Michi hurried up the stone steps two at a time, carrying her skirts. Her eyes were fixed on the brown-tipped tails of the cat Pokemon scampering ahead of her, just out of reach.
I am out of shape, she realized as she gasped for air, reflecting on all the times she’d had Matchan carry her while hiking, and unconsciously made her New Year’s Resolution.
I must exercise more this year!
Torii gate after torii gate passed above her, marking the route to a little-used Harvest Shrine further up the mountain. It was for people like her friend Jun-Jun who came to pray for good weather and a bountiful rice crop—she couldn’t let the Meowth take those offerings, too!
She reached the top filled with determination, hands balled into fists. One Meowth kitten had climbed up a moss-covered Ninetales statue and was perching on its head—another was working its way up a cedar post towards the roof of the shrine, where a third kitten crouched.
It was the Meowth she
couldn’t see that worried her. Her eyes went unconsciously to the offering box.
She hesitated.
If there
was one inside, what would she do?
> FIGHT CAPTURE
RUN AWAY
As was the way of this world, Pokemon saved the day.
“Doree, Meriru, I choose you!” Two capsules sailed forwards, fountaining light into the heart of the harvest shrine.
“Meriru, bring the Meowth down!” Michiko cried, pointing at the two on the roof,
“Doree, check inside the box!”Water sprayed the roofline, sending soaking kittens flying and mewling from the high place. They dropped their five-piece coins, which clattered on the roof-tiles. The Marill turned its Water Gun on the Meowth on the statue next, who fled with its back arched and its tail puffed up.
The Dreepy which had appeared zoomed inside the shrine box, passing through the exterior with ease. There was a sudden explosion of yowling and clattering from inside before the lid flew off and the big Meowth came tearing out with its ears laid back flat to its head, covered in an Infestation of more tiny Dreepy.
Michi clapped her hands in delight.
“Oh! Doree! Your friends come quickly!” she exclaimed, a little worried that she hadn’t seen them beforehand. Was she losing her Dreepy vision?
Shedding Dreepy like a cloud of insects, the Meowth and its kittens took off towards the forest empty-handed, clearly having had enough.
Looking at the tiny ghosts still zipping around the shrine, Michi hoped they would stay to protect its offerings from thieves in the future. It was a nice ending to their arc at Jun-Jun farm!
Hoping the Harvest God would forgive her, Michi peeked inside the offering box to see the Meowth had left the coins here. It seemed nice to leave them alone—there was nothing wrong with a little redistribution of wealth, she thought privately, setting the lid back over the coins.
Back at the main shrine, Mickey was utterly baffled when the tree began to
move mid-tie of his fortune slip. While he was usually careful about cursed or ghost-possessed objects on a ruin crawl (they were quite common) he hadn’t been expecting one during his yearly shrine visit with his wife. He hadn’t even brought his Machamp.
“Ah!” He exclaimed in surprise as the branches seized him and ripped him off the ground, dangling him upside-down. His long hair flopped back from his face, brushing the gravel of the courtyard.
“This is a bit of a surprise! There must be a lot of bad luck trapped in this old plum tree after the years— it’s brought in a Trevenant! Wonder what I did to catch its eye...” A knot at the heart of the tree rolled like a ball bearing, revealing a single round, accusatory eye. Aged bark seemed to crack and warp, twisting into a jagged wooden mouth. The splinters peeled back like teeth, and the branch holding Mickey began to move him towards it.
“Ah! Zac! Mind helping me out? I didn’t bring any Pokemon,” Mickey gasped, realizing he was actually in danger a little too late.
“No no no, Trevenant... let’s try not to feed into harmful stereotypes...”
Like a trapped gnat he began to struggle, but it was too late to break the branches’ hold.