lisa clapped the diary shut, locked the tiny gold bolt in place and slipped the diary back into her jeans. Her heart still racing, she pulled on her sunglasses, shoes and socks and ran into the living room before stopping abruptly in her tracks.

    She hesitated anxiously: her mind had darted to the key fragment in her pocket. If she went outside and by a turn of bad luck was captured by some Union agent, the fragment that Gavin and Marina had entrusted her with – and their greatest weapon against the Union – would be lost too.

    She scanned the apartment for somewhere unassuming to hide the fragment. She would only be gone for a couple of hours at the most, probably: she needed somewhere inconspicuous just in case. Returning to Dave’s room, she hunted through the messy chest of drawers by his bedside.

    “Oh, perfect!” she giggled, after fishing through the mess of the bottom drawer. Among Dave’s boxers and briefs, a couple of chains, a belt, a sea of old receipts, a belt buckle, a deflated football and some loose change, she had found a box of condoms. Unable to suppress another giggle, she opened the half-empty box and dropped the fragment into it. She hesitated. If someone broke in and shook the box, they’d hear something odd within. Or was she being too paranoid?

    Sure that all would be fine, she closed the drawer and then, vacillating, opened it up and reopened the box. Feeling slightly as though she had strayed into forbidden waters, she used the sharp edge of the key to make a tiny incision in one of the condom packets, and then slid the fragment into the packet completely. She closed the box up and rattled it: it was impossible to tell that there was anything unusual within. Laughing at her own thoroughness, she hid the box well in the sea of clutter in the drawer and went to wash her hands in the bathroom.

    Jogging back through the apartment, she noticed a note on the bench from Marina:

    Hey Leese,

    I know you’re too proud to take this from me face to face, but I also know you’re out of cash, so here’s some dough for food, male company, etc.

    Love you,

    Marina.


    And at that exact moment, Marina’s mobile buzzed in Lisa’s pocket. She checked the screen: a text had come through from Gavin’s phone:

    breakfast over, on the road now wooo! stay safe! M. xo

    Lisa grinned; Marina’s sign-off had given her a James Bond flashback. Feeling incredibly grateful, she took the three fifty-dollar bills from beneath the note and, pocketing them and the key to Gavin’s apartment, she left.

    *

    The owner of the Internet café on Madison Street was surly and his rates were excessively dear (five dollars for half an hour), but Lisa paid happily and scrambled to get online at the nearest computer terminal. She tapped her fingernails on the desk impatiently as the homepage loaded, image by image, and then, finally, she typed in the search bar, ‘Sacred Statue of Celebi’ and clicked on the online encyclopaedia entry that popped up first on the list of results:

    Antoknossos’ Celebi

    Antoknossos’ Celebi (pictured), also known as the Sacred Statue of Celebi, is one of the most renowned works of art extracted from the Ruins of Alph in the Johto province.

    The statue is a feat of ancient sculpture. Constructed by Alphian sculptor and poet, Adrian Antoknossos (1305 – 1351), it is comprised of almost pure jade, standing at a staggering 1.8 metres high and up to a metre wide. The piece is notable for the fact that it was sculpted not from one block of stone, but from two blocks that Antoknossos fused together to create a perfectly symmetrical statue. The work dates back as far as 1339 and is considered by many to be Antoknossos’ master work.

    Finally extracted from the Ruins of Alph in 1975, the statue was initially housed in the Blackthorn Museum of the Arts from 1975 through to 1982, when it was purchased by Charles Druos for the Museum Wing of the newly-constructed Goldenrod Radio and Communications Tower (Radio Tower). Though the statue survived the 2002 Radio Tower Collapse, the Museum Wing itself was greatly damaged and had to be demolished. The statue is temporarily being stored in the Goldenrod City Library, pending the reconstruction of the Radio Tower, currently slated for early 2006.


    Lisa bit her tongue with mingled excitement and wonder. She had learned about Antoknossos and his works at school: he was one of the most famous artists of his era. She shivered. So he had known about the keys, then. Was he an ancestor of her, Darius or Marina, perhaps? Or had the Guardians of that time simply entrusted him to protect the key for them?

    She tapped her fingers on the desk again. How on earth was she supposed to extract a tiny key from within a solid block of jade, short of blowing it to smithereens? And how on earth was she meant to get away with it in a public place?

    She pulled out the leather-bound diary and flipped through to page 22, looking for guidance. She squinted at her grandfather’s slanted writing, reading through his musings until she came to a diagram of Antoknossos’ Celebi, and a scrawled note from Theodore Walters:

    According to the texts I have found, the key was embedded in the exact centre of the statue’s head, right behind the eyes.

    “So now what?” Lisa mumbled aloud; the dark-skinned, dreadlocked girl at the computer beside her smirked and cast her an obtuse look. Lisa shrugged it off and went back to scanning the internet page, as though it would also offer information on how to extract hidden keys from within the statue.

    After a few minutes, she gave up and left the Internet café, setting off down the crowded sidewalk of Madison Street toward Goldenrod’s Central Business District, where the library was located, hoping that some kind of genius idea would hit her before she got there.

    *

    The door of Lance Hudson’s drawing room swung open and he stepped into the stunningly well-lit reception area. Sarah sat at her desk, typing up an e-mail.

    “Need a refill, Lance?” she asked blankly, tapping away at her computer.

    “Not right now, Sarah. I have some great news from Giles and Gideon.”

    “Ooh!”

    Sarah tore her rust-coloured eyes from the screen and devoted her full attention to Lance who, having just returned from an important meeting, wore a black, pin-striped suit, complete with shiny shoes, a red silk tie and a grey fedora.

    “What is it, then?” she asked.

    “They just got confirmation about the kids from Jack Criddle, one of Lisa’s listed associates. It looks like all three of them – Lisa, Gavin and Marina – have banded together, like we thought. And apparently they’re now somewhere in mainland Johto, though we don’t know where.”

    “Incredible,” Sarah breathed. “Man, I can’t believe them. What on earth are they up to?”

    “And if they’re alive and well, why aren’t they answering their phones?” Lance added bitterly. “Anyway, Giles and Gideon are going to keep investigating for me, but in the meantime, I need you to get the heads of the teams together for a meeting ASAP so we can brief them on this. We’re going to need the whole Guard involved if we want to find them.”

    “Righto!”

    “Oh, and call Darius and tell him I need to see him right away.”

    “I’m on it.”

    *

    The Goldenrod City Library was one of the oldest structures in the metropolis: an imposing edifice of white marble columns and ornately decorated windows, its eight levels cast half of Madison Street East into its shadow.

    As Lisa stared up at the library, Marina’s mobile vibrated in her pocket. She took it out of her pocket and saw that a new message had come through from Darius Hudson:

    Hi Marina. We’re all really worried about you and hope you’re safe. Text me back if you are able to.

    Lisa felt a sudden pang of longing. She had tried to put Darius out of her mind with the events of the past few days, but with his words right before her eyes, it was impossible to forget him. Sitting down on a park bench immediately before the entrance to the library, she closed her eyes and imagined a day – just one day – alone with Darius, perhaps just going for a walk at the Lakeside Mall in Ecruteak or seeing the latest film at the Octoplex. She rolled the moment around on her palate for a few seconds, enjoying the sweetness and the otherworldliness, before sighing and shoving Marina’s phone back in her pocket.

    She reopened her eyes and set about scanning the entrance to the Goldenrod City Library. The staircase that led to the edifice was no less decadent than the building itself: white marble steps, framed on either side by thick black and gold balustrades, rose sharply to the elevated sandstone archway that led into the library’s foyer.

    “Here goes,” Lisa muttered to herself, stepping onto the bottommost stair.

    She had only taken a few steps when she heard it: a familiar voice – the voice of a woman – barely a metre to her right.

    “ … actually built inside the statue. Right in the middle of the head, behind the eyes.”

    Her heart skipped a beat and her mind seemed to frost over instantly, but the sheer panic forced her to keep ascending the stairs slowly. She didn’t dare look to her right, but rather, focused on the enormous shape of the grand archway ahead; nonetheless, she was aware with each thudding footfall that Veronica, Joseph Sterling’s right-hand woman, was exactly in step with her.

    She was almost halfway to the archway when her brain managed to regain some authority over her limbs. Feeling as though she were practically shining an enormous spotlight on herself, she reached a landing and knelt down, ostensibly to tie her shoelace. Blood rushed to her head and her vision blurred – she half expected to hear a cry of shock and then the sizzle of a beam of energy rushing at her – but there was only the sound of the morning traffic in the street below, the bad singing of a nearby busker and the general hum of pedestrians and tourists.

    Catching her breath and thanking her lucky stars that she had bleached her hair at Jamie’s house, Lisa untied and retied her shoelace and surveyed the people who were now several metres further ahead than she. The sleek length of platinum blonde hair draped against a black-clothed back, combined with the unmistakeable voice Lisa had heard, confirmed for sure that the woman on the steps ahead was Veronica. Amid her panic came a sense of rising dread: Veronica was flanked by no fewer than four men, no doubt some of the most highly-skilled agents the Union had to offer.

    Without really thinking about what she was doing, Lisa unknotted her other shoe and set about slowly retying the lace. Veronica’s words rang in her ears.

    The Union knew about the statue. They had discovered exactly where the key was.

    *

    Trying to align herself with the tail end of a guided tour, Lisa walked as casually as possible through the sandstone archway and into the alfresco foyer of the Goldenrod City Library. Her eyes bulged behind her dark aviators: the foyer was yet another exercise in antiquity-style opulence. Colourful tapestries decorated the sandstone walls and verdant creepers dotted with violet flowers clung to the glassless windows and balustrades. Various artworks and sculptures adorned the corners of the foyer, but none quite so great as the enormous jade sculpture in the very centre of the room.

    Six feet tall, Antoknossos’ Celebi was raised on a granite podium, surrounded by eager tourists who seemed to vary in their interest in the piece: some took photos of themselves beside the sculpture as a kind of jaded ritual; others traced their hands over the smooth surface in an apparent trance, clearly fascinated by the work.

    “And yes, I know what all your eyes have immediately gone to, but we’ll touch on Antoknossos’ work at the end of the tour,” boomed the auburn-haired tour guide, tapping her clipboard impatiently as the entire tour group – like Lisa – gawked at the jade Celebi. “For now, let’s start with an overlooked gem of the Renaissance: the first tapestry of Soliono of Ecruteak!”

    There was a vague buzz among the other tourists. Lisa shuffled along behind them, keeping close enough so that anyone watching would think she was a part of the group, while maintaining enough distance between herself and the tour guide so that she would not be seen and asked to pay.

    As the tour guide launched into a tired introduction of Soliono’s tapestry, Lisa scanned the foyer for signs of the Union agents. The reason she had not spotted them when she entered the foyer quickly became apparent: they had split up. Though Lisa had not seen any of the men’s faces, she could only spy one of them for sure – a bulky man in torn blue jeans and a leather jacket – standing at the concierge desk, apparently asking for information. Lisa’s eyes darted around the foyer: where had Veronica gone? Had the others entered the library itself, perhaps?

    “And next, we have a well-known piece that is sure to delight you all: Garbaddi’s famous fresco, The Mourning Light. Keep up, please!”

    Scarcely avoiding having her foot impaled by an elderly woman’s walking frame, Lisa shuffled along with the group, trying to feign interest. Once the tour guide launched into a discussion of Garbaddi’s use of light in his painting, she wheeled around again to scan the foyer – and at once, her eyes fell on Veronica.

    She was standing behind Antoknossos’ Celebi, previously obscured from Lisa’s line of sight. The oversized pair of brown sunglasses that covered most of her face gave her the unassuming impression of a bimbo. Indeed, as Lisa watched her, it seemed that Veronica’s plan had been to disguise herself as a bottle-blonde moron: she wore an uncharacteristically revealing black halterneck and frayed denim shorts, and rather than overtly appraising the structure, she seemed bored by it, instead texting on a bright pink mobile phone while one of the other Union agents read the long inscription beside the statue, apparently fascinated.

    “If you’re not going to keep pace with the group, at least have the courtesy to stand right at the back!” snarled the elderly woman behind Lisa, roughly clattering past her as the group moved on to the next piece.

    Lisa flinched, not because she was fazed by the woman’s outburst but because she feared it would draw attention to her; however, for the second time that day, she was proven to be somewhat paranoid: neither Veronica nor either of the two visible Union agents looked up from what they were doing. She reminded herself for the umpteenth time that with her short, bleached hair and different clothes, she looked nothing like the Lisa Walters the Union knew.

    She reluctantly followed the group to the third, fourth and fifth pieces of interest, casting surreptitious glances at Veronica and her agents as often as she dared. They weren’t making any obvious movements, and yet they were lingering for a long time at the statue. Was the foyer about to be rocked by a massive explosion? Were the agents biding their time for something to happen before they took the Third Key – from right beneath Lisa’s nose?

    Lisa frowned. There were two security guards in the foyer and a handful of large cameras affixed to the sandstone ceiling. Given her knowledge of what the Union was capable of, she knew that such security measures amounted to little more than a picket fence.

    “And now, the moment I can tell you’ve all been waiting for: Antoknossos’ Celebi!” declared the tour guide, her voice loaded with empty excitement. At once, the throng of tourists abandoned the latest tapestry and swarmed toward the statue.

    Lisa didn’t idle: she rushed forward with the rest of them, keen to avoid the vengeful clatter of the elderly lady’s walking frame, and at once found herself mere metres away from an unsuspecting Veronica, who still had not moved an inch. Amid the camera flashes and teenagers posing for photographs in front of the statue, Lisa saw Veronica turn her head and say something to the Union agent nearest her, but over the cacophony of the tourists’ excited chatting, Lisa couldn’t make out what was said.

    And then, suddenly, shielded by the crowd, Veronica moved.

    Standing firm against the jostling of the tourists, Lisa glued both her eyes to the blonde woman before her. Veronica reached into her pink handbag and produced what looked like a compact. She opened it, gouged her fingers into whatever was within, and placed it sleekly into the bag once more.

    “No! Move, move, move!” Lisa hissed, as an obese man wearing a Hawaiian shirt moved into her line of vision, sipping at a slushie, apparently unaware of the artistic wonder before him.

    When the man finally moved, Veronica had too – but not far. She had crept around the other side of the statue and was now tracing her fingers slowly around its middle. Lisa squinted and moved a little closer, so that she was now close enough to touch the statue itself. Veronica’s fingers seemed to be coated in some kind of vermilion-coloured powder, but her tracing around the statue left no mark at all.

    Heart pounding, Lisa instinctively took a step back from the statue, anticipating some kind of sudden explosion, but her brain caught up with her: if Veronica was still standing right beside the statue, there was clearly no imminent danger. Gingerly, Lisa stepped back onto the granite podium and began tracing her hand around the statue, much as Veronica had. Pushing past a couple of bored-looking kids, she circled the statue until she was right beside Veronica, who now stood in the statue’s shadow, sending a text on her mobile phone.

    Lisa’s breath had left her: she raised her head as if appraising the Celebi’s ornate antennae and then, beneath her aviators, sneaked a peek at the screen of Veronica’s pink-and-silver mobile. For a moment, nothing happened, and then the screen flared to life and a notification appeared:

    1 new message received – Joe.

    As her heart thudded, Lisa readied her legs. Was Joseph Sterling sending through the order to blow the statue to pieces? Would she need to run to save herself? She took a surreptitious snatch at oxygen with her nostrils and pretended to check the time on Marina’s mobile before she shot an electric glance at Veronica’s mobile one more time and saw on the screen, just before Veronica deleted it, a text message:

    It will take several hours. Go back at 8pm and retrieve it.

    Veronica clapped the phone shut and stowed it in her pink handbag. Lisa jolted and returned to gazing solemnly at the statue. For a terrible, blood-curdling second, she felt Veronica’s eyes burning into the side of her face. Mustering all her confidence, she reached a leaden arm out and traced her fingers over the statue’s surface, apparently entranced, before turning deliberately away from Veronica and pushing very gently through the crowd, toward the plaque that described the statue.

    Adrenaline electrified her veins as she stared blankly at the plaque on the floor, pretending to read it. She didn’t dare look up to find out if Veronica was looking at her, but stared resolutely at the shiny plaque before her, the words on it utterly meaningless. Seconds passed and then, mercifully, minutes. Slowly, her face cooled.

    After a good five minutes – and most of the crowd of tourists – had passed, Lisa scanned the foyer gingerly and found no sign of Veronica or any of the other agents. Her heart struggling to regain a steady rhythm, she walked in a controlled manner toward the ladies’ toilets, locked herself in a cubicle and, putting her head in her hands, shook uncontrollably.

    *

    A fierce April sun bore down on the Ikoswit Gorge, a ribbon of sunburnt rock that divided the thick, verdant foliage of the Ikoswit Forest from the vast landscapes of Emerald Plains to the east. Unhindered by the midday heat reflecting off the rock walls, two teenage figures hiked down the centre of the gorge, keeping their path close to the narrow sliver of water that ran the length of the canyon.

    “This is looking more and more familiar,” said Gavin, wiping his sweaty forehead on his sleeve. “I think we’re just about on it. Maybe one more bend.”

    Marina squirted a jet of water into her mouth from her bottle, gulping it down gratefully.

    “I wish I hadn’t been blindfolded at the time, otherwise I’d have some clue as to where it is,” she sighed, veering around a jagged orange-brown boulder.

    “I’m sure we’re close,” Gavin said confidently.

    They approached a sharp bend in the gorge.

    “I think it’s just after this bend,” Gavin said. “Are you nervous, then?” he ventured gingerly.

    Marina seemed to stiffen. She turned and faced Gavin, her face chalk-like.

    “I’m rationalising it like this,” she said, her voice rigid. “Lisa went in there and had no idea what she had to do. At least I know what to expect. I know what I have to do, so it won’t be a shock when Raikou says it.”

    She seemed to verge on saying something more, but decided against it, and strode onwards, ever closer to the bend in the gorge.

    “Of course, there’s still the chance that we’re completely wrong, and the Union already have the fragment,” she added seriously.

    “I reckon Lisa’s right,” Gavin said, shaking his head. “If Suicune told her only the guardian can do the deed, then he’s right.”

    “I know. But I really wish it was the other way,” Marina sighed heavily.

    Their path curved around the bend. For a few paces, nothing was visible except the opposite wall of the gorge, red and shimmering with reflected heat. Then, they rounded the bend and a new stretch of canyon unfurled before them, looking almost identical to the last stretch except for one detail.

    “Oh wow,” Marina gasped.

    Standing on a high boulder in the middle of the gorge was the legendary beast of electricity: Raikou.

    *

    Marina Frost kept her head pressed firmly against Raikou’s furry violet back as the legendary dog pelted down one rocky tunnel after another, yellow sparks exploding from his jaws as he ran, setting fire to the formerly dormant wooden torches fixed along the walls.

    After a few minutes, the beast slowed; Marina shifted her head ever-so-slightly off Raikou’s fur and saw, through tendrils of her own ultramarine hair, that the tunnel had opened up into a larger antechamber.

    “Wow,” she breathed.

    Raikou’s antechamber was no less breathtaking the second time around: at the broadest side of the cavern, a dais made seemingly of pure gold glittered gorgeously in the yellow light of the torches. A six-foot-tall golden statue of Raikou, eyes made of dark amber, guarded the giant, gem-encrusted oak double door that led to the Sepulchre of Raikou. In other circumstances, the excess of gold might have been gaudy, but the sheer grandeur of the scene rendered such a thought impossible.

    //Welcome, Marina Frost//

    Marina tore her gaze from the glittering cavern; Raikou, whose back she was still clinging to, had turned to regard her kindly, the black-and-blue face uncharacteristically soft.

    “Thank you,” Marina said, slightly timidly, as she slid awkwardly off the beast’s back. She hurriedly straightened her flyaway hair and brushed it out of her face as Raikou paced toward the golden dais and then turned to face her.

    //Your second visit to my Sepulchre// Raikou said telepathically. //And the last time anyone will see it ever again//

    Marina felt a pang of fear and tragedy; so, Lisa’s hypothesis had been dead on.

    “S-so … when the Union brought me here last time … you tricked them?”

    //One of the many security measures the Guardians put into place, in case we were ever forced to enter the Sepulchre under duress// Raikou said, scraping his claws nonchalantly against the golden dais; a deep swipe mark appeared in the soft metal. //Assuming, of course, that the party placing us under duress didn’t already know that we had to be killed with the Sceptre – which, luckily, the Union didn’t. They thought a bit of Entei’s powers and a machete could finish me? HA!//

    Marina couldn’t muster up the strength to laugh; her hands were beginning to tingle slightly, her heart fluttering.

    //Ah – yes// Raikou said suddenly. //You are aware of what must happen within the Sepulchre, aren’t you?//

    “Yes. Lisa told me,” Marina breathed.

    //Ah, Lisa Walters// Raikou said. //Truly an inspirational young woman. She is the reason we are here now, of course. Had she never dropped into our Brotherhood’s meeting in the Burned Tower, Suicune never would have come up with his scheme to open the Sepulchres prematurely, and Entei would never have turned against us quite so violently// He shook his enormous head bitterly.

    “Where is Entei now?” Marina asked.

    Raikou pawed his own statue casually.

    //He has abandoned the Brotherhood and our true cause. Apart from that, I will never know. We will not speak again//

    Marina flinched.

    Raikou fixed her with a serious gaze.

    //So I am to take it that Lisa has entered the Sepulchre of Suicune, then. And my brother is dead//

    Marina shivered.

    “Yes. She did it just yesterday. That’s when we realised I hadn’t actually fulfilled my duties here.”

    //And what is the great plan? Has the Guard decided to do what Suicune once planned – and I agreed to? Enter the Sepulchres, hide the fragments elsewhere, away from the Union’s grasp?//

    “Well – that is the plan – yes,” Marina said slowly. “But it’s not the Guard’s plan – it’s ours. Well, Lisa and Jamie came up with it, but we’re playing along. We’re not telling the Guard anything.”

    For the first time, Raikou looked mightily impressed by the blue-haired teenager before him.

    //Youth never ceases to inspire me// he boomed. //That you have done this without the Guard’s knowledge is a pleasing truth to hear before my end. I have never truly trusted the Guard//

    “Suicune said the same thing to Lisa.”

    //We were in agreeance, then. The Guard always were a little too good to be real, I think// Raikou said, his electric-blue bolt-shaped tail bouncing slightly in amusement.

    His face suddenly sharpened.

    //Well – there is no sense in delaying the inevitable, nor is there any sense in keeping Gavin Luper waiting. Let us enter the Sepulchre and be done with it all. Before we enter, though, I wish to say that I admired your courage a great deal when you were brought here by the Union. Indeed, it has been a great honour to serve your mother, and grandmother, and the rest of your bloodline before that – a line of truly impressive women and men//

    A painful silence lingered in the air; searching for the right thing to respond with, Marina said awkwardly, “Thank you so much. I suppose – on behalf of all of us – it’s been great to serve as Guardians with you, too.”

    Raikou laughed suddenly; a loud, non-telepathic guffaw. Once he calmed down, he fixed Marina with his deep crimson eyes and smiled.

    //You don’t mean it in the same way as I do, but thank you for saying it.

    //And now, let us meet our destiny//

    *

    The Sepulchre of Raikou was a tiny chamber, its floor, walls and ceiling all constructed of what looked like solid, translucent amber. Two torches were fixed in golden brackets on the far wall, but only the yellow flame on the right still burned, its light reflecting brilliantly in the glassy room.

    Beneath the bracket was a golden tabernacle.

    “My sceptre is in there, right?” Marina said, her heart beating faster than ever.

    Raikou had stalked over to the tabernacle and sat down, tail sparking mildly.

    //It is. You should act quickly. You will want enough time to escape this cavern before it self-destructs//

    “Right,” Marina said firmly, but her palms were sweaty and she was feeling progressively more woozy. She gingerly made her way to the tabernacle, threw it open and groped around inside; her hand closed on something unexpectedly soft. Bemused, she pulled her find from the tabernacle: it was a foot-long silver sceptre, encrusted with amber, its tip a deathly-sharp white crystal.

    A thick piece of paper had been tied with a strand of red ribbon to the handle.

    //From your grandmother// Raikou said. //She summoned me one day, years ago, to enter this place and leave that note for her descendent//

    “She felt guilty,” Marina surmised, untying the ribbon and tucking the note into her pocket. “She agreed to lie to my mother about the Legend, apparently for money.”

    Raikou’s face soured.

    //I wish I had never had to know that//

    Marina felt a wave of guilt.

    “I’m sorry – on her behalf.”

    Raikou tilted his head in a way to say that he did not mind.

    //No time for this. You have your sceptre and only seconds of calm remaining. You must do it now//

    As he spoke, there was a sudden tremor; a growling was coming from somewhere beyond the amber walls.

    “Okay,” Marina said. “Okay, I can do this …”

    //You must!// Raikou urged. //Come closer//

    Marina shuffled forward, her shoes scarcely lifting off the sleek amber floor, her limbs stiffening as she reached Raikou’s side.

    Her head was spinning as she stood over Raikou’s calmly breathing body, sceptre at hand. She raised the weapon high as Raikou shifted his foreleg, revealing an exposed underbelly, heart beating beneath ice-white fur.

    Gasping, she froze.

    “I can’t. It’s too much, I’m sorry – I can’t!”

    Raikou’s scarlet eyes locked with her frightened ones; in the same instant, the floor shook violently, and the ominous rumbling began to grow louder.

    //You are a Frost. You have the courage to do this//

    Marina swallowed; her throat was swollen with a ball of fear.

    “Can you do what Suicune did for Lisa? If I hold the sceptre to your chest, can you kind of –” Marina gestured to indicate Raikou impaling himself.

    //Yes. Go, you must do it now or there will be no time! Be brave, Marina!//

    Gritting her teeth, both hands gripping the handle, Marina held the tip of her sceptre to the ice-white fur near Raikou’s heart, and steadied her footing as the floor shook again.

    Raikou smiled toothily, said, //Take the fragment and run, child!//, and threw himself onto the razor-sharp tip of the sceptre.

    Abruptly, chaos reigned: hot blood spilled over Marina’s arms as she screamed; Raikou’s body fitted wildly, sparks flying from his back; the floor trembled again; and the final torch was extinguished, plunging the sepulchre into pitch blackness.

    “No!” Marina spluttered, pulling her arms from Raikou’s carcass. Panic begin to stalk her heart: she was blind and the world was shaking violently. She reached for her belt, picked a pokéball at random and pressed the button on it; a burst of radiant white light exploded from the ball, briefly illuminating the chamber and reflecting off the golden tabernacle and the sconce; Marina lunged for the place where the right torch had once burned and felt her hand close over something small and glassy.

    Bitterness and joy mingled in her hammering heart as an explosion rent the air, throwing her roughly to the amber floor beside Raikou’s body.

    Destiny fulfilled.
    Last edited by Gavin Luper; 22nd January 2012 at 09:22 AM.
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 75 now up! (22nd January)

    I'm impressed that Lisa's grandfather managed to gather so much information. I wonder if he really did it purely to preserve his power, or whether something else is going on... seeing as Marina's grandmother also left her a message... Marina had so much courage. It must be even worse for her, knowing exactly what she has to do, and having to go ahead and do it anyway. Her struggle was depicted really well. But how on earth did Veronica know where to find the key? And is it really a coincidence that she and Lisa are looking for the same key at the same time, or does Lisa somehow have another spy around her? Unless the diary itself was planted to lure Lisa to the statue, but I don't see how that's possible. Waiting for the next chapter!
    mistysakura
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  7. #7
    The slaughter never ends. Junior Trainer
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 75 now up! (22nd January)

    She had only taken a few steps when she heard it: a familiar voice – the voice of a woman – barely a metre to her right.

    “ … actually built inside the statue. Right in the middle of the head, behind the eyes.”
    Why hello there, "oh shit" moment.

    As he spoke, there was a sudden tremor; a growling was coming from somewhere beyond the amber walls.
    That was a nice, ominous little detail. It was pretty suspenseful, I must say, reading and waiting to find out if Marina would do what Raikou required of her before anything could go awry.

    Oh, and I rather liked Raikou's personality.

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 76 now up! (8th February)

    Thanks for your feedback, guys.

    Quote Originally Posted by mistysakura View Post
    I'm impressed that Lisa's grandfather managed to gather so much information. I wonder if he really did it purely to preserve his power, or whether something else is going on... seeing as Marina's grandmother also left her a message... Marina had so much courage. It must be even worse for her, knowing exactly what she has to do, and having to go ahead and do it anyway. Her struggle was depicted really well. But how on earth did Veronica know where to find the key? And is it really a coincidence that she and Lisa are looking for the same key at the same time, or does Lisa somehow have another spy around her? Unless the diary itself was planted to lure Lisa to the statue, but I don't see how that's possible. Waiting for the next chapter!
    Hullo Ada, and thanks for the comments and questions! Lisa's grandfather certainly did a studious job documenting it all. I wonder how, and why? ^_^ As for Marina's grandmother's message ... you are on the right track in linking the two together, but there's more to all this than meets the eye. I felt for Marina too - and I agree, it would have been much harder to do it knowing what was coming. She's a very fierce soul. Veronica's information came from Sterling - but how did he find out? Lots of good questions and I don't want to reveal anything because it will all spill out in good time. Thanks again, next chapter is here!

