Pokemon: Apocalypse (Pokemon/Our World)

Oof, well hopefully after this the civvies will know to stay the hell away from a possible fight. Freakin' rubberneckers...

On the other hand, this is going to ratchet up their fear of Pokemon even more. Though counter to that, I wonder if it will sink in that they'd have been absolutely sunk if not for Rocket, Spade, and Scout?

Also, good grief... With their attrition rate the humans REALLY need to start putting more effort into becoming trainers. Because at this rate they won't have anyone left capable of fighting.
 
I find it all funny. Some people will point and yell and scream for pokemon to leave the settlement, but then they should consider something. If guns didn't work on the smaller crabs, then what hope do thwy have to survive without pokemon? Bullets don't grow on trees, or replacement parts. That requires scavanging which can be dangerous, or some industry which they lack.

Logically they nedd pokemon, but when have people ever been rational? This next update will be interesting. Perhaps the mayor's son will get a wakeup call, or double down on friendship magic? Perhaps Alex will be a smug cunt and boot Shane out the settlement or finally get his shit pushed in?

And another interesting point. Idle hands and all that, some of the Hunters should had been policing the civilians away. I mean dont get me wrong this was a good way to reinforce that, albeit in the worst possible way. Again, next update is gonna be neat.
 
1.14 Liftoff
Liftoff 1.14

June 2015


I let out a deep breath as I took stock of the mess around me. Rocket was thankfully the only pokemon who was injured, though he'd take a week or so to recover from this fight. Spade was physically fine but the young drilbur had just hacked a crustle to death. I'd be surprised if he wasn't shellshocked. Scout fared the best of them, having acted largely in a support role. The two poochyena seemed alright too, if only because Rocket had stepped in before they could get seriously injured.

That was just about where the good news ended however. I felt like one massive bruise, perhaps literally given the Bulldoze that wracked my entire body. I now knew what it felt like to be one of those earthquake-resistant architecture demonstration exhibits at science centers, the ones that failed. It wasn't a pleasant experience.

Still, I forced myself to my feet. There was much to do. We needed to care for the injured, clean up the bodies, and get Phil out of the caves he'd partially flooded.

'At least he got to avoid the fighting,' I thought. That was more than could be said for the ones who wanted to watch Austin try to "make a new friend." And what a shitshow that turned out to be.

It wasn't just rangers involved. Civilians, like Sabrina, had come to spectate, with high hopes for a positive relationship. They'd gotten caught up in the fighting and I could see several bodies laid out side to side, most lacking the forest-green and brown we rangers preferred. I doubted the dwebble targeted them purposefully, but moving rocks were moving rocks and they weren't nearly as used to dodging lethal projectiles as us.

All told, I counted five dead civilians and three dead rangers. A few of the bodies sported footprints, likely trampled when people first started to panic.

In the middle of all of this sat Sabrina Swanson. She was practically catatonic as she cradled her father's head in her arms. I had no words to describe the raw sorrow etched on her face.

In a way, I'd been fortunate. My entire extended family died, yes, but they died "offscreen," out of sight and out of mind. They'd perished in nuclear fire, instantly wiped off the face of the earth alongside millions of others. They were statistics and I was permitted to both physically and emotionally distance myself from their deaths. I reckoned it was as clean a way to go as any.

I hadn't had to hold my father's head in my arms as he breathed his last.

I took a knee by her side. I wasn't sure what to do. In the Before, I'd had a mostly normal life. No one important died. No major tragedies or illnesses like cancer either. I wasn't sure how to comfort her. I wasn't sure if it was possible to comfort her. All I could figure to do was to place a hand on her shoulder and sit by her side as she cried herself to exhaustion.

Scout landed a few feet away, cooing softly at Tom's body. Judging by his flight, his wing wasn't broken, just tender. He bowed his head, paying his respects to his trainer in all but the ball itself. There was a real sadness there, a solemness that reminded me of how much more pokemon were from mere animals.

This… wasn't the worst case scenario. But it was damn close. Tom wasn't just another ranger. For the town, for me, he was the man with the plan. He was the one who was always moving forward, always looking to better our lives in one way or another. He was a leader, a rallying flag for the other rangers. No, not all of his plans worked out, and he couldn't always keep everyone safe, but there was no question the town would have been worse off without him.

I didn't know how long we stayed like that, but we were soon joined by Rocket, Spade, and the poochyena. I didn't think the two pups really understood what was going on. Or maybe they did, maybe they knew they'd lost the leader of their pack.

Eventually, I felt Jarvis tug on my sleeve. He motioned quietly to the body. I nodded. Everything else had been cleared away.

"Come on, Sab," I whispered gently. "Let's get Tom inside…"

X

Carnelian Bay didn't have a dedicated coroner. With a population of only 2,300, there just wasn't a need for one. Hell, my high school had more people than this town. Most of the time, the people most likely to die were rangers and we weren't always able to bring back the bodies anyway.

We did have a church, a little Methodist place that wasn't being used for much. It used to serve as a makeshift schoolhouse before I came along, back when Carnelian Bay was even smaller and the folks from Truckee and Sierraville hadn't moved in. Now, it served well enough as a morgue and funeral parlor.

A collective wake was held for the eight who died. The town's general policy was to hold the wake and funeral as soon as possible, all the better to get some closure and move on. The wake would last all night. The bodies would then be cremated at dawn, their ashes buried wherever the next of kin chose.

The bodies had been placed inside makeshift coffins, more like repurposed wardrobes lined with what blankets we could spare. Friends and family gathered around without formal structure, praying or softly singing hymns under their breaths. Some lit candles while others simply bowed in solemn quiet. This wasn't the first I'd attended in the months I'd been here, but it was the only one that mattered.

I sat next to Sabrina to lend her what support I could. She had stopped crying, though only because she'd long since run out of tears to shed. All through the night, she held her father's cold hand in hers as broken sobs wracked her form.

She'd always been so vibrant, an optimist through and through. She truly believed that things could get better so long as we kept studying the pokemon around us. There was always a bright curiosity about her, a drive to know more and to share that knowledge with the world.

That light was gone now, drowned in soul-crushing grief she'd yet to process. Her slim shoulders shook long after she'd run out of tears to shed. She looked so small like this, fragile, like a porcelain doll.

Finally, dawn broke over the horizon. Mayor McAllen rang a small bell. I doubted he was an ordained pastor, but that was just as well. It allowed everyone to worship whichever god in whatever manner without feeling left out of the proceedings.

The man looked almost as broken as Sabrina. The ruddy tone of his face had faded into a sickly pallor. His voice was hoarse and his hair matted to his face like a corpse.

Austin… Austin wasn't the most popular person in town right now. He'd likely live from what I heard, but he wouldn't be walking ever again. And in a world like this one, that was no life at all.

"Shane," Sabrina said. Her voice was soft, little better than a whisper.

"Yes, Sabrina?"

"Thank you… I… I'm a mess…"

"We all are," I told her truthfully. I wrapped one arm around her shoulder and pulled her into a hug. Most of us hadn't exactly bothered with a shower before coming out for the wake. I reached for my holster and pulled out the Springfield M1911. ""I only knew him for a few months, but I owe him my life. Did you know he left this behind? In Sierraville."

"No."

"Well, he did. A full magazine too. His note was how I knew to come to Carnelian Bay. My crossbow was busted and this pistol was all I had. Said that if I failed to catch anything with it, the last bullet was for me," I said with a watery chuckle.

She laughed. Hollow, but I took it to be a good sign. "Y-Yeah, that sounds like him."

"Tom was a good man. Helped people when he could without ignoring how dangerous things could get. I'm happy to have known him. Without him, I probably wouldn't even be here."

