Post by Selina O'Sullivan on May 27, 2022 5:54:06 GMT
selina p. o'sullivan
NAME Selina Pavlina O'Sullivan | AGE Fifteen |
OCCUPATION Team Rocket Member | HOMETOWN Vester City, Shula |
SEXUALITY Hetero | PLAYED BY cynda1 |
PERSONALITY
POSITIVE TRAITS: • Curious • Intelligent • Loyal • Determined • Empathetic | NEGATIVE TRAITS: • Close Minded • Temperamental • Overly Sensitive • Reckless • Somewhat Manipulative |
LIKES • Freedom • Travelling • Books • Pasta • Positive Affirmation | DISLIKES: • Gijinka • Pokemon • Feeling Outsmarted • Most People • Losing |
POKEMON
Species - Emolga Gender - Female
Ability - Motor Drive Level - 5
Moves - Nuzzle, Tail Whip, Double Team, Tickle
Species - Emolga Gender - Female
Ability - Motor Drive Level - 5
Moves - Nuzzle, Tail Whip, Double Team, Tickle
Also randomize the second starter completely, please!
APPEARANCE
Upon first glance, Selina gives the impression of a moody teenager who is going through a rebellious phase. She stands at a solid 5’0’’, just a couple inches short of average, and carries a rather scrawny build. Her current weight has been fluctuating, her most consistent being exactly 100.5 lbs, but never going too much higher or lower than that. Her brown hair reaches up to her shoulders when allowed to be loose, but she usually keeps most of it in a high ponytail. A good chunk of it is left hanging over her left eye, completely covering it in most situations. Her eyes are a cold blue, and circular in shape.
Her street clothes are incredibly casual. An example of what she usually wears is a white, long sleeved shirt that reaches about half way up her upper arm. Its sleeves are both ripped at the edges of them, and its collar seems to have the same ripped look to it. Over the shirt, is a navy blue t-shirt with a head of an unimpressed looking Pikachu on it. She has a belt the same color as the t-shirt with a silver buckle on it, and light blue, ripped jeans, with the edges of the legs of the jeans rolled up. She wears black and white converse sneakers, with no visible socks.
Her Team Rocket uniform is much more uniform. While the outfit is the same as pretty much every other Team Rocket member, she finds herself putting her ponytail in a prestige bung, pinning her bangs back, and covering it all with a hat. She also tends to wear glasses for good measure.
As for her face, she’s a bit of a roller coaster at times, but she usually gives the impression that she’s trying to come off as confident. If someone is trying to interact with her, she tends to send a bit of a smirk, and if in her street clothes, she’ll typically stick her hands in her pockets or lean her back against the wall. In her uniform, however, her mannerisms are much more professional, and she tends to be much more serious when on the job. She’ll still wear a smirk if she’s being competitive or testy, but she’s overall much more proper in just about any of her stances.
Her street clothes are incredibly casual. An example of what she usually wears is a white, long sleeved shirt that reaches about half way up her upper arm. Its sleeves are both ripped at the edges of them, and its collar seems to have the same ripped look to it. Over the shirt, is a navy blue t-shirt with a head of an unimpressed looking Pikachu on it. She has a belt the same color as the t-shirt with a silver buckle on it, and light blue, ripped jeans, with the edges of the legs of the jeans rolled up. She wears black and white converse sneakers, with no visible socks.
Her Team Rocket uniform is much more uniform. While the outfit is the same as pretty much every other Team Rocket member, she finds herself putting her ponytail in a prestige bung, pinning her bangs back, and covering it all with a hat. She also tends to wear glasses for good measure.
As for her face, she’s a bit of a roller coaster at times, but she usually gives the impression that she’s trying to come off as confident. If someone is trying to interact with her, she tends to send a bit of a smirk, and if in her street clothes, she’ll typically stick her hands in her pockets or lean her back against the wall. In her uniform, however, her mannerisms are much more professional, and she tends to be much more serious when on the job. She’ll still wear a smirk if she’s being competitive or testy, but she’s overall much more proper in just about any of her stances.
HISTORY
TW: Emotional Neglect, Gaslighting, Brainwashing, Implied abuse
The early life of Selina O’Sullivan is mostly blurred to her. She doesn’t really remember what her mother even looked like, or even if she had ever met her. She had early memories of her father, perhaps back when she was four or five, telling her stories at night, and cherishing her as any daughter should be. Her father raised her to treat every creature with love and kindness, from the smallest Joltik, to the largest Wailord, and everything in between. Man and Pokemon were meant to live in harmony.
