- 26
- Posts
- 17
- Years
- In Canberra, the capital city of Australia.
- Seen Sep 8, 2008
Disclaimer: The characters and the situations within this fan fiction story are not my property. They are the property of Nintendo and others, and are used without permission; challenge to copyright is not intended and should not be construed. No profit is being made from the use of these characters and situations; these written-down imaginings are only presented in an internet forum for the interest of and consumption by like-minded individuals who enjoy them and recognize them as unauthorized fan fiction only, and are not in any way meant to be confused with the originals nor presented as authorized materials of these owners.
Author's note: This is the story of the cloned manufactured pokemon Mewtwo and his friendship with the young daughter of his creator, Dr Fuji.
In the original Japanese "Myutsuu No Gyakushu", there was a short ten minute prologue where Ai-two (anglicized to "Amber" for international release) was a clone of Dr Fuji's daugher, who had died in a car crash. Her griefstricken father used her DNA to recreate her, and grew her in the same unit in which Mewtwo was also growing, where they became friends. This version was cut from the movie for overseas consumption as being too dark for children.
In my version of the story, the original Ai (now called Aiko, it still means the same, I just think it's a prettier name) didn't die, but still met and interacted with Mewtwo while he was growing within the gestation unit. Circumstances part them, until they meet up many years later, both as adults, and the story follows their developing relationship and growing affection for each other.
I have tried to set my story up as a sort of Pokemon-for-adults, so Aiko has black hair and brown eyes, rather than the Pokemon-for-kids type fantasy with hair and eyes of many amazing shades. Likewise, I've tried to achieve a science-fictiony feel to the story, just to see how it would turn out.
I have deliberately written Mewtwo as a little naive at first - after all, he spent his formative years growing in a jar in a laboratory! And until Sakaki (Giovanni is the anglicized version of the name) decided to train him, he was kept with animals and had to teach himself to speak the human language using his psychic ability, so he didn't have much in the way of life experience! As one reviewer rightly stated, this gives him the attitude of a child in an adult's body; however, I have matured him as the story progresses.
I hope you like this little foray into my imagination, and please do review!
Prologue Rated G
The Mewtwo File
Alison Venugoban
Prologue
Aiko's father finally gave in to her pleas and agreed to let her see the kittens.
"Just remember," he told her as they drove to his workplace, "these are genetically-enhanced creatures, they don't really look much like cats. At least not the sort you're used to."
It was late in the afternoon, and the laboratory where her father worked was quiet. A uniformed man sitting at a desk looked up as Aiko and her father walked into the foyer.
"Hello Dr Fuji," he said with a smile. "Is this your new lab assistant?"
Dr Fuji shook his head with a chuckle. "Hello Miki. This is my daughter Aiko. I promised to bring her to see the kittens for her birthday. Aiko, this is our security officer Takeshi Miki. "
"Happy birthday, Aiko," Miki said. "How old are you?"
"I'm seven years and one day old," Aiko told him seriously. "I had my birthday party yesterday."
Miki touched a button on his desk and the double glass doors leading to the labs swooshed open. "Well, Aiko, seeing as you're with Dr Fuji, and especially since it was your birthday yesterday, I guess I can let you through. I hope you like the kittens," he added as she and her father walked through.
The corridor was long, with many open doors leading into labs all along it. But Aiko's father walked past these until they came to a sturdy, locked steel door at the very end of the corridor.
"The kittens are being grown in here," he told her, taking his identity card from his pocket and swiping it in a slot at the side. The door unlocked with a muted click and slid aside, granting them access. "Not many people are allowed in," he added. "Usually just the scientists. But because you're with me, you may come in to look. Just don't touch any of the computers, all right pet? They're sensitive."
"All right, Daddy," Aiko agreed. She tightened her grip on her father's hand as they walked into the dim lab. It was eerie in there. Huge glass containers filled with liquid loomed out of the darkness. Bubbles floated up, up, up within them, like pale ghosts in the gloom, to disappear at the top with muted gloop gloop sounds. Strange unidentified lumps floated in the liquid.
"Why is it so dark, Daddy?" Aiko whispered.
"The kitten's eyes can't take bright light yet," Dr Fuji answered with a smile. "And there's no need to whisper, Aiko, they can't hear you! You could have a rock band going in here and the kittens would sleep through it." He led her to the nearest container. "See this button here, on the base? This is an infrared light switch. Press this and you'll be able to see the kitten growing inside. Infra-red light doesn't hurt their eyes like ordinary light would."
Hesitantly, Aiko reached her hand forward and pushed the switch. Instantly the container was filled with a soft pinkish glow, and she gasped as she saw that the dark lump inside was in fact a "kitten", curled in a fetal position. A long flexible plastic tube emerged from the place where its navel should have been, branched into several separate tubes of different colors, and disappeared into the base of the container.
"That is its feeding tube, that's its waste-disposal tube, and that one there is how we monitor its health and brain waves," Dr Fuji explained, pointing at the various tubes. "All baby mammals have an umbilical cord when they're within their mother's body that provides them with everything they need to grow. These tubes do the same job. When we feel they're strong enough to be 'born', the tube will be removed, and they'll have a normal belly button, just like yours!" And he tickled her stomach, smiling at her giggles.