"I'm glad you came."

"Yeah, me too."

"I… I think he was proud of you. He was so happy when you showed up, said how having a new trainer would turn things around. And he was right. I just… I wish I'd never come out," she said, breaking down into fresh sobs. She buried her head into my chest. "Why? Why the fuck did I run out like an idiot? Dad… If I didn't, then dad would…"

"To save people. You wanted to help," I whispered into her hair. "And he would have been so damn proud of you. He was proud of you. Whenever we were out in the woods, half of all he talked about was how great his little girl was."

I gently held her as she lost herself in her grief again.

We went about the cremation proceedings with a sorrow that weighed on us like a thick fog. I worked with Rocket to swiftly build a large pyre. Even Scout contributed a few branches.

"Would you like me to light the pyre?" I asked Sabrina. I offered her the torch, a bit of fatwood that had been shaved into ribbons on one end.

She took a shuddering breath and took the torch in hand. "N-No. I need to do this."

The fire was lit and we watched as Tom's body burned, just one tragedy of many.

X

Things were tense for a while. The funeral gave us some closure, but it wasn't as though our problems could be buried with the ashes of our dead.

The crustle's rampage had two contrary effects on the town. On one hand, they were far more appreciative of Rocket, Scout, and the two poochyena we had. There was no denying who did the lion's share of the work in that battle after all. Nods and quiet murmurs of respect were far more common now, and not just from the rangers. The battle had cemented in the town's mind that only powerful pokemon could contend with other powerful pokemon.

In a way, the crustle was even more effective at driving this point home than the snorlax I wasn't here for. With the snorlax, the threat seemed almost divine in scope. What could a human, or even most pokemon, do against a Hyper Beam that reduced all in its path to smoldering ash? How was a snorlax different from a Plague of Egypt? Normal humans could do fuck-all about it no matter what plan we came up with.

But where the snorlax was an unstoppable natural disaster, more of a calamity given form than an animal, a crustle was less in every way. And because a crustle was weaker than a snorlax, its strength seemed achievable. Rocket and I, and to a lesser extent the other rangers, had proven that a powerful pokemon could stop another powerful pokemon, that we could be ready for threats.

On the other hand, the fear had not gone away. If anything, this incident only exacerbated the fear normal people had of pokemon. And why wouldn't it? They saw, for maybe the first time, what we rangers dealt with each time we went out beyond the wall.

They saw us fight for our lives. They saw how dangerous even an oversized hermit crab could be. Oh, they'd always known of course, but empirical knowledge was very different from the experiential variety.

That fear colored their newfound respect for us. It was like they didn't really know how to deal with us, never mind the pokemon. There was a real divide between the townsfolk and the rangers that no one was sure how to bridge.

For my part, I was just happy no one was giving Rocket shit for this somehow. There hadn't been any rangings in the past week, but that was obvious. In fact, there was no real chain of command. We were labeled "the rangers" by the town, and we were fine with the label, but that didn't mean we had much in the way of structure. More or less, we were just people who were good at being outside.

That left me feeling somewhat aimless. A part of me wanted to leave, maybe disappear for a few weeks while things settled down. Each time I seriously considered it, something kept me here. I was growing attached. In the end, I'd always walk back to town after having picked off a deer or a sack full of rabbits.

One morning, I wandered out onto the pier with my partner ambling behind. It was quiet here. The sun was just starting to rise and the fishermen of the yacht club had long since set off into the lake, leaving behind only a few people to guard the fisheries.

"Morning, Aaron, Rocket," said Vincent Jackson. His salt-pepper beard was as immaculate as ever as he sat on a lounge chair, looking out over the lake. "What brings you here?"

"Morning, Vincent. I just… needed a place to think, I guess," I said as Rocket nudged Vincent's hand in his own greeting. "Not taking the boat out today?"

"Not my turn. Come, sit with me. You two have breakfast yet?"

"Not yet. How's it going?" I asked as I pulled up a folding chair next to him. Rocket circled the chairs a few times like a puppy before lounging at my feet. A fishing rod, one of several already in the water, was placed in my hand to oversee. "How's Phil?"

His expression darkened. "He's alright. Boy's still afraid of the dark. He sat there, you know? Inside the caves, hearing all the mess that went on aboveground."

What could I say to that? I was the one who convinced Vincent to allow Phil to help, the one who said we should force the dwebble to the surface so Austin could have his chat with them. I still didn't know what else I could have done, but I felt I deserved a share of the blame for what happened anyway.

"For what it's worth, I'm sorry to hear that," I said.

"Don't be, son. Phil will get over it and, I can't help but think he'll have to learn more than fishing as he grows," Vincent said with a sigh. "Elaina's distraught of course, I wouldn't go near her if you can help it for a while."

"Yeah, I don't blame her. She's his mother."

"Don't beat yourself up too much is what I'm saying. Phil was nice and safe with that graveler while you risked life and limb for everyone. You did the best any man can rightly expect of you, you hear?"

"Thanks," I spoke softly. "I… I think I needed to hear that…"

The two of us sat around and shot the breeze. It was nice, not worrying about anything for a bit. I caught nothing, but that was alright. I needed this chance to kill some time and think things through for myself.

There was so much that I could have done better. Maybe, if I kept an eye out for the others, Tom wouldn't have died. Or maybe I ought to have voted for drowning the dwebble altogether and waited to ambush them immediately as they came out of their ended up killing them all anyway. It was cruel, but so was letting other people die for Austin's delusions.

In the end, everything I considered led me back to one conclusion: I needed to be stronger. Me and Rocket both. And, maybe more. Spade had been glued to Sabrina's side ever since, but Scout was a free bird. I couldn't remember much about unfezant besides that they weren't very popular competitively and the males had vibrant crests, but this wasn't a game anymore. A third-stage flyer, when Scout evolved, would be beyond helpful.

Scout was a proud creature. Could I get him to listen to me? Tom apparently had him since he was a pidove so the old ranger had a bond with Scout that I lacked. Maybe, maybe I needed to beat him in a traditional pokemon battle, get Rocket to prove that I could make him strong. He'd taken orders from me on occasion in the past, but this and that were different.

Which led back to Rocket. There was so much more I wanted to teach him. His Hone Claws needed to get faster. Double Team was great, but his clones tended to be simplistic in their actions. I knew that those clones could act with some independence. He could always learn more moves, maybe Seed Bomb from a skiddo. A stronger ranged attack would have made that fight with the crustle much easier. I had no idea how I'd teach Rocket Shadow Claw, but that was an option as well.

Hell, maybe I ought to focus on teaching him Swift or something. That was the trouble with normal types: They had such a large movepool that it was hard to pick a niche once you removed the numbers and stats sheets from the games.

I had a loose plan. Teach Rocket. Maybe coach the rangers and the two poochyena some while I was at it. Then, hopefully, I could impress Scout enough that he'd recognize me as his trainer.

And then… Then I'd need to see about taking care of the weakest link on my team: me.

"I need to hit a dungeon."

X

"It's not your fault," I told Austin. I wasn't sure I believed it in truth.

I'd come to visit. Dr. Lansdowne and Dr. Nguyen had been rather busy this past week taking care of all the injured. With the limited supplies we had, they couldn't do much more than brace his pelvis and give him some painkillers.

This was the fourth time I'd come to visit. He hadn't been lucid enough for a conversation the first two times. The third time, he fell asleep after a light meal.

I was here alone, having sent Rocket to roam the forest. His mother, the mayor's wife, didn't exactly have a high opinion of pokemon after one crippled her son.

"You were right," Austin said quietly. "You said I was too naive."

"None of us knew there was a crustle. It was probably a recent evolution."