    Quote Originally Posted by Sike Saner View Post
    Why hello there, "oh shit" moment.

    That was a nice, ominous little detail. It was pretty suspenseful, I must say, reading and waiting to find out if Marina would do what Raikou required of her before anything could go awry.

    Oh, and I rather liked Raikou's personality.
    Howdy Sike - thanks for the read. Hehe, I do like to throw those "oh shit" moments in there, I'm pretty sure LTL is now peppered with them, though hopefully not overly so. Glad you liked the suspense that came with Marina's foray into the Sepulchre of Raikou - and that you dig (or dug) Raikou's personality. I think he complements Suicune well, whereas Suicune is more passionate and paternalistic and direct and engaged, Raikou tends to be a bit more distant and yet quite kind in a tough, no bullshit kind of way. Or tended to be, rather; have to use past tense now, poor beast. Thanks for your reply as always.

    It's a couple of days late but here's Chapter 76! No more extended 'Previously on Lisa the Legend' intros as they tend to be a bit time-consuming and now that chapters are regular, unnecessary. But here's a quick recap on where we left off:

    - Gavin and Marina travelled to Emerald Plains, where Marina killed Raikou and obtained, with some difficulty, her fragment of the Sixth Key.

    - The Union's Operations Manager, Larry O'Brien, revealed himself to Lisa as a double agent. His Guard contact is Lance Hudson's personal assistant, Sarah Venner, their exchanges made though a series of coded telephone calls.

    - Alone in Goldenrod City, Lisa found her grandfather's diary, which led her to the location of the Third Key, however Veronica and the Union looked to be on the verge of beating her to it.


    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

    Chapter 76 – Run Like Hell.


    If he hadn’t known what was taking place in a cave somewhere around him, Gavin might have fallen asleep in the warmth of the sun. He lay on a flat rock in the middle of the gorge, his bare feet dangling in the shallow creek and his eyelids closed when, quite abruptly, his mobile vibrated in his pocket.

    Blinking against the sun, he slid the cover open and read the new text message. It was from Marina’s mobile: a message from Lisa:

    Any chance you will make it back here before 8pm? Just wondering. L.

    Gavin checked his watch: it was already two-thirty. Marina had been gone for almost half an hour, but he wasn’t alarmed: Lisa had taken well over an hour in the Sepulchre of Suicune. Still, he hoped Marina wouldn’t be too much longer, or their chances of returning to Goldenrod today would be slim. After an arduous six hour drive, Melanie had taken Gavin and Marina as close to the Ikoswit Gorge as possible, eventually parking her sedan at the end of a gravel track that led from the Dervine Expressway deep into Emerald Plains. Nonetheless, they had trekked a further kilometre or so to reach the Sepulchre.

    Sunlight crackling on his eyelids, Gavin crunched the numbers. Even if Marina returned within the hour, they wouldn’t make it back to Goldenrod until late that night, definitely hours after eight o’clock.

    Gavin typed out a quick reply:

    No chance. Maybe 9ish at the earliest. M in Sep. now. Waiting. Why do you ask?

    He pocketed the mobile and closed his eyes again, inviting a nap …

    BOOM!

    The explosion came out of nowhere. A column of thick grey smoke erupted from the wall of the canyon; rocks, dust and debris flew into the air, cloaking Gavin in a world of opaque grey. Coughing and rubbing the specks from his eyes, he lunged for the ground, but it was no escape: smoke had consumed the entire gorge, carrying with it a wave of intense heat.

    “MARINA?! MARINA!” Gavin roared, amid a second, and then a third explosion. “MARINA, WHERE ARE YOU?!”

    There was nothing but the resounding echo of the explosions in his ears.

    “MARINA!”

    And then, gloriously, between the third and fourth blasts, there came through the opaque haze of smoke the imposing cobalt form of a Golduck, carrying a slender, blue-haired teenager.

    “Gavin – I got it – it’s okay – I got it …”

    *

    Lisa regarded Gavin’s text message without surprise. She had known it would be a long shot for him to return during the daylight hours, but she had been desperate for help. Sighing, she typed back a reply:

    No worries, just wondering. See you tonight.

    She finished towelling her short hair dry and stared with mild horror at her own reflection in Gavin and Dave’s dull, spotted mirror. The supermarket she had stopped by had only offered two shades of hair dye that weren’t a type of brown or black: blonde (which the Union had already seen, or Veronica had, at least) and crimson. Feeling roguish, Lisa had picked up the crimson and rushed back to Gavin’s apartment to put the rinse through her hair. The result was awful, but she at least looked completely different to the girl who had visited the Goldenrod City Library earlier that day.

    Changing into a pair of Marina’s denim shorts and a summery top – and reminding herself oddly of Veronica – Lisa checked her reflection one more time before, steeling herself, she jogged out of the apartment and headed for the nearest park, for the first training session with her new pokémon.

    *

    The shadow cast by the Goldenrod City Library was even greater now that it was almost six in the evening. Though she still had two hours before the Union agents were due to return for the Third Key, Lisa didn’t plan on idling. She took the marble stairs at a brisk walk and slipped in swiftly through the sandstone archway, passing the sign that said:

    Welcome to the Goldenrod City Library
    Johto’s First Library, est. 1621
    Open 7am – 10pm, 7 days a week.

    As she had anticipated, the foyer was much less crowded than it had been that morning. There were no tour groups scouring the art works; rather, barely half a dozen people were scattered about the place, not including the two security guards and a robust middle-aged woman at the concierge desk.

    “You can do this,” Lisa whispered to herself, picking up a brochure and casually weaving her way toward Antoknossos’ Celebi. For the second time that day, she found herself staring at the plaque, pretending to read it while her mind raced. Was she really about to deface one of the best-known artworks of all time? She ran through the rationalisation in her head again. The Union was almost definitely going to blow the statue to pieces in a matter of hours. If she didn’t do it, they would, and they’d have one more key toward opening the Iron Lock.

    It was the far, far lesser of two evils.

    “It has to be quick,” she muttered under her breath, still fascinatedly regarding the plaque.

    Regardless, she found herself hesitating. There were eight other people in the foyer. Too many. She waited impatiently, silently willing them to drift away, but it took precious time. Finally, at about ten past six, a group of three thanked the concierge and drifted back down the staircase toward the street.

    “Now or never,” Lisa whispered. She took a deep breath and said a silent prayer. “Revelum, Altaria!” she hissed, touching her thumb and forefinger to the pendant on her chest; the light had barely issued from the pendant when she plunged her hand into her pocket and hurled two red-and-white pokéballs to the ground and then, amid the loud explosions of radiant light, she whipped the Buzzball from the same pocket, span on her heel to face the direction of the two bewildered security guards and screamed:

    ELECTRIFY!”

    Lisa saw the guards react: their hands leapt for the weapons at their belts, but neither of the two men were fast enough for the Buzzball. A streamer of ultramarine energy crackled through the foyer, forking in mid-air and striking each of the men squarely in the chest; they were both blasted off their feet, collapsing to the ground.

    At the same moment, Altaria cooed pleasantly and opened its mouth, building a pulsating ball of rainbow energy within before discharging it with a proud squeak; the Aurora Beam slammed with spectacular force into the middle of Antoknossos’ Celebi and for a moment, the jade statue was completely illuminated by the beam before the energy tore it apart: there was an almighty crack as the Celebi split cleanly in two; the two halves seemed to hang in the air for an instant, as though suspended on an invisible hinge, and then the aurora engulfed them completely, and the two halves disintegrated into a shower of fine jade crystals which rained to the ground, clinking like shards of broken glass.

    People were screaming; the female concierge shrieked and lunged for the telephone behind her desk. Lisa wheeled around and held the red Buzzball in her direction.

    ELECTRIFY!” she bellowed again.

    She didn’t wait for the streamer of electricity to connect: the anguished scream a moment later told her that she had been on target. She leapt over the remains of the statue scattered across the granite platform and began scanning the jade crystals for the Third Key. Her newly-caught Kingler and Cubone, along with Larry’s Altaria, fanned out, as they had been instructed to do, searching for the key, but it was mercifully much easier than Lisa had anticipated. After only ten seconds or so, Lisa’s eye fell on something large and translucent twinkling in the light of the grand chandelier, far bigger than any of the almost powdered jade crystals:

    A thin, glass-like key.

    “Yes!” she yelled, grabbing it at once. She recoiled as the sharp jade crystals cut her fingers, but there was no time for pain; people were now spilling out from the library and crying out in mingled shock and fear.

    “Stop her!” someone yelled.

    Lisa pocketed the third key, her blood pumping. The thought of yelling out something like, “Don’t attack me, I’m good!” briefly raced through her mind, but her mouth never found the time to articulate it; she swung her legs over Altaria’s back and screamed, “Let’s go!”; amid the panicked cries of Kingler and Cubone, she gripped their two pokéballs and cried, “Return!”, their bodies dematerialising into red light as Altaria lifted off.

    “Oh, crap!” Lisa cried.

    Beneath her, a teenage trainer had broken away from the pack of frightened library staff, intellectuals and students. A Tyranitar stood beside him.

    “What do you think you’re doing?” he cried out boldly.

    Altaria’s wings beat frantically at the air. Despite being six feet in the air, Lisa felt intensely vulnerable.

    “Please, don’t try to stop me!” Lisa cried frantically; her face was boiling hot and her vision was blurring; she had prayed that something like this wouldn’t happen.

    “We’ve already called the police!” the teenager boomed, rather righteously. “Come back down and we’ll tell them you co-operated.”

    “I’m really sorry,” Lisa called. “Altaria, Dragonbreath now!”

    “Tyranitar, Hyper Beam!”

    “Oh crap!” Lisa cried. “Altaria, attack and fly us out at the same time!”

    “Awoooo!” Altaria cried.

    The only disadvantage to Hyper Beam was that Tyranitar took a moment to power up the orb of energy in his mouth: Altaria opened its mouth and issued an ice-hot blast of blue flames directly at Tyranitar’s face. Tyranitar gave a guttural scream of pain and fired off the golden orb of energy in its mouth in a random direction; it hurtled across the foyer and slammed into the wall, tearing Soliono’s tapestry to shreds.

    The crowd of onlookers gasped; some of them cried out; a few of them threw out their own pokéballs. Lisa wove her right hand tightly into the fur on Altaria’s back as it flapped its wings and zoomed for the broad sandstone archway.

    “Not so fast!” the boy cried from behind them. “Tyranitar, Shock Wave!”

    “No!” Lisa cried, panicking. She had feared Shock Wave ever since Tom had warned her about it years ago: like Swift, it was an unavoidable attack. She glanced ahead: they were almost through the archway … Altaria was singing sweetly … but even if they made it outside, they would be hit …

    “Oh!” Lisa cried, an idea dawning on her. “INFLATE!”

    Twisting around, she held the Buzzball out to protect herself and Altaria; instantly, it ballooned to ten times its usual size, swelling rapidly; barely a second later, as Altaria swooped through the archway and into the twilight, a bolt of yellow light arced through the air behind them and connected with the Buzzball.

    At first, Lisa thought it had worked – certainly, the ball glowed an odd colour – but she found herself momentarily paralyzed, unable to move or process a thought – until the spell on her was lifted, and she realised even the Buzzball could not stop the attack from hitting home. Smoke billowed into the air from Altaria’s wing, and yet it was still flapping, trying to rise higher into the sky.

    “No!” roared the boy from below, pelting onto the staircase.

    “Sorry!” Lisa cried, but she could not help but laugh as she said it. She glanced at the back of the enormous Buzzball and saw that it was now charred black: it seemed that it had taken the greater force of the Shock Wave.

    Deflate,” she said sharply, and it began to hiss with escaping air.

    “Awwoooo!”

    Lisa spun back to face Altaria: it was struggling to stay in the air now. Indeed, they had only ascended twenty feet into the air and were slowly drifting back down.

    Looking down on the collection of people on the staircase, Lisa saw the teenage boy and his Tyranitar still in furious pursuit, along with several other trainers. And then, her blood running cold, she saw a collection of five people standing on the sidewalk at the very base of the staircase, their faces almost identical masks of shock.

    The blonde woman at the centre of the group went deathly pale.

    “NOOOOOOOOOOO!”

    Veronica’s scream reached Lisa even a hundred metres down the street. Lisa’s brain locked up: this couldn’t be … she had planned it two hours in advance …

    “STOP!” Veronica roared, her voice shrill. “STOP NOW!”

    Lisa heard a pokéball opening, but didn’t linger to find out what it was; gripping Altaria’s back, she whirled around to face the streetscape ahead, trying to scope out a low roof to land on and regroup.

    “Dammit!”

    She cursed loudly: every building was a high-rise; they were nowhere near high enough to land somewhere safe yet.

    “Rise up, Altaria, come on, let’s get some height!” she encouraged, patting Altaria’s back eagerly.

    Altaria flapped vigourously again, but there was a note of exhaustion to its voice. They rose a metre or two before fluttering back to the same level.

    “Come on, Altaria, you can do this, we’re almost safe, come on!” Lisa egged on, as Veronica’s screams drew nearer; she could hear police sirens now in the distance.

    “Awoo,” Altaria cooed sadly, flapping its burnt wing frantically, but to little use; they were descending markedly now, and had barely made it three hundred metres down the street.

    “Oh crap, oh crap, oh crap!” Lisa panicked, as the pavement spiralled closer.

    To its credit, Altaria managed a decent crash-landing: they hit the sidewalk with a great deal of force; Lisa was only thrown off at the last minute, rolling relatively gently into an organic herb garden at the front of an apartment building.

    “Awooo!”

    “I know, I know, you’re hurt!” Lisa cried frantically, spitting out a mouthful of organic basil leaves. “Retrahere, Altaria!”

    No sooner had Altaria’s shimmering form dematerialised into the poképort than an enormous ball of black sludge soared mere inches over Lisa’s shoulder and slammed into the front window of the apartment building, caking it in a poisonous-looking goo.

    There was nothing for it. Lisa scrambled to her feet and ran for her life.

    Thankfully, the sidewalk ahead was relatively clear of pedestrians: the after-work rush had long since passed. Lisa bolted her way down Madison Street East, dodging lamp posts and recycling bins, her sneakers hammering the concrete like urgent claps of thunder.

    She chanced a glance over her shoulder. A hundred metres behind her was a small pack of Union agents, led by Veronica, whose face was contorted with genuine fear; she looked deranged. A Persian raced alongside her, its eyes an odd crimson colour; the other agents had a variety of Weezing, Arbok and Houndour beside them as they ran.

    Lisa checked the street ahead of her in time to dodge an old man with a walking stick before she wheeled back to take another look behind her. The trainer with the Tyranitar and his friends seemed to have disappeared – perhaps the Union had taken them out?

    “No!” she screamed; another Sludge attack soared toward her, courtesy of one of the Weezing; she stopped in her tracks and ducked in order to avoid it, before picking up speed again.

    “Shit!” she cursed, trying to push herself harder and faster. She heard Veronica’s cackle from behind her. Even though the Sludge hadn’t struck her, it had slowed her down for a moment, and the Union agents were now in closer pursuit than ever.

    Electrify!” Lisa screamed, holding the newly-deflated Buzzball over her shoulder and firing it in the direction of the Union agents. Blue sparks crackled through the air. “Electrify! ELECTRIFY! ELECTRIFY!

    “Augh!”

    “YES!”

    She whirled around: she had hit one of the agents, at least, taking him out; one of the Weezing had disappeared, too.

    “Flamethrower!” bellowed one of the male Union agents.

    “Thunder!” screeched Veronica.

    Remembering something she had read in a book once, Lisa began to vary her running pattern, cutting a zig-zag path across the sidewalk to make it more difficult for the Union to target her. She spied a major intersection ahead: a two-lane, one-way street met with Madison Street East, and the WALK light was still green. If time was on her side, maybe she could manage to leave the Union behind …

    “MOVE!” Lisa yelled, almost slamming head-on into a young man in a checked shirt as he left his apartment block; she managed to zig-zag around him at the last minute.

    “What the fuck!” he cried, throwing his hands up into the air.

    As she turned around and cried, “Sorry!”, her eyes were scorched by the horror before them. The Flamethrower intended for her erupted from the Union’s Houndour’s mouth, enveloping the young man in a blindingly hot column of fire.

    “No!” Lisa roared. She tried to turn around again, but a bolt of Thunder sliced the air behind her, missing her by scarcely a metre.

    She faced the street ahead and almost threw up in panic: she had already made it onto the intersecting street – the concrete beneath her feet had become bitumen – but the traffic light had changed to a bright red DON’T WALK.

    “Aaaaargh!” she screamed, as two sleek sedans roared toward her.

    In sheer panic, she leapt for the opposite sidewalk.

    CRACKKKKKKKK!

    Miraculously, her head landed against her arms, preventing any major damage, but as she rolled, the back of her head struck something extremely solid. Silver stars exploded into existence before her eyes; the skin on her arms was burning; she tasted blood in her mouth. The pain was too much: she struggled to her knees, but it was a task to stand. The world swam before her eyes: grey concrete slabs, a frightened old lady looking on, a colourful roar of cars beside her …

    “YOU WON’T ESCAPE, LISA WALTERS!”

    The cry sharpened her vision. She focused her sight and saw, though the stars and the rush of vehicles, the pale, pointed face of Veronica, frantically slamming her fist into the button on the traffic light.

    They knew who she was.

    She clambered to her feet and took an almost drunken step forward. If she stopped, this would be the end of her valiant attempt to get the Third Key … her escape, Larry’s sacrifice … it would all be for nothing …

    Vaguely aware of the old lady calling out to her, Lisa stumbled onward down Madison Street East. A row of neon signs barely twenty metres ahead caught her eye: a popular fast-food chain, a Megaplex … an Underground train station …

    “Come on, come on, you can do it!” she muttered to herself, trying to move her body into something more than a slow jog. She began to hum to herself. By the time she reached the entrance to the Underground she was almost hobbling, but she continued to hum to herself, focusing on the goal, sure that if she could just catch a train – any train – she would be able to escape the Union’s grasp.

    She cast a quick glance behind her – the DON’T WALK sign was still red, a seamless buzz of evening traffic keeping Veronica and the other Union agents at bay.

    “Come on …” Lisa said, spurred on by the sight. She entered the arcade that led into the Underground and began the descent.

    “Damn stairs!” she muttered, negotiating them as quickly as possible, her bones sparking with pain with every step.

    After what seemed like an eternity, she reached the main platform, filled with people and the screeching of train brakes. She scanned the red digital readouts of the overhead schedule. There were four train lines that converged at this station. The next train was due to depart in one minute from platform two; the second would leave in two minutes from platform one. Lisa’s mind raced. There was almost no way she could make the first train in her injured state … but she could make the second, and it would probably throw the Union off course …

    Hobbling more frantically than ever, she crossed the underground footbridge over the tracks and descended the steps to platform one. Reaching the train, she collapsed with exhaustion onto the floor, panting heavily as her lungs clutched at oxygen. The doors seemed to hang open forever. Lisa waited in terror for Veronica’s black boots to step through the door and announce her capture.

    The train at platform two squealed and its doors hissed shut. Lisa had to know. She clambered onto her knees and peered cautiously through the glass window at the first train as it pulled away.

    Her eyes prickled with relief.

    Veronica strode down the length of the first train as it chugged away from the station, her expression cruel and victorious, pushing past commuters to track down Lisa. Her three agents were behind her, harassing everyone in their path.

    Lisa slumped to the floor in relief, oblivious to the frightened stares of the other passengers, as the doors of her train hissed to a close and tears poured down her bloody face.

    *

    The electric hand dryers never seemed to work. Wiping her wet hands on her dark blue jeans, Sarah Venner returned to her desk outside Lance Hudson’s office. The view from the window was black: the sun had set hours ago, but working in Lance Hudson’s office had never been a nine to five job.

    Sarah’s hands were poised over the keyboard, ready to resume the urgent email she had been composing, when she noticed that her silver mobile phone was flashing red: she had a missed call.

    She flipped the cover open and bit her lip. One missed call from Larry O’Brien. One voicemail. Twenty-three seconds.

    She frantically dialled the voicemail number, her mind reeling.

    “You have one new voicemail,” the electronic female voice stated. “Voicemail received on Thursday the third of April at twenty hundred hours and forty-six minutes.”

    There was a sharp beep. Larry’s voice reached Sarah’s ear. This time, among the gravelly, fatherly quality, there was something Sarah had never heard in his tone before: disguised fear.

    “Hi sweetheart. Just … uh … thought I’d give you a quick call. Angela’s made me think about taking some time off work so … we might be able to spend some more time together. Nothing’s … uh … definite yet, and it won’t be for a few days at least, but I’ll let you know. Uh … don’t bother calling me back, I know you’re busy with study. Love you.”

    Sarah closed her phone and said a word she had never said before in her life:

    “Fuck.”

    *

    It was nine o’clock when Lisa turned the key in the door of Gavin and Dave’s apartment and gingerly stepped inside.

    Gavin and Marina were huddled on the thick rug before the wooden TV set, Gavin with his phone to his ear; when they heard the door open, their faces both changed into curious expressions of mingled relief and concern.

    “Oh my God, Lisa!”

    “What the fuck happened!”

    They were both at her side within seconds.

    “Lisa, you look … are you okay?” Marina spluttered.

    “I’m alive, I’m okay,” Lisa said, her voice unintentionally vague. She felt as though she could float off the ground at a moment’s notice. She wriggled out of their grasp and collapsed gratefully on the dirty, chocolate-brown rug, her bones sighing with relief and her mind whirling.

    “Why didn’t you answer your mobile?” Gavin demanded, his tone almost accusatory.

    Lisa reached into the pocket of her denim shorts and produced Marina’s mobile phone, brandishing it in Gavin’s direction to show the deep crack that ran through its screen.

    “Sorry, Marina, but the Union broke it.”

    Lisa almost heard the silence that followed.

    “Leese … the Union … what?!” Gavin spluttered.

    Lisa stared dazedly at the ceiling, still numb from the day’s events.

    “I have a lot to tell you guys, but first up … what happened at the Sepulchre of Raikou?”

    “Get her a glass of water and something to eat, Gav. I think she’s dehydrated or something.” Marina’s bushy blue hair appeared in Lisa’s line of vision; she sat down beside Lisa and took her hand comfortingly.

    “You were right, Leese. About Raikou. I got the key fragment.”

    Somewhere in the depths of her numbness, Lisa felt a ripple of sentiment; a distant, muffled echo of victory.

    “Good stuff,” she said, slightly giddily.

    “Lisa,” Marina held her face firmly, “we got back here almost half an hour ago and you weren’t here. We’ve been worried sick. Where have you been? Did the Union attack you? Are they still around?”

    “They’re always around,” Lisa sighed.

    Gavin’s face swam into view, a glass of water and a slice of cold pizza in his hands. Lisa downed the glass in the space of five seconds before taking the pizza and munching the corner eagerly.

    “Feel better?” Gavin prodded, mirroring Marina and kneeling beside her.

    “Mm,” Lisa murmured through a mouthful of pizza.

    When she had finished eating, despite a wave of nausea, her head felt slightly clearer.

    “Lisa, fill us in,” Marina pressed. “What happened to you?”

    “I’ll give you the short version,” said Lisa slowly, “because I seriously feel like I’m about to throw up or fall asleep or something. That okay, Marina?”

    “Okay,” Marina said gently, her alarmed face betraying her cool voice. She rubbed Lisa’s arm comfortingly. “Go on.”

    “Well, I found the locations of all the keys,” Lisa said, getting onto her back once more and fixing her gaze on the ceiling. “My grandfather’s diary – I found it in the Sepulchre of Suicune – he’d hunted it all down, he’d written it, he knew everything except the Fifth Key and the Seventh Key, he doesn’t know where they are, but he found the rest, and the Third Key was in the library so I went to get it, but the Union – Gavin, you remember Veronica? She got to it too, so I had no choice, so I had to like, I just destroyed Antono – Antononno - Antoknossos’ Celebi basically, you know what I mean, and got the key, then Veronica and them chased me with pokémon, and me and Altaria crashed, of course, but then I ran and I crossed the road in time but I hit my head and I think I broke my nose. That’s when your phone died. But then I got on the train and it took me on the circle route for a few hours and then I got lost and then I found my way back here to you guys. So yeah, I got the Third Key.”

    She reached into her pocket and withdrew the thin glass key, pressing it into Marina’s hand.

    “Lisa … wow … this is incredible …” Marina breathed.

    “You’re welcome,” said Lisa, giggling slightly as she said it.

    Gavin, however, was not quite so congratulatory.

    “Lisa, how sure are you that you weren’t followed?”

    Lisa felt a spark of indignation within her; she sat up carefully, Marina hauling some of her weight.

    “Gavin, I just got the goddamn Third Key. A ‘thank you’ would be nice you know!”

    “Thanks, Leese,” he said pacifyingly, clearly in no mood to squabble. “I know you’ve been through a lot and you’re clearly overtired, but I need to know, did you see anyone following you?”

    “Well, I didn’t see anyone, Gav, no.”

    “But you didn’t take any precautions?”

    “Well, I got on a different train to them, they never saw me.”

    Gavin audibly tapped one of his canine teeth against his bottom teeth.

    “I guess it’s possible that you lost them,” he said. “But just in case …”

    He finished his sentence, but Lisa didn’t hear the words over the five heavy thuds that sounded from the front door.

    There was a moment of dead silence within the apartment. Lisa, Gavin and Marina’s terrified eyes all locked in a triangle of panic.

    “Could it be Mel?” Marina breathed to Gavin.

    “Don’t think so, and I won’t chance it,” Gavin whispered. “Get yours and Lisa’s packs, hurry!”

    “It never ends,” Lisa said blankly, her mind numb. She gave a kind of half-scoff to herself. “Peace. There’s no such thing.”

    BANG. BANG. BANG. BANG.

    “Fuck fuck fuck fuck,” Gavin panicked. “Leese, wait here, I’ll get my pack, I’ll be two seconds –”

    “No, don’t leave me!” Lisa hissed. She lurched to her feet, every muscle aching, as Gavin darted into his bedroom. For a moment, she stood in the lounge room alone, waiting for the door to cave in, and then Marina raced out from Dave’s room, her rucksack slung over her back and Lisa’s in her hands. Her Guardian Butterfree hovered alertly over her shoulder.

    “Here we go,” she said in a high-pitched whisper, securing Lisa’s pack onto her back. “I’ve got the Third Key, don’t worry …”

    Ice cracked in Lisa’s veins suddenly.

    “The fragment,” she gaped. “Did you get my key fragment?”

    Marina’s hazel eyes widened.

    “I thought it was with you …”

    Gavin came pelting out of his room.

    “Guys, I can pop the window frame on my bedroom window, come on!”

    Before Lisa and Marina could even turn to face him, the front door exploded in a billow of dust and debris. Lisa and Marina ducked; splinters and shards of wood whizzed past their faces as five black-clothed figures stormed the room, led by Veronica.

    She stood in the doorway, her platinum-blonde hair sleeked back into a ponytail, her dark eyes alive with triumph as she levelled her Stunner at Lisa.

    “I’m not going to immobilise you this time, sweetie,” said Veronica, casting a poisonous smile at Lisa as she pulled the trigger.

    “This one’s set to torture.”
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

  9. #9
    The slaughter never ends. Junior Trainer
    Junior Trainer

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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 76 now up! (8th February)

    Oh man. First this happened--

    “MOVE!” Lisa yelled, almost slamming head-on into a young man in a checked shirt as he left his apartment block; she managed to zig-zag around him at the last minute.

    “What the fuck!” he cried, throwing his hands up into the air.
    --and I laughed, and then the above was immediately followed by this--

    As she turned around and cried, “Sorry!”, her eyes were scorched by the horror before them. The Flamethrower intended for her erupted from the Union’s Houndour’s mouth, enveloping the young man in a blindingly hot column of fire.
    --which was an "oh my God" moment. Hell of a contrast there, and in such a short frame of time, too. Nice.

    “YOU WON’T ESCAPE, LISA WALTERS!”

    The cry sharpened her vision. She focused her sight and saw, though the stars and the rush of vehicles, the pale, pointed face of Veronica, frantically slamming her fist into the button on the traffic light.

    They knew who she was.
    OH SHIT.

    Sarah closed her phone and said a word she had never said before in her life:

    “Fuck.”
    Someone should make her a "Congratulations on Your First Use of the Word 'Fuck'" cake.

    “I guess it’s possible that you lost them,” he said. “But just in case …”

    He finished his sentence, but Lisa didn’t hear the words over the five heavy thuds that sounded from the front door.
    Oh shit again.

    Ice cracked in Lisa’s veins suddenly.

    “The fragment,” she gaped. “Did you get my key fragment?”

    Marina’s hazel eyes widened.

    “I thought it was with you …”
    And again I say OH SHIT.