However, rather early in life, and quite abruptly, her father vanished from her life with no trace. In his place was her aunt, Belinda. She must’ve been her mother’s sister or something, because they never really shared the same name. That being said, Belinda Grant expected Selina to call her mother just like her cousin, Randy Grant. Belinda held a much more strict household, and unlike most loving families, she tended to distance herself from her children for the most part.
Randy, by this point, was used to it by now. He thrived in it, and for the most part, Belinda allowed him to be independent and reckless to his heart’s content. In fact, she’d encourage him to get out of his comfort zone. And he’d do anything to please his mother.
Selina, on the other hand, struggled with the idea of not having a parent readily available emotionally. However, she was chastised when she showed any “signs of weaknesses” in her presence, and would dismiss any of her concerns, which only disheartened Selina. It didn’t take her long to realize she wasn’t going to gain approval or love by doing what her father had taught her, and instead tried to prove how successful she’d be.
However, it was never enough for Aunt Belinda.
She’d get grades just as good as Randy, but his grades always looked more appealing to her. When she’d get better grades than Randy, she’d say that Selina was showing off and shouldn’t try so hard. When she tried to do her chores well, she would say something along the lines of “You know, it would’ve been nice if you didn’t create your dirty dishes in the first place”. There didn’t seem to be anything she could do to please Belinda except just avoid her at all costs, sometimes.
But of course, there were those good times. Family nights were one of the few times Selina felt loved in the family, and she came with that love and attention. It was the one thing where things would go her way, and even when Randy didn’t feel like having the mushy family nights, Belinda would insist that that just meant he needed it more. They would play board games, watch movies, and sometimes even talk.
One day, when she was about eight, Selina happened to come across her aunt's laptop and see her looking into creatures called Gijinkas. Before she could get a decent look at what she was precisely looking at, Belinda slammed the laptop shut and told her that “information like this isn’t meant for little girls” and simply walked out of the room, laptop in tow. This was Selina’s first time learning about Gijinka.
Outside of the home, Selina would hear stories about them, and it peaked her interest at first. She wanted to learn more about them, and more about Pokemon as a result. She went home and asked Belinda about these Gijinkas but she would simply reply that it was all just a little fairy tale, and that Belinda hadn’t looked up such a thing. Belinda even showed her the website that Selina had seen the other day, and there was no mention of Gijinka anywhere.
Selina insisted that the website had said Gijinka somewhere, to which Belinda accused her of calling her a liar. Selina questioned why the other children curiously knew about the Gijinka legend, then, to which Belinda replied “Oh, kids these days will say just about anything to get attention”. In any case, Belinda ordered her niece not to talk about the issue anymore as it was simply utter nonsense, and that if she caught her talking about it again, she’d be in big trouble.
Selina obeyed… but that didn’t stop her from snooping around.
Selina and Randy were never allowed to have internet access or the like. She said it was toxic for the mind, and only got in the way of true education, and that there would be no streaming under her roof by anyone… of course, Aunt Belinda could break her own rules whenever she liked, because if you questioned her, as Selina often did, you’d get grounded.
And when being grounded basically entails you being locked in your room in solitary confinement at all hours outside of school, you learn fast not to break the rules, even the double standard ones.
At least, that’s what Selina had to deal with.
Regardless, Selina managed to find a loophole, and prolong her time away from home when she was around ten. She gained access to the public library, and all the internet access that came with it, since Belinda didn’t really care what time Selina came home and wasn’t looking over her shoulder as a result. The things she found out concerning Gijinka became more and more intriguing, though they seemed to somewhat back up Belinda’s idea of it just being a story and nothing more.
But then… Why didn’t she want Selina to talk about it? Why did she act so weird whenever it was brought up, even getting angry at Andy if he dared to question it?
Selina confronted her that very day with the information that she looked up online, and for several minutes, which felt like hours, Belinda grew silent. Selina questioned why it was so hard for her to answer a simple question, to which Belinda simply replied “You didn’t read anything about Gijinkas”. This… confused Selina all the more. She insisted she knew what she read, but Aunt Belinda continued to askes Selina if there was a legendary Pokemon in the story.
Selina answered yes, and then Belinda claimed that the story she read had nothing to do with Gijinka, and all to do with that legendary Pokemon. It was a cautionary tale on the dangers of being too close to Pokemon, and nothing else.