He let out a broken, hollow laugh. "Does it matter, Shane? God, I got people killed. I…"

"Sabrina doesn't blame you, you know," I told him truthfully. No, she blamed herself and the other civilians for standing around gawking. "Tom wouldn't have either. You did what you thought was best for the town."

"It'd be easier if she did. It'd be easier if she hated me."

I didn't know what to say to that. At the moment, Sabrina didn't have the emotional capacity to feel anything at all.

I understood where he was coming from; there was some atonement that could have been had in letting her punish him. Maybe things would have been easier if she was the type to burn hot. Maybe then she'd rage and lash out and call Austin a murderer.

But Sabrina just wasn't that kind of girl and we both knew that. No, she was the sort to distract herself by any means at all. She'd buried herself in her old veterinary school textbooks and hadn't emerged from the old ranger station since the funeral. At her pace, I wouldn't be surprised to find out she memorized the damn things cover to cover.

"IWhat do I do, Shane?" he asked me. "What… What am I supposed to do with myself?"

I wasn't sure. I was a twenty-three year old punk kid who lucked out into a pokemon for himself. What the hell did I know?

Still, I answered anyway. "Rest. Recover. Learn. Live. Figure out a way to contribute to the town."

"Easy for you to say," he said with a bitter laugh. "You're… you. You've only been here since April and you're already the hotshot ranger. I'm just… just Austin…"

"Weren't you the one who got the graveler to work with the town? That wasn't nothing, Austin. You're why we have a wall, why I can come and go with the expectation of safety. You tried and, this time, it didn't end well. But that doesn't mean you should stop trying."

"I… And what if I get more people killed? Who'd follow me after this fuckup anyway?"

"Me," I stressed. I surprised myself but found I wasn't just trying to make him feel better.

I didn't know to what extent the power of friendship still applied in this world, this wasn't an anime, but damn it, the strength of the bond between pokemon and humans was the one defining trait Professor Oak emphasized across every medium. There had to be something there. Hell, I'd experienced a bit of that for myself with Rocket.

Austin was naive. He was unathletic. He had no hope of being a "ranger." He wasn't especially charismatic or anything either. But… But he truly, genuinely believed that humans and pokemon could coexist. That we should coexist.

I could get behind that.

Author's Note

May this be known as the Chapter of Sad.

You know what'd be funny? What if I made a Lake of Rage scenario the next chapter and blew up the town via gyarados ex machina?

Animal Fact: Honey badgers are related to skunks. They don't spray when threatened, but they can manually turn their anal pouches inside out. The odor acts as a warning signal to others to stay the fuck away. Imagine forcing a rectal prolapse whenever someone steps up to you.

You're welcome.

Thank you to all of my patrons. As many of you know, I update at least once a week. That said, I update much more frequently on Pat-re-on. If you would like to drop a tip, read my stories early, or vote in monthly polls, come and visit.

As of now, this is how far along each story is:

- A Colorful Life: Same as public. *This will change as I build a backlog.
- A Life Worth Living: 5
- Homeless Bunny: 27
- Legendary Tinker: 8.9
- Plan? What Plan?: 5.4.5
- Pokemon: Apocalypse: 1.17
- The Holy Grill: 3.1
- Troll in the Dungeon!: 25
- When is a Spoon a Sword?: 4.16
- Let There be War: 9 (Complete)
- Snippets & Omake Exclusives: 11

Total Chapter Difference (Pat-re-on - Public): 39
 
Hmm, so Shane has finally firmed his resolve to face a Dungeon? That's... gonna be an experience. Gotta say that I'm curious to see how it will go considering the tidbits you've dropped about them earlier in the story. I'm looking forward to see what he'll get out of it.

As for his ideas on training... Yeah, I hope to see him get Rocket a few more techniques before going off. And I'm especially curious to see if he can convince Scout to join him.

Lastly, R.I.P. Tom. May you enjoy all the beer and steak you could ever want on the other side.

On one hand, they were far more appreciative of Rocket, Scout, and the two poochyena we had. There was no denying who did the lion's share of the work in that battle after all. Nods and quiet murmurs of respect were far more common now, and not just from the rangers. The battle had cemented in the town's mind that only powerful pokemon could contend with other powerful pokemon.
Well, at least something good came from this mess... Seriously, a lot of the people in that town were acting like those idiot civilians from Highschool of the Dead. Just trying to stick their heads in the sand and hoping if they ignore the problem long enough, things would go back to normal.

"Morning, Aaron, Rocket,"
"Aaron"? I do believe his name is "Shane Hayes", yes?

Or maybe I ought to have voted for drowning the dwebble altogether and waited to ambush them immediately as they came out of their ended up killing them all anyway.
I think this is two sentences smashed together.
 
If they managed to find two poochyenas, then they should in theory be able to find more pokemon to co-opt with. Tier 1's and 0's should be the goal, things like caterpie, pidgeys, bidoofs, etc.
 
I will personally say that for the interaction with the Dwebble they should have had multiple levels of plans for how things could go. Option 1: Talk no Jutsu is a success and the Dwebble are now our friends. Hooray, all is well. Option 2: Partial success, the Dwebble aren't that friendly but can be convinced fairly peacefully to f-off. Still a good option. Then we have the FUBAR option, number 3: the Dwebble are most finitely NOT friendly and do NOT want to move. Cue music "Mortal Kombat".

Hopefully our little community of survivors will learn from this highly painful experience without becoming completely distrusting of Pokemon and unwilling to at least give being friends a try.
 
Finally caught up. Can't wait to see what's really inside a dungeon.
 
1.15 Liftoff
Liftoff 1.15

August 2015


Things had changed a great deal since the crustle incident, and yet not at all. The universe didn't care that Austin couldn't walk anymore. It didn't care that Sabrina was deeply traumatized. Time moved forward and the townspeople collectively tried to put the incident past them. Perhaps it was callous, but there was a cold pragmatism to it: Life went on and survival was hard enough without carrying the ghosts of the past.

In two months, the general attitude towards Rocket had shifted. No longer was he treated like a rabid dog, barely kept on a leash. He, Scout, and the other pokemon were more readily welcomed. He'd even shown up at the school once or twice, allowing children to pet him and get used to the idea of working with our new superfauna neighbors.

That wasn't to say the town magically transformed into a utopia. The suspicion was here, but it was now directed outward, in a clear "us vs them" perspective. Our pokemon were our protectors and thus safe; the wild ones were not. I wasn't sure I liked this change.

As for me, I took over the rangers with Jarvis and Guilermo, the guy who owned the sporting goods store. He also maintained the bounty board so though he seldom went outside the walls himself, he was a good man to know. He acted as our point of contact with the Adams brothers, who were the town mechanics, and other relevant individuals.

I said "took over," but it wasn't as though there was a structured organization anymore. A few days after the funeral, a lot of the rangers got together and decided I should be in charge, at least nominally. I was pretty sure it was mostly because Scout, Tom's tranquill, now took orders from me.

There was no ceremony. Scout didn't demand that Rocket and I defeat him in a pokemon battle. One day, I woke up to find the bird snoozing on my trailer's side-view mirror. I fed him, we chatted for a bit, and that was that.

What that meant in practice was that I was now responsible for liaising with Guilermo and Sabrina. Guilermo to manage our supplies and take occasional attendance to make sure no one died, and Sabrina to collect and process the information gathered in a centralized way. I was the only one she talked to much these days.

Beyond those broad strokes, the rangers as an organization dissolved. The bounty board became more important than ever, with Guilermo and I posting any notifications such as wild pokemon sightings there. We now had two boards, one for in-town jobs that anyone could take and another for work that had to be done outside.

