So,
this was it. It had finally begun. She was never really convinced
that it would come, but it had. Here she was, on the very outskirts
of Viridian City. Behind her, the trees of Viridian Forest reached
out as if to embrace her. She looked at the flora of her first
obstacle, trying to imagine what the forest, like her future,
held.
Sounds emanated from the forest, the cries of the
hunters and the hunted. The cries of Pokémon battles.
Somewhere, far away, she could hear the excited cries of a trainer’s
first battle. How the battle would end up, she didn’t really
care, but it was still a comforting reminder that she wasn’t
the only one starting her journey on that day. Of course, she was
probably among the oldest that would set forth that year, but that,
of course, wasn’t the point.
What was the point,
however, was that she would have a journey that no one would ever
forget, she knew. She wasn’t sure how she knew it, but somehow
she had a feeling that her journey would be one for the history
books, and wouldn’t be forgotten in quite some time. There was
something that she couldn’t quite put her finger on about
setting off.
She looked back at Viridian City, at its green
buildings and large parks, and wondered if she was really doing the
right thing. Would it have been better if she had stayed in Viridian,
where she was at least safe? What would happen to her once she set
out? She shook her head. There was no going back, she knew that. With
a small smile, she remembered how she had gotten where she was in the
first place.
+++++
The day had finally come. She’d
been dreading it for days, and had been doing everything she could to
hamper its arrival, and, failing that, prevent her family from
finally shipping her off to Kanto. But now, it had come, and the last
of the boxes were in the foyer, in front of the door, waiting for the
last moving truck to come and take them away.
Lorelei sat,
stunned, on a bench near the door, her loyal team of Pokémon
sitting all around her. How could she depart from them, after giving
them most of the last four years? She sighed, and slipped off of the
bench, her team following solemnly behind her. She walked over to a
mirror, and looked at herself. Her usually ornate jet-black hair was
a mess, she observed with apathy, and her clothes were wrinkled from
having been slept in. She sighed and decided to take one last walk
around her house before she had to leave it forever.
Her
cerulean eyes took in her surroundings with something that, if she
had been a soldier, would have been something akin to shellshock. The
paintings on the wall, the plush carpeting, the laboratories where
she would sit and watch Professor Silph work for hours, the Pokémon
Center where Nurse Joy used to teach her about Pokémon—ethics,
general information, and battling strategies—for hours on
end…she was going to leave it all behind.
It still
hadn’t fully sunk in yet.
Lorelei made her way out to
the garden, and sank down next to a patch of flowers, and stared at
them, but didn’t really see them. She heard her team lying,
sitting, and hovering around her, and something in her felt like
punching something. They were so loyal, and here she might never see
them again. It just didn’t seem right, having invested so much
time into them, and not being able to take them with her. It almost
felt like betrayal.
She felt something crawling into her lap
and curling up, and she looked down to see Sneasel lying there in a
ball, eyes wide open, staring up at her. It nearly broke her heart.
Sneasel was about to be a father, in just another month, and she
wouldn’t be around to see his newborns.
She still
remembered the first time that she had seen him. He had been so cute,
scratching at Berries on a bush. She had forgotten what kind of
berries it had been, by now, but she still remembered how the Sneasel
had spotted her, and spun around, executing a flip, and landing in a
defense position. It had been then that she knew that she had to have
him.
The battle that had ensued had been nothing short of
frantic, due to the fact that Lorelei had “borrowed” a
Gloom from her brother. She had made good use of the powders,
however, and had managed to capture Sneasel. After, however,
Brandon’s Gloom had fainted. When he had discovered what she
had done with his Pokemon, he had been furious, and had threatened to
release Sneasel back into the wild, but relented only after Lorelei
promised him that she would never do anything like that again.
Of
course, that promise only lasted thirty-six hours, when she first met
Duskull, but that wasn’t the point.
