I immediately tried to hide myself behind Freestar, but she held me in front of her, so the Latias could see me easily. I whimpered quietly as the Latias flew over to me.
"Please don't hurt me." I said to the Latias while whimpering.
"Why would I hurt you?" She asked me.
"Because, I was that boy you knew a year ago." I said, trying not to start crying in fear.
"I know." She replied. "I followed you here, you cutie. " She giggled. I was still whimpering, but Freestar was making sure I didn't fly away.
"Please let me go Freestar." I begged Freestar, whimpering louder now.
"No, I think you should talk to this young lady, and maybe explain
The next morning, I woke up very early, but Freestar was hugging me too tightly for me to go anywhere, so I just simply laid there, thinking heavily.
I continued thinking heavily until I heard a yawn a couple hours later. I looked at Freestar and she giggled at me. "Good morning." She said to me.
"Hi..." I replied, somewhat sadly.
"Something wrong?"
"...Yeah..." I looked at the ground.
Freestar hugged me, and then I started to whimper slightly, so she hugged me tighter. "What's wrong?" She asked while hugging me.
"I miss my parents, I think it's been something like a year or so..." I said, now holding back my tears.
"Shh, please don't
I immediately tried to hide myself behind Freestar, but she held me in front of her, so the Latias could see me easily. I whimpered quietly as the Latias flew over to me.
"Please don't hurt me." I said to the Latias while whimpering.
"Why would I hurt you?" She asked me.
"Because, I was that boy you knew a year ago." I said, trying not to start crying in fear.
"I know." She replied. "I followed you here, you cutie. " She giggled. I was still whimpering, but Freestar was making sure I didn't fly away.
"Please let me go Freestar." I begged Freestar, whimpering louder now.
"No, I think you should talk to this young lady, and maybe explain
The next morning, I woke up very early, but Freestar was hugging me too tightly for me to go anywhere, so I just simply laid there, thinking heavily.
I continued thinking heavily until I heard a yawn a couple hours later. I looked at Freestar and she giggled at me. "Good morning." She said to me.
"Hi..." I replied, somewhat sadly.
"Something wrong?"
"...Yeah..." I looked at the ground.
Freestar hugged me, and then I started to whimper slightly, so she hugged me tighter. "What's wrong?" She asked while hugging me.
"I miss my parents, I think it's been something like a year or so..." I said, now holding back my tears.
"Shh, please don't
It's not often I come across a real gem of a comment anymore, but this one takes the cake. Give it a read:
"Today, we grieve for our beloved old friend, Common Sense, who has been with us for many years. No one knows for sure how old he was, since his birth records were long ago lost in bureaucratic red tape.
He will be remembered as having cultivated such valuable lessons as:
- Life isn't always fair;
- Knowing when to come in out of the rain;
- Why the early bird gets the worm;
- Waste Not, Want Not;
- And maybe it was my fault in my situation
Common Sense lived by simple, sound financial policies (don't spend
more than you can ea
The wind whips across the barren planet's surface. Red tinted earth glows with the light of the neighboring sun. Several long-abandoned barracks bunched together, the same sun's glint soon overpowered by a brighter light.
All out of nowhere, a barrage of heavy blasts of supercharged plasma obliterate the ground around the structures. The serenity of the scene is turned straight to the horrors that the most war-hardened soldiers fear in their dreams.
A blast lands between several of the barracks, uprooting one of the entire buildings and sending it somersaulting through the air. The light from the sun and the explosions glint
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