Nori walked swiftly along Route 214, eager to get things over with as soon as possible. This had been a nightmare come true.
“You’re doing a good thing here. You’re doing a good thing…”
He repeated those words like a mantra. This situation made no sense. He was helping a Pokemon in need. He expected to get at least some praise from strangers for it. But no. It was indifference at best and hatred at worst. It was like they saw him as much of a monster as they thought the Demon.
“Don’t give up on this, Nori. Quitters can’t win!”
Part of him wanted to quit. But he
had to keep going, no matter how painful it was! He never had a problem standing against adversity. Though that didn’t mean it couldn’t hurt, and what happened had cut deep indeed. He’d lost a friend over this. Maybe forever, and definitely forever if he failed. Which was a real possibility.
“No, no, don’t think about that.”
Giving up would be the same as failing, and make him a laughingstock. More importantly, he promised the Demon. He said he’d help her. Going back on that now would feel like stabbing himself in the heart. Not to mention, it would go against his morals. He had to succeed.
“So don’t let it bug you! There’s nothing to do but do it!”
He reached his destination, the rocky cliffs on the west side of the route. He once had a field trip here in first grade. Another time, he went exploring here with Claris, back before he lost her. Now it felt like he was on his way to losing everyone else.
Nori stopped. He opened his mouth, but could not find any further words of self-encouragement. All he could do was sigh.
He brought out the Demon, who immediately stomped a foot. No doubt over getting abruptly recalled again. Nori paid her attitude no heed.
“The wild Pokemon should be tougher here,” he briefed in a subdued tone. “We’re going to fight them until they can’t continue. But not cripple or kill them. Okay?”
The Demon flashed a toothy grin, giving no indication as to whether she’d listen. It was frustrating. He knew Pokemon could somehow understand human language, but how were you supposed to understand them? Well, the important thing was trying fighting, so it was time to try.
A snarl rang out. It didn’t come from his Pokemon; it sounded deeper, and her mouth wasn’t moving besides. He turned to see a small black canine with an orange muzzle and bones on its body. Perfect. A Houndour, about ten meters away. He knew what those were and what they could do. It crouched low, as if ready to pounce.
Nori took a few steps aside. The Nidorina didn’t even have to be told to, “Go get it!” She started charging in right as soon as the boy moved, his words being a formality. The canine flinched and reflexively spewed a shower of Embers. The first burst went high into the air. The Demon proceeded to run right through a second point-blank blast unabated to deck it in the face with a glowing purple claw.
The Houndour let out a yip of pain, followed by whimpering when its opponent spun around and started kicking it in the head. For a moment, Nori thought he should say something, but he decided to leave things be. She finally whirled back with her claws extended, ready for a finishing blow.
Suddenly, the Houndour snapped forth. It managed to grab Nidorina’s paw between its teeth. The chestnut-haired boy leaned in. The dog growled, but its defiant expression faded as it locked eyes with the Demon. She stared back, narrowing her eyes. Nori smiled and relaxed.
She yanked her front leg back to reel the Houndour in, and clamped her jaws on its face. The wild Pokemon whined horribly and released its own bite. The Demon jerked her head and slammed it into the ground, and that made the Houndour go slack.
“Okay, you did it! Let go now.” When she did not let go, he started to walk closer. He spoke with more force. “Nidorina, that’s enough!”
She released it. Yet as the wild Pokemon started to weakly rise, she jumped back a few steps and lowered her head. Her intent became clear. Nori broke into a sprint.
“ENOUGH!” he shouted. He interposed between the two Pokemon right as the Demon was going for a Skull Bash. He only realized what he was doing when Nidorina ran into him. It was less forceful than he expected; maybe she slowed at the last moment? Still, it took him off his feet! He got his arms out in just enough time to break his fall. The Houndour saw its chance and scurried away as if it had been doused by water.
Nori scrambled back up, ignoring the throbbing pain in his leg. He glared at the Demon, who was staring at him slack-jawed and wide-eyed. “What is wrong with you?!”
She smiled and puffed. Nori shifted at her pride. This Pokemon was insane! That Houndour was clearly beaten, and didn’t do anything to deserve to be beaten down more! Even if it was about to do more, that was too much!
“You can’t keep doing this!” he urged. “Your future is on the line here! Not to mention mine! So next time, just listen. Follow every move I tell you to. Okay?”