Selina insisted that her friends at school somehow knew about Gijinkas and that everything she looked up backed their claims up, but before she could even finish defending her claims, Belinda put a stop to it. She simply replied that the children were poisoning her mind and that she should have nothing to do with them, or the outside world in general for that matter. It was just brainwashing her!
Belinda grounded Selina that day for about a month, and took her and Randy out of school permanently. Randy continued his education through homeschooling, but whenever Selina asked about her education, Belinda would always answer “You already had your education, remember?” And then she’d leave Selina confused.
The only time Selina would get an education was out in the field where Belinda would share her thoughts on Pokemon. She claimed that Pokemon weren’t actually friends, and that one way or another, they’d turn on humans when the opportunity came to take over. Selina questioned if that were true, couldn’t they already do that? After all, Pokemon were the ones with the super powers.
It was one of the few questions Belinda was actually happy to answer.
She countered that while Pokemon had power, humans had intelligence and technology. The Pokeball, for example, was meant to keep Pokemon under control. It’s devices like the Pokeball that kept humans at the top of the food chain, and that without this advantage, Pokemon would turn on them in a heartbeat. Selina said that she thought they were meant to be friends with Pokemon and try to live in harmony.
Belinda simply stated that she’d be a fool to believe such childish nonsense. It was beliefs like hers that kept her from ever being anything other than an insolent child.
The young girl didn’t even realize it, but even as she was arguing in favor of treating Pokemon nicely, Selina didn’t believe her own words. It wasn’t until that very moment that she realized her thoughts on Pokemon hadn’t been like other people she knew for a very long time. She merely mimicked what she thought other people would want to hear… something her aunt seemed to do often.
It was from that moment forward that Selina found a way she could best sustain a comfortable life with her aunt and cousin. Instead of being honest, Selina had learned to lie, and well. Whenever she went out to take her frustrations out on the street, she’d come back and say she just did a little shopping. She’d even show off a new hat or bracelet from someone she stole from to prove it.
She was never certain if her aunt believed her, but it never seemed like she cared at all.
Selina didn’t always get away from her thefts scott free, but the few times she did get caught, she’d put on an act of a “sad child, simply trying to find a way home”. Oh, she didn’t mean to take that watch off the nice lady’s wrist, she just thought it was the watch her mother gave her, surely!
Of course, with no reason to doubt her, the officer would let her go, and the lady would feel so bad for the poor dear that she would give her the watch in hopes she’d find her mother soon.
Of course, that part didn’t always happen, but it was pretty nice when it did.
At the age of twelve, she started sneaking into people’s cars, and one time she did get caught. It just so happened that while she had found an unlocked car, she happened upon one that had a not too happy Yamper sitting on the opposite seat. The girl tried to heed the warning of the growl, but it was already too late, and the girl was zapped by the pup. This time, the cops weren’t so kind to her since not only was there an innocent Pokemon that could’ve been hurt, there’s no way she could say she “accidentally” tried to break into someone’s car. Though she begged them not to get her aunt involved, Belinda was brought in, and was fined for Selina’s crime.
They warned her that if she was caught doing this again, Selina would be put in jail. Of course, in front of the cops, Belinda acted like a perfectly reasonable aunt, saying she was terribly sorry to the man Selina almost stole from, and dragged her back home.
Behind closed doors, Belinda chastised her for doing something so stupid. For a moment, Selina thought that maybe she’d been wrong about herself and that she actually was worth caring about. However, Belinda wiped any chance of that being true away when she complained more about having to pay a fine than anything else.
She punished her the way she always did: distancing herself from Selina, and grounding her until Belinda wasn’t mad anymore.
Luckily for Selina, the sting of having to pay a fine didn’t seem to bug Belinda for very long. On the contrary, the girl wasn’t even grounded for a week, and things were back to how they normally were. That being said, Selina seemed to shift for the worse upon being on the receiving end of Belinda’s apathy. The girl was starting to think that she could drop dead where she stood, and Belinda still wouldn’t care, and that was honestly the thing that caused her constant pain and confusion.
And so Selina finally gave up.
As life seemed to go on, the teen became more and more secluded, refusing to interact with anyone outside of her petty thefts, even if they were old school mates of hers. As the years rolled by, she simply found more and more things to blame for why she hated her life so much.
