• An addendum to Rule 3 regarding fan-translated works of things such as Web Novels has been made. Please see here for details.
  • We've issued a clarification on our policy on AI-generated work.
  • Our mod selection process has completed. Please welcome our new moderators.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.
Created
Status
Incomplete
Watchers
5
Recent readers
45

Thalia Clariday, a logical and cynical girl from a wealthy family, begins a Pokémon journey she never wanted, all to protect her best friend, the free-spirited cowgirl Hannah
Last edited:
Where Truths Aren't Numbers New

Nephthys8079

Not too sore, are you?
Joined
Feb 13, 2023
Messages
415
Likes received
2,323
Chapter 1

The Poké Balls felt impossibly heavy in my hands. Not with weight, but with the knowledge of a life I'd never wanted, a future I had, in fact, actively worked to prevent. I, Thalia Clariday, turned mine over and over, the cool, smooth plastic a dull, familiar object. It was a product of my family's engineering, of Kalos Dynamics. My father, Jude, was its heir, and I, a mind made for its calculations, was the heiress apparent. A gilded cage, a perfectly logical life, but here I was, a trainer, a variable I couldn't contain, all because Hannah had decided we had to. The cool polymer against my skin, so like the marble floors of our headquarters, brought me back a decade.

We were six. My dad was there to discuss investments with Hannah's dad. I'd hated the trip, had seen the farm as a vast, organic machine of genes and breeding charts, a puzzle I just found repulsive. And then I saw her. Hannah, with her boots caked in red clay, singing to a cluster of sleeping Litleo. Her hands were full of newly hatched Pokémon, her face a luminous map of pure, unadulterated joy. She was a living contradiction to my world, and in that moment, I understood, with a jolt of clarity, that I had found my lodestone in the small, vibrant cowgirl.

For ten years, she'd wanted one simple, audacious thing: to journey across Kalos. And for ten years, I'd tried to dissuade her, my voice a relentless, logical stream of carefully calculated risks. I showed her charts, graphs, and the statistics on how many trainers ended up broke and broken on the side of a Route. But she, with a stubborn, bright look in her eyes that never faded, just said, "Well then, I reckon you'll just have to come with me to make sure I'm all right." And so, here I was, sixteen years old, with a mind for logistics and a heart for a girl. My black leather jacket felt reassuringly heavy against my shoulders, and the black choker, a silver chain with a simple, uncut diamond that was my Key Stone, felt less like jewelry and more like a tether, a cool, constant weight against the frantic thrumming of my pulse. Our parents saw it, too. It was a silent, well-meaning conspiracy to protect what they saw as a fragile but beautiful thing, their daughters' bond.

"Well, reckon it's real now," Hannah said, her slow, honeyed drawl cutting through my thoughts. She was gazing at the small, two-legged lizard that had just taken its first tentative steps out of its ball. It had vibrant orange skin, a cream-colored belly, and blue eyes that were wide with cautious curiosity. The perpetual flame on its tail, a beacon of its health, burned with a steady, bright glow. I looked down at my own new partner, also a Charmander. It simply stood there, quiet and still, its own sleek, orange body a stark contrast to the bustling, kaleidoscopic chaos of the lab. Its deep blue eyes, twin pools of a terrible, crystalline clarity, studied me with an intensity that made my skin prickle. The bond between us was a fledgling thing, a thread so thin it was invisible to the eye, too fragile to bear the immense weight of our shared future. My mind, an endless well of strategic knowledge from countless hours poring over battle simulations and league-sanctioned data, ran through its potential: an immense power to be unleashed, a devastating force to be shaped into a weapon of mass destruction in the right hands. But my heart, a frantic bird in a cage, saw only a living being that was now tied to me, and thus tied to Hannah. I felt the weight of it, a moral calculus more complex and terrifying than any battle equation.

We stepped out of Professor Sycamore's lab and into the overwhelming streets of Lumiose City. The shift was brutal. The air, thick with the scent of roasted street-food, hummed with a thousand lives. Sunlight glinted off the chrome of the monorail system overhead. We had just turned a corner when Hannah stopped dead in her tracks, pulling me to a halt. In the middle of an empty plaza, a small crowd had gathered.

"Is that…?" Hannah whispered, her voice a mix of disbelief and reverence.

"And what a beautiful sight, Jim! That Lucario has completely dominated the field! A master class in controlled power!"

"You're right about that, Bob. A perfect execution of Aura Sphere, followed by a devastating Close Combat. This trainer from Kanto has the makings of a true champion!"

I rolled my eyes. Could they be any more melodramatic? The Gengar, a dark, floating specter, responded with a malevolent smirk, its glowing red eyes fixed on its opponent.

"And there's the retort! A Shadow Ball, screamed through the air like a ghost's wail!"

The projectile struck the ground, an explosion of purple smoke and disturbed dust a violent punctuation to the silence of the crowd.