She sensed, somehow,
rather than heard or saw Duskull floating in behind her, as if
summoned by her train of thought. When she had asked Professor Silph
about the Ghost-type’s seemingly Psychic abilities, he had told
her that Duskull were empathic, and that was how they caught their
prey. When she had asked him what the word “empathic”
meant, Silph had grinned and explained that empathy was a name for an
ability to tell what others are thinking. He had further explained
that while humans were empathic, it was because of reading body
language or speech patterns, not any kind of Psychic ability. Psychic
empathy, he had said, allowed a Pokémon who had the ability to
know where exactly every living thing, except Dark types, were in the
immediate vicinity. Also, he had informed her, his face split by an
excited grin, it appeared that some empathic Pokémon could
actually change the mood of another non-dark type Pokémon,
without affecting any of the Pokémon’s other brainwave
patterns.
Professor Silph’s explanation had made her
look at her second Pokemon much differently after that, as well as
her fourth, Haunter, when he had told her that most, if not all Ghost
types were empathic, at least to some degree. It made sense that
Duskull was empathic, too. She was always the mediator when any
conflict among her team, or between Lorelei and one of her team
arose, and, more often than not, the arguments were settled without a
fight.
Lorelei sighed, and shifted slightly, freeing up her
right leg, which had fallen asleep. The movement awakened Sneasel,
who glared up at her for a second, before readjusting himself and
drifting back off.
She glanced around, and spotted Graveller
sunning himself on a rock ledge overlooking the garden. At first she
thought he was asleep, but then she noticed that he was looking at
her. That was typical for him. He constantly laid around, but he was
always ready to come to her aid if she needed it. Right now, he stuck
to the high ground because, if anyone he needed to attack came, he
could use his Rock Throw or Rock Slide techniques to fend off her
attackers, then leap down and impose himself between Lorelei and
whoever was attacking her.
He was always thinking in terms of
combat, and that was probably why he was her number one battling
Pokémon, with Sneasel a close second. He had, from what
Micheal Carentamous, Silph’s aide, had told her, vowed
something of a life debt to her because she had rescued him from an
incredibly fast incoming tide on Alto’s coast. This was, he had
told probably the most committed to her of any of her team. Since
Carentamous had studied Pokémon behavior for most of his
thirty-five year life, she was pretty sure that he had it
right.
Haunter wasn’t with her, of course. He was
probably still in her special place, hovering in the exact place
where he always was. If she went there, he’d try to comfort
her, he was sure, but it wasn’t likely that he was going to
move from his pseudo-assigned spot. He would probably resist trying
to go to Kanto, even if she was able to bring him.
Lorelei
stared at the plants in front of her. It was odd, seeing them there.
They were called terrestrial anemone. It was a distant relative of
the aquatic anemone, but had been specially bred and genetically
altered to increase the strength of its cellulose, and allowed it to
support its own weight outside of water. The entire process had taken
several hundred years, and many millions of dollars, much of which
came from Team Magma—their leaders had said that they wanted to
take something from the oceans to spite Team Aqua—and Team
Flora—who supported any research to plants, as long as they
were not put to use as weapons—and had been performed by Silph
Company. Lorelei had come to enjoy the plants, and had spent many a
waking hour tending to them. And now she would leave them and her
team here in Alto.
At least her parents were allowing her to
bring Entrophen to Kanto. True, Entrophen wouldn’t actually be
hers anymore, he would belong to her parents, but at least he’d
come with her. Of course, that was because he would die nearly five
months after their arrival in Kanto of old age. Unless, of course, he
evolved into an Attrophen, which happened very rarely, before he
died.. In fact, it hadn’t been recorded in more than three
hundred years, and no one really knew what they were like or looked
like, and most Pokémon Professors thought that it was a
genetic ability.
She’d gone to the Kantan embassy
several times, begging them to let her bring her team to Kanto. He’d
apologized to her, and told her that the Indigo League did not
recognize Pokémon caught before the age of ten. That had made
Lorelei storm out of the embassy, enraged at the fact that she would
turn ten six months after moving to Kanto. Then she had come back,
asking if she could bring her team to Kanto. The ambassador’s
aide responded that bringing wild Pokémon into the country was
not allowed, and, because her Pokémon were caught before the
age of ten, they would be considered wild Pokémon.