    Great, fast-paced chapter there, really fun and exciting. :)

  10. #10
    Super Moderator
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 76 now up! (8th February)

    Quote Originally Posted by Sike Saner View Post
    Someone should make her a "Congratulations on Your First Use of the Word 'Fuck'" cake.
    Hahaha, I love this idea - good call!

    Thanks for reading - I'm glad you liked the chapter and that it took you on a bit of an "oh shit!" rollercoaster. It was a bit of an adrenaline-fuelled one.

    Thanks again for your feedback, Sike, and sorry about the wait to all readers - have been a bit preoccupied with some health issues and a new job all at once! Suffice it to say all is going well now and my mind is freer now, so here's the next chapter!

    Cheers!

    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

    We last left Lisa, Gavin and Marina in Gavin's old apartment in Goldenrod City - and Veronica had just broken down the door to attack them ...

    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

    Chapter 77 – Council of War.


    Thousands of volts of pure pain coursed through Lisa’s body. She felt knives grinding against her spine, needles stabbing her chest and a blunt axe cutting into her forehead. Her arms twisted as she spasmed; her scream barely audible over the thrashing of her body. It was uncontrollable hell: there was no mercy, no escape, no end …

    “NO!”

    The blanket of pain lifted with a righteous shriek. Lisa blinked, trying to regain her sight. The room emerged from a pool of oppressive blackness: Veronica still stood at the door flanked by her grunts, her Stunner slung across her front, however, she was rubbing her eye in apparent pain.

    Her body still sensitive, Lisa turned to see Marina standing behind her looking slightly bewildered herself; over her shoulder, her Guardian Butterfree hovered indignantly, a faint wisp of smoke issuing from it.

    “GET THEM!” Veronica roared, clawing at her eye.

    She was almost knocked to the floor as the male Union agents stormed the room. Lisa plunged her hand into her pocket and closed it around the rubbery form of the Buzzball as Marina pulled a Lure Ball from her pocket; and in the same instant, Gavin dived behind the two of them, grabbing both their hands and shouting, “Please, please, please work!”

    The world went black once more; Lisa felt her body squished by pressurised blasts of cold air – but the sensation lasted much less longer than usual – almost within the same second, Lisa felt her battered body slam against a hard, thinly-carpeted floor.

    “Oh God, it didn’t work,” she squealed, pulling the Buzzball out of her pocket and holding it out in the direction of the apartment door. “Electrify!

    “Lisa!” Marina cried.

    Lisa opened her eyes in time to see a streamer of blue electricity arc through the lobby of Gavin’s apartment building and sizzle the wall of mailboxes.

    Lisa pressed a hand to her heart.

    “I thought it didn’t work or something,” she breathed. “How come we’re still here?”

    “I knew I wouldn’t have enough power to teleport us very far,” Gavin conceded, clambering up off the lobby floor and pulling Lisa to her feet. “I’m actually pretty grateful I got us all this far on my own …” He hauled Marina up to a standing position, too; she was patting her Guardian Butterfree gratefully.

    “Thanks, Gavin,” Lisa said slowly, moving toward the front door.

    “No worries and no, don’t try the front,” Gavin hissed swiftly. “I planned ahead. Come through the back way. Hurry, they could be after us already.”

    Lisa and Marina followed him through the back exit of the lobby. They tiptoed through an overgrown communal garden and a row of half-empty vending machines before they reached a cramped gravel car park.

    Gavin crept over to a white sedan; it looked like it was about fifteen years old.

    “Hop in,” he hissed.

    Lisa hobbled over the gravel and clambered into the front passenger’s seat, while Marina took the back seat. Gavin slid skilfully into the driver’s seat and started the car before slamming the door and swiftly reversing into the driveway.

    Lisa locked her door; there was a chorus of clicks through the car as the other doors followed suit.

    “Central locking,” she said, slightly awed.

    “It’s Mel’s car,” Gavin explained, as he shifted into ‘drive’ and floored the accelerator, rolling quickly toward the street. “I got her to leave it with me tonight, just in case.” He gave a laboured sigh and then guffawed loudly. “Thank fucking God.”

    Gavin turned onto the street and wheeled away at high speed.

    “The fragment!” Marina said suddenly, as they turned onto a major road. “The damn fragment! Lisa, where did you put it?”

    Lisa massaged her temple and rolled the window down an inch, feeling rejuvenated somewhat by the cool night air.

    “I hid it when I left the apartment today,” she said slowly. “It’s inside one of Dave’s packs of condoms.”

    Perhaps it was the adrenaline still pounding through them all, or perhaps it was the overload of emotions and thoughts that their nervous systems were struggling to process, or both, but suddenly, all three teenagers burst into a fit of riotous laughter, as though the word ‘condom’ was the most hilarious thing they had ever heard.

    “Man …” Gavin muttered, still chuckling slightly as he wiped a tear from his eye and turned onto Madison Street West. “Okay, so seriously, that’s where you hid it?”

    “Yeah,” Lisa grinned. “I wedged it right into one of the little individual packet things, you know the ones …”

    “I do,” Gavin guffawed.

    Marina giggled.

    “In all seriousness, it’ll be the last place they look for anything,” she laughed.

    “Let’s just hope they never do find it,” Lisa said. “But even if they do … it’s not the worst thing in the world. We have Marina’s fragment still, and the Third Key. We’re set.”

    Gavin pulled up at a set of traffic lights. Madison Street West was Goldenrod City’s number one place for nightlife, and Thursday night was student night. Scores of youths prowled the streets, wandering from one neon-lit nightclub to the next bar, half of them singing in groups or drunkenly throwing their arms around one another.

    “God, to be young again,” remarked Marina, as two young women in short dresses walked past arm-in-arm, singing at the tops of their lungs to a Julienne Brextar song.

    “That’s ‘All Your Love’,” Lisa said, recognising the tune. “My friends and I used to do karaoke to it. Do you know it, Marina?”

    “Hells yeah!” Marina laughed.

    The girls locked eyes and, almost cracking up, they rolled down their windows and joined the drunken women in the song’s chorus:

    It’s just a mistake so baby don’t punish me
    I’m free to be myself so don’t objectify me
    I’m just a girl who wants a boy to love me
    So baby, don’t take away all your love from me!


    “HAHAHAHAHA!”

    “That was classic!”

    “Did you see their faces when they realised we were singing over the top of them?”

    “HAHA! I know! Madness!”

    The traffic light finally changed to green; Gavin smirked and rolled onwards down Madison Street West.

    “Can the world ever really have enough cheesy 90s dance pop?” Marina pondered.

    “Yes,” quipped Gavin.

    “Oh, shut up Gav, I heard you singing with us, too!” Lisa cried, rolling her window up almost to the top.

    “So what? Guys are allowed to sing too. Don’t be sexist, now, ladies!”

    After the laughter had subsided, Gavin pulled into a drive-thru fast food chain just before the freeway entrance.

    “Anyone else hungry?” he asked.

    Aside from the cold pizza she had rammed down her throat, Lisa couldn’t remember the last time she had eaten anything substantial. She ordered an extra-large Beefy Burger meal, slightly buoyed by the fact that both Gavin and Marina were ordering similarly indulgent meals.

    After they pulled away from the fast-food diner, Gavin drove into the underground tunnel that led to the Western Freeway.

    A green sign was affixed to the left of the tunnel entrance. Lisa pointed at it with one of her chips.

    “Old Acres Town – 102 kilometres, Olivine City – 436 kilometres, Redwood City – 491 kilometres …” she read, before they zoomed past the sign. She turned to Gavin. “Where are we going?”

    “Who knows, I just wanted to get the hell out of the city,” Gavin shrugged, his face half dappled with passing slats of fluorescent light and half shadowed.

    “The question is, what are we going to do next?” Marina said thickly; she put her hand to her mouth in a slightly awkward manner and attempted to swallow her mouthful of burger.

    Lisa took a sip of cola and reached into the pocket of her denim shorts, flipping to page 62.

    “My grandfather’s diary says that the Fourth Key is in a cavern within Silver Rock Island.”

    Gavin almost swerved into the wall of the tunnel.

    “You can’t be serious!” he cried, straightening up. “After what happened to you today, you’re seriously thinking about going for another key?”

    Lisa felt slightly flushed.

    “Well, I’m not saying we try it straight away or anything …”

    “Besides that, have you even thought about what you’re talking about? Silver Rock Island, Lisa! That’s where the Union have their base.”

    Lisa clicked her tongue: she had not even begun to think through the practicalities. Silver Rock Island was where the Union’s headquarters were located. There was absolutely no chance of them retrieving the Fourth Key.

    “So the Union are basically sitting on the Fourth Key and they don’t even know it?” Marina asked.

    Lisa frowned, still bitterly digesting the realisation; Gavin, on the other hand, spoke up.

    “I’m not sure that they don’t know it,” he said seriously. “I mean – when they had me prisoner … well, I know this isn’t much, but I know they were digging and drilling within the caves.” He screwed his face up. “Granted, they might’ve just been looking for something valuable, or something else, who knows …”

    Marina placed a cool hand on Lisa’s bare shoulder.

    “Leese, I know your grandfather’s diary has all these locations, but … well, didn’t we kind of agree that we’d go back to the Guard after we got our two fragments?”

    “Yeah. Yeah, we did,” Lisa muttered.

    She mulled things over in her mind, the slats of light from the walls of the tunnel playing across her face as the sedan rolled onward. Even though her fragment of the Sixth Key was still (as far as she knew) stuck in Gavin and Dave’s apartment, her acquisition of the Third Key and Marina’s acquisition of her fragment gave them exactly the sort of power she had banked on. If they offered the Guard the Third Key, perhaps they could keep Marina’s fragment a secret, to protect against the corruption that Lisa knew could be present among the Guard. Even if the Guard were fatally betrayed, Marina’s fragment would be in neither Guard nor Union possession, but rather, somewhere Lisa had hidden it, somewhere that even ancient texts and hidden diaries wouldn’t be able to locate it.

    “What we need is somewhere safe to spend the night,” Marina said presently. Lisa turned, listening keenly. “If we find somewhere to hunker down, we can call Lance and then sit tight and wait for the Guard to pick us up.”

    “Well, decide soon. The junction’s getting close,” Gavin said testily. “We can either head toward Olivine or toward Redwood.”

    “Ecruteak would be better,” Lisa ventured.

    “Well, Ecruteak would be north and not on the Western Freeway, wouldn’t it?” Gavin snapped. “Quickly, decide!”

    “Okay, here’s a thought,” Marina gushed. “We don’t really know anyone in either city, but we do know Jack on Red Rock Island. Let’s go toward Olivine, surf over to Red Rock and use Jack’s place to sit tight in. Sound good?”

    Lisa was still nodding her assent when Gavin veered the car to the left and onto a very sharply-curved off-ramp.

    “Hold on!” he cried.

    Grateful that few other cars graced the Western Freeway in the middle of the night, Lisa clung to the handrest as Gavin sped onto the offshoot and then rapidly spun the steering wheel the other way, almost sending them flying into a concrete wall as he overcorrected.

    “Where did you learn to drive?” cried Marina, as they finally emerged from the tunnel and straightened up on a new, bushland highway.

    “We’d’ve been fine if you two old women made up your minds faster,” Gavin scowled.

    Marina laughed and hurled a chip in his direction, giggling as he grimaced and flicked it off his lap. Lisa caught something on Marina’s face – a coyness that wasn’t usually there – but before she could make much sense of it, Marina stretched her arms and yawned.

    “I think I’m gonna try to sleep. You alright to drive for awhile, Gav?”

    “Yeah, it’s cool,” Gavin said, his chestnut-brown eyes smiling at Lisa. “Me and Lisa can keep each other company.”

    Lisa nodded in agreement, but when Gavin’s hands shook her arm four hours later, she had no recollection of chatting with him at all.

    “Gav, I’m sorry, I think I dozed off,” she murmured, rubbing sleep from her eyes.

    “No, you were a great conversationalist,” Gavin said sardonically. “I really liked your point about the snooooooooooooooooooorrre.” Gavin imitated Lisa’s snoring before breaking into a fit of guffaws.

    “We both know I don’t snore,” Lisa shot at him.

    She clambered out of the car, feeling extraordinarily rested. Her sneakers coming to rest on an overgrown dirt track. She tried to glimpse more of her environs, but it was still the middle of a dark, cloudy night: almost nothing was visible beyond the dim interior light of Melanie’s car. However, nearby, Lisa could hear the sound of waves breaking furiously against a coastline.

    “We’re here already?” Lisa said incredulously, shivering against the chill.

    “You slept for ages,” Gavin said, adjusting the grey beanie he had apparently designated for use only when on the sea.

    Marina’s eyes were almost still closed as she emerged from the car, shivering violently.

    “It’s the middle of the night, I don’t wanna swim,” she moaned in a childish voice.

    Lisa decided not to point out that the plan had been Marina’s idea: she wasn’t much of a morning person, and even less of a middle-of-the-night person.

    “Actually, you girls are gonna love me,” Gavin said smugly. He removed the last of their backpacks from the car and, before locking it up, he flashed the headlights four times into the darkness ahead; Lisa glimpsed a rolling grey wave ahead. “We don’t have to surf.”

    “How’s that?” Lisa said, hoisting her rucksack onto her back.

    “Well, while I was driving, all on my lonesome, you know … nobody to talk to … a lone wolf, a man on a mission …”

    “Get to the point, drama queen,” Lisa sighed.

    “I stopped for a coffee to keep me awake,” Gavin continued. “And for petrol, too, which I paid for myself by the way … just saying … but anyway, I thought it would be worth calling Jack to find out if he was still around Olivine.”

    “Oh, good thinking!”

    “If I do say so myself,” Gavin smirked, locking the car with the immobiliser. “Because it turns out he just came to Olivine Harbour again for a fishing trip this arvo, and he’ll be able to take us back to Red Rock first thing in the morning. He’s going to pick us up now and take us back to his boat for the night.”

    “If I wasn’t scared of your ego exploding, I’d kiss you, Gavin,” Lisa grinned.

    “I accept cash payments,” Gavin said seriously. “No, for real … that petrol was really expensive …”

    Marina mumbled something which could have been construed as happiness; Lisa had a feeling she had gone into a state of semi-sleep whilst still leaning against the side of the car.

    The saltbushes nearest the front of the car rustled suddenly. Lisa spun around to face the direction of the disturbance. The bulky form of Jack Criddle emerged from the salty gloom, his body wrapped in an enormous black parka.

    “’Zat you, Gav?”

    “Hey mate!” Gavin moved forward, wringing Jack’s hand.

    Lisa fought the urge to roll her eyes; she had only ever heard Gavin use the word ‘mate’ when around Jack and Frank.

    “Can’t thank you enough for this,” Gavin said.

    Jack shrugged.

    “What’re mates for?” he said nonchalantly. “Let’s go then, me dinghy’s waitin’.”

    His eyes fell on Lisa holding up Marina’s half-sleeping form.

    “Bloody hell, girl, every time I see yeh, yer hair’s another colour!”

    Lisa smiled, shaking his hand and following him down toward the beach through the scrub.

    “I like to change it up,” she said wryly.

    *

    A chilly Friday morning had dawned over Silver City. In the main street, office workers headed for early meetings, cardboard-encased cappuccinos in hand. At Silver Stadium, wannabe pokémon masters gathered for the seasonal qualifying matches, having spent the night camping outside the edifice, jostling for pole position. And in the drawing room of Lance Hudson, built into the side of Mount Silver, six people took their seats around the reflective mahogany drawing table, their faces all set in a mixture of curiosity and apprehension.

    They had all been called at less than a day’s notice: Ryan and Maria Walters had flown in from their strategic operation in Ecruteak; Azura had brought her private jet from the Tokor region; Jim Donovan had taken a commercial flight from Olivine. Only Alison Venner, and her daughter, Sarah, had been in Silver City already.

    The double doors of the drawing room opened and a suited Lance Hudson strode in, his right hand clutching a fawn-coloured manila folder and a steaming ‘World’s Best Dad’ coffee mug.

    “Morning, everyone,” he said, reaching the head of the table and smoothing the file out before taking an eager sip of his black coffee. “I’d like to thank you all for coming on such short notice, but this is extremely important.”

    The people seated in grey tub chairs around the drawing room inclined their heads in an almost uniform indication that they understood. Two people didn’t conform: one, Sarah Venner, was staring rather distractedly through the enormous glass wall behind Lance, where she could see the distant shape of Silver Stadium filling with people; the other, Jim Donovan, furrowed his brow and cleared his throat twice in a disgruntled manner.

    “It’d better be, mate,” he drawled. “Dunno if yeh realise, but I had to cancel a recon mission with Jasmine because of this.”

    “Glad to see you’ve put aside your feelings from our last argument, Jim,” said Lance crisply; the exasperated faces around the table seemed to echo his impatience with Donovan. “You’ll probably be glad to know that the recon mission was going to be cancelled regardless. We don’t need to track the kids down; we’ve found them.”

    “Terrific!” said Maria Walters, gripping her husband’s hand instinctively.

    “How did that happen?” Ryan asked enthusiastically.

    “Yes, how?” pressed Azura, looking similarly ecstatic with relief.

    “I received a call from Lisa Walters about three hours ago.”

    There was a chorus of surprise and delight around the mahogany table; Donovan’s ire briefly forgotten, he whooped heartily, while Ryan and Maria beamed.

    “She, Marina and Gavin are currently staying at a location on Red Rock Island. Now, the reason I called this meeting yesterday was because intelligence retrieved by Giles and Gideon suggested that all three kids had joined forces and were apparently AWOL. I can confirm that they took a boat to the mainland on Tuesday, disembarking somewhere near Olivine City, and that they were up to something on the mainland until this morning.”

    Maria cleared her throat.

    “Your text this morning just said that Lisa was alive and well – what else did she tell you?” she prodded; Azura nodded enthusiastically.

    “More than any of us bargained for,” said Lance seriously. He opened his file and regarded a printed document. “Much more than I thought I would be sharing with any of you this morning.

    “What I am about to reveal will come as a surprise, but I ask for the full support of all of you, and of all your teams, in the mission I am proposing. Due to the new intel Lisa was able to provide, I have decided that we will launch a major offensive on the Union’s base on Silver Rock Island.”

    A resounding silence followed: Maria and Azura exchanged bewildered glances; Alison glared at her daughter for not telling her about the plan. Then, with the air of someone at the end of their rope, Donovan slammed his palms down onto the table and cried, “I’m out!”

    “Sit down, Jim,” said Lance flatly.

    Ryan’s dark eyes darted from Donovan’s ruddy face to Lance’s pale one.

    “Lance – he has a point,” he said slowly, his tone controlled. “When did you decide the best thing for the Guard would be for us all to suicide?”

    Maria chuckled nervously; Lance, on the other hand, maintained his stoic façade.

    “Jim, sit down,” he repeated, “and all of you, give me a chance to talk this through before you get up in arms.”

    A silence fell over the people seated around the mahogany table, as though someone had thrown an invisible blanket over them all. Donovan held his ground for a few seconds, his eyes locked in combat with Lance’s, before he scowled and, shrugging as though acting of his own accord, he slumped back into his chair with a muffled thud.

    “Okay, now, let me explain my rationale before we all go jumping up and down,” he said curtly, taking a sip of coffee before launching into an explanation.

    “First of all, I may have glossed over a few of the details that I conveyed to you all when Marina interrupted us in our meeting on Sunday. That is, the story Lisa told me is not the one I conveyed to the rest of you.”

    “So you lied.” It was Donovan.

    “I did what I had to do, as you will understand in a minute,” Lance said stiffly, not making eye contact with anyone. “Suffice it to say, it was a lie that Lisa was taken to a Union holding cell on Red Rock Island and escaped of her own accord the following day.

    “The true story is that when Lisa was abducted at Redwood Hospital, she was taken – as we all initially guessed – to the Union’s headquarters below and within Silver Rock Island. The morning after, Sterling arranged for a helicopter to take her with him directly to the Sepulchre of Suicune.”

    Maria and Ryan gasped; Azura frowned.

    “Yeah, he wasn’t wasting any time,” Lance continued, “especially not after what happened on Mt Fairfax. However, due to a fortunate turn of events, Lisa managed to escape the helicopter in mid-flight –”

    “WHAT?”

    Lance recoiled slightly from the volume of the exclamation; it seemed that everyone at the table had cried out the same word at the same time.

    “What do you mean, she jumped out of the chopper mid-flight?” Maria almost screamed, clutching at the back of her dark bun.

    “What do you mean, she managed?” Donovan said sharply.

    Sweating slightly, Lance purposefully faced Maria.

    “Yes, Maria, she did, but she escaped unscathed.”

    “But how –”

    “Yeah, HOW,” Donovan snarled, interrupting Maria and leaving her with an expression of muted bewilderment. He levelled his gaze at Lance. “Two days ago, Jasmine and I rescued a museum curator after the Union interrogated him for info on the Third Key’s location. They had him handcuffed to an agent from the second he was kidnapped to the second they left him in that fucken basement to die.” His lip curled. “Are you telling me that they had one of the three Guardians in their possession and didn’t even bother to do the same?!”

    Five faces swivelled toward Lance. He felt his heart hammering beneath his suit jacket and, in the recesses of his mind, he heard his father’s voice.

    “We are doing the right thing, son. Sometimes it’s necessary to tell a lie for the greater good. Surely you know that by now?”

    Feeling comforted, Lance spoke.

    “Okay, it’s time to admit something that I’ve kept secret from you all. Well, except Sarah.”

    All eyes swung around to face the demure teenage girl at the end of the table; though her cheeks reddened under the sudden scrutiny, she maintained her composure.

    “You told her, but not us?” Azura said shortly; Donovan seemed to be going purple in the face trying to work out how to express the same sentiment.

    Azura shifted in her tub chair and tapped the end of her pen on the table. “This’d better be good, Lancelot.”

    “I don’t trust Sarah any more than I trust any of you,” Lance said, as bracingly as possible. “It’s just a fact that I need someone to help me here in Silver City with admin work, and – well, it’s just a reality that Sarah needs to be in the loop …”

    His voice seemed to falter slightly as he spoke.

    “Right,” Azura frowned. “So, what’s this secret, then?”

    “Well, after Derek defected and you all found out that I had a double agent in the Union’s ranks, I assured you he had been the only one …”

    “So he wasn’t,” Azura said swiftly.

    Lance bit his lip.

    “No, he wasn’t,” he said solemnly, opting to look in Sarah’s direction as opposed to any of the others’, especially Donovan’s. “There was one more. Larry O’Brien. None of you have ever met or probably even heard of him. He’s an old associate from my days working up in the Mt Silver wildlands. He infiltrated the Union for me years ago, in the bad old days, just after all that drama in the early 90s. A few weeks ago he worked his way up to Operations Manager of the Union. Sterling trusts him almost completely.”

    “This is unbelievable,” Ryan said slowly.

    “This is fantastic,” Azura added. “But then … why didn’t he warn you about the ambush on Redwood Hospital?”

    “He didn’t know,” Lance said crisply. “It turns out that when it comes to infiltration, Sterling keeps his cards close to his chest.” Like I do, he thought, before trying to fight the comparison from his mind. “Probably only Joseph and his top two or three agents knew that the Union had infiltrated the Army Reserve.

    “My association with Larry has, however, proved enormously beneficial over the past years. When Team Rocket tried to rebuild throughout the 90s, Larry’s intel helped us thwart them at each turn. Even after the Silph Co. affair, Larry kept passing info and enabled us to knock Team Rocket on the head once more. When Sterling finally allied himself with other gangs for support, Larry lost some of his influence, but since he was promoted to Head of Operations in February, he’s been on top form, initially positioning Derek to do our dirty work right under Sterling’s nose, and then, just a few days ago, he responded to my request to help Lisa escape from the Union.”

    There was a resounding silence in the drawing room; Lance stole the moment to pick up his ‘World’s Best Dad’ mug and gulp down something that was close to pure caffeine.

    “So it was you,” Ryan said, looking immensely grateful. “You saved Lisa.”

    “Sorry, Ryan, but I couldn’t tell you,” Lance muttered thickly, his throat burning. “I didn’t want anyone but myself and Sarah to know.”

    “It’s fine, I’m just a bit speechless,” Ryan said, his black eyes looking suddenly soft. “Thanks.”

    “Yes, Lance, thank you, thank you,” Maria gushed, reaching into her pocket for a tissue as her mascara ran. “Remind me to invite you and Susan over for pasta once this is all over, okay?”

    Lance nodded awkwardly; he was aware of Donovan smouldering to his right. Rather hoping that Donovan’s embarrassment at his screaming match with Lance a week previous would outweigh his indignation at being lied to, Lance continued.

    “If I can get back to my main point, then, since time, as you’ll all see shortly, is of the essence …

    “So, with Larry’s invaluable help, Lisa escaped from the helicopter and landed safely on Red Rock Island, on the back of Larry’s Altaria. Once there, as we all know, she managed to contact Marina and spoke to me directly.

    “The rendezvous we arranged was legitimate, of course. Giles, Gideon and uh, Marina – at her insistence –”

    “Christ’s sake, Lance!” Azura boiled over suddenly; she slammed her pen onto the table and gave Lance a dirty, threatening look. “For the last time, I authorised it. Stop making my daughter sound like some kind of pushy brat!”

    “I didn’t say anything –”

    “The way you said it!” Azura snarled; her eyes were wild. “I get that you think I was reckless in agreeing to her request. I do too, now. But – no, listen to me – she’s sixteen years old, she’s travelled half the province alone in a canoe, independent of any adult, and the Union already has her fragment of the key: most of her strategic value was and is gone. I just treated my daughter like the mature young adult that she is. I never said – no, let me finish, Maria – I never said you had to do the same with Darius. So for the love of God, stop rolling your eyes every time Marina is mentioned, and if you’re gonna talk shit on me or my daughter, at least have the goddamn courtesy to do it behind our backs!”

    “If we can continue,” Lance boomed decisively, before there was so much as a second of shocked silence. “We arranged the rendezvous at the trainer’s entrance of the Water Colosseum. Giles, Gideon and Marina –” (He said the three names almost in one syllable.) “– were to meet Lisa there. However, when they arrived, the trainer’s entrance was blown apart, and Lisa was nowhere to be found.

    “We were forced to assume that the Union had tracked Lisa down and recaptured her. However, after Sarah and I finally made contact with Larry on Wednesday, he revealed that Lisa was not in Union custody. This meant, then, that Lisa was in neither Union nor Guard custody, and was not making contact.

    “We might have assumed she had had an accident, except her disappearance coincided with two others. Gavin Luper – who, as we know, was nearby on his mission to Cianwood – stopped making contact with us on the same day that Marina Frost went missing from Red Rock Airport. With all three children somewhere on Red Rock Island and refusing to answer their phones, Sarah and I became suspicious.

    “We sent Giles and Gideon to investigate any of the group’s known contacts. After two of Marina’s contacts proved futile, the boys visited a sailor named Jack Criddle, who lives on the coast of Red Rock.”

    “Lisa’s mentioned him before,” Ryan said quickly. “He was the sailor who gave her her Elekid.”

    “Correct,” said Lance, “and Lisa sought to benefit from his friendship once again, just a few days ago. He ferried Lisa, Marina and Gavin to the mainland.”

    “But why?” Maria said, a note of angst to her voice. “Why didn’t they just come back home?”

    “Lisa’s explained this to me in detail,” Lance said. “You see, while she was in Larry’s office in the Union’s headquarters, she discovered the location of the Sepulchre of Suicune: a small lake in the bushland to the east of Goldenrod City.

    “After the Union attacked her at the trainer’s entrance of the Water Colosseum, Lisa came to her own decision regarding – her movements.” Lance’s tone became stilted suddenly; he fought to keep the disdain from his voice, and he fought even harder to keep his eyes averted from Lisa’s parents. He stared at Alison and Sarah Venner at the far end of the mahogany table and took solace in their neutrality. “Basically, Lisa decided that the only way to ensure the Union stopped pursuing her was to take the key fragment herself.”

    “SHE WHAT?!”

    “So she did,” Lance sped on, ignoring the faces of his underlings; the second hand on his watch seemed to tick louder with every digression. “Lisa now possesses her fragment of the Sixth Key.”

    “Oh wow.”

    “Far out.”

    “Fucken little ripper!”

    “Quite as impressively,” Lance continued quickly, ignoring his coffee, “is that, within the Sepulchre of Suicune, Lisa found an ancient text, thankfully in English, that charted the locations of the first four keys and the Sixth Key fragments, which led her to obtain the Third Key yesterday.”

    Another exchange of stunned smiles and whoops took place.

    “How did all that happen?” asked Azura, who had been uncharacteristically silent since her earlier outburst.

    “You guys might not have seen the news yet,” Lance said, almost excitedly. “But there was a major disturbance at the Goldenrod City Library last night. The Union finally discovered the location of the Third Key – at the same time as Lisa did. Lisa took the key from beneath their very noses!

    “This is a headfuck,” said Donovan.

    “Maybe we should have been letting the kids do the work for us this whole time,” Ryan said jokingly, his expression one of mixed bemusement and glee.

    “Don’t joke, Ryan,” Maria sniffed.

    “So what were they plannin’ to do?” Donovan quizzed. “Open the lock themselves or summat?”