"How many kittens are there, Daddy?" Aiko asked. The room seemed to extend a long way; the big glass containers faded into the gloom and she couldn't see the back wall.
"We have thirteen that have made it this far," Dr Fuji answered, his face serious once more. "We started off with over one hundred eggs, but clones are difficult to bring to maturity, and we were working with the preserved DNA of an extinct animal, the psychic pokemon Mew. So there were gaps that we had to fill using DNA from other animals. Many of the clones either didn't divide, or else just withered before we could transfer them to the containers. Some had to be culled because they were deformed or showed signs of disease. These thirteen seem to be the strongest. We have to keep our fingers crossed that they will make it long enough to be born, that is, when they're big enough to leave their containers."
Aiko stared at the creature floating inside the container. Its body fur was light, with a soft lilac tinge, but whether that was from the infrared light or its actual colour was impossible to tell. Its tail and stomach were a slightly darker shade. Its eyes were tightly closed. Two short forelegs crossed its chest and two long hind legs were drawn up in front. The long tail floated out behind it, rising and falling gently in the currents within the container. It was huge for a kitten, almost as big as Aiko herself.
"How long will it be before they can come out?" Aiko asked.
Her father thought for a moment. "Nobody really knows. You have to remember, pet, this is a brand-new experiment, we're still learning! The kittens are extremely slow growing; I put the first clone in its container before you were born. You can see the dates each was started written on the base of the containers. This one is the eldest of the thirteen and is ten years old now. They get younger as you go further back."
"But they must be going to be born soon, Daddy. They look so big!"
Her father smiled at her earnest face. "We expect to have them growing in here for some time yet. They'll be a whole lot bigger once they're born, that's why the containers are so large, to accommodate them until then."
"What will you do with them once they're born? Will they go to school like I do?"
Her father laughed. "No. The original Mew was said to be psychic, and we added some DNA from another psychic pokemon, Abra. They also have some human DNA, so their brains will be large; they may turn out to be the most intelligent of all species of pokemon. What we're really interested in is any psychic ability they may have. They've got some very interesting brainwave patterns, even this young, and we're going to be experimenting with what they can do for years. If the clones turn out to be as psychically powerful as we hope, they'll be worth a lot of money." He smiled down at her. "You can go and have a look at each of them now. I have to check the computer readouts."
Aiko wandered amongst the containers, pressing the light switches and gazing with fascination at each of the animals. They all looked similar to the first one, lilac-furred, eyes closed, bobbing gently in their artificial womb. Occasionally one would twitch or flicker an eyelid, as if dreaming. But there was no other response to show that they were living creatures.
The dates on the bases of the containers got progressively younger, and each kitten was smaller than the last. Finally, Aiko reached the far end of the room. She gazed at the last, youngest kitten. This one was only half her size, not counting its long tail. Aiko read the date on the base of this container and gasped. "Daddy!" she called softly. "This one, here at the back, has the same birthday as me!"
Her father chuckled and called back, "It hasn't been born yet, Aiko! That date is when the fertile egg was put into the container."
Aiko smiled and didn't answer. She turned back to the kitten. "Maybe you're not really born yet, but you're still my age," she whispered to it, feeling a connection she hadn't had with any of the others. "And you may be the littlest, but I think you're beautiful."
She placed her palm onto the warm glass of the container, where the kitten's shoulder touched. "What is it like," she whispered, "floating in there all by yourself? Are you dreaming? What could you be dreaming of, if you've never seen the world outside?"
Suddenly she gasped. For the kitten had moved slightly, more than any of its brothers, and not just because of the currents circulating around its body. It turned its head in her direction. Aiiko watched, holding her breath, her hand still on the glass. "Can you hear me?" she whispered in awe. "Do you know I'm here, little kitten?"
She stared in rapt concentration at the baby pokemon. It moved its head again, restlessly, and its body drifted a little more towards her. Then, so quickly that she jumped, its eyes opened, revealing two clear sapphire-blue pupils, fixed on her. She heard, no, she felt…felt something…no words, but a strange, questioning feeling in her head. There was no doubt in her mind that this was coming from the kitten.
Leaning close to the glass, her brown eyes never leaving the blue ones watching her, she whispered to it, "My name is Aiko. Hello, little Mew …"
She felt that wordless questioning again in her mind. Then the kitten moved one of its forelegs, on the end of which was a paw resembling a three-toed 'hand'. It moved this clumsily, then managed to place it palm-first against the glass where her own hand rested.
Aiko smiled in delighted wonder. "You're the most beautiful of all the kittens," she told it sincerely. "And when you get out of this container, we'll be friends, I know it."
"Well, well!" said a voice, and Aiko turned her head to see her father staring at the kitten in amazement. He came forward and knelt down beside Aiko. The kitten moved its gaze from Aiko to Dr Fuji. Again that questioning feeling tickled Aiko's mind.
"He wants to know who you are, Daddy," she said to her father.