Small groups of rangers would take on tasks from the board or use the information provided to go on their own rangings for a few days at a time. Others, like Alex and his brother, Luke, retired entirely from the profession. Large-scale rangings with a convoy of cars to Truckee or beyond were a thing of the past. They might be necessary eventually, but for now, Tom's absence was felt.

Whatever the case, my new "promotion" kept me in town more often than not. As the new "chief ranger," I couldn't just fuck off with Rocket and Scout for two weeks with zero notice. I did get a few days to myself occasionally by leaving Jarvis in charge.

Truthfully, being stuck in town for the most part ended up being a blessing in disguise. Not because I suddenly made friends with the regular townsfolk, fuck those guys, but because I had much more time to myself to train the pokemon.

If anything, the pokemon were my true calling. Their continued progress was synonymous with the town's security.

The two poochyena weren't pups anymore. They were about half again as large as pitbulls, with a bite force closer to big cats than medium-sized dogs. Under Rocket's guidance, they were taught to identify unusual scents and made to guard the perimeter of the town. These two didn't have dedicated trainers, partnering instead with a rotating town guard. As young as they were, they were already more reliable than most humans I'd met.

Scout, being the most maneuverable pokemon we had, tended also to be the most independent. When he wasn't sparring with Rocket to hone his Air Cutter, I had him flying a large, circular perimeter around the town, both to enhance his stamina and provide another layer of security.

Through this, I found out two things about him: First, he was a relatively poor flyer. Compared to the pidgey and spearow, he lacked agility. In aerial confrontations, he used his bigger size and increased mastery of Gust and Air Cutter to intimidate the opposition. He'd also lost a race against a friendly pidgeotto we'd briefly encountered a month back.

There wasn't a whole lot I could do about his poor speed, but I opted to help him become more nimble through a set of training exercises. I, or sometimes the town's children, would fling as many frisbees into the air as possible and Scout would do his best to snag them all out of the air.

As if to make up for his shortcomings in the sky, I found that Scout's eyesight and directional memory was phenomenal. There also seemed to be some inexplicable connection between us now that he'd recognized me as his trainer. No matter where I was, whether in the woods, lakeshore, or town, he could find me. I felt much more comfortable leaving my post for short periods knowing Jarvis could send Scout with a message should the need arise.

Another major development was the rise of pokemon-trainer pairs who weren't rangers.

Some of the farmers finally got to working with the skiddo and oddish beyond helping to enhance the harvest. One of them, brave idiot, thought ingesting a Worry Seed could help keep him awake. He ended up having an anxiety-induced panic attack.

That said, thanks to his sacrifice, Doctors Lansdowne and Nguyen began a study on the right dose of Worry Seed. Only two weeks ago, they came through with a solution concocted from pine bark tea and trace amounts of Worry Seed. We now had a coffee-equivalent that could keep us alert without the increased anxiety, so long as it was consumed in small amounts.

The oddish still hated being disturbed during the day, but some of them agreed to donate their powders. The two doctors were hopeful that Poison Powder could be used to develop an antidote, at least for plant-based poisons we might encounter. We also began storing vials of Stun Spore and Sleep Powder for defensive purposes.

Hell, some of them had even begun to train, if only a little bit. I saw people running laps around the town in the mornings, sometimes even getting a skiddo or two involved in a game of tag. As scary as the crustle had been, I was glad at least a few people were stepping up to take ownership of the town's security.

As befitting my starter, Rocket saw the most improvement in these two months. His Dig was practically fluid, like he could dive in and out of the ground as if it was water. It became a favorite trick of his to dig down, use Double Team, then emerge out of the ground with six different copies of himself, all running in different directions. The kids loved to try to guess which was the right one and it became a way to train Rocket's abilities at misdirection.

Hone Claws was coming along as well. He'd always been able to use it well enough, but now, he could activate the buff in less than a second. He'd run, stutter for a brief moment to use Hone Claws, then use that moment to lose the opponent's eyes, blurring in an unexpected direction with Liftoff.

It wasn't about pure speed. In essence, I found him to be similar to a mosquito. The sudden shift in direction and acceleration made him incredibly hard to follow and he'd appear to become invisible for a short spurt. Using this trick in conjunction with Double Team, Rocket became an expert in striking for the kill in that instant of inattention.

My murder-scarf also picked up two new moves: Swift and Seed Bomb. Swift was easy enough, what with him already having a good handle on normal type aura, but Seed Bomb only came along thanks to a particularly playful skiddo. Apparently, the trick to teaching Rocket to harness grass type aura was to nail him with a Leech Seed one too many times. I was pretty sure he learned it out of sheer frustration.

I walked into the ranger station, now practically my house, with Rocket ambling happily by my side.

"Jarvis," I called. "How goes it?"

My second looked up from his mug of Worry-Brew. There had been some talk about changing the name but the doctors insisted on calling it that so people wouldn't forget to stop drinking the damn thing if they began feeling anxious.

It was about as close to a product label from Before as we could get. I wanted to say we weren't that stupid, but some of these folks were why toothpaste came with disclaimers.

"Not bad, might possibly get worse though. Rocket and I headed out to the Merryweather Turnpike to confirm Scout's report. He's right. We've got at least one pack of sneasel. I found the local pidgey in a tizzy because a few eggs got robbed. Saw some claw marks on the trunks, too."

Scout had recently returned from a recon trip with new intel for us. Our system was crude but effective: We had a sketchbook full of drawings of pokemon. He pointed out the area on a map and then pecked at the pokemon he saw. If he discovered a species we hadn't seen before, he scratched the ground for each new find.

Jarvis swore at that. He was the one who went with Tom and I to fight that sneasel pack in the hospital. He was tough shit, and had the scars to prove it, but no one sane wanted anything to do with those things.

"Hopefully they don't come here then," he grunted. "We don't have any eggs so those fuckers can fuck right off."

"Agreed. I'm hoping they won't become a problem."

We sat in companionable silence. I had work to do if I wanted to hit the dungeon. Even now, two months since my decision, I still didn't feel ready. I doubted I'd ever be.

We had so little information about dungeons that there wasn't any real way to prepare. The best I could do was to train Rocket and Scout and make sure the town would be fine without me.

"No one's making you go," Jarvis said, looking at my choice of reading material. It was a compilation of news articles, opinion pieces, and scientific dissertations, what science could be done anyway, 2012 to 2014, shortly before the bombs dropped. Every one of them was about the dungeons. Some successes, but more often than not, failures. "The town's fine. We have a wall. We have pokemon we're getting along with. Our stockpile of food is decent."

"It is," I agreed. He didn't get it. We were fine now. That was why I had to go while I could, while the town had some breathing room, while they could afford to lose me. "Carnelian Bay will be alright without me for a little while."

"Your mind's made up, huh?"

"Yeah. It's just… I'm going to fight. There will be other crustles, probably things bigger and meaner." 'Like the snorlax,' I didn't say. The looming winter was a cause for concern, but that was one more reason I shouldn't tarry in my mind.

"We can get through those by working together."

"And I'll be the one in the thick of it, me and Rocket."

"We're grateful. You're a good leader, Shane."

"That's not what this is about, man. I'm saying that sooner or later, I'm not going to be good enough."

"Like Tom?"

I felt a flash of anger at that. It came and went like the morning dew, leaving me feeling colder with the wind. Tom was… "Yeah, like Tom…"

"When? You know I've got your back."

"You need to stay here. Why the hell do you think I made you my second? Someone's gotta make sure the town doesn't implode while I'm gone."

"So you're going alone then?" he asked skeptically. I felt him. Fuck, that sounded even stupider when he said it aloud.

Still… I held out the notebook I'd been writing in. "Yes, alone. The success rate of clearing a dungeon doesn't improve because more people happen to enter. Hell, it might drop.

