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Chapter 1: Friendly Meeting, Friendly Parting

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Author's Notes:
I wrote this story last year with no definite intention of ever posting it anywhere. Even writing it at all was far from a sure thing at first: It began as a programming exercise to calculate on which dates the characters in a hypothetical Pokémon fic would plausibly reach each destination in a travel itinerary. Since I was also at the time reading a bunch of manga by my favorite cartoonist, Mitsuru Adachi, the hypothetical story veered towards the sort of romance that Adachi made me want to be able to write. Whether I succeeded on that front isn't my place to say, but I was happy enough with my program/spreadsheet-driven outlining process to go ahead and write the thing.

Suffice to say, not only is the story already written, the timing of the events in the story constitutes a preposterous house of cards which may preclude me from making many story changes based on reader feedback. Naturally, I still want to hear from people on how/why the story doesn't work for them, but more for my own future improvement rather than for fixing this story as I go, as I would normally try to. The good news is that barring unforeseen changes to my real-life circumstances, I can promise that the last chapter will go up before the end of this year, 2024.

Disclaimer on Content Warnings: I am not well-versed in mental health issues. I have made a good-faith effort to highlight objectionable or potentially disturbing material below, but I wouldn't bet money on my judgment. If you read this and think there should be an addition to these warnings, please message me. If you have questions about the content before reading, whether on your own behalf or on another's behalf, please message me.

Content Warnings (General): Swearing. Violence. Blood. Sensuality. Not recommended for readers below the age of 14.

Content Warnings (Specific, or possible spoilers): Please open this spoiler tag if you require advance notice of certain topics.
Bullying. Emotional manipulation. Animal (Pokémon) abuse.

Table of Contents:





The arrival of the full-fledged “PC” network to Pokémon Centers in 1995 is chiefly celebrated for the public release of the Pokémon Storage System, which afforded unprecedented latitude to roster experimentation. Perhaps underrated in importance, however, is that a PC account came with an inbox.

For the vast majority of trainers, this amounted to their first experience with any kind of electronic messaging. While e-mail and online bulletin boards were not new technologies in 1995, among adolescents they were still limited to the tech-savviest those whose parents could afford a home computer. Now, with the PC network, any journeying trainer could send a message to any other with reasonable hope that it would be noticed in a matter of days, even if the other trainer were clear on the opposite side of the map.

For better or worse, this story stops before the end of 1993.



Just Hold Still



Chapter 1
Friendly Meeting, Friendly Parting

September 4th, 1988

Luke Andersen had just passed a significant milestone: He no longer knew off the top of his head how many weeks it had been since he began his journey. He retraced his path on the map to get an idea. Mahogany to Ecruteak, then to Violet for the “easy” Gym, then to the Ruins of Alph yesterday… about three weeks, he was pretty sure. Hard to believe. He stretched his bare toes, let out a deep breath, and debated whether it was time to change the bandages on his feet. He was getting used to everything about hiking except the blisters.

Zoe, presently out of her Poké Ball, sniffed the air and rose from the base of the tree she’d been lounging against. Her wrinkled trunk led her headlong, which Luke watched with some interest. Although Luke’s Drowzee and only Pokémon was by now perfectly comfortable around him, he couldn’t pretend to know much about what made her tick yet. Before she could get too far away, he pulled his socks and shoes back on to follow. He also took up his camera bag in an automatic motion. His sleeping bag, food, water, etc. occasionally escaped his attention, but it would take a conscious effort to get more than ten feet away from his Camdak SLR-81m.

Luke soon marked the target of Zoe’s purposeful meandering: a heavily laden Berry tree. He wondered how far he could trust her not to give herself a bellyache if he let her pick at her leisure. He also wondered how long it would be until he came across a training question he already knew the answer to. As Zoe inspected the lower branches with a discerning air, however, he suddenly heard a clicking noise from somewhere above.

It was certainly a bug noise, but not one Luke recognized. Knowing without thinking that the window of opportunity may be narrow, he took out his camera even as he scanned the treetops for any unfamiliar sight. He had the strap around his neck and the lens cap removed when he spotted it: a Heracross. He’d never seen one in person, but there was no mistaking Johto’s most famous Bug-type. It clung upside down to the trunk of a tall and spare pine tree, apparently sucking sap. Interesting pose, clear line of sight. Perfect.

Luke put his right eye to the viewfinder and got the Pokémon in focus. The light meter indicated underexposure, which was unsurprising, as his last picture had been taken in direct sunlight. Lowering the shutter speed seemed the correct choice (rather than widening the aperture) since the subject was motionless for now.

He pressed the shutter release. The viewfinder’s image jumped to black and back with a click as the internal mirror lifted to expose the film. Got one.

He flipped the film-advance lever and reconsidered the shutter-speed/aperture tradeoff. Would a narrower depth of field make for a more subject-focused composition? He scolded himself for not knowing the answer instinctively and corrected the settings for the second take. Another click. Got two.

Suddenly, it occurred to him what would be an even better shot. If he could get to the base of the tree without startling the Heracross from its dinner, he might get it looking straight down at the camera. That would really be something. He crept closer, and the subject stayed where it was. He was almost there when a stick snapped underfoot. The Heracross jumped from its spot and labored away through the air with its just-functional-enough wings, as if it had been waiting for an obvious mistake to punish. Luke sighed.

“Aaaaand, there it goes,” came a boy’s voice from behind.

Luke turned in surprise to see three trainers standing uphill: two girls and a boy. The boy clicked his tongue and shook his head, to which the girl in the center laughed. “Oh, relax. It woulda run away if you tried to catch it, too.” Then she waved to Luke. “Hey! Are you a Pokémon photographer?”

“Uh…” Luke struggled with the unexpected question. Did she jump to that conclusion just from his having a camera? Sure, he could use a darkroom, but he barely knew what he was doing when it came to shot-composition, and he couldn’t even keep the properties of different focal lengths straight. Also, a Pokémon photographer? How could anyone commit to that level of specialization at age ten? Maybe she was kidding. By this point in Luke’s deliberation, she had already jogged down to talk to him, so he went with an answer that felt mostly correct.

“…I’d like to be. Someday.”

The girl’s friends followed behind her, the boy in front at a leisurely pace, and the other girl at a halting one. The boy examined Zoe, now shuffling back to Luke’s vicinity, and whistled, impressed. “Wow, never seen a Drowzee before. Is he your starter?”

“She’s a she,” said Luke, “and yeah, starter.” Zoe, never shy, eyed the strangers with interest in turn. “We just started out a few weeks ago.”

“Cool, so did we!” said the first girl. “I’ve never seen a Drowzee, either. How’d you get her?”

My mom bought her from a breeder because she was worried about my insomnia being a problem on the trail. “From my parents.”

“My dad caught mine when I was seven. Wanna see?” She reached for a side pocket on her pack and took out a Poké Ball. “Oh, what’s your name? Mine’s Wendy, and this is Aaron and Nadine.”

Luke was unsure which question to answer first, but he erred on the side of the most recent. “Luke. Uh, nice to meet you.”

“Likewise,” said Aaron, smiling, who took out a ball of his own. “So, which one of us you wanna fight first? We’ve all made eye contact.”

Luke’s entire body tensed up, which must have shown because Wendy smiled, rolled her eyes, and said, “He doesn’t have to if he doesn’t want to, Aaron.”

“She’s right,” added the theretofore-silent Nadine. “There’s no actual rule about eye contact. That’s an urban legend.”

“I call it manners,” said Aaron with a laugh. “But whatever—no pressure.”

“Oh, even better!” said Wendy. “Can you take a picture of us with our Pokémon?”

This took Luke by surprise. Nobody had ever asked this of him before, and the first thing that came into his head was to point out, “It’d be black and white. Is that okay?”

It felt like he was missing some other, more important question, but it wasn’t coming to him. It didn’t help when Wendy responded, “That’s a black and white camera? Cool! Okay, everybody out!”

Luke was going to say something about how cameras were cameras and that it was black and white film, but while he was trying to think about how to phrase it politely, the three kids each sent out a Pokémon. The figure which emerged at Wendy’s feet in a flash bumped all other thoughts from his mind. He had never expected to see a Clefairy anywhere in Johto, much less so soon after leaving home. The plump, pink creature took one look at Zoe with its soft, cheerful eyes, then turned to jump into Wendy’s arms. The way it moved in the air was mystifyingly airy—as if gravity had less of a hold on it than it should.

Wendy said, “Don’t be shy now, girl,” turning the Clefairy back around. Her shyness wasn’t reflected in her bright expression, rather in how she was content to stick to Wendy. Just to be safe, though, Luke motioned Zoe to step back a few paces. She complied.

It was here that Aaron’s Pokémon, a Cyndaquil, uttered a confident squeak and let its fiery quills flare up. Luke hadn’t even noticed it yet, which went to show how suddenly spoiled he was for seeing rare Pokémon. It and the Clefairy utterly and unfairly overshadowed Nadine’s common Sentret, though Luke did notice this one had an exceptionally bushy tail. All told, it was a singular opportunity to be present to take this group portrait. He looked around for a spot with the light coming in at a better angle, then waved the other trainers to it. “Uh… over there’s good.”

“You’re the boss,” said Aaron.

They lined up with Wendy in the center as before. She still held her Clefairy, as did Nadine her Sentret, but Aaron kept his Cyndaquil at his feet. This gave Luke a little anxiety about the composition, as now he couldn’t shoot from the waist up as seemed best to him.

“When in doubt, get closer,” his dad had told him countless times. “The big mistake every new photographer makes is thinking you need to get everything around the subject in frame. If you’re shooting a scene, shoot a scene—otherwise, shoot a subject.”

He thought maybe he should tell Aaron to pick up his Pokémon too, but the thought of saying something so presumptuous made him awfully nervous, especially since he might actually be completely wrong. Instead, he tried to frame them as they were to the best of his ability.

They were already smiling for the camera, which worried him about leaving them posed for too long. “One sec, I’m almost ready.” He hurried to get them in focus and check his exposure, then finally said, “Okay, say ‘cheese.’”

They all said “cheese,” and the Clefairy even raised her arms and sang a note to match the kids’ voices. That was really good, and Luke felt lucky to get in another shot with her holding that pose. “Great, just a few more. Say ‘cheese’ again.” He quickly turned the shutter-speed nob one step faster than his initial estimate for an insurance shot, then one step slower.

“Okay, that should do it.”

“Awesome, thanks!” said Wendy. She set her Clefairy down and walked up to him, staring intently at the camera. This was bizarre, but after a few seconds of confusion, Luke finally realized what he should have cleared up before even getting them posed.

“Uh… it’s not an instant camera. I need to develop the roll first and then make prints.”

Wendy blinked, then turned a shade of red. “…Ohhh.”

“Yeeaaah…” said Aaron. “I was going to ask what the plan was about getting the picture to us.”

“That’s something you have to do in town, right?” Nadine asked Luke.

“Umm, yes, anywhere there’s a darkroom. Sorry, I should have said something.”

“Nah, dumb on us for not asking,” said Aaron, laughing. “Some of us are usually quicker on the uptake than this.” The girls laughed with him, but Luke noticed some hesitancy in Nadine’s laugh, and she seemed to shrink.

“Well, how ’bout this?” said Wendy. “We’re off to Azalea Town next, and if you’re going the same way, we can stick together so we’re there when you do your cameraman thing!”

Aaron snapped his fingers. “Hey, there’s an idea! You can keep up, right, Luke?”

Luke didn’t know how to answer right away. Despite how people (especially his parents) talked about Pokémon journeying as if teaming up were a matter of course, he had always sort of assumed he’d go it solo—mostly because he had no idea how you were supposed to ask to team up. But then, maybe he was reading too much into what Wendy and Aaron were asking. After all, they had implied nothing about sticking together any farther than Azalea Town. When he looked at it that way, it just made sense, especially if it meant keeping this little photo shoot from having been an embarrassing screw-up.

“Sure,” he said. “That’s where I was going to stop next, anyway.”

“Awesome!” said Wendy, clapping her hands and flashing an infectious smile. “We should get all our Pokémon introduced, then. This here’s Sharpy, the Sentret is Quincy, and…”

*********

June 28th, 1993

The television above the bar showed Aaron’s smug face in a box next to some flattering statistics. The screen held the gaze of much of the bar-and-restaurant’s crowd, which at this time of year was comprised as much of trainers as of adults. Next to Aaron’s headshot, a reporter whom Luke recognized but couldn’t name was speaking.

“…now advancing to the Round of Thirty-two for the first time in his three Tournament appearances. His bio says he’s fourteen, but his birthday is in August, and Mr. Barlow has shown as much poise under pressure as any fifteen-year-old this year. He’ll have just enough eligibility left next year for a rare fourth appearance. Now we’ll take another look at his top-notch Typhlosion, ‘Ace,’ finishing off Wallis Flaherty’s Tauros in their elimination battle earlier this afternoon…”

Luke shook his head and forced his eyes away from the screen. He knew it wasn’t good for him to dwell on that period of his life, so he made every effort to bring his full attention back to the table and his companions. It didn’t help that said companions had moved on from their earlier conversation to watch the Tournament coverage. This was fair enough, as they were in Goldenrod City for the same reason as all the other trainers who had been here since the first day of summer: to follow the Indigo League Championship on any and every available TV. It was the same deal in towns and cities all over Kanto and Johto. An unofficial two-week party. And here was Luke, wishing he’d sprung for a restaurant that was too classy to have anything playing but music.

“Daaaaamn,” said Sundeep at what was undoubtedly some impressive replay footage. “That’s a Flamethrower.”

“This dude could make some noise with a starter like that,” added Parker.

Ignore, thought Luke, refusing to let the topic of Aaron regain a foothold in his head. Ignore, ignore, ignore. He shook his head again and scraped himself another chunk of Goldenrod-pancake from the iron griddle in the middle of the table. Yes, better to just concentrate on the food. He took a bite: delicious. Shrimp was his favorite topping, and he loved that sauce. Goldenrod-style “As-ya-like” cabbage pancakes were the best part of visiting the city, easy.

“You don’t look sold, Luke,” said Ken from his left. “What’s your take on this guy?”

“Huh?” Luke was confused for a moment, then realized that Ken must have figured he’d shaken his head no to what Sundeep and Parker were saying. “Oh, no, I was thinking about something else. …No, he’s the real deal.” He immediately regretted elaborating on this point.

“Wait… do you know him?” asked Ken, perceptive as ever. This got Sundeep’s and Parker’s attention as well.

Luke took a few gulps of his root beer just to give himself a second. “…Yeah. Yeah, we were teamed up for a few years.”

Parker’s eyes went wide, as did Sundeep’s. “Whoa, really?”

Luke’s current traveling companions were all thirteen—not that much younger than him—and they, like he, had traversed every route in the region at least once. This meant it was a tad silly the way they regarded him as this wise, trail-worn sage who had seen and done it all. Still, in this case, he had to admit that this former acquaintance of his was on TV, which lent Luke himself an unavoidable air of experience and in-ness. There was certainly much he could say which the sporting news couldn’t, and which he absolutely did not care to. So, he just nodded.

Ken read him like a book. “Didn’t end well?”

“No.” Without thinking, he rubbed his right shoulder, which didn’t actually hurt anymore. “No, it uh… got ugly.”

“Eh, we don’t gotta talk about it, then,” said Parker. “It’s your night, after all! Right, Zoe?”

Zoe, the lone Pokémon sitting in the booth, made a sustained, gravelly noise in the affirmative. It was never an exact science determining to what degree Zoe grasped human speech at the semantic level versus the emotive, and this instance struck Luke as somewhere in the middle. Either way, she responded to the sentiment of indulgence by reaching for Parker’s plate.

“Uh-uh,” said Luke, pointing to the common plate of octo-fritters instead. “You get these, and just two more.” Zoe lacked in both respect for personal property and in the ability to guess how much physical food her stomach could handle. No one could reasonably expect the former from a Hypno, of course, but that’s why Luke was here. She obeyed with a grunt, dipped one of the fried balls in the thick, savory sauce, then enjoyed it with long, thoughtful chews.

“Obviously, I’m really glad to have finally moved on in the bracket, but that’s not my goal here,” came Aaron’s voice from the television, making Luke stiffen momentarily. They were replaying the post-battle interview, each word faker than the last. “I’m aiming for the whole thing, and I owe it to everyone who got me here to keep going. I’ve had help from lots of people, and I’m so grateful to all of them. My Pokémon and I are stronger thanks to everyone I’ve met.”

The broadcast cut back to the reporter. “Aaron’s next opponent is the favorite in the Johto sub-bracket, Grant Fairbanks. We’ll be taking a break, but stay tuned for…”

“He’s done,” said Sundeep. “Grant’s taking it all this year. Slowking beats Typhlosion, and Meganium beats at least two, maybe three.”

“Sure, sure, change of subject!” said Ken.

“Oh, right—sorry.” Sundeep drummed his fingers against the table, presumably thinking about how to word what he wanted to say next. When he did speak, it was to Luke. “So, you thinking you’ll wait to hit sixteen before you go pro, or are you gonna be ready earlier?”

Finally, a question he didn’t mind answering. “Well, I’m gonna play it by ear, but there’s only so much I can get paid before sixteen. And I’ve got a wish-list for filling out my portfolio, so I’ll see how long that takes me.”

“Too cool,” said Parker. “What magazines should we keep an eye on? We gotta see your professional debut!”

Luke smiled. “Heh, no idea. That’d be a lot of reading, anyway. Can’t say I’d recommend it. It’s not like I’ll have a cover-photo first try, and they print those names small.”

“Well,” said Sundeep, “maybe save us a few copies. You can get ’em to us eventually.”

“If I don’t remember, my folks’ll definitely save a ton. And, y’know, fingers crossed on there being a first-published to save. No guarantees.”

“No way, man,” said Parker. “You ask me, you could start tomorrow. You’re good as in.”

“Thanks,” said Luke, not agreeing but appreciating.

This, in Luke’s mind, was the way farewells were supposed to go: known by each party weeks in advance, no hard feelings, and preceded by a nice dinner. His last two stints with other trainers hadn’t concluded nearly this smoothly, to say nothing of the first one. Ken, Sundeep, and Parker, by contrast, had teamed up with “extras” like Luke before, so they knew the drill. Going it together made things easier and more fun, but when your priorities diverged, you accepted it and moved on.

Luke’s last year on the trail was coming up, and he’d known for a while he was going to focus entirely on his photography to prepare for what came next. This wasn’t compatible with the others’ plans, which included winning the Blackthorn Gym Badge after another try or two, then getting bounced after their first battles at the Indigo Plateau and sticking around to watch the Tournament from the bleachers for free—the usual.

Luke himself had long since dropped every intention of getting even his seventh Badge, and he’d already seen the Tournament up close more than once as a little kid when his dad was shooting it. While it had been fun tagging along with this trio for the last eight months as their consulting trail guide and regular conversation partner, it was time.

Sensing it was time in the more immediate sense, Ken grabbed his soda. “I think a toast is in order.”

Sundeep and Parker raised their glasses with the utmost solemnity. Luke lifted his own with a mix of resignation and amusement.

“To Luke,” said Ken. “Photographer extraordinaire, wisest of counselors… and good friend.”

“To Luke!” cheered Sundeep and Parker, raising their glasses higher and coinciding with a loud “Mraaah!” from Zoe.

Luke stifled a laugh, said, “Cheers, cheers,” and dutifully clinked every glass.

After that, the conversation turned to happy times—places seen and things done together. So it went on until the last Tournament battle of the night began, and the TV again seized the attention of the entire establishment. The seasoned veteran from Vermilion City, Zach Stengel, was facing a newcomer in Saffron’s Natalie Lundqvist, whose hyper-aggressive style clearly gave his team fits. This was all to the liking of the Goldenrod crowd, eager as Johtoans usually were to see a Kanto media-darling get his figurative teeth kicked in.

As the battle reached a critical point for both sides and the noise level in the room rose, Ken got Luke’s attention and spoke in a low voice. “Hey, I need to ask one more time. I’m thrilled to have him, of course, but you’re absolutely sure about leaving Shane with me?”

Shane was a Sandslash: Luke’s third Pokémon caught and second-to-last Pokémon left until this morning. “Yes. Absolutely.”

“Okay,” said Ken. “Cause you know it’s not too late? I haven’t even taken him out yet.”

“Trust me,” said Luke. “I’m not going to be fighting enough Pokémon to match his energy level anymore. And he likes you. He’ll be perfectly happy in a few weeks—I’m positive."

“I suppose you’d know best… Okay. I’ll take good care of him. Promise.”

Luke didn’t doubt it for a second. “Thanks. Glad I can count on you.” And he meant it. He’d be lying if he said he hadn’t been scouting all three of these guys to find the right trainer for Shane, and Ken had the insight and patience to click with any Pokémon. Luke didn’t make the decision lightly, and would have opted for release to the wild over the wrong trainer, or even a merely okay one.

He didn’t like it, but it had to be done. He wasn’t going to have the capacity to take good care of two Pokémon for long—and honestly, he’d been pushing it in recent months. All Pokémon needed exercise and attention, and the gung-ho ones needed other Pokémon to rough up now and then. Large teams were for trainers working extra-hard to become competitive, and Luke had no battling ambitions beyond fending off the wild Pokémon he couldn’t avoid entirely.

All this considered, Ken was perfect. And either of Parker or Sundeep would have been excellent. They were great guys—great with people, great with Pokémon. That’s why it made Luke a little ill to know he wasn’t going to miss them at all.

It had been the same story with all the other trainers he’d met and parted ways with over the last two years. He knew he ought to miss them, and how much some of them deserved to be missed, but he didn’t. They were just people he’d known—good people, but not his people. Even when it came to his former Pokémon—whom he’d do anything for—knowing that they were well cared for was enough for him. With each of them, the absence in itself had no hold on him. They left no cavities.

He knew why this was. His brain no longer let him get close enough to anyone for him to truly miss them. The very idea of missing someone ripped his thoughts away from the Shanes, Kens, Sundeeps, and Parkers in his life and fixed them squarely on one person.

On Wendy.

There. He’d gotten through Aaron’s whole stupid television spotlight without thinking about her, but there she was again, daring him to wish he’d never met her. It was easy to wish he’d never met Aaron, but Wendy complicated matters by bringing the second-guessing to the surface. How he might have handled things more maturely. How he and she might have gone separate ways as friends, and maybe not permanently.

How he might not have blown it all to smithereens.

Luke took a deep breath. Then he turned around to watch the battle with everyone else. He had Zoe to consider: It wasn’t good for her dream-diet to have uneasy thoughts swimming about his mind.

Over on the large, flickering screen, Lundqvist’s Raticate cleared twenty yards in a flash and somehow bowled over Stengel’s unready Electabuzz, all but knocking the tournament’s seventh-seeded trainer out of contention. The room exploded. Parker jumped on his seat, Ken and Sundeep started high-fiving everyone in arm’s reach, and Luke decided this should be what set the tone for the rest of the evening.

*********

The sun had yet to climb over the line of trees to his left when Luke looked back at Goldenrod City from the top of a rise on Route 35. The city was too large to be altogether asleep at this hour on a Tuesday morning, but Luke still got the sense of a place that wanted to get as much shut-eye as it could before the early matches began, in anticipation of another late night. Indeed, Ken and company might well have gone back to their sleeping bags after their bleary-eyed, final, official goodbye to him.

Luke himself suffered from no such sleep-deprivation symptoms, and as on near-every morning, he had Zoe to thank for this. She was always amenable to facilitating fast, deceptively dreamless sleep, having a literal appetite for it as she did. It seemed about time for her to walk off whatever last night’s meal had been—Luke, naturally, couldn’t remember—so he opened her Poké Ball and gave her the minute she always wanted to take in her surroundings.

He let out a long sigh, suddenly feeling the length of nearly five years behind him.