From
the house, she heard her mother calling her, saying that everything
was loaded, and that it was time to get in the car. Lorelei thought
one more time about trying to run away or try to escape somehow so
she wouldn’t have to go to Kanto. She’d gone over a
thousand escape plans, but each plan had some major flaw, that would
void the entire thing. She’d tried running away from home a
half dozen times, but each time the Alt-Sec, or Altan Security
Forces, found her within two and a half hours. It seemed as if there
was nothing she could do to escape.
Lorelei sighed. Who was
she kidding? She was going to Kanto, and there was nothing she could
do to stop it. She got up slowly, bidding goodbye to her beloved
Pokémon, and went into the house. There was no doubt about
it.
It was time to face the future.
And then she’d
beat the living daylights out of it for what it had done to
her.
+++++
“Huh? What was that?” Lorelei
asked, putting down her book, and looking up at the woman her family
had hired to be a flight attendant on their way to Viridian City. She
remembered her father saying something about the woman—her name
was Delia, wasn’t it—going to Kanto to meet her husband,
after studying at the Altan Botanical University.
“I
asked,” the woman repeated, smiling gently, “Would you
like any more pop or something to eat? There’s still a good
hour left before we begin our descent.”
“Maybe a
Grape Spritz?” Lorelei asked, “I don’t really want
to stop reading this if I can help it,” she said, lifting up
the Indigo League Rules and Regulations, Twelfth Edition to show
Delia what she was reading, “I want to get started in the
Indigo League as quickly as I can.”
Delia smiled, “Of
course,” she said, and set a can of the beverage onto Lorelei’s
tray table, and moved on.
Lorelei was barely aware of this,
however, as she was once again firmly ensconced in the Indigo League
regulations concerning the capture, release, and other ways of
receiving or losing Pokémon.
+++++
Lorelei put
her hands on her hips and surveyed Pallet Town. It wasn’t much
of a town, really. The airstrip was only sufficient for small planes,
one of which they had transferred to in Saffron City, because her
father had wanted to meet Kanto’s main Pokemon Prof. There
wasn’t much going for Pallet Town besides the Professor’s
laboratory. If it weren’t there, the town’s population
would probably dwindle to close to nothing within a year. Yes, it was
the main jumping-off point for the Indigo League, but it also
appeared to be one of the smallest towns in the entire country. It
was quaint, with the buildings painted nearly every color of the
rainbow, but Lorelei was sure that she wouldn’t come back to
the town for a long time.
It was in sharp contrast to Saffron
City, the capital of Kanto, and the home to two gyms. The Primary
Gym, the Fighting Dojo, had been the gym for the last dozen or so
years, Lorelei had learned from her readings about Kanto, and the
second gym, led by a young woman named Agatha Fraley, was a relative
newcomer, but was quickly gaining power. Most people projected that
Agatha would defeat the gym trainers and leaders in the Fighting Dojo
in short order, and would become the primary gym of Saffron
City.
Lorelei brought herself back to the present, and hurried
after her father, who was striding purposefully towards Professor
Samuel B.F. Oak’s Pokémon Research Lab. She knew that
much of the funding for his research came from Silph Company, and
that her father would most likely have him over for dinner many
times. It wouldn’t hurt to make a good first impression.
The
scene that greeted her as she entered the laboratory surprised her.
Where Silph’s laboratory had been a calm, serene place, Oak’s
laboratory could best be described as barely organized chaos.
Screaming, running around, and frantic scribbling were commonplace,
and then there were the kids. Lorelei assumed that they were there to
get a Pokémon from Professor Oak, as was his wont once a
month. The realization that she had walked in on it cut her deeply,
as she remembered her mother forbidding her to start a journey.