"All those headlines about groups of hikers entering at a time? Or about entire military squadrons armed to the teeth? They almost always end in tragedy. One or two people might survive, if they're lucky. Usually, the dungeon gets cordoned off after a week of waiting and the expedition is written for dead.

"The few success stories we have that don't involve hilarious losses were attempted solo, or with a pokemon. I think… I think there's something to that. The dungeons don't reward military training or swarm tactics. At the bare minimum, the objectives inside are such that numbers don't provide an advantage by themselves."

"Or," Jarvis pointed out, "those that attempted the dungeon in smaller numbers are dead but didn't get reported because 'Solo moron commits creative suicide,' doesn't sell papers. This could be media bias."

I swallowed the lump in my throat. He wasn't wrong; there probably was an element of that here. Even if I was right, there was no guarantee that the specific dungeon I entered would be one that was winnable for me.

But there was a nagging in my mind, an incessant prickling that just wouldn't go away. If the dungeons were made by Arceus, as the golden hoops around each gate implied, then maybe the dungeons were meant to be tests for the humanity of this world. In which case, perhaps Austin's trust had not been so naive, merely… misapplied.

"I have to do this," I said finally. "Not just the town, I personally need to get stronger."

He sighed but didn't push. "Just… Just tell Sabrina, alright? Don't walk off on your own."

"Yeah, I know."

X

"You're going then?" Sabrina asked. She looked tired, done with it all. By her feet, Spade carved his claws against a block of wood; the little guy had gotten into woodworking of all things.

She looked down and offered her partner a smile. Spade had been good for her. He acted as her assistant and cheerleader, keeping her from wallowing too long in her own memories. He even managed to get her out to the golf course to train once a week or so.

I nodded and took a seat across from her. Her wooden cabin was one of the nicer ones, but also one that felt too big now that she lived alone. "Yeah, I am. I've been thinking of possibilities. I thought I'd say goodbye, and see you soon."

"You… You already know where you're going then?"

"I think I do. I left a copy of my plans with Jarvis. He knows what to do if I don't show in a wee-"

"Don't! Don't say that," she whispered, looking down at her hands. They were trembling, balled into little fists and unwilling to let go. "Just…"

"I'll come back," I told her. "I always do, don't I?"

"Don't say that either, dumbass."

"And don't you just go through the motions either, Sabrina. Get out there. See Jarvis and Austin. Maybe do a study on Phil's marill or something."

"I… I'll try…"

I suppressed a sigh. She looked so frail, like a brittle, dried out leaf. I motioned to Spade. "You take care of her, you hear?"

"Dril. Dril-bur," he grunted, nodding solemnly.

"And drag her out of the house by her ankles if you have to."

"Bur."

I stood. "Good. I'm going."

"Yeah… Be careful?"

"Always."

X

Carnelian Bay was aware of four dungeons in total around the Lake Tahoe area. We knew nothing of what awaited me inside, but we could make a general guess based on the color of the golden hoop that framed each gate. They regularly pulsed with a bright, incandescent light that, according to Rocket, was indeed similar to his own aura.

Of the four, I wrote off the one nearest the town immediately. It was in the middle of the lake, the gate lying just beneath the surface. We'd only found out about it thanks to Plue the marill.

There was a chance that the challenge would be as simple as "catch the magikarp," but I had no desire to find out if it was actually an underwater labyrinth. Or, Arceus forbid, "kill the gyarados." Worst of all, if something did happen, there was a chance the nearby town would suffer for my stupidity. I couldn't have that.

There was another dungeon gate we'd passed when we went to Truckee with the rangers. It pulsed a light-blue and was located at the base of the air traffic control tower in the Truckee-Tahoe Airport. If that didn't scream "sky battle," I didn't know what did. Seeing how Scout wasn't the best flyer and Rocket's best ranged option was Swift, I gave that a miss as well.

Of the last two, the one at the Rubicon Trail trailhead was green, grass or bug, while the other at the Stampede Reservoir was a tawny-brown, rock or ground. I could have gone either way, but Austin pointed out a few days back that grass or bug also likely meant poisons. Those who cleared the dungeons did get healed, but that was contingent on actually clearing the damn thing and not running out to expire shortly after.

So, the Stampede Reservoir it was.

According to the travel guide, the reservoir was a popular fishing spot, with wide-ish plains and an artificial lake made by a dam. It was near Sierraville, which meant I was headed back north. It was only August but the brisk chill of autumn had already begun to set in, enough that I needed a coat to keep warm at night.

We traveled during the day and slept inside convenient ditches dug out by Rocket with a plastic tarp to keep the dirt off my things. Scout proved his worth, steering us clear of unnecessary danger. It'd have been humiliating to be forced to turn back because one of us got injured before we even reached the damn thing.

It took approximately twelve hours, two days of cautious hiking for us to reach the Stampede Dam. The dam was absolutely beautiful in a stark, rugged way. It had been years since it had seen maintenance. The concrete walkways around the reservoir had been consumed by nature. The reservoir itself had overflowed, creating a sort of boggy, muddy mess that hid the path.

And still, there was tranquility here. Maybe I happened to be in a poetic mood, but it felt soothing to see that nature would take back what once was hers.

I spotted the dungeon easily enough. It sat right in the middle of the dam, Arceus' golden hoop gleaming in the setting sun. It spun lazily around the gate along an unknown axis, occasionally pulsing with a brown glow that reminded me of burnished bronze.

Scout landed near me, trilling his greeting. "Tran?"

"Are we going to go in?" I asked. Whatever bond allowed me to understand Rocket almost implicitly hadn't quite formed yet with Scout.

"Quill."

"No, not today. It's already getting dark. Can you find us a safe clearing? Preferably away from the mud?"

"Quill."

Once we set up camp, Rocket, Scout, and I ate a simple meal of dried meat and vegetable stew I kept for us in a big thermos. We then spent that night making last-minute preparations.

I barked out orders, shorthand code for different moves and formations. Despite being new to the team, Scout responded just as swiftly as Rocket; I was lucky to have smart partners.

I cleaned my crossbow and backup handgun with nervous energy before making sure my bolts weren't bent and the extra bullets were where I'd left them. I sharpened my hunting knives, I'd taken to carrying a spare after breaking one off in a bucking stantler, and checked to see that the crude bombs I'd made using Stun Spore and Sleep Powder were still unbroken.

After dinner, I buried all unnecessary items inside a pit in the ground. Most of my food, extra clothes, and toiletries all went inside. I wanted to be as light as possible tomorrow, just in case the dungeon involved a lot of running. I retained enough supplies for an overnight stay, but I wasn't betting on it. If I required more time with whatever the mission happened to be, I'd probably be dead in short order anyway.

We were as ready as we could hope to be.

Author's Note

The note about tranquill comes from the pokedex. Shane might not remember the exact details, but he's finding out some of the trivia written in them first-hand.

Watch the challenge be "Build a sand statue of Arceus."

Random fact of the day: The moon spins on its axis as it orbits the earth. However, the speed of this spin is synchronized with the speed of its orbit. This means that no matter where in the sky it is, only one side of the moon is facing us. The reverse side that we cannot see from earth is often called the "dark side of the moon."

Funny enough, this is also why so many different cultures across the world have stories about the "moon bunny." From the Jade Rabbit of Chinese folklore to the adventurous rabbit who visits the moon with the help of a crane in Cree myth. Both the Cree and ancient Chinese saw the same dark markings and thought, "Bunny!"