“Well, looks like it’s just the two of us, again.”

Zoe looked up at him with an air of mostly-understanding. Though she wasn’t the most sophisticated of conventional mind-readers by Luke’s estimation, she wasn’t the worst at piecing things together, either. Since she knew 1) that she’d been the first, 2) that now all the others were gone, and 3) that Luke had just said something with a hint of melancholy, she probably guessed his meaning correctly. With her right hand still holding steady the string tied to her round, silver pendulum, she extended her left to him, as if to say, “I’m still here. Perhaps she didn’t grasp how the recent departures had been Luke’s own decision, but either way, the gesture put a smile on his face.

“Yup,” he said, giving her hand a few gentle pats—not taking it, since she didn’t like that. “All right. Time to make tracks.”

Zoe wasn’t naturally inclined to exercise, but she stayed in her supportive mood and followed after him with a resolute grunt, pendulum swinging in time with her steps. She couldn’t match his natural stride, so this would be a leisurely mile or two of the day’s trek. He’d keep an eye open for when she got tired and wanted back in her ball. Absent anyone to have conversation with (reciprocal, verbal conversation, anyway), he spent the time thinking about shots he wanted to take.

There was one he already had in mind: a particular view of Violet City’s Sprout Tower, which he was pretty sure he could get from a nearby rooftop. As always, it would take luck in the weather department, but as he had no need to coordinate plans with any friends, he could wait for days to get the perfect conditions. The remaining uncertainties were whether the residents beneath the rooftop would let a stranger borrow their ladder, along with the simple fact that there was no way to know for sure if a picture would really be worth taking until you had your eye to the viewfinder.

He had about five days of walking ahead of him to think of other compositions he might try, or other things he could shoot around Violet City. That timespan was one key difference between now and when he had first left home: walking from Goldenrod to Violet used to take him over ten days, maybe twelve or thirteen. And when he’d get there, he’d be sore and exhausted. Now he barely noticed the trip. It was just a quick blur of routine hiking, camping, and thinking.

Indeed, before he knew it, he was cooking some rice and beans over a tiny camp stove as the sun went down. Zoe was out of her ball again, and was presently inspecting her pendulum for the tiniest of imperfections. She set it swinging as a test. It wasn’t aimed anywhere in particular, but Luke still made sure not to look directly at it, out of habit rather than necessity. As impish and opportunistic as Zoe could be when it came to physical food or unsuspecting Pokémon, she had never once tried to put him to sleep without his asking. They had built this understanding about Hypnosis very early, and it had held all through the journey, even now as things wound down and the end crept into sight.

A few hours later, Luke made ready for bed. He checked the sky, laid out his sleeping bag, changed, and finally checked his own sleep-readiness. On some nights, he was dead-tired but found his thoughts jumping around far too quickly to leave any hope of his falling asleep. On others, his eyes stung too much from fatigue to actually get the sleep they wanted. And on nights like tonight, he was simply wide awake. Any night when natural sleep felt like a remote possibility, he gave it a shot in the interest of perhaps one day getting better at it, but he knew from experience it was usually best to let Zoe do her job. When all was in order, he got her attention. “Zoe.”

She looked at him, nose twitching, which meant she was ready too. “Sleep, please.” This was the single spoken phrase Zoe had the most practice with. She fixed Luke with a stare and let her pendulum swing back and forth. In a matter of moments, Luke’s vision blurred, and he felt a familiar dullness in his other senses. His attention crawled between shadows of people he might have once known wandering in places he might have once been: the vaguest hints of dreams he would soon have but not remember. When he felt the pillow beneath his head and lost track of whether his eyes were open or closed, he mumbled, “G’night, Zoe…”

*********

It was late afternoon when Luke finally reached where the main trail changed from dirt to cobblestones. He came around the last bend and passed the three miniature shrines which marked the western limits of Violet City. From there, it was still a hundred yards until the first scattered, secluded houses, then another quarter mile until the trail widened to a proper street and joined other streets with shops and houses bearing the striking, ornate woodwork of past centuries. Although Violet also had its share of flat, utilitarian, late-twentieth-century buildings, none of them were tall, and they were mercifully distanced from anywhere most people wanted to be.

The Pokémon Center was situated just far enough away from the middle of the city so as to anger neither the locals by its proximity nor the itinerant trainers by its remoteness. Luke hurried since it was almost the golden hour, and the few clouds in the sky had excellent shapes. He wanted to get his trainer-business out of the way and take advantage of the ideal conditions for photography.

Only when the unmistakable red roof and automatic doors came into view did it occur to him that he didn’t really need to stop there. He and Zoe had been accosted by wild Pokémon only once a day since leaving Goldenrod, and each of those encounters had ended nearly as soon as they’d begun and without violence thanks to Zoe’s expert skill at combat hypnotism. She was completely fine, and there were no other trainers’ Pokémon to consider.

Still, Luke was loth to lose a good habit, and it could never hurt to let the machine check up on Zoe. He’d be in and out in five minutes. So, he stepped through the doors and found an unoccupied nurse behind the counter. He handed over Zoe’s ball and his trainer ID as she recited the standard nurse’s spiel that was white noise to all but the newest trainers. She continued speaking as she typed his ID number into the computer, then stopped as something caught her by surprise. “Oh.”

“Something wrong?”

“Oh, no, just says here we’ve got a letter for you.” She pointed at a sticky-note attached to the monitor. This was far more of a surprise than if something had been wrong.

“You sure?”

“It’s the name on the note.” She double-checked his card. “Luke Andersen?”

“Yes.”

“Just a moment, then. Should be dooowwn heeeere…” She disappeared under the counter for a few seconds, rustling through a box by the sound of it. “Ah, here we go.” She popped up again and gave Luke a plain envelope with no stamp—just “Luke Andersen” written on it in a wispy but legible hand. He stared at it for a minute as the nurse resumed her prescribed speech. Then she took Zoe’s ball to the back.

No explanation for this letter immediately came to mind. He’d actually forgotten that Pokémon Centers offered to hold letters addressed to trainers, difficult as it was to estimate when a trainer would next visit his legal residence. But even then, it wasn’t much less difficult to predict when a trainer would visit a given Pokémon Center, so there was little reason to avail oneself of the service unless one had been separated from friends for a few days and was trying to arrange a rendezvous. As nobody besides the three guys Luke had just left in Goldenrod City even knew he’d be coming this way, he was at an absolute loss as to who would have written him here.

He was still pondering this when the nurse came back with Zoe’s ball and the report of a clean bill of health with no procedures performed. He thanked her and left the building, still staring at the envelope in confusion. The next reasonable step seemed to be to read the thing’s contents, so he walked off to find a nice, private-enough place to sit. He settled for a vacant bench in the vicinity of the bridge to Sprout Tower. Though there was plenty of foot-traffic around, everyone was looking at the tower and not at his bench.

He ripped open the envelope—the gracelessness of the tear reminding him of just how unpracticed he was with opening envelopes. Folded inside was a short, hand-written letter. On instinct, his eyes went to the name at the bottom.

They stayed there. Then his mouth fell open.

It took some convincing to get his eyes back to the top of the page.



June 15th, 1993

Dear Luke,

I don’t know if or when you’ll get this, but I wanted to write to ask how things are going with you. If you leave a letter here by mid-July, I’ll probably see it then—can’t promise when I’d see one later or somewhere else. I understand completely if you’d rather just ignore this, and I wouldn’t be offended if you did. But I really would like to hear from you, and I hope you’re doing well, and your Pokémon too, especially Zoe. But no pressure.

Sincerely,
Wendy




Luke’s hands shook. “No pressure,” she said. Incredible. He wondered if she could have written that with a straight face.

This was twice as much pressure as he was prepared to handle. Before he could even think about whether he wanted to write back, questions about the context of the letter bombarded him from all sides. Was she writing him because something was wrong? How would she react to his having mostly disbanded his team? When she said she’d likely be back here later in July, was that for some unrelated reason, or was she going out of her way to check for a reply?

He thought about the timing. Maybe there was some clue there. The letter was dated June 15th, but nothing came to mind that was special about that specific day. Proximity to the Tournament, perhaps? Was she there in person? He didn’t think so—while that could explain her return time, if she’d been here on the 15th, that was too late to reach the Plateau by the 21st. Where could she be now? She was going to be back in Violet in what, two or three weeks? Today was the 2nd… Or no, it was the 3rd…

July 3rd. Today was Wendy’s birthday. For a moment, the thought entered his head that she had planned this—that if he got the letter today, he would feel compelled to write back if only to congratulate her on turning fifteen—and it mortified him that something so ludicrous could even cross his mind. Coincidence, he told himself, stupid coincidence. At the absolute most, maybe the upcoming reminder of the inexorable passage of time and the impermanence of youth had gotten her thinking about days gone by.

Luke found himself cursing birthdays. The outsized influence they held on a trainer’s life almost made him concede credence to the notion of zodiac signs. Of course, the reality was simply that parents of toddlers with roughly proximate birthdays tended to collude to engineer friendships that they hoped would result in the slightly-older kids promising to wait for the youngest to turn ten, so they could all take to the trail together. Safety in numbers. How Luke wished Aaron had been born in the autumn—that Wendy and Nadine would have teamed up with someone else or just themselves. And who knows, maybe that would have Butterfree-effected Nadine into not bailing on training so early, saving her and Wendy even more grief.

He took a deep breath. This was getting a smidge hyperbolic. Yes, the letter was a reminder of the worst day of his life. That didn’t mean he had to let it drive him nuts. This situation called for the maturity he’d sadly lacked on that day. Another deep breath. A look at the clear sky, at the Tower in the fading daylight, and at its reflection in the still water before it. Ten more deep breaths. Then, he was ready to look at this with some perspective.

It wasn’t like he was going to have to step back into the year 1990. This was just a letter from Wendy—not Aaron, just Wendy; who, going by this new evidence, did not hate him. Catching up a little over a letter or two was just the thing to help them shed some baggage before moving on to near-adulthood. Besides, there was no pretending he was uninterested in how she was doing.

After all, he reminded himself, …she was the best friend I ever had.

He stood up, took another look at Sprout Tower, and sighed. It seemed he’d have to forget about catching the golden hour. He wondered which stores would sell envelopes.
 
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Blackjack Gabbiani

Merely a collector
Pronouns
Them
Partners
  1. shaymin
  2. dusknoir
Oh dear, going back to vintage technology. I remember those days. Applying them to a high-tech world like this is going to have interesting consequences.

Going on a journey in days before easy PC usage...goodness that would be quite a lot to handle!

I like Zoe already. Nice way of establishing a bit of her personality in a short time.

I'm going to assume the camera stuff is tech accurate since I don't know enough about cameras for that. But it FEELS like it to an untrained observer at least.

Oh wow, Luke's internal monologue is a good way to establish some of his history. And I like how he overthinks the encounter with the other trainers.

I assume the "one other important question" would be how to get the developed image to them.

Man, I remember polaroids being the height of cool. But I don't think they were a thing in black and white. They could have been idk.

Oh no, a timeskip and Luke is trying to not dwell on "that period of his life"? Friiiick that's ominous.

Goldenrod okinomiyaki I assume? I like the regional flavor. I also like the use of real animals here. It gives it that early-gen flair but also puts us closer to our world and establishes your own sense of the world.

"not agreeing but appreciating" yeah that feels solid.

Aww he cares a lot for Zoe. But I hope it's not at the detriment of his own mental health! And Zoe cares a lot for him too. You do a good job conveying this even with the language and understanding barrier. Reminds me a bit of how my pet parrot displays sympathy.

Oh, are they specifically speaking English? That's a bit surprising in Johto.

You describe the entry to Violet so well!

June 15th, 1993...it's funny, but I can tell you exactly what I was doing the previous day.

There's something bitter about a 15 year old musing on the impermanence of youth, but it also seems to fit very well, especially in a series where kids leave home so early.

Well, I'm curious. I've gotta know what happens next!
 

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Oh dear, going back to vintage technology. I remember those days. Applying them to a high-tech world like this is going to have interesting consequences.

Going on a journey in days before easy PC usage...goodness that would be quite a lot to handle!
In hindsight, I'm wondering if that foreword/intro is worth having there. It's only really there to 1) Establish that the characters can't communicate over a distance easily, which is easy enough to infer from the actual story, and 2) Prime the reader to pay attention to how close the story gets to the end of 1993.

I like Zoe already. Nice way of establishing a bit of her personality in a short time.
Thanks! Something I wanted to do better with this story than my last one was give the main characters' Pokemon more personality and presence, so that's encouraging if I'm off to a good start.

I'm going to assume the camera stuff is tech accurate since I don't know enough about cameras for that. But it FEELS like it to an untrained observer at least.
I took a black-and-white photography class in college, so everything to do with cameras is from my memories of that plus any research (googling) I did to fill in the gaps. I feel pretty confident about it.

Oh wow, Luke's internal monologue is a good way to establish some of his history. And I like how he overthinks the encounter with the other trainers.
Thanks! That internal line of Luke's was one of the first ones I knew would be in the story.

I assume the "one other important question" would be how to get the developed image to them.
Lol, good assumption.

Man, I remember polaroids being the height of cool. But I don't think they were a thing in black and white. They could have been idk.
To my knowledge, they weren't. I imagine that Wendy's house only had a Polaroid camera, so she momentarily forgot there are other kinds of cameras.

Actually, now that I think about it, since "Polaroid" is a real-world brand name, I should probably replace the word with "instant."

Oh no, a timeskip and Luke is trying to not dwell on "that period of his life"? Friiiick that's ominous.
Stay tuned for further developments regarding that period of Luke's life.

Goldenrod okinomiyaki I assume? I like the regional flavor. I also like the use of real animals here. It gives it that early-gen flair but also puts us closer to our world and establishes your own sense of the world.
Bingo! Yes, it's okonomiyaki in that scene, and the "octo-fritters" are takoyaki. Both favorites of mine.

As for animals, I try to refer to them only when there's a compelling reason to do so—for example, to let me describe Luke's okonomiyaki as having "shrimp" instead of "Clauncher." For all my commitment to making a "grounded" setting, I've never been able to cross the line of having people eat Pokemon. Since I also don't want the entire world to be vegetarian, that leaves an under-emphasized sub-ecosystem of actual animals in the background. I just try not to call any more attention to them than early-gen Pokemon did because it's best to take every advantage of the actual Pokemon setting.

"not agreeing but appreciating" yeah that feels solid.
I feel like being able to "disagree with but appreciate" a compliment is an early step to getting past Imposter Syndrome.

Aww he cares a lot for Zoe. But I hope it's not at the detriment of his own mental health! And Zoe cares a lot for him too. You do a good job conveying this even with the language and understanding barrier. Reminds me a bit of how my pet parrot displays sympathy.
Stay tuned for further developments regarding Luke's mental health.

Oh, are they specifically speaking English? That's a bit surprising in Johto.
I'm glad you pointed this out, because I forgot to change this before posting. Basically, I've never decided on what to call the language the characters are "actually" speaking. "Japanese" feels wrong because this is PokeJapan, not real-world Japan. "Tohjoan," which I've seen here and there, is the one I'm closest to picking, but I've never pulled the trigger on it. I used "English" as a placeholder here, thinking about its idiomatic usage in the way you might hear a character say "Was that even English?" in an English dub. In my head, this story is the "Americanized" version of what would originally have been a Japanese story, as were the Pokemon media I grew up with (and like how Tolkien always kept up the pretense of being the "translator" of The Lord of the Rings).

Anyway, I edited those passages to avoid the mention of a specific language right after I read your post, so I beg your pardon for making your remark retroactively confusing. :V

You describe the entry to Violet so well!
Thanks! It was important to me to get that right.

June 15th, 1993...it's funny, but I can tell you exactly what I was doing the previous day.
I might have been rolling over by myself in mid-June 1993, but I'd have to ask my mom to be sure. Anyway, I freely admit that this story has way too many specific dates in it, but the story wouldn't be itself if I excised them.

There's something bitter about a 15 year old musing on the impermanence of youth, but it also seems to fit very well, especially in a series where kids leave home so early.
I'm glad if you think it fits, because I don't think this story can work if the reader doesn't buy into the idea of age 16 being the end of childhood by virtue of being when trainers stop journeying.

Well, I'm curious. I've gotta know what happens next!
Great! I'm always a little wary of throwing my fics into something like Review Catnip because I'd hate for someone to be obliged to read it and then come away thinking it was a waste of time. Glad I've got your attention, and thanks for doing Catnip and for reading!
 
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Chapter 2: Stitches

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Chapter 2
Stitches

December 21st, 1990

Wendy Merrick was stacking wood for a campfire, log-cabin style. It was her turn to cook, and she had one of her specialties planned: Trainer’s Cassoulet. This was a simplification of (if not quite an insult to) a traditional, rich, hearty, slow-cooked Kalosian stew. She had the white beans right, but her choice of preserved meat was cheaper and less varied than what Mrs. L’Enfant would use back home. Worse yet, Wendy didn’t have multiple days to devote to its proper simmering. The seasonings, however, she had expertly identified and gathered herself during the spare moments between hiking and training with her friends and team.

When the logs were ready, she looked around for the designated fire-starter, until she remembered that Ace would still be off practicing with Aaron and Luke. Though it wouldn’t be as handy as getting a Typhlosion’s help, she dug through her pack for the flint and steel. Then, something flitted in front of her eyes, and she lifted her head.

Flurries. She smiled. Perhaps it would be a white Christmas this year?

Christmas and cassoulet made her think of Nadine again, which dulled her smile a little. Their families had always visited each other a few days before or after Christmas. In fact, Wendy’s family, along with Aaron’s, may have been at the L’Enfant house that very minute, enjoying some real cassoulet.

She wondered how it felt for Nadine to be home this time of year, with everyone else being either under ten or over fifteen. Not that trainers were never home for the holidays, but when they were, they were supposed to be visiting, not visited. Their aunts and uncles would ask about where they had been, not about whether they were thinking of trying again. A trainer’s most natural place on Christmas (not best, but most characteristic) was standing in line at a payphone with all the other trainers who were miles and miles from home, waiting to pay twenty Pyen to field those questions.

Wendy wanted to call Nadine this year, but she didn’t know if it would do her friend any good. It might be nothing but a reminder of how she had quit. For that matter, Wendy didn’t want to spoil her own Christmas by knowing the call had hurt more than it had helped, especially not when this year’s was going to be so special.

Today, she and the boys were in the vicinity of the Lake of Rage, only a few days’ walk north of Luke’s house in Mahogany Town, where Mr. and Mrs. Andersen had invited them all to stay from Christmas Eve through New Year’s. This was easily the most excited Wendy had been for any holiday since she hit the trail.

She loved talking to Mrs. Andersen, who by all evidence was the sharpest, cleverest person in the world. And while Mr. Andersen kept his cards closer to his chest, she loved being around him too because he was so, so much like Luke in every way from his speech to his appearance to his temperament. It was easy to imagine she was sneaking a peak at Luke himself thirty-five years out.

All that, and staying at the Andersens’ house would be an opportunity to have Luke show her his old photos again. The last time had moved her more than she thought it would, and in ways she had trouble pinning down. She wanted another chance to figure out exactly what it was she felt, and he felt for that matter, if she wasn’t imagining things.

She remembered that she was looking for the flint and steel. Only a few seconds into her resumed search, though, she heard footsteps.

“We’re back!” said Aaron, who came into view a fair deal before Luke did.

“Great timing,” said Wendy. “May I ask Ace if I can borrow him?”

“Have at it.” Aaron lobbed over Ace’s ball, and he emerged a few feet away from her. His quills flared up in their usual, playful way at the sight of an unlit campfire. Then Aaron said, “I’m gonna put up the tent now, in case the snow picks up.”

“Thanks!”

Luke, on the other hand, said nothing. He simply walked over to his camera bag and sat down. This wasn’t unusual for him after a long round of extra practice. Aaron’s training regimen was as demanding of the trainer’s brainpower and mental endurance as it was of the Pokémon’s strength and stamina, which made it all the more impressive how determined Luke was to keep pace. She would have doubted it a year ago, but at the rate he and his team were improving, they just might pose a challenge for her and hers in a few months. And that was all on top of how much of himself he put into his photography. She smiled. He made her want to work twice as hard.

But dinner came first. “Ace, fire please?”

Ace was on the job even as she said “please.” With a single, measured breath, the “log cabin” was ablaze and ready to go. The moment his work was done, he flopped onto his back and stared at her with every expectation of getting a rubbed belly for recompense. She was happy to oblige. “Thank you, sir.” There was nothing like the naturally toasty fur of a Fire-type.

Wendy remarked at Ace’s seemingly boundless energy. All of her own Pokémon were in their balls taking their needed and well-earned rest following the day’s training, but if Ace had limits, Aaron had yet to find them.

This reminded her: Luke seemed tired more often these days. It wasn’t really affecting him yet, and it seemed to her his Pokémon were keeping up just fine, but she did wonder if it would be a good idea to check in with him on his pace. It was important that it stayed fun for him and for his team. She was pretty sure he knew that, but it never hurt to hear it from someone else.

Though, then again, she also didn’t like to highlight the fact that he wasn’t in the same class as her—much less Aaron—when it came to battling, which was why he was working so much harder to catch up. She didn’t want to discourage him by mistake.

It kept coming up: that question of whether to ask about a friend’s choices, or to trust their judgment and give them space. She knew Luke would say the former while Aaron would say the latter, and as far as she could tell, they were both right. Even when Luke was the friend in question this time, the right answer didn’t come easily to her, which meant she would probably err on the side of not asking. Which was fine in this case—she would know when it really mattered, after all.

But then, would she? Nadine still hung over her head as the ultimate counterexample.

She forced her attention back to preparing dinner. That, at least, was one thing she knew she could do right. At the same time, she heard Aaron walk over to where Luke was sitting.

“Hey, Luke,” he said. “You were saying something earlier about our plans for—”

He cut himself off as Wendy heard the shuffling of feet.

“Hey— OW! The fu—!

Wendy jerked her head up. It took a moment to understand what she saw.

Luke was swinging at Aaron’s face, with full force, over and over. Aaron tried to block his punches and hit him back on the side of the head, but it didn’t even slow him down. Luke only went after him harder and harder. Wendy heard the blows, the yelling, the swearing. A splash of blood sprinkled to the ground.

Ace came unfrozen before she did. With a terrible cry, the Typhlosion rushed at Luke in a blur. He collided. The momentum sent boy and Pokémon both tumbling down the opposite ravine. Luke screamed.

Wendy dashed to the brink; heart racing, head swimming. This isn’t happening, she told herself. This isn’t happening.

She looked. Ace had Luke’s shoulder in his jaws and shook like he was trying to tear his arm off. Luke howled in pain. Wendy’s voice caught in her throat, and after an agonizing second, she saw that Luke’s jacket was smoldering.

Fire Fang.

She wheeled to face Aaron. He held his bleeding nose in his hands and stared down at his friend and his Pokémon.

“Call him off!” Wendy finally screamed at him.

But Aaron said nothing. It was like he hadn’t heard her. He just watched.

Desperate, Wendy screeched the order herself. “Ace! Stop it! Ace!

The Typhlosion held his head still. But he didn’t let go. He just growled, visibly bristling at her words.

Wendy looked to Aaron again, silently pleading. Then, he finally said, “Back.” Ace let go. As he began to stalk his way up the slope, Wendy rushed down it, all while Luke continued to wail.

“First aid kit!” she yelled back at Aaron before turning to Luke’s shoulder. The jacket was completely burned through, and the sight underneath nearly made her throw up. In his writhing, Luke almost rolled onto his side and got dirt in the wound, so Wendy held him down. She fumbled for the canteen on her belt, wishing it had started snowing yesterday so she could pack ice onto that sickening mass of bloody, charred flesh.

