For Sieg, the qualifying rounds amounted to little more than a formality. He cut through the bracket without dropping a single round; each match resolved quickly and cleanly, and the efficiency of it did not go unnoticed. By the ti he had cleared his third consecutive opponent inside of a minute, the label had attached itself to him organically: one of the genuine threats in this tournant, soone to be drawn against only if you had no other choice.
The main bracket brought a modest step up in the average quality of opposition, with most competitors now fielding Pokémon sowhere in the mid-twenties, but the level gap remained firmly in Umbreon's favor. Sieg worked through the field thodically, and Umbreon answered each match with the sa unhurried precision it had shown from the start.
The only opponent worth noting had been a trainer with a level thirty-one Musharna, a Psychic-type that presented a real matchup consideration given the type dynamics involved. It required actual effort, and Sieg gave it the attention it deserved. The outco was never seriously in doubt, dark-type moves suppressed psychic-type resistance cleanly, and Umbreon's level advantage compounded on top of that, but the trainer had not embarrassed themselves. They had no standout item or tactic that changed the equation in any aningful way, and in the end, Sieg closed it out steadily.
"Umbreon, Pursuit."
"Umbreon, Dark Pulse."
"Umbreon, hold."
The bracket thinned. The crowd around the arena filled in to replace every departing competitor with three new spectators, until the space around the final field was packed shoulder to shoulder with no room left to spare.
Sieg's opponent for the final was the girl with the Glaceon. She had made the sa journey through the bracket that he had, one Pokémon, every round, no losses.
He stepped onto the field and saw her properly for the first ti at close range. During the qualifying rounds, she had been too far across the arena to see clearly, and he had only registered the outline of her, a tall figure moving with calm assurance. Now, with the distance gone, he stopped for just a fraction of a second.
She was standing with her arms folded across her chest, entirely indifferent to the low murmur of conversation circling the watching crowd, her expression settled into a composed, waiting stillness. Long gold hair fell past her waist. Her features were sharp and refined, her complexion pale, and she wore a fitted dark coat over slim black trousers in a combination that sohow managed to look both practical and striking at the sa ti. There was a quality to her presence that was difficult to articulate precisely but completely impossible to miss.
Sieg's mory moved before he had consciously decided to let it.
"Cynthia?"
The na ca out before he had weighed it.
She was. The girl standing across the field from him was Cynthia, the future Champion of Sinnoh. She was younger than the version of her he carried in mory, without the full authority that would co with years and titles, but the foundation of everything that would beco that authority was already there, visible in the way she held herself and the quality of her stillness.
In his previous life, if Sieg had been asked to na the trainer he respected most among everyone who had ever competed at the highest level, Cynthia would have been at or near the top of the list without aningful competition. Part of that was straightforward admiration for her record. Part of it was sothing more specific to how she had built that record.
The dominant approach among Elite Four mbers and Champions was the specialist model: a team built entirely or primarily around a single type. The logic was sound. A specialist team developed faster, reached its ceiling sooner, and in the hands of a skilled trainer could achieve an almost suffocating level of internal synergy. Every strength was compounded. The team moved like a single instrunt rather than a collection of parts. The cost, and it was a real cost, was exploitability. A team built around one type had structural weaknesses that a competent opponent could prepare for and target. Everyone who chose the specialist path knew this going in. Most chose it anyway, because it was simply the faster road to the top.
Cynthia had not chosen it.
Her team crossed types, crossed purposes, crossed the conventional logic of how a top-tier team was supposed to be assembled. A generalist team of that ambition took far longer to develop, demanded far greater resources, and required a quality of strategic intelligence that most trainers who attempted it simply did not possess. The early stages of building one looked, from the outside, like falling behind. The payoff, if the trainer had the patience and the ability to see it through, was a team with no exploitable seam. No obvious answer. No reliable counter-strategy. And a ceiling that specialists, for all their focused power, could not reach.
That was what Cynthia had built, or would build. In this mont, standing across a tournant field on a cruise liner in Hoenn waters, she was sowhere in the earlier chapters of that story.
The comparison that ca to mind unbidden involved a trainer nad Steven Stone, heir to a family of considerable wealth and influence, who had famously assembled a team of four shiny [Pokémon] through a combination of genuine ability and the kind of resource access that simply was not available to most people. The contrast was the point. Cynthia's strength had been earned differently. The training footage and match records that circulated online told the sa story consistently: she went looking for the strongest opponents she could find and fought them, repeatedly, until she was better. She had built a substantial following on that alone, a na that carried real weight across the Sinnoh training community before she had claid a single official title. The prodigy of Sinnoh, people called her, and unlike most labels attached to young trainers that one had begun to look like it was going to hold.
None of which changed the fact that she was standing on the other side of the field right now.
A flicker of sothing moved through Cynthia's expression when he said her na. Mild surprise, contained quickly. She had only just arrived in Hoenn and had not done any particular advance work to announce herself. Running into soone who recognized her imdiately was not what she had been expecting.
A fan, perhaps?
She filed the question away without letting it show further.
Whatever the answer, it made no difference to how this match would be conducted. The only honest respect you could offer an opponent worth respecting was your full effort. Anything less was an insult dressed up as courtesy.
"Hello," she said, her voice even and direct. "I'm Cynthia."
"Sieg." He t her gaze. The surprise had settled back under the surface where it belonged. "I've been looking forward to this."
The sincerity in it was real, and he knew it, and he was not entirely comfortable with that. In his previous life, he had been as devoted a follower of her career as anyone, tracking her results and watching her matches with the kind of attention most people reserved for their own training. That version of him was not entirely gone. But he had not built the person he was now by allowing sentint to compromise his judgnt at critical monts, and a tournant final was precisely the kind of critical mont that required him to be exactly who he was, not a residual echo of who he used to be.
He felt the pull of it, acknowledged it, and set it aside.
The referee signaled. Both trainers made their choices simultaneously, and neither chose to switch from the Pokémon they had carried through the entire tournant.
Umbreon stepped out from Sieg's side. Glaceon took the field opposite.
An Eeveelution final. The watching crowd stirred with audible interest, and understandably so. Eevee and its many evolved forms had a particular grip on the imagination of anyone who cared about Pokémon, precisely because the range of what that single base form could beco was so vast and so varied. Every evolution was its own entirely different creature in terms of type, temperant, and style. Two of them facing each other across a competitive field, each fully embodying a different direction that shared ancestry could take, was the kind of matchup that made people lean forward.
"Glaceon, Icicle Spear."
Cynthia's voice was calm and certain, and the mont it landed, the match began.
Glaceon gathered ice-type energy with a speed that Sieg noted imdiately and filed carefully. The first projectile was away almost before the command had finished leaving her mouth, a compact, fast-moving shard of ice crossing the distance between them before Umbreon had completed its read of the trajectory. Then the second. Then the third, launched before the first had even landed, a rapid, relentless stream of ice shards fired in quick succession.
Icicle Spear was not a high-damage move. That was precisely the point. Its power budget was low, its energy cost was low, and those two facts together ant it could sustain the barrage almost indefinitely. The real weapon was the pace, each projectile arriving before the previous one had been processed, giving the target no window to reset or prepare.
Umbreon absorbed the opening hits, and Sieg's mind moved through the options in the sa mont.
"Umbreon, Screech."
Umbreon dropped low to the ground, coiling inward for a single beat, and then released.
The sound that tore out of it was sharp enough to cut, a sustained, piercing shriek that filled the entire arena and hit the crowd before it hit Glaceon, drawing involuntary winces from every corner of the watching ring.
"Umbreeeon!"
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