Thank you to all of my patrons. As many of you know, I update at least once a week. That said, I update much more frequently on Pat-re-on. If you would like to drop a tip, read my stories early, or vote in monthly polls, come and visit. As of now, this is how far along each story is:

- A Colorful Life: 32
- A Life Worth Living: 6
- Homeless Bunny: 27.5
- Legendary Tinker: 9.1
- Plan? What Plan?: 5.5
- Pokemon: Apocalypse: 1.17
- The Holy Grill: 3.2
- Troll in the Dungeon!: 26
- When is a Spoon a Sword?: 4.17
- Let There be War: 9 (Complete)
- Snippets & Omake Exclusives: 11

Total Chapter Difference (Pat-re-on - Public): 41
 
1.16 Liftoff New
Liftoff 1.16

August 2015


The next morning found the three of us in front of the dungeon. The gate looked even more imposing up close. There was a certain weight to it, a gravitas that was hard to put to words. The golden hoop that was usually around Arceus' torso pulsed eerily in shades of brown and bronze.

It was strange, almost surreal. The past few years had been gritty and hard. I'd worried about survival, about having enough food to eat, bedding so I didn't freeze. And here was a dungeon, something straight out of a video game or one of those shitty light novels that had been getting popular back in the Before.

"Ready?" I asked, voice steadier than I felt.

"Quill."

"Oone."

I nodded. This was it, our Rubicon. Once we entered, there was a good chance that exit would not be possible. I took a deep breath and prepared myself. I stroked Scout's breast feathers and did the same to Rocket's ears.

I reached out and touched the gate, allowing it to claim us.

X

I didn't know what I was expecting. Dungeons existed in another dimension, if not an entirely separate plane of existence. Part of me thought we'd step into something similar to the Distortion World, a series of floating islands with rivers that flowed in nonsensical directions, all suspended over a fathomless void. That wasn't what we found. Nor did we find a desert befitting the ground or rock type we'd expected.

No, it was as though we'd never entered the dungeon at all. The Stampede Reservoir stretched out before us, its perimeter flooded and caked in mud. The trailhead marker was the only thing that even hinted at the path that had been there years before.

I made to take a step forward, but the System appeared, making me pause. It was something that came with the dungeon, some kind of administration software, inasmuch as a reality warping phenomenon could have "administration software." It was something I knew existed, but never had a reason to think too deeply about.

Yet, here it was in its translucent, blue glory.

Welcome to the Stampede Reservoir Dungeon. Your mission is as follows: Walk the circumference of the reservoir within 48 hours.

Good luck.

48:00:00

I blinked. It caught me off guard with its simplicity. I'd been prepared to hunt another crustle. Return a phanpy to its herd without getting trampled by the overprotective donphan. Survive a golem-induced avalanche as they rolled down the mountain. Or maybe something even more ridiculous like "steal a flygon egg."

The System told me to take a hike. Literally. It felt so… simple, like all the caution I'd practiced so far was all for nothing.

"No, I should be happy about this," I told myself. "Simple is good. Simple is safe."

"Lin?" Rocket chuffed, pointing at the screen.

"You can't read it?"

"Linoone."

"Ah, sorry. Is this another challenge to get humans to cooperate with pokemon?" I wondered. "It says we need to walk the perimeter of the reservoir in two days."

"Tran? Tranquill?" Scout chirped a question. He took flight and made a quick circle before landing back on my shoulder.

"I think I'm the one who has to do the walking, bud," I replied with a chuckle. "'Pokemon can help, but the journey is the trainer's right,' or something like that."

I tried to remember what I could about the reservoir. The ranger station had plenty of pamphlets for visitors. Before it all flooded over, the reservoir had been respectably large, about twenty-five miles in circumference. The land surrounding the reservoir was relatively flat and had been turned into a mix of lakeside walkways and hiking trails. It all led up to the surrounding mountains, but the immediate area was very beginner-friendly.

Now, the boggy mess probably added another mile or two to the walkable perimeter, but I could easily walk fourteen or fifteen miles a day while backpacking. If I pushed myself, covering twenty wasn't out of the question. It all seemed well within my abilities, but that itself made me pause.

I'd only brought enough supplies for a night's stay. I'd thought that, given how these dungeons typically went, I wouldn't need any more. If I needed more time, the mission was likely impossible for me and I'd be dead in short order.

"Fucckkk," I groaned. I took a deep breath to still myself. Yes, that was a mistake, but it wasn't an irredeemable one. If one or two sleepless and hungry nights was all it took to clear a dungeon, these domains wouldn't have the fearsome reputation they did. "There's no way things are that easy."

"Oone," Rocket whined.

"You too?"

"Lin."

"Yeah." I looked around and spotted a line dug from the trailhead. It was cut too perfectly, as if someone had scooped the dirt directly out of the ground like LEGO blocks. Hell, now that I was looking, I saw a pair of checkered flags tied to two, nearby trees. "I guess that's supposed to be our starting line. Scout, can you fly ahead and see what sorts of pokemon there are?"

"Quill."

He flew off, leaving Rocket and I to ourselves. I could see the timer ticking down, but I was loath to charge forward without my scout. I had a feeling the terrain would be trapped to hell and back.

If I could get Scout to identify at least a few of the native pokemon, I ought to be able to discern the type that this dungeon catered to, rock or ground. That would then give me an idea of what other species might be found in this dungeon.

I cautiously took a step across the starting line. Then, I took a step backwards, and then forwards again.

"Does that count as finishing the race?" I wondered.

I doubted it would be that easy, but I'd heard that people could rules-lawyer the win conditions. Hell, that was basically how every dungeon was cleared since humans didn't exactly do well against pokemon. Then I felt my heart leap into my throat as I saw the timer drop rapidly.

47:57:29



46:30:40



44:00:00

Cute. Shane Hayes has incurred a penalty of four hours. Once more: Your mission is as follows: Walk the circumference of the reservoir within 48 hours.

I breathed a sigh of relief when it finally stopped. Four hours. That little stunt cost me four fucking hours. That was unexpected. I didn't think it'd actually work, but the penalty had been a nasty surprise.

"Guess 'walk the circumference' really does mean I'm going for a hike," I sighed. "Come on, Rocket. Odor Sleuth. Keep an eye out and let's make some progress before Scout gets back."

X

Scout found us in a few minutes. By flipping through my hand-drawn "pokedex," he was able to tell me what I wanted to know: He pecked at a sloppy drawing of Spade. The dungeon contained ground types, which lent further credence to my original guess: The path would be trapped to hell and back.

Judging by the fact that we were told to circle a manmade lake, I could also assume a few water-ground hybrids were nearby as well. That would mean barboach, whiscash, wooper, quagsire, and if I was especially unlucky, a fully mature swampert.

"Thank you, Scout," I said gratefully. "Let's move carefully."

Each step was a chore. I found out quickly that twenty-five miles in two days might be a lot more challenging than I'd first assumed. The trail had become so overgrown with plants that my hunting knife was simply no good. If I wanted to make good time, I'd be better off with a machete, which I didn't have.

Closer to the reservoir, the path was muddy and slick. Random puddles and potholes had formed that sucked in my boots. I soon gave up the lakeside trail as a bad job and moved further out where the ground was dry and I could still see the shore to keep me on the right track.

Everything was fine for an hour or so. Three and a half miles down and things were going smoothly.

Then, Rocket let out two sharp barks that had me diving for cover. I crouched behind a nearby pine tree as a rock sailed past where my head used to be. Poking my head out, I saw a trio of geodudes.

"Scout, distraction! Rocket, bomb them!" I shouted, falling into a clearly established routine.

Scout fell from the sky, chirping and crooning something that made the pokemon reveal themselves. Three geodude leapt from the brush, launching stones at the pigeon. This wasn't a video game. Rock Throw did not have a ninety percent accuracy rate across the board, or whatever that number was. Flying pokemon were without fail a bitch to hit.