The stupid Gijinka story, the kids who reinforced that the story happened, Randy and his smug face, the cops who wouldn’t let her get away with her crimes, her father for leaving her, her mother for never being there to begin with as far as she could tell. She even blamed Pokemon. Heck, they didn’t have to have anything to do with her plight, really. If they were happy, she was more than happy to blame perfect strangers that she wasn’t.
She even blamed herself for simply not being good enough.
But of course, Belinda managed to avoid being on that list despite being the core cause of the misery. But how can it possibly be her fault? She’d been the caregiver of children, and she’d been doing it alone! Surely she wasn’t truly to blame for how Selina felt…
Selina needed a change of scenery. She needed to go away… maybe then everything in their house in Vester City would finally be at peace.
It was at the age of 15 when Selina had first taken a good look at Team Rocket as a possibility. While the teen had been making petty thefts, she hadn’t ever truly thought about joining the organization. Even at the moment she considered it, she didn’t think she’d actually do it since she’d always known them to be horrible people.
It wasn’t until she’d heard about the outbreak of Gijinka that she finally opened up to the possibility. That word that had been haunting her for years, had been tugging at her curiosity while simultaneously being the single thing that she hated most. She could finally put the doubt in her head on whether or not they even existed to bed once and for all.
With her continued thievery only becoming more intense since that fateful car break in incident, and her lack of education, it didn’t seem like Selina was cut out for anything else really anyway. The early lessons taught by her father about treating every living creature with respect? At this point, she didn’t remember any of them. She barely remembered what her father even looked like anymore, so did they even matter at this point? He wasn’t here, and the one who was here didn’t seem to care if she lived or died.
So why would she care if Selina never came back at all? She had a sinking suspicion that she wouldn’t be missed.
Selina eavesdropped on conversations, gossiping on where a potential Team Rocket hideout could be, and she finally narrowed the most consistent theory to be that it was in Oasis City. Quite a walk for a young, scrawny girl to make, but it built distance between her and Vester City, right? Maybe it was for the best that she went far away from her home.
Casting all doubt aside, she began her arduous journey to Oasis City. Maybe she could finally find her place in the world with Team Rocket…
The early life of Selina O’Sullivan is mostly blurred to her. She doesn’t really remember what her mother even looked like, or even if she had ever met her. She had early memories of her father, perhaps back when she was four or five, telling her stories at night, and cherishing her as any daughter should be. Her father raised her to treat every creature with love and kindness, from the smallest Joltik, to the largest Wailord, and everything in between. Man and Pokemon were meant to live in harmony.
However, rather early in life, and quite abruptly, her father vanished from her life with no trace. In his place was her aunt, Belinda. She must’ve been her mother’s sister or something, because they never really shared the same name. That being said, Belinda Grant expected Selina to call her mother just like her cousin, Randy Grant. Belinda held a much more strict household, and unlike most loving families, she tended to distance herself from her children for the most part.
Randy, by this point, was used to it by now. He thrived in it, and for the most part, Belinda allowed him to be independent and reckless to his heart’s content. In fact, she’d encourage him to get out of his comfort zone. And he’d do anything to please his mother.
Selina, on the other hand, struggled with the idea of not having a parent readily available emotionally. However, she was chastised when she showed any “signs of weaknesses” in her presence, and would dismiss any of her concerns, which only disheartened Selina. It didn’t take her long to realize she wasn’t going to gain approval or love by doing what her father had taught her, and instead tried to prove how successful she’d be.
However, it was never enough for Aunt Belinda.
She’d get grades just as good as Randy, but his grades always looked more appealing to her. When she’d get better grades than Randy, she’d say that Selina was showing off and shouldn’t try so hard. When she tried to do her chores well, she would say something along the lines of “You know, it would’ve been nice if you didn’t create your dirty dishes in the first place”. There didn’t seem to be anything she could do to please Belinda except just avoid her at all costs, sometimes.
But of course, there were those good times. Family nights were one of the few times Selina felt loved in the family, and she came with that love and attention. It was the one thing where things would go her way, and even when Randy didn’t feel like having the mushy family nights, Belinda would insist that that just meant he needed it more. They would play board games, watch movies, and sometimes even talk.
One day, when she was about eight, Selina happened to come across her aunt's laptop and see her looking into creatures called Gijinkas. Before she could get a decent look at what she was precisely looking at, Belinda slammed the laptop shut and told her that “information like this isn’t meant for little girls” and simply walked out of the room, laptop in tow. This was Selina’s first time learning about Gijinka.
