"Ey, what the-"
BO-DOOM!
"Aw, hell no," All three of the company's eyes on the rocks widened, as Mari started with horror. Avery and Zorya, now wide awake, blinked starstruck - well, atleast Avery did - as the pulsing orb of power shot past the challenger's Dreepy and off into the distance. And that wasn't the end of it either; like a shotgun firing off, blast after blast escaped the flopping Magikarp, flying willy-nilly as the pokemon writhed about on the ground. She hopped smoothly off the rock, dodging one of the blasts and wondered if kicking the fish into a corner was the right thing to do. Would it just get madder?
"Aves, put him to sleep!" She called out in her mind, reaching round for her pokeball-- "What?! Me?! Are you insane?! No way! Don't send me out there, Mari!" The owl's whimpering plea rang out, halting the girl in her tracks. "What?! This ain't the right time to hesitate at all! Come on, one quick Hypnosis, just like we practiced!" Too late, they had no more time to dilly-dally, her hand was already wrapped around the Hoothoot's pokeball. Clearly she wasn't the only one who had this idea neither, because the challenger girl was calling out to her to do something, anything!
In two long strides, Mari was at Nua's side, skidding to a halt as her rubber soles screamed against the frosted ground, and threw up an arm, shielding the two girls from the snow getting kicked up from all the explosions. Her free hand flicked Avery's pokeball free, and the owl let out a wail as he appeared, firing a powerful blast of psychic energy straight into the ground. Eh? Where did the Magikap go?
Her eyes snapped to Ron, clutching the menace of a Magikarp's pokeball in his hands, and she frowned as she watched him sweat in the icy snowscape. Fear of hypothermia aside, the flopping fish had done a real number on the man - and further still, something stirred deep in the girl's heart. Avery, despite not being a psychic type, possessed enough mastery over the skill to not only communicate with his trainer, unlike Zorya, but also to understand concepts, insinuations, traces... and he felt it the same moment Mari did. That power...
"Ey? Ver'd'ye t'ink yer goin', stumblin'awf aloon?" Mari called out, running to catch up with the man, waving a hand at Avery over her shoulder. The owl stood still, blinking first after her, then quizzically up at Nua as the two stood there in the settling snow, exchanging quiet glances. In the distance, he could vaguely hear someone call out to them, and his round little body turned to face their direction, but they had evidently been too far for Mari to hear, and he could only offer them a reassuring, albeit trembling wave of the wings.
"Oi!" The girl caught up in no time, grabbing on to Ron's shoulder to whirl him about, but had overestimated the strength left in the man's body because she immediately leaned in to offer him a shoulder of support. "Wot'ern tha'all'aboot? Yer gunna doe'summin'bou'ha', rayt? That fish'n gawt moure problem'n'han Carter's got li'l pills, an'it's only gunna ge'worse'nce it get'n older! Then ye'll 'ave'a reyl biggun runnin'all o'r hell's 'alf acre! Tell me ye've go'ta'plan fer tha', ye numbskull!" The final comment was more of a demand than a real question, but a hint of a plea had wormed its way into the headstrong girl's tone.