"Lucario, however, remains untouched! Now that is a testament to the trust between trainer and Pokémon!"

The Gengar, momentarily staggered, vanished into the ground, its malicious laughter echoing through the plaza. The Lucario remained perfectly still, its ears twitching, its gaze fixed on the last place it had seen its opponent. I held my breath, my mind racing through the calculations of speed, power, and the terrifying concept of a disembodied enemy. This wasn't a casual sighting; this was a glimpse into a world of power that was impossibly far away. My stomach, a tight knot of nerves, was starting at zero, with an unevolved Charmander and my own new, unevolved Charmander, and a backpack full of questions.

As the crowd dispersed, Hannah's gaze was fixed on the space where the Lucario had just been, her expression a mixture of profound wonder and a nascent longing I had never seen before. "Did you see that?" she whispered, her eyes wide. "It was like… they were one bein'. Not two." She turned back to me. "How d'we get somethin' like that?"

My mind went to my father's contacts, the exclusive network that could secure almost anything. But this was different. This kind of spiritual connection wasn't something my family's wealth could simply buy. "It's a long way off, Hannah," I said, my voice flat, a hollow echo in my own ears. "Right now, we need to focus on getting to Santalune without getting our butts kicked."

Hannah sighed, the awe in her eyes replaced with a flicker of disappointment. "Right," she said, her shoulders slumping just a bit. "Strategy first."

I adjusted the strap of my backpack and stepped forward. The air, no longer thick with the scent of roasted street-food, tasted of damp earth and distant, sweet-smelling flowers. The paved road gave way to a winding dirt path, rutted with the passage of countless feet and the recent trickle of rain. My polished boots felt alien, their rhythm on the uneven ground a foreign metronome. Hannah, by contrast, moved with an easy, almost silent grace. My head was on a swivel, my eyes scanning for threats, my mind running a constant simulation of what-ifs. A stray branch, a sudden shadow—each was a data point to be analyzed for its potential threat. But beside me, Hannah was simply smiling, her head tipped back as she breathed in the freedom of it all. "Reckon that's the real stuff," she said, her voice a soft hum of contentment.

I looked over at Hannah, her tanned skin glowing in the late afternoon sun, the golden-brown of her hair tied back in a messy ponytail, a few wild strands escaping to frame a face that was more laughter lines than sharp angles. Her denim overalls, worn and faded, were a stark contrast to my own goth-style clothes: a tailored, black jacket with a high collar, and pants that held a precise, unnatural crease. The only piece of me that felt truly a part of this world was the small diamond on my choker, a raw, uncut thing that was, in fact, my Key Stone, a tether to a world I wasn't sure I could truly belong to. I looked down at my own hands, pale and fine-boned, a stark contrast to her dad's clay-stained palms, and I knew that no amount of time in the wild would ever make me look like her. But as I watched her, bathed in the soft glow of a setting sun that was now painting the clouds in shades of rose and gold, I felt a new kind of strength begin to form within me. I may not know this world, but I knew her, and I knew that my place, for the first time in my life, was not to control, but to protect. And so, with a final, lingering look at the untamed path ahead, I found my purpose, not in my family's empire, but in the small, vibrant cowgirl who walked beside me. This journey had just begun.

The sun set in a blaze of orange and purple, casting long, distorted shadows that danced like ghosts on the road. Route 2, known officially as the Avenue of the Whispering Woods, was proving to be exactly what I had feared: a chaotic ecosystem of uncontrolled variables. We were barely an hour outside of Lumiose City and already I had a dozen entries in my mental log of potential dangers. A flock of Fletchling, their tiny bodies a blur of motion, dove from the trees to snatch up berries, their sharp chirps a constant, high-pitched static. A lone Weedle, its purple body almost invisible in the dusk, writhed on a nearby rock, its tiny tail flicking a threatening spike. I knew, from my research, that its poison was a simple neurotoxin that could be cured with a basic Antidote. A variable I could contain.

The air grew heavy and damp, and the ground, once firm, became soft and mucky. We had just passed a weathered signpost—Route 2, 5km to Santalune City—when Hannah's Charmander let out a sharp cry, its tail flame flickering erratically, a sure sign of distress. We stopped dead in our tracks, and a shiver of fear, cold and sharp, ran down my spine.
"What is it?" I whispered, my voice barely audible over the sudden silence of the woods.

Hannah was staring at a large, rusted-out pipe that lay half-buried in the muddy ground. A small, rhythmic scratching sound was coming from within. She knelt down, her face a mask of worry, and carefully peered into the darkness of the pipe. Her Charmander, still on edge, crept forward, its tiny body trembling.
"There's something in there," she said, her voice soft and laced with concern.
I pulled out my Pokédex, a sleek, Kalos Dynamics model that felt reassuringly solid in my hands. The data on Route 2 was exhaustive, detailing every common species, their attack patterns, and their vulnerabilities. But as I scanned the area, the device offered no explanation for the sound. It was an anomaly, a variable I hadn't accounted for. My mind, a frantic machine of logic, started to short-circuit. An unknown variable was an uncontainable variable. I pulled out a small, high-powered flashlight from my bag and shined it into the pipe. The beam cut through the darkness, illuminating a small Pokémon huddled against the far wall.