    “According to Lisa, she wanted to ensure the end of her persecution,” Lance said slowly. “She wants us to inform the Union that we have the key fragment, so that they will no longer seek her so fervently.”

    “Then we should!” said Maria fiercely.

    “And we will,” Lance said calmly. “But for now, the important thing is that we get ourselves to Red Rock Island and take all three kids back into our custody.

    “And the second most important thing,” he added, electric excitement coursing through him, “is that Lisa’s list revealed the location of the Fourth Key. It’s located within the caves of Silver Rock Island – right within the Headquarters of the Union itself.” He took an enormous breath. “So, long story long, my first reason for launching this offensive on the Union’s base is, obviously, to get the Fourth Key.”

    He clapped his hands together by way of conclusion and, unperturbed by the stunned faces that framed the table, he reached for his mug and let his brain cells dance with a fresh hit of caffeine.

    “Lance – if I could ask something …”

    Everyone turned toward the end of the table to face Senior Agent Alison Venner who, along with her daughter, had remained silent throughout the discussion, until now.

    Lance swallowed.

    “Of course, Alison.”

    Alison brushed a long strand of glossy black hair from her eyes as her rust-coloured eyes – much like her daughter’s – glanced down at a notepad she had been scribbling on throughout the meeting.

    “Well, I just want to put this out there: If our aim is to stop the Union getting through the Iron Lock, the fact that Lisa now possesses one key and another fragment should be enough, shouldn’t it? Even if the Union get all the other keys, they’ll never succeed.”

    There was a mixed reaction around the table: Maria and Sarah nodded vaguely; Donovan, Ryan, and Azura, on the contrary, looked almost insulted.

    Lance, too, seemed perturbed.

    “In simplistic terms, you’re right, Alison,” he agreed, “however, the more keys we have, the stronger a position we’re in in the long run. If we sit back and let the Union accumulate the other keys, we run the risk of eventually being ambushed and losing what little we have.”

    “Exactly,” said Ryan, regarding Alison harshly.

    “Still,” Alison persisted, “doesn’t this operation present an enormous risk for us? The Union has a thousand-man army, still growing constantly, and the bulk of those agents are stationed on Silver Rock Island.” She frowned. “We’ve got around twenty people on each of our teams,” she said soberly, looking at Ryan, Azura and Donovan. “Including ourselves, and our sympathisers and assets, the Guard still totals probably just over a hundred members. It’s a ridiculous statistic. Like everyone said before, it’s a suicide mission. Unless you’ve got something miraculous planned, wouldn’t it be better to use your double agent to find the key in his own time?”

    All eyes were on Lance.

    “I do, in fact, have something miraculous planned,” he said, a wry smile breaking over his face. “And the retrieval of the Fourth Key is not my only reason for this mission. But as for Larry, I’m afraid he’s paralysed. He left a voicemail for Sarah last night, telling us in code that he’s afraid that Lisa’s retrieval of the Third Key may have prompted Sterling to become suspicious of him. You see, Larry only just managed to save his reputation in Sterling’s eyes after Lisa’s escape. He framed a subservient agent, a young man named Jovan. Sterling murdered Jovan before Larry’s own eyes. Twelve shots to the head and heart. Larry believes Sterling killed Jovan in front of him intentionally, as a warning of the end result of treachery.”

    “Fuck,” said Donovan.

    “His cover hasn’t been blown yet,” said Lance. “But he’s being closely watched, and he seems convinced he only has a few days left before he’s made. Sarah and I have … well, theorised … that Sterling is probably checking through communications records for most of the high-ranking officers in the Union, not just Larry, so that could explain why it might take a few days. Nonetheless, despite the fact that we’ve been extremely careful in our coded communications with Larry, there will be patterns in our conversations that might trigger off Sterling’s suspicions and blow Larry’s cover. And that’s assuming there’s nothing else that gives him away.

    “It goes without saying that the greatest weapon at our disposal – aside from the keys that Lisa has acquired – is Larry.”

    “Hence the haste,” Alison said, nodding slowly. “You’re saying it’s now or never.”

    “I’m saying it’s now,” Lance nodded firmly. “Lisa’s intel and the … precarity of Larry’s situation … give us a unique – let’s call it opportunity.”

    Ryan laughed humourlessly.

    “My plan, then,” said Lance, feeling slightly less apprehensive now that his party was brought up to speed; indeed, they were all listening intently now, “is to ambush the Union’s base on Silver Rock Island, for four reasons. Firstly, for the Fourth Key. Secondly, to try to get the Union’s other stash of keys: I know Larry knows where they are. Thirdly, to wipe out as much Union scum as we can get our hands on, especially Sterling.” (Sarah was the only one whose skin prickled with fear at his words.) “And last of all, if we possibly can, to save Larry’s life.

    “The way we’re gonna do it is via the miraculous means I mentioned earlier,” Lance continued. “That is, we’re using Larry to play a nice practical joke on the Union.”

    “A diversion?” ventured Azura.

    “A big one,” Lance smirked, unable to help himself. “A few hours before our ambush, Larry will inform Joseph Sterling that he has intercepted a communiqué that the Guard is mobilising to a cave on the west coast of Johto’s southern peninsula, just west of Azalea Town, where we have located the Fourth Key. According to Larry, there are about eight hundred Union agents on base at any one time. He is going to try to scramble about half of them if possible, to head us off in Azalea. Ideally, that will leave us to contend with just four hundred agents.”

    “Four each,” Donovan boomed, thudding his fist on the table. He seemed oddly excited by the prospect of battle.

    “Assuming they take out none of us,” Alison said curtly, her lips thinly drawn. “That ratio’s still way too far into suicide territory for my liking.”

    “Looking at the raw numbers, I’d agree with you, Alison,” Lance said, resting his hands on the edge of the table and checking for the umpteenth time that power had definitely been cut to the intercom and telephone unit built into the mahogany; he was paranoid about accidentally broadcasting their secret conversations. “But you’re forgetting the pragmatics. Sterling will send his best fighters to intercept us in Azalea; the weakest grunts will be left to face an onslaught of around eighty of the most skilled trainers and fighters in the region.

    “The other thing you’re forgetting is that while the Union agents still do use pokémon by means of habit, these days they favour their pistols and stun guns. According to Larry, most agents only carry three or four pokémon at the most. So, to make the most of this,” he said, grinning, “I’m planning on bringing a veritable army of my strongest pokémon with me, including my Dragonite and my Steelix, just to shake things up a bit.”

    Donovan and Ryan exchanged broad grins.

    “You’re putting everything into this, aren’t you?” Azura said, her expression half-excited and half-bemused.

    Lance nodded.

    “I am, and I want all of you and all your teams to do the same,” he said. “If we pull this off right, if everything goes to plan, this could be the end of Joseph Sterling. The end of the Union.”

    The atmosphere in the drawing room was suddenly palpable.

    “I’ll get Tom to bring my Blastoise from home,” Ryan said at once.

    “And my Nidoqueen,” Maria added.

    “I’ll kill Sterling myself, and if he gets me first, my Machamp’ll finish ‘im off,” Donovan grinned venomously.

    “Okay, that energy is exactly what I want you all to pass you on to your teams,” Lance said, energised. “They need to be ready to do battle for the fourth key. They need to be pumped.

    “So, that’s the plan,” Lance said. “Sarah’s emailed you all with a briefing, so check your phones. I’ll notify Larry in a few minutes, and we’ll mobilise ASAP. All teams will converge on Red Rock Island as subtly as possible. As we have no base or safe house there, we’re going to use Jack Criddle’s house as a meeting point: it’s not big but it’s big enough, it’s coastal, for us to mobilise quickly by sea, and it’s well out of town, so we likely won’t be seen.

    “There’s just one more thing.”

    “I was going to say …” Alison said under her breath, just loud enough for the others to hear her.

    Ryan, Maria, Azura, Donovan and Alison faced Lance, waiting keenly on his final comment.

    “Aside from my dad, the seven of us in this room are the only people in the Guard who know that there is a mole within our ranks.”

    Realisation dawned on the faces of the others.

    “There’s still no lead?” Azura asked.

    “None, other than it’s not one of us,” Lance sighed. “However, I plan to use this mole to our advantage.

    “You’re going to tell your teams the exact same thing we’re leaking to the Union. That the Fourth Key is located in a remote coastal cave west of Azalea Town. We’ll chopper it to a bare stretch of beach between Olivine and Goldenrod and surf from there. We’ll say Red Rock is a rest point before we surf onward to the hidden cave. Not until we leave Red Rock will any of our members know that we are heading for Silver Rock Island. The mole, whoever he or she is, won’t have a chance to warn Sterling, and his agents will be too far away to help him, in any case.

    “The added advantage of this is that, if Sterling is really that suspicious of Larry, he might contact his mole within our ranks for confirmation that the Guard is headed to Azalea. And he’ll receive that confirmation.”

    “You realise you’re proposing we lie to our entire teams,” Maria said blankly.

    “In order to save their lives, probably,” said Lance.

    “He’s right, Maria,” said Ryan.

    “I know, love … I know there’s no way around it … it’s just that … we’re going to catch the mole, but after that’s all said and done, we’ll end up with an entire team that no longer trusts us.”

    “They’ll understand why the measure had to be taken,” said Alison briskly; it irritated her when people dwelled on things they had already resolved to accept.

    “Exactly,” said Lance. “And if all goes well tonight, we might not even need teams ever again.”

    Maria’s frowning face broke briefly into an appreciative smile before resuming its deep frown.

    “That’s it,” said Lance, clapping his hands together in a macho gesture once more. “Grab your phones and things from Sarah, and I’ll see you all down in the foyer. We leave in thirty minutes.”

    Azura, Donovan, Alison and Sarah slid their grey tub chairs out from the table and rose.

    “We’re gonna kill some Union scum!” Donovan sang to himself in a toneless voice, as he headed out into Sarah’s reception area.

    “You don’t seriously take issue with this, do you, Maria?” Lance asked her incredulously.

    Her dark Italian eyes weighed down with years of suffering, Maria Walters stood up slowly, helping her husband into his coat.

    “I’m afraid after everything we’ve seen in last twenty years, Lance, I still get those pangs of Catholic guilt. I’m not going to oppose you, and I can’t even disagree with your logic. I just … I still believe it’s wrong to lie.”

    Lance pressed his lips together and inclined his head slightly.

    “I know, Maria. Me too. And hopefully this whole business is going to be done and dusted soon. But until then, it’s the reality of what we do.

    “Sometimes it’s necessary to tell a lie for the greater good.”
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

  11. #11
    Elite Trainer
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 77 now up! (4th March)

    Argh, every time they're talking about going to Jack's place, I want to scream warnings at them... just like talking to the TV It's really scary how much Lance knows, and the spin he's putting on it. It's also interesting to see how the parents are reacting -- Ryan seems like such a yes-man... The whole bit with the trio doing karaoke and scoffing huge burgers seemed a bit weird, given that they still weren't completely safe -- I guess they just went delirious with 'freedom'? Looking forward to the next chapter!
    mistysakura
    2007 Golden Pens: Co-winner of Best Poem (Rain Eternal) and Best Reviewer
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    Former 3-time winner of Most Dedicated Reader at the Fanfiction Forums
    Also Keeper of the 'A'ctivator Unown

    Brimstone Diamonds. The Artist. Tightrope. Solitude. Autopsy.
    Glitter (one-shot).
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    Random thought: 2+2=5.

  12. #12
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 78 now up! (13th April)

    Quote Originally Posted by mistysakura View Post
    Argh, every time they're talking about going to Jack's place, I want to scream warnings at them... just like talking to the TV It's really scary how much Lance knows, and the spin he's putting on it. It's also interesting to see how the parents are reacting -- Ryan seems like such a yes-man... The whole bit with the trio doing karaoke and scoffing huge burgers seemed a bit weird, given that they still weren't completely safe -- I guess they just went delirious with 'freedom'? Looking forward to the next chapter!
    Thanks, Ada! Hehehe ... yeah this is one of those cases of dramatic irony, isn't it, where the readers know just a little more than the characters. Or is that the case? You shall soon find out. Yeah, I agree Lance is a powerful character and with that comes the inevitable corruption that power brings, to an extent at least. I think the dynamic between Ryan, Lance and Azura is an interesting one: you're right in that Ryan will generally be closer to Lance's point of view and echo him, while Azura acts as this fierce voice of reason and, sometimes, passion. And yes, the bit with them celebrating was a bit out-of-kilter, but I tried to think about the adrenaline of freedom and escape from near death/capture, and there would be a dizzying elation that comes with that, I think, maybe slightly inappropriately, I don't know.

    Here is the next chapter. A whole lot of stuff is about to go down.

    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

    Chapter 78 – Underneath.


    Lisa hung up the dirty, cream-coloured receiver of Jack Criddle’s phone and sighed. Had it been the right thing to do, not telling Lance the whole truth? She had omitted any mention of the fact that the text she had found was her grandfather’s secret diary, lying further by telling Lance she had lost the text while escaping from the Sepulchre, but that she had memorised the key locations; likewise, she had said nothing about Marina’s fragment of the Sixth Key.

    She stared blankly through the tatty flywire that covered the enormous window of Jack’s kitchen. Though the sun was not quite up yet, and the sky still a deep umber streaked with orange in the east, the old sea captain, Frank, was sitting on a deck chair among the enormous mess of junk, rubble and curios that comprised the back yard of Jack’s beachside hut, smoking tobacco from a smooth wooden pipe.

    Lisa regarded him with mild amusement. He had sung his bizarre sea chantys throughout their voyage from the mainland, where Jack had picked them up, to where they had moored the boat, just off the beach near the hut. Lisa watched as he puffed little white plumes of nonchalance into the crisp morning air, his eyes knotted over a crossword puzzle that he could surely scarcely see in the half-light. Was it really possible that there sat before her a man in his sixties – seventies, even – who was apparently completely carefree and content, while there she was in the kitchen, a stressed teenage girl of fifteen who, she knew, had already experienced more pain and seen more terrors than most people would see in a lifetime?

    Life didn’t seem to make sense.

    She turned away from the window and, tucking a tendril of newly-black hair behind her ear, she located the least grubby glass on the stainless steel sink and poured herself a glass of water. After they had arrived on Red Rock Island, she had asked Jack to buy her a black rinse from the all-hours deli beside Shane’s Shark Shack: the crimson bob was just a little too attention-grabbing, especially as the Union had now seen her new look. While Marina, Gavin and Jack had all collapsed wearily into bed when they returned to the hut an hour ago, Lisa found the prospect of sleep impossible, not least because she had slept for the entire naval voyage. Moreover, she had been too keyed up to rest; after dying her hair back to its old black (it felt odd to return to looking like herself) and showering, she had decided not to put off the phone call she had to make to Lance, and had dialled him at once.

    Was it a mistake? Lisa felt oddly empty at having brought the Guard back into her loop – displaced, even. In just a few days of independence, she had learned to live, more than ever, without parents, without the Guard, without rules. It had been exhilarating. To think that, according to Lance, her parents and most of the Guard would soon be descending secretly upon Jack’s little hut made her suddenly regret her decision. It felt as though she had discovered a world and a life of her own, and then sold them for a price she wasn’t even sure she cared about.

    At least she still had some secrets. The diary and Marina’s fragment. There was no way she was ready to part with them yet.

    She was glad that Marina and Gavin had agreed to the decision. Just after they boarded Jack and Frank’s fishing vessel, and the night waves battered the craft as it sailed for Red Rock, she had explained her fear of the Guard being infiltrated and suggested that they not mention Marina’s fragment but, rather, hide it somewhere themselves.

    “Fine, whatever,” Marina had muttered sleepily, trying to curl up in her bunk; she was still half-asleep, it seemed.

    “Sounds good,” Gavin had said, pulling his grey beanie tighter over his shaved head. He reached into the pocket of Marina’s jeans, which lay on the floor of the below-deck cabin, and removed the tiny, glassy fragment, handing it to Lisa. “The question is, where the hell do we hide it?”

    Lisa had struggled with the same question for some time. Even the hot spurts of steaming hot water rinsing the tides of purple from her hair had not cleansed her mind enough for her to make a decision on where to hide the fragment. Part of her wanted to hurl it into the ocean and simply lose it forever, or, similarly, bury it in a patch of salty scrubland and forget where it was. But her mind looped back to the scrawled text in her grandfather’s diary and his description of the power behind the Iron Lock. The fire of the Phoenix. Eternal life. If Lisa lost the key forever, the secret of the Iron Lock would be lost, too. Maybe she would be better off hiding the key somewhere it could be found if needed? Would it be too much of a risk to hide it, say, under one of Jack’s splintery floorboards?

    She checked her watch and sighed. She would have to make a decision within the next twelve hours. According to Lance’s rigidly-spoken words on the telephone, that was when the Guard was to descend on Red Rock Island – on Jack’s little hut – and prepare for the invasion of Silver Rock Island.

    Lisa was surprised that Lance’s stern words had cut her.

    “We will attack the Union’s base. You kids will stay put on Red Rock Island. No arguments.”

    Even as she absent-mindedly poured herself another glass of tap water, Lisa found her face screwing itself up in contempt. Did Lance think she was some kind of idiot? She smiled savagely. He had no idea what she had lived through … what the three of them had experienced together. They had escaped the Union yet again; they had found and retrieved keys. Didn’t that prove their mettle?

    Lisa remembered something Jamie had said while he helped her bleach her hair.

    “My ex-mum always said bleach damages your hair. You’re meant to use some wanky dye.”

    He had taken a sip of lukewarm beer and locked eyes with Lisa’s wide-eyed reflection in the mirror.

    “I’ll tell ya one thing I’ve learned, girl padawan. Adults are fucken pussies when it comes to their kids.”

    Lisa smirked. For all his obliqueness, Jamie was right in that regard: adults seemed to have developed a collective habit of treating their teenage children like incapable infants. Her parents had done it, keeping her in the dark for so long. And now Lance was doing the same, cloistering them in Jack’s house while the adults – who, from what Lisa could see, had never had as much success against the Union as she, Gavin and Marina had – played the starring roles.

    Indeed, as Lisa unwrapped one of Jack’s high-protein muesli bars from the peeling, faded green cupboard, she realised exactly what bothered her. Not Lance’s disregard for her achievements – after everything, she wasn’t sure she cared what anyone except Gavin or Marina said anymore – but the pragmatic thud in her soul: she was going to sit on the sidelines while the war was finally – maybe – won.

    For the millionth time, the old fear returned to Lisa: had she become a crazed adrenaline junkie? Why did she even want to fight? The jets of deadly light sizzling the air, screams and explosions of gunfire, blurred vision and heart hammering … it was terrifying, not exciting … but her body seemed to feel otherwise.

    Suddenly, the urge to run overcame her. Gulping down an arid ball of muesli (how did Jack manage it?), Lisa double-checked that Frank wasn’t on sentry duty (he was now draped over the deckchair, eyes closed and the steaming pipe lolling dangerously close to his collar) before reaching for her backpack, scribbling a note for Gavin and Marina and bounding toward the front door.

    Jack, Gavin and Marina would only be asleep for a few more hours. She couldn’t bear the thought of not making the most of her last few hours of freedom; the last few hours of being alone.

    She had to breathe.

    *

    Larry O’Brien sprinted down the spiral stone staircase, his heart pounding. The torches were already burning in the sconces on the walls: was he too late?

    He reached the small cavern he needed to visit and turned the corner to where the cell was located. Behind a series of ceiling-to-floor iron bars, crumpled in a corner of a bare cell with just a bed, toilet, sink and desk with texts sprawled across it, was Professor Geoffrey Westwood. The man was a shadow of his former self: he had lost a great deal of weight over the past four months, and was now skinny and more wizened-looking than ever before. His eyes drooped with weariness as he gnawed on a slice of bread.

    “Geoff,” Larry said.

    “What is it?” Westwood asked tiredly. “What do you people want from me now?”

    “I only have a few minutes, and I can’t be seen leaving here. You must do exactly as I say. My name is Larry O’Brien. I am a double agent working for Lance Hudson and the Guard, sabotaging the Union from the inside.”

    A flicker of hope crossed Westwood’s face.

    “You’ve come to rescue me!”

    “In a manner of speaking,” Larry said matter-of-factly. “I’m not here to bail you out myself, but I’m here to help you get free in the end. Listen: the Guard is leaking false information to the Union that the Fourth Key has been discovered near Azalea Town. Sterling will come and ask you if this is congruent with the texts before he takes any action. It’s imperative that you lie to him and confirm the bogus info.”

    Westwood looked bemused.

    “But to what end is all this?”

    “We are luring the Union’s forces away so that the Guard can attack this base. I have already told the Guard your location. They will liberate you when they get here. But you have to promise me you will do this. Tell Sterling that the Fourth Key is indeed somewhere on the coast of the peninsula, west of Azalea Town, and only when he asks you, which he will.”

    Westwood nodded sharply.

    “I will do it, I give you my word,” Westwood said.

    “Thank you, Westwood – now, I have to get out of here before he comes …” Larry paused, teetering on the cusp of doing something before deciding to go through with it. “Listen, Westwood,” he said solemnly. “I think Sterling is onto me, and what I’m going to try to do tonight might be my death.” He removed a silver chain from around his neck and passed it through the bars of the cell; Westwood took it soberly. “If I die tonight, please give that to my wife, Esther, and my daughter, Jenna.”

    Westwood’s eyes were wide as he curled the chain into his hand and placed it securely in his pocket.

    “I will,” he said.

    Larry nodded curtly, and turned to leave, but Westwood called out:

    “Thank you, Larry. And good luck.”

    Larry turned and deigned a troubled half-smile.

    “Thank you, Geoff. You too.”

    *

    The office was lit by a single candle placed on the corner of the polished granite desk. It burned not with a yellow-orange flame, but of a deep, bloody vermilion hue.

    His dark eyes burning in the eerie illumination Joseph Sterling picked up his mobile telephone and dialled a number while Veronica Stawell took a long drag on a cigarette in the seat opposite.

    A voice answered through the receiver of Sterling’s mobile.

    “Sir.”

    “I have just received intel that the Guard has located the Fourth Key. Is this true?”

    “Y-yes, sir.”

    “Where is the key located?”

    “We haven’t been told exactly, but it’s somewhere on the coast of the peninsula, west of Azalea …”

    “Tell me everything you know.”

    “They haven’t said much yet – we were only just informed – but we’re all converging in Olivine, it’s the closest to all the teams’ locations, and then we’re taking boats or something from Olivine to the key. Scheduled to arrive at 2am.”

    “All of the teams are involved?”

    “Yes, sir. Everyone who can help. It’s all hands on deck. Probably close to a hundred agents. You should send maximum force.” The voice suddenly rose an octave. “I-I m-mean, if you should decide, sir, it’s your deci-”

    “Yes, it is. Don’t remind me of the extent of my power in the same breath as displeasing me,” Sterling hissed. “Now tell me, how is it that I learned of this mass movement via an intercepted communiqué, rather than from you?”

    “S-sir … please, we were only just told …”

    “I hope you haven’t forgotten our arrangement, maggot. I don’t need to remind you of your wife Natasha’s beauty. I’m sure neither of us wish for her to be … damaged.”

    “N-no, please sir …”

    Smirking, Joseph Sterling hung up.

    “What a pussy,” Veronica snarled, blowing a ring of smoke into the air.

    Sterling stood up abruptly.

    “Assemble the best of the best on the floor of the cone in twenty minutes. I’m going to pay our mate Westwood a little visit.”

    *

    For the first time in Lisa’s memory, Red Rock Island was waking up to a gloomy sky and an aggressively cold zephyr. Reeking of dried salt and Seaking scales, she wrapped Jack’s wool-lined jacket around her and pulled Gavin’s grey beanie further over her short hair. As she hurried along the coastal promenade, she wondered if she might be mistaken for a boy, at a distance.

    Her destination was mercifully a long way from the well-policed main mall. As the sun finally crested over the misty horizon, Lisa located the ivy-choked two-storey brick bungalow and pressed the doorbell.

    There was a scuffling behind the white door, and then several seconds of silence. Lisa knew a bleary eye was scanning her through the peephole. Shaking her head, she removed Gavin’s beanie and her aviators.

    A latch clicked and the white door swung open.

    Jamie stood there, naked except for a pair of black-and-yellow beer-branded boxer shorts, his bleached hair sticking up like a Nidorino’s spine.

    “Lisa. Hey,” he said simply, his deep voice muffled by the smouldering cigarette that dangled from his mouth.

    “Hey Jamie,” Lisa greeted, stepping inside quickly. “Didn’t wake you did I?”

    “It’s seven a.m.,” he grunted, locking the door behind them. “Haven’t slept yet.”

    Without waiting for Lisa, he trudged through the corridor that led to the rest of the house.

    “I’m in my room, dude,” he muttered.

    Lisa couldn’t help but smile to herself: Jamie was supremely unconcerned by her appearance.

    She picked her way carefully through the rubble strewn through what remained of his ‘ex-mum’s’ house. Lisa was flabbergasted by how much filth had accumulated since her visit just a few days previous. Clothes, empty cans of beer and cornflakes formed a steady track from the entry to the kitchen to the living room. The kitchen sink was dripping. Most of the lampshades were shattered; a golf club, a baseball bat and a pair of tennis rackets lay on the torn linoleum beside a collection of small rocks and cricket balls. A smorgasbord of bottles of spirits and ales – all empty – lined the full length of the half-wall in the dining room, like some kind of victory parade.

    Lisa nearly jumped out of her skin as she passed through the living room: what she initially believed to be a pile of clothes on the futon suddenly moved and groaned, and a pair of arms stretched out from within the mess, followed by a second, hairier pair.

    Lisa scuttled into Jamie’s bedroom and instinctively closed the door behind her.

    “I thought you told me you don’t live here anymore,” she said. “Who are the people on the futon?”

    Jamie was sitting cross-legged on his bed, unabashedly poring over a glossy magazine emblazoned with pictures of topless women.

    “Rod and Amy? They’re boss. Let ‘em crash for the night. We had a wicked rave last night.”

    Lisa screwed her nose up at the smell emanating from every corner of the room: it was an acrid mixture of sweat, alcohol and something pungent that she couldn’t quite identify.

    “No kidding.”

    “And not that it’s yer business, but I’ve been here ever since you made me come back. I felt like I owed my ex-mum somethin’ in return for all her good work, so I redecorated.”

    He took a long drag on his cigarette before returning it to its at-ease position between his lips, his blue eyes fixed to a pair of printed breasts.

    Lisa hesitated to sit down on the bed, but, to her surprise, Jamie obliged her, wordlessly moving his dirty jeans from the foot of the mattress and gesturing for her to sit. She did.

    “So did you get your key then?”

    He looked up from his dirty magazine, his pallid, malnourished face and bloodshot blue eyes suddenly keen with interest.

    “Yeah. Yeah, I did.”

    “Destroy it?”

    Lisa tilted her head and grimaced.

    “It’s indestructible.”

    Jamie regarded her blankly for a moment.

    “Flush it down the dunny then.”

    Lisa almost laughed. For the millionth time, she recalled the words in her grandfather’s diary. The fire of the phoenix. Eternal life.

    “I would – if it wasn’t so much more complex than that …”

    She fell back on the bed and sighed, her eyes falling on the lurid yellow-and-black poster that she had woken up to four days ago:

    SO YOU’RE JUST GONNA ROLL OVER AND GIVE UP LIKE YOU ALWAYS DO? OR ARE YOU FINALLY GONNA GET MAD AND DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT?

    Enormous globs of putty attached the poster to the wall.

    A smile curled Lisa’s lips, replaced immediately by a sense of dread.

    “Can I say something?” she said abruptly, staring at the poster with a swirl of something akin to affection in her stomach.

    “No,” Jamie said dully. He guffawed suddenly and took a quick drag of his smoke. “Haha. Kiddin’. Yeah, what?”

    “I know I’ll sound like an idiot but … I’m scared of this all being over,” Lisa said, forcing herself to say the words as her face flushed red.

    “What d’you mean?” Jamie asked, saving a page of his magazine with his thumb and closing it, as though he detected a serious conversation in the air.

    “I mean … I don’t know what I’m going to do with my life after this is all over.” Lisa felt the words tumble from her mouth, allowed to flow for the first time. “I was washing the dye out of my hair this morning … back to black … and I was just thinking, like … how boring my life will be once the war is over. The last six months have been the most horrible and exciting months of my whole life, and – okay, this is gonna sound kind of emo, but … it’s pretty much the only interesting thing that’s ever happened to me. I don’t want it to end.”

    Her chest tightened as she disgorged her ugly truth. She winced, waiting for Jamie’s reply.

    “Guess that’s fair enough,” he mumbled.

    Lisa’s eyes moved from the broken lampshade on the ceiling to Jamie: he had reopened his magazine and was ogling a nude woman who appeared to have clambered out of a very cold lake.

    “You don’t think that’s ridiculous?”

    Jamie’s slate-blue eyes looked up briefly from the dirty magazine.

    “What’m I, yer shrink?” He smirked, not unkindly. “I dunno, I get where you’re coming from. Life is boring as batshit.”