Outside of the home, Selina would hear stories about them, and it peaked her interest at first. She wanted to learn more about them, and more about Pokemon as a result. She went home and asked Belinda about these Gijinkas but she would simply reply that it was all just a little fairy tale, and that Belinda hadn’t looked up such a thing. Belinda even showed her the website that Selina had seen the other day, and there was no mention of Gijinka anywhere.
Selina insisted that the website had said Gijinka somewhere, to which Belinda accused her of calling her a liar. Selina questioned why the other children curiously knew about the Gijinka legend, then, to which Belinda replied “Oh, kids these days will say just about anything to get attention”. In any case, Belinda ordered her niece not to talk about the issue anymore as it was simply utter nonsense, and that if she caught her talking about it again, she’d be in big trouble.
Selina obeyed… but that didn’t stop her from snooping around.
Selina and Randy were never allowed to have internet access or the like. She said it was toxic for the mind, and only got in the way of true education, and that there would be no streaming under her roof by anyone… of course, Aunt Belinda could break her own rules whenever she liked, because if you questioned her, as Selina often did, you’d get grounded.
And when being grounded basically entails you being locked in your room in solitary confinement at all hours outside of school, you learn fast not to break the rules, even the double standard ones.
At least, that’s what Selina had to deal with.
Regardless, Selina managed to find a loophole, and prolong her time away from home when she was around ten. She gained access to the public library, and all the internet access that came with it, since Belinda didn’t really care what time Selina came home and wasn’t looking over her shoulder as a result. The things she found out concerning Gijinka became more and more intriguing, though they seemed to somewhat back up Belinda’s idea of it just being a story and nothing more.
But then… Why didn’t she want Selina to talk about it? Why did she act so weird whenever it was brought up, even getting angry at Andy if he dared to question it?
Selina confronted her that very day with the information that she looked up online, and for several minutes, which felt like hours, Belinda grew silent. Selina questioned why it was so hard for her to answer a simple question, to which Belinda simply replied “You didn’t read anything about Gijinkas”. This… confused Selina all the more. She insisted she knew what she read, but Aunt Belinda continued to askes Selina if there was a legendary Pokemon in the story.
Selina answered yes, and then Belinda claimed that the story she read had nothing to do with Gijinka, and all to do with that legendary Pokemon. It was a cautionary tale on the dangers of being too close to Pokemon, and nothing else.
Selina insisted that her friends at school somehow knew about Gijinkas and that everything she looked up backed their claims up, but before she could even finish defending her claims, Belinda put a stop to it. She simply replied that the children were poisoning her mind and that she should have nothing to do with them, or the outside world in general for that matter. It was just brainwashing her!
Belinda grounded Selina that day for about a month, and took her and Randy out of school permanently. Randy continued his education through homeschooling, but whenever Selina asked about her education, Belinda would always answer “You already had your education, remember?” And then she’d leave Selina confused.
The only time Selina would get an education was out in the field where Belinda would share her thoughts on Pokemon. She claimed that Pokemon weren’t actually friends, and that one way or another, they’d turn on humans when the opportunity came to take over. Selina questioned if that were true, couldn’t they already do that? After all, Pokemon were the ones with the super powers.
It was one of the few questions Belinda was actually happy to answer.
She countered that while Pokemon had power, humans had intelligence and technology. The Pokeball, for example, was meant to keep Pokemon under control. It’s devices like the Pokeball that kept humans at the top of the food chain, and that without this advantage, Pokemon would turn on them in a heartbeat. Selina said that she thought they were meant to be friends with Pokemon and try to live in harmony.
Belinda simply stated that she’d be a fool to believe such childish nonsense. It was beliefs like hers that kept her from ever being anything other than an insolent child.
The young girl didn’t even realize it, but even as she was arguing in favor of treating Pokemon nicely, Selina didn’t believe her own words. It wasn’t until that very moment that she realized her thoughts on Pokemon hadn’t been like other people she knew for a very long time. She merely mimicked what she thought other people would want to hear… something her aunt seemed to do often.
It was from that moment forward that Selina found a way she could best sustain a comfortable life with her aunt and cousin. Instead of being honest, Selina had learned to lie, and well. Whenever she went out to take her frustrations out on the street, she’d come back and say she just did a little shopping. She’d even show off a new hat or bracelet from someone she stole from to prove it.
She was never certain if her aunt believed her, but it never seemed like she cared at all.