*********

Three hours later, the adrenaline was gone. Wendy was sitting next to a hospital bed on the outskirts of Mahogany Town when the full weight of what had happened sunk onto her shoulders and stayed there. Somehow, she had contained the bleeding, set off the emergency flare for the search-and-rescue tower to spot, and made it through the ambulance ride without thinking about anything beyond whether Luke would make it through the day alive and with two arms.

But now? Now, she had to contend with the fact that Luke had just tried to beat Aaron well past the point of drawing blood: to seriously hurt him. It defied belief. Her mind couldn’t reconcile what she knew about him with what she had seen him do.

She looked at Luke where he lay. The sling could have been there from any accident, as could have the hospital gown and the outline of the thick bandage underneath, where the nurses had told her he now had twenty stitches. It was the same story with Aaron out in the hallway: A thoroughly bandaged but unbroken nose could have been from anything. It didn’t make what she had seen real.

What made it real was Luke’s face. His jaw had been clamped shut since she entered the room. He glared at the ceiling with eyes that looked like they might never blink again. It was all she could bear to listen to his manic breathing. But she stayed. She needed an answer, or at least an excuse. It was too much to hope for the excuse to be convincing, or even to make sense, but it at least needed to make today feel less like a demented fever-dream.

She was still afraid to ask, though. “They called your parents,” she said. The voice sounded too quiet and shaky to be her own. “They’re on their way now.”

Luke gave no sign he’d even heard her. Wendy’s hands began to shake, but she grabbed her knees to control them. Then, she finally asked it.

“I… I want to know what’s wrong… why you hit Aaron like that.”

Luke breathed in sharp and held it for several seconds. He didn’t answer when he breathed out.

“D… did he deserve it? You didn’t s… stop after his nose started bleeding.”

Again, silence. Wendy struggled to think of another way to ask, but eventually it was Luke who spoke first.

“I’ll apologize to Ace,” he said, clearly straining to keep a level, neutral tone. “It wasn’t his fault. I shouldn’t have spooked him.” The tone broke down. “But if I ever, ever see Aaron’s face again, I’m going to break his teeth.”

Break his teeth. Her own teeth nearly chattered at the words. How could Luke not have had enough? Did he have to see to it that Aaron came off worse than he did? No, all he seemed to care about was that Aaron went away for good, whatever it took. But why?

Wendy’s eyes welled up. “Please… Just tell me what’s wrong.”

“Why.”

Now his voice was full of offense, as if he had taken her plea as a deliberate insult. No matter what she said, it just kept falling apart. “Because I need to know how to fix this!”

He turned his head away. He hadn’t looked at her once since she came in, and now she couldn’t even see his eyes. “There’s no point,” he said. “You wouldn’t even get it. Or you’d be on his side. There’s no point. I’m done.”

On his side? She never knew there were sides to be on. And “done?” Did he mean he was done with her too, part and parcel with Aaron? That no matter what, she was losing him?

Now she recognized the desperation welling up in her stomach. She hadn’t noticed it with her mind stuck on the violence and the medical emergency, but the worst feeling in the world was back. It was all happening again, just like two years ago. She wasn’t ready for it this time, either.

Her heart pounded. She had to find out what she was supposed to say. Right now.

“I’m on both your sides! Just tell me what it is! I won’t blame you!”

His free hand clenched the sheets. “I said I’m done.”

She was already too desperate to think about her words until after she said them. Anything that came into her head, she tried.

“This doesn’t make any sense!”

Unless I missed something.

“You were the best of friends this morning!”

Or I took their normal behavior at face value.

“How can one bad day mean more than all the time you’ve been together?”

Why do I still think it was just about today?

“We said we were going to Indigo, all three of us, and we’re so close!”

It was four of us when we set that goal, and now it’s going to be two.

Luke’s breathing was getting erratic again. He twitched. She knew she was making it worse, but she couldn’t stop. This could not happen again.

“You can’t just give up like this!”

Luke’s back spasmed. Then he exploded. “Get out!

Wendy sprung to her feet in alarm, but was too stunned to step away. She had never heard any noise like this come out of his mouth. She could almost feel his throat tearing itself to ribbons.

Geeettt! Ouuuutt!

She backed away, bumped into a stool, then stumbled into the woman who rushed into the room. The nurse practically shoved her out the door as Luke’s screaming devolved into incoherence.

Wendy could only stagger down the hallway. At first, she had only a mind to get out of earshot. That awful, unrecognizable voice was too much to bear any longer. Soon, either the nurse managed to quiet Luke down, or there were too many walls between them for the sound to reach her.

She needed a friend. Badly. Her thoughts turned to Aaron, who might as well be her only friend in the world, now. She looked up from the floor, and as if he’d known how much she needed him just then, there he was.

He walked toward her. Wendy had every intention of throwing her arms around him and crying her eyes out. But the bandage on his nose gave her pause. She didn’t want to jostle him too much. During that pause, she noticed the harsh look in his eyes, and it stopped her cold.

“You done?” he asked, as if she had committed some offense in taking so long to talk to Luke.

If he had asked the question in other words or in a different voice, she might have said yes. She had no hope of changing Luke’s mind, and Aaron should have been the first one she’d gone to confide in, to escape with. But something told her there could be no commiserating with Aaron as he was now—that any sign she was loth to leave Luke behind wouldn’t be treated kindly.

Instead of answering, she finally asked, “What happened?”

‘What happened?’ He’s a psycho. He snapped. That’s what psychos do. You think I had anything to do with it?”

“I… I never said you…” She clutched her temples and groaned. “He’s not a psycho! That’s why none of this makes sense!”

“Oh, so it’d make sense if it was my fault?”

“No! I said it doesn’t make sense, period!”

A passing nurse glared and shushed them.

Aaron spoke again, quieter this time but with even more acid in his voice. “This is why I didn’t want to tell you what bad news he was. You still don’t want to believe it. I was hoping you’d get the picture when something like this finally happened, so you’d agree we need to get the hell away from this guy.”

Wendy gaped. It was like someone had replaced both him and Luke with imposters while she wasn’t looking. This might have been why the first thing she asked was, “…How long have you thought this?”

“‘Thought?’ That took a few weeks. I’ve known it for at least a year.”

His answer wasn’t just wrong: It was pathetically, obviously wrong. Even if there were some tension she had missed between them, it could not have been like this. It bewildered her that he expected her to believe it over everything she’d experienced for herself all this time. There was no hiding her disappointment.

“You’re lying.”

Wendy had never said those words to anyone. She didn’t know if anyone had ever tried to tell her this plain a falsehood on purpose before. She never imagined Aaron of all people ever would.

“Oh, come on! You saw what he did! Normal people don’t go from zero to sixty over nothing like that!”

That wasn’t the lie Wendy meant, and she had a sick feeling Aaron knew it. “Even if you’re right—even if Luke’s… got problems… and he’s not safe to be around… you couldn’t have known it for a year, or even thought it. You can’t just pretend to be that good of friends with somebody for that long. Nobody can. Nobody should.”

At this, Aaron balked. Wendy went on. “You’re asking me to believe you could lie about being friends with him day-in, day-out for two whole years! I know that’s not you. I can’t even believe you’d want me to think that’s you.”

Aaron remained speechless, however much he tried to start a sentence. He seethed. But she didn’t want him to be angry, and she wasn’t trying to trap him. All she wanted was the truth.

“Just take it back,” she said, hoping against hope he’d grab the rope she was lowering him. “Just say you made it up because you’re mad.” She fought back the tears, but couldn’t keep her voice steady. “I can understand that. I can’t understand this.”

He stared at her with a fixed, bitter expression for what felt like an eternity. This was more than enough to mark his eventual reply as a lie beyond any shadow of a doubt: “I’m not lying.”

In that moment, it was as if something passed out of Wendy, possibly never to return. She had never felt so alone, nor so disgusted by the proximity fellow human beings.

The latter problem was easy enough to solve. “I’m leaving,” she said.

Wendy turned around and walked away. There was no need to debate her plans, since she had no friends to make plans with. They had all been swapped out with strangers that morning, if not earlier. At first, she meant to head straight for the main entrance, but she remembered her pack was still sitting outside the room where one of the imposters was.

When she found it, barely slowing down to sling it over her shoulder, she suddenly heard Aaron from back the way she came. “Look, are you—”

She wheeled on him and screamed, “Don’t follow me! I said I’m leaving!

Then she ran to the lobby, ignoring each nurse she passed who told her to walk. Just as she burst out the front door, she thought she caught Mr. and Mrs. Andersen in her peripheral vision. She didn’t slow down. The urge to cry both returned and overcame her, but she kept running.

She wasn’t fast, but she could go for hours. At each intersection, she took the turn she knew the least, less to keep from being followed than to make it so she couldn’t turn around and easily find her way back. When she realized this was what she was doing, she finally stopped.

Wendy stood at the bottom of a ravine on a deserted Mahogany Town backroad that wasn’t three miles from where she was supposed to have spent Christmas and New Year’s. She fell to her knees, put her head in her hands, and bawled.

*********

July 3, 1993

Wendy lay awake in her sleeping bag, staring at the stars and remembering. Though she had been fifteen for only an hour, age twelve felt farther away than it had the day before. That was how old they had all been on the worst day of her life. The memory of that day hadn’t kept her up all night every night—not even most nights after a month or two—but she knew this wouldn’t be the last time, either. In fact, it had troubled her more the last few weeks than it had in some time, surely because of those letters she’d left for Aaron and Luke.

She knew there wasn’t much hope of their writing back, assuming they got the letters in the first place, and even less of them saying what she wanted to hear: that it was high time to at least see each other, even if only to talk and not to go so far as to bury the hatchet. A mere frank discussion of the hatchet and whether it should stay above ground would be enough.

The question had never stopped vexing her: What on earth had made them so furious at each other? For as clearly as she remembered every agonizing minute of that day—maybe even every word spoken verbatim, it felt like—she’d never come any closer to piecing together the answer. Going by her working hypothesis, there was likely blame to go around, even to herself (though she had no idea how). Regardless, she could still think of nothing to explain such a sudden, violent, irrevocable turn.

As usual, she looked back to older memories of Aaron and Luke to find any clue, however tenuous. And as always, she kept dwelling on ones that were too happy to be of any help, which finally got her to sleep.

When the sun came up, the past gave way to the present again. She rose, stretched, and walked down to the river to wash her face. Amanda was already there to fill her canteen.

“Mornin’, sleepy-head,” said her friend, who in all likelihood had managed to wake up first by a whopping five minutes.

“It’s too early for insubordination.”

“Ma’am, yes ma’am!” said Amanda in her worst joke-voice and with a mock salute.

Wendy was, strictly speaking, not Amanda’s superior. She was merely two years older and had been volunteering for the Johto Conservation Society for longer. While the reason Amanda was with her on this surveying excursion was so Wendy could show her the ropes, neither of them was technically on the org chart at all. After Wendy dunked her head in the water—fresh from Tohjo Falls—she got right into laying out the morning’s work.

The work was testing water quality. Soon, they had out an array of test-tubes, filters, and other instruments. They also let out one Pokémon each: Wendy’s Clefable, Sharpy, and Amanda’s newly caught Doduo, Gemini. Clefable weren’t known to be outgoing with Pokémon outside their own evolutionary line, but Wendy had made a point of socializing Sharpy thoroughly from a young age. Sure enough, Sharpy was already trying to teach Gemini to get his two heads to harmonize on melody she supplied.

“Wow,” said Amanda, taking her eyes from the turbidity test. “She’s really something.”

Wendy smiled. She knew it.

“I know I asked last year, but you said her name’s short for ‘C-Sharp?’”

“Close,” said Wendy, “F-Sharp.”

“Why ‘F?’”

“Cause when my dad caught her, F♯ was the only note she’d sing, and it sounded better than ‘G-Flat.’ She’s branched out since then.”

Amanda whistled. “That’s some real A-game naming. Do you think Gemini’s too basic?”

“Nah, say it’s an oldie but a goodie,” said Wendy, meaning it. “Besides, you don’t want to go over the top with the name just cause he’s got those green feathers. It’d go to his heads.”

Amanda just smiled and continued to watch her miracle-catch play around with Sharpy. Wendy didn’t mind some mild neglect of the work. The absence of strict deadlines was among the perks of being a trainer-volunteer, and who could blame Amanda for relishing the catch of a lifetime?

It had been when they were out tagging flocks of Do’s -duo and -drio for Society researchers when Wendy was lucky enough to spot the stray green feathers. Luckier still, the flock they subsequently tracked down had several Doduo of rare plumage, so the Society’s rules concerning which rare subjects field surveyors were allowed to catch gave Amanda enough leeway.

As for Wendy, she was done catching new Pokémon. All but her starter had moved on to new families. She couldn’t see herself getting around to that last Gym Badge anymore, and as with most other fifteen-year-olds (even those others who had been fourteen the day before), she was already thinking about the future. Sharpy would always be part of that future, and her eventual job would certainly call for a Pokémon so she could take to the field without worry, but it wouldn’t call for a whole team.

An hour later, they had finished taking their measurements and were on their way back to Route 27, and thence west to Johto proper. They kept within eyesight of the rocky coast, but didn’t battle any of the fishers they passed. Pitched battles (to say nothing of the entire Pokémon League system) were, in Amanda’s words, “totally fascist.”

“So, you’re going to work for JCS full-time when you’re done, right?” asked Amanda.

“I’m undecided,” said Wendy. “It sounds great, but they don’t have a ton of full-timers, and it might make more sense to go to school first. Geology degree, maybe zoology. Whatever I do, I want it to get me outside a lot.”

“I might apply soon as I’m back at HQ,” said Amanda, “so long as they keep me on the trails and away from the desks. I think there’s a real chance to make a difference, here.”

Wendy suspected Amanda may be serious about this plan. “You’ll run into child-employment laws, you know,” she said. “I don’t think they can hire-hire anyone under sixteen.”

“Hey, if they’re serious about healing the world, they’ll lie about my age.”

Wendy laughed. “I think you’d have an easier time passing for eleven.”

“Whatever. If they don’t, I’ll head to Hoenn and see if the Rangers will.”

She would never say it out loud, but Wendy almost hoped the JCS or the Rangers would perform some age fraud on Amanda’s behalf, if only because this way Amanda was more likely to pursue her long-term goal through cleaning trash, monitoring Pokémon populations, etc. instead of bombing power plants.

“Anyway,” said Amanda, “How far do you think it is to New Bark?”

“We could get there around sundown, if you can keep up.”

“Try me!”

Wendy did try her, and they made it in time to spend the night in town. Their next destination was to be Violet City—a six-day walk at Wendy’s usual pace. There they planned to split up again, with Wendy turning south for Ilex Forest, and Amanda continuing counter-clockwise to Goldenrod and JCS headquarters.

Violet City was also where, try as she might to keep her expectations in check, Wendy couldn’t help but wonder if there would be any letters waiting for her at the Pokémon Center.

*********

It was dusk, and Amanda was regaling Wendy with the time she and her Caterpie got a logging company’s machinery completely gummed up with string when they finally reached the eastern outskirts of the city. Wendy’s irrational sense of anticipation got more and more of the better of her as they passed through the familiar lamplit streets leading to the signature red roof. It took repeated internal admonishment to keep her mind under control when it came into view.

It’s only been a month, she told herself. Neither of them has probably even been here. You’ll just have to rewrite the letter and leave it in a few more towns. And if they read it and don’t reply, there’s nothing to do about that. The past is the past.

There’s probably no letter.


“Hey, you good?”

Wendy realized that she had stopped just outside the building and was staring at it. “Yeah,” she said. “Yeah. Thought I forgot something, that’s all.”

They walked in. Amanda dropped off her Pokémon first, while Wendy tried to both look and feel casual, continuing her mental anti-pep-talk. Then it was her turn, and she finally felt ready for the same utterly rote interaction as always.

But then,

“Oh! There’s a letter here for you.”

Wendy suddenly found difficulty in keeping her feet on the floor.

“Two weeks in a row with letters getting picked up,” said the nurse as she dug below the counter. “I think that’s a record.”

Amanda poked her head across the counter, then asked Wendy, “What’s this about a letter? You in trouble or something?”

“I don’t think so,” she said.

“Know who it’s from?”

“Nope,” which was technically true.

The nurse resurfaced and handed Wendy the envelope. Amanda immediately inspected the handwriting. “Ooooooh, I think it’s from a booooooy!” she said in extremely under-fourteen-years-old fashion.

“Amanda, not now.” Wendy let no irritation into her voice, just the calm, unambiguous message that this letter wasn’t one to joke about. Amanda got on the same page at once.

While the machines checked on their Pokémon, Wendy took a vacant chair in the corner. She examined the handwriting herself, when it occurred to her that she’d never learned to recognize Aaron’s or Luke’s handwriting. Training and hiking didn’t often call for pen and paper. The letters which comprised “Wendy Merrick” sure looked like they were from a boy, and one whose parents made sure he knew cursive before he left home, but that didn’t narrow it down.

“You know…” mumbled Amanda, abashed, “if it is from a boy, I think that’s cool, and I’m happy for you.”

Wendy’s mouth thinned to a frustrated line. She didn’t want to fault Amanda for misunderstanding in an un-joking way after her younger friend had so graciously and obediently pivoted to taking the matter seriously. Since there was no shaking her, Wendy decided it’d be best just to explain. She took and released a deep breath first.

“It should be from one of the guys I first teamed up with. I left each of them a letter here while we were on our way to the Falls cause I wanted to know how they were doing, and… well.”

Amanda sat down opposite her. “That was the… big falling-out, right? I know you said something about it once, but I don’t remember the details.”

Wendy shook her head. “I wouldn’t have told anyone the details.”

“Not asking, not asking,” said Amanda, waving her hands. “I can take your word for it. For one thing, you were right to bail when Genevieve and Emily started getting after each other. Wish I’d stuck with you instead then.”

Wendy turned the envelope in her hands. “Well, that made me one-for-three with these things. And I missed any signs on this one. I still don’t know what they were.”

“That’s rough.”

“Yeah.”

Wendy, along with Amanda, continued to stare at the envelope.

“…You gonna open it?”

Wendy knew she was going to, of course, but she couldn’t bring herself to say so until she decided whom she wanted it to be from.

She definitely worried the most about Luke. He was the one she’d left with a messed-up shoulder and in by far the more distressing emotional state, which she couldn’t deny scared her to think of what he might write. Aaron, at least, she knew was doing well enough to be in the League Tournament, so the worst case for his letter couldn’t be nearly as bad. In the end, she decided it would be better to hope for an end to the worry than to keep putting it off, so she crossed her fingers for Luke.

One more deep breath, fingers still crossed, and Wendy nodded. Then, she worked the seal bit by bit until she had the letter to read.



July 6th, 1993

Dear Wendy,

Thanks for the letter—it was nice of you to write. Happy to say things are all going well on my end. It’s just me and Zoe now, and she’s the picture of health. She’s only gotten smarter, too. Usually seems to have an idea of what I’m thinking, which can be good or bad depending on if she feels cooperative. I spend most of my time now working on my portfolio. Got a good angle of Sprout Tower yesterday, and next I’m off to give the Ruins of Alph and then Ilex Forest another go. Want to have recent pictures for as much of the region as I can by the time I apply for jobs.

Hope things are going well with you, too. If you get this and want to write back, I wouldn’t mind hearing about what you’re up to and how your team’s doing. Say hi to Sharpy and Feldspar for me.

Thanks again, and happy late birthday,
Luke




Wendy leaned back and exhaled in relief.

“Nice letter?” asked Amanda.

“Nice letter,” said Wendy.

She held it out for Amanda to read for herself, feeling this was the best way to assure her junior colleague of the unexciting pleasantness of its contents.

Amanda perused the text with care, then nodded. “Nice letter.” She handed it back. “Is he a painter or something?”

“Photographer. He should be going pro next summer. I’m just way relieved since he was the—” She faltered.

Amanda gave her a moment, but only a moment. “... ‘The?’”

“...He was the one who snapped. It was really, really bad. I can’t tell you how much easier I’ll sleep after how normal that letter was.”

Amanda grinned. “Guess I can still say it, then: ‘I think that’s cool, and I’m happy for you.’”

Wendy smiled back. “Thank you.”

“So, that leaves the other one, then. Is he safe to talk about?”

Wendy considered this for a moment. “Pretty safe, I think, but you wouldn’t like him. He was just in the Tournament.”

Amanda clicked her tongue. “Fascist. Got it.”

“Yeah, yeah,” said Wendy, with her usual dismissiveness of Amanda’s more idiosyncratic political opinions. “Anyway, I’ve known him much longer—since we were babies, basically. I’m not worried about whether he’s stable, just… it’s still hard.”

“I get that.”

The two sat in silence for some time, letting the normal sounds and conversations of the Pokémon Center fill the air, some pertaining to their own little dramas.

The next day, Wendy would say goodbye to Amanda again, but not permanently, even if it might be for a good while depending on what the Society needed done.

What filled her mind, though, was the fortuitous overlap between her immediate plans and Luke’s. If he spent a good chunk of time exploring the Ruins of Alph, there was a good chance she’d reach Ilex Forest before him, and could be confident he’d find her reply if she left it in Azalea Town. And if her guess was off, then maybe—just maybe—she could be off exactly enough to run into him in town, and see for herself if they were ready to put what happened behind them. Maybe it could even be the two of them extending an olive branch to Aaron together.

She knew she was getting ahead of herself. The most important thing, and the reason she did in fact sleep easily that night, was that she finally knew Luke was okay.
 
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Chapter 3: Quitter

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Chapter 3
Quitter

September 16th, 1988

Luke was in the middle of trying to get two trainers and two Pokémon in frame without over-busying the composition of the shot. The trainers in question were Aaron and an older kid who, by his own admission, spent most of his time in this very corner of Azalea Town’s greenhouse Gym, where his Venonat and Aaron’s Hoothoot were now having it out.

Even preoccupied with the camera as he was, Luke could tell the older kid had reams of experience with the sort of trainers who came into the Bug-type Gym thinking any old Fire-type plus any old bird would be enough to steamroll the entire place. Ace was already done, having succumbed to confusion and poisoning before Luke could blink, much less get a decent picture.

He’d just gotten an adequate shot of the Venonat slipping away from the still-unnamed Hoothoot’s talons when he noticed Wendy was sitting next to him. She clearly meant to ask him a question, but seemed reluctant to break his concentration. Since little was worse for his concentration than having an unanswered question looming over his shoulder, he said, “Go ahead,” while putting his eyes back on the fight.

“Sorry,” she said, “didn’t mean to distract you. I was just wondering how many pictures you can take with one roll of film. You went through the last one real quick.”

“Oh,” said Luke, “I didn’t actually shoot most of it. I switched to a higher speed for the battles in here.”

Wendy stared at him in rapt attention, apparently expecting further explanation. “Um, basically, if the speed of the film is too low, fast movement like in a Pokémon battle comes out blurry in the picture.”

“Why don’t you just always use the fast film, then?” asked Wendy.

“It’s grainier. Also costs more.” It was dawning on Luke just how much of what he thought was common knowledge about photography might, in reality, be a tad specialized.

“I see…” Wendy nodded slowly. “I never even heard of that before.”

Luke was about to proceed to explain that the cloud cover outside, while helpful for even lighting, limited the absolute amount of light in the space and further necessitated fast film when Wendy returned her attention to the bout, cheering, “Come on, Hoothoot!” before whispering to Luke, “You think Aaron can come back, here?”

“Hmmm…” muttered Luke, involuntarily trying to give the impression that he had more of an idea than he did. The Venonat was clearly stronger, and the Gym-trainer knew what he was doing, but Aaron was adjusting. He had Hoothoot reacting quickly to disrupt the Venonat’s attempts at readying a debilitating move, rather than over-committing to an attack early and opening the door for the Venonat to dodge and counter. Luke could see it going either way. More than guessing the outcome, though, he wished he could just tell what each Pokémon was going to try in the coming seconds. That’d make it much easier to get good shots.