A part of me wished I could understand my pokemon. Whatever Scout said never failed to piss off our opponents. It didn't matter if it was a skittish caterpie or a combative pidgeotto. In my head, I assumed my pigeon had the foulest mouth in the world.

Rocket took the chance provided to mark his target. He built up a green energy over his snout before flicking it towards a still airborne geodude with his tail. So distracted was the rock type that it didn't see it coming at all and the super effective attack sent it through the tree, dead or simply out for the count, I couldn't say.

But Seed Bomb was still a new move. As perfect as it was for this ground type dungeon, Rocket needed a bit more time than normal to charge the attacks. By the time the other two geodude turned to him, he'd only charged a second Seed Bomb halfway.

I distracted one with my crossbow and whistled for him to abandon the move in favor of climbing a tree. Going underground against a pokemon famous for its Magnitudes and Earthquakes seemed like a suicidally stupid idea.

Scout swooped in to distract the other. His attacks didn't do much more than annoy the rock type, but that was enough. Rocket bombarded the two geodude from a superior position with slow but effective Seed Bombs. When the smoke cleared, both were dead, cracked into shards like a broken egg.

It was disquieting. Geodude were friends of Carnelian Bay. I usually didn't have to worry about these guys trying to kill me.

Then again, they'd quickly reoriented from me to my pokemon. For whatever reason, the pokemon in the dungeon seemed to be animalistic. Not stupid, but direct in their priorities. I suspected that this was why humans with pokemon partners tended to do far better in dungeons than full military squadrons; most pokemon tended to prioritize other pokemon.

Just as I was thinking that, a group of graveler rolled down the mountain. The sole forewarning I had was the crackle of branches and the rumbling of a sentient rockslide. The ground rumbled with their passing. The trees snapped under their momentum. Some of the thinner boughs splintered explosively as though they'd been struck by mortars.

With nothing better to do, I flopped onto my belly and made myself as flat as possible. It was grenade protocol; by minimizing my profile, I could hopefully evade the shrapnel flying around. There was fuck-all I could do about the graveler besides pray one didn't land on me though. They were so loud that I couldn't even be sure how many there were.

When the last of them passed me to the lake, I stood on shaky legs. Being in the middle of that was intense. I wasn't being attacked, not really, but the experience was a thorough reminder that, where pokemon were concerned, I didn't need to be.

"Rocket, Scout, to me," I said, voice hoarse with dust. I coughed and spat out some dirt. Rocket hopped down from a nearby tree, one he hadn't been on before. My murder-ferret friend jumped from branch to branch like one of those anime characters, which I supposed he absolutely was.

"Lin?" he asked, concern obvious.

"I'm fine, just covered in dust. I was very lucky."

"Lin."

"Yeah, let's get out of here. Any chance you can sniff out graveler before they're on top of us?" I asked, already suspecting the answer.

He whined and placed his paws over his nose. He flicked his tail at a rock, tossing it away with contempt.

"They all smell the same?"

"Oone."

"Yeah, I figured. Scout, mind hovering a bit further out? If you see movement up in the mountains, I want to hear about it. Two chirps for a rockslide like that, three for something worse."

"Quill," he replied before flying off. I quickly lost sight of him in the canopy but it didn't matter; Scout could find me whenever he pleased.

X

I skipped lunch. Rocket, Scout, and I had a light breakfast before entering the dungeon and opted to graze on the move, picking up berries and herbs I knew were edible. We trekked through the woods for hours, occasionally taking breaks of ten minutes to keep us going.

After eight hours of nearly nonstop walking, we encountered a tributary that fed into the manmade lake. I led us back downstream to meet up with the hiking trail again. If there was a tributary, there was also likely a small bridge.

Unfortunately, all that was left of the bridge were two posts of rotted wood. Seeing no other option, I shrugged off my backpack and placed it against a tree.

"Guess I have to wade across," I grumbled.

"Lin…" Rocket huffed. He didn't look too thrilled about swimming in the muddy water either.

"Let's take an hour's rest first."

Just then, a familiar, blue salamander hopped onto land. It was small, with whiskers that reminded me of radio antennas, two stubby feet, but no arms.

Wooper. They were water-ground hybrids, which explained their presence here. Though they weren't powerful, they'd been some of my favorites because of how cute they were.

"Woop! Wooper!" it cried. It let out a small stream of bubbles in greeting.

"Hello, little guy," I said softly. I took a sip from my water bottle and took out some of the food I'd packed, dried fowl and some sourdough. Its beady little eyes tracked the food in my hand. "Do you want one?"

"Woo."

"Lin," Rocket let out a quiet growl. His lips curled in obvious warning, reminding me where we were. This was a dungeon. Some measure of caution would never go amiss.

I handed my pokemon their shares and tore a piece off my own before putting the meat and bread on a nearby rock. "Go on, little guy. Do you know if there's a bridge upstream?"

"Woo," it replied. It was a weird mix between speech and a croak. I didn't know what it said, but it was something in the negative.

"Pity."

"Woo-Wooper."

It seemed to enjoy the food, not that I could tell for sure. After a little butt-wiggle and head bobble of approval, it shuffled into a nearby bush and disappeared.

Rocket, Scout, and I rested for almost an hour when we saw that wooper again. It had returned with three others of its kind, cheeks bulging. They hopped up and down excitedly, their names making them sound like tween fanboys at a Britney Spears concert.

"Woo."

"Woo."

"Wooper."

"Woop."

I stared blankly as each wooper opened its mouth wider than I'd thought possible. Rocket shuffled in front of me and I held my pistol. They were short, but I had confidence in my aim at this distance. But they surprised me yet again. Rather than attack, they regurgitated something, dropping it in one big pile at my feet.

I blinked in confusion. It was disgustingly cute, and more than a little disgusting, but I looked closer anyway.

The pile of… something… turned out to be some kind of plant matter. It was pulpy and chunky, with pieces of blue skin. It looked like someone had mashed a ton of blueberries to turn into jam but hadn't gotten far enough to add the sugar yet.

"Is this… for me…?" I asked hesitantly.

"Woop!" one of the wooper, presumably the one I'd fed, cheered. Without hands.

Which made me realize, these things had no hands. Carrying things in their mouths was probably the best they could do.

Which meant they weren't making fun of me. They legitimately had nothing better to offer me to say thanks besides pulped berries.

"Thank you," I said with an awkward smile.

It tilted its bobble head to one side. "Woop?"

"Do… Do you want me to… eat it?"

"Woop!"

I looked at the cute little salamander, then at the pile of pulped berries, then back at the salamander. I didn't want to. Never mind hygiene, this was literal throw-up.

Pokemon in dungeons were assumed to be hostile, but it wasn't as though there had been a comprehensive study. We assumed they were hostile and acted accordingly. Usually, that was the right answer, the safe answer. I'd already seen how dangerous pokemon could be; those graveler had almost flattened me without even noticing.

But why did the dungeons exist? Clearly, they had some relationship with Arceus; the llama's hoops were on the gates. Did dungeons exist just to punish humanity? That was what a lot of religious leaders used to say, probably still said in their isolated communities, but that didn't seem right; there were more devastating ways to make humanity suffer than this.

Others said dungeons were a way of testing people. That, I was more inclined to believe, though the question remained: Testing what?

Was it courage? People who dove into dungeons definitely had that in spades. Or perhaps survival skills? Combat strength? Leadership skills?

Or maybe it was faith. Trust. Kindness. Plenty of anime in the Before emphasized the virtues of friendship, but I couldn't readily think of one that weaponized the power of friendship quite as much as Pokemon.

