As a Pokémon researcher, I’m used to seeing unusual things…
Still, there are some times in my life when I look around and say to myself… “What the Hell is going on?”
Times like this I encounter things that simply defy description.
I often wonder if things like this ever happened to Professor Oak…
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
Fragments
The four trainers slowly and cautiously inched down the narrow tunnel, guiding their way with the flashlight. Strangely, Giratina (they assumed the roar they had heard had come from Giratina) was silent as they approached.
Eventually, they came to a large, open room… And to somewhat of a surprise.
They had expected to be met by a monstrous creature bearing terrible claws. But there didn’t seem to be anything in this cavern…
Lisa shined her light in front of her. There seemed to be a crude dais of some sort, almost like an altar, and two stone pillars to either side. The room didn’t seem to have any other exits.
“How did it get past us?” asked Mandy.
“It’s a Ghost Pokémon…” said Starbuck. “Maybe it just… you know, disappeared. But I never pegged Giratina for a coward…”
“So strange…” said Lisa.
She slowly walked up to the crude altar, and stepped onto it…
And then, to the shock of the three younger trainers, she vanished.
“MOM!” shouted Starbuck.
He rushed up to the altar, and he vanished too.
Shadow sighed.
“Here goes nothing…” she said.
She followed Starbuck, and vanished the same way as Mandy watched.
Mandy hesitated for a while.
The smart thing would be to not follow them, she thought. The smart thing would be to turn the other way fast…
She sighed, and ran towards the altar.
She hadn’t done the smart thing for a long time, and it wasn’t the time to start now…
* * * * * * * * * *
When Starbuck opened his eyes, he wished he hadn’t.
A shiver ran down his spine as he looked around the odd… Place where he was.
He was standing on a stone ledge (well, maybe it was stone, that was the best word for it) in a dark void, full of many more stone ledges, all connected to each other, some of them with stairways. Some of the stairways were very orderly, some were crude, and many of them were at odd or downright impossible angles.
Looking further from where he was, he saw stone platforms where odd-looking plants grew, and floating platforms throughout the void, some not moving, some moving slowly, others quickly.
“My God, it’s like an M. C. Escher painting!” he exclaimed.
“Where the devil are we?” shouted Shadow’s voice.
Starbuck turned around. To his relief, Shadow and Mandy were behind him.
“I don’t know where we are,” said Mandy, “but I don’t like it, and I want to go somewhere else very fast!”
Then Starbuck realized something.
“MOM?” he shouted, starting to panic.
“I’m down here, dear!” said Lisa’s voice.
The three of them looked down…
“Or, uh, maybe up here…” she said. “To your point of view.”
They looked up.
Suddenly, he started to think his sanity was in question. Another stone ledge was above them, and his mother was literally standing on the underside, looking down on them.
“Most peculiar…” said Lisa.
She rubbed her chin and looked at a vertical ledge that separated the two ledges. Cautiously, she walked to that ledge, and slowly stepped onto it…
…and quickly, her body turned ninety degrees, so that she was standing on that vertical ledge.
“Hmm…” she said. “Clearly gravity doesn’t follow the rules that we’re used to here…”
“We’re in some other dimension…” said Starbuck.
Lisa walked down the vertical ledge, and then onto the one that they were standing on, making another ninety-degree change.
“Yes, that is obvious…” she said. “Although I’m not clear where we are… Although, Giratina may have had something to do with it…”
“Maybe this is where it’s from…” replied Shadow. “If Giratina is Death, then maybe this what Pokémon perceive as Hell.”
“Well, I have heard stories about how Giratina is said to live on a world that exists… ‘Perpendicular’ to ours, if you will…” said Lisa. “A world on the opposite side of ours, relatively speaking…”
“Yes, that’s all nice to hear…” said Mandy, “but that doesn’t solve the big problem, which is how the Hell do we get out of here?”
“I don’t think Giratina brought us here to play bridge,” said Starbuck.
“Yes, that does seem to be a problem…” said Lisa. “Giratina is clearly very intelligent, and it must have had a reason for bringing us to its home…”
She was trying to stay calm, but it was clear from the tone of her voice that she was just as scared as her son and his young friends.
She sighed.