“Oh…” Wendy soon whispered in disappointment, “…He’s lost.”

Luke didn’t admit out loud that he had no idea of which development she’d noticed to declare this, but sure enough, Hoothoot’s quickness flagged long enough for Venonat to wrestle him down and coat him in at least two kinds of unpleasant powder. The owl Pokémon put up a brave show from there, but it wasn’t in the cards. Aaron, too, kept up his coaching to the end, but it probably wasn’t within any trainer’s ability to think or will a way to win this one.

Nadine rejoined Luke and Wendy as Aaron shook hands and conversed with the victor. “I got beat too,” she said, frowning. “Wasn’t close.”

Wendy smiled, though. “Looks like me and Luke got our work cut out for us!”

Luke froze when he heard “we.” It raised a few intimidating questions. First, did they expect him to actually take on one of these trainers? He had been planning to observe the fights and then decide whether Zoe was up to the task, especially since he had still neglected to catch another Pokémon. Second, was he already “one of them” to the degree it was just assumed he’d be doing whatever they did, including taking on Gyms he was months away from being prepared to clear?

Wendy spotted an unoccupied regular in the next clearing over. “Well, wish me luck!”

Nadine said, “You got this.”

After Wendy jogged off, Luke asked Nadine, “Does she got this?”

Nadine shrugged. “Probably not if Aaron lost? But I never count her out.”

Aaron, having wrapped up pleasantries with the opponent, walked over to them. “Okay! Who’s up next?”

“I’m already done,” said Nadine, staring at the grass.

“Your guys get outmatched, or didja freeze up again?”

Nadine mumbled something inaudible. Luke was thinking Aaron might have phrased it less bluntly when Aaron caught him off guard by asking, “Okay then, Luke, you ready?”

“Uh… I’ve got to put the camera away.”

As he pulled the lens cap out of his pocket, it occurred to him that since he didn’t say, “No thanks, I’m just watching today,” he had already in essence volunteered to fight the trainer with the Venonat. He knew it should have been an easy matter to stow the lens cap again and say, “Actually, I’m going to take pictures of Wendy’s battle,” but the thought of backing out embarrassed him too much. Despite every better instinct screaming at him that his one Psychic-type Pokémon wasn’t up to taking on any regulars at a Bug-type Gym, he capped the lens, then the camera back in its bag.

After he stood up, locked eyes with the older trainer, and raised his hand in confirmation, Aaron gave him some rapid advice. “Even if he sticks with that Venonat, don’t let your guard down. I didn’t weaken him as much as I thought I would. Keep up the attack and hope for a lucky hit. If he dictates the pace or gets any status moves in, you’re toast. Remember, the only way he’s going easy on us is by using his weakest Pokémon. He’ll still be coaching to win.”

“...Uh-huh,” said Luke, feeling sick to his stomach.

“Good luck!” said Aaron, clapping him on the back and sending him off to his doom.

When he was in position across the clearing from the regular and his Venonat, he made the customary nod, which the regular reciprocated.

“I’m sticking with this guy,” said the regular of his Venonat, suggesting that to surrender this foreknowledge was no handicap whatsoever against a trainer like Luke. “Whenever you’re ready.”

Luke unclipped the lone ball from his belt, swallowed, and threw it, forgetting to put the requisite verve into his voice as he called, “Go, Zoe.”

Zoe came out flat-footed and aloof, whereas the Venonat was off and running as soon as the regular barked, “Tackle!”

The little fuzzball of a bug was by no means a champion sprinter, but with Zoe so slow to realize there was a fight happening, and Luke so slow to think of what order he was supposed to give, it had no trouble making contact. The combatants tumbled a bit, but Zoe had a significant mass advantage and wasn’t too fazed, unlike Luke.

As they settled, the regular ordered, “Poison Powder!” which finally clued Luke into the fact that, at least on offense, he had a type-advantage.

“Confusion!”

It was a bad trade-off. Zoe’s face was downright caked with the poisonous dust by the time she was focused enough to attune to the Venonat’s brain. By then, the regular had already called in another Tackle. The blow to the gut threw Zoe off balance again, and though it didn’t stop her from getting off the attack, the Venonat barely whined and squirmed when the telltale hum filled the air.

Aaron yelled at Luke, “Come on, hit back or get some distance!”

Luke was at a loss for which half of the advice to follow. When the Venonat charged again, he fell back on the strategy that hadn’t worked the first time. “Confusion!”

All this resulted in was Zoe getting knocked down two more times before an even feebler hum kicked in, scarcely bothering the Venonat. Luke was aware he was calling for a distance move in close quarters, moreover one that Zoe wasn’t skilled enough with to execute quickly yet. But calling for Pound or telling her to fall back for positioning didn’t feel like they would work either. He also saw Zoe panting and coughing now. She didn’t look hurt-hurt, but he knew the Tackles couldn’t feel like nothing either, also that the poison was surely setting in.

Just then, an option came to mind which his brain didn’t immediately reject, so he went with it. He waved his arms and held out Zoe’s Poké Ball.

The regular was taken aback for a moment, but then he said, “Venonat, return!”

The little bug hopped back to its trainer. On the other side, Zoe slumped her shoulders, snorted, and wiped some dust from her face. Luke jogged up to her, whispered, “Sorry. We’ll go right to the Pokécenter,” before letting the ball zap her back in.

He walked to the regular and stuck out his hand. At least he wasn’t forgetting the formalities. The older trainer shook his hand and asked, “Your only Pokémon?”

“...Yeah,” said Luke, disappointed in himself.

“Hey, don’t sweat it. She’s pretty tough—gonna be a real team-ace with practice.”

“Mm-hm.”

“What I’d do in your shoes is catch a Pidgey outside town to back her up. They’re a breeze to train once they warm up to you.”

“Mm-hm.” His voice didn’t show it, but it was some comfort to Luke that the Gym-trainer talked to him like he hadn’t put up an embarrassing display. Gym-trainers must get plenty of practice being nice to hopeless cases, he figured.

“Hope to see you back soon!”

“Thanks.”

Luke turned around to walk back to his bag. Nadine, it seemed, had gone to watch Wendy’s battle—which, by the sound of it, was ongoing—leaving Aaron as the only spectator. He wasn’t smiling.

“Uh, hey,” he said in a low voice when Luke came near. “You know you quit early, right? Your Drowzee had a lot of fight left in her.”

Luke’s stomach hurt again. And there he’d thought he might get off easy. “I, uh… didn’t like how it looked. There was the poison, and, uh, she…”

“Look,” said Aaron, pulling him farther aside. “I’ll give you the BOTD, but you gotta know it ain’t cool to forfeit when it’s still anyone’s battle. It’s cheating your Pokémon and your opponent out of a real fight. Nobody grows, and it’s… pretty disrespectful.”

This shook Luke. He knew he’d done a bad job, but to think he’d been rude on top of it. The Gym-trainer must have been putting on even more of a tolerant face than he’d thought. “I didn’t know, honest. I didn’t mean to—”

“I read you,” said Aaron in an almost-reassuring voice. “It’s cool. And don’t worry, I won’t tell the girls. Especially not Wendy. She can’t stand quitters.”

The relief of having dodged a bullet didn’t quite outweigh the stress of having learned the bullet was there to begin with. “Good to know.”

With that, they walked over to see how Wendy’s battle was going. They saw little more than Feldspar, Wendy’s Geodude, almost but not quite managing to outlast the opposing Ledyba, and then it was finished.

Contra Luke, Wendy was all smiles when she was done with her post-battle chat with the victor. That was what came with putting up a respectable effort, Luke supposed.

“Ooh, if we hadn’t taken that first String Shot from the Metapod, I think we might’ve had that!” she said, bouncing on her toes.

Nadine nodded. “The strength gap wasn’t that big in your case. Speed might have made the difference.”

Then Wendy asked Luke, “How’d yours go?”

Luke was surprised she hadn’t already guessed the outcome. To his relief, Aaron answered for him. “Good showing, but you’ve seen what we’re up against.”

“Well,” said Wendy with a deep breath. “Guess we got our work cut out for us.”

“Yup,” said Aaron, “but these Gym-rats better be ready next time. I’m gonna have Ace in shape to sweep! And that includes the Leader!”

Wendy clapped her hands. “Now we’re talking!” Then she stuck her right hand into the space between the four of them, pulling Nadine’s in as well with her left. “Let’s call it here: When we come back, we all get the badge. And then all eight!”

Nadine took in a sharp breath, but kept her hand in the center. Aaron put his in as well. “I’m up for it!”

Then, all eyes were on Luke. Nadine’s were hesitant, while Aaron’s were stern, even penetrating. It was like he was telling Luke that if he put his hand in, he’d better mean it.

But Wendy’s eyes?

Hope. Pure, exuberant hope. A full vote of confidence. It was the sense she couldn’t wait for his answer, even though she didn’t doubt for a second that he’d say yes.

In that moment, Luke lost the crushing awareness of just how unprepared he was, of how unrealistic he thought this goal to be, and of just how little he cared to subject Zoe to a beating like that again. It was buried underneath the new, bewildering sensation of knowing that someone, for whatever reason, wanted to have him around.

The exact words said after he put his hand in to seal the pact didn’t stick with him, but he always remembered this as the exact moment they became, unambiguously, a group of four.

*********

July 25th, 1993

Luke wasn’t sure about the exact spot, but he was standing near where he’d made a miserable two-fold mistake about five years prior. The primary aspect of the mistake was that he had cast his lot in with people he didn’t really know yet, but perhaps less excusable was that they’d centered their relationship on the Gym Challenge. With the gift of hindsight, the right decision would obviously have been to endure one awkward refusal, then take up a different trail after developing the photos he owed them. Any silver linings to his actual, incorrect decision were just that: linings on a very heavy cloud.

But he wasn’t here today to re-live screwups, even if he was here to do what he should have done the first time: deliver some photos and leave. Old Pendergast, the Gym Leader, had commissioned a color print for use in a poster.

“Yeah…” said Pendergast, taking a long look at an action shot. “I think this is the one. Good poses on the Pokémon—makes you feel the blood pumping. And how do you get the light coming through the roof like that?”

Luke shrugged. “Lucky timing,” he said, which was only mostly true. In photography, “luck” virtually always meant having the knowledge to tell what was lucky when you saw it, and the persistence to get enough opportunities to encounter it. But luck was still luck, so Luke left it at that.

A younger boy Luke didn’t recognize popped in on their conversation. “Oh, it’s here? Want me to run it to the copy place?”

“Sure,” said the old man, carefully covering the photo with the wax paper again before giving it to the kid. “Just keep it flat, right?”

“Yessir!” In the blink of an eye, the kid was off on his errand.

“I hope you’re paying him,” said Luke, who was unused to seeing Gym-trainers who were quite that eager to play the role of gofer.

“Who, Bugsy? I could get away with charging him rent—he’d never leave if I didn’t have to lock up at night. I’ll probably pay him with the keys to this place when I retire.”

“He’s good, then?”

“Damn good. You just take some pictures of his Scyther at work next time you’re in town.”

Luke promised he would, pleased as he always was when a young trainer found his niche early instead of following the crowd. Then, after accepting his payment—most of which would go toward film and photo paper—and a little conversation about current events, he said goodbye. When he was back on the streets of Azalea Town, he decided to let Zoe out of her ball while he considered his immediate itinerary.

As he usually found himself doing when he walked around here, he led them in the direction of Slowpoke’s Well. Zoe gave the Slowpoke they passed the side-eye, but otherwise left them alone. Despite what deep sleepers Slowpoke were, it seemed their heads were better “insulated” against dream-eating than most, which Luke guessed was a source of frustration and indignation to Zoe.

When they reached the well, he sat down on one of the benches. The sun was getting low over Ilex Forest to the west, so he felt less inclined to stick to his original plan of setting out for said forest that same day—the print had taken a little longer than expected to get the contrast just right. Since he wanted some pictures of the eaves of the forest in full daylight, anyway, it only made sense to stay at the Pokémon Center again tonight instead of going straight on.

He meandered about town for the next few hours, taking a few sunset shots when the composition struck him. When he did return to the Center, he was about to head to the boys’ sleeping quarters when he remembered he’d skipped Zoe’s checkup in favor of making the print earlier. He briefly scolded himself, then went to the front desk.

He was almost through listening to the formalities on autopilot when, for the second time that month, he heard the nurse behind the counter say, “Oh.”

Notwithstanding the last time this happened, Luke’s first thought was that something might be wrong with his trainer ID. He was only marginally less surprised when the nurse said, “There’s a letter here for you.”

Luke couldn’t believe it. Sure, Wendy had said in her first letter that she would probably be back in Violet by mid-July, but for him to get a reply in Azalea Town this quickly? What were the odds of that? Maybe she’d left copies of the first letter in multiple places.

He thanked the nurse when she gave him the envelope, then took it to a corner-chair to open it. He immediately saw by the letter’s length that his guess was wrong: This wasn’t the first one again.



July 16th, 1993

Dear Luke,

Thank you, that was all wonderful news. I’m especially glad to hear Zoe’s doing great. I can only imagine how much more of a handful she is now! I can also only imagine how good your latest pictures are—I thought you could have gone pro when we were eleven (in my super-informed opinion, heh).

I said hi to Sharpy, but I’m afraid Feldspar will have to wait. I’m down to just the one partner now, too—gave Feldspar to a good friend last year. Lately I’ve been spending most of my time doing field work for the Johto Conservation Society. Lots of water testing, herd-tagging, and community outreach stuff. It’s a lot of fun (whenever they don’t have us working the phones to solicit donations, bleh), and Sharpy was getting tired of battling anyway. She’s not tired of walking, though, which is great cause we go all over the place. Earlier this year we hiked Mt. Silver for the first time (!), and even tagged a whole nest of Larvitar (!!!).

Next up for me is Ilex Forest, too. I’m guessing you’re still at the Ruins of Alph right now—I think they’re creepy, but I hope you’re having fun. Also, just so you know, I wrote to Aaron too. Haven’t heard back, but I’m hoping he’s also willing to write. If none of us have any hard feelings—I know I don’t—I think it’d be good if we could all bury the hatchet. You don’t have to respond to that if you don’t want to, just wanted you to know.

Say hi to Zoe,
Wendy



Up to the last paragraph, this had been as pleasant a letter as he could wish. There was more of her voice in this one, especially in the emotive asides.

But then… the last paragraph. There, the letter took two turns which made Luke want to scream. Obviously, there was the matter of Aaron, which: No. No and hell no. He had to shut his eyes and breathe at regular intervals for a solid minute to get the idea of seeing Aaron again off of his mind.

The second matter of concern was the lesser in degree but the more pressing:

She’s following me.

It only took a moment to decide that this wasn’t necessarily the case. After all, if she was coming from Tohjo Falls, there were only two directions around the Loop to go, and one of them went through Ilex Forest. But that didn’t get the thought altogether out of his head, nor did it lessen the likelihood of running into her in the forest if she had a long errand there.

Which wouldn’t be the end of the world, of course. It might even be nice. But the letter made it clear: Even if she didn’t talk about Aaron should they happen to meet up, she’d want to. No matter if he said he didn’t want to talk about him, it would still be hanging in the air. He did not need that.

And just like that, he reached his decision. Tomorrow, he was turning around. Back through Union Cave, then on to some other destination. It didn’t matter which—he had a lot of places he wanted to get to this year, and any of them would do.

No sooner did he pull out his map to brainstorm did he realize the bigger problem: He wanted to write back. Moreover, he didn’t want to lie by omission and let her think he’d stuck to his original plan, and that if they’d missed each other in the woods, it was merely luck of the draw. But it would be worse to say that Ilex Forest suddenly felt too crowded now that she was there.

He needed an excuse. That felt gross to think about, so he decided it would have to be a true excuse. If he couldn’t think of one, he would just have to risk the forest. With that decided, he left the Center in search of a newsstand and, hopefully, inspiration.
 
Chapter 4: Amateur Therapy

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Chapter 4
Amateur Therapy

August 2nd, 1993

Wendy stretched and yawned as she emerged from the shadows of Ilex Forest and took in the familiar sight of Azalea Town. It had been a good, full trek in the woods, and more tiring than usual. Her arms were still heavy from days of cutting down invasive vines from the native trees. For this reason, she had decided to take a quick detour back to town for a day of rest, rather than leave the forest to the west on the long trail to Goldenrod City and the Johto Conservation Society headquarters.

Yes, Wendy reminded herself yet again, that was the reason she was back in Azalea Town for the second time in as many weeks. She continued to remind herself of this as she passed Kurt’s workshop on her way to the Pokémon Center. It was a simple matter of timing and wellness-maintenance. If going this way allowed her to check whether Luke had written a second reply, so much the better. If it turned out he hadn’t, it wasn’t like she’d gone out of her way for no reason.

While she had hoped to run into Luke in the Forest, she hadn’t expected to, given how big, dense, and dark a place it was. She’d done all she could, which meant altering her course whenever she heard human footsteps, but this had accomplished nothing besides her having met a few dozen new trainers. Not that she felt this was something to complain about. Any conversation was a nice break from hacking away at invasive plants, so she’d never grown too frustrated vis-à-vis the elusive potential rendezvous.

Before she knew it, Wendy was approaching the Center’s automatic doors. She stopped and mentally prepped herself for further frustration-management.

There’s probably no letter, she told herself. Twice in a row would be pretty lucky.

Regardless of how she confident she was in comparing their respective itineraries, there was no guarantee Luke would have written back again yet. It was only fair of her not to expect him to write a reply as soon as he received one. And even that was assuming he’d been to Azalea Town since she wrote—he was under obligation to stick to his stated plan. With all this in mind, she walked through the doors under no delusion of there being a letter waiting for her.

There was. The nurse behind the counter was as surprised with how many kids were getting letters lately as the nurse in Violet had been. Wendy was opening the envelope before she even sat down.



July 26th, 1993

Dear Wendy,

I shouldn’t ever be surprised to hear about any Pokémon you track down, but a whole Larvitar nest is something else. I mean, wow. I’m increasingly of the opinion that the Three Dogs must be an Ecruteakan folk tale, cause if you haven’t found them yet, they probably aren’t there.

Regarding Aaron, I hope he writes back as well and that you have a chance to catch up.

That’s great you’re working with the JCS. Are you looking at a permanent position later? Also, have you been at all involved with the run-off prevention program? I think that’s only going to get more important with all the houses going up everywhere. At any rate, I feel more optimistic knowing they’ve got you in their corner.

Well, next for me is a bit of a change of plans. Speaking of the JCS, I just read in the paper about a flock of Doduo/-drio they tagged near Tohjo Falls that had a bunch of green-feathered ones in the mix. I don’t think I’ve gotten a decent shot of a “Shiny” before as the new kids are calling them, and I figure the lead’s good enough to roll the dice on these. I’m still not world-class at tracking, but I remember some of your pointers, so fingers crossed.

Sincerely,
Luke




Wendy didn’t quite laugh, but she had to smile and shake her head. She could hardly blame Luke for turning around—she would have encouraged him to do so if she didn’t have an ulterior motive against his walking farther away. That the blame fell on her and Amanda’s own report of the green birdos was the real kicker, of course. She knew the lesson to take away from this minor farce was that planning one’s own itinerary on the weeks-removed stated itinerary of someone who isn’t coordinating with you in turn is a recipe for wasted time.

She knew this, but already the gears were turning in her head to do the very thing.

Now, following him all the way back to Tohjo Falls didn’t even cross her mind. Or at least, didn’t cross her mind beyond the thought that this would be an absurd thought to have. She had just been there, and it was a two-week trip from Azalea. No, it would more than suffice to expedite the time of her next letter’s receipt, which she could do by returning to where the road from Kanto met the main loop of Johto: Violet City. And since the Loop was a loop, continuing counter-clockwise from there would bring her to her destination in Goldenrod. It was a long detour, to be sure, but it wasn’t an insane detour. It was just the scenic route, she told herself.

Later that afternoon, when she was bathed and rested, Wendy did the arithmetic in her head on how much travel time her new plan would add. After five years on the trail, this was second nature to her, but she still felt it would only be professional to let HQ know exactly how late she’d be. Not that she was obliged to show up at all, being a minor and a volunteer, but Candice had logistics and scheduling to sort out, and Wendy hated to add to her difficulties.

There was a small line at the Center’s payphone thanks to one kid who sounded like he was having problems at home. Eventually, Wendy’s turn came up. After a few rings, she heard a familiar voice.

“Thank you for calling the Johto Conservation Society. How may I help you?”

“They finally got you working the phones, huh?”

Amanda sighed. “Yeaaaah… Figure it was just a matter of time, anyway. New-girl dues and all that. Least they don’t have me cold-calling folks yet.” There came some shuffling noises on the other end, and Amanda failed to completely muffle the transmitter as she said to someone unseen, “No, I’m not… It’s Wendy! I’m allowed to joke if it’s just Wendy! …Okay, cool.

“Sorry, Candice is jumpy today,” said Amanda to the phone this time. “What’s up?”

Wendy tried to restrain her laughter with little success. “Oh, no! I was hoping not to make her day any tougher!”

“Relax—you can do no wrong in her eyes. What’s the prob?”

“No problems, just I’m going to be later than I said earlier. Should get there on the thirteenth.” She thought about leaving it at that, but her mouth was already moving. “Taking the long way around.”

“That all? No sweat—I’ll tell Candice.”

“Thanks.”

“So…” said Amanda, lowering her voice. “You gonna see him? Your friend. Or friends.”

Wendy was suddenly conscious of how it would only really make sense to go this far out of the way to meet someone in person, not merely to leave a letter for him. She hesitated a moment. “Maybe. I mean, probably not. But I wanted to go that way anyway.” She knew that couldn’t sound convincing.

“...Gotcha. Hope that works out. Anyhoo, Candice is giving me the look. Don’t think she wants this to turn into a non-work conversation.”

“Yeah, better not push it. See you later.”

“Yup! Have fun!”

Wendy hung up. As she walked back to her seat, she mulled over whether it sounded like Amanda had bought her explanation. Her first guess was “yes,” but she also knew her first guess was always “yes” whenever the other person’s literal words suggested nothing to the contrary. She imagined reading the same conversation in a book, and looking at it that way, Amanda was probably just being polite by not calling her out for having a weird plan. But then, wouldn’t Amanda have just said so if she thought that? She wasn’t the type to leave things unsaid. …Or maybe Wendy just thought that because she always thought people were like that.

She shook her head. This was a silly thing to worry about, so she decided to distract herself by finding some other kids to talk to.

*********

Wendy was in the middle of traversing Union Cave when she was again struck with the thought that this detour was, in fact, insane. She stopped in her tracks, rubbed her forehead, and wondered again why she had thought this made any kind of sense.

“Pi?”

She came back to the present moment upon hearing the concerned peep of her pink, pointy pal (and, at the moment, walking lamp), Sharpy. “It’s nothing, girl,” said Wendy with a smile. It was rude to hold up a Pokémon who was so graciously lighting the way with Flash like that, so she got moving again.

Although Union Cave wasn’t the longest underground path in Johto by half, it was still a good fifteen miles from end to end. If the above-ground trail between Routes 32 and 33 weren’t three times as long, far more vertically challenging, and in a constant state of disrepair, few trainers would bother with the trek in the dark. It may have been rated as safe for beginners in terms of the danger posed by the pesky Zubat, ornery Geodude, and infrequent Onix, but the challenge to the nerves was considerable. Even a trainer in Wendy’s shape didn’t clear it in a single day’s march, and for the little ones it could take three. Coming back into the sun after all that time underground was a rite of passage which every trainer respected, even if the older ones could say from experience, “At least it’s not cold.”

