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Private/Closed Pokemon: Earth and Sky

Que lifted himself from the ground calmly, and at a leisurely pace. He took a moment to look around, as if surveying the area from this new vantage point, before dusting off his sweats with sharp, stale gestures of his boyish hands. When the seat of his muddled, snow-colored pants had turned from a murky, mottled brown to more of a subtle sandy appearance, the fourteen-year-old crossed his hands behind his back and marveled, a little less surly now, about how solid the ground felt, and how his foolishly deceived feet finally seemed to understand the basic principles of balance again. The queasy feeling had been vaporized from his belly in a way that long lengths of time often cause, and Que was rather content to never think of it again.

"That would be me as well," the boy uttered at length, as if the fact was so simple that explaining was unnecessary and a waste of breath. His voice was not flat, but rather it was sterile. It slithered through the air with the solemn pitch of a cello, no emphasis on any word or syllable, but simply a single, uniform stroke of the bow. It had no pitch, it was neither angry nor annoyed but simply matter-of-fact, as if the boy were stating that two plus two made four. As tempting as the description might sound, his voice was not mechanic. He was not a machine. He was very much alive, very much human. To be sure, the boy's heart still beat against its cage, his breast still rose and fell in the manner of bellows never set to rest, for fear that the fire will go out. Yes, he was very much alive, very much human, certainly not a machine. His voice was not mechanic, simply stale, matter-of-fact, a uniform stroke of the bow. Perhaps, if that had been Que's wish, his voice could betray excitement, or pleasure, or a surly demeanor, just as, on his slate of a face, he could easily draw a picture of mood.

But why should he, if he didn't see the point? If he didn't feel enough to care?
No amount of effort in that field would ever untie the knots. Only calm, simple, meticulous thought could draw him up a pure solution, fit together another piece until at last, the devious riddle was vanquished, the hurricane subdued, the cyclone melted into harmless little drops, until the wind whipped another frenzy of thought into motion, another knot unconquerable onto the platter of riddles that he so joyously consumed, twirling the world on the twines of his stark, childish fork.
 
“Alrighty then!” Professor Sequoia said brightly. “If that's everyone, would you all please follow me.” The graceful woman turned on her heel and strode into her lab. Kya trotted after her, grinning excitedly at the other trainers.

When they passed through the doors, Kya was quite impressed. The lab had a high, glass domed ceiling. She could see a flock of Fletchling and Fletchinder soaring gracefully outside. The walls of the entrance room were lined with computers, desks, and book shelves. In the center of the circular room was a large, cylindrical, glass chamber. The base of the chamber was encased in some kind of metal machine.

Professor Sequoia must have noticed Kya staring at the odd chamber, because she suddenly said, “That's the device we use to test a Pokemon for mega evolution.” Kya nodded, considering this. “Well,” Sequoia continued. “This is the research center of the lab. Down that hall in the battle room and through the back door is the habitat where we keep the starters. Speaking of starters, would you like to meet yours?”
 
Aurora followed, even though she had her starter pokèmon, litrally on her shoulder. "Ready to see some more excited faces Shasta?" Aurora asked the Eevee that was dangling from her shouder. "Eev! Eevee!" He exclaimed before sitting back on Aurora's shoulder.
 
Just as Kya and Aurora, Jack also followed the professor into her lab. The feeling of excitement built up inside his stomach - and he didn't even want a starter! Jack stared at almost every object, person and Pokemon inside the lab and wondered what each and every one of them were doing. Many of the Pokemon he hadn't even seen before. It was such a cool building, and an experience that should be shared with a Pokemon. Jack stopped to root around inside of his bag, and the crowd continued walking. Jack soon found what he was looking for - a revive with a note taped to it. 'Future Jack, use only in an emergency. Sincerely, Jack from the past.' The note read. "Man, it's a good job I kept this. This sure is an emergency." He muttered to himself. Jack then proceeded to use the revive on his Snover, nicknamed Frost. Jack told Frost exactly where they were, picked him up and then sped up in order to re-join the crowd. Since Jack was he pre-occupied with reviving Frost, he'd missed the professor's speech so turned to the nearest other trainer and asked "What's going on? What did she say? Did I miss anything important?"
 
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