Her
father was barely two steps of her, trying to squeeze forward through
the knot of kids. It looked like he wasn’t making much
progress. Lorelei shook her head and glanced down at Entrophen, who
was looking up at her, a pleading expression on his face. IT was then
that she remembered that Entrophen had hearing that was among the
most acute of any Pokemon. This racket, while loud for her, must be
torturous for him. She smiled sympathetically and nodded; the
saber-toothed tiger immediately opened his maw and let loose a roar
that cut sharply above, and then through all the noise in the
laboratory.
Lorelei leaned against the doorjamb, studying the
stunned expressions on the faces of the children mixed with those of
awe, the terrified expressions on the few parents—besides her
father, of course—in the room, and the unremitting interest
from thescientists.
Professor Oak himself threaded his way
through the crowd and came up to her and her father, and held out his
hand, an animated expression splashed across his face. “Archibald!”
he exclaimed, “It’s been a long time! When I heard that
you were coming to Kanto, I never thought I’d meet you so
soon!” he turned to the children, who were staring at him
accusingly, and gestured towards one of his aides, “Jeffrey
will give you your Pokemon, I need to speak with this man.” He
said dismissively, and turned back to Lorelei’s father, but
caught sight of Lorelei and her Pokemon behind him.
“Is
that...” he asked incredulously, trailing off. “An
Entrophen,” he said softly, his face one of excitement, like a
schoolboy having just gotten a new infatuation, “My, I’ve
never seen one before.” He raised his eyes to Lorelei, “Are
you it’s trainer?” he asked.
Lorelei’s eyes
darkened, and she twisted her lip. “I used to be,” she
said, glancing at her father, “But then we moved
here.”
Professor Oak’s eyes glittered. “I’ve
never seen one before. You’d let me study him, won’t
you?” he asked, never taking his eyes off the Altan Pokemon,
and ignoring the pandemonium and the cries of the aide he had
referred to as Jeffrey for help, “It’s a tremendous
opportunity. How old is he?”
“Four and a half,”
Lorelei replied, her eyes dropping to the ground.
Professor
Oak grimaced, “Maybe,” he said, “I should just talk
to your father, and we can discuss your Entrophen
later.”
+++++
Lorelei stared at the orb that sat
in front of her on her desk in her room. It was a Pokeball. Her
parents didn’t know about it yet, and, with any luck, they
wouldn’t find out about it. It had been seven years since she
had moved to Kanto, and she’d missed three of Sneasel’s
litters, two of Duskull and Haunter’s, and an additional four
of Geodude’s litters.
Yes, Viridian City was all well
and good, but it was just too confining. She was used to a big city.
She’d lived in the capital of Alto until she was ten, after
all! Now she’d been dropped into a town that was a paltry
fraction of what Smogh had been, and she was expected to cope? Sure,
she had done all right when she was younger, but as she had gotten
older, the city had chafed more and more on her. It hadn’t
helped that Entrophen had died relatively soon after she arrived in
Viridian City, three months sooner than expected. After that, the
city had become synonymous with her pain of losing the Pokémon,
and she grew to hate it with every fiber of her being.
She
knew that she’d gotten bitter, and she’d become obsessed
with beating everyone and everything around her. She’d gotten
into more than her share of fights and trouble, but she didn’t
really care. Now she’d figured out how to bet her parents.
She’d had her brother secretly send her a Sneasel from her
first Pokemon’s latest litter, and he’d sent her a
prototype Pokedex to test out as well Using it, she’d been able
to hack into the Indigo League’s mainframe, and insert herself
into the trainer list. She’d made sure, when she hacked into
the Indigo Mainframe, to leave a trail that would stand close
scrutiny that said that she had first registered in Johto, and hacked
into the Johto League Mainframe to back it up. Because of that, once
she was in Johto, she would be able to travel without worrying about
being returned to Kanto. From the stash of money that she’d
hidden away, she’d bought a travel backpack, several Pokeballs,
and healing supplies from the local Pokémon Mart. She had put
everything in a lockbox under her bed, and had waited for the right
opening, so she could slip away, and have several day’s head
start before her parents knew she was gone. At least in Kanto, there
wasn’t a Psychic net, so running away from home was much, much
easier.