“Going back the way we came isn’t an option, it seems…” she said, “so we can only move forward…
“I’ll lead the way…”
The path they were on was short, before it led to a stairway that went down. After going down about a hundred feet (which made them very nervous, as there was no handrail) the stairway changed, and went up for the same distance.
As they reached the top, they were startled by a loud screech as a huge shadow passed over them.
“Nobody panic!” shouted Starbuck. “It’s trying to scare us!”
“It’s succeeding!” trembled Shadow. “It’s stalking and playing with us, just like the monster did in the Predator movies!”
“Interesting comparison,” said a female voice that they had not heard before.
They looked… And looked down. The voice had come from… A Glameow?
They looked at the small, cat-like Pokémon.
“Uh, hullo,” said Starbuck. “Who are you?”
“I am only a fragment,” said the creature. “Still, I should tell you that what your mother said was pretty much the truth… I believe that Cyrus explained it well when he was here…”
“Cyrus?” gasped Lisa. “The leader of Team Galactic?”
“The one and the same,” replied the Glameow. “Although he isn’t here now.”
“What happened to him?” asked Starbuck. “Did Giratina eat him?”
“How well-learned are you about genetics?” asked the Glameow, not answering the question.
“Uh, a little…” replied Lisa.
“As you know, a molecule of nucleic acids is a double helix,” said the small creature, “made up of two completely separate parts, DNA and RNA. Both of these parts are essential to the genetic make of the organism, but are kept entirely separate.”
“Lovely…” said Shadow. “We’re trapped in another dimension, and this talking Pokémon is giving us a biology lesson!”
“Just listen to me,” it continued with a sigh. “This is similar to how this world, which was called the Distortion World by a member of your species, relates to your world.
“You see, Giratina’s two ‘brothers’, Dialga and Palkia, represent Time and Space. In your world, those two concepts are well-defined and immutable.
“However, in the Distortion World, both Time and Space are not defined at all. They are mutable and ever-changing. Only Chaos rules this place.
“In a way, Giratina’s realm opposes the world of his brothers, the two worlds existing perpendicular to each other in a sort of cosmic balance.”
“Okay, that’s the ‘what’,” said Lisa. “So… Exactly ‘why’ did Giratina bring us here?”
Glameow pointed its paw forward, and they saw a door about a hundred feet in front of them, one that obviously wasn’t there before.
“You’ll have to pass through that door if you want to get anywhere here,” said the Pokémon. “Assuming you can reach it.”
Then it looked at them closely, and hopped off of the platform they were on.
“What?” said Mandy.
She looked over the ledge where it had jumped. All she saw was darkness below.
Somehow, she didn’t think that the small Pokémon had decided to leap to its death…
They all looked at the door.
“Assuming we can reach it?” said Shadow. “How hard could it be?”
She started to walk towards it.
“All we have to do is…”
Then, to her surprise, it wasn’t so easy. The door actually seemed to get farther away as she moved towards it.
Then, when she stopped to look at it again, she saw that she apparently hadn’t taken a step away from her allies.
“Okay…” she said. “Not as easy as it looks…”
“Let’s all make a go for it at once…” said Starbuck.
Unfortunately, that didn’t work either. They still didn’t manage to get any closer to it.
After walking for a minute, they stopped, and found that they were no closer to it than they were when they started.
“So now what?” said Mandy.
“Hold on, hold on…” said Lisa. “Time and Space are mutable here, right? In the real world, walking towards something will let you get closer to it…
“This is just a wild guess, but… Maybe in this case, we’d get closer to it by moving away from it.”
“That’s the craziest…” said Shadow.
“So crazy it may just make sense!” said Starbuck. “I’m going to try it…”
He looked at the door, and then slowly started to backtrack.
“It’s working, people!” he said, as he saw the door getting closer. “Follow my lead!”
They started moving away, and the door got closer, until finally, he could grab hold of the knob.
“Seems that in the Distortion World,” he said, “what doesn’t make sense can make perfect sense!”
He threw open the door.
* * * * * * * * * *
Tweedledum and Tweedledee
Agreed to have a battle;
For Tweedledum said Tweedledee
Had spoiled his nice new rattle.
Just then flew down a monstrous crow
As black as a tar barrel;
Which frightened both the heroes so,
They quite forgot their quarrel.
The words of that old nursery rhyme echoed through their heads as they entered a very strange room.