Dr Fuji chuckled. "It certainly looks like it, doesn't it? I wish I did know what it was thinking!"
"No, really Daddy," Aiko insisted, realizing he didn't believe her. "He just asked me who you are."
Her father stared at her. "What do you mean, Aiko?"
"I can hear him…well, not exactly, I sort of…feel he wants to know."
Her father shook his head. "You can? Hmm, this is the most reaction I've seen in any of the clones. I wonder…are they dormant psychics needing mental stimulation to bring it out? Why did the youngest wake first? Are the others about to? And how can you hear it, pet? Are you psychically empathic? I wonder…"
Aiko didn't understand all the big words. She realized her father was simply thinking out loud. She stood and smiled at the kitten, as Dr Fuji hurried back to the desk at the front of the room and began telephoning colleagues. Aiko could hear his low, excited tones as he spoke to each of them in turn. "Jiro? It's Fuji Yutaka here. One of the kittens is awake. Yes, it moved! It opened its eyes…can you get out here as soon as possible, we need to run some tests. Yes, number thirteen, the youngest one, who would have expected that? Good, good, see you then. No, that's all right, I'll let them know…but could you pick up Saburo on your way in, her phone line was busy when I tried to ring…"
Aiko thought friendly thoughts at the kitten and smiled when she received the feeling back, as if the kitten was copying her. She moved her hand, and with some difficulty little Mew changed his position to again lay a paw against the glass where hers lay, making paddling motions in the liquid to get there. She laughed at this, and was even more delighted when she saw the kitten's mouth curve up into a smile as well. It had fully uncurled itself now, and hung in the liquid of its container, watching her intently. She felt its happiness and continued to play, the other kittens all but forgotten in her joy at interacting with this one.
"Aiko," she told it out loud, "my name is Aiko."
"Ai…Aik..o?" It was the first real word she had 'heard' from it, a psychic whisper directly in her head. It felt strange that she could hear it without using her ears at all.
"That's right! Yes, I'm Aiko! And you are my friend little Mew!"
But this proved too much for the kitten. It gave up the attempt and turned upside down, looking so comical that Aiko got the giggles again. She felt the kitten's surge of happiness at this new experience of playing with another.
"Can you follow me?" she asked, beginning to walk around the container. Little Mew obligingly paddled its short front legs, turning to keep her in sight, until she got back to her starting point. It was then she realized that the kitten's long tail had wrapped around its body as it turned, and she burst out laughing again, pointing. Little Mew began to laugh silently too, slowly rotating back in the other direction until its tail unwound from about its waist.
She felt its questioning emotion again, and after concentrating, she thought she understood what it asked enough to answer, "My hair? No, it's only on my head. Oh, and my eyelashes and eyebrows."
She touched her shoulder-length black hair to demonstrate what it felt like, and got back a definite impression that Little Mew somehow "received" the tactile sensation. He then put one hand to the top of his own head, with the other still on the glass. Aiko touched the glass again and closed her eyes. Tingling in her free hand, she could feel the pokemon's wet, soft fur.
She was trying to explain the difficult concept of "clothes" to Little Mew when her father returned to her side. "I've called some of my colleagues to come and check this kitten out," he told her. "But I'll be busy for some time, so I've phoned your mother to come and pick you up…"
"Oh no, Daddy, don't make me go yet!" she protested. "Little Mew and I are just getting to know each other. He knows my name, we're playing…"
"Now don't argue with your father, Aiko," Dr Fuji said firmly. "You've seen the kittens as I promised, but now I have work to do." He took her hand. "Come along, I'll take you to the foyer. Your mother will be here soon."
Reluctantly, Aiko turned to follow her father. Instantly, she felt a puzzled feeling from little Mew.
"I have to go now, little Mew," she called, turning back to look at it. "I'm sorry, but I can't stay…"
As it realized her intention was to leave, the kitten grew frantic, pressing its face against the glass. Its emotion echoed in her head as clearly as any words: "Don't go! Please don't leave!" Then, making an effort, it used the only word it knew: "Aiko! Aiko!"
The kitten's desperate psychic calls made Aiko's stomach knot painfully. Fighting back sudden tears, she looked up at her father. "Daddy, I'll go with you, but please, can I say goodbye to little Mew first?"
Dr Fuji hesitated, then relented at the sight of her tear-filled eyes. "All right pet. But don't be too long."
Aiko ran back to the incubating container. Little Mew was still hovering anxiously. She pressed her hand against the glass and the kitten did the same. "I have to leave now, little Mew, I'm sorry. I really can't stay."
The kitten's desolate feeling hit her so hard that Aiko felt her tears spill over and begin running down her cheeks. "Please don't be sad," she whispered to it. "Please be happy. I want to remember you laughing."
"Come back?" the kitten's wordless emotion was again as clear as speech.
"I don't know if they'll let me see you again," Aiko replied. "Today was a special birthday present. But you're going to grow into a big strong pokemon someday. I'll never forget you, little Mew. Goodbye… "
Hanging her head, Aiko turned and walked back to her father, who took her hand silently and led her away. As they went out through the steel door, Aiko felt another emotion in her head. The little clone was crying.