An unwelcome winged friend flapped close enough to Wendy’s head that she snapped her fingers for Sharpy to take care of it. With a cheerful flick of her wrist, Sharpy sent a precise Thunder Wave into the Zubat, leaving it to think about its decisions on the ground for a few minutes while they walked on. Wendy might have avoided even the hint of the encounter by applying some Repel, but she always preferred to spare the non-offending wild Pokémon the smell of the stuff, especially when the offenders were too weak to pose her and Sharpy any trouble.

Wendy’s internal clock told her it was about time to stop for lunch, so she found a dry spot just off the main path and sat down. To give Sharpy a break from lamp-duty, she pulled out her weaker, battery-powered one. The ethereal sheen on the cave walls faded as Sharpy ceased to glow. The shadows cast by the yellow-ish light of the bulb had their own charm, though. Now that they were settled, Wendy portioned out the rations: some dry pellets of obscure origin for Sharpy, and a small can of tuna with crackers for herself.

As she ate, the troubles came into her head again. At the risk of letting them spoil her meal, she finally turned to the only available individual in search of insight.

“Sharpy, is this all too much?”

Sharpy stared at her. Her smile didn’t falter (which itself signified very little), and she kept chewing. This meant the question hadn’t particularly bothered or confused her.

“I mean, you know, I already know he’s doing okay. And it’s not like I have that much to say until I hear back from Aaron, too.”

At the mention of Aaron, Sharpy did stop chewing. Her posture suggested concern for her trainer. Getting this read on her Pokémon gave Wendy’s mind the green light to keep thinking out loud.

“So, I really should be focused on Aaron. Not that there’s much I can do when I don’t even know if he got the first letter. I could call his house… I mean, no, I’m not going to do that. I shouldn’t get his parents talking to him—or to mine—if he doesn’t want them to. But with Luke, it’s…”

Sharpy leaned forward.

“…It’s that he might be avoiding me.”

This only now occurred to Wendy. Her habit of taking words at face value troubled her again as she considered whether Luke had changed his plan not upon reading the newspaper, but upon reading her letter. Her letter in which she’d told him she’d be in Ilex Forest. Which he’d walked basically to the edge of before turning around and going in the exact opposite direction.

Her stomach suddenly felt heavy. “I guess… yeah… Is this too far out of the way to go for someone who might not want to see you?”

Sharpy hummed in a minor key. Wendy recognized this as emotional reciprocation rather than as any kind of actual answer. For all her sensitivity and personality, Sharpy wasn’t one for literal conversation. She could be remarkably helpful when Wendy needed someone to listen to her problems, but when it came talking with someone about them, that was another matter.

The real problem was, the best “someone” she’d ever known for this was Luke.

*********

November 3rd, 1988

When Wendy woke up, the inside of the tent was brighter than she expected. She turned over to find Nadine still out cold, so she shook her. “Hey, get up! It’s daylight!”

Nadine groaned.

Having done her part, Wendy got dressed and stepped outside. It was a crisp, clear day for November, and the familiar salt tang of sea-air put a smile on her face. She had grown up with this air, which went without saying since she was standing in her literal backyard. When she had learned Luke had never been to Cianwood City, her decision that it would be their next destination was immediate, and here they were. Naturally, her parents had insisted they all stay at her house, and also naturally, Wendy drew the line at sleeping indoors. There was a subtle distinction between a Pokémon journey and a conventional sleepover.

She walked through the gate and down the winding lane to the beach, which save for Luke was empty. He was by a rock formation which jutted out into the water. As Wendy expected, he had his camera out. She could see he was fully concentrated on his camerawork, so she decided not to distract him. The sun was just coming up, which he often said was one of his favorite times of day for taking pictures. She was looking forward to seeing all his photos from the last few days here, as were her parents. They’d already said they planned to frame the first one he’d taken of her, Nadine, Aaron, and their Pokémon back in September.

As she reflected on what a great idea this little trip had been, Nadine walked down to join her. She was by no means a morning person, but she looked even worse than usual to Wendy’s eyes. “...Morning,” she mumbled.

“Morning!” said Wendy, hoping a little pep would be contagious.

It wasn’t. Nadine stared into the distance without a word for a few moments, squinted, then looked at her shoes. This gave Wendy pause for a reason she couldn’t pin down.

“Hey,” said Wendy, “Something up with you?”

Nadine didn’t respond right away. Wendy was about to ask again when she said, “No. Just early.”

Wendy relaxed, glad to have misread her mood. Maybe Nadine could get some more sleep on the ferry back to the mainland today. In the meantime, getting her talking more might help wake her up. “You and Aaron were at it a good long time yesterday. What’d you focus on?” While Wendy and her dad had been showing Luke around the inland paths, Nadine and Aaron had spent the day training their teams.

“...Reaction time, mostly. Worked on accuracy for some moves. Bit of sparring.”

“Nice, nice. I think reaction time’s the edge Quincy needs.” Nadine’s thinking in battle was always solid. It was just a matter of getting her Pokémon to the stage where they could execute on her decisions more cleanly.

Nadine made a noise that didn’t sound quite like agreement or disagreement, and put her eyes on the sea again. Wendy looked at the dazzling orange gleams on the waves. She could never grow tired of this sight. “Hard to believe it hasn’t even been three months yet,” she said. “It already feels like visiting, not just being back, you know what I mean?”

“Hmm.”

“None of your sisters really came home much when they were trainers, did they?”

“...No. Even when they took the Gym, they didn’t come to the house. We went to watch their battles, and they got back on the boat right after. …Mary told me later she was worried she wouldn’t want to leave again.”

Wendy was pleased to hear more complete sentences from her friend. That could only mean her head was finally clearing up.

“That’s too bad for them,” said Wendy. “I don’t think I’ve got that problem. This has been fun and all—showing off home like it’s a place to see—but I just keep thinking about where we’re going next.”

“…Uh huh. …Lot to look forward to.”

Nadine took a deep breath, stretched, and sounded just about normal when she spoke again. “Here comes our tourist.” Luke was walking up to them, camera back in its bag.

Wendy waved to him. “Hope you got color film in there!”

He waved back and shook his head. “Still got most of this black-and-white roll left. Can’t afford to take it out yet.” He nodded at Nadine when he was closer. “Morning.”

“Good morning,” she said back. The picture of awake-ness, sort of.

“Let’s head in,” said Wendy. “My mom’ll be hollering about breakfast soon.”

They made it back to the house before any hollering could commence. The kitchen was abustle with the preparation of food for both people and Pokémon. Wendy’s dad adjusted portion sizes and meal-composition for each of their Pokémon with his usual attention to detail, while Aaron helped Wendy’s mom crack eggs for rice omelets.

“Was wondering when you all would get up,” said Aaron. Wendy knew that Aaron could give a dictionary definition of “fatigue,” but she wasn’t sure he had any firsthand experience with it.

“Didn’t we tell you?” said Wendy. “You were supposed to bring us breakfast in bed.”

Aaron laughed, but her mom had a more limited sense of humor. “If you’re going to tease my helper, you can pour drinks and set the table, please.”

Luke was about to set the table himself when Wendy’s mom shook her finger. “Uh-uh! You’re a guest, so just take your seat!”

He seemed confused at this, so Wendy attempted to explain the distinction the Merrick household drew between proper guests like him and regulars like Aaron as she got out the plates.

“Okay,” said her dad, “I’ve got it worked out here for a Clefairy, Geodude, and Murkrow… Drowzee and Pidgey… Sentret, Exeggcute, and Zubat… Cyndaquil and Hoothoot. Am I missing anyone?”

“Aaron has a Spinarak, too,” said Nadine.

“Ah, right. That’s easy.” He handed Nadine two of the ready bowls to take out to the back porch.

Soon, they were all digging in. Wendy intended to savor every mouthful of the last expert-cooking they could expect to eat for some time. She made a mental note to pick up more skill in this area. Then she proceeded to drown her omelet in sauce, oblivious to any irony.

The conversation turned from their immediate plans regarding Gyms and such to yesterday’s nature hike. “I never realized how many medicines you could make with the plants here,” said Luke. “Is that why the pharmacy in town’s so famous?”

“It helps,” said her dad, “but it’s really the same all over the mainland. Take Ilex: It’s chock-full of useful herbs and trees you can’t find anywhere else. Mrs. Merrick could tell you all about that.”

Wendy’s mom was a botanist, though Wendy’s geologist dad was no slouch on the subject himself. They had both taken equal responsibility for quizzing Wendy on every last variety of plant and rock within five miles of Cianwood City when she was growing up.

“I don’t think I asked earlier, Luke,” began her mom. “What do your parents do for a living?”

“My dad’s a photographer, and my mom and him run a photo store under our house. Err… apartment, I guess.”

Her mom nodded, as if confirmed in a guess. “And do you have any brothers or sisters?”

“No, just me.”

“Ohhh, that puts your mom and dad in the same boat as us. It’s hard to have the only kid already out the door.” She put a hand on Wendy’s shoulder and rocked it, which was mildly embarrassing. “The L’Enfants and the Barlows wanted you kids to stay at their houses, but I said, ‘No way! Your nests ain’t empty yet! They’re ours!’”

“It’s true,” said her dad. “Nearly came to blows.”

“We stopped by,” said Aaron, mouth half-full. “They’re fine.”

“Tell you the truth,” said Wendy to Luke, suddenly in the mood to articulate something she rarely had, “I never felt that much like an only child. We did basically everything together.”

“Yeah,” said Aaron. “Only difference is me and Nadine didn’t get in trouble for not knowing how to spell ‘igneous.’ Guess we all got chewed out the time Nadine got east and west backwards and we didn’t find her till after dark, though.”

Wendy stifled a laugh—that was one heck of a day. She noticed poor Nadine was getting a little red when Luke kindly changed the subject for her. “When we come back for the Gym later, I’d like to see more of the rockier beaches to the north.”

“Anytime you want,” said her dad. “I’ll give you the grand tour.”

As they talked and ate, Wendy felt a sense of happy pride welling up within her. That her newest friend found her neck of the woods so fascinating, that her parents were so impressed with him in turn, that they were already planning another visit just like this one… She couldn’t have drawn it up better.

*********

A few hours later, Wendy and company were on the deck of the ferry back to Olivine City. The wind off the water was biting cold, but today even that was a delight. They stood by the starboard railing, where they could see the Whirl Islands to the south as they passed them at a safe distance.

“Hey, so,” began Luke to the group as a whole, but seemingly more to Wendy, “If we want to go to Mahogany next, I know some neat places in town, and my folks would put us up. I know the way around Gyarados Lake pretty well, too.”

“That sounds great!” said Wendy, suddenly excited at the prospect of seeing what it was like to live on top of a photo store. She even found herself wishing they had all grown up in four different cities instead of two, just to have more hometowns to visit.

“Sure,” said Aaron, “but let’s head back to Azalea Town and focus on the Gym first. We’re overdue for another try.”

Wendy wouldn’t mind going out of the way to Mahogany Town first, but she supposed it only made sense to give their pact to obtain the Badges top priority. That left only one opinion to hear, so she asked, “What do you think, Nadine?”

Nadine was staring straight down over the side. She answered without looking up. “…Yeah. Sounds good.” Wendy wondered what was so interesting down there, but she couldn’t see anything when she looked.

The two hours until they reached Olivine passed quickly. They spent some of it above deck, some of it below, all of it in good cheer. When the lighthouse came into view, they gathered up their packs. “Let’s find some trainers to battle outside the city,” said Wendy. “I feel like knocking the rust off.”

“Good idea,” said Aaron, while Luke added, “I want to buy some film in town, first.” Nadine offered no comment.

When the ferry was tied down, they were the first ones down the gangplank. “Okay!” said Wendy. “Back to it!”

They were halfway up the dock when Luke stopped and said, “Um, hey, Nadine’s…”

Wendy turned around, surprised to see there were only three of them together. Nadine was back by the ferry, standing still as others disembarked. Wendy led them back to her.

“What’s up, you forget something on the boat?” she asked. “You can head back on and get it—it won’t be leaving again for a while.”

Nadine just stared at the planks without speaking.

“…Hello? Nadine?”

Nadine’s lip quivered. Then she finally spoke. “I’m going back.”

Wendy didn’t know what to make of this.

“…Did you leave something at my house? It’s okay, there’s another round trip today. We can call ahead and—”

“No, I… I need to go home. Alone.”

The air died. It felt like any attempt to make words would stop at the speaker’s mouth. And what would Wendy even try to say? Nadine said “alone.” There existed no problems Wendy could imagine whose first steps to fix them didn’t involve her own proximity.

She finally managed to babble, “W… what do you mean? Are you sick? Did something happen? What—”

“I can’t do this anymore. I’m sorry. I have to go.” She took two steps toward the gangplank.

“Wait!”

Nadine froze mid-stride at Wendy’s desperate interjection. “What’s the matter? Is there—”

Aaron put a hand on Wendy’s shoulder. She looked in his eyes, hoping with all her heart he knew something she didn’t and could do something about it. He turned to Nadine and asked her with perfect control of his voice, “Do you want to talk about it?”

Nadine didn’t meet his eyes. “...No.”

“And you’re absolutely sure?

“...Yes.”

Aaron took a deep breath. “Then… we’ll see you when we can, okay?”

Nadine nodded.

Wendy couldn’t believe what he just said. This was wrong. They couldn’t just leave it at that. If this was something Nadine didn’t feel like she could talk about, that was proof they needed to talk about it. And if they didn’t, if they let her get on that boat by herself, there would be no fixing it. Everything would be ruined forever. She had to say something.

She was about to, but Aaron squeezed her shoulder, looked her in the eye, and shook his head.

Nadine looked at Wendy and said, again, “I’m sorry.” Then, “Goodbye.” Turning to Luke, she mumbled, “It was nice to meet you.”

Then she sped up the ramp, wiping her eyes all the way back to the deck and out of sight.

Wendy was frozen. Her eyes lost focus. There was something in her chest and throat that had last been there during a funeral.

*********

It was getting dark. Wendy sat by herself with her back to a tree some distance away from where Aaron and Luke had probably set up camp. She knew she had to eat dinner eventually. Her stomach felt either full or empty, she wasn’t sure, but it was moot because the thought of doing anything that involved moving from that spot disagreed with her. If they weren’t going back to Cianwood for Nadine, she could at least not get any farther away from her.

She heard footsteps. That would be Aaron telling her she had to eat, or that it was her turn to cook, or that it was her turn to clean up, or that they weren’t going to camp here and had to walk another mile, or he might just ask her to cheer up. Whatever it was, she didn’t want to hear it.

The footsteps halted before they came close. Then nobody spoke. Neither behavior was like Aaron, so Wendy looked up.

It was Luke. It was plain he had something to say, but was unsure if he should. Wendy didn’t ask him what it was.

Finally, he spoke up. “If you want to be alone, I can go away.”

She knew if it had been Aaron, she would say she did want to be alone. She wouldn’t want someone she’d always known and likely always would know to be around to see how her eyes were still red, or how much of a baby she was being. But perhaps because deep down Luke was still a stranger to her—just some kid she was glad to know but who wasn’t a permanent part of her life like Aaron and Nadine were—she found she didn’t care so much what she thought of her. So, she looked down again and said, “No.”

Luke took a few steps closer, but not many, and sat down.

At length, he spoke again. “I’m… not going to tell you and Aaron what to do, but if you think you… we… you and Aaron or all of us should go back and talk to Nadine, I’ll vote for it.”

This hurt to hear. Wendy shook her head. “She said she didn’t want to talk.” She knew Aaron was right to leave her alone. She hated it, it felt wrong, but it was what Nadine wanted. Wishing otherwise was selfish.

“Are you sure she meant it?”

Wendy didn’t know how to answer that. The thought hadn’t so much as crossed her mind. And when she considered it, she realized it hadn’t crossed her mind because it didn’t make sense. “She isn’t a liar.”

“I don’t mean she’s lying, sorry. I just… I think… people don’t always say what they mean when they’re feeling that bad.”

She looked up just long enough to see he wasn’t looking at her, either. That felt easier, somehow. “Aaron would have noticed,” she said. “Or I would have.” All of a sudden, though, she felt less certain about the latter. But she kept on. “She meant it. And Aaron was right. We can’t force her. If she doesn’t want to train anymore, she shouldn’t. It’s not about m… about us.” She felt the tears welling up again.

“It’s about you, too.”

Wendy’s head bolted upright. This time he was looking back. There was enough light left to see his eyes.

Luke continued. “What would you say to someone who just lost her best friend and didn’t know how long for? That it’s none of her business? Doesn’t being friends mean nothing’s just your own problem? That’s what they say, isn’t it?”

It was getting difficult to hold eye contact without breaking down. “…I dunno, maybe? But we might just make things worse. What if being around u… around other people is the problem?” She couldn’t do it. The tears were dripping out.

“Then you’re right, and you’ve got to leave her alone. I doubt it, but it’s you and Aaron’s call—I barely know her.”

Luke hesitated and looked away for a moment, but only for a moment. “But don’t say this isn’t about you. I don’t care if it’s more about Nadine. It’s still hurting you, and that’s about you.”

It was too much. If he didn’t blame her for thinking this was the end of the world, she had no hope of holding back in front of him. She put her head to her knees and couldn’t keep the sobs quiet.

“…I can go,” he said.

“No,” she managed to say. “…Please stay.”
 

Umbramatic

The Ghost Lord
Location
The Yangverse
Pronouns
Any
Partners
  1. reshiram
  2. zygarde
Hi! Here for Catnip! I don't think I've ever reviewed one of your fics before, this was fun! Disclaimer that my reviews tend to be play by play notes with a general short summary at the end.

The whole beginning disclaimer about PC emails got me really curious. Hoo boy. How is all THIS gonna play into everything?

I love Zoe. Excellent you have Drowzee and Hypno representation.

Flashbacks to my own absolutely atrocious photo-taking in Snap and New Snap

Similarly "I'd like to be someday" is a mood with people asking about my hobbies. I feel for Luke.

Lmaooooooooooooo the reason Luke got Zoe.

The fact that you have an Aaron amuses me because I have an Aaron as the main character of my fic but mine is a canon character but yours is an OC

Lmao about eye contact being an urban legend. That's a great touch.

Are Clefairy normal or fairy types in this continuity i wonder

Tinmeskiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip

Looks like things went sour with Aaron. Luke is once again a mood in trying to suppress the Bad Thoughts.

Thirteen year olds. So smol.

Zoe is also a mood. She just wants foob.

Looks like Luke is going on a very different path from his friends. Feels bad man.

He's even giving away his Pokemon. Feels more bad.

-insert the Squidward Alone gif here-

I guess Hypno ARE good sleep aids

Gasp! A letter!

Gasp again! It's Wendy! Lmao at the no pressure bit.

and Luke is going to message her back despite it all. Things will happen. Bad things probably.

------------------

This is shaping up to be a pretty interesting character drama! Luke is a protagonist I can really feel for. I'm excited to see what he does next, when I loop back around to this fic. Thanks for sharing!
 

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Disclaimer that my reviews tend to be play by play notes with a general short summary at the end.
Not to worry: I'm a fan of play-by-play notes!

The whole beginning disclaimer about PC emails got me really curious. Hoo boy. How is all THIS gonna play into everything?
I'm debating whether I'll cut that foreword. I'm leaning "no" since it seems to grab people's attention, but I do worry that it primes the reader to expect a story about technology.

I love Zoe. Excellent you have Drowzee and Hypno representation.
When I picked Drowzee/Hypno for Luke's Pokemon, a lot of the rest of the story came to me really quickly after that. Best decision I made.

Flashbacks to my own absolutely atrocious photo-taking in Snap and New Snap
Weirdly, I'm not sure I thought about Pokemon Snap once while writing this, just real-world photography. I should play New Snap...

Similarly "I'd like to be someday" is a mood with people asking about my hobbies. I feel for Luke.
(...)
Looks like things went sour with Aaron. Luke is once again a mood in trying to suppress the Bad Thoughts.
One of my key goals with this chapter was establishing the Luke Moods, both teen and pre-teen.

Lmaooooooooooooo the reason Luke got Zoe.
One of my favorite lines in the fic.

The fact that you have an Aaron amuses me because I have an Aaron as the main character of my fic but mine is a canon character but yours is an OC
No joke, Gen IV is still on my to-do list, and I straight up did not know there was an Aaron on Sinnoh's Elite Four. Would have picked a different name if I had, but so it goes.

Lmao about eye contact being an urban legend. That's a great touch.
I try to lampshade game mechanics only sparingly, but this one was too good to pass up.

Are Clefairy normal or fairy types in this continuity i wonder
That's a great question, and I wish I had a real answer. I've always been pretty pick-and-choose about what I incorporate from "new Pokemon" (read: "Gen III or later," lol). If I were pressed, I think I'd say that "under the hood," the Fairy type exists, but it doesn't enter the scientific Type theory until 2013. Clefairy and maybe a few other lines of Pokemon are commonly understood to be lower-case f "fairies" who behave mysteriously for Normal-types.

Jigglypuff and Marill, though, I'll probably always write as just-Normal and just-Water when I do write about them. They didn't feel like Fairy-types to me when the Fairy type was introduced, and they still don't.

Tinmeskiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip
Whooooooooooooooaaaaaaaaaaa!
(You'll get used to these if you read subsequent chapters, lmao.)

Zoe is also a mood. She just wants foob.
She is a being of mysterious powers and simple wants: Foob, pls

Looks like Luke is going on a very different path from his friends. Feels bad man.

He's even giving away his Pokemon. Feels more bad.

-insert the Squidward Alone gif here-
This is a stronger reaction than I was aiming for when I wrote that scene, but I'll take it.

Gasp! A letter!

Gasp again! It's Wendy! Lmao at the no pressure bit.

and Luke is going to message her back despite it all. Things will happen. Bad things probably.
This is exactly how I want readers to react to characters getting letters. The whole fic kind of hinges on it, lol.

This is shaping up to be a pretty interesting character drama! Luke is a protagonist I can really feel for. I'm excited to see what he does next, when I loop back around to this fic. Thanks for sharing
Hey, thanks for reading and doing Catnip! Glad Luke's clicking with you!
 
Chapter 5: Tracker's Tricks

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Chapter 5
Tracker’s Tricks

August 21st, 1993

Luke’s camera was currently equipped with a telephoto lens and set on a tripod. He had it pointed at a normal, brown Dodrio about thirty yards away. One of its head drank from a pond while the other two stood on lookout duty. It was a good, dynamic pose for Luke to shoot.

He had never found the reported “Shinies” among the Doduo and Dodrio in the area, not that he’d expected to. Finding so much as a stray green feather on the ground would have been a pleasant surprise. But he had expected to find more than five of these multi-headed birds in the two weeks he’d spent searching all about the vicinity of Tohjo Falls. He was a long way from rivaling Wendy’s skill at this.

A sneeze threatened Luke’s nose, which he tried to ignore in favor of getting the perfect shot. The bird’s rightmost head tilted in a way that struck him as just-so, and he pressed the button. The click of the shutter didn’t grab the Dodrio’s attention, but the sneeze he might have tried to suppress did when it burst from his mouth. The two lookout heads spun straight toward him.

“Ah, shit.”

In one motion, the third head bounced up and the Dodrio aligned its legs with where its heads were facing. Luke had Zoe’s ball in his hand as the wild Pokémon charged at him. He lobbed the ball to so as to get Zoe between the Dodrio and the hard-to-replace camera (as well as himself).

There was no need to call for an attack: Zoe knew the drill. With a flick of her pendulum, she worked her Hypnosis on the Dodrio. The bird’s course wobbled, and it slid to a harmless stop some ten feet away.

Hypnosis was usually a high-risk, high-reward move. With most Hypno, it was a low-risk, high-reward move. With Zoe, the risk was virtually nil. She had several years’ worth of all-but-exclusive practice with the maneuver, ever since Luke left competitive battling behind. While this meant she was now utterly hopeless against a serious team with a competent trainer, she had no peers when it came to handling wild Pokémon with minimal fuss.