It was a brightly lit room, and looked like a child’s playroom. Colorful pictures were painted on the walls, and there were toys on the floor: a jack-in-the-box, a box of Legos on its side with some pieces spilled out, a Stretch Armstrong, three cute plushies depicting a Snorlax, a Charizard, and a Blastoise, and an undone jigsaw puzzle.
The disconcerting thing about the room was, the toys were very, very large. It took a while for them to see the apparent point… The room and its contents were scaled so that they were the size of the average four-year-olds…
“Well…” said Shadow, nervously. “This is a little better than that place we were just at…”
Then they realized something. The door they had walked through was gone.
“No other exit…” said Mandy.
“Clearly we have to use something in this room to get out…” said Starbuck. “Let’s see…”
He walked up to the large jack-in-the-box, and looked at it for a minute.
Then he took hold of the large crank, and started to turn it. The familiar tune of “Pop Goes the Weasel” started to play.
Then, as the lid popped open, a true shock came out. What emerged wasn’t a clown or anything you’d expect to come out of a jack-in-the box… It was a large, very angry-looking Onyx.
The four trainers backed away from the huge Pokémon as it glared at them.
Then, it shot flames from its mouth, and then scattered to avoid it.
“NO FAIR!” shouted Shadow. “Since when could an Onyx use Flamethrower!”
“Things don’t have to make sense here, remember?” said Lisa.
Mandy grabbed a PokeBall from her belt.
“It’s still a Pokémon!” she shouted. “We’re Pokémon trainers, and I think we all know how to handle an angry Pokémon…”
She threw the PokeBall at the angry Onyx.
“Toxicroak! Go!” she shouted.
The PokeBall burst open, and the burly Poison/Fighting hybrid leapt out.
“Hit that thing hard with Brick Break!” she shouted.
“Toxicroak…” croaked the Pokémon.
It slammed its fist into the huge Pokémon, causing it to shiver…
And apparently, it worked. The Onyx didn’t collapse, but dissolved into shimmering particles of light, leaving only the jack-in-the-box.
Toxicroak landed on its feet, and they looked at the large toy, which was now empty and apparently inert.
“Weird…” said Shadow. “At least we know that Type advantages still work here.”
Mandy held up the PokeBall, and recalled Toxicroak.
“Well, that was a bust,” she said. “Maybe we should try something else? The Stretch Armstrong, maybe?”
“I don’t think so,” said Starbuck. “I hurt myself using a regular one of those things when I was a kid.”
“Hmm…” said Lisa.
She looked at the jigsaw puzzle.
“Maybe solving this will do something…” she said.
She looked at the pieces.
“Going to need everyone’s help here, people…” she said. “It’s kind of hard to put one of these together when you don’t have the box to tell you what it’s supposed to look like…”
“Okay, start with the edges…” said Starbuck, as the knelt over it.
Eventually, they managed to fit two pieces together, and then a third. More followed, and soon they had the whole border.
The puzzle quickly took shape, and after about twenty minutes, the picture became clear: It was a picture of a gateway of some sort.
This suggested that the puzzle was, indeed, the key to leaving the room, so they continued, fitting more pieces into place, until finally, Lisa fit the final piece into place.
As she did so, the puzzle stood upright, against the wall, and then vanished, turning into a portal of light.
Lisa sighed, and the four trainers walked through it.
* * * * * * * * * *
To their shock, they seemed to be back in the Distortion World proper. The same void full of floating stone platforms.
“Hey, this is the same place where I didn’t want to be the first time!” shouted Mandy.
“It’s worse…” said Starbuck, pointing ahead of them.
To their shock, a river was running in front of them, which turned into a waterfall that ran up, which continued into another river that was flowing upside-down.
“Chaos?” said Lisa. “More like madness…”
“Call it what you will,” said a familiar voice.
They looked down, and saw the Glameow again.
“Look, fellah,” said Starbuck. “Just what is going on here?”
“You want to know what the deal was with that playroom?” asked the Pokémon. “I’ll gladly tell you…
“Giratina is both the ruler and a prisoner of this place. It was banished here by its two brothers because of its violent behavior. It can only enter your world for very brief times.”
“Dialga and Palkia banished it because they thought it was violent?” asked Shadow. “That’s the biggest case of the pot calling the kettle black I’ve ever heard!”
