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Anachronism - Pokémon Dimension

Tenebrys
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Celeste was a mother, a nurse, and a gamer who was anticipating the new Pokémon game, a small comfort in the chaos of her life. But when a cruel twist of fate sends her back in time to her teenage body in a parallel universe, she finds herself in a world that is both familiar and terrifyingly new. This isn't the world she knows. Pokémon are real, and her life is a mirror image of her own, with one horrifying difference: her mother and sister are gone, her father is a ghost of a man, and she has a dark history of her own. Trapped in a new world with a new diagnosis of schizophrenia, and without her husband and kids, she must navigate a world where her knowledge of a game is both her greatest asset and her most dangerous secret. As she pieces together the truth, Celeste realizes that her counterpart's life was a fragile facade, and that a single act of cruelty may have shattered her reality. With a killer on the loose and people to protect, she must find a way to survive in a world that is not her own, in a much younger body than she knew. The development of this world, and the lives of the people close to her rest on her ability to confront the past and save a future that she never knew.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 - Where?

The water was cold, a deep crushing weight enveloping me, merciless black that

stole the air from my lungs and rational thoughts from my head. The frantic

symphony of the ship's alarm blaring in the background, the distant, muffled

shouts of my husband, the desperate, wrenching scream that felt like it was

tearing through my throat but only caused my last remaining precious supply of air

to leave me. I remember hitting my head on the rails when the cruise started to

capsize, the impossible speed of me falling overboard, the icy cold that seized

my body like a vise, dragging me down into a world of endless shadow. It wasn't

a quick darkness; it was a slow, agonizing suffocation, every moment a battle I

was losing, and couldn't fight back because i probably had a concussion .

Everybody says that in your dying moments your life flashes before your eyes…

My last, frantic thoughts really were not of salvation, but of their faces, a

beautiful, agonizing montage of my life with my husband, my six year old daughter's

smile and my three year old son's laughter, a vivid, cruel reminder of the life

I had and the family I was failing to get back to. The salt stung my eyes, the cold

burned my skin, and the silent, final embrace of the deep consumed me with my

last breath, leaving only the gut-wrenching despair of a mother who coudnt hold

on, couldn't save her own family, and couldn't even save herself. 

For a moment, there was nothing.

And then, a different kind of

light over my eyelids.

It wasn't the salty air of the

ocean, but the clean, sterile scent of antiseptic. Even with my eyes closed, I

recognized that scent and those sounds, as I've spent years hearing them while

working as a nurse. I opened my eyes to the soft, rhythmic light of medical

machinery, the world coming into focus as a blur of white sheets and muted

sunlight. Panic, cold and sharp, shot through me. I tried to sit up, but the

jolt sent a wave of pain through my left arm. I looked down and saw my whole

forearm wrapped in a thick, white bandage, the gauze stained with a faint trace

of red vertically. I followed the line of the bandage, and my stomach clenched.

It ran almost the full length of my forearm. My hand, which I now noticed was a

little thinner than I remembered, trembled with the shock. Could I have hit

something underwater that cut my arm? Looking at myself laying down, why was I

so thin? Did I just wake up from a coma? But if so, why was the bandage still dirty

with blood?

The heart monitor connected to my

chest picked up on my distress. The rhythmic beeping sped up, a frantic,

electronic echo of my own terror. The sound grew louder, more insistent, until

a soft rythimic thudding on the floor, approached the room. The door slid open,

and a figure entered. But It wasn't a nurse.

My mind, a messy collection of

memories and thoughts at that moment—struggled to make sense of the sight

before me. It was a Pokémon, not a creature of a video game, but a creature of

flesh and bone. Its body was a plump, pink egg shaped, with small, red dark

pink pouch on its belly. It carried a single egg in it, and had a perpetually

gentle, maternal expression.

But I wasn't feeling gentle. I

was feeling the kind of visceral terror one feels when seeing the impossible,

and my breath caught in my throat. The heart monitor shrieked, a panicked,

multi-toned alarm that cut through my thoughts. My first reaction was to yank

on the IV drip and heart monitor cables, a desperate, irrational attempt to

run. The pink creature was too fast. It reached a red button by my bed and held

me down with its surprisingly strong, stubby arms while looking down on me with

a surprisingly gentle expression. I started to scream, but the creature was too

strong; I couldn't even lift my torso. Frantic footsteps began pounding down

the hallway, but the sound only made me more agitated. An old woman with stern

expression in a white medical coat and scrubs entered the room, her eyebrows

pinched as she looked at the creature seemingly for answers. It started to

frantically repeat variations of its own name.

"Chan, chansey, Chan!"

That just made me more scared.

The doctor came to the other side of the bed and helped hold me down, nodding

her head as if she understood the creature. She tried to talk to me, but my

panic was a roaring gale, and I couldn't comprehend what was happening.

"She doesn't seem to be

calming down," the doctor said to the creature. "Please, Chansey, use

Sing."

The pink blob began to sing a

soft, calm melody that reminded me of Mary Had a Little Lamb but without words,

and my eyelids started to feel heavy, my body relaxing against my will. The

last thing I thought was how that doctor wasn't affected by this impossible

lullaby, and what the heck was happening.