If she rolled her eyes any harder, they’d have rolled off like a Voltorb.
They marched on, looking for another opponent. They found one within a few minutes: a rock with arms. A Geodude, a common enough sight in any mountainous area. That was two Pokemon in a row that Nori recognized! He was a little worried about facing something he didn’t really know about, especially after that demand he made.
The Nidorina looked up at him with an arrogant smirk, as if to belligerently say she was awaiting orders. Well, what should they do here?
He thought back to the type chart. The full one was part of basic third-grade curriculum in Pokemon class. “Rock…” Geodude was Rock-type. “Water, Grass…” Its two most common weaknesses. If Nidorina knew moves of those types, she hadn’t shown them off. So what else was there? “Fighting – yes, that’s it!” Nidorina had a Fighting-type move! “Use Double Kick!”
She languidly sauntered in. Once the Geodude noticed her, she accelerated to a brisk pace. As with the last fight, their opponent attempted to intercept her with a ranged move, winding an arm back to throw something at her. This time, she lunged to strike before it could get the attack off. And she did use Double Kick!
“Okay, it’s working!” he exclaimed as the Geodude recoiled from the force of the blows. Now what? Well, no reason not to continue! It was the best option right now. “Just keep at it with Double Kick!”
Indeed, Nidorina did not let up, continuously kicking her opponent. It tried to swing and grab at her, only for her to kick its arm away. She kept knocking it back a bit with each blow, and kept following right along. Eventually, the rocky creature just curled up. A soft light started forming near its center.
Nori gasped. Anyone could recognize that pulsating glow. That was a Self-Destruct attack!
“Look out, it’s about to blow up!”
The Demon took an active approach to this threat. She yanked one of the Geodude’s arms out, grasped it between both of her front legs, effortlessly swung it around, and threw it up a cliff into a wooded area. Seconds later, shards of dirt and granite went flying everywhere. The Demon stood on her hind legs to survey her handiwork. Nori had to do a double take as she seemed to laugh triumphantly.
“What? And, why?” he got out.
The Pokemon faced him and smirked, indeed, like a demon might. She briefly glanced over at the blast radius with irreverence. Her front legs dipped briefly. Did she just shrug?
He had to admit. “I mean it worked, but…” Nori trailed off. “I just wasn’t expecting that. But it’s fine, I guess.”
She slowly nodded. Before he could decide what to do next, he heard something that sounded like a faint whine. Nori turned to where he thought he heard it, and spotted the source. A small gray quadrupedal creature with jagged skin and a tiny horn was peeking down from the cliff. There was a scorch mark across the right side of its body. The cause was obvious.
The Demon beckoned it to come down with a paw. It instead let out a guttural cry of distress. Nori felt a pit rise within him, which worsened when he heard the sound of heavy footsteps approaching.
A much larger bipedal creature came stomping out from behind the trees. Sharp claws, a massive tail, and a spiral-shaped horn. Nori had only ever seen a Rhydon in books before, but here was one in the flesh. The thing’s parent?
“Now we’re talking tough Pokemon,” the boy mused. All he knew for certain was their typing and toughness, but he could guess what they could do. This was a real opponent! It was going to test their abilities: exactly what they needed.
Nori braced himself as it leaped from the cliff. The ground shook a little as it landed. It roared at them, leaning in and brandishing its horn, which it spun like a drill. Nidorina squared up, but he took pause. There was murderous rage in their foe’s eyes.
He needed to ask, “Are you sure you’re up for this?”
As if that were an insult, the teal beast charged straight for the enemy. She raised a claw and got ready to slice, only for the opposing Pokemon to spin around as she got near. It batted her away with its tail!
The Demon flew back several meters through the air. It did not phase her one iota as she used the momentum to flip over and land on her feet, running right back into the fray. The Rhydon was not expecting this and got caught by the subsequent Shadow Claw attack. It staggered back a few steps, but Nori knew better.
“Don’t be so reckless!” he tried to warn her, but it fell on deaf ears.
His concerns proved correct when the gray Pokemon suddenly lunged forward. Nidorina was quick enough to dodge with a quick hop to the side, but her foe was surprisingly dexterous itself, pivoting to land a punch on her.
“Get out of there for now!” Nori shouted. But the Nidorina – who rolled to avoid a follow-up Stomp – refused to back down. Their foe stamped a foot. Nori had to brace himself as the land shook violently for a second; that had to be some sort of Ground-type move.