"Believe in yourself. Believe in your team. Treasure the bonds between you and you will go far." That was the central theme of the entire franchise. Hell, Professor Oak, the foremost expert on pokemon, apparently made "bond" his entire academic field of study.

There had to be some truth to that.

Sighing, I resigned myself to the insanity that was my life. I'd survived a nuclear exchange. I'd roamed the wilderness of the Cascades. I'd tamed and fought fictional monsters. I'd entered a dungeon. And now, I was about to eat wooper-barf so I didn't upset the little guy.

I scooped a small handful up. The chunks of skin definitely looked like blueberries, but blueberries were smaller than this. "Are you sure this won't poison me?"

"Woop!" it replied, slapping its tail down.

"You're right, sorry." I put it in my mouth. It was sweet and surprisingly not bad, full-bodied would be the way those snobby wine enthusiasts put it. "It makes my mouth tingle a little but it's not bad."

That made me pause. Berries weren't supposed to do that. Blueberries definitely didn't taste like this.

It was like a lightbulb lit itself in my mind. This wasn't mashed blueberries I was eating. I doubted they were native here in the first place.

"A-Are these oran berries?" I asked.

"Woop!" it croaked in affirmation. Its head bounced up and down with a cheerful grin, an action quickly adapted by its three siblings.

That changed things.

People went to war for pokemon technology, but berries were equally prized. Universal antidotes, foods that could fix nerve damage, and more, berries were the foundations of medicine in the pokemon world, worth more than their weight in gold.

How many people had passed by such opportunities? How many would have thrown aside the gratitude of a weak pokemon? My good fortune rendered me speechless.

I dug around in the goop until I found what I wanted: Seeds. Seeds that might one day mean I could have oran berries of my own. This alone made the dungeon worthwhile.

"Thank you," I said sincerely.

"Woop!" it cheered. It did this little skip, kicking its feet like it was paddling. It was ridiculously adorable.

I reached down slowly to pet the lead wooper. When it didn't seem offended or defensive, I allowed my hand to make contact with its slimy body.

That turned out to be a mistake.

I felt my hand go numb immediately. It was a tingling, stinging sensation, like my hand had gone to sleep and blood was only now starting to circulate. My smile became decidedly wooden as I pulled my hand back.

I felt idiotic when I remembered: Wooper were poisonous. They had a mucus membrane that caused numbness when touched. It was one of those dex entries that almost never came up so I'd forgotten. Hell, Austin was the one who added the entry when Sabrina and I asked him to help us fill things in.

I wiped off the mucus against a nearby tree and cradled my hand, trying to massage some feeling back into it. Rocket, ever perceptive, began to growl.

"No," I said, "that's my own stupid fault, Rocket."

"Lin-Linoone."

"Thank you and your friends for the oran berry, wooper. We're going to cross the stream, okay?"

"Woop," it nodded. It croaked something to its fellows and they hopped away.

X

I sighed as I held my pistol in my left hand. My right hand was still numb even an hour later. I could slowly feel my sense of touch returning, but I couldn't wield my crossbow like this.

The worst part of this was that it was entirely my fault. I was the one who was supposed to remember the dex. I'd managed to take an entirely beneficial encounter and cripple myself. Now, at approximately five in the evening, we were headed back to the lakeshore.

"Rocket? Please remind me to never touch a pokemon without a damn good reason," I told him. "Talk about snatching defeat from the mouth of victory."

"Linoone," he chuffed. I didn't need to speak pokemon to know the little shit was laughing at me.

"Yeah, I know. That was fucking stupid of me. I have no excuse. Swift into the water, please. I want to make sure I'm not about to get ambushed."

Five golden stars sailed into the water with a moderate explosion. When nothing surfaced to fight us, I knelt and began to refill my canteen. Ideally, I'd purify the water first, but beggars couldn't be choosers.

It was unfortunate, but I'd likely have to revisit the shore tomorrow as well. The general rule of thumb was a liter of water per five miles of hiking. I'd only brought two liters' worth because I hadn't expected the dungeon's mission to be an extended hike. Having had to share water with Scout and Rocket, I'd run out earlier than I'd hoped.

"Quill," Scout trilled. As the sun began to set, his eyes weren't as helpful and he'd settled onto my shoulder.

"What's up?"

"Tran." He gestured to my left. There, lying amidst the dirt and mud, was a sand castle. A pristine, red shovel poked out above it.

I shook my head. I quickly screwed on my canteen and stood. "Nope. Fuck that. I'm not stupid. I don't know if that's a dungeon mechanic, but I don't want anything to do with it. Let's head uphill a bit, guys. Maybe we can find make a bit more progress before making camp.

Author's Note

With this, I'll have technically written a Gamer fic. I can no longer give people shit for this lazy trope. It only took me ~80k words to introduce the System lol.

This might be the latest a Gamer fic's ever gotten without introducing the System at all. Hopefully, I've done a good job of establishing the plot and worldbuilding so I don't rely too heavily on "big numbers go up" like some other fics out there.

Rocket did not smell the wooper because it lives most of its life underwater. It doesn't have a scent that's distinguishable from the surrounding muck.

Did you know wooper are poisonous? Almost every dex entry states that the film they use around their bodies to keep themselves hydrated out of water is poisonous. Not Paldean wooper, regular wooper.

Whiskey Fact: Whiskey has oil in it. This comes from the casks that they're aged in. Because of this, one way to drink whiskey is to sprinkle a drop or two of water into a tumbler of whiskey and gently swirl it around, letting the water diffuse into the drink. This will cause the oil and water to separate, forming a thin layer of oil on the whiskey's surface. That slight difference will alter the flavor profile.

Thank you to all of my patrons. As many of you know, I update at least once a week. That said, I update much more frequently on Pat-re-on. If you would like to drop a tip, read my stories early, or vote in monthly polls, come and visit.

As of now, this is how far along each story is:

- A Colorful Life: 33
- A Life Worth Living: 7
- Homeless Bunny: 28
- Legendary Tinker: 9.1
- Plan? What Plan?: 5.6
- Pokemon: Apocalypse: 2.1
- The Holy Grill: 3.3
- Troll in the Dungeon!: 27
- When is a Spoon a Sword?: 5.1
- Let There be War: 9 (Complete)
- Snippets & Omake Exclusives: 10

Total Chapter Difference (Pat-re-on - Public): 40
 
yeah... i shudder to think how well a sandyghast could fuck a guy up in this universe. leaving the shovel alone is an solid call.

Great chapter btw!
 
Did you know wooper are poisonous? Almost every dex entry states that the film they use around their bodies to keep themselves hydrated out of water is poisonous. Not Paldean wooper, regular wooper.
I guess the intensification of the protective film is what gives the Padean variant its poison type due to the larger amount of time the species spends outside of water.
 
i shudder to think how well a sandyghast could fuck a guy up in this universe
Forget that. The real horror story would be what getting pounced by a Grimer or Muk would do to some poor SOB who didn't know what they were. Things are literally sentient toxic waste. Touching one, you're lucky if all that happens is you lose the hand. Having one pounce you like Ash's from the cartoon did is just instant, agonizing death. Unless you got lucky and it's composed of something instantly fatal.
 
There's impulsively petting something cute, forgetting that it's mildly toxic even though it isn't classed as a poison type, and then there's obvious trap is obvious.
Let's be honest here: The wooper were the real losers of that. Poor things can't get pets! We must develop a glove to allow us to give wooper proper pets!
 
Let's be honest here: The wooper were the real losers of that. Poor things can't get pets! We must develop a glove to allow us to give wooper proper pets!
You think they are losers? They at least can be touched by someone without them killing the toucher. Paldean Wooper and Clodsire on the other hand? Why shaped like fren when no can touch without die?
 
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