After all, once she was reported missing, she’d
be running from Indigo League authorities, and every Gym Leader in
the country would be required to turn her in, or have their Pokemon
Training licenses removed. That meant that if she wanted an Indigo
League Badge, she’d have to move quickly.
By her
estimation, it would take her nearly a day to get to Pewter City
through Viridian Forest, and, once there, she’d have to make a
run for the Johto Border to prevent being picked up and being
returned to home, and have everything confiscated. She had everything
planned, and the only Polleen in the ointment was if she ran across a
Kanto trainer or Kantan Officer Jenny while she was making her break
for the border. If all went well, she’d have made it to
Blackthorne City before anyone knew that she had run away, and from
there, it would be a quick run down to New Bark Town.
She’d
gotten the Sneasel several weeks before, and had been training it in
secret ever since, preparing it for Luther Slate, the Pewter City Gym
Leader. She was confident that she would be able to beat him. She
knew that she’d only have one shot at the Pewter City Gym
Badge, or she wouldn’t be able to make it to the Johto Border
in time.
She heard the door slam on the floor below, and
quickly swept the Pokeball into the lockbox, shut the lid, and spun
the combination opener to scramble the combination. She had barely
managed to get it shoved under her bed and get on top of it, reading
what she had been assigned to her in school before the door opened,
and her mother poked her head in. “Any calls?” she asked,
and Lorelei grunted and shook her head.
The door closed, and
Lorelei sighed in relief as she lowered her schoolbook. That had been
close. Just three more days, and she’d be able to get out of
Viridian City. Her parents were leaving for Celadon City for a
week-long conference on the pros and cons of genetic splicing on
Pokémon. There were teams of scientists arguing both for and
against it. Those that were in favor of the genetic splicing were
from a company known as the Rocket Group, a subsidy of Specter
Corporation, and those opposed were mainly from the newcomer company
Devon Corporation. Her parents had been called in to moderate the
debate.
She’d only have, however, a two-day window in
which to go. Her next-door neighbor, Mr. Peterson, who was of the
opinion that Clefairy and Clefable came down in space ships from the
moon wanted to capture him and perform experiments on him, was going
to be checking on her every day, but would be gone for the first two
days of the conference. By her estimation, it would take a day to get
to Pewter, she would rest up there, challenge the gym leader, and
head for the Johto Border. It would take up the rest of that day to
get there. It would be close. Very, very close.
Lorelei
grinned, and glanced at the newspaper she had brought up to her room.
On the front, it showed Professor Elm standing in front of his lab, a
curious-looking creature standing by his feet. The headline
proclaimed, “Johto Scientist genetically mixes Arcanine and
Ninetails DNA.” What he had gotten, Lorelei had read in the
article, was a litter of baby Pokemon that he had dubbed “Vulithe.”
It had also said that in nine days, he would be giving six of them
away to trainers for observation. The trainers would only have them
for one week, but Elm wanted to know how the Vulithe acted outside of
the laboratory.
Lorelei glanced at her watch, and rolled off
her bed onto her feet, and walked down the stairs. If she was going
to be going off on her own, she had better study as much as she could
about Pokemon, so she would be as ready as possible. She grabbed her
backpack from where she had lain it down by the door and said, “I’m
going to the library. School report,” and walked out without
waiting for her mother to reply. Only a few more days, and she
wouldn’t have to stay in Viridian City anymore.
+++++
Less
than twelve hours, now, and then she’d be able to go on a
journey of a lifetime. Just a little longer. She had her supplies,
she had her Pokemon, and now there was just one thing that she needed
to get. New clothes.