Nidorina stumbled at the shockwave. Thankfully, she scampered back a few paces at that. She watched closely from there. The Rhydon raised a foot to do it again. Nori braced himself. As it brought it down, she jumped. She jumped straight over it! The boy was in shock, but not as much as their foe. It tried again, only to be met with the same result: missing because of a well-timed leap. Yet she was still only defending. Good as this was, it wasn’t helping them defeat this thing. And it was leaving her open.
Sure enough, the Rhydon feinted a stomp, then moved into a run. Nidorina jumped, only to be caught by surprise by a reckless body check.
Nori winced. The Nidorina went tumbling across the ground, bouncing a couple of times before coming to a stop in front of him. Though it looked like the Rhydon hurt itself in the process, she came out far worse for wear. Enough was enough.
“Nidorina, listen to me!” The Pokemon managed to stand, but other than staying put, didn’t show any sign of listening. He continued anyway. “This thing is far bigger than you and really pissed! It’s not some city dwelling or soft tamed Pokemon! You’re not going to beat it head-on!”
She roared defiantly. The Rhydon screamed back and took a few steps back. It lowered its head, and she replied by doing the same.
Nori took out her Poke Ball and raised it. His instincts stopped him. Was running a good idea? Would this thing even let them go? No, they needed to fight. His legs quaked as he shuffled off to the side.
“Don’t back down now…” he told himself under his breath. “If you do, she’ll lose all respect for you!”
This looked bad. But at the same time, he felt he –
they could win. This was strength against strength right now. Nidorina might have had a lot of skill and power, but their foe was so much bigger and heavier. Its stone scales looked stupidly thick, it’d be hard to chip away at them even with a Fighting-type move. Yet one thing came to mind. One way you could always deal with that size difference.
He thought back to fourth grade. That much bigger sixth grader threatening him. Answering in kind. The crowd that gathered after they exchanged words. How he got shoved, and shoved back. It didn’t do much but provoke the bigger kid. Soon the fight was on. And he won that fight. So Nidorina could win this one.
“Nidorina! Go for the legs!” That was how he always fought people taller than him. The teal beast’s eyes shifted to him. “Trust me, it works against bigger foes! I know firsthand! I don’t care how you do it, just get its legs!”
Though that wasn’t a move name, so would she understand? Would she listen? The Demon didn’t acknowledge one way or another. A second later, the Rhydon’s horn started spinning. It charged forward, aiming to run her through.
“Be careful!” he warned.
She instead barreled directly towards it. “Whatareyou–!!” In an instant, they’d closed the distance on each other. Nori shut his eyes.
A moment after, he heard a huge thud. That was it, that had to be it. He knew this Nidorina had done a lot to hurt other Pokemon with the random fights she’d picked. Some might think getting badly hurt herself was what she deserved, but he only felt sympathy. Not even she deserved this.
He opened his eyes, fearing the worst.
The Rhydon was down on its stomach, stunned in more ways than one. The Demon was behind it grasping one of its legs. Their eyes met, and she grinned at him.
“D-don’t just sit there,” he squeaked out, trying to act as if his composure hadn’t been completely destroyed. “Kick your legs at its legs!”
The Demon was all too happy to oblige, viciously Double Kicking the leg she had caught. The dinosaur-looking Pokemon roared in pain! Okay, maybe they could break through! It flailed as it attempted to kick back at its attacker. It eventually succeeded, but only in pushing the Nidorina back for a moment. As it started to stand, Nori shouted, “Now get the other!”
She listened. She couldn’t knock it back down, but nonetheless assaulted the other leg moments after their foe had made it back to its feet. It was working! The other Pokemon was finding it hard to keep its balance! One more push, and–
Nidorina stopped as a spat stone abruptly impacted her, sending her staggering back. Nori deflated all at once. The wild Pokemon launched a desperation strike and it landed. It barely hurt, but had the desired effect. They’d lost their momentum! Now their opponent was back in it! Its hands started to glow yellow. What was that?! He looked over at Nidorina. Now what were they going to do?! He had no idea!
But this time, the Demon took action. She loosed numerous pins from her body and fired them off directly into the Rhydon’s eyes! Whatever it was trying to do faded as it clutched its face in pain, desperately trying to wipe away the Poison Sting attack. Nori exhaled in relief as the Demon used the chance to fall back some paces.