Two Dodrio heads were out cold, but one head was awake enough to command the body to its feet. Again, Luke didn’t have to say anything. Zoe sent another round of thick-but-gentle psychic waves from her pendulum, and the last head was down for the count.

“Thanks, girl.” Luke looked at the dozing lumps that comprised the Dodrio and sighed. He’d been hoping to get more shots out of this one. Instead, he would have to be well away from here by the time it woke up and went looking for whomever had pulled such a dirty trick on it. After it failed at this, it would probably be off like lightning to wherever its next destination was. Maybe east to Kanto, maybe west to Johto—it depended on which way its flock was, which was beyond Luke’s skill to guess. He didn’t even know why Doduo and Dodrio so often passed through this narrow strip of flat land to begin with.

If Wendy were here, he mused, she’d probably know where the birds were going before they did.

As he stowed his camera gear, he noticed how Zoe leaned forward to stare at the sleeping Pokémon. “Go ahead,” he said. There was time enough to let her eat a dream or two, and she’d earned it. He watched the near-invisible disturbance of air rise from one of the heads and waft toward Zoe’s eager nose. He wondered whether the dreams of wiry, low-fat Pokémon tasted “gamier.”

After Zoe had eaten her fill and was back in her ball, Luke trudged off through the rushes toward the main trail. He supposed he was being too hard on himself regarding how long it had taken him to get a handful of Doduo and Dodrio pictures—much less for failing to find any green feathers. No, he wasn’t Wendy, but who was? Besides, if he hadn’t learned a thing or two from her, he may not have found any of the birds at all yet.

In fact, if it hadn’t been for Wendy, he certainly would have missed the sign which led him to this last Dodrio. At most, he might have accidentally stepped in it.

*********

March 8th, 1989

Luke struggled to accept the sight of Wendy sticking her hands into a literal pile of crap. It made perfect sense to him how the pile could be an important visual indication of a Stantler’s having been here—what with its distinctive composition of small, dark pellets—but he could imagine no cause for manual inspection.

“Ah!” said Wendy, having crushed and smeared one of the pellets between her fingers. “See these thin fibers? They’re from Lygodium fronds: ‘Krabbyfern.’”

“Does it grow near the beach or something?” asked Luke, trying not to think about where those fibers had been.

“No, it’s a forest plant. Picture a vine but with fern leaves.”

“Why ‘Krabby,’ then?”

“Dunno. I’d ask—”

She cut herself off, her expression turning blank. Luke didn’t push her to finish the sentence, just in case it was the subject she usually took pains to avoid.

“…I’d ask Nadine, maybe,” she finally said, “It’s the kind of thing she might know. Y’know, word stuff.”

To Luke’s surprise and relief, she could say this in a light, normal tone. She continued to perk up as she spoke on, leaving the touchy subject behind with encouraging ease. “What I do know is that scientists also call it ‘Kanto climbing fern,’ even though it grows in loads of other regions. Plant names are weird. Anyway, this Stantler must like to eat it.”

And so, Luke’s mind was forced back to the topic of Stantler droppings. Even if the clue as to its diet seemed potentially helpful, Wendy’s unabashed zest for picking through Poké-scat still confounded him. As he often did when confronted with the perplexing, he opened his camera bag. “Mind holding that pose for a second?”

“Hm? Oh, sure!”

So Wendy said, but she shifted her knees and looked up at the camera instead of holding the pose, which meant Luke wouldn’t be able to pass this off as a candid shot of a Poké-zoologist at work. On the other hand, the genuineness of Wendy’s smile as she proudly held out a stool sample could make this a compelling picture in its own way.

“Okay… one second…” Luke adjusted his angle and distance to get her framed as best he could, then took the shot. “Thanks. I think I’ll give this one to the Saffron Municipal Art Gallery. They can hang it up with the title, Bon Appétit.”

In a blow to Luke’s confidence in his comedic delivery, Wendy’s eyes widened, and she asked with undisguised awe in her voice, “You really think you can get that in a museum?”

“Um…” Luke turned a bit red. This was ridiculous. “No, uh… It was the title. …Bon Appétit.”

Wendy continued to stare.

“…You’re holding poop.”

It took Wendy another second, but then she busted a gut. Luke had to laugh too from how funny she thought his lame, botched joke was.

After they settled down, Wendy wiped her hands on some dead leaves and used some hand-sanitizer from her bag for good measure. “Anyway,” she said, “I think Krabbyfern grows downhill from here, closer to the marshes. We’ll look for tracks down there.”

“Here” was in the woods just off Route 30, north of Cherrygrove City. They were off the trail because Luke had said in passing yesterday evening that he’d always wanted to photograph a Stantler, especially if he could catch it in the act of distorting the space around its antlers. He had said this with no intention of impacting their immediate plans, as the guide-booklet in town hadn’t listed Stantler among the nearby species of wild Pokémon.

“That just means they don’t come here in numbers,” Wendy had said. “This is still their kind of habitat, and lone Pokémon go wandering all the time. If we get a little lucky, I bet I can find you one tomorrow!”

It had taken some convincing to get Aaron to concede that the Goldenrod City Gym would still be there even if they arrived a day later than anticipated. He had still opted to stay behind and train on his own, though. So, it had been Luke and Wendy alone since a bit before dawn, and now as noon approached, they had their lead.

“Just remember,” said Wendy with her eyes fixed on the ground as they walked downhill, “once you’ve got your picture, I get to catch it!”

“It’s all yours,” said Luke.

The cheerful tone of her voice—to say nothing of the howls of laughter a minute ago—made Luke realize just how far she’d come lately. Not long ago, any mention of Nadine would have put her under a cloud for hours. On top of that, today she was probably in her best mood since…

Well, he told himself, since Nadine left to begin with.

It had taken Wendy weeks to get over the initial shock following that inexplicable day in November, but even during all the months since, she never seemed to be quite herself again—not as far as Luke could tell, at least. He didn’t think he was the best judge, seeing as he hadn’t known her for long prior to Nadine’s departure. What he did know was that whether or not today’s Wendy was “herself again,” strictly speaking, she was doing great, which was a real blessing after all this time of not knowing what to do for her.

“Oh!” said Wendy in a loud whisper. “Look here!”

She crept up to a cluster of tall ferns, then waved him close and pointed at some mangled stems. “Here’s Krabbyfern, and something bit the leaflets off here just a bit ago. The spit ain’t dry yet.”

Luke wouldn’t have spotted it in a million years. He looked down for hoofprints, but didn’t see anything.

“Tracks over here!” said Wendy, clearing the ground at a spot Luke had glanced right over.

Can she see through leaves? Luke wondered. Even without the obstruction, he could only sort of identify the faint impression in the dirt as being a Stantler’s cloven hoofprint.

After examining this one and a few other prints ahead of it, Wendy announced her conclusion. “It went this way up the draw here, and not in a hurry. Might still be around. We’re downwind, so that’s super lucky for us. We’ll go quiet from here.”

They only went a few steps before Wendy stopped and turned around. “Just step where I step, okay? We don’t wanna make noise. Toe-heel, not heel-toe. Oh, and get your camera out now. We don’t want it to hear the zipper on the bag when we find it.”

For the second time that day, Luke turned red. She was right about the camera, of course, but he hadn’t even realized his footsteps were particularly noisy. He nodded.

When he had the camera out and its strap around his neck, they started again. He stayed exactly two steps behind her, not letting his eyes stray from her shoes. His legs were a bit longer than hers, so it wasn’t much trouble to keep up. After a few attentive minutes, he could better anticipate where she would step next.

Every so often, Wendy would pause as she spotted more hoofprints, then would adjust their course accordingly. Luke got used enough to the routine so as to almost forget about the likelihood of his screwing this up, if snapping the wrong twig would suffice to send the Stantler running. He let himself focus instead on the simple task of following her lead. Toe-heel, toe-heel.

Suddenly, Wendy stopped cold. Luke looked up, and she waved him forward. His heartrate spiked as he guessed what this meant. Since he couldn’t step where she stepped while she was standing still, he had to trust his own judgment in choosing where to place his feet in drawing up alongside her.

Toe-heel. One, two, three, four steps. No noise.

She pointed, and there it was: the first Stantler he’d ever seen, and much closer than he thought they’d get. He looked over at Wendy, who nodded. Her job was done. The rest was up to him.

He slowly, carefully pressed the sides of the lens cap to remove it, keeping his eyes on the Stantler all the while. It was grazing on a fern of the very sort Wendy had identified as their clue. He thought it looked engrossed enough in its meal to afford him some time, which he hoped wasn’t simply wishful thinking on his part. He slid the lens cap into his pocket, and at last looked through the viewfinder.

He was about three steps to his left away from having two trees frame the shot perfectly. He looked at Wendy again. Somewhat to his surprise, he didn’t have to get her attention: She was already staring at him as he worked. He motioned her to give him room, and she complied without hesitation or noise. It took him a few more seconds to step where he wanted to be, but he managed to remain silent as well.

Luke now had his shot, as long as the Stantler didn’t move. He checked his exposure and focus. Both good. All he could have asked for was some distortion around the antlers, but he was far too nervous to feel greedy. He was about to press the shutter release when the Stantler looked up and over just enough to get its head in ¾ profile. Perfect.

Click.

Even as Luke flipped the film-advance lever for a possible second shot, the Stantler jerked to attention. It didn’t seem to know exactly where the sound had come from.

Then Luke nearly gasped: Its antlers and everything behind them appeared to swirl. Distorted space. And he already had his camera pointed at it. He felt his vision shake—he knew he had to take as many pictures as he could before he fell asleep, got confused, or began hallucinating.

Click. Click.

He was getting dizzy. This was his limit. He mouthed to Wendy, “You’re up.” He looked at her with shaky, bleary eyes. She was shielding her own and taking out a Poké Ball. She was about to throw it up high—Luke guessed to get her Murkrow, Lenore, in position to surprise the Stantler from above.

She never threw it. A shout startled them from far uphill: “Hey, Wendy! Luke! Let’s get a move on!”

The Stantler ran off. It was out of sight in a matter of seconds. As his head cleared, Luke could only gape. All those hours of combing the forest, and it ended like this. He was about to say something to Wendy, some words of consolation for how she didn’t even get a chance to try catching their quarry, but before he could, she shook her head and laughed.

“That’s just how it goes, ain’t it?”

Luke wouldn’t have put it like that. He wasn’t inclined to attribute this particular misfortune to a vague “it.” If he and Wendy had been gone until dinnertime, sure, Aaron ought to have gone looking for them in case they were dead. And yes, they had said they’d be looking for Stantler “this morning,” but it was only barely afternoon. Couldn’t he give them another hour or two?

Since Luke couldn’t quite bring himself to ask “What’s his problem?” he instead said, “Someone’s in a hurry,” as he stowed his camera.

“Heh, yeah! I’m surprised he sleeps, he’s so fixed on that third Badge!” Then she turned uphill and shouted, “Be back in a few!” her voice echoing all about.

“Cool!” Aaron shouted back.

As they hiked on up again with no need to avoid making noise, Luke supposed that if Wendy wasn’t mad at Aaron, he couldn’t complain. After all, even though she’d been serious about catching that Stantler, he knew she was also keen to get back to Goldenrod to retry the Gym. It might even be the case that she’d proposed this little excursion only as a favor to Luke himself, in which case it wouldn’t do to be mad at Aaron on her behalf.

“Soooo…” said Wendy with a lilt in her voice, “did you get him good?”

“Hm? Oh, yeah, I think so. We’ll have to see after I develop the roll.”

Her question assured him that, yes, she was mainly here to be nice. Therefore, he shouldn’t be angry with Aaron for acting like a selfish jerk all of a sudden.

…No, that was too strong. “Like a dolt” was sufficient, he told himself. But again, he shouldn’t be mad.

“Can’t wait to see!” said Wendy.

Yes, Luke thought, what mattered was how Wendy was finally getting back to normal. If she’d had fun today, that was more than enough.

*********

August 30th, 1993

Luke sat with his back to a tree on the outskirts of Violet City, holding a third envelope addressed to him. He had to wonder if the Violet City Pokémon Center’s staff was starting to gossip at this point. Mostly, though, he considered the implications of Wendy having walked back to Violet already. It didn’t assuage his suspicion that she was following him. Granted, he didn’t know when she had made it back to Violet, since he hadn’t opened the letter yet, nor did he know how long she had spent in Ilex Forest. Enough time had passed that she could have just happened to be in Violet City and knew he would be coming back this way eventually.

Or, she was following him.

He rubbed his eyes, stood up, paced back and forth, and took a deep breath. He wanted perspective.

Naturally, it would be preferable if she weren’t following him. But if even if she were, which he didn’t know, there was an obvious remedy to the problem: not telling her where he was going next. Or better yet, not writing back at all. If the prospect of seeing her—and, if things went according to her plan, seeing Aaron next—was worrying him, there was nothing forcing him to keep it going. Nothing at all.

He decided. He would read this letter, stick with his first instinct on whether Wendy was genuinely following him, and leave their correspondence at that if she was. He had already done more than he was obliged to in writing back twice. It would only be reasonable for Wendy to interpret the absence of further replies as signifying nothing more than coincidence. Really, the return to the mean regarding coincidence. Absolutely no cause for disappointment on her part.

Luke mentally rephrased this simple decision and its self-evident rationale at least five times before finally sitting down again.

“Just open it,” he said out loud. He didn’t.

“Get it over with.” He still didn’t.

“It’ll be nice. You’ll like it.” He had almost convinced himself, but he didn’t like over-promising.

“…Probably,” he added.

Now satisfied, he opened the envelope.



August 9th, 1993

Dear Luke,

First thing’s first, happy early birthday! late birthday! ← I assume you’re getting this after Friday, so let’s go with “late.” I’d send you a cake, but I don’t think the nurses will hold packages. Also, now that you’re 15, you are officially my peer again until next July, haha.

Let me answer your JCS questions: I’m still not 100% sure, but yes, I’m seriously considering full-time when I age out! Everyone’s really nice, and the boss told me she really wants to make it happen even if we’re not allowed to sign anything yet. As for “Run-off Stops Here,” yup, I’ve been working on that! Mostly water-quality testing, but I’ve also helped with the community outreach stuff. They let me “punch up” our latest round of fliers about which detergents to avoid. If you see a funny one, that’s probably mine!

It’s kind of weird. If you told me two years ago I’d be spending this much time in an office and not on the trail (and it’s not a lot, just a week or two every few months) I’d say you were crazy. Sometimes when I’m sitting at a desk I think, “Why aren’t I outside?” for a second, but it always passes. Like, I’m not itching to be done being a trainer, but more and more it’s starting to feel like it’s time. I always figured that being done being a kid basically was something that got pushed on you and you just had to suck it up until you got used to it, so it’s strange feeling ready to be done before it’s actually happened.

Lately, Nadine’s been on my mind a lot. Specifically, if I could/should have done something different before she called it quits. I have seen her at home a few times since then, but never for long. We were cool, and she seemed to be doing okay each time, but I still feel bad about how much she missed out on. And I’d be lying if I said I didn’t still miss her, too. For a while now, I’ve thought you were probably right back then and we should have turned around and made her talk it out more. Something was clearly hurting her, and we owed it to her—and us too—to try to do something about it, even if it turned out we couldn’t.

On that note. I don’t think I ever properly thanked you for how much you were there for me after that happened. I don’t know if you were going out of your way to do more things with me, seeing more stuff off the trail and all, but it was exactly what I needed and it means a lot to me. So, thank you.

Next up for me is Goldenrod again, going to help out at HQ for a bit. Hope you find those green birdos!

Yours truly,
Wendy




For a while, Luke sat there without the incriminating math even entering his head. He hadn’t realized how much he needed to hear what was in that one paragraph. Even if it had all gone south—way south—eventually, to know that at least for a while, and for once in his life, he’d been in the right place at the right time and had actually helped…

It meant the world. There was no other way to put it. As it sunk in, he found himself feeling physically, literally warm. It was like he could feel his blood reaching, calming, warming his entire body. It had never occurred to him that this was anything more than a figure of speech.

When the math did enter his head, it was powerless to trouble him. Yes, she had clearly gone the long way around from Azalea to Goldenrod, whether because she was following him or to check for a reply from Aaron again, but so what? He couldn’t feel anxious about that now, not with this letter in his hands. For once, everything felt okay.

He stood up. Even the weather was great. It was clear and warm, neither dry nor muggy, and there was a hint of the approaching autumn in each breeze. He stretched, smiled, and took to the path back to the heart of the city. Even as words he might write back to Wendy came to his mind, he felt like the “closure” thing people talked about was already here. And in that moment, he knew she would understand this too, somehow.

That settled it. He would call this a happy ending, with this perfect letter as the last word. This was it.

This was definitely, definitely it.
 
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tomatorade

The great speckled bird
Location
A town at the bottom of the ocean
Pronouns
He/Him
Partners
  1. quilava
  2. buizel
Hello! Here for Catnip! Read the first chapter.

You tease, trapping us in the world before email.

I remember you talking about a fic following a bunch of trainers like a relay. I can't tell if this is that fic, but considering the time jump between the first two scenes, that seems like a possibility.

Nevermind, it's just Luke. All Luke, all the time, baby.

Anyway, this seems like a very trainer trainer-fic. The pokemon are kinda there, but they don't have much presence beyond worldbuilding flavour and I don't really expect them to. I actually happen to like these a lot--there's a cottage industry of them on TR for sure.

Funny enough, this has vibes similar to a story I wanted to write a while ago. The image of a bitter kinda-failed trainer watching an old friend succeed on TV is a powerful one lol.

You've also managed to do what I never could and kept your scenes a tight, reasonable length. Overall, the actual reading experience was very smooth. You've got a strong vocabulary and know how to use the narration and description to tell a story over excessive dialogue, which is a positive from me. I didn't spot any errors and had no trouble getting through sooth as butter.

On Luke. Oh no, he's a nerd. Very strong start in general though. It's always nice when a character's interests have so much effect on the colour of the story. And although Luke commits the greatest sin of being a nerd, he takes no time at all to start being compelling, at least. I think even if you didn't tell me he was new, I would've known. He carries around his hobbies like he owes them his life and does the whole 'uh, I guess I'm a photographer' lol. He also lets himself get bullied into taking a group picture but I think he's just a little shy.

He also seems a very anxious boy. I can already tell he's going to overthink everything.

Reading on to the timeskip, I think Luke is much more my kinda guy than I first anticipated. I love disaster men who are still very hung up on shit that happened years ago. I'm glad, at least he kept to his photography.

Bro, he dated Wendy, didn't he? I know mournful regret when I read it. His thoughts on Aaron have the feeling of a former friend that nabbed your cars keys without asking and totalled it, but there's the regret of young love with Wendy and I've read to many YA books to not pick up on it.

Frankly, I'm surprised he didn't watch the whole special just to make sure Aaron lost lol.

I'm still trying to figure out the meaning of the little prologue snippet in regards to the actual story. Could just be a horror-movie-esque 'no, they don't have cellphones. Stop asking!' but so far I doubt it. Maybe Luke is actually Bill Gate or something, who knows. It's relevant a little later with Wendy's letter, but I don't think I would've needed a prologue just to know that they will be using letters in this fic.

You haven't gone super in depth in one particular area so far, but you have a great consideration for the way the world is built. lots of details about the strain of hiking across the region. Some great architectural details, too, one that I especially noticed was the positioning of the pokemon center to less inconvenience actual townsfolk. Not something I've considered before. I will say that the lack of narrative change from Luke at thirteen to Luke at... fifteen? seventeen? makes it read a little weird. The prose made more sense to me for the latter, and brought some attention to the difference. Though the first scene doesn't last long so it's not a huge deal.

Uh oh. Wendy writes a letter and the overthinking commences.

Continuing on a previous point, I'm a little split on the age. While I like the prose, I feel it makes him read older than I'm assuming he is. At the same time, you manage to hit a younger form of angst that counteracts it a little bit. Watching Luke stress like a teenager and muse on life like only a teenager can help put him more into perspective. I'm still a little torn but I do like that aspect of him, at least.

Looking back, I wish there was a little more of a hint why Luke's previous partnerships fell apart. I don't know if I just missed something, but at the moment all I get form it is that reacted immaturely in some way and the parting was not amicable. it's hard to get invested in that aspect of his person without more of a hint of why things didn't work out. I appreciate that it should still be a bit of a mystery, and my complaints really depend on how long you go without saying anything. For a first chapter, it's good, but three or four chapters of dancing around the issue might be too much.

Anyway, really enjoyed the first chapter at least. I would tell you to keep writing, but you got ahead of me :).
 

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
I remember you talking about a fic following a bunch of trainers like a relay. I can't tell if this is that fic, but considering the time jump between the first two scenes, that seems like a possibility.
Ah, the dangers of coloring reader-expectations by chatting in Discord, lol. Anyway, no, I'm currently early in the process of writing that fic, no promises it ever gets posted. This one's actually already completely written; I'm just posting new chapters every two weeks after doing the final editing pass for each.

Anyway, this seems like a very trainer trainer-fic. The pokemon are kinda there, but they don't have much presence beyond worldbuilding flavour and I don't really expect them to. I actually happen to like these a lot--there's a cottage industry of them on TR for sure.
Yeah, this has been the case with basically everything I've written. I'm unapologetically more interested in individual Pokemon trainers than I am in individual Pokemon, and it takes a conscious effort to check my instincts for the betterment of my fics. I did try to give Zoe and one other 'mon more vitality and presence than I usually do, which I hope shows over the course of the whole story, if not in the first chapter necessarily.

You've also managed to do what I never could and kept your scenes a tight, reasonable length. Overall, the actual reading experience was very smooth. You've got a strong vocabulary and know how to use the narration and description to tell a story over excessive dialogue, which is a positive from me. I didn't spot any errors and had no trouble getting through sooth as butter.
One of my main goals with this fic was to improve the readability of my prose, so this is very encouraging to hear, thanks.

On Luke. Oh no, he's a nerd. (...)
(...)
Reading on to the timeskip, I think Luke is much more my kinda guy than I first anticipated. I love disaster men who are still very hung up on shit that happened years ago. I'm glad, at least he kept to his photography.
Glad you like Luke so far despite his deplorable nerdiness. This is the kind of fic where if the reader doesn't like Luke after chapter 1 (or doesn't like Wendy after chapter 2, stay tuned), I'd say the rest isn't worth reading.

I'm still trying to figure out the meaning of the little prologue snippet in regards to the actual story. Could just be a horror-movie-esque 'no, they don't have cellphones. Stop asking!' but so far I doubt it. Maybe Luke is actually Bill Gate or something, who knows. It's relevant a little later with Wendy's letter, but I don't think I would've needed a prologue just to know that they will be using letters in this fic.
I might rewrite the foreword eventually or cut it entirely, even though I like it personally. From what I can see so far, it hasn't done what I meant it to, being:
  1. Prime the reader to feel the anxiety of trying to communicate with someone by essentially leaving a message in a bottle, and
  2. Prime the reader to notice when the dates in the fic get closer to "the end of 1993."
You haven't gone super in depth in one particular area so far, but you have a great consideration for the way the world is built. lots of details about the strain of hiking across the region. Some great architectural details, too, one that I especially noticed was the positioning of the pokemon center to less inconvenience actual townsfolk. Not something I've considered before. I will say that the lack of narrative change from Luke at thirteen to Luke at... fifteen? seventeen? makes it read a little weird. The prose made more sense to me for the latter, and brought some attention to the difference. Though the first scene doesn't last long so it's not a huge deal.
(...)
Continuing on a previous point, I'm a little split on the age. While I like the prose, I feel it makes him read older than I'm assuming he is. At the same time, you manage to hit a younger form of angst that counteracts it a little bit. Watching Luke stress like a teenager and muse on life like only a teenager can help put him more into perspective. I'm still a little torn but I do like that aspect of him, at least.
This made me check, and it turns out I never explicitly included the characters' ages in the first part, so the reader would need to piece together a few things to infer that everyone's ten when they first meet. I made an edit. Anyway, in the 1988 part of the chapter, Luke is 10, and in the 1993 part, he's almost 15.