It was an Onix.
My mind went blank. An Onix. In the middle of Route 2. It was a Rock and Ground type, a rare sight in this part of Kalos, and it was curled up in a defensive position, its stony body shivering, its tiny eyes squeezed shut. It was covered in something thick and sticky, and its stone plating was dull and lifeless. The scratching sound was the result of a futile attempt to rub the gunk off. I looked down at my Charmander, which had returned to its place by my side, seeing a creature of such size and power in such a vulnerable state, it let out a soft, pained cry, its own tail flame dimming in sympathy. The sight of a Pokémon so defeated, so utterly at the mercy of its environment, was more terrifying than any battle. My hand, which had been reaching for a Potion, trembled violently.

This wasn't in my data. My spreadsheets didn't account for compassion.
"It's just a baby," Hannah whispered, her voice a low, soothing hum. "And it's sick." She didn't hesitate. She carefully reached a hand into the pipe, her fingers brushing against its cold, smooth rock. The Onix flinched, but it didn't attack. She cooed at it, her voice a series of gentle, comforting sounds that I had never heard from her before. Her Charmander, seeing its trainer's resolve, took a step forward, its tail flame brightening, a silent promise of support. I watched, my mind in a frantic spin, as Hannah, a girl of a different world, a girl of earth and spirit, simply... connected. She was doing something I could never have done: she was prioritizing empathy over logic. A single tear, hot and foreign, rolled down my cheek. I had to admit, with a humility I didn't know I possessed, that maybe, just maybe, the greatest truths had nothing to do with numbers after all.

I looked at my hand, outstretched and trembling, and then at Hannah's, already a calming presence on the cold, sticky rock of the Onix's head. This was an unquantifiable data point, a variable that defied all my carefully constructed models: empathy. A raw, unthinking compassion that had nothing to do with statistics or win rates. I had never seen anything like it. Hannah's presence, her voice a low, soothing hum, was an antidote to the Onix's terror. I knew, without a single data point to confirm it, that this was the truth of her world, a truth I had always dismissed.

"Don't be scared, little fella," Hannah whispered, her fingers stroking the slick, slimy stone. Her own Charmander nudged the Onix's tail, its flame burning steadily, a silent promise of warmth. "We ain't gonna hurt ya."
My mind, still running diagnostics, was finally able to identify the gunk. It wasn't poison or a corrosive acid, but something more mundane and tragic: dried mud from a recent downpour, mixed with the sticky residue of a wild Pineco's defensive goo. The combination had hardened into a petrified crust, gluing the Onix's segments together and caking its eyes and mouth shut. It was a suffocating armor, not a natural part of its body.
"It's not poison," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "It's a biological mix of mud and Pineco residue. It's… stuck."

Hannah looked up, a glimmer of hope in her eyes. "Well, reckon that's a fixable problem."

We went to work. Hannah, with her farmer's hands, began gently picking at the mud, a painstaking process that tore at my nerves. I, however, had a different set of tools. I opened my backpack, pulled out a bottle of fresh water, and carefully, meticulously, poured a steady stream over the Onix's body. The water began to dissolve the mud and soften the goo, a chemical reaction I could track and quantify, a problem my mind could solve. My own Charmander watched, its deep blue eyes fixed on the Onix, its tail flame flickering with a newfound focus. The contrast between our approaches was stark: Hannah, all instinct and warmth, and me, all logic and measured action. And yet, for the first time, our methods worked in harmony, two different sets of skills converging on a single goal.

After what felt like an hour, the Onix gave a great, shuddering shake, and a large chunk of the gunk fell away. It let out a small, grateful cry, and its eyes, now clear, blinked at us with a newfound clarity. It nudged my hand, its smooth stone body cold against my palm. The sensation was foreign, but not unwelcome. It was a silent thank you, a truth that no data sheet could ever contain. I felt a warmth spread through my chest, a feeling that had nothing to do with the Charmander's flame but was every bit as real.

"Well," Hannah said, her face streaked with dirt but beaming with pride. "Look at that. You're a natural at this."

I didn't answer. I just watched as the Onix, now freed from its encasement, slithered happily back into the woods, its stony body rumbling with a low, contented sound. For the first time, I felt a different kind of purpose than the one I'd been groomed for. Not the cold, clinical duty of a heiress, but the simple, unquantifiable joy of helping. The night had fallen completely now, but the path ahead, previously a dark, unknown variable, seemed a little brighter. Santalune City was still a long way off, but for the first time, I wasn't just walking a path. I was living a truth.
 
Last edited:

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top