“Possibly,” replied Glameow. “No true Pokémon live here except Giratina. It lives all alone most of the time, and has become incredibly bored over the centuries.
“Giratina has very little imagination of its own, so to amuse itself, it reads the memories of any human that comes here, and creates fragments to amuse itself.
“That room you were in was a fragment of Cyrus’ past, a memory of his childhood.
“Cyrus’ childhood had toys that attacked him?” asked Lisa, with an expression of disbelief.
“Cyrus perceived his childhood that way,” replied the Glameow. “You forget how unbalanced he was.
“You see, Cyrus’ parents and nannies tried hard to raise him to be an intellectual, so they encouraged him to play with toys that were educational in nature, and discouraged him from playing with frivolous ones. Later in life, as he descended into madness, he began to view his childhood as much like what you saw.”
“That’s why a jack-in-the-box produced a monster,” said Shadow. “While a toy that actually required us to think showed us the way out.”
“You’re learning,” said the Glameow.
“You said that you’re a fragment too?” said Mandy.
“A memory taken from the mind of Cynthia, another human who was once here,” said the creature. “As a child, she was given a Glameow. It a pet she had as a little girl, her biggest inspiration to become a Pokémon trainer, and later become the Champion of Sinnoh.”
As the creature said this, another door appeared in front of it.
“Continue your journey…” it said. “There’s far more ahead…”
It vanished, and they were startled again as the loud scream echoed though the void and the huge shadow flew overhead again.
They ran to the door (doing so didn’t cause it to move away from them this time), opened it, and ran through it.
* * * * * * * * * *
They looked around. Now they were in a forested area, and the night sky was overhead.
“Okay, NOW where are we?” asked Shadow.
Lisa looked at a tree next to her. Then she plucked a shrub out of the ground.
“Given the flora…” she said, “I’d say Sinnoh was a safe bet… Or a place made to resemble it…”
“Which likely means that this fragment is also taken from either Cyrus or Cynthia’s memory…” replied Starbuck. “And I really hope it’s Cynthia…”
The brush in front of them started to rustle.
“We may find out in a second…” said Lisa, nervously.
To their shock – and relief – the Pokémon that leapt out was a cute one. A small, smiling creature wearing a colored eggshell on its lower half.
“TOGEPI!” they all shouted at once.
Then it was clear that this wasn’t only the incredibly rare Togepi. The markings on its shell were green (opposed to the ones on a regular Togepi, that were red and blue) and the parts of its body not covered by the shell were very tanned.
“A Shiny!” exclaimed Lisa.
“DIBS!” shouted Mandy, butting in front of them and grabbing a PokeBall from her belt.
“Mindy, WAIT!” shouted Starbuck.
“Wait, nothing!” shouted Mindy. “A chance like this comes around once in a trainer’s lifetime, Starbuck!”
She threw the PokeBall, and a very large Parasect emerged.
“You know the drill, Parasect!” she shouted. “False Swipe it!”
“Parasect,” confirmed the mushroom creature. The Togepi only smiled more as it lunged at it with a claw. Clearly, Parasect’s attack hit home, but it was hard to tell from Togepi’s expression just how much damage it had done.
Togepi started to wiggle its hands back and forth…
“Metronome…” said Lisa. “That could turn into anything, literally…”
And then it did turn into something… Razor Leaf. The sharp leaves shot at Parasect, and it let out a loud scream, tumbling backwards.
“Parasect…” it groaned.
The four trainers looked with disbelief.
“Parasect is part Grass and part Bug…” gasped Shadow. “And yet, Togepi almost knocked it senseless with a Grass attack?”
“Must be one strong little guy…” muttered Starbuck, looking at the small Pokémon.
“I want this Togepi…” snarled Mandy.
“Parasect, use Spore!” she shouted.
Parasect hopped onto its feet, and shook its back, throwing a cloud of poison dust into the air. This powerful attack never failed, and didn’t this time; Togepi fell into a deep slumber.
Mandy took a deep breath. She reached into her pouch and took an Ultra Ball from it.
“I have you now…” she said.
She was about to throw…
Then her hand trembled…
She looked at her allies.
She sighed, and pointed Parasect’s PokeBall, recalling it.
“Kind of does seem a little too good to be true, doesn’t it?” she asked.
* * * * * * * * * *
They were back in the void of the Distortion World again. The Glameow was in front of them again.