Selina didn’t always get away from her thefts scott free, but the few times she did get caught, she’d put on an act of a “sad child, simply trying to find a way home”. Oh, she didn’t mean to take that watch off the nice lady’s wrist, she just thought it was the watch her mother gave her, surely!
Of course, with no reason to doubt her, the officer would let her go, and the lady would feel so bad for the poor dear that she would give her the watch in hopes she’d find her mother soon.
Of course, that part didn’t always happen, but it was pretty nice when it did.
At the age of twelve, she started sneaking into people’s cars, and one time she did get caught. It just so happened that while she had found an unlocked car, she happened upon one that had a not too happy Yamper sitting on the opposite seat. The girl tried to heed the warning of the growl, but it was already too late, and the girl was zapped by the pup. This time, the cops weren’t so kind to her since not only was there an innocent Pokemon that could’ve been hurt, there’s no way she could say she “accidentally” tried to break into someone’s car. Though she begged them not to get her aunt involved, Belinda was brought in, and was fined for Selina’s crime.
They warned her that if she was caught doing this again, Selina would be put in jail. Of course, in front of the cops, Belinda acted like a perfectly reasonable aunt, saying she was terribly sorry to the man Selina almost stole from, and dragged her back home.
Behind closed doors, Belinda chastised her for doing something so stupid. For a moment, Selina thought that maybe she’d been wrong about herself and that she actually was worth caring about. However, Belinda wiped any chance of that being true away when she complained more about having to pay a fine than anything else.
She punished her the way she always did: distancing herself from Selina, and grounding her until Belinda wasn’t mad anymore.
Luckily for Selina, the sting of having to pay a fine didn’t seem to bug Belinda for very long. On the contrary, the girl wasn’t even grounded for a week, and things were back to how they normally were. That being said, Selina seemed to shift for the worse upon being on the receiving end of Belinda’s apathy. The girl was starting to think that she could drop dead where she stood, and Belinda still wouldn’t care, and that was honestly the thing that caused her constant pain and confusion.
And so Selina finally gave up.
As life seemed to go on, the teen became more and more secluded, refusing to interact with anyone outside of her petty thefts, even if they were old school mates of hers. As the years rolled by, she simply found more and more things to blame for why she hated her life so much.
The stupid Gijinka story, the kids who reinforced that the story happened, Randy and his smug face, the cops who wouldn’t let her get away with her crimes, her father for leaving her, her mother for never being there to begin with as far as she could tell. She even blamed Pokemon. Heck, they didn’t have to have anything to do with her plight, really. If they were happy, she was more than happy to blame perfect strangers that she wasn’t.
She even blamed herself for simply not being good enough.
But of course, Belinda managed to avoid being on that list despite being the core cause of the misery. But how can it possibly be her fault? She’d been the caregiver of children, and she’d been doing it alone! Surely she wasn’t truly to blame for how Selina felt…
Selina needed a change of scenery. She needed to go away… maybe then everything in their house in Vester City would finally be at peace.
It was at the age of 15 when Selina had first taken a good look at Team Rocket as a possibility. While the teen had been making petty thefts, she hadn’t ever truly thought about joining the organization. Even at the moment she considered it, she didn’t think she’d actually do it since she’d always known them to be horrible people.
It wasn’t until she’d heard about the outbreak of Gijinka that she finally opened up to the possibility. That word that had been haunting her for years, had been tugging at her curiosity while simultaneously being the single thing that she hated most. She could finally put the doubt in her head on whether or not they even existed to bed once and for all.
With her continued thievery only becoming more intense since that fateful car break in incident, and her lack of education, it didn’t seem like Selina was cut out for anything else really anyway. The early lessons taught by her father about treating every living creature with respect? At this point, she didn’t remember any of them. She barely remembered what her father even looked like anymore, so did they even matter at this point? He wasn’t here, and the one who was here didn’t seem to care if she lived or died.
So why would she care if Selina never came back at all? She had a sinking suspicion that she wouldn’t be missed.
Selina eavesdropped on conversations, gossiping on where a potential Team Rocket hideout could be, and she finally narrowed the most consistent theory to be that it was in Oasis City. Quite a walk for a young, scrawny girl to make, but it built distance between her and Vester City, right? Maybe it was for the best that she went far away from her home.
Casting all doubt aside, she began her arduous journey to Oasis City. Maybe she could finally find her place in the world with Team Rocket…
aeron of thq