If there isn't enough narrative change across the timeskip, I think what that comes down to is that my voice as a narrator basically is what it is. I hope it's something readers can get acclimated to over the course of the story, otherwise the structure will really work against it. And if Luke comes across as older than 15, that's mostly because I struggle to make kids sound their age, but partially it's the consequence of a conscious decision. In my take on the world of Pokemon, where kids leave home at age 10 and spend most of their time living outside and minding themselves, legal adulthood starts at 16 because that's when they're ready for it. Some writers (sensibly) bump up the ages to have training start at 12 or 13, but I decided early on that I liked the idea of kids growing up faster through independence.

Looking back, I wish there was a little more of a hint why Luke's previous partnerships fell apart. I don't know if I just missed something, but at the moment all I get form it is that reacted immaturely in some way and the parting was not amicable. it's hard to get invested in that aspect of his person without more of a hint of why things didn't work out. I appreciate that it should still be a bit of a mystery, and my complaints really depend on how long you go without saying anything. For a first chapter, it's good, but three or four chapters of dancing around the issue might be too much.
If you do end up reading the next chapter, I'd be interested in how you think things stand on this matter. There's some key stuff just around the corner, but there will also be key stuff that remains obscure for most of the story. Even though the whole fic isn't that long (approx. 70,000 words), I'll be up front and say that much of the story cooks at a slow burn (see the "slice of life" tag at the top of the thread). My intention was to make each chapter substantial enough on its own for this to work, but the jury's still out on that.

Anyway, really enjoyed the first chapter at least. I would tell you to keep writing, but you got ahead of me :).
Hey, glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for reading and for doing Catnip!
 
Chapter 6: Grown Up New

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Chapter 6
Grown Up

September 14th, 1993

Wendy was starting to feel it in her legs and feet. It was typical of trainers to take a multi-day break from distance-walking after two weeks of travel, whereas she was coming up on three straight. From Goldenrod, she had taken the Loop counter-clockwise (again), taken the Route 36 Fork north to Ecruteak, gone east as far as Mahogany, then turned around and passed Ecruteak again en route to Olivine City—her current destination. Each time she stopped at a Pokémon Center, she left another copy of her first, short letter to Aaron. He had to see one of them eventually.

The sun was getting low, but she had a stopping place in mind for the evening, so she kept up the pace. Then, as had happened so often for more than a month now, she clapped her hand to her forehead and muttered, “Stupid, stupid, stupid.” What troubled her was how she had somehow failed to include any follow-up questions in her last letter to Luke. Every time she’d meant to ask one while writing, she’d worried she was being too pushy and changed her mind. When the letter was done, she could have sworn she’d remembered to ask one. She didn’t realize it until after she dropped it off.

She knew he wouldn’t decide not to write back simply because there were no questions to answer. They’d had enough back-and-forth to count as pen-pals by now, surely? And even though there had been no reply waiting for her in Violet City, he might not even have gotten back yet, not if he was really committed to finding those green Doduo.

Still, something troubled her. By going so out of her way to reply quickly and in great depth, it was possible—not likely, just possible—she had scared him off. Despite the friendly words in his replies so far, even she had pieced together that he was hardly interested in sitting down and talking about everything past, present, and future over coffee.

Well, soda, she said in her head, seeing as I don’t drink coffee yet. Does Luke drink coffee?

She shook her head vigorously in an attempt to drive these thoughts away. “A watched pot never boils,” she said aloud. It didn’t help to fret over what she might have done or written differently. All she could do now was trust him to write back when he could and would, end of story.

But if I already pushed him too hard…

Just then, a familiar fork in the trail mercifully brought her mind away from her recent possible screw-ups. She took the right turn to the fainter path leading uphill, passing a weather-worn sign that read:



Rt. 38 Pokémon Gym
Open use tue-sat, dawn to midnight
Spectator fee 50p open days, 100p tournaments
See fieldhouse for tournament schedule and eligibility
PROVIDING ALCOHOL TO MINORS IS A FELONY


The (court-ordered) last line was on a newer plank of wood. It couldn’t have been replaced all that long ago, since nobody had yet covered over the words “A FELONY” with “ONLY POLITE” or similar.

The Route 38 Pokémon Gym didn’t particularly stand out from other outdoor, minor-league gyms—it was rather mundane in its modest sketchiness—but its location was convenient, being only a short walk from the main trail about thirteen miles out from Ecruteak city limits. Wendy usually stopped there on her way to Olivine to meet other kids and spectate a few battles. These days in particular, it helped her feel like a real trainer for a change.

When Wendy crested the hill and emerged from the trees, the lights were already on, and the bleachers held a not-quite-sparse crowd watching (or half-watching) a battle on the dirt arena. A Xatu belonging to a man in his thirties was making quick work of some kid’s overmatched Octillery.

Wendy paid her fifty Pyen to the man at the foot of the stands, then climbed to the tenth and top row. She stepped down a row when she didn’t like the way the highest board creaked, then surveyed the attendees. None of them looked to be her own age tonight. Aside from the younger trainers, there were a few parents and grandparents with distracted toddlers, as well as the always-present drinking-and-gambling set, mostly men. They were clustered around a few coolers.

Wendy did spot a quiet trio of girls sitting a few rows down who looked like they could use some company, so she approached them.

“Heya!”

The girls said hi and hey back to her. Then she asked them, “You all fight yet?”

They shook their heads. “The adults are too tough, tonight,” said one.

Even as she said it, the Xatu finished off the Octillery with one last Psybeam. A mix of mild cheers and boos came from the rest of the crowd. Traditionally, when an adult beat a kid-trainer, most of the cheers came from the drinkers-and-gamblers who’d picked right.

“I’m Wendy, by the way. Names and Badges?”

“I’m Alice. We all got two: Violet and Azalea.”

“I’m Gabriella.”

“Dolly. You got all eight?”

“Just seven,” said Wendy with a smile. “It’s enough for me.”

As she grilled the girls all about their teams and their recent itinerary, the man with the Xatu took on another trainer. It was a simple one-on-one affair, this time against a Flaafy. An Electric sheep was a good choice against a Psychic bird.

The battle proceeded nothing like the conventional wisdom would suggest. Right from the outset, the Xatu set a Light Screen in place strong enough to be nearly opaque. This reduced the Flaafy’s opening Thunder Shock to little more than static electricity. The Xatu then took to the air and stayed there, reducing the risk from basic attacks to nil. Its Psybeams hit much harder than the opposing Electric-type attacks, and soon the match appeared out of reach for the young trainer.

The gears turned in Wendy’s head as her attention strayed from the girls’ current story. Even though she rarely gave a thought to battling these days, she couldn’t ignore the enticing holes in a one-trick-Ponyta strategy. A toothy grin spread over her face.

I think it was a Misdreavus,” Gabriella was saying when Wendy decided she had to interrupt her, “but Alice—”

“Hey, sorry, you said you got a Hitmontop?”

“Huh?” said Gabriella, “Uh, yeah. My others are too worn out from today.”

Wendy knew the other two girls would have an easier time beating this complacent scrub of a grownup, but she couldn’t help it. She wanted this to be spectacular. “Is she quick?”

“Sure.”

Excellent. “Does she know Detect and High Jump Kick?”

Gabriella grew apprehensive. “…Yeeeeaah?”

Perfect. “You’re up next. Put ’er in.”

Gabriella was speechless. Dolly, however, was neither speechless nor impressed. “Do you really have seven Badges? Fighting’s double-weak against Psychic-Flying.”

“Doesn’t matter,” said Wendy. “Not as long as she can keep from getting hit for a few minutes.”

“What do you mean?” asked Alice, with a touch more curiosity than doubt in her voice.

“This guy’s going all-in on a defensive strategy that can’t win a war of attrition. Take a close look at Xatu. He’s barely taken any real hits, but he’s already flagging.”

The bird’s angular wings were indeed flapping slower than before. There was no trouble discerning the painterly lines of color on its feathers.

“There’s a reason bird Pokémon don’t stick to the air for a whole battle unless you tell them to. Hovering around an enemy is much, much harder than flying in a straight line. And even if he’s crazy-good at Light Screen, it’s only wearing him out faster. If this kid knew to stall, this wouldn’t be a contest.”

“Won’t Xatu’s trainer adjust if he gets too tired?” asked Dolly. It was a good question, and if they’d been talking about a kid-trainer, it would have been the right question.

“He won’t,” said Wendy. “This guy’s no serious trainer. He’s just doing this on autopilot to make some drinking money. Won’t even notice what’s wrong till it’s too late.” She clapped a hand to her candidate’s shoulder. “You got this, Gabriella.”

Gabriella and the others considered this in silence as the battle concluded to more cheers and boos. “We can go all night!” the Xatu’s trainer jeered at his buddies. The coins he accepted from the kid trainer were a token formality, of course. He was in it for his bets with fellow adults. Wendy noticed him administer a Potion to his Xatu that wouldn’t help with fatigue nearly as much as he probably thought it would.

“I dunno…” said Gabriella.

“I’ll cover your payout if you lose,” said Wendy, taking out her wallet.

All three girls’ eyes widened. Wendy knew the math would be hard to resist. Get an adult’s payout with a win and come out even with a loss?

“Who’s up next!” called the man to the bleachers.

To Wendy’s delight, Gabriella stood up and raised her arm.

The man clapped his hands. “Hey, all right!”

At least he was a friendly dope, Wendy decided, her knees bouncing in anticipation.

Gabriella walked to her end of the oval. Neither her voice nor her body language screamed “confidence” when she tossed out her Poké Ball. “Go, Heidi!”

There came a few groans and a few laughs from the crowd at the sight. More laughs followed when one of the grandpas barked out a bet of two thousand Pyen on Gabriella in the direction of the drinkers. As they repeatedly told the old man they weren’t joking about the money, Gabriella whispered something in Heidi’s ear.

There you go, thought Wendy. Give her the plan, get her on board, then execute.

The battle began. Just as Wendy had counted on, the Xatu took to the air at once. Idiot, she couldn’t help thinking. Heidi, meanwhile, got her feet moving in place and stayed alert. She had the classic Detect look in her eyes.

“Psybeam!”

Heidi snapped away from where the beam landed as if she’d seen the future, then at once took to her head and began to spin. The Xatu was slow in responding to the second command for a Psybeam, and missed again as he failed to account for Heidi’s acceleration. A third miss followed when Heidi started switching up her direction, maintaining a remarkable amount of speed even as she turned on a dime.

“Yeah!” cheered Wendy, “That’s the way!”

Next, Gabriella called out, “Detect!” Wendy sucked in a breath. She had somehow failed to consider it, but everything hinged on Heidi being able to pull off this maneuver while spinning.

The adult trainer hesitated, no doubt considering whether his next move would be a wasted one. But with every second working against him, finally he called for yet another Psybeam.

Heidi flipped away and back onto her spinning head with the impossible anticipation of a successful Detect as the beam again struck nothing but dirt. Wendy hooted and pumped her fist. Heidi was a Hitmontop’s Hitmontop: immune to dizziness. This was going to work.

Gabriella’s growing belief began to show in her posture. At the sight of it, an uncanny impression swept over Wendy. She was looking at herself. Not now, but four years ago, when she first came here. She was right there, standing in that girl’s shoes. The overconfident adult was there. The cheering kids, all having her back, were there too.

She found herself scanning more of the crowd, not expecting but wanting to expect to see Aaron shouting his encouragement. She looked at the edge of the arena where Luke should be, his camera tracking the dueling Pokémon.

And when, every so often, her gaze would flit away from the battle at hand, she’d see— not every time, but some of the time—the lens pointed at her.

But no. Not at her, now. At Gabriella. She didn’t look enough like Wendy at that age to fool her—not really. Wendy shook her head as if to wake herself. Then she realized the critical point of the battle was almost here, and enthusiasm dispelled whatever had caught her mood for a minute.

“Go Heidi, go!”

The Xatu struggled to stay aloft, while Heidi moved as fast as ever, having only been grazed once this entire time. When her path took her directly beneath the opponent, Gabriella seized the moment. “High Jump Kick!”

In an instant, Heidi was off her head, on her feet, and springing into the air. She could have been a Hitmonlee with that jump. Her right leg whipped around as she pulled with her whole body, and the Xatu took the full kick square on the forehead. Double type-resistance or no, he crashed to the dirt before Heidi landed at a safe distance. The crowd erupted.

Gabriella didn’t miss a beat. “Rapid Spin!”

Wendy knew she could count on a Hitmontop-trainer to know how to end it. Psychics may be naturals at reading and adjusting to precise martial attacks, but brainpower was no help against pure kinetic energy. The exhausted Xatu had no answer for Heidi’s revolving bombardment of blows. His trainer’s desperate call for a Reflect was too little, too late.

Seconds later: “Okay, he’s down! We give!”

Alice and Dolly shrieked with joy and ran out to celebrate with their friend and her Pokémon. It filled Wendy to the brim seeing them jump up and down at the “impossible” upset. She got up to join them.

She stopped.

Something in the back of her head told her this was their moment, not hers. Even as she felt she could see a younger Wendy where Gabriella stood, she couldn’t picture an older Wendy crossing the distance from here to there to join them. It was strange: Usually, hanging around other trainers and watching battles make her feel more like a kid still, not less.

When she realized what was different this time, she gulped. Upon spotting a winnable battle, she hadn’t just handed it off to a kid: She’d offered to subsidize her for it, like a kindly patron of the rising generation of Pokémon trainers, content to share, observe, and remember.

In that moment, she felt more like Gabriella’s aunt than like Gabriella herself.

*********

Three days later, Wendy was still in a slight funk, but the view of Goldenrod Bay from the top of Olivine City made it hard to feel the symptoms of a funk. It was two in the afternoon, with the sun high and bright over the dazzling water. She walked down the cobblestone streets toward the southern docks. Olivine was built on a slope such that the bay dominated every sightline unless you stood directly behind a building, none of which were tall save the towering lighthouse. There was a slight chill in the salt breeze: The autumnal equinox was right around the corner.

When she was a block away from the bottom of the street, she turned for the Pokémon Center. She had the copy of her letter to Aaron to deliver, even though if he hadn’t picked up one of them by now, he was probably wandering about Kanto or something and wouldn’t get this one either. In any event, she was here, the envelope was sealed, and her muscle memory made it difficult to walk to any other building when she first entered a town. She stepped through the automatic doors and got in line.

When it was her turn, she placed the envelope on the counter along with Sharpy’s Poké Ball and her ID. “I’d like to leave a letter here for someone, in case he comes through. Aaron Barlow.”

“Not a problem,” said the nurse, taking the letter before reciting the usual spiel.

“Oh.” The nurse suddenly interrupted herself. Wendy’s heart skipped a beat, knowing by now what was coming. “‘Wendy Merrick?’ There’s already a letter for you. Your friend must have gotten here first.” She handed it to Wendy. This one felt heavier than usual.

“Thank you very much.” Her name was in Luke’s handwriting. A stupid smile came over her face.

“Would you still like me to keep this one?”

“Huh? Oh, yes please.” There was no need to clarify the actual number of her correspondents in the mix. When Sharpy’s perfunctory checkup was complete, Wendy left the Center and walked the short distance to the docks to read.

She found a wrought-iron bench facing the water and sat down, letting out a deep sigh of relief. She had not frightened Luke away for good after all. Without further ado, her eager fingers opened the seal, but then they froze. There was a thick, white, lineless sheet in addition to the notebook paper. Anticipation mounted within her as she realized this was what she hadn’t dared to ask of him: a photo. She pulled it out carefully by the edge and turned it around to see what it was.

She gasped.

It was a valley. And not just any valley, but one of Wendy’s very favorites in all of Johto, even though she had never told anyone this, nor felt confident in her ability to describe why it was. But here was the very thing in black and white.

In the lower-right foreground, atop one of the ridges flanking the valley, there stood a row of conifers silhouetted against a low, white, crawling cloud, itself framed just so by the trees of the next ridge down. The outlines of a family of Aipom were perfectly visible in the closest treetops: stark shadows on brilliant pearl. They seemed to gaze at the valley beyond just as the cameraman did. In the valley itself, there were two lovely little cabins in the lone clearing amid the trees. The far ridges were draped, but not obscured, by more of the crawling clouds.

Luke must have climbed a tree at the exact right time on the absolute ideal day to take this picture. It was every little thing she had seen and remembered individually of this quiet, precious place at the foot of the mountains north and east of Cherrygrove, all together in one little rectangle.

And he’d given it to her.

Feeling she was in a dream, she tucked the photo safely back into the envelope and unfolded the letter.



September 7th, 1993

Dear Wendy,

I definitely get what you’re talking about with being ready to move on. Whenever I walk into a Pokécenter and everyone’s younger than me except the staff, it’s like, “What am I doing here?” At the same time, I know I’m going to miss the freedom that comes with still technically being an underage trainer. You know, having license to spend all your time wandering around, getting a food stipend, etc. Seems like nobody realizes what a good deal it is till it’s almost over. So as much I want to go pro, I do also want to get as much as I can out of what I’ve got going now.

I’m very glad to hear you’re still on speaking terms with Nadine. I know that wound festered for a long time, even when it didn’t show. I don’t blame you for second-guessing now, but I still don’t blame you for the choice you made back then in letting her go, either. You had no easy options, and you did what you thought was best for her. So even if you got it wrong (and that’s if), there’s no shame in it, especially seeing as we were only ten, so I hope you don’t beat yourself up over it. And who’s to say it’s permanent? It wouldn’t surprise me if down the road you end up even better friends than you were growing up, if life obliges.

As for the thanks, I didn’t know how much I needed to hear that, but I really did. So, thank you too.

Anyway, enclosed is a picture I took on the way back from Tohjo Falls. I hope it makes up for the absence of a color picture of a green Doduo, all of whom were successful in avoiding me. This one seemed to me like one you’d like, though, and I thought it came out nice, so here it is. Another print of the same’s going in my portfolio, so don’t worry about holding onto yours.

I’m going to hitch a ride to the Whirl Islands tomorrow, and decide where next after that. Maybe Ilex, maybe the Natl. Park. Hope to hear from you again if/when you get this, and sorry for dropping it off this far away from your last one.

Sincerely,
Luke



Wendy read the letter five more times from start to finish. Then she tried to remember everything in their earlier letters in sequence, as if this were just a normal conversation they were having over the course of ten minutes instead of three months. She wanted to nod, laugh, listen, interrupt… not just read.

What mattered most to her, though, was that she hadn’t lost him again. She figured she could live with the time and the distance as long as she knew that.

“Wendy?”

She thought she recognized the voice, but ruled it out as impossible. Then she lifted her head, and her eyes moved past the woman’s nice clothes and up to her face, where they stuck. For a split second, Wendy’s brain said it wasn’t her after all, but it changed its mind. The sense of coincidence amounted nearly to vertigo.

“…Nadine?”

It came out as a question. More an “I didn’t expect in a million years to run into you right here and now” question than an “I wasn’t sure I recognized you” question, though much about Nadine had changed. What struck Wendy first was her outfit. The top was intricate, lacy, flattering… everything that would make you leave it at home if you were going hiking in the woods. It was a similar story with the long skirt and classy sandals. Clothing aside, she had grown, too. She was taller, her facial features were more defined, and she’d let her hair grow out.

Frankly, she was gorgeous. And most of all…

She looks like an adult.

There were too many things Wendy wanted to say about Nadine’s new appearance to pick one. She was getting terribly close to letting this develop into an awkward silence. But then, she noticed the fuzzy little paws poking around from behind her oldest friend’s feet.

Wendy half-rose and leaned over to see. As soon as she did see, any previous danger of an awkward silence was moot. The ice didn’t so much break as evaporate.

“Oh. My. Gaaaaahhd! He evolved!

Since Nadine stepped out of the way, Wendy didn’t have to worry about bowling her over to get at Quincy. The Furret, pleased to see her, let out a friendly squeak, and kindly subjected himself to the hug and subsequent inspection of his pointy ears and long, silky tail.

“Oh, he’s simply wonderful!”

Nadine laughed. “Thanks! He gets that a lot! Now, I hope you’ll let me see Sharpy…”

Wendy held out Sharpy’s ball without taking her eyes off Quincy. “Yeah, sure, keep ’er.”

“Oh no,” said Nadine, laughing even harder. “Don’t even joke about that!”

When she came out of her ball, Sharpy sang in delight to see Nadine. Back before their journey began, they had made a point to get Wendy’s shy Clefairy well-socialized with her travelling companions to-be. It was good to see it still stuck.

There was no need to ask why it had taken Quincy so long to evolve from a Sentret. Ever since Nadine went home, he’d been living as a pet, and consequently was slower in growing than even a wild Sentret.

“I’ve been looking forward to this for like, ever,” said Wendy, running her fingers over Quincy’s tail again. “So, what are you doing out here?”

“I’m here most Fridays,” said Nadine. “I don’t have any lectures today, and the library’s bigger here, so I come over to do research.”

Wendy had forgotten the news from her mom that Nadine got accepted to school a year early. “That’s a lotta time on the ferry.”

“Yeah, but I read, and it’s nice to get out.” She shifted her weight and looked away for a second, but only a second. “We’ve got a lot to catch up on. You want to go get coffee?”

Coffee.

“Uh, heh-heh,” stammered Wendy. “Is soda okay?”

*********

They ended up getting milkshakes. More than being a compromise, it only made sense to go with dairy when in Olivine, near as it was to the best Miltank farms in Johto. They stayed and talked well after their glasses were empty, not least because Wendy’s calves were really catching up to her after so many weeks of walking in a row.

“How many miles do you usually go in a day now?” Nadine had asked at one point.

“’Bout twelve. Give or take.”

Nadine could only whistle at that.

Mostly, they talked about Nadine’s new scholastic career, rather than Pokémon training. She was majoring in linguistics, and she went into detail on the topics this entailed, including the Great Vowel Shift, voiced and un-voiced consonants, the International Phonetic Alphabet, subject-verb-object order vs. subject-object-verb order, and more besides. When Wendy made the woundingly predictable joke that it was “all Greek” to her, Nadine was polite enough to chuckle.

Looking at her, hearing about her, Wendy couldn’t help but compare herself to Nadine. For all the prospect of moving on from childhood had been on her mind of late, she hadn’t taken anything like the leap Nadine had. Next to her, Wendy felt like she’d overslept for a year and shown up for this reunion under-dressed, under-learned, under-cultured…

Wendy found herself jarred from this line of thought when Nadine described one classmate in particular and grew suspiciously careful in her word choice until finally:

“So… you could say… we’re…”

Wendy’s eyes nearly bulged out of her head. “…You’ve got a boyfriend?

Nadine raised a finger. “We haven’t said that yet.”

She must have known this was no way to downplay the news for a rabid audience. “‘Yet?’

Poor Nadine was bright red at this point, but she was smiling. Wendy, by contrast, was downright ecstatic.

“Well, come on, tell me everything about him!”

Even “everything” about Mike might not have satisfied Wendy’s curiosity, but Nadine gave her a proper rundown. He was sixteen (“Sixteen!” echoed Wendy), had come to Cianwood to study medicine, and had met Nadine in their mandatory mathematics course. They happened to have the same idea of going to the library in Olivine one Friday, then on another, after which it became something they did together on the regular. So, they talked a lot, and before she knew it…

“This is so you. It’s perfect. So where is he right now?” Wendy looked around as if Mike might be hiding under another table.

“He’s at home in Ecruteak. Big celebration for his great-grandma’s hundredth birthday. Lucky for him he missed the interrogation!”