Lorelei stared at herself in the mirror,
and grinned. She’d cut her long hair, and now there was very
little of it at all. She had cut her hair so that her black hair, of
which there was the most, was short, and her short, blond streak was
long, and draped forward over her shoulder. She had just finished
picking out clothes for her journey, and was very satisfied. She had
picked out a leather jacket, sunglasses, several pairs of jeans, and
several T-shirts from Johto baseball teams. The Electabuzz, Jynx,
Sneasels, and the Charizards were just a few of the shirts that she
had gotten.
She grinned, and headed for the checkout counter.
Her parents were gone, so now she didn’t have to sneak around.
She only had one more stop after this. The Grocery Store. She’d
need to buy enough food to last for at least a week, to make sure
she’d have enough food to make it to Cherrygrove City. She
grinned, and was almost trembling with excitement. She was almost on
her way. She had only a few hours to wait, and then she’d be on
the run.
True, she wouldn’t really be on the run for
nearly a full day, but she’d have to make every second
count.
+++++
Lorelei glanced at herself in her new
clothes in the mirror and grinned. She looked back down at the
lockbox in front of her, and opened it. Inside were all the supplies
she had gathered, and enough money to last for at least a month. She
grinned as she began stuffing the money, then the supplies into her
backpack, and strapped on her customized Pokéball belt. In
addition to the magnetic clamps that kept Pokéballs on the
belt, she had had it outfitted with several more pouches that were
just big enough to fit Potions, Antidotes, and other healing supplies
into, as well as a special pouch for berries, and another for
miscellaneous objects. That was where she put her empty Pokéballs
now, as well as some extra spending money. Her eyes glittered as she
picked up the Pokéball containing her first Indigo
League-recognized Pokémon, and put the Pokéball onto
her belt.
It occurred to her as she grabbed the backpack and
heaved it up over her shoulders that she could just go to New Bark
Town right away, and skip Pewter City altogether, but that would
negate the thrill of being out on her own for the first time. And the
thrill that came when she knew she was being chased.
She
grinned, and hurried out the door. Under cover of darkness, she knew,
there were few who could keep up with her. She had spent entire days
exploring the area between Viridian City and Pewter City with a
trainer that had wanted to train. So familiar had she become with the
route, in fact, she’d become a guide, and had made a lot of
money guiding trainers back and forth between the two towns, and
guiding them to nests of rare Pokemon. She also had the added bonus
of watching trainers battle, and she had learned much because of
it.
She knew where to walk, where to go, and what to avoid.
And that was if she didn’t have a Pokemon. With a Pokemon, she
knew, there was nobody that could catch her. She would be, however,
in unexplored territory once she traveled a mile west from
Pewter.
For one short moment, she stopped to take in Viridian
City, and then she turned, and dashed into the woods. She had a tight
schedule, and she needed to get moving if she wanted to keep
it.
+++++
Lorelei slowed to a stop at one of the creeks
that she had designated as a rest area, and sat down on the ground to
try to catch her breath. She had made good time, but it would count
for nothing if she didn’t keep up the pace.
Suddenly,
she heard a twig snap behind her. She leaped to her feet and whirled
around, her hand snapping out and releasing Sneasel before she
dropped down into a defensive position.
“Who’s
there?” she demanded, taking a cautious step forward.
A
figure formed out of the bushes and came towards her, grinning.
Lorelei felt her eyes narrow. It was a human, not a Pokemon. Nobody
else knew about places like this. Or, if they did, they didn’t
know how to get here. They were too heavily guarded by Pokemon. That
meant only one thing. She’d been discovered earlier than she
had thought, and they were here to take her back. Well, they wouldn’t
get her without a fight, that was for certain. With a yell, she
charged forward, felt something cold go up her arm, and somehow found
herself on her back, staring up at that grinning face.
Lorelei
felt true terror as she realized that she couldn’t move. Not a
muscle would work. She opened her mouth to scream, but no words came
out. Then the human dissolved into the grinning face of a Gastly.
Lorelei felt herself grow colder and colder as the Ghost descended
towards her. This was it. She was dead.
And there was nothing
she could do about it.