[attr="class","skullbody"]The funny part was, Isaac expected everything to feel far more intense.[break][break]
Isaac knew the cold.
Cillian Quinn had made damn well sure of that, buffeting him in blast after frigid blast of Icy Wind. With that so fresh in his mind, it was almost startling to realize that Suicune's crest had turned even colder. It was as if he was gently caressing the side of a glacier. More startling still was the fact that the biting pain that always followed the cold was nowhere to be found.[break][break]
Rejuvenation ebbed through Isaac's body. Though many of his wounds remained, the pain they caused him had become a distant memory. In its stead, he found an indescribable feeling. It was as if he had been parched for his entire life, only now knowing the cool refreshment the waters could provide. Power welled within him, yet he could barely feel its pull. Instead, he could only feel its presence nestle within his core, as calm as an underground hot spring.[break][break]
The waters, settled waist deep around Isaac, began to reject him. Second by second, breath by breath, as if he were lighter than air, they began to carry him upwards. Isaac didn't even realize it was happening at first. All he knew was that, as Suicune held his head high, his own body rose to meet him.[break][break]
When he finally looked down, he could see himself standing atop the water's surface.[break][break]
His eye widened in surprise. He thrust out his arms, trying to prepare himself for a fall that would never come. As shock stole his concentration, so, too, did it steal his power. Isaac stumbled forward, his feet half-dipped into the water. A cacophony of ripples flowed out their wake. A wry smile spread across Suicune's face at the sight; he had much to learn, but that was okay. It had much to teach.[break][break]
Perhaps, if this human kept surprising it, those roles would turn alongside the tides.[break][break]
The Suicune turned towards the forest, its expression taking a turn for the serious. It lowered its haunches, ribbon-like tails idly beckoning towards its new bondmate. For a second, the message seemed clear. Isaac took a step forward, prepared to ride the Suicune out of the grove just as he'd ridden it into here.[break][break]
That expectation meant he was in for a rude awakening when the Suicune tore away towards the treeline.[break][break]
"H-hey, wait a sec!" What else was there for Isaac to do but to run after the legend? At first his footsteps were shaky and unstable, kicking up large splashes of water in his wake. He'd never catch up to Suicune at this rate; either the waters would keep slowing him down, or he'd waste too much time trying to swim out from them. But when was the last time something being impossible stopped Isaac?[break][break]
With each step, his stance atop the water firmed up. With each step, less and less of the spring was displaced. With each step, Isaac felt himself growing faster, lighter, more unburdened. The feeling was intoxicating, and Isaac let himself surrender to it. By the time he'd gotten out from the sacred spring, he'd blown his old personal best out of the water. Nothing could stop him now![break][break]
Nothing but that tree.[break][break]
He was going far too fast to stop. With no other options, Isaac threw his arms up and braced himself for an impact that never came.
"What the-?" he said, only to notice his voice was little more than a hollow echo that trailed behind him. The hands he held before his face were translucent, weaved together from air, mist, and the light of the aurora. Such was the lack of burden on Isaac that he'd left his very form behind.[break][break]
In this new state, it was easy for him to catch up with Suicune. The legend looked towards him without breaking its stride, simply acknowledging his presence with a nod. They traveled through the woods together, side by side, shoulder to shoulder, their tailwinds as intertwined as their hearts.[break][break]
Isaac felt the temptation to stop as soon as the first signs of decay came to mind. However, with a break shake of its head, Suicune spurred them onwards. No, their goal was far greater than tending to trimmings and plucking out mushrooms. Instead, they pushed themselves deeper, past where Pokemon and even man feared to tread. The soil had been reduced to a caustic slurry of black and orange mulch. Stunted trees twisted inwards as if attempting to impale themselves. Hastily abandoned dens littered the land, punctuated with flashes of yellowed bone.[break][break]
They'd come to the heart of darkness itself.[break][break]
Isaac skidded to a halt faster than he'd anticipated, his corporeal form leaving a skidding trail through the muck. Isaac lowered his mask off of his eyes, letting it hang around his nose and mouth to keep the toxic gas at bay.
"Really did a number on this place . . ." he muttered, almost expecting to feel that familiar grudge come knocking once more.[break][break]
To his surprise, it never arrived. Every intrusion on his mind left mere ripples in its wake. In its stead came a focus as clear as crystal. Isaac knew he had been brought here for a reason. He was damn well sure he knew what that reason was. Now he simply needed to figure out what to do.[break][break]
An easy thought was revenge. Flow across the north wind, find those responsible for this disaster, and bring them to justice beneath his heel. Simple, right? There was just one problem with that. Revenge would do nothing to push back the tainted ground beneath his feet. It would just leave the Petalburg Woods to be nourished in blood.[break][break]
No. Isaac didn't want to bring more pain to these long-suffering lands. He wanted to take it all away, just as Suicune's purifying waters had taken away his.[break][break]
That's it![break][break]
Isaac walked forward to Suicune once more, setting a hand atop its crest. He refamiliarized himself with the cold of the northern winds; not bitter but refreshing, not biting but soothing, not destructive but preserving. Then, while the chill still lingered against his palm, he held his hand towards the sky.[break][break]
The air above Isaac began to chill. Mist rose from his outstretched palm, dancing higher and higher before settling into the form of a cloud. The cloud grew darker and thicker by the moment, casting a long shadow across the blighted lands below. All the while, it hung expectantly, as if waiting for Isaac's command.[break][break]
Isaac looked towards the cloud, looked towards his hand, and clenched it into a fist. At his will, soothing waters rained down from above. The blight seemed to part wherever the soothing drops fell. Was it trying to move away from the purification's reach, or was it simply being obliterated at a mere touch? Whatever the case may have been, Isaac didn't know and Isaac didn't care. All he cared about was making sure it was gone.[break][break]
Even after his efforts, he knew the woods wouldn't be the same. Where the miasma washed away, he was sure only barren, starved soils would remain. Perhaps, spared of its blight, the mulch and decay left behind could nourish them anew. That would remain to be seen, not by observation but by action. Isaac would come back to this place, again and again, just as he had in the past. With Springtide Storms, Overgrowth, and his Shaymin's blessings, he would see to it that the Petalburg Woods would return to their former glory.[break][break]
He was sure, in another lifetime, it would be what
Elisabeth Fiorelli would have wanted.[break][break]
The center of the circle, where the heart of darkness had once beat, would be where he brought Echo to his final rest. He didn't have a shovel with him, but the loose soils would be easy enough to move aside by hand. Suicune wouldn't help. It knew that, for this one moment, it wasn't its place to. Instead, it would simply observe these sentimental rituals, a moment of silence provided for the one who liberated the Liberator.[break][break]
Atop Echo's grave, Isaac would plant the seeds from his Gracedia flower.
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[attr="class","skullinfo"]MOBILE POST /
shiv