    Suddenly, his expression became deeply serious: he removed the cigarette from his mouth as his forehead creased with sincerity.

    “Look, the night we met at the Colosseum was the fucking best my life has ever been,” Jamie said flatly. “Running. Getting attacked. Getting my knee fucking blasted by an Ice Beam! Dude, it’s not ridiculous. I was fucking shitting myself the whole fucking time but it was fucking rad. I’d give good money to do that shit again.”

    Lisa gave up trying to count expletives.

    “You really feel the same?”

    “Shit yeah!” he cried. “Rad enough for me to stay here at my bloody ex-mum’s place for the last four nights, hoping you’d come back.”

    Lisa felt a shiver course through her skin: his utter vulnerability raised almost frightened goosebumps all over her body. She waited a few seconds for him to laugh, or say that he had been joking. He didn’t.

    The silence stretched on as Lisa’s thoughts raced. Had she given him the wrong impression? Was he infatuated with her? Was that why he’d waited for her to come back? Or was it just because he wanted another glimpse of a life of danger? Lisa regarded him as he flicked nonchalantly through the pages of his porno magazine, completely unfazed by her presence. Certainly, he was attractive: his torso was slim but sinewy, and even with his bloodshot eyes and pallid skin, he had a handsome face and a strong jawline. If anything, the dark circles around his eyes gave him a rugged, dangerous appearance. Lisa watched him stub out his cigarette in the smoked-glass ashtray on the bedside table. Nothing about him was conventionally likeable. Indeed, everything about him was repulsive in her eyes: he swore, he drank, he smoked, he looked a porn in front of a girl he barely knew and he was clearly involved with some kinds of drugs. The image of Darius drifted across her mind’s eye and she felt her heart glow at the thought of his dimples. Her breath became shallow as she thought of his voice, his laugh, his attitude. She was attracted to him: a hopeless crush. But her feelings toward Jamie were different. She wasn’t sure she even liked him, but she found some kind of convergence with him. Perhaps it was the fact that he was someone outside the insane world of the Guard and the Legend: someone from the real world. A teenager who was actually allowed to be a teenager. Someone she could actually vent to about how she felt. She knew her friendship with Gavin and Marina was infinitely deeper, and yet both of them were embroiled in the same chaos as she: they all faced the same hell together, they shared every moment of fear and pain. But if she had told them how she felt about the war ending, would they have felt the same way? And if they did, would they have admitted it to her, for fear of, like her, being thought ridiculous by the other?

    There was no such fear with Jamie. What did Lisa care if he thought she was ridiculous or selfish? Whatever his perception of her was, she didn’t care.

    For an infinitesimal moment, the image of the two of them kissing flitted across her mind’s eye as her brain sorted itself out, sliding shards of confused light over one another. She grimaced in disgust.

    “I don’t want to go out with you.”

    The words leapt from her lips before she could lasso them back.

    Jamie’s dark eyebrows shot up toward his peroxide-blond hairline. He burst into a fit of deep guffaws.

    Lisa’s cheeks burned.

    “That’s good,” said Jamie eventually, wiping a tear from the corner of his eye. “I don’t do relationships, full stop. Only sex.” He crooked his head. “We can do that if you want.”

    A wave of horror crashed over Lisa.

    “No! No way!” she cried hastily. “EW. No. No no no. God no!”

    “Okay, chill out dude, I was messing around …”

    She shuddered. “I’m only fifteen anyway!”

    “Big deal, I did it when I was thirteen.”

    Lisa stared at him blankly.

    “My dad would kill you if he knew what you’d just said to me,” she said haughtily.

    Jamie put up his hands as a sign of non-violence.

    “Okay, I misread my audience. Sor-ry, Prudy McPrude. You can go back to your meltdown if you like. You don’t know what you’re going to do with your life after the war, etcetera …”

    Lisa scowled at him.

    “I wasn’t melting down,” she snapped. “I just don’t know what to do next.”

    “The war isn’t won yet, is it?”

    “No, but the way Lance was talking on the phone … it sounds like he’s putting everything he has into this ambush we’re doing on the Union’s base tonight.”

    The magazine slid from Jamie’s lap to the floor.

    “You’re what?!” he almost yelled. “I’m coming with you!”

    “You can come with me all the way to Jack’s hut,” Lisa said shortly. “That’s where I’ll be. Sitting pretty while the grown-ups fight …”

    “Laaaaaaaame,” said Jamie.

    “We’ve spent all this time fighting, so much time scared that the Union will win and we’ll be screwed. And now, it sounds like we’re the ones who are probably going to win somehow, judging from what Lance has planned, and of course that’s what we’ve fought and some people even died for. I’m not saying I’m not happy about it. But it’ll be all over, this whole thing will be over and everything will go back to normal, and I don’t even know what normal IS anymore. Normal to me is being with Gavin and Marina – and running away from people and searching for things and fighting the Union. That’s what I’m used to now.”

    She sighed heavily and covered her face with her hands, massaging her temples.

    “Seriously, what am I ever going to do with my life that’s, you know, as real as this?”

    “Well, what did you used to wanna do?”

    “Be a pokémon trainer,” Lisa answered at once. “I started out on my journey but didn’t really get far before I got more interested in the Legendary pokémon. I thought maybe I could study and be an expert on Legendaries and their myths, or something …”

    “Not being a dick, but is that even a real job?” Jamie asked.

    Lisa threw her hands up in despair.

    “I don’t even know,” she sighed. “I worked part-time at a pokémon centre last summer. I suppose I could go into nursing or something … my mum would be happy, she’s always saying that I should become a nurse.”

    “Mothers should be banned from telling their kids what to be,” Jamie said, a little too venomously.

    Lisa hesitated, before her curiosity overwhelmed her.

    “What did your mum want you to be?”

    “My ex-mum, you mean.”

    “Okay. Her. What did she want you to be?”

    “You can’t laugh.”

    “I promise.”

    “She wanted me to be a priest.”

    Lisa couldn’t help it: she snorted loudly.

    “A what?!” she said, fighting off a smile by opening her mouth broadly, as if in shock. “She has met you, right?”

    “Oh yeah,” Jamie scowled, his face darkening. “She’s a lovely piece of work, is my ex-mother.”

    He reached for a green pack of cigarettes from the bedside table, withdrew a smoke and torched the tip with a white disposable lighter.

    “What did she – I mean – well … yeah, what did she do to make you hate her so much?” Lisa asked in a hushed tone. She was suddenly gripped with the urge to leave the room, to escape Jamie and all his grievances, and at the same time, she found herself transfixed.

    “Hate isn’t the word,” Jamie glowered, blowing an aggressive plume of smoke into the air with unrequited force. “I loathe her.

    “She was a fucking cartoon. She still is. Fucking sweetness and light. Rabbiting on at community bake sales and bullshit like that. Seriously, people like that still exist. ‘My Jamie’s going be a deacon. My Jamie’s gonna be a priest. My Jamie absolutely adores Bishop Harding.’ Fucking crazy bitch. Couldn’t hear anyone but herself.

    “When I told her I hated religion and think it’s all a load of bollocks, she went fucking apeshit. Screamed the house down. Said she didn’t have a son.” He chuckled suddenly, mirthlessly. “The next day she checked me into a Catholic Boys’ Wellness Centre.”

    “Oh,” Lisa said. “That’s kind of … hardcore, isn’t it?”

    “It was a fucking prison, and this was a year ago. I was sixteen,” Jamie snarled, his eyes flashing. “A prison where they indoctrinate you to be like JESUS.” He nearly yelled the name. “Fuck that. It was me, some heroin addict dude, and a bunch of closeted fagboys who were being ‘cured’.”

    His voice was rising in pitch and volume now; his face was scarlet.

    “So my ex-mother, bless her fucking soul, is gonna come home from prayer camp to find her Mary statue no longer has a head and her bible’s soaked in my piss.”

    He took a long, violent suck on his cigarette.

    “I need a beer. I’ll be back in a bit,” he said abruptly, suddenly embarrassed-looking. Not making eye contact with Lisa, he stole from the room, slamming the door.

    Lisa found herself transfixed on the spot where he had been sitting, her heart thudding even though she had been still for some time. She wasn’t sure whether to feel sorry for Jamie, or to be utterly repulsed by his vitriolic revenge.

    Perhaps she didn’t like him after all. Perhaps he only made her feel better by comparison.

    Opting to distract herself from the misery of Jamie’s life, Lisa’s eyes moved to the poster on his wall. She had assessed it while he spoke. She knew it was right, even poetic.

    Crawling over the mattress, Lisa removed the tiny fragment of transparent glass from her pocket and, checking the door to make sure Jamie wasn’t returning, she peeled the poster from the wall and pressed the key into the largest glob of putty. It was small enough to be completely consumed by the soft globule.

    Heart racing, Lisa reaffixed the poster to the putty and regarded it from every angle, her smile broadening with each second.

    Marina’s key fragment was now invisible.
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

  13. #13
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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 79 now up! (12th May)

    Hey guys,

    It's been a month and I can't wait any longer to post this - I'm too excited for the epicness to begin. Enjoy!

    Cheers!

    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+


    Chapter 79 – The Gathering.


    The scrape of knives and forks on plates amid the noise of a jovial conversation wafted down the corridor as Lisa strolled back into Jack’s hut. She emerged in the kitchen to see Jack, Frank, Gavin and Marina clustered around the rickety old dining table, plates loaded with baked beans, fried eggs, pillars of toast, rashers of bacon, and chipolatas.

    “Speak of the devil!” Gavin said, not humorously, as Lisa appeared on the threshold. “Oh, so that’s where my beanie went!”

    “Hey, everyone,” Lisa called.

    “Leese! We were jus’ wond’rin’ where yeh were! Help yehself to some brekkie!”

    Judging from the white and yellow spray that flew in Lisa’s direction, Jack’s mouth was stuffed with eggs and toast.

    “I’ve just been for a nice morning walk down on the beach … thanks, Jack.”

    Lisa ladled some beans, bacon, tomato and chipolatas onto her plate and grabbed a slice of toast before taking the empty seat between Gavin and Marina. They both fixed her with deeply quizzical looks as she sank into her chair and poured a glass of mango juice: Marina mouthed, “Where have you been?”; Gavin looked murderous.

    “So what have you all been up to so far this morning?” Lisa asked cheerily, knowing full well that neither of them would grill her in the presence of Jack and Frank. “It feels like a real indoors day, doesn’t it?”

    Gavin’s fork skidded off his plate.

    “Not fer me ‘n’ Snowy,” Jack declared, shovelling bacon into his gob. “We’re goin’ on a little fishin’ trip to a lagoon off Blue Rock Island. Beach is mint there. You three can come along if yeh want.”

    “That actually sounds so nice,” Marina said, her face lighting up. “I could have a nice swim, my pokémon could get some fresh air – or some fresh water, I guess. Although it’s salt water … anyway, you know what I mean. Leese, Gav?”

    “Oh, does it matter what we think?” Gavin said, his voice rising an octave as he sawed through a greasy chipolata. “Apparently these days we just leave the group of our own accord and come back when we please.”

    “Fair enough, then,” said Jack, completely missing the sarcasm in Gavin’s tone as he tucked into some more baked beans. Frank, too, nodded vaguely; Lisa had the lingering suspicion that he was too deaf to hear the majority of most conversations.

    “That’s interesting,” Lisa said testily, meeting Gavin’s gaze. “I remember sitting by that hotel pool in Silver City for hours, wondering if you were gonna come back.”

    Quite at random, Frank seemed to jolt back to consciousness.

    “Oh, bin to Silver Rock have yeh, Linda?” he asked Lisa eagerly, a stray baked bean tangled in the wisps of his wiry white beard.

    Gavin and Marina snorted loudly before both shaking with repressed laughter; Jack seemed completely oblivious to anything that wasn’t coated in a thick ham sauce; Frank, meanwhile, was waiting quite intently for Lisa’s reply.

    “Um, no, sorry,” Lisa muttered, as politely as she could, before turning pointedly to face Gavin, who was sniggering openly, and Marina, was had turned a slice of charred toast into a shield so that Jack couldn’t see her giggling at Frank.

    “Okaaaaay,” Marina said at length, after taking a few swigs of mango juice to calm her down. “So, Gavin-and-Lisa-bickering aside, I’m assuming we’re gonna go to the lagoon with you, Jack. Thanks for the offer.”

    “No worries.”

    “What time will we get back here, Jack?” Lisa asked.

    “’Bout two this arvo.”

    “Perfect.”

    Gavin’s chestnut brown eyes probed Lisa’s honey-coloured ones. Perfect for what?

    “I’ll tell you when we’re alone there,” Lisa whispered, tucking into her grilled tomato.

    *

    The pastel blue sands of Blue Rock Island clashed horribly with the crystalline azure waters of the lagoon, but Lisa couldn’t have cared less. She was sprawled on the fine sand, drawing a small circle with her big toe and listening to the soothing sound of the waves foaming and hissing on the shore, just five metres away. Gavin and Marina lay around her, their heads all resting against one another’s. Shaded by a chair-sized leaf that protruded from a tropical fern a little further up the beach, Lisa closed her eyes, revelling in the relaxation.

    “Okay, girl, spill!”

    “Ouch!”

    Marina jabbed her index finger into Lisa’s rib.

    “What was all that about, Leese?” Gavin asked, his soft voice indicating that his anger was clearly tarnished by the serenity. “Where the hell did you go? We freaked out!”

    “More accurately,” Marina chimed in, “Gavin freaked out. I saw your note.”

    Gone for a walk, be back soon is NOT a note,” Gavin said swiftly. “I mean, it is, but come on … where’d you really go?” He lowered his voice. “Did you hide the key?”

    “Why are you whispering?” Marina muttered. “Jack and Frank are like a mile away, and this part of the island’s deserted.”

    “Answer the question, Leese.”

    “Yeah, I hid it.”

    “Hid it?” asked Marina. “Or did you … like, get rid of it somehow? Throw it into the sewer main or something?”

    Lisa tapped her teeth with her tongue. She hadn’t yet shown Gavin and Marina her grandfather’s diary. Would they understand her reticence to dispose of the key fragment if they knew how significant it might be? Or would they chide her for not ending a gang war when she potentially could have?

    “I hid it somewhere safe.”

    “Whereabouts?” Gavin asked quickly.

    Lisa decided to bite the bullet. She sat up.

    “Okay, I’ll start from the start. After you guys went to bed, I called Lance …”

    *

    The mobile telephone vibrated on the granite desk. Joseph Sterling downed the last of a scotch on the rocks and answered it.

    “Yes?”

    “The Guard is mobilising now, sir. We’re flying to Olivine in five minutes, ETA 3pm.”

    “Good. My first wave is on its way.”

    Sterling clapped the mobile shut and licked his lips, savouring the taste of the bitter drug.

    Game on.

    *

    “It’s bullshit, though!” Gavin cried hotly.

    “I know that!” Lisa countered. “Don’t shoot the messenger!”

    Gavin was on his feet, his hands behind his head as he paced aggressively along the shoreline, seafoam playing across his bare feet.

    “Lance is so … arrrrgh!”

    In frustration, Gavin kicked up a lump of periwinkle-blue beach sand; it sailed through the air, showering Lisa’s leg.

    “It’s not really surprising for me,” Marina said seriously, rubbing suntan lotion on her arms and chest. “You should’ve seen him ark up when Mum allowed me to come to Red Rock on that mission with Giles and Gideon. He went the Lance equivalent of apeshit. He nearly swore.” She giggled; Lisa cracked a smile. “And he’s completely forbidden Darius from basically doing anything other than sit at the Safe House forever. Darius is so pissed off, I’ve never seen him so angry as when he came back from talking with Lance. He snapped at me, even. But it’s ridiculous, honestly, the way Lance treats him … it’s like Darius is ten years old or something.”

    “But dear old Darry’s his son,” Gavin argued, excavating the beach with his big toe. “We aren’t. Why does he get a say in who gets to fight and who doesn’t?”

    “He’s still the leader of the Guard. I spose no-one can really challenge him,” Marina shrugged, slopping half a litre of coconut-scented oil over her midriff. “I don’t think it’s fair though.”

    “They’re being overprotective,” Lisa contributed, nodding to Marina’s wordless request to rub the lotion over her back. “Like my Mum and Dad were before. They don’t want us to get hurt. Or die.” She sighed. “I mean, duh, obviously I’m scared of that, too … but it’s kind of like – a detached worry. Like I can’t actually feel scared of dying because everything else outweighs it. And I know I’ve fought before, I know I can do it again.

    “Plus, I really don’t think they get how involved the three of us are in this,” she added, tapping Marina on the shoulders to let her know she was done. “Lance said they need all hands on deck for this. We’re as good as three Guard members. We’d be a massive help. And if this is really the end of the war …” She felt a flame reignite in her. “Then I want to help them end it. I wanna do my part. I wanna fight.”

    “Me too,” said Marina.

    “Exactly!” Gavin cried, pacing toward them, his sodden boardshorts sliding down and revealing the white band of his underpants. “I don’t wanna just sit around and wait for them to get back! What if they all get blown up and die, and if we were there we could’ve saved them, hey? That’s it, I’m fighting. Even if they don’t admit it, they need us!”

    “Good luck getting Lance to agree-ee,” Marina almost sang, standing up and brushing sand off her bare leg. “Alright, I need to de-stress, and my pokémon do, too … youse coming in for a dip?”

    “Yeah,” Lisa said, readjusting Marina’s spare bikini. The thought of some cool water was promising, especially as the water in the lagoon was so clear and pristine.

    They swam in the shallows for a good hour, and during that time, the topic of the Guard and the war was never mentioned. They instead frolicked with their pokémon: Lisa released Kingler, Cubone and a revitalised Altaria out to play with Gavin and Marina’s pokémon. Among all the others, Marina’s pokémon appeared the most relieved to be in the ocean again: Starmie performed an ecstatic series of cartwheels, which were eagerly mimicked by Gavin’s Staryu, who was graceful, and Marina’s Mudkip, who was much less so, and ended up tangled in Tentacraw’s ghostly tentacles; Herby, Marina’s water-loving Bayleef, began shooting off a series of small water cannons, which amazed Gavin as he had never seen it before; and Golduck, after treading water beside Gavin’s seel and Lanturn, decided to come over and braid a small section of Lisa’s hair, an action which made her decidedly uncomfortable; she was still not quite over her childhood fear of Golducks.

    “That’s another thing,” Lisa said pensively, after managing to palm Golduck off onto the two Kinglers. “How do I know whether the Guard’s going to be able to retrieve my pokémon for me? I bet it’s not high on their priorities. I have to be there. It’s up to me to get them back.”

    Gavin bounced Natu into the air and drifted over toward Lisa, his pale, slim chest glistening with water in the high noon sun.

    “It’s final, then,” he said. “We talk to Lance and demand that he lets us go, too.”

    Marina plunged underwater suddenly, re-emerging a second later with her cerulean-blue hair matted to her face.

    “It won’t happen,” she said. A slightly devious expression stole over her face. “If we want to go – if we’re seriously gonna do this – then we have to do it ourselves. Secretly.”

    “Tu!” Natu cried in the background, as Golduck and Altaria batted him between one another like a volleyball.

    Lisa recalled how Gavin had once used her Magneton as a volleyball and felt a distinct pang in her chest, mostly of how negligent she had once been. She had thought of her pokémon so much over the past week, and despised the fact that she felt so limp, so incapable of doing anything at all to bring them back to her. Were they still the same as before? Had the Union performed Lenina-like experiments on them, transforming them into fighting machines? Lisa winced. She thought of Dratini, ever calm and serene, always the peacemaker of the group. There was Vulpix, with her sweetness and temper and battle ferocity and utmost loyalty; Lisa grinned at the memory of Vulpix biting down hard on Veronica. Even Elekid, with his rogue disrespect of Lisa’s authority … somehow, with distance and her changed perspective, Lisa didn’t feel quite so frustrated by him. And Fiskmire, the stoic battler and recreational clown … Lisa frowned. Her perception of Fiskmire was marred by what Suicune had told her in the Sepulchre. Was Fiskmire still a Sentry? She shook her head vigorously. Suicune had insisted that Fiskmire had been unconscious of his use. Lisa fought valiantly to think of him as the same lovable creature she had been friends with for so long.

    And Aipom. Lisa had felt her heart shatter in Larry’s office, when he had refused to tell her the location of her pokémon. She would have liked to say that she loved them all equally, but it would have been a distinct lie. Certainly, she loved and liked her full team immensely … but Aipom had been there from day one. Through the beginning of the lonely summer holidays, they had enjoyed each other’s company, mucking around in the backyard or training against weak Rattata in Ecruteak’s parks. Aipom had stuck by Lisa’s side from the debacle with Suicune to gorging on maple syrup in countless grimy diners to her first major pokémon battles. His humour and hyperactivity energised her constantly, and she liked to think that her strength and skill kept him balanced. And his loyalty to her was and always had been remarkable; she owed him the same in kind.

    “There’s no question,” Lisa said vehemently, as Natu continued to squawk as he was bounced around. “I need to get my pokémon back myself. Above and beyond the war, they deserve a trainer who would fight for them, and I have to do it.”

    Gavin grinned excitedly.

    “So how do we do this?”

    Marina looked thoughtful, but just as she appeared ready to speak, the dull chug of an engine broke through the sounds of waves breaking and pokémon cheerfully splashing.

    “What’s that?” she asked, peering toward the deeper water.

    Lisa turned. The lagoon was quite secluded, cordoned off from the Cianwood Sea by natural groyne made entirely of pastel-blue rock. At the entrance to the lagoon, they saw a white vessel slowly drifting toward them, reflecting the brilliance of the sunlight.

    “It’s just Jack and Frank,” Lisa said, squinting. “I can even see Jack – he’s waving to us.”

    The vessel drifted closer and the distant sound of the motor seemed to amplify – and yet, it sounded more distant than just twenty metres away from them.

    “That sound …” Marina said, slowly. “It’s not coming from Frank’s boat.” She whirled around to face them. “Why’ve they cut the engine?”

    “I don’t think Jack’s waving,” Gavin said suddenly, wading toward the shore.

    Lisa squinted again. Jack Criddle stood at the stern of the white fishing vessel, frantically waving his tanned arms in a frantic gesture for them to get on board the boat.

    “Oh my God … what is it?” Lisa wondered aloud.

    “You don’t think …” Gavin muttered.

    The vessel bayed closer to them, just ten metres away from them and the shore; finally, Jack was within earshot.

    “Pirates, fuckin’ pirates, get on the bloody boat!”

    The motorised throb growing ever louder, Lisa, Gavin and Marina scrambled wordlessly for the shore. They hoisted their backpacks over their bare shoulders; the discomfort of the strap on skin was meaningless as they each hissed, “RETURN!” to their pokémon, and Lisa cried, “Retrahere!”

    Altaria, along with the other pokémon, had an expression of utter bewilderment as it disappeared in a flash of translucent red light.

    “Hurry!” Jack hissed.

    Double-checking she hadn’t left anything behind on the blue beach sand, Lisa pelted for the water, led by Marina and followed by Gavin, who muttered behind her in a guttural voice, “D’you reckon it’s pirates, or …”

    “Definitely ‘or’,” Lisa breathed back.

    Jack’s thunderous right bicep hauled each of them aboard, his face panic-stricken.

    “Keep yer mouths shut, don’t make a sound,” he hissed.

    The boat gently drifted further, so that it was mostly concealed from view by the natural groyne. Nevertheless, the groyne was low enough for Lisa to see directly out to sea, which meant that anyone passing would still be able to glimpse enough to know that a vessel was in the vicinity.

    “Frank an’ I spotted ‘em a few minutes ago,” Jack explained, throwing them a single, grubby towel that reeked of Seaking. Marina and Lisa both declined the offer with outstretched palms; Gavin, on the other hand, nodded at Jack by way of thanks and began roughly towelling his head. “Comin’ from Silver Rock d’rection, by th’ looks of it. Don’ reckon they’ll come in ‘ere, it’s jus’ a lagoon, no-one but fishermen around ‘ere. We should be right. Reckon they’re probably that gang o’ pirates from out near Tokor. Bastards, comin’ inta our waters. Fuckin’ Tokorese scum.”

    “Uh … Marina’s from Tokor,” Lisa said.

    “Oh shit – sorry, Marina … Jus’ meant the pirates, not you … no offence, ay …”

    “None taken, Jack,” Marina shrugged.

    “We should be right anyway … they’ll pass us by hopefully …” Jack added, folding his arms and gazing out to sea through his reflective wrap-around shades. His tattoo stretched with the bulge of his bicep; the instinctive quiver of his lip, however, betrayed his macho presence.

    Lisa, Gavin, Marina and Jack watched silently, in mingled fear and awe, as the mechanical roar became a series of differently-pitched cacophonies, a veritable soundstorm that finally broke as the vessels flew past the entrance of the lagoon from west to east.

    The first ones were speedboats, cutting the ocean at full-pelt and sending seaspray cannonning into the air, the water around them visibly churned and opaque. Even at a distance, the roar of their motors dug at Lisa’s ears. It was a veritable fleet of motorboats: Lisa lost count somewhere in the twenties, distracted as she tried in vain to identify the occupants of the vessels. They were definitely Union agents, there was no doubt about it: four to a boat, most wore dark jackets and pants in the trademark Union style, although Lisa spotted several men wearing flanellette shirts and denim, and still others in army-style fatigues and bandanas. More than ever, the Union members looked like dangerous guerrillas, most agents manned with rifles and AK-47s.

    Lisa heard Jack cursing underneath his breath as the convoy of speedboats flashed by in a total of perhaps sixty seconds; and then the larger craft came. Gavin swore and Marina gasped. There were half a dozen boats about double the size of Frank’s, each armed with a mounted machine gun and ten or so (armed) Union agents on each side. They passed by almost as fast as the speedboats, chugging past the right side of the lagoon and into the distance.

    And then came the mothership. Flanked by four more speedboats, it was a monstrous black warship, surging with deadly purpose through the water. Lisa had never seen anything like it: the deck was crowded with wooden crates and several Jeeps. Union agents clung to the deck like bees on honeycomb, shouting out excited whoops and exclamations among themselves. One or two of them faced the lagoon at various points, pointing at their visible boat. Lisa’s heart stopped. Machine guns lined the port and starboard sides of the ship. There was a moment of intense, unspoken panic on board – oxygen was a lost luxury – and then, the warship passed on by the lagoon, the deep throb of its engines reverberating into the air.

    A thirty-second silence ensued.

    “Holy crap,” Lisa gaped.

    “Don’ think they’re pirates …” Jack muttered, bounding toward the bow of the boat, ostensibly to consult with Frank.

    Once he was gone, Lisa faced Gavin and Marina, each of them pale despite the day in the sunlight.

    “So that’s what Lance reckons is half of the Union’s force,” Lisa said breathlessly.

    “So the same amount again is still on Silver Rock Island,” Marina breathed, still staring blankly at the place where the largest warship had been.

    “Excellent,” Gavin muttered sardonically.

    He threw the towel to the floor and sniffed curiously.

    “Have they been cleaning fish here or something?”

    Lisa and Marina exchanged a mildly amused glance, but it was impossible to laugh. Lisa wondered if the other two were thinking the same thing she was: the Guard was at a gross disadvantage in this battle.

    “What is Lance thinking?” Marina wondered aloud, her face panic-stricken. “Does the Guard even have a single boat?”

    “They have choppers,” Lisa pointed out.

    “They do have some boats in Olivine,” Gavin chipped in, smelling his armpits with a look of dismay. “Before I went to Cianwood, Lance offered me a boat and stuff. I went with Jack instead. He’s easier to … well … trust than anyone else.”

    Lisa frowned at him.

    “No, I’m not saying he’s an idiot, I’m just saying he’s loyal, y’know? You know where you stand with him.”

    “I spose it’s time to test that loyalty,” Marina said seriously, hunting around on deck for a cleaner towel. “We’re gonna have to tell him about the Guard taking over his house, right? Or will we just wait until Lance knocks on his front door?” She grinned. “I’m sure it’s an everyday occurance to have the League Champ rock up on your doorstep.”

    “That would be easier than actually telling him about all of this,” Lisa said wryly. “He’s been so nice to us … I feel bad asking for another favour from him.”

    “Especially ‘cause we’re not so much asking as telling,” Marina pointed out.

    Gavin scratched his shaved head.

    “I’ll tell him, then,” he shrugged, moving toward the bow of the boat. “I need to ask if I can borrow his deodorant, anyway.”

    *

    “Reckon we should’ve prepared something for ‘em?” Gavin asked, carrying his clothes into the spare room that he, Lisa and Marina were sharing. “A block of beer or something?”

    Marina snorted.

    “Yeah, cause that’s what we want, Gav, a load of drunk people rushing in to save the day.”

    “It would probably help with their confidence,” Gavin shrugged.

    Lisa listened to their conversation as she buttered their sandwiches on the kitchen bench, glad to have some normality abounding when such a terrifying event loomed before them all.

    She glanced at the wall clock as she slopped mustard pickles onto Gavin’s sandwich. It was close to seven in the evening; the sun was low, painting the sky and the inside of Jack’s hut an overbaked orange colour. According to what Lance had told her in his most recent call at 3pm, the Guard would be arriving within the next couple of hours.