“Yes,” it said, “and when something is too good to be true, it usually is. Especially since I told you that Giratina is the only real Pokémon in the Distortion World.”
“Yeah, remembering that you said that was a big reason why I stopped,” replied Mandy. “Seeing that Shiny Togepi made me forget where I was for a minute.”
“A mistake just like one that you avoided making is what cost Cyrus his sanity when he was a young trainer,” said the Glameow. “He was tempted by an incredibly rare and powerful wild Pokémon that logic said shouldn’t have been there… Ignoring logic and giving into temptation was the worst mistake he ever made. The Pokémon he caught wasn’t what it appeared to be…”
“What was it?” asked Starbuck.
“Better you didn’t know,” replied Glameow.
“And what would have happened if I had caught that Togepi?” demanded Mandy.
“Be grateful you didn’t have to find out,” said the Glameow.
“Listen here…” said Lisa.
For the first time in a long time, she sounded incredibly annoyed.
“I’m getting sick of these dumb parlor tricks,” she said. “If what you say is true, and only Chaos rules here, then these ‘tests’ that Giratina is putting us through have no real meaning.”
“I never said they were tests,” said Glameow.
“So what’s the point?” asked Lisa, sounding angry now. “Is Giratina trying to gain more ‘fragments’ from our minds? Or does it just like watching us squirm for its amusement?”
The Glameow didn’t answer.
“Well?” asked Lisa.
“You’re very smart, Mrs. Conrad,” it said, now in a voice that was clearly male.
“Still, you can’t be all too smart…”
A dark, ominous, evil-looking shadow surrounded the creature as its eyes glowed.
Then it turned completely into a large shadow.
“You haven’t been able to see the truth even when it was right in front of your face!”
“Ho boy…” muttered Starbuck, as the shadow started to grow to enormous size.
Then before their very eyes, the true form of the Pokémon – yes, the Pokémon – loomed before them.
Giratina (as it was obvious now that it was indeed the infamous Renegade Pokémon) was hard to describe, and truly pushed the limits of what a Dragon Pokémon could look like. It had no limbs at all. Its thick, serpentine body had armored rib-like plates that resembled bone, an inhuman skull-like face, and six long, spiked tendrils protruding from its back, three to one side. It hovered in mid-air as it looked at the trainers, Lisa in particular, with empty eye sockets.
“What…” said Lisa. “It… It didn’t look like this before!”
Giratina looked at her for a minute.
“Do you know why I let you live the last time we fought, Mrs. Conrad?” it asked, apparently not acknowledging the last comment.
“No…” said Lisa, trembling. “But then… I really didn’t know that you could talk then either…”
“I’ve been a prisoner of the Distortion World for eons…” it said. “Trapped here in this dark, lonely, and mind-numbingly boring place!
“It’s enough to drive anyone mad… I’ve been able to foray into your world for brief times, sometimes for a few hours, and sometimes only for a minute, and those brief times where I was able to feel the sun on my face and breathe fresh air… That was the only reason I’ve kept my sanity for so long…
“You… I saw you as a possible way to escape permanently… I saw potential in you back then… But you were unprepared… You weren’t ready… So in hopes that you would return, I was merciful…
“I’ll give you one more chance…
“But I won’t be merciful if you fail again…”
Lisa looked at it and trembled.
Why? she thought. Is it counting on Starbuck, Shadow, and Mandy to put it out of its misery if it kills me?
Maybe it isn’t fully sane…
She trembled again…
“I’m waiting…” said Giratina. “Don’t give me a chance to change my mind…”
Slowly, Lisa reached for one of the PokeBalls on her belt.
* * * * * * * * * *
Next:
As a Pokémon researcher, I’m usually prepared. But I know that no matter how well-prepared you are, you can never prepare for every contingency. Even if you go over something a hundred times, the best-laid plan can fail because of something you never thought of. Even if there’s a one percent chance of something going wrong, that one percent might just happen.
I wasn’t prepared for a Dragon/Ghost hybrid the first time, because that wasn’t what I believed Giratina to be. I’m prepared for it now…
But am I truly prepared to catch this Legendary Pokémon? My second – and it appears, my final – attempt will show it I am.
“Second Chance” is coming soon. Let's hope Dark Sage can post it faster this time.