Their opponent was reeling. Nori looked at it, then to Nidorina. One last big attack might end this. From how the teal creature lowered her head and started scraping her front paw along the ground, she seemed to have the same idea as him.
“You want to smash it down?”
The Nidorina chuckled a confirmation.
He nodded and pointed with fervor. “Well, so do I! Demon, SKULL BASH!”
On his word, his Pokemon bolted toward their foe. The Rhydon recovered enough to see what was coming, but could only brace for its fate. The teal Pokemon made a huge leaping headfirst tackle directly at the thing’s belly. Despite the weight difference, this took the Pokemon to the ground with sheer force. She was left disoriented from the vicious headfirst tackle. But the Rhydon was groaning in agony, clutching at the site of impact with one of its stubby arms while still trying to rub its eyes with the other.
That had to be it. Nori couldn’t believe it. They’d won! He wanted to jump for joy, yet stopped as he was bending his knees. Was this the rush that real Pokemon trainers got when they defeated a tough opponent? He had to admit, it felt great! He could sort of see now why they did this sort of thing. He walked over to his huffing Pokemon. They’d worked together to beat something they couldn’t have alone. And she listened to him! That was a huge step!
Then the Demon jumped onto the Rhydon! She stomped across its body and started laying into it. Not again! Nori could only watch as she relentlessly slashed and sliced her helpless foe’s face. It took only three seconds of this before the Rhydon was crying out in pain. It sounded like gurgled choking. The boy shuddered.
“Stop, stop! Nidorina, that’s enough!” he shouted at the top of his lungs. “It’s too hurt to continue, you’ve done enough! Unless it starts attacking again, stop attacking it!”
The Nidorina vocalized in acknowledgment, but continued to hack away. Finally, she raised her paw one last time, a purple fluid oozing from the tips of her claws. She was actually going to kill it! Nori reached for her Poke Ball to recall her.
But before he could even aim it, the Demon stepped off! Nori almost dropped the capsule in his surprise. She still looked ready to pounce back on at a moment’s notice, but she stopped!
The beast looked the Rhydon square in the eye and barked sternly at it. The injured parent growled and wheezed. They went back and forth a bit before the Demon pointed with a paw. The Rhydon and Nori looked to see the quadrupedal Pokemon from before. It was trembling, tears were flowing from its closed eyes, its mouth was open as it sobbed silently.
Nori felt a tightness in his chest and briefly stared down as the guilt struck. A lot of it. This fight was an accident caused by this Rhydon’s baby getting hurt by that thrown exploding Geodude. It must have been trying to protect its young. Instead, the baby saw its parent get defeated. It was easy for it to see the assault after and think its mom or dad was seconds away from death.
“We’re sorry for hurting your kid,” he said to the Rhydon, lowering his head and placing his hands together. “We really, really are! We were being too careless. I know you’re mad at us, and we probably deserve it. But please, enough is enough! Someone could get badly hurt, or worse! At least, let’s stop this for your kid’s sake.”
Silence. The Rhydon looked to him, and to his Nidorina. The Demon growled lowly and took a step back without averting her gaze. The Rhydon looked over at its child. For a tense few seconds, it simply sat there. Nori clenched his fists.
The gray Pokemon rose to its feet, legs quivering as it faced them once again. It heaved and grit its teeth. The boy huffed and squeezed them harder, his nails digging into his palms. His Pokemon sharply vocalized. Did it really have to be like this?
The Pokemon started to move. It turned around. No, it didn’t have to be. Mercifully, it did not. Their foe limped away, weakly scaling the cliff to rejoin its offspring. Trainer and Pokemon watched closely until they disappeared into the bushes further up the mountain.
The boy just wanted to collapse in relief on the spot. He thought for sure somebody was going to get hurt or die there: that Rhydon, his Nidorina, or himself. Yet somehow, some way, they all made it through in one piece. All told, he did not want to go through anything like that ever again.
He noticed the Demon approaching. It hit him at that moment that she stopped short at the end. She didn’t want to kill the Rhydon; she just wanted to make sure it couldn’t continue. Exactly like he asked at the beginning. The Pokemon came to a stop right in front of him and looked up with her usual harsh gaze.
Then, she gave the faintest of smirks. Nori smiled and flashed a thumbs up. “Thanks,” was all he could say. Things looked bad at many points, but it worked out in the end.