    “We’ll get there just after nine,” he had said, the roar of an aeroplane screaming down the phone line, almost drowning him out. “Is Criddle in the loop?”

    Lisa had hesitated to answer.

    “He – he is,” she had said. “He agreed to it, but he’s not thrilled, to be honest.”

    She didn’t relay to Lance what Gavin had told her: that Jack had initially refused point-blank to house any kind of rebel gang in his house. Gavin had eventually managed to convince him by telling him his efforts would mean the guerrilla war would be brought to an end tonight – and that Lance would generously compensate him for his help.

    “I’ll talk to him, I’ll sort something out,” Lance said distractedly, as a voice called for him to get into a ute. Lisa quietly hoped that Lance would offer some kind of remuneration to Jack of his own accord: she didn’t exactly fancy telling him that it had already been promised on his behalf. “Have to go, Lisa!” Lance cried. “See you in a few hours!”

    Lisa pressed the slices of bread together and lumped them onto three separate plates.

    “Grub’s up, guys!”

    “Thanks, Mum!” Gavin joked, taking the china plate from Lisa and sitting down at the dining table.

    Marina wiped her hands on Jack’s grubby dishtowel and took the plate.

    “Thanks Leese.”

    They collected around the table and began to eat in silence, watching another repeat episode of The Goldeen Girls. Lisa tried telling herself how important it was to eat proper food before they went to fight, but her stomach wasn’t in agreeance: she had never felt less hungry in her life. Looking at the others, she noticed that they, too, seemed unable to stomach the food: Marina was nibbling feebly at the crust, and Gavin had pulled his sandwich apart, shoved the slice of ham into his mouth and was now picking at the remains with mild interest.

    “Should we run over the plan again?” Lisa suggested eventually, after her attempts to soak her mouthful of food with mango juice and then swallow it failed to make eating more appetising.

    “If we run over the plan again, I think I’ll scream,” Gavin said flatly.

    Marina nodded. “I think we’ve got it down pat.”

    “… you definitely got your Buzzball, right?” Gavin asked apprehensively.

    “Buzzball, check. Pokéballs, check. Poképort, check. Diary, check. Third Key, check.”

    “Did you tear the page out already?”

    “Of course.”

    Lisa hadn’t forgotten to be attentive to the details of her lie. She had torn page 62 from her grandfather’s diary and meticulously copied almost every detail onto a page of old yellowed paper to turn over to Lance, keeping the original for herself.

    “All the pokémon are healed, right?” Marina asked nervously, taking a sip from her glass of mango juice; Lisa wasn’t sure if she swallowed anything but air.

    “Done,” Gavin said. “The Nurse Joy was a bit of a hippie though. They’ve decked that place out with yoga mats and like, Caribbean music. It’s wicked.”

    Lisa smiled briefly.

    “And your Guardian Butterfree’s ready to go?” she asked.

    “Totally,” Marina replied.

    Another long period of silence followed; one of the Goldeen Girls announced that she had fallen pregnant at fifty-two years of age.

    “Gav,” Lisa ventured. “If we get into real trouble – how much psychic power can we, I dunno, expect?”

    “No idea, really,” Gavin said blankly, scratching his scar. “Little things I can do, I reckon. Like a little beam or a reflect or something … teleporting would be a big risk …”

    “Right,” said Lisa.

    “I’m shitting myself,” said Gavin.

    “Me too,” said Lisa.

    “Me three,” Marina added.

    The sound of the front door slamming made them all jump. Glances of anticipation were exchanged frantically as a pair of heavy footsteps clodded down the hallway – and Jack Criddle emerged in the dining room.

    “Ayyyyy,” he boomed, grinning broadly.

    He swayed into the kitchen, grabbing himself a stubby from the fridge and almost tripping over the power cord to the TV before taking a seat at the head of the table.

    “Sorry ‘bout before, mate,” he muttered to Gavin, his words slurred. “Jus’ had t’ get me head ‘round it all, y’know? So me ‘n’ Frank bin down at the pub – ‘e’s still there – an’ I had a good think an’ it’s all good, y’know, mate? S’all good, y’know?”

    “No worries, mate,” Gavin said bracingly. “I know it was a lot to ask.”

    “We really didn’t mean to make an imposition, Jack,” Lisa gushed; she felt bad about not having broached the subject with Jack personally. “It’s all out of our hands – Lance Hudson made the decision, not us.”

    Jack shrugged his muscled shoulders.

    “S’alright, Leese,” he insisted, and Lisa smelled the pungent odour of beer on his breath before he even took a swig from the new stubby. “I look up to Lance Hudson. Always have. What a fucken legend. Best trainer I’ve ever seen on TV. Saw him in person in ’96, he came t’ the Cossoleum – uh – the Cosso – y’know the place … yeah … He was fucken wicked, mate!” He slammed his fist down onto the table, almost sending the stubby flying. “DESTROYED Clair, assbolootly – absa – absolutely flogged ‘er. Fuck me, I wouldn’t mind floggin’ ‘er meself, ay …”

    “Don’t think we have a problem after all,” Gavin winked at Lisa.

    Jack belched loudly.

    “Tell ya what, would love t’ flog that bird down at the pub. Little blonde thing, from Kanto I reckon …” he took a hearty swig from his stubby; the amber liquid bubbled as it gushed into his mouth. He paused for a moment, his face slightly green, and then he said, matter-of-factly to the table at large, “Gotta chunder.”

    He bounded from the room toward his bedroom, slamming heavily into at least two doorframes before they heard the distant sound of retching.

    Marina winced.

    “I think that’s enough evidence against the beer-for-the-Guard plan.”

    “I’ll go check on him in a minute,” Lisa said slowly. “This is good, though … if he’s passed out for the night …”

    “… then it’s even easier for us to sneak out,” Gavin finished.

    It was dark and close to nine o’clock when Lisa finished helping Jack into his bed. Leaving a glass of water on his bedside table and a plastic bucket beside him (just in case), she was about to leave him to snore away when she heard the front door creak open and Marina’s muffled voice, followed by several pairs of footsteps creeping into the house.

    “Sweet dreams, Jack,” she whispered.

    She closed his door and crept out into the corridor before entering the large dining room, her eyes immediately falling onto a teenage boy now seated at the table.

    “Lisa!”

    If she had expected anyone to be there less, it was Darius Hudson.

    He leapt from his seat beside Marina, eyes shining, and jogged toward Lisa.

    “Hey,” he said simply, smiling broadly at her.

    Hello, dimples! “Hey, Darius!” Lisa grinned, before throwing her arms around him; he reciprocated the gesture with gusto.

    They broke apart.

    “Wow, you look good with short hair!” he exclaimed, gently taking hold of a tuft of her hair.

    “You too,” Lisa muttered stupidly.

    She felt instantly moronic for saying it: Darius’ dark brown hair was longer than she had ever seen it, shaggy and almost Beatles-esque. Indeed, he looked like he could’ve been in some kind of indie band. Lisa let her eyes play over his face – his deep brown eyes, his rugged jawline, and now, for the first time, the hint of stubble that was growing on it – and his then his body. Perhaps doing all the outside chores at the safe house had paid off: Darius now looked considerably stronger than the last time they had met: his shoulders were squarer and he was barrel-chested; his white T-shirt fitted him snugly, as did his dark denim jeans.

    Something inside Lisa’s chest was excitedly doing somersaults.

    “So, Marina was just trying to explain to me and the others what the hell got into you guys,” Darius smiled, holding out one of Jack’s old vinyl chairs for Lisa.

    Lisa wheeled around and, to her utter surprise, realised there were several other people now in the room besides Darius, clustered around the kitchen bench. There were three men and two women, all of whom appeared to be in their late twenties and thirties and all of whom were strangers to Lisa.

    “Oh, hi,” Lisa said nervously, waving to them. The full meaning of Darius’ words suddenly weighed down on her: she had forgotten that most of the Guard would still be furious about her, Gavin and Marina’s disappearance.

    “Oh yeah – should do intros again, I s’pose,” Darius muttered, sweeping his fringe from his eyes. “Everyone, obviously you know who Lisa is. Lisa, this is Julia Thorne, who does all the legal stuff for the Guard –” A brunette woman in a business-like pant-suit smiled politely. “– and Stephen Wendt, the best welterweight in Blackthorn City –” A man with a shaved head and almost spherical muscles bulging from his tank top gave Lisa a warm grin. “– and Owen Carmichael, who takes care of weapons and stuff for the Guard –” A young, blond man wearing blue jeans and a leather jacket gave Lisa the thumbs-up. “Annette Flank, she does loads of field work around the place –” The youngest of the group, a purple-haired woman in her early twenties, waved jovially. “– and last but not least, Jason Firth, Olivine’s top police officer and an awesome guy to boot.” Jason, a bearded man in his late thirties, nodded in Lisa’s direction courteously; of all the Guard Members present, he seemed the only one outwardly disapproving of Lisa’s rogue quest.

    “Nice to meet you all,” Lisa said meekly, taking her seat eagerly as Darius mirrored her. She looked at the group of five. “I thought Lance said the whole Guard was coming together, though?”

    “We’re the early birds,” Annette smiled, happily sipping at one of Jack’s stubbies. “We came in on an earlier flight. Or an earlier Lapras, rather. The others are due pretty soon.”

    “We were the only Guard members based at the safe house when Lance’s message came through,” Owen explained. “He said to bring all available manpower.”

    “Which is why I’m here, too,” Darius beamed. “I don’t care what Dad says, I’m gonna fight this time.”

    Lisa noticed the mood intensify among the five Guard members: Annette, Owen and Stephen looked supportive; Julia, on the other hand, looked quietly sceptical, and Jason’s face visibly darkened.

    “You’ll have to respect your father’s orders,” he growled, his gravelly voice almost akin to the strum of a bass guitar.

    “Yeah, well,” Darius shrugged defiantly. Lisa felt a sudden surge of attraction toward him, and instantly felt foolish that she was excited by his rebelliousness.

    “I was saying, Darius,” Marina said, keen to defuse the situation, “that basically we were all sick of being attacked and chased all the time by the Union. It’s as simple as that. Lisa explained it all to Lance on the phone. We took matters into our own hands for once. I’m really sorry that I worried you.”

    “It’s all good,” Darius shrugged, although there was a certain dignified angst to his tone; it looked like he was restraining himself from saying what he really felt about the matter.

    Gavin regarded Darius for a moment, his expression one of mingled curiosity and distaste. Lisa rolled her eyes: she knew Gavin was in some way jealous of Darius.

    “So when –” Marina began, but before she got any further, the old front door creaked open and the sound of muted footsteps – many more than before – carried down the corridor. “Never mind …” Marina muttered, exchanging an apprehensive glance with Lisa as the first Guard members entered the dining room.

    Lisa couldn’t believe the sheer number of people who flooded into the room: the stream of Guard members, stranger and unknown, poured into the wood-panelled house, all of them greeting their fellow Guard members warmly while Darius introduced them all to Lisa and Gavin.

    “And this is Natalie –” Darius began, as a blonde woman walked over the threshold.

    “We’ve met before, in the ward at Mt Fairfax,” Natalie gushed to Lisa, before nervously double-checking her pokéball belt – it was loaded with six Ultra Balls – and rushing over to greet Stephen.

    “And Marco – one of Dad’s oldest friends –”

    Lisa recognised the handsome Italian man at once: he had dropped the bombshell about the Legend on her at the Fairfax Inn a month ago. Clearly embarrassed, he gave a brief nod and a fleeting smile to Lisa and Darius before moving to speak with Julia.

    “And Lauren, she’s from the Orange Islands –”

    A tall, big-boned woman charged into the room, her tanned face drawn in a serious expression.

    “Hello, Lisa,” she greeted, shaking Lisa’s hand forcefully.

    Taking in her gigantic frame, Lisa’s memory triggered.

    “You’re Christina’s sister, aren’t you?”

    Lauren’s frown broke for a brief moment.

    “That’s right. She mentioned me?”

    “In Redwood Hospital, yeah. Before …” Lisa paused; Lauren’s face had cracked and she looked almost ready to burst into tears. “Um … how is Christina?”

    Lauren closed her eyes, straightened her face with what looked like a gargantuan effort and, with a mildly apologetic look at Darius, she moved further into the room to speak with the other Guard members, completely bypassing Lisa.

    Lisa looked desperately to Darius.

    “Christina’s still …”

    “The Union still have her, yeah,” Darius said. “Not your fault, you couldn’t’ve known really.”

    Gavin and Marina drifted over from the table to join them in greeting the Guard members. Lisa found that their welcome was mixed: some members were simply glad to see them all alive and well; others were distinctly cold and disapproving.

    It was just after Jim Donovan entered the already-crowded room – which, Lisa thought, was taking on almost a party atmosphere, with everyone chatting excitedly and several members helping themselves to Jack’s beer – that Lisa felt two plump arms sweep her into a tight bear hug.

    Lisa!”

    It pronounced in the Italian way, which made Lisa sure of one of two things: either her mother was so glad to have her back in her arms that she had become emotional, or she was about to ground Lisa for life.

    “Mum!” she spluttered, through a mouthful of woolly jacket. “Hi!”

    Sono stato preoccupato, Lisa! I was soooo worried!” she gushed, kissing the back of Lisa’s head. “What happened to your hair?!”

    Emotional, Lisa thought gratefully.

    As her mother’s arms worked harder and harder to cut off the supply of air to her lungs, Lisa saw her father enter through the door. For a second, his black eyes were hard and unyielding as he surveyed her. The ability to speak precluded by her mother’s grip, Lisa mouthed to him, “I’m so sorry.”

    Dad’s face broke into a soft, lined grin.

    “The important thing is that you’re safe now,” he said, his voice sonorous.

    Finally, the intensity of Mum’s grip lessened. Lisa gulped gratefully at oxygen before her mother turned her around and hugged her face-to-face.

    “Yes, you’re safe now!” Mum gushed. “And how could we be mad at you, Lisa –” Lisa was relieved to notice she had reverted to pronouncing it the English way. “– you got us the Third Key!”

    Her words were loud enough for the Guard members nearest to them to overhear; suddenly, there were scattered cries throughout the crowded dining room.

    “Where is it?”

    “Show us the key!”

    Dad’s face was a mixture of alarm and delight. He turned to face the rest of the Guard.

    “Please, everyone, try to keep it down, we’re supposed to be hiding here,” he said soberly. “As for the key, Lisa’s hidden it somewhere safe until this whole event is done and dusted!” he declared, prompting several groans of disappointment and at least one spirited, “Boooooooooo!”

    Dad turned back to Lisa.

    “You’ll show me later, of course,” he said under his breath with a mischievous grin. His eyes fell on the others standing beside Lisa. “Gavin, m’boy! Good to see you! Marina!”

    Mum gave Lisa a final, bone-crushing squeeze for good measure and scuttled along to sweep Gavin into a similar embrace.

    Lisa had barely re-oriented herself, taking in the cacophonous chatter of the surrounding Guard members and swapping glances with Darius, before another voice cried, “Lisa!”

    If Darius had bulked up over the last month, he must have been taking instruction from Lisa’s elder brother, Tom. Typically weedy throughout his teenage years, he now looked almost as toned and heavy-set as their father, his chest visibly broadened beneath his polo shirt.

    “Tom! Oh my God!” Lisa cried.

    They embraced.

    “How do you manage to do this all the time?” Tom whispered in Lisa’s ear. “It’s like drama follows you wherever you go …”

    Lisa shrugged lightheartedly. “What can I say, I’m a magnet for the limelight,” she joked, finishing the quote from a TV show they’d watched obsessively as children.

    Tom laughed.

    “I’m so glad you’re okay.”

    “Me too,” Lisa said, grinning. “How have – oh my God, Miki!”

    Tom’s fiancée, a pretty Asian girl named Miki, stepped over the threshold and into the dining room. Lisa ran toward her and hugged her enthusiastically: they had always had a great rapport.

    “Thanks for squishing the life out of me, Leese!” Miki gasped, coming up for air. She stepped back, putting her hands on Lisa’s shoulders and looking her up and down. “Far out. It’s good to see you in the flesh again. Short hair works on you.”

    Lisa laughed; Miki had a way of making the most serious of situations seem normal.

    “So, how do I look?” she asked, gesticulating to her clothes.

    She had opted for practical black leggings and a flowy, red silk top, adorned with countless black rhinestones; a pokéball charm in her resplendant black hair held, Lisa knew, her high-level Umbreon.

    “I swear I didn’t have a clue what you’re meant to wear to, you know, a war, so I figured if I’m gonna get taken out tonight, I’ll go out in style. This top was like two hundred bucks from Macy’s.”

    She laughed lightly, though Lisa knew from her face that she was petrified.

    “You’re not going out, period,” Tom said seriously, pulling her nearer to him.

    “Excuse me, could I see you for a minute, Lisa?”

    A young girl with sleek brown hair and rust-coloured eyes appeared beside Miki. Unlike everyone else in the dining room, she wasn’t equipped with weapons or pokéballs: rather, she held a clipboard and pen, tucked under her left arm.

    “This is Sarah Venner – she’s Dad’s assistant and receptionist and coffee-maker – pretty much everything,” Darius explained, in response to Lisa’s puzzled look. “Hey, Sar.”

    “Hey, Darius,” Sarah smiled politely. “So, Lisa – a moment?”

    “Oh – sure,” Lisa agreed, nodding to Tom and Miki. “See you guys in a minute.”

    She followed Sarah down the dingy corridor and into the spare room in which she, Gavin and Marina had spent the night. Closing the door as they entered, she found the pandemonium from the dining room was nothing more than a distant murmur.

    “I suppose this will do,” Sarah said, brushing off Gavin’s quilt before setting herself down squarely on the foot of the mattress. “Do you want to take a seat?”

    “I’m alright standing,” Lisa shrugged. “What’s this all about?”

    Sarah tapped her clipboard nervously.

    “Lance wants to see you privately,” she said anxiously. “He should be in any minute, he was just finishing up with the boats, making sure they were all ready.”

    “Okay …” Lisa said slowly.

    Sure enough, a moment later she heard the front door creak open and several pairs of footsteps thudded down the hallway.

    “What do they think they’re doing, making so much noise? You can almost hear them from the beach! Take care of it, Azura.”

    “On it,” came Azura’s sharp cry.

    The door of the spare room swung open and Lance entered. In the dim light of the single, dangling light bulb, his face looked much older than the last time Lisa had seen him: there were dark circles around his eyes and his forehead was particularly creased. Nonetheless, there was no denying the palpable aura that surrounded him as he entered: Lance Hudson, League Champion. His black cape billowed slightly as he closed the door behind him; his black hair was spiked up sharply, and he wore what looked like custom-made gear beneath his cape: black pants and an orange vest, completed with a pair of extremely durable-looking steel-capped boots.

    “Hello, Lisa,” he said regally, extending his hand.

    Lisa shook it back.

    “Hi.”

    “You’re probably wondering why I asked Sarah to cordone you off here,” he said curtly. “First things first: do you have the Sceptre of Suicune with you?”

    Lisa blinked.

    “It’s in my pack,” she said, gesturing to the three backpacks lined up in a row against the wall – Gavin’s, Marina’s and hers. She fervently hoped the arrangement wasn’t too obvious.

    “Please get it for me,” Lance said swiftly.

    Lisa fished around in her pack and unfurled Gavin’s old yellow shirt that she had wrapped around the sceptre after emerging from the Sepulchre of Suicune. It was still slightly bloodstained; the tip still glowed with an icy, cerulean light.

    “That’s … perfect,” Lance said, open-mouthed; Sarah, too, looked entranced by the object.

    “Perfect for what?” Lisa said, handing him the sceptre gently.

    He took it by the handle, regarding the sparkling sapphires encrusted in the silver weapon, his fingers running over the handle and dangling dangerously close to the glowing, bloody blade.

    “Perfect for … what I need,” Lance muttered enigmatically.

    Without wiping the blood off it, he opened a hitherto invisible pouch in his black-and-orange vest, securing it tightly within, before nodding cryptically to Sarah, who jotted something down on her clipboard, and turning to Lisa with a blank face, acting as though nothing had happened.

    “Let me explain the other reason I called you here,” he said sleekly. His voice was sharp and humourless. He regarded her sternly. “I appreciate what you have gained for the Guard and I trust that you will keep the Third Key safe for me until I return tomorrow. Nevertheless, as I said on the phone, I am deeply disappointed in your actions and I cannot reward your defiance.”

    Lisa’s skin tingled; she suddenly understood where this was going.

    “I know my son has mistakenly been brought here tonight, thinking he will fight with us, and judging from your past actions, I can anticipate a similar sentiment from you,” Lance growled. He looked Lisa dead in the eyes, his golden eyes meeting her honey ones. “This is not going to happen. Nobody under the age of eighteen will be fighting. You, Gavin, Darius and Marina – and Sarah –” he added, flicking his head toward her. “ – will wait here tonight. Is that crystal clear?”

    Lisa fought to hold his gaze.

    “No,” she said, with a great effort. “We want to fight. You told me you need all the manpower you can get. Well, you’ve got four of us right here, ready to help you out – five, even, if you let Sarah come …”

    “Oh, I’m staying here,” Sarah said swiftly.

    Lisa scowled at her.

    “Fine, four of us. But we’ve fought before, we can do it again, we can help you.”

    Lance massaged his temple.

    “This is NOT a negotiation, Lisa. My word is final. Your parents have agreed. Azura has agreed. You are teenagers. We are not risking your lives in this fight. You will stay here until morning.”

    “I can’t believe this!” Lisa cried. “I got the Third Key for you!”

    “I don’t CARE!” Lance roared, agitatedly pacing. “I am telling you this now, Lisa, so that you can relay it to my son and the other kids. I am not having this same argument with him again. You must understand that, as your adult guardians, we’re just protecting you!”

    “We don’t need to be pro–”

    “You will stay put.”

    “We want to fight –”

    “ENOUGH!” Lance roared.

    Lisa stood opposite him, seething, filled with the urge to punch him or push him … just to express her fury …

    “There. Is. No. Argument,” Lance said, jabbing his finger at Lisa. His face was bright red. He turned to Sarah. “Sarah, take the information about the key locations that Lisa said she has and make a copy for us to take with us,” he said, abruptly resuming his usual, calm voice. “If you’ll excuse me, both of you, I have to go tell an army that I’ve lied to them.”

    Without another look at Lisa, he swept from the room.

    Lisa glared at the door for a moment, her fists clenched and her teeth grinding in rage.

    “I understand you’re angry,” Sarah said gently.

    Lisa fixed her with the dirtiest look she could muster.

    “Some help you were,” she scowled. She pulled out the piece of paper, where she had dutifully copied the details from page 62 of her grandfather’s diary, while carefully eliminating the time-applicable references he had made; she was not ready for the Guard to know that she knew anything about her grandfather, or the theory that Suicune had told her about in the Sepulchre; she had copied the key locations in a way that made it seem that the text could have been a hundred or more years old. “Here, take it!” she snapped, hurling the page at Sarah’s clipboard before running from the room.

    A few faces turned as she stormed into the packed dining room, but most people were focused on Lance, who had taken up a position at the far end of the room, standing on top of a couple of milk crates and loudly pontificating.

    “What’s wrong?” Gavin whispered, as Lisa squeezed past Lauren to join Gavin, Marina and Darius.

    “Tell you in a minute,” Lisa hissed, still fuming.

    “ … ask for your co-operation and your dedication, as always. I know we can win this tonight!” finished Lance.

    “Hear, hear!” someone cheered in a sarcastic whisper; clearly they had been chided for being too noisy earlier.

    “There is a final point that I must mention before we take off,” Lance said. He checked his wristwatch. “It is nine-thirty right now. Several hours ago, the Union deployed half of its number to the coastal cave west of Azalea Town. They are anticipating our arrival at two in the morning.”

    There was a collective gasp of horror and dismay throughout the room; Lisa, Gavin and Marina, however, listened attentively.

    “So they’re onto us, fuck!” someone cried; Lisa thought it was Stephen.

    “Yes,” Lance said. “Fortunately, the intel we told you about the location of the Fourth Key was a decoy.” There was a collective intake of breath. Lisa watched Lance closely, wondering how he would word his bombshell. “For some time, we feared that the Union had managed to intercept our communiqués. Tonight is the proof. Fortunately, we have used this to our advantage, sending them to the wrong location to make our job a little easier.”

    Guard members were exchanging delighted glances around the room, as a murmur of excitement began to build. Lisa realised with a jolt that somewhere among them, someone – the mole within the Guard’s ranks – was probably sending a frantic text to Joseph Sterling.

    “The great thing about this is that, even if Sterling were to find out our change of plan now,” Lance continued delicately, scanning the faces of his subordinate agents; Lisa wondered if he was trying to pick out the rogue agent, “it would be too late to stop us with full force. Half of his army is more than four hours away. For now, then, our aim is to retrieve the Fourth Key. We will surf to its location, about twenty minutes away. It is located within the Union’s base on Silver Rock Island.”

    Cries of shock and dismay replaced the buzz.

    “WHAT?”

    “Nooooo …”

    “You’re fucking kidding me, Hudson …”

    “This is bullshit!”

    “The team leaders,” Lance pushed on, apparently oblivious to the chorus of dissent below. “Are already aware of this plan, and we agree that the element of surprise will be key to our mission. The volcanic cone at the centre of Silver Rock Island provides the Union with protection, but it also makes it far easier for us to smoke them out.

    “Your team leaders will give you exact details, strategies and co-ordinates once we are en route,” Lance continued hastily. “So, without further ado, move into your teams and let’s move! We can do this, guys!”

    Lance stepped down from the milk crates and was immediately obscured from view by the nearest Guard members, who had risen to their feet to argue with him. Lisa noticed that her parents, Azura, Donovan and Alison were attempting to get a round of applause happening after Lance’s speech, but nobody was having a bar of it. There was utmost dismay on every face: everyone looked enraged.

    “What, does he think we’re gonna fight half the Union on our own?” Lauren spat, exchanging an incredulous look with Natalie. “Why not just tell us to point a bloody gun to our heads and cut to the chase?”

    “And why didn’t he tell us before?” Natalie demanded, though her soft voice did not lend itself to anger. “Why tell us twenty minutes before we land?”

    She looked as though she were about to hyperventilate.

    Lisa, Gavin, Marina and Darius stayed standing, pressed against the wood-panelled wall of Jack’s dining room as the throng was ushered out toward the corridor by a much-abused Lance.

    “This is bull,” said a man with salt-and-pepper hair that Lisa didn’t know.

    “We’re mad to do this, we’re fucking mad,” added Owen, walking alongside him.

    As the crowd thinned, Lisa spotted Mum and Dad near the door, apparently searching the room for her, too. Abandoning the others, she raced over to him.

    “Dad!” she cried. “Lance won’t let us come with you to fight! He practically yelled at me!”

    Dad’s face creased painfully.

    “Lisa, you know what my answer will be. Don’t make this any more difficult than it already is.”

    “But you need us! You need all the help we can get, and we’re good for it!”

    “The important thing,” Mum said passionately, pulling Lisa into another tight hug and kissing her on each cheek, “is that you’re safe, Lisa. Knowing that will get me through this. We’ll take care, we’ll be alright.” She gave Lisa a final kiss on the forehead. “Take care, Lisa. Love you.”

    “I love you too,” Lisa said despite herself, returning the embrace.

    Apparently overcome with emotion, Mum bustled toward the corridor, joining a red-headed woman along the way.

    “Dad … come on …” Lisa pleaded.

    “It’s final, honey,” he sighed, hugging her tightly and kissing her on the forehead. “Stay safe and we’ll see you in the morning. Love you.”

    As he moved to go, Lisa struggled with herself. She wanted to scream “I hate you!”, but the fear of her parents being killed in the fight and her last words with them being something as detestable as that made her feel sick to the stomach. Choking down her anger, she hugged him back tightly and said, “I love you too, Dad. Good luck.”

    He winked at her.

    “She’ll be right,” he grinned, jogging down the corridor energetically.

    Even though his back was turned to her, Lisa waved to him until the old front door creaked to a close. She sighed and turned back to the dining room to find it almost deserted: only Gavin, Marina, Darius and Sarah were left.

    “Wow …” Lisa muttered.

    The dining room had filled and emptied so quickly that it almost seemed as though it had all been a dream. The empty beer bottles and general clutter of left-behind backpacks were the only evidence that some kind of mass migration had just taken place.

    “Here’s what I don’t get,” Gavin said, leaning against the kitchen bench and regarding Darius. “Lance has just told everyone – including the mole – that they’re heading to Silver Rock. What’s stopping the mole from calling Sterling and warning him? The Union will have twenty minutes to prepare.”

    Darius shrugged.

    “Don’t look at me, he doesn’t tell me anything.”

    “Forethought,” Sarah answered abruptly.

    Everyone turned to face her: she was seated on one of the torn vinyl chairs, jotting something down on her clipboard.

    “Care to elaborate, Sar?” Darius asked.

