OOC: Mind if I just get out of that cruise? XD
EDIT: lol, this post just reminded me of the movie Crank, now that I think about it. XD
--
The night was just how a night was supposed to be. You would get ready for bed, then you'd go to sleep. I had found that there were many people doing so. Me; well, I had wanted to go to sleep, but something changed my mind. There was no point to it; I would just keep thinking. In my mind, there was only one way to get it out of my mind, and that was to get to where I was going at the fastest pace possible.
So no one took notice when I began to jack all the Pokéblocks and any form of Pokéfood. I didn't thing anyone would, considering almost half the ones I took were free anyways.
Maybe they should have kept better watch on me; I was the kind of guy to just get there, finish, and move on. To me, this was just too slow. I wasn't going to let it go like that.
So, did anyone notice when the big bird flew off deck with a trainer riding, passing the ship, in hopes of getting to Hoenn faster? I think not.
The wind was fast; Pidge was faster. We rode the wind like we belonged to it. It was actually pretty fun.
After awhile, I wasn't so cautious to keep holding on. I let go of Pidge, and just sat. the ocean below was passing by really fast, and I could tell that Pidge was trying her hardest to get to Hoenn. It may have been a land unfamiliar to her, but she had to find a way to land.
Knowing this, I tried to make myself lighter (however possible or impossible that may be).
After awhile, I wasn't so stuck onto her. I climbed higher from her back, getting near her head and hugging her neck. The ocean and stars were beautiful. There was nothing else I could say about them.
"How much can you hold up?" I asked Pidge.
Her answer, I wouldn't understand. However, just because I did not speak her language didn't mean I wouldn't get what she meant. I knew it had been somewhere around almost getting there.
As the time passed, I began to rise from her back, trying to stand against the wind. Pidge noticed this and tried to slow down, but I told her to keep going and not worry.
Now standing in an unsafe position, I spread out my arms and looked forward, as if to be flying too. And that's when I saw the outline of the coast of Slateport. I knew this is where I had to stop; Pidge would be too tired to go on. I had already seen signs of that.
"We're doing fine, Pidge," I assured her. But she still seemed too tired. "Don't worry about a thing; just concentrate on getting to land.
Pidge tried, but she began to have double vision. She couldn't go on, and I knew it. This would prove to be a problem in coming closer.
I couldn't tell just by looking, how far we actually were. However, I could tell that it seemed to me we just weren't going to make it; we were going down, and we were going in for a crash landing. Uh oh.
--
At the dark beach of Slateport, it would seem you would find no one on land. They seemed to have all gone home to enjoy everything and anything else they could.
So they didn't notice the Pidgeot fly out of control and towards the sands.
At the last second, right before Pidge made a crash landing, I returned her. This proved to be a very dangerous move. She disappeared from beneath me, and I went ahead and fell to the hard sand, rolling over and over, eventually stopping, and taking the position of what others would think I'd be doing; taking a nap under the stars of the beach.
No one stopped to ask if I was alright because all they thought was that I was sleeping under the stars; in reality, I was knocked unconscious by the crash landing.