“Being a good family member is a nice sign… Yes, I’d say he’s checking out so far.” Wendy nodded in an unmerited show of sage-ness. “Now, here’s the real question: What do you like about him? Like, like-like?”

Nadine drummed her fingers on the table and took a long, slow breath before venturing to answer. “Well, he’s really kind, of course, but mostly… I guess it’s the way he makes me feel like I’m… smart, funny, and… pretty.”

Mike was getting flying colors at this rate. Wendy felt great confidence in how the rest of the interrogation would go.

At length, it came time for Nadine to walk back to the ferry. Wendy insisted on accompanying her—moreover, she insisted she carry Quincy as they strolled along, even though he was big enough that she needed to crane her neck to drape his front paws over her shoulder.

“You’re sure?” Nadine had asked, “You shouldn’t push yourself if you’re worn out.”

“Not at all,” Wendy had said. “I’m fine, and this is why I wanted a Furret in our crew from the beginning.” She nuzzled Quincy’s fuzzy face, and he nuzzled her right back.

As they walked, the topic of conversation shifted from Nadine to Wendy, and then, inevitably, to the letters.

“That’s really great about Luke,” Nadine said after Wendy had gotten through the gist of things. “I only heard what my folks heard about the whole thing with… you know. Really didn’t line up with what I remembered about him. Not that I knew him that well, but… what I heard was hard to believe.”

“Yeah. I still don’t understand what happened. Really, it makes less and less sense the more I hear from him and the more I try to think about it. I’m hoping if Aaron finally writes back, I can actually figure it out and maybe we can all get past it.”

“Hmm.” Nadine looked off in the distance for a while before she spoke again. “So, I probably shouldn’t speculate about Luke, cause it was only a few months and we were little kids, but…”

“No, no, go for it. Can’t hurt.”

Nadine rubbed the back of her head. “I… can see how someone might explode if they tried to bottle down a lot of pressure for a long time. That’s… that’s why in hindsight I think it was probably for the best I quit when I did.”

Wendy swallowed, but made an effort to keep a neutral face. They had never talked about this. She could only imagine how difficult it was for her.

Nadine continued. “Not that I know whether Luke was dealing with that kind of pressure or not… You know I’m only guessing. But I know I felt a lot of pressure from Aaron, and—”

She cut herself off, but recovered and clarified before Wendy asked her to.

“I mean, pressure from how good at training and battling he was. …And from how good you were too, not just Aaron. My Pokémon and I just weren’t at that level and… it wore on me fast. I don’t know how I would have dealt with pushing for the Tournament like he does every year.”

This was a lot for Wendy to process. She found herself brushing Quincy’s tail for comfort.

There was no question she would have tried to convince Nadine to stay on the trail if she’d known this was the problem. She would have declared that “pact” to get all eight Badges void on the spot if it would have lowered the stakes and kept Nadine with them. Or she would have helped Nadine find some other goal she was the best at—anything.

She didn’t say it, though. This didn’t feel like the time to stick what-ifs or shouldas into the wound. Instead, she asked another question as it occurred to her.

“Have you talked to Aaron since Luke—uh, since the fight?”

“No. No, I uh…” she looked away again. “I haven’t actually talked to him since I stopped training.”

Wendy blinked. More than being hard to process, this revelation struck her as plain odd. She knew Aaron had been home several times since then, and hadn’t Nadine talked to her a few times when she went home? Only briefly, somewhat awkwardly, and in no real depth, granted, but not at all with Aaron? If Wendy and Aaron both had been the source of the problem, what was this discrepancy? Maybe Aaron was avoiding all his old friends. Or could it be that Nadine, like Luke… couldn’t stand to talk to Aaron? Was there more to this?

She pumped the brakes on this line of thought. By Nadine’s own admission, Aaron had been a passive influence on whatever had been going through her head at the time. That couldn’t have been the case with Luke’s head, which made the situations categorically different. All it meant was that it was even more important she get in touch with Aaron and learn how he saw things. If it took long enough, she might have to go to Mr. or Mrs. Barlow as a last-resort intermediary.

They were coming up on the ferry when Nadine’s mood suddenly brightened. “Hey, why don’t you come home, too? We can hang out more over the weekend, and maybe later you can meet Mike.”

Wendy’s own cloud lifted at once, and she almost said yes right away before she caught herself. Instead, she bent over to let Quincy down and asked, “Can I meet you there tonight? I need to write a letter, first.”

“I can wait for the late ferry,” said Nadine. Then, with a wink, she added, “Don’t worry. I won’t read over your shoulder.”
 
Chapter 7: Dreamaches New

icomeanon6

That's "I come anon 6"
Location
northern Virginia
Pronouns
masculine
Zoe took a savage blow to the chin. Luke wanted to switch in another Pokémon—Shane, Pauline, any of them but Zoe. She wasn’t supposed to still be out there. But no matter how many times he pressed the switch on her ball, it wouldn’t recall her. A Headbutt sent her flying backwards a hundred feet, but not out of bounds, even though she’d only been five feet away from the edge. If he couldn’t switch her out, he wanted to forfeit. He opened his mouth, but his lungs were shut tight, and his vocal cords were gone.

The lights went out in the Gym, but the battle didn’t stop. The opponent sent out three more Bug-types, each of them something between an Ariados and a Beedrill, and they all jabbed their fangs into Zoe. Leech Life. Luke couldn’t call for any attacks, but Zoe tried using Psychic anyway. The walls warped, and the playing surface fell for miles. But the bugs held on.

Luke heard his own voice in his head, but only in his head:

Fall over. We can’t win. Just fall over.

He wanted to move his hands to signal “time out,” “give up,” anything, but his arms were locked to his side.

Stop.

Zoe moaned in pain. She fell her to her knees, but not all the way down. Instead of going quiet, she continued to moan, so the fight wasn’t over.

Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop.

“Wendy can’t stand quitters,” said Aaron.

Chapter 7
Dreamaches

October 6th, 1993

Luke awoke gasping for air. It pitch-black above. He worried he might have gone blind, but then he remembered where he was. No stars ever poked through the leaves in Ilex Forest.

It was years since Luke last had a bad dream. He must not have been fully awake yet, since it didn’t occur to him right away why he wasn’t supposed to have—or remember having—bad dreams at all. All he could think about was training for the Gym Challenge, which he had to reassure himself they weren’t doing anymore.

They. He and Zoe.

Zoe and bad dreams.

Luke bolted upright and all but kicked his sleeping bag away from him, hoping against hope it wasn’t what he thought. He groped for his flashlight, found the switch on the second try, then finally saw Zoe.

“Oh, fuck.”

Zoe was lying in the fetal position. Next to her head was a translucent, shadowy puddle of what Luke recognized as “dream-sick.”

“I’m so sorry, girl.”

He had dropped his end of the bargain: She hypnotized him and ate his dreams so he could actually sleep, while he maintained his emotional stability such that her dream-diet remained healthy. If her body was rejecting nightmares—vomiting them back into his head as well as onto the ground—it meant he had been feeding her too many of them for weeks.

Before she could go back in her Poké Ball for the night, she needed her medicine. Luke dug through his pack for the deep, seldom-opened compartment where he kept the plastic bag. It was distressingly light when he found it. Taking it out, he counted only two sheets of four pills. He cursed himself for forgetting to obtain more when those older packs expired.

Slowly, he turned Zoe onto her back, then helped her sit up. She made an obstinate but weak noise in her throat and kept her eyes closed. He held the pill to her mouth.

“You got to take one, Zoe. Open.”

She showed no interest in listening. It took a minute of persuasion with his fingers and with what he called “thinking louder” to get her to open up just a crack. Even then, he needed his hands to make sure she swallowed.

“Good girl. You’ll feel better.”

He set her down again before returning her to the ball. Then, he put his head in hands, rubbed his eyes, and groaned. The stock might not last until he could get more. The silver lining was that since they were in Ilex, he could scrape together a supply of an emergency substitute tomorrow, if he remembered how.

In the meantime, he was left to his own devices to get some sleep. He knew it would be impossible for at least two hours in his current condition. His watch, to his dismay, read 2:00 AM. He was going to be as good as a zombie come daylight.

With his options limited to lying awake or finding a distraction, he opted for the latter. Before he thought twice about it, he had pulled out Wendy’s letter from Olivine a few weeks ago and was re-reading it by flashlight.



September 17th, 1993

Dear Luke,

Thank you, thank you, thank you for the picture. I love it so much. I’m writing in a little more of a hurry than usual, but even if I had time, I don’t think I could properly write down everything I feel about it. I don’t remember if I told you once that I think that’s one of the prettiest valleys in Johto or if you just guessed I would like it, but I actually think that would be even better because that means we’re seeing the same thing there, if that makes sense. Maybe it doesn’t, I don’t know. Anyway, I love it, and thank you.

Nadine just told me I don’t have to hurry that much on her account. She says hi, by the way, which I suppose needs some explanation, ha. If you can believe it, we ran into each other right after I got your last letter a few hours ago. We’re catching up on a lot of stuff: She’s doing amazing at school back home, for one. Quincy (her Sentret, if you forgot the name) finally evolved and is very soft, fuzzy, and adorable. Maybe we should get you together so you can take his portrait, ha ha.

Okay. I’m actually going to slow down and write with my brain more now.

Among the things Nadine and I talked about, there was something I wanted to run by you. She told me the reason she quit back then was because she felt a lot of pressure to measure up to where Aaron and I were at with our teams. This really caught me by surprise, and I imagine it might surprise you too, if you remember just how sharp she was about reading battles. I mean, I’d be lying if I said I thought her team was quite as good as mine or Aaron’s, especially Aaron’s, but I never thought she was “behind,” and we were all just getting started. I don’t think I could have guessed in a million years she was dealing with that kind of self-expectation.

Or I guess what worries me more is that maybe it wasn’t just self-expectation, and that I was doing something to make her think she had to get better right away or quit. I wish I hadn’t missed whatever the signs were, and really feel like I should have seen them. If all she needed was a little encouragement, just someone telling her she was closer than she thought, or even just a “There’s no hurry, you got this,” she should have heard that from me. Maybe because I never felt any stress about how I was doing with training, I didn’t think about how she might be looking at it.

All that said, the biggest relief in the world to me is that whether or not things should have gone better, they’re going great for her now. She is so clearly in her element at school. I can’t overstate this: My footsteps are lighter just knowing she’s doing this well. At the risk of putting it too bluntly, it’s like when you first wrote back to me in July. Knowing you were okay, getting you back again even a little bit was so important to me. And now it’s happened with Nadine, and right after I got your picture, too. This is seriously one of the best days of my life.

I’m going home with Nadine for at least a while. Long enough to meet some of her school friends. After that, I’m overdue for doing some work at and around the National Park, so probably there next.

Yours truly,
Wendy




Luke put the letter down. If it had consisted of only the first two and last two paragraphs, he would probably re-read it every single day. Even with the middle two paragraphs, though, the thing was an overwhelming comfort to him. He loved it. What he hated was how it was also making Zoe sick.

If he was honest with himself, he could have seen this coming when he changed his mind about continuing this correspondence with Wendy. There was no thinking about her without also thinking about Aaron and the fight, and no thinking about that without inviting nightmares. He suddenly found himself wishing he’d never met her. If this letter was medicine, he figured it was worse than the disease.

He clapped a hand to his forehead. That was the dumbest thing he could possibly think right now. It was one thing to curse Aaron, curse Pokémon battling, curse his own bad luck, bad decisions, immaturity… but not Wendy. Not when he owed her so much on Zoe’s behalf.

*********

September 30th, 1989

Luke was at his wit’s end. His head hurt, his eyes were burning, and the doctor still wouldn’t tell him if Zoe, lying limp on the examining table, was going to be okay. The man just kept pulling Zoe’s eyes open and shining a light in them. Then he listened to her chest with his stethoscope again, even though anyone with eyes could tell something was wrong by how it was blue.

“Doctor, pleeeease… Is she going to get better?”

The doctor took the stethoscope out of his ears. His face showed nothing. “Luke, the first thing you should know is that while her condition is serious, it isn’t life-threatening, and the effects shouldn’t be permanent.”

Luke’s lower lip trembled. He’d never thought “life-threatening” was a possibility.

“What it comes down to,” said the doctor, “is that there’s a lot we still don’t understand about how a Drowzee’s stomach works, such as how dream-eating manifests semi-physical matter for digestion. We know that too many bad dreams upset the stomach, and that in rare cases, they can provoke something like an allergic reaction, as is happening with your Zoe. But we don’t know enough about it for the machines to be of any help. And since the condition is so uncommon and only medium-priority, we don’t keep the medicine in stock either. Its shelf-life is too short.”

Luke was in disbelief. Nobody ever told him there would be anything the Pokémon Center couldn’t make better. But what gnawed at him was how the doctor could call this “medium-priority” when Zoe was in this much pain and could barely move. He almost bit the man’s head off for how calm his stupid doctor-voice was when this was serious, but he reined himself in. “Then where can I get some? She needs it!”

“I know she needs it. I’m writing the name of the medicine on this piece of paper. When you give it to the nurse at the front desk, she will order some in, and tell you when we expect to have it. Until then, if you’d prefer not to leave her here, keep her in her Poké Ball so she can rest.”

Five minutes later, the nurse put down the phone. Luke’s knuckles went white from his grip on the edge of the counter.

The nurse said, “It will be four to six weeks.”

An eternity. Luke fell to his knees, then broke down completely. His friends had to lead him out of the building.

*********

Fifteen minutes later, Luke sat hunched over on a bench in Goldenrod Municipal Park, staring at the dirt. Aaron was there too, saying some words Luke didn’t care to listen to, but couldn’t stop hearing. Wendy was off somewhere else. Said she needed to call home.

“So, if Zoe’s gonna be out of commission for a while,” said Aaron, “I think we ought to focus most on Shane. He’s been falling behind lately. This ain’t a bad chance to get him caught up, if it makes you feel better.”

Shut up, Luke wanted to say but didn’t, since with some people it only invited more talking.

Aaron continued. “First thing Shane needs work on is defense, especially against Water and Grass. He can take a pounding, but the way he loses his drive when you hit him with a weakness is a real liability.”

Luke put his head in his hands. Why couldn’t Aaron leave it alone for one day? Or even one minute? This was torture.

“After that, I say it’s time to teach Pauline a new move. She’s good and strong, but you’re not taking advantage of that. Brave Bird might be a reach, but maybe Hurricane…”

“They need a break.” Luke couldn’t keep it in. He regretted it immediately.

Aaron’s rebuttal, though inevitable, wasn’t quite immediate. “…You know, last I checked, Wendy and I got four Badges, and you’ve still got three.”

So what? Luke stopped himself from saying. Who cares?

“Like, am I missing something? Did your team get good enough to earn a vacation while I wasn’t looking?”

This was too much. Luke’s self-control slipped again. “They’re tired. Zoe’s sick. They’ll get sick, too. They need it.”

Aaron rolled his eyes. “They’re not gonna get sick like Zoe. That’s just cause you’re having some bad dreams, right?”

I need it.” It should have gone without saying. He was a wreck. Maybe he was a wreck because of the dreams, maybe the dreams were because he was a wreck—it didn’t matter. He hadn’t slept more than two hours a night in a week, he was killing Zoe, it was all his own fault, and this jerk wanted him to push even harder. He wanted to tell Aaron where he could stick it.

“Okay,” said Aaron.

Luke hadn’t expected that.

“Maybe you should go home for a few weeks, then. Or months. Whatever. We’ll see if we run into you again, down the road.”

Luke stiffened. He should have expected this, but Aaron caught him utterly flat-footed. The thought of going it alone again? After more than a year with Wendy and Aaron?

…No, “with Wendy.” Forget Aaron. Luke was too mad at him right now.

“Course,” said Aaron, “Wendy’ll take it hard. You saw how she was when Nadine threw in the towel.”

If Luke could have gotten stiffer, he did.

“If you don’t want to deal with that, you can try to pick up the pace again, but I think the worst thing you can do is keep dragging behind like this. You know Wendy—she’s all about that hundred-and-ten percent. She won’t show it, but it’s getting on her nerves. I’d either catch up fast or quit while it’s easy. Your call.”

In that moment, a thought came to Luke for the first time: Why wasn’t he mad at her, too? It wasn’t just Aaron who never said it was time for a break. Even if Wendy wasn’t all-training-all-the-time like Aaron, she never wanted to take it easy. It always had to be something else if not training or battling. And whose idea was that stupid Badge-pact to begin with?

“…Maybe I will,” said Luke.

“Which?” said Aaron, in the same voice as if he’d been asking whether Luke meant diet or regular, chocolate or vanilla, heads or tails.

Luke dug his fingers into his temples. He was this close to saying it. This close to saying he was through.

“Luke!”

Wendy came running over. She sat too close to him on the bench and shoved a piece of paper under his face.

“My mom talked to her friend at the Pharmacy.” If she was trying to be reassuring, there was too much urgency in her voice, but she spoke too fast for it to matter. “She said there’s an herb that grows in Ilex Forest that can help if we’re careful. I’ve got what to do with it written on here and I’m going to the library now to copy a picture of it from a book. I’ll be back real soon, then we’ll go right away. Okay?”

She left the paper in his hands and was off running before he could blink.

Whatever thoughts had been in Luke’s head about whether to leave or whom to be mad at were gone. Everything was about Zoe now. He read and re-read Wendy’s scrawled instructions. Even if they couldn’t reach the forest until the day after tomorrow, he wanted the procedure committed to memory.

“Ilex it is, then,” said Aaron. He didn’t speak again after that.

*********

It was impossible to tell when the sun set in Ilex Forest—it was hard enough to tell when it was noon on a clear day—but what mattered was that Luke had to strain his eyes to see protruding roots before they tripped him. He spotted a bush which he knew wasn’t the right kind, but he checked the picture again anyway. Still wrong. None of the plants they’d seen all day had the round, jagged leaves they were looking for.

He checked the picture again for another bush, again knowing he didn’t need to check, then realized it wasn’t even another bush but the same one. He was checking plants twice when he didn’t need to check them once. His eyes stung so bad. Before he could check the bush a third time, he put the paper away. It took all his concentration to start walking again. Three steps later, he tripped.

Now his hands and knees stung too. He didn’t want to move. He knew he had to because Zoe still hurt worse, but moving his arms was like moving cement. He moaned.

“Luke?”

Wendy’s voice.

“Luke!”

Someone pulled him to his feet, but took his pack off and set him down with his back to a tree right afterward. Luke couldn’t quite see who, but whoever it was had long hair. Wendy, maybe.

“Wow, is he dead?”

“Luke, are you okay?”

He closed his eyes, and somehow the sight of nothing was brighter. It hurt, so he opened them again. He took deep breaths. Eventually, his eyes semi-focused on whoever was in front of him.

“…Fine,” he said. At least, he was pretty sure he said it.

Someone put a cool hand to his forehead.

“He needs to sleep, somehow.” Girl’s voice. She was talking to someone else. “We gotta camp here.”

“Not much space.”

“It’s Ilex. The nearest clearing could be a mile away. It’s not going to rain, so we don’t need the tent.”

“Whatever you say.”

“You start on dinner. I’m going to lay out his sleeping bag. I think he needs more padding under it.”

Luke didn’t know why she kept checking on him, assuming it was Wendy. He wasn’t sick—Zoe was.

The rest of the evening was a blur. He was lying in a sleeping bag for much of it, not sleeping, and for a while he was sitting up with a hot bowl of rice in his hands, trying to eat some at someone’s insistence. There were gaps in his memory. One or two of those gaps might have been sleep. He wasn’t sure. It didn’t feel like it.

Eventually, as it always happened, Luke’s head cleared up. Nothing hurt less—if anything, everything hurt more—but at least he could think again. He could tell himself they were going to find the right plant tomorrow, that they couldn’t possibly have such bad luck two days in a row. It wasn’t true, but he could at least tell himself.

He sat up. This was no time to lie down. They needed to get looking again. He staggered to his feet. The only problem was how it was pitch-black out. No matter. He could wait. He took a few steps, felt for a tree trunk, and sat at its base. It would be morning soon enough.

A flashlight lit the ground at his feet. Even though it wasn’t shining in his eyes, it stung, so he covered his face. It went out. Then he heard approaching footsteps. They stopped right next to him.

“Hey,” said Wendy. Her voice was little more than a whisper. “Do you think you should lie down?”

“No.” His head and mouth were working a little better, now.

“You don’t think it’ll help?”

“Doesn’t matter. Soon as it’s bright enough, we should go.”

She sat down beside him. Her arm brushed his in the process, so he shifted. “It’s still hours away. Even if you don’t fall asleep, you need rest.”

He didn’t say anything.

“Was it always like this? Before you had Zoe?”

He wished she’d go away, but he tried to remember the answer. It felt like a lifetime ago since he lived at home. “…No. We had routines. Had a bed, too.”

“What were the routines?”

It was clear what she was trying to do. “I don’t need sleep. Zoe needs medicine. I shouldn’t sleep after that either, cause—”

He faltered.

“She’s in her Poké Ball,” said Wendy. “You getting sleep now won’t hurt her. It doesn’t have to after, either. When she’s better, she can use Hypnosis at bedtime, and then I can put her back in so she can’t use Dream Eater. We’ll make it work.”

“That’s not fair,” said Luke. “It’s not a trade, then. That wasn’t the deal. This is how she eats. Human dreams are best—the book said so.”

“Then we need to get you sleeping again.”

Luke leaned forward and rubbed his eyes. She was talking in circles. Or, no, he was. Was he? He was so tired. “It’s the dreams. I can’t just make them better.”

He’d seen them every night he’d managed to fall asleep since Zoe threw up the first time. Zoe getting kicked around by bigger Pokémon, Shane stumbling exhausted through a training session, Pauline falling out of the sky and landing on her head. Over and over and over.

Aaron was right. He had to go home. He couldn’t do a hundred and ten percent. The stupid jerk was right.

He had to tell her. She would hate him for it, but he had to tell her. It wouldn’t be like it was with Nadine. She hadn’t known him since they were little, so she could just get mad and tell him good riddance. It wouldn’t be as bad. And he had to leave.

There was a hand on his back. “What’s your favorite thing in the world to think about?” asked Wendy.

He lost whatever train of thought he’d been on. “Why?”

“Remember when you told me that nothing’s just your own problem?”

He didn’t.

“When you feel bad, I feel bad. You’re my friend, so this is about me, too. You said so yourself once. So, if you won’t lie down, tell me about something nice so I’ll feel better.”

It didn’t make sense, but maybe if he played along, it’d get her to go away.

“…New Year’s, three years… four years ago. We went to Ecruteak to visit my aunt and uncle.”

“Uh-huh. Did you go to a shrine?”

“Yeah.” He tried to remember what it looked like. Soon he could picture it. “There was a gold statue of Ho-Oh under the gate. He had snow on his beak. Looked like he might sneeze.”

She rubbed his back. Up and down, slowly and gently. He felt his shoulders sag.

“Did you take a picture?”

“Yeah…” He remembered it was in color, but he didn’t remember developing it, which meant… “I got a disposable camera that Christmas. …I used it up before lunchtime, but I wanted it for Ecruteak, so my dad gave me another one.”

“Did you help decorate the tree?” Her voice was quieter now.

“Uh-huh…” His head was dropping, so he sat up straighter. “…uh…” He felt limp and unsteady. The hand on his back kept moving. His eyes closed on their own, which seemed to help. “…my mom puts the lights up, but it’s …my job to untangle them…”

He opened the box from the attic. His favorite “…decorations…” were right under the mess of lights at the “…top of the box…” so he asked if he could put them up first. Dad said no, since it’s easier to put the lights on a bare tree. So, he carefully set them aside, the “…Magikarp scales…” from up north.

As he worked on the knots in the string of lights, he seemed to lose his balance. It didn’t keep him from the task at hand, though, since his head came to rest on somebody’s shoulder.
 
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