    “I guess it’s okay to tell you guys,” she said. “Lance and I organised something with Albert Cripps – you know old Albert, Darius. Telecommunications across the Island will be down for the next twenty minutes, as a precaution.”

    Lisa gaped.

    “The Guard can do that?”

    Sarah swept a strand of hair from her face.

    “Albert can, yes. We’ve got quite a few really well-placed contacts. They might not be fighters, but they’re useful in other ways.”

    “Clever,” said Gavin. “I don’t think we’ve been introduced, by the way. I’m –”

    “Gavin Luper, I know,” Sarah finished smoothly, a small smile on her face. “I’m the one who organised your mission to Cianwood. And got you and Lisa those hospital beds in Redwood City. I’m Sarah Venner, by the way, Lance’s assistant.”

    She held out her hand professionally and shook Gavin’s with considerable force.

    “Ah right,” Gavin muttered. Lisa chuckled to herself. She had a feeling he had been about to flirt with Sarah but had realised that she was a little too high-flying for him.

    “Not meaning to be rude,” Sarah added, “but Lance wanted me to read over a few things before I relax for the night, so I’d better knuckle down to it.”

    Lisa stepped in quickly.

    “Not a problem,” she said, flashing Sarah a brief smile to repair any damage done by her earlier spat. “We were actually just going to go out onto the deck and watch the Guard take off if we can see them … We’ll see you out there?”

    “Sure,” Sarah nodded, before her rust eyes refocused on the clipboard. “Nice to meet you guys, by the way,” she added, frantically scribbling on the page.

    “You too.”

    Lisa motioned to the others to follow her onto the decking, closing the flywire door behind them. Unconvinced that they were out of earshot, Lisa led them down into the dark backyard, amongst the mess of old wooden crates and car bodies and boat bodies and rope and other curios that had accumulated over the years.

    “Did you know she was coming?” Lisa shot at Marina.

    Marina’s eyes widened in the moonlight.

    “How the hell could I have known?” she protested.

    “She seems a bit … straight-laced …” Gavin muttered darkly.

    “Sarah’s a nice girl,” Darius chipped in, tapping Lisa’s shoulder. “What’s going on?”

    “We’re going to Silver Rock anyway, without permission.”

    “What? MAD!”

    “It’s awesome, isn’t it?” Marina grinned.

    “But I’m guessing Sarah won’t have a bar of it …” Lisa added.

    “So what?” Gavin said. “I’m going, end of story. I say we give her the choice to stay here or join us.”

    “Hear hear!” said Marina.

    “You guys are really doing this?” Darius muttered excitedly, his eyes aglow.

    “For real,” Lisa said.

    “Let me talk to Sarah, then,” he said. “We’re friends, I might be able to persuade her. She knows a lot of secret stuff, too, she could be really useful.”

    “Deal,” said Lisa.

    Darius scrambled back up toward the deck, almost tripping over a blown tyre in the process.

    “You ready, Marina?” Lisa asked seriously.

    “I think I can do this,” she said. “Well, I’ll have to. We just need to be far enough behind them to not be heard.”

    “Which is why I want to get some kind of visual on where they’re leaving from and where they’re heading,” explained Lisa. She clambered up onto the decking and peered out in the direction of the coast, but she couldn’t see anything through the nearest row of screen trees.

    “Try the roof,” Gavin suggested. “I have a pair of binoculars in my pack, actually … gimme a sec …”

    “Get our packs, too, while you’re there, Gav!” Marina called.

    “Pfft!” muttered Gavin, though Lisa knew he would probably do it nonetheless.

    Lisa and Marina stood in the darkness outside the wooden shack for a couple of long, silent minutes. At one point, Lisa thought she heard the front door creak open and a couple of male voices mutter to one another, but before she could listen in, Marina spoke.

    “This could be it,” Marina said solemnly. “Tonight. Us, them. It could finally be over.”

    “I know.”

    “I don’t know what I’m more scared of: the war not ending tonight, or the war ending tonight. Does that kind of half make sense, or have I finally lost my mind completely?”

    Lisa’s lips curved in the dark.

    “Nope. I feel the same way.”

    The sound of several pairs of footsteps approaching reached their ears. Lisa and Marina looked up to see Gavin emerging onto the decking, laden with their three backpacks; behind him was a teenager with peroxide-blond hair and studded wristbands; and trailing them was Darius, looking excited, and Sarah, still clutching her clipboard, her face a pale mask of terror.

    “Lisa, did you invite this clown over for drinks?” Gavin demanded hotly, hurling the three rucksacks to the wooden deck.

    “Don’t call me a clown, fuckface,” Jamie snarled.

    “Don’t start fighting, for God’s sake!” Lisa cried. “I just mentioned to Jamie that we were gonna be stuck here tonight …”

    “Yeah, fuckface,” Jamie snapped, eyeing Gavin with immense disdain.

    “Fuck up,” Gavin growled back at him.

    “There’s been a change of plans, Jamie,” Lisa explained. “We’re – um – we’re going to fight the Union after all.”

    “Wicked. I’m coming.”

    “What?” Gavin cried. “Mate, you’re not invited.”

    “Gavin, knock it off,” Marina said swiftly, rolling her eyes.

    Sarah followed the exchange in the dark, her eyes bewildered.

    “Okay, everyone stop talking for a minute!” Lisa cried.

    Silence fell.

    “Let’s get this cleared up. Gavin, I don’t care if you like Jamie or not, the fact is, we need as many people as we can get to fight the Union and get my pokémon back.”

    “I thought you didn’t have any pokémon, though, Jamie,” Marina’s voice floated through the cold night zephyr.

    “I don’t,” Jamie said flatly. “I got a good right hook though.”

    “We can share our pokémon around,” Lisa said seriously. “Darius, did you bring a full set of six?”

    “Yeah. I guess I can share one.”

    “Great. And Sarah, I’m assuming Darius has brought you up to speed, otherwise you wouldn’t be out here, right?”

    Sarah’s voice was surprisingly calm and professional, despite her frightened stance.

    “I don’t agree with what you’re doing, Lisa,” she said at length, “but if you’re going to do it anyway, I’ll be able to help. I helped Lance plan this mission, I know where they’re leaving from and where they’re arriving. I will help you, but please don’t ask me to fight.”

    Lisa raised her eyebrows.

    “That actually – I mean – that sounds fair to me. So, if everyone’s got their crap together, let’s get this show on the road before we miss the party!”

    “Woooo!” Jamie cheered, scrambling down the steps from the decking to the dirt.

    “Alright, let’s do this!” Marina called, hoisting on her backpack before jogging toward the path that led from the back of the house to the beach. “Here, Jamie, you can borrow my Golduck if you want …”

    Darius and Sarah clattered down the steps behind them.

    “This is gonna be awesome,” Darius said, his grinning teeth sparkling in the moonlight as he jogged past Lisa and tapped her on the shoulder energetically.

    Sarah followed beside him, still looking thrown by the sudden turn of events.

    Gavin slung Lisa’s rucksack toward her; she caught it easily – they had packed light, taking only the bare essentials – and used the momentum to swing it over her shoulder.

    “This is it, Leese.”

    “I know,” she said heavily.

    “Scared about going back?” he asked, his tone serious.

    “Petrified,” Lisa said baldly. She fiddled with the strap of her rucksack. “Even more than I’ve ever been before. I’m not even sure if we’re doing the right thing …”

    “You did a good job of sounding convinced,” Gavin said simply. His chestnut-brown eyes met hers gently. “The others believed you. I would have, too, if I didn’t know you better.”

    Lisa’s forehead creased.

    “What if one of us gets killed, Gavin?” she said, her voice brittle. “This was all my call. I could never live with myself.”

    Gavin shook his head vigorously.

    “Lisa, buck up,” he said, not unkindly. “You can’t psych yourself out like this. Not before a battle.”

    He took a single step toward her.

    “This battle is going to happen whether we’re there or not. You didn’t force anyone to come along. We all made our own choice; I know I did.”

    Lisa dug her fingernails into the durable strap of her rucksack, losing the fight against the apprehension building in her chest.

    “What about the Guard?” she said. “They’re just following Lance’s orders. If I’d never told Lance about the Fourth Key location – if I hadn’t gone into the Sepulchre of Suicune – then we wouldn’t be here right now.”

    “Leese, I already said –”

    “I know, I know what you said, Gav!” Lisa interrupted. “But it’s easier for you to say that. I can’t help the way I feel.” The reality struck her like a thunderbolt. “People are going to die tonight. Union members. Guard members. Even one of us. It’s all on me.”

    She half expected Gavin to roll his eyes and chide her for being ridiculous; to her mild surprise, he cocked his head to the side and regarded her with pity.

    “The way you feel accountable for everyone else in the world … I don’t think I’ll ever get that,” he grinned. “But I kind of like it.”

    Lisa met his smile with a questioning look.

    From the far side of the yard, Marina’s silhouette waved wildly to capture their attention.

    “Hurry up, you two!”

    “We’re coming!” Gavin called back.

    He turned back to Lisa.

    “Lisa, Lance is the one who made all this happen tonight. Whatever happens, it’s on him, do you hear me?”

    She winced against the intensity of his gaze.

    “Yeah … yeah, I guess so.”

    His chestnut-brown irises softened.

    “If it helps, Leese, just forget about the Guard. Forget about the Legend. You know the reason I’m going? Revenge.” His voice bubbled with latent anger as he spoke the word. “The Union has fucked up our lives for months. They’ve tried to kill us, they cut my face open –” He jabbed his index finger at the scar on his face. “– and they kidnapped you and stole your pokémon.”

    He suddenly took her hand in his and squeezed it gently; his palm was sweaty.

    “This isn’t about the war, Lisa. It’s personal. It’s time we paid them back.”
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

  14. #14
    Master Trainer
    Master Trainer

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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 79 now up! (12th May)

    OH GOD ITS ACTUALLY HAPPENING

    I was so excited reading this. I feel like I'm watching an episode of 24; the suspense, the sneakery, the fact that so many characters' lives at stake (don't make Lisa an orphan, please!? And Tom's girlfriend seems nice too...)

    I like the little gang Lisa formed, also great to see Jamie back (found that guy hilarious). I just don't know how this is all going to pan out. Excitedly awaiting the next instalment Gav.

    Descriptions were brilliant, loved reading the trio in the lagoon, and the description of the Union's boat drifting past.... that was chilling.

    See ya!

    Show-Off
    Contest fic
    *Chapter 37 up*
    Posted September 22nd, 2013


    ________________________________________________



  15. #15
    Super Moderator
    Super Moderator

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    Default Re: Lisa the Legend - Chapter 80 now up! (24th June)

    Chris: Thanks for reading and replying mate. Hehehe I know, it's all coming together! Glad you like the gang ... it has been a really long time since I sketched that out so it was nice to share it, at last. More on that front now.

    Stoked that you liked Jamie, too.

    I waited so long to post again because - well, I know I have to do some brief editing and spellchecking for each chapter, so I put it off and procrastinated. But I just forced myself to do it and it took all of ten minutes.

    More importantly, I think I'm going to post chapters up weekly now, otherwise I'll never finish posting this. I simply hope that you guys can keep up, but if not, reading two or three recently-posted chapters at once would be no different to how you would read a book, so I hope it doesn't put you off.

    So I'll be committing myself to weekly chapters now, each Sunday. Stay tuned!

    On that note, here's Chapter 80! Boom! It's all happening now!

    Cheers!

    +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

    Chapter 80 – The Midnight Armada.


    Shrouded by darkness, the six teenagers sprinted through the salty scrub, bashing sticks and leaves out of their way as they hurtled toward the beach.

    “Look out, sleeping Ekans ahead!” Jamie shouted.

    “Cheers!” Lisa cried, looking down at her sneakers just in time to see a thickly-coiled mass of purple only a foot ahead of her. Throwing all her weight forward, she leaped over the snake, clearing it safely, her sneakers landing with a thud on the dirt on the other side, her legs crunching slightly with the shock.

    “Gav, look out for the Ekans!” Lisa called over her shoulder.

    “Cleared it!” he bellowed back, grunting as his shoes landed safely on the other side.

    Barely twenty metres past the sleeping Ekans, the box-thorns, blackboys and saltbushes began to dissipate, until the sound of breaking waves tugged at Lisa’s ears and the strong scent of salt teased her nostrils.

    Lisa slowed herself down to a halt, as Jamie, Darius, Sarah and Marina were doing before her. The bush cleared completely: they were standing on fine beach sand, the coastline spreading out either side of them. Straight ahead, in the distance, Silver Rock Island glinted in the moonlight.

    “Oh wow,” Lisa gaped.

    Her eyes had fallen on the dark, tiny dots that seemed to be floating in the distance, close to Silver Rock Island. There were dozens of them, barely visible except when a moonbeam fell upon them.

    Gavin came jogging to a halt beside Lisa.

    “Gav, let me borrow your binoculars,” Lisa asked him.

    He handed them over – a sleek, metallic silver set – and she pressed them to her eyes, gazing out at the tiny dots near the island. Sure enough, the dots were boats – fishing vessels and speedboats and pleasure craft – all of them crowded with tiny figures that must have been Guard members.

    “It looks amazing,” Lisa breathed. “It’s like a silent armada.” She grinned. “The Union won’t know what hit it.”

    She removed the binoculars from her eyes and handed them to Gavin, who eagerly took them and gazed out at the sight before them. Sarah, meanwhile, was pointing out to the others a small headland about a hundred metres to their left.

    “That’s where the Guard left from … there’s no rips there, no dangerous current. We should leave from there.”

    “Just as well you’re here, then,” Marina said dully. “Because our plan A is a no-go.”

    She gesticulated to the old wooden jetty that jutted into the Cianwood Sea, about three hundred metres to their right. It was completely abandoned; a loose rope dangled from one of the piers.

    “Oh no!” Lisa moaned.

    “What was plan A?” Jamie asked.

    “We were going to nick Jack’s dinghy,” Marina sighed. “I’ve sailed them before so I thought I could do that … but it looks like the Guard stole it first, or something.”

    “They must have run out of boats …” Sarah muttered.

    “So, what’s plan B?” Darius asked urgently, eyeing up the distant dots, which seemed to be almost atop Silver Rock Island now.

    Lisa and Gavin exchanged wry smiles.

    “We surf.”

    *

    The Cianwood Sea was frigid by night: Lisa wanted to scream as Gavin’s Seel surfed purposefully through the water, occasionally dipping an inch or two deeper and wetting a little more of her jeans with the ice water.

    “Aaaaaargh!” she shrieked, as a small swell rose over them, drenching her right leg from the knee down. “This is insane!”

    “I think my leg is falling off,” said Sarah, from the back of Darius’ Dragonair.

    “Toughen up!” said Darius sharply, though even from her distance, Lisa could see his teeth chattering violently.

    Looking around, she was glad they had managed to surf on relatively small pokémon: it would make them less visible by either the Guard or the Union as the silhouette of Silver Rock Island loomed ever closer. Gavin was seated on his half-submerged Staryu, his legs crossed to keep his feet dry, while Marina and Jamie each took one of Starmie’s horizontal arms, her grubby sneakers and his black-and-white Converse All-Stars trailing through the seaspray.

    “Reckon the Union’s got someone on lookout duty?” Lisa called to Gavin.

    Gavin shrugged, scratching his leg.

    “I would, if I were them,” he called back.

    He grabbed the pair of silver binoculars from around his neck and peered up ahead at the armada of Guard boats, all of which were now either in the shallows surrounding Silver Rock Island, or actually disembarking.

    “Looks like they’re arriving undetected,” he remarked, impressed.

    Lisa patted Seel gently on the head.

    “G-good job, buddy,” she grinned falsely, trying to appear grateful for the ride instead of resentful that she had taken one of the pokémon lowest to the water level.

    Silver Rock Island was now only a few hundred metres away. Although the island itself was largely no more than a gigantic, conical silhouette, the jagged silver rocks caught the moonlight in various places, giving the island a twinkling aura.

    “The Guard members are taking too long to get out of the way,” Gavin observed through his binoculars. “Some of them have already gone into the island through a cave … I think it’s through a cave anyway … but there’s a bunch still hanging around on the shoreline. They’ll see us if we get much closer …”

    “That’s D-Donovan’s team,” stuttered Sarah, her teeth clattering together. “They’re meant to act as a back-up for Azura’s team. They’ll only go in when they’re called.”

    “So what, we’re gonna float around and wait for ‘em to go in?” Jamie demanded brashly.

    “What are they gonna do, tell us to turn around and go back?” Lisa laughed. “Once we’re there, they’ll need us … OH!”

    Her cry of shock was echoed by the others.

    An enormous streak of flame had suddenly exploded from the core of the extinct volcano within the island, illuminating the island and the sea. Lisa and the others watched in awe as the tongue of flame rocketed into the air like a nuclear warhead, apparently bound for the stratosphere, before it reached its zenith, hung delicately in mid-air for a moment, and then arced back down toward the ground, gathering velocity.

    “Are they battling inside the cone – OH MY GOD!” Marina screamed.

    Lisa screamed with her: the gigantic ball of flame had not returned to the inside of the cone, but rather, had streaked down the outside of the island, illuminating the silver rocks around it before slamming with almighty force into the centre of Donovan’s team; silhouetted bodies went spinning backward into the beach sand; a second later, a barrage of anguished screams reached Lisa’s ears.

    “Fuck!” Jamie yelled.

    “Oh no,” Sarah whimpered.

    Lisa and Gavin exchanged glances.

    “The Union saw them coming …” Gavin muttered.

    Lisa’s teeth were chattering and she felt a surge of self-hatred overcome her as she cried, “Seel, get deeper into the water and surf as fast as you can!”

    Her mind churned; the voice she had successfully repressed for the last few minutes reared its head with a vengeance.

    It’s on me … it’s my fault if they die …

    Icy needles pierced Lisa’s arms and torso as Seel dove, almost submerging himself; around them, Starmie, Staryu and Dragonair followed suit, accompanied by curse words from the boys and a whimper from Sarah. Marina alone seemed immune to the water’s frigid wrath.

    “Shit!” Gavin muttered, peering through the binoculars as Staryu pulled in closer to the other pokémon. “The Union’s got troops coming to finish the job.”

    Lisa didn’t need binoculars: they were close enough now for her to see what was taking place on the beach, which was illuminated by the blaze that had sprung up in the wake of the massive fireball attack. Union agents in camouflage gear and bandanas were streaming from a hidden cavern near where Donovan’s team were writhing on the ground; all of the agents were equipped with either Stunners or AK-47s.

    “No!” Lisa cried, as the agents levelled their weapons and began to fire.

    The rat-tat-tat of rapid gunfire echoed across the water, followed by bloodcurdling screams; one of the Guard members on the beach, a male, judging from his bulky silhouette, bellowed, “NOOOOO!” and hurled something at the nearest group of Union agents.

    BANG!

    The grenade exploded; a wave of flame blossomed over the beach, enveloping the three Union agents, accompanied by a wave of airborne sand, which rained over the others.

    They were just twenty metres from the shoreline now; Sarah was looking around wildly at the others, as if demanding to be taken back to safety, but nobody was even capable of returning her gaze – least of all Lisa. She firmly redirected her eyes at Gavin, her mouth hanging open as a vortex of horror and guilt swirled in her gut.

    She knew Gavin understood what she was feeling, but he offered no word of comfort. Instead, he called out to the group at large.

    “Let’s attack from here,” he said firmly. “At the ready, guys, with your quickest, strongest ranged attacks. Go!”

    And at once, Lisa’s anxiety was supplanted by the call of duty; life and reality and the world ceased to exist, and the world became war.

    “Staryu, Psybeam!” Gavin roared.

    “Hydro Pump, Starmie!” Marina bellowed.

    “Dragonair, Hyper Beam!” Darius cried.

    Lisa hesitated just a moment.

    “Seel – use an Ice Beam!”

    The Union agents on the beach turned at the commotion, but they were too slow to react: an ice-white beam of energy flew from Seel’s mouth, grazing the top of the seafoam before smacking directly into a Union agent’s leg, sending him tripping over his own feet and into the fire; a ray of purple blasted through the night air, slamming directly into an Umbreon and its trainer; by the time Starmie’s cannon of water flooded the beach and sizzled half the inferno, there was an explosion of gunfire and bullets sizzled the surface of the water around them, pinging off with a distorted twang sound.

    “There’s some more coming from the wat-aaaaargh!”

    A Union agent decked out in leather copped a Hyper Beam to the head as he tried to call for back-up; he slammed into the ground as a deadweight.

    Screams echoed from the beach as the battle continued to rage in the semi-dark, illuminated by the flames.

    Abruptly, Lisa felt Seel slow down, and then her feet scraped against sand.

    “Everyone stay back!” she commanded to the others, pelting onto the beach and hurling her rucksack to the sand.

    She supposed it was abject fear, rather than genuine conviction, that caused her to say it; she knew at once that her desperate cry would have no pull over the others. Around her, Gavin and Marina were clambering to their feet and launching pokéballs into the air; Darius followed suit, wading toward dry land, edging past the Guard’s moored vessels.

    Sarah, meanwhile, was floating half-submerged in the shallows, looking completely stunned; and Jamie stood beside Starmie, a pokéball in his hand and a vacant look on his face.

    “Don’t just stand there, you’re an easy target!” Lisa roared. “Go, Kingler! Revelum, Altaria!

    Lisa had perhaps one full second in which to survey the battleground before her: she realised the beach was only a small alcove, home to about a dozen battling Guard members and about double the number of murderous-looking Union agents; motionless bodies littered the sand. Before Lisa could get her head around anything else, she saw a bolt of blue light streaking from nowhere toward her head, and threw herself to the ground; she rolled in terror, her ears caked in wet sand; her heart was pounding; she was sure that staying still would seal her doom in an instant …

    “Nooooo!”

    There was an explosion of green light just feet away from where Lisa lay; a second later, a sweaty hand gripped her arm and hauled her onto her feet.

    “I got your back, Leese!” Gavin screamed. “Yeah, Natu, peck his fucken eyes out!”

    “DIE!”

    A Union agent seemed to materialise from the darkness, a machete in his hand and madness in his eyes; he lunged at Lisa, brandishing the blade …

    ELECTRIFY!

    The Buzzball crackled to life; a blue streamer sparked through the wet air and connected with the tip of the machete, only a foot from Lisa’s face; the agent screamed as he was blasted off his feet …

    “NO, LISA!”

    Donovan’s voice came from nowhere; Lisa spun around almost a full three hundred and sixty degrees before she realised that he was in front of her.

    “Why’re yeh HERE?” he growled furiously. “LOOK OUT!”

    He threw his entire weight on top of her; Lisa’s bones crunched audibly as they slammed into the dirt together; Lisa didn’t even have time to see what attack they had just escaped; she yelled an indiscriminate, “Electrify!” and clambered to her feet.

    “Thanks, Donovan,” she called, hunting around the beach until her eyes caught something white and blue being pummelled by a red-eyed Raichu.

    “Altaria, don’t take it lying down! Speed Star!” Lisa cried.

    “Fucking hell, it’s the Walters bird!” roared Raichu’s owner, a bearded bikie. “Get ‘er!”

    “Not likely!”

    Stephen appeared from somewhere in the shadows, delivering a deft uppercut to the bikie before smacking him neatly in the nose; in the same instant, amid a renewed round of gunfire, Altaria squealed a series of high notes and released a volley of golden, resplendent stars, which slammed into the Raichu’s side, almost throwing it off its feet.

    “Quick attack!” Lisa bellowed, exchanging an awkward wink with Stephen by way of thanks. “AARGH!”

    She would never know where the attack had come from: blackness overcame her; her body was shaking, spasming; her bones were being loosened, screwed from their joints by a grinding screwdriver; her nerves were being cleaved by a blunt saw … her brain was screaming …

    “GET OFF!”

    The pain lifted; Lisa found herself lying face down on the beach, her mouth half-filled with mud. She spat it out and pushed herself back up, her arms shaking uncontrollably.

    She wheeled around to see Darius standing over her, flanked by his Stantler and holding Lisa’s Buzzball out before him.

    Electrify!” he cried. “Stantler, Double Team!”

    As a bolt of electricity crackled toward the nearest agent, Stantler multiplied itself; suddenly, the beach was filled with dozens of brown stags, each one as real-looking as the last; just as the nearest Union agents cried out in confusion, Darius spun round to face Lisa.

    “Are you okay?” he asked.

    Before Lisa could answer, a Hispanic agent lunged out from the shadows, a pistol outstretched, and pulled the trigger twice.

    Bang! Bang!

    Darius hung for a moment, as though suspended in time, and then collapsed backwards into the soft sand.

    A crystal of black ice blossomed in Lisa’s chest.

    “NO!” she screamed, scrambling toward Darius’ body, thoughts of her own safety forgotten.

    Don’t be dead … don’t be dead …

    Darius’ face was frozen in a stunned expression, his eyes rolling around in his head. Her heart burning, Lisa scanned his clothes for a deep red stain and finally located one slowly flowering – on his right shoulder.

    There was a metallic click nearby. She whirled around: Anthony, the Union agent, had levelled his pistol at her chest.

    “We both know you won’t do it, Anthony!” Lisa screamed. Knowing his name – and using it – somehow made her feel powerful. “You know Sterling needs me too much …”

    Anthony’s yellow-toothed grin broadened. He lowered his pistol toward her leg and pulled the trigger just as Lisa dived to the right; the slipstream of the bullet grazed past her thigh moments before she slammed roughly into the ground once more …

    Sprawled on her back, Lisa saw Annette, the purple-haired Guard agent, run at full-pelt at Anthony, pulling the trigger of her Stunner at point-blank range. A jet of blue light burst from the tip of the Stunner; Anthony spasmed as though he had been kicked in the solar plexus; he crumpled to the sand.

    “You okay, Lisa?!”

    Annette hauled Lisa to her feet. Behind her, another grenade exploded, showering both of them in wet sand; somewhere in the mêlée around them, Marina cried, “COP THAT, BITCH!” and Donovan let off a tirade of curse words as he fired off a Stunner relentlessly into a Union agent’s gut.

    “We rock!” Annette cried, appraising the beach around them.

    The chaos had somehow petered out into a series of isolated fights, though Lisa spied at least four Union agents retreating back into the cave. Bodies covered the ground; only a few people were left fighting; the Guard’s sheer number of pokémon had tipped the scales in their favour. A gang comprised of an Ivysaur, a Wigglytuff, three Beedrill, Marina’s Bayleef and Golduck, Gavin’s Girafury, Lisa’s Altaria, a monstrous Golem and a Treecko was systematically taking down one Union agent after another, impervious to most attacks thanks to the constant Reflect and Light Screen provided by a Xatu in their midst.

    Lisa scanned the scene – Marina had now apparently disappeared, but Gavin was still locked in a fierce pokémon battle with a female Union agent, and Jamie was engaged in fisticuffs with a Union agent who looked no older than he; as they watched, Stephen ran up and decked the Union agent definitively, before high-fiving Jamie in triumph.

    “Where’s Sarah?” Lisa cried, looking back into the shallows, but there was nobody there.

    “That’s her!” Annette said in astonishment, pointing behind Lisa.

    Lisa whirled around in time to see Sarah perform a lightning-fast kick to a slender Union agent’s head; the female agent’s nose broke with a loud crack; she reeled backwards, stumbling, as Sarah ran forward and delivered a swift backhand to her bleeding nose. With an anguished roar, the woman collapsed to the dirt.

    Sarah spun on her heel, her arms twirling around her in a distinctive martial arts formation.

    “I learn karate,” she said, looking slightly shell-shocked at what she had done as Annette and Lisa stared on in disbelief. “For – for self-defence.”

    Lisa barely had time to express her astonishment; a shout of victory from Gavin, Donovan and some other Union agents signified the battle’s end. A relative calm fell over the beach, broken only by the crackling of the fire and the groans of various agents sprawled across the sand.

    “Lisaaaa!”

    The hoarse cry came from just a few metres away. Lisa’s blood ran cold once more. She rushed back to Darius’ side.

    He lay spread-eagled on the shimmering sand. Marina knelt at his side while Stantler presided over affairs, cooing miserably.

    “I’m here,” Lisa muttered, as Darius’ pained eyes found hers.

    “Am I okay? How bad is it?” he said in a panicked voice.

    The wound, a few inches east of Darius’ collarbone, was trickling with hot blood. Marina held a scrap of black material to the spot, her eyes wide.

    “It’s going to be alright,” Lisa said in the calmest tone she could muster, though tears had sprung to her eyes. “He only got you in the shoulder.”

    Marina gaped at Lisa, her voice strangled, tears tumbling down her cheeks.

    “Lisa – I don’t know what I’m doing –”

    “I can help!”

    Annette came rushing up to them, pulling two red-and-white pokéballs open; a plump, bright pink Blissey and a robust Wurmple emerged in a flash of radiance.

    “All good battlers should always carry a Blissey and a Wurmple,” Annette said seriously to both Lisa and Marina. “Blissey, try a Softboiled and let’s see if we can’t do something about that wound with Wurmple!”

    Not convinced that Annette was going to have much success, Lisa gripped Darius’ hand tightly before turning around to survey the rest of the beach. There were only a dozen figures on their feet, all of them Guard agents.

    “Leese!”