##########
AkepWwd. Race traitor.
That was what the gray driller, and many others had called her. The elders always told her to stay away from them unless she got the blessing of a lunar stone. She was owed one at some point, but that would have come with its own set of responsibilities that she was not willing to take on.
It had been a long time since she was here, so close to her birthplace. That child was acting stupid. She had tested him by acting defiant. He acted as she expected. It was good until they came here. He was starting to impose. It was annoying. She did what she wanted. She had considered another escape attempt. He had impressed her the first time, but all the respect from that was gone. He wouldn’t win in her old backyard.
Then that mother came down. She was unsurprised at being recognized. What she had done was not something her race took lightly. Being in the city was partly to escape their wrath. Fleeing was off the table. The only thing to do was the usual: fight.
Right away, she could tell why her elders told her to stay away. Hitting their armor was like hitting bedrock, and it hurt worse being hit by it. She was not giving up. Every foe had a weakness, and a lot left openings.
That’s when he said it. Get the legs.
She thought back to one of their fights together. That wallmaker’s owner towered over him and tried to attack after his slave fell. Carino tripped and felled him too. It was funny.
He knew fighting. His advice was worth a try. She grabbed that gray driller’s legs. Down she went like a cleaved tree. It was what she needed to stop her. And she would not waste it.
Until then, her opponent had been screaming threats. Not simply over that accident that she should’ve blamed that little rock for, but for what she had done. The threats continued even as she was losing.
She was ready for the finishing blow when he spoke up.
“{Asking if she wants to end this.}”
It was like he had read her mind.
“{Saying he does too.} Demon, SKULL BASH!”
He was starting to get it. With enough force, you can bring anything down. That gray driller was no exception. She continued to curse them out as she fell. She fired off a spiel of insults at her. Nori Carino was not spared either, being called a crazed enemy, a race traitor himself, and something that roughly translates to ‘one who assists a threat to our colony’.
It hurt a bit to smash her head into the thing, but she couldn’t afford to give quarter. She jumped onto her prone foe and moved to send a message. Carino had panicked. Their attacker was reduced to threatening to kill them, over and over. Toothless, of course. He was ready to bring her back to her prison when she deliberately stopped.
She knew that would surprise him. It was to give him a message. She never killed except for food. Yes, she would beat some to the brink of it as she had done now, but she was better than those who would try.
“Enough of this!” she growled at the gray driller. “You’re not killing anyone but yourself. And your child!”
“You animal!” the belligerent one cussed her out with an outright slur. “Don’t you dare… I’ll kill… Do NOT talk about my kid!”
“I’ll say whatever I want!” she barked. “You lost. Pull in your spikes and go home!”
“Animal!” The mother coughed. “You know nothing… What it’s like to have young…!”
Of course not. But she knew what it was like to be one. And the sight before her was obvious anyway. “Just look!”
There it was. A young spiky horn peering down, moments away from losing his parent. So he thought. Tears flowed from his eyes like a river. The mother attacked out of petty vengeance. She picked a fight she couldn’t win. Well, credit where it was due. She might not have won if not for Carino’s advice.
Then Carino spoke. He apologized. He took responsibility – more than he should have – but also begged her to stop fighting. It took the mother way longer than necessary to decide what to do. Finally, the gray driller rose.
She pointed. “Go.” That demand was the last thing any of them said. She kept a watchful eye and stood ready in case her foe decided to do anything stupid. Humbled and ashamed, the mother sulked off to rejoin her child.
That just left them. No one dared attack the two of them after that. Two outcasts, hated by their own people save for a few. It had gone quiet. She expressed her acceptance with a mouth gesture. Carino made a weird hand motion, smiled, and thanked her. She could not help but smile back. For maybe the first time since at the lake long ago, she felt a connection with another.
“{Asking to walk back.}”
She agreed, and they set out. There was an irony. Places like this were where their two species were to meet. She avoided them in the past. Here she was with a trainer in the present. What did the future hold?
Carino spoke for a bit. Most of it was absorbed into her ears. But his inflection and the words she did pay attention to were enough.
The Demon. That was her name. She could have easily ended up in the hands of someone who wanted her for selfish reasons. Or worse, someone who wouldn’t let her so much as fight. Anyone who didn’t respect her. She had her complaints about this child named Nori Carino, but overall? She was happy. Now there was just one thing left to do before they both had their freedom.