    Gavin came lumbering forward clumsily; as he got closer, the flames from the still-raging blaze illuminated his thin face; his nose was crooked, bent violently to the right, and blood flowed in a thick stream from his nostrils into his mouth.

    “Gav – you okay?” Lisa cried, suddenly aware that her heart had slowed to a rapid pounding; she suspected it had been veritably vibrating before.

    “I’m fucking wicked!” Gavin cried, spitting a mouthful of blood and saliva to the sand. He threw his arms around Lisa. “I’m alive, so I’m fucking wicked!”

    Lisa managed a smile; though bruised, she had somehow escaped the scuffle unscathed.

    Over her shoulder, she glimpsed Jamie rubbing his head gingerly; it looked like he had sustained several bruises during his fistfight, including a heavy hit to the face which seemed to be swelling into a black eye.

    “Eddie is dead,” Donovan announced.

    “No!”

    There were screams and cries from the surrounding Guard agents, only a few of whom Lisa knew by name or face.

    “Tamara too,” said Donovan. “And Jonas, Adam and Travis.”

    Lisa barely heard the second chorus of grief. Her ears were ringing, her throat swollen as the truth hit her: five Guard agents were dead.

    “It’s on me …”

    She didn’t realise she had said it aloud until Gavin, his arms still embracing her tightly, pulled away slightly and locked eyes with her.

    “Lisa – it isn’t on you. Stop punishing yourself,” he said sternly.

    Lisa swallowed a dry sob and hummed to herself, visualising her five pokémon’s joyful faces when she rescued them.

    It was just enough.

    “Roxanne is unconscious and wounded, but not seriously; we will have to abandon her here,” Donovan continued. “Same as the others; we don’t have time for grief or diagnostics. Azura’s team will need their back-up now; we have to go into the caves, and now. Wartortle, Hydro Pump,” he added in the same breath; a Wartortle waddled up to the blaze and, with several bursts of cold, refreshing water, extinguished the fire in a matter of seconds, the hissing of steam echoing into the night.

    Stephen, Owen and some other agents began picking up various weapons from the unconscious or paralysed Union agents at their feet.

    Donovan regarded Lisa and Gavin with an expression of incredulity.

    “You kids … nothing will stop you, will it?”

    Feeling as though she were repeating a hypnotic recording, Lisa pulled away from Gavin and faced him.

    “I need my pokémon back,” she said firmly. “And you need us.”

    Donovan ground his teeth.

    “I need you to stay here on the beach and take care of our wounded members,” he said gruffly, “but I have a feeling that’s not going to happen.”

    He sighed heavily as he picked up a revolver from Anthony’s holster and took it for himself. He trudged through the beach sand toward Lisa and Gavin and placed a hand on Gavin’s shoulder.

    “If you kids are going to fight no matter what, then at least do me this favour, and stay the hell away from the main cavern. Most of the fighting will take place there, if it isn’t already.”

    “If you help us out with some info, we’ll be able to do that,” Lisa said quickly. “I need to know where the Union’s lab is – where they do tests on pokémon – I want to get my pokémon back …”

    Donovan’s beady eyes flicked to the top of his head, as though he were racking his brains.

    “Each team had a set objective,” he explained quickly. “Ryan and Maria’s team is freeing trapped Guard operatives, including Professor Westwood; Lance and a few other agents are basically kicking arse and takin’ out as much Union scum as they can; Azura’s team and mine are hunting for the Fourth Key.” He paused for breath. “Alison’s team went in to liberate the pokémon and destroy as much infrastructure as possible … it’s them you’ll need to rendezvous with. Oy, Venner!”

    Sarah jogged over from Darius’ side.

    “Yes?”

    “You and Lance plotted this thing – you got any idea where the pokémon are being kept?”

    “No – we didn’t have enough intel. We only know cavern codenames,” Sarah said anxiously. “But … if I knew what cavern the lab was in, I could probably find my way to it.”

    Donovan grunted and reached down for the nearest Union agent he could find sprawled on the dirt; he hauled a red-haired teenager a foot off the ground by his hair and held Anthony’s pistol directly against the young agent’s face, the barrel resting on his forehead.

    “Yeh’ve got two seconds to gimme the fucken codename of the cave where the pokémon lab is kept, Red, or I blow your fucken brains out all over this beach.”

    The agent began to scream hysterically.

    “It’s codename Cyprus! Cyprus cave! Please, don’t, don’t kill me – don’t! –”

    “Fucken treacherous prick,” Donovan growled, releasing his hair and sending him face-first into the dirt; he aimed the revolver toward the sky and fired a single bullet off with a deafening bang!; the agent convulsed and shrieked in terror.

    “Cyprus cave is your best lead, even if he’s lying,” Donovan said to Sarah. “And on that note, we’re off.” He sighed heavily, surveying them with bemusement. “Stay safe, kids.”

    He jogged toward the rock wall that comprised the foundation of the volcanic cone, Stephen, Owen and the others following him eagerly.

    “One more thing,” he called as he jogged, “Lance always tells us the main objective to keep in mind is to STAY ALIVE! Remember that!”

    “We will!” Lisa and Gavin called in unison.

    No sooner had the Guard agents disappeared into the crack in the rock wall than there was the renewed sound of gunfire and anguished screaming. Lisa jumped as she saw a blast of light high above them, from within the cone itself; clearly, another battle was taking place in there, too.

    “I think we’re done!” Annette declared, stepping back from Darius.

    Lisa, Gavin, Sarah and Marina looked on as Annette recalled her Blissey and Wurmple. The colour had returned to Darius’ face, and his shoulder was no longer bleeding, bandaged organically with Wurmple’s thick, sticky String Shot.

    “Wurmple String Shot is the best for wounds,” Annette said confidently. “I bound it nice and tightly … so it shouldn’t come loose. You should be okay, Darius.”

    “T-thanks,” he muttered, sitting up slowly.

    Annette surveyed the sea of bodies before her, clutching her hands to her bushy purple hair. For a moment, the moonlight fell upon her face and Lisa realised that she was emotionally shellshocked; but before she could comfort her, Annette gave them all a distracted wave and, muttering, “Stay safe, kiddos!”, she bounded toward the tunnel entrance that Donovan and the others had taken.

    A set of waves crashed over the shoreline, water rushing over Darius’ backside and the hiss of seafoam almost blocking out – for a second – the pandemonium of at least two separate battles on the island.

    “What are we waiting for?” Jamie drawled, tapping his knee with Cubone’s bone.

    Lisa looked around at the others: Gavin’s bloody nose, Jamie’s black eye, Marina’s grazed arm, Sarah’s bruised face and Darius’ wounded shoulder. The guilt finally overcame her.

    “Look, I dragged you here to get my pokémon back, essentially … and I feel really bad that out of all of you, it’s me who comes out of the first battle, you know, without a scratch …”

    “Lisa, what are you babbling about?” Marina asked, regrouping with her pokémon. “Have you even seen your arm?”

    Lisa followed Marina’s finger to the underside of her right arm: it was grazed so badly it looked as though someone had grated it; flakes of skin dangled loosely while blood seeped from the holes.

    “I can’t even feel anything …” Lisa muttered.

    “It’s called adrenaline,” Darius said, miraculously sardonic as he allowed Sarah and Gavin to pull him to his feet. “I can barely feel anything in my shoulder, either. I mean, it’s killing … but I’m kind of numb …”

    “Then let’s get going while we’re still pumped!” Jamie urged.

    “Well, that’s what I was starting to say. The Union aren’t fighting fair; they’re using bullets and we’re not. We could be killed tonight. If you guys want to wait here and avoid any more fighting, then I’d –”

    “Oh, fuck’s sake, don’t pull this shit, Lisa!” Jamie cried indignantly. “I was just starting to like you, jeez. Get your bloody hand off it and let’s go!”

    Gavin’s face wrinkled into a grin.

    “First time I’ve agreed with him,” he muttered. “For the last time, Leese, stop thinking you’re responsible for us, for God’s sake.”

    Without another word, Gavin and Jamie leaned over the bodies of some of the Union agents, collecting weapons for them all. Marina gave Lisa a friendly elbow before following suit, along with Sarah.

    Lisa felt the burden in her chest lift, if only slightly. She turned to Darius, who was gingerly brushing wet sand off himself.

    “I was so scared for a minute there,” Lisa admitted.

    “No kidding,” Darius breathed. And then, while the other four were busy scouring for weapons, he leaned toward her and pressed his lips against hers.

    Lisa froze, taken completely off-guard. She had never been kissed before, had never experienced the sensation of a warm pair of lips against her own. Her heart seemed to lift in her chest, suspended by elation, her mind wiped completely blank by the new sensation; and then, quite as suddenly as it had happened, Darius pulled back and their lips broke apart.

    Lisa locked eyes with Darius. She could see her own reflection, pale and battered, shining in his brown irises. She searched the depths of his eyes for meaning. For an infinitesimal moment, time seemed to wait for them. And then –

    “Take a Stunner!” Marina called, her voice deliberately loud. She pushed in between them and thrust a stun gun into Darius’ hands before pressing a second one into Lisa’s and dragging Lisa along by the arm.

    “Okay, let’s move!” she bellowed, trudging determinedly toward the cleft in the rock wall that led to the inside of the cave.

    Lisa looked back at Darius, who held her gaze until Sarah came up by his side and spoke to him in a whisper; Lisa felt a surge of jealousy rise within her.

    “Focus, Lisa,” Marina said knowingly in her ear, as they reached the tunnel entrance.

    “Right. I know. I am,” Lisa said, tearing her eyes from Darius and facing front. She recalled Altaria into the poképort and jogged onward.

    Gavin had somehow come into possession of the Buzzball: as they strode into the pitch-dark tunnel, he held it before him and said quietly, “Illuminate.”

    A globule of light materialised from nowhere and began orbiting gently around the red Buzzball, sending sparks of golden light glimmering to the ground and illuminating the tunnel ahead.

    “Okay, that’s fucking awesome,” said Jamie.

    The tunnel stretched out a long way before them; echoes of shouts and bangs could be heard further ahead. Almost at the end of the illuminated section, there was a dark shape curled up on the ground.

    “Let’s … uh … proceed with caution, ay?” Gavin suggested, slowly creeping forwards.

    “Cyprus Cave is actually very close to here,” Sarah’s voice echoed from behind Lisa and Marina. “The first tunnel to our right should take us to an antechamber, and Cyprus Cave leads right off that, I’m almost positive.”

    “Okay,” Gavin said, adopting a tone of faux-machismo. “Stunners at the ready? Let’s march, boys!”

    Gripping the handle of the Stunner with her left hand and holding her right index finger on the trigger, Lisa shuffled forward. As Gavin walked, the tunnel lightened further and further. Before long, they had reached the dark shape that lay slumped in on the edge of the tunnel.

    Lisa was only a few metres from it when she realised it was a body.

    “Oh no …” Marina breathed.

    It was the body of a man in his mid-thirties: his polo shirt had been torn to shreds by what looked like a vicious pokémon attack; his gut, still visibly hairy, was sliced in a thousand places, leaving red, bloodied slashes across his torso. His face was also shredded, the gashes even deeper here, with what was left of his nose dangling from his face on a precarious thread, leaving a bloody, gooey mass exposed beneath. One of his eyes, mercifully, was closed, but the other had been clawed out, leaving a mess of white and black jelly leaking over the side of his face.

    The bile rose in Lisa’s stomach; she pushed Marina out of her way and vomited violently.

    She wasn’t the only one affected so strongly, either; Gavin made a retching noise, and Sarah was quietly throwing up at the back of the group, while Marina clapped her hand to her mouth in terror, and Jamie covered his eyes and walked around in a small circle, muttering, “Christ, no, no, no …”

    Darius had gone pale, biting his lip repeatedly, as if in a petrified trance.

    “Please tell me it’s a Union agent,” Lisa managed eventually, wiping her mouth on her sleeve; all thoughts of decorum were antiquated, silly.

    “It’s not,” Darius groaned. “His name was Jon, he worked with Donovan’s team.”

    A collective cry – something between a groan and a scream – went up from the group.

    “What d’you think did this to him?” Marina wondered in terrified awe. “It almost looks too vicious to be a pokémon, doesn’t it?”

    “Who knows …” Darius muttered darkly. “Let’s just … keep an eye out …”

    A shiver ran down the length of Lisa’s spine. Focusing her gaze anywhere but on Jon’s body, she glanced at the dimly illuminated cave ahead and felt slightly relieved: there was a wide opening to their right.

    “Is that the tunnel?” she asked nobody in particular.

    “If it’s the first one to the right, then, yeah,” came Sarah’s voice.

    Eager to escape the corpse in the tunnel beside them – though Lisa did not think the image burned into her retinas would ever leave her – they turned down the auxiliary tunnel, jogging. The sound of fierce battle echoing through the glittering ceiling above them instilled a sense of urgency: Lisa’s knuckles grew white on the trigger of her Stunner.

    “Slow down, Gavin, we’re nearly at the antechamber!” Sarah cried suddenly. “Cyprus Cave will be dead ahead – the pokémon lab is within – but the tunnel that intersects with this one leads from the Union’s barracks!”

    “You’re telling me now!” Gavin bellowed, extinguishing the Buzzball at once; they were plunged into total blackness.

    Lisa ground to a halt; Marina slammed into her heavily.

    “Well this is helpful,” Jamie muttered snidely.

    “Shut up,” Gavin snapped.

    “Gav, I can’t even see my hand in front of my face,” Lisa muttered, feeling around for his shoulders.

    “Well, according to Sarah the barracks are ahead – they’ll be friggin’ flooded with Union bastards …”

    “THERE’S SOME MORE DOWN HERE! HEADED FOR THE LAB!” a hoarse male voice bellowed from behind them.

    “SMOKE ‘EM OUT!” barked another man. “Charizard, Blaziken, use Fire Blast!”

    “I’m thinking we don’t have a choice!” Lisa screamed, as the roars of the fire pokémon behind them were followed by torch-like sounds.

    “RUN!” Marina screamed, pressing into Lisa.

    It was chaos in the inky blackness. Lisa felt at least three bodies crushing against hers as she fought to run forward; her sneaker catching what she assumed was a stray rock, she lost her footing, slamming her cheekbone against the rock floor.

    “Arrgh …”

    Stars sprung into existence before her eyes. Though she could still see nothing, the darkness seemed to take on a vibrating, fluorescent glow.

    “Stop moving, I think Sarah fell over –” Jamie cried.

    “I didn’t,” Sarah said. “I think it was Lisa.”

    “I’m okay!” Lisa tried to say, but she didn’t hear any noise come out.

    At that moment, several things happened all at once. The tunnel was momentarily illuminated by a flash of translucent scarlet light; a Machoke emerged from a pokéball held in Darius’ outstretched hand; and at the same time, the tunnel in the direction they had come from was filled with a two jets of orange flame, rocketing toward them.

    “Rock Slide!” Darius yelled.

    The silhouetted Machoke leaned forward and wound up his fist before slamming it devastatingly into the wall; the entire tunnel shook before a cascade of silver rocks tumbled from the ceiling, slowly at first before an avalanche seemed to trigger itself; dust flooded the air around them and an almighty roar accompanied the ceiling’s collapse.

    “GET BACK!” Darius roared.

    Already sprawled on the ground, Lisa was forever struck by the colossal image of Darius hurling his body to the tunnel floor as a metre-long tongue of deadly vermilion fire exploded through the final gap in the blockage, missing his head by centimetres; the wave of intense heat hit them all a millisecond later; Lisa felt as though her face had been smacked with a hot iron.

    “CLEAR IT!” roared the Union agents on the other side.

    BANG! BANG!

    They were firing at the blockage in their rage; feeling as though she were about to pass out from the combination of the heatwave and the blow to the head, Lisa clambered to her feet gingerly.

    “Gav, we need the Buzzball. Let’s run for it!”

    “Amen!” Marina cried.

    The globule of light once again lighting their way, the teenagers took scarcely ten seconds to regroup – helping each other to their feet and thumping smoked-out Darius heartily on the back – before Gavin led the charge down the tunnel.

    “I see it!” he cried at last.

    A bright glow was visible ahead; Lisa could see a torch burning in a bracket against the rock wall; they had reached the antechamber. They tumbled out of the tunnel almost at once, temporarily blinded by the brightness of the enormous, well-lit antechamber. As her eyes adjusted, Lisa felt acid eating through her gut.

    The entire antechamber was strewn with dead bodies, the floor grotesquely adorned with bleeding, bullet-riddled pulps, some dark-clothed, some denim-clad, all of them bloodstained.

    The walls weren’t silver: they were crimson.

    The smell was nauseating.

    Her vision blurring, Lisa’s eyes fell on the only figure still standing in the antechamber. Directly opposite them, standing before a metal door marked ‘Cyprus’, was Veronica, her entire body sprayed with scarlet blood, her platinum-blonde hair matted and red, and an AK-47 in her arms. Wincing against the deep, oozing gash on her face, she stared down at the writhing, bleeding, purple-haired woman whose throat she currently rested her boot on and roared with triumphant laughter as she pulled the trigger a dozen times, the flashes of light illuminating her maniacal expression as she tore Annette’s body to shreds.

    “NOOOO!”

    Lisa wasn’t sure if the five others were screaming with her, or if her ears had just been so badly damaged that everything echoed. In any case, her shriek jolted Veronica; the blonde agent looked up and regarded them with an expression that bordered on savage delight.

    “Lisa! My favourite guardian! You made it to the party!” she cried, her tone mockingly sweet.

    She kicked Annette’s head out of her way and took a step closer to them, examining their faces with keen interest.

    “Not that I don’t have a special place in my heart for you, Marina …” she grinned. “And this must be the famous Darius Hudson. You certainly inherited your father’s good looks, boy …”

    “Don’t talk about my father!” Darius barked, glaring at Veronica with venom; behind her back, Lisa heard Sarah mumble something indecipherable.

    Lisa regarded Veronica curiously. There was something inscrutable on her face – she looked almost intrigued by Darius, more than any of the others – but a second later, the look was gone; she returned to scanning the remaining faces in the group.

    “Now let me see – which ones of you am I allowed to pick off without getting fired …” Her eyes fell on Sarah. “You’re cute,” she smiled, raising the black AK-47.

    “NO!”

    Lisa lunged to her right, straddling Sarah from Veronica’s range. Around her, she felt Darius and his Machoke shuffle in front of Gavin, while Marina threw her arms over Jamie.

    “You wouldn’t shoot a guardian!” Lisa barked at her triumphantly, aiming the Stunner at Veronica’s head and pulling the trigger swiftly.

    A jet of blue light issued from the tip of the Stunner; seconds before it connected with Veronica’s gored face, however, a bubble of ethereal brown light materialised around her head, shimmering as the blue bolt struck it and then sending it flying back at Lisa’s face.

    “Aaaarrgh!”

    Instinctively, Lisa ducked; she heard Sarah scream as she was thrown backwards, paralysed.

    “What the hell?!” Marina cried.

    “Oh, we can invest in Battlemagic too, Marina Frost,” Veronica snarled. “You’ll be pleased to learn that your Guardian Butterfree’s little stunt in Goldenrod City inspired me to invest in a hundred Guardian Eevee for the Union.”

    She smirked.

    “They specialise in Light Screens.”

    Marina scowled darkly; Lisa felt her hackles raise: a tiny, caramel-brown Eevee was perched, infuriatingly insouciant, on Veronica’s shoulder.

    Sarah groaned as she returned to her feet, idling cautiously behind Lisa.

    “I suppose you’ve bested me, Lisa,” Veronica sighed heavily; her tone was laced with dangerous irony. “You’re right. I won’t dare shoot at a Guardian.”

    Abruptly, Gavin screamed “Electrify!”; a spear of electricity arced through the air toward Veronica and the reflective bubble kicked in again, forcing both Gavin and Darius to duck in unison as the spark sizzled past them.

    From the intersecting tunnel to the right of the antechamber, Lisa heard a dull, metallic grating; aggressive male voices were shouting epithets as the sharp, regimented sound of booted footsteps grew louder and louder.

    “Unfortunately, I can’t guarantee that my grunts will have the intellectual capacity to distinguish between you,” Veronica laughed, backing toward the high, rectangular metal door behind her; she slammed her fist against a large white button and the door hissed open, revealing a sleek, metallic lab within.

    “Good luck!” she grinned savagely. “I might just pop into the lab and see how your lovely pokémon are coming along, Lisa!”

    “BITCH!” Lisa screamed, pulling the trigger on the Stunner once more, but she was too late; the barrel of the AK-47 disappeared through the silver door as it slid shut once more; the bolt of blue light bounded uselessly off the door.

    There was no room for thought: rage propelled Lisa forward; she hurtled across the antechamber, leaping over dead bodies as she rushed for the door to the lab. She threw the useless Stunner to the ground as she climbed over the body of a Union agent, substituting it with a loaded Mini-Uzi …

    “Lisa!” Marina cried from behind.

    “What?”

    Lisa spun round to face the others in the antechamber, her hand poised over the white button beside the door.

    “Get in, get your pokémon, get out!” Marina cried frantically, hurling pokéballs to the ground as the roar of booted footsteps grew louder. Her eyes fell on the Uzi. “And be careful with that!”

    “I will!” Lisa said brashly. She didn’t think she possessed the guts, even in hot blood, to fire a bullet, but perhaps the threat would be enough for Veronica.

    “And take Jamie and Sarah with you!” Gavin cried, bodily pushing Sarah and Jamie toward the metal door; Jamie nearly fell face-first onto a mangled corpse before recovering and deftly grabbing the dead agent’s AK-47.

    “You’re not a guardian either, Gav!” Darius cried, a full team of six pokémon surrounding him. “Machoke, try heading them off before they get here, cave the tunnel in on them with Rock Slide!”

    “Yeah, but I got a plan, it’s cool!” Gavin winked, Natu clinging to his shoulder as he squeezed the Buzzball.

    Holding hands, Jamie and Sarah ran the gauntlet of bodies and reached the metal door beside Lisa, their faces pale.

    “Go, hurry, we’ll hold them off!” Marina cried, waving her hands frantically at Lisa. “Starmie, Hydro Pump them as they come through!”

    “Whaddaya waitin’ for?” Jamie shouted in Lisa’s ear, punching the white button fixed to the wall.

    The silver door hissed open instantly. Lunging forward as one entity, Lisa, Jamie and Sarah tumbled through into the lab; glancing back, Lisa caught a glimpse of several beams of blue, green and yellow light arcing through the air before the silver door slid to a close.

    “Uh, Lisa … maybe stand in front of us …” Sarah breathed, gripping Lisa’s shoulders and about-facing her.

    The lab was enormous, almost the same size as the antechamber, except that there was no sign of roughly-hewn archways or glinting silver rocks: every surface of the lab – floors, walls, ceilings, benches, sinks, shelves – was made of smooth stainless steel.

    A couple of duelling agents had clearly made their way through the door during the earlier mêlée: two bloodied bodies were sprawled, motionless and facing each other, on the steel about three feet ahead of Lisa, each with a revolver in hand. They had shot each other in the forehead at the same time.

    “Mutually assured destruction,” Jamie muttered darkly, regarding the AK-47 in his hands. “How the fuck do you use this …”

    Lisa levelled the sleek, black Mini-Uzi at the blonde agent at the far end of the lab. Veronica was hunting through a steel cabinet near a second metal door, glancing surreptitiously at the teenagers like a child caught sneaking into a cookie jar.

    “Get out of it!” Lisa snarled, fury blossoming in her chest. “Leave my pokémon alone!”

    “Ha!”

    Veronica burst into a fit of almost girlish giggles as she hauled a plastic sleeve from within the cabinet. Five red-and-white pokéballs were contained within it.

    “They’re MINE!” Lisa screeched, hurtling past the dead bodies and approaching Veronica. “GIVE THEM BACK!”

    As she reached the bench opposite Veronica, Lisa saw the blonde woman’s battle-scarred face curve into the cruellest smile she had ever seen.

    “But sweetie, I was always going to,” she said innocently, opening the plastic sleeve and hurling the five pokéballs to the ground.

    As five blasts of radiant crimson light flared in the fluorescently-lit laboratory, Veronica cried, “Goodbye!” and pressed the white button on the silver door nearest her, disappearing in a flash of silver metal before Lisa could process what she had meant.

    But as she watched the five globules of red light form into pokémon, Lisa knew something was wrong.

    “Oh God …” she breathed, stepping back in alarm.

    “You have an Electivire?” Jamie asked, his voice less urgent now that Veronica was no longer with them; from the antechamber, though, Lisa could still hear the screams and explosions of battle; she hoped Gavin and the others were holding up … but for the moment, something else was deeply amiss.

    “No, I don’t,” Lisa said, slowly, regarding the other creatures. “Nor do I have a Ninetales, or …”

    Five pokémon – Electivire, Dragonite, Ninetales, Fiskmire and Aipom – rested on the steel floor before Lisa, all affixing her not with looks of joy or recognition, but rage.

    Their pupils glowed red.

    “Lisa, get back from them, now!” Sarah cried sharply.

    Lisa couldn’t. She stared in disbelief at the creatures before her, sure that, yes, they belonged to her; and yet, she had never felt more detached from them; never had she been so abjectly frightened of beings that she knew and loved. A deafening buzz rose in her ears, drowning out Sarah’s words: her nightmare – the thing she had dreaded the most – had happened.

    “They’re mutated, Lisa, get back!” Sarah cried warningly.

    Lisa gaped as Electivire’s behemoth form began to lumber toward her, its black-fingered hands outstretched; Ninetales advanced with a smooth, deadly gait, pearly teeth bared.

    “They’re my pokémon …” Lisa breathed, a lump forming in her throat.

    Dragonite lumbered closer, behind Ninetales; Fiskmire’s canine teeth were bared as he waddled toward Lisa.

    All of their movements were slow, deliberate, controlled.

    “Lisa, get back!” Sarah called again. “Listen to me, I know about this. The Union have used this technique before. Your pokémon won’t respond to you as their trainer.”

    Lisa’s eyes fell on Aipom. The purple monkey scampered toward her, white claws appearing from its erstwhile blunt hands, its tail erect.

    “Aipom … it’s me …”

    Lisa stared into Aipom’s eyes, her heart cleaving.

    “Aipom … it’s me … Lisa …”

    Tears tumbled from her eyes as nothing but red, deadened pupils met her gaze. Aipom growled menacingly.

    “Aipom … it’s me … Leeeeeeeee –” She sobbed as she imitated the way Aipom had learned to say her name. “–eeesa …”

    “Appealing to them is useless!” Sarah cried hoarsely. “You’re an enemy in their eyes, Lisa … GET BACK NOW!”

    Her shriek broke Lisa’s attempt to connect with Aipom; Lisa glanced up again just in time to see Electivire’s furry, black-and-yellow form descend on her. She backed up a step or two in fright, but it was too late: a massive, furry arm swung through the air.

    WHACK!

    Lisa’s cheekbone cracked as Electivire’s black fist slammed into the side of her face; her skull burst in renewed agony as she fell against the stainless steel floor, the Mini-Uzi spinning away …

    “Rrruuuuuuu!” roared Electivire monstrously, its red, beady eyes feasting on Lisa as though she were prey.

    “No!” Lisa shrieked, blinking against her tears and the silver stars before her eyes. “Electivire – it’s me – back off – OOOOOOF!”

    His leg swung at her from nowhere, the clawed foot driving hard into her solar plexus and jarring the base of her rib cage; Lisa moaned but no sound came out; Electivire had winded her.

    A second kick slammed into the side of her head and the world went temporarily black. Her nerves were ablaze as clawed feet slashed down her arm, her left side suddenly damp and warm …

    As her vision returned, Lisa saw the maniacal red glow in Electivire’s eyes intensify as he ploughed his fist once more into her solar plexus; she retched on reflex, vomit dribbling down her chin; and already, Electivire was robotically winding his arm up again …

    “NO!”

    The rapid-fire of the Mini-Uzi shattered what remained intact of Lisa’s eardrums. Mid-punch, Electivire recoiled, roaring in pain.

    Lisa craned her neck backwards and gaped: Jamie stood behind her, his feet apart, the Mini-Uzi held out directly before him, exploding with flashes of light as bullets ripped through the air, rapid-fire, and pierced Electivire’s body.

    The electric pokémon howled as the twentieth bullet tore through his torso: he stumbled backwards in blind terror, sending Ninetales and Dragonite reeling back in turn. Electivire teetered for a millisecond, his red eyes rolling back in his head, before he gave a bloodcurdling howl and toppled over, thick squirts of blood spraying the ceiling before his body fell to the stainless steel floor.
    Last edited by Gavin Luper; 23rd June 2012 at 11:03 PM.
    ...Quest for the Truth of the Legend ...

    Lisa the Legend

    Winner of 12 Silver Pencil Awards 2011 - Including Best Plot, Best Character in a Leading Role, Best Moment and Best Fic of the Forum for Lisa the Legend!

    Quote Originally Posted by mr_pikachu
    Feel free to withdraw at any time, Gavin.

    Quote Originally Posted by DragoKnight View Post
    ...Far too many references!! You're like the Swiss army knife of discussion.

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