Chapter 9
CHAPTER 9
Dad yelled out my name immediately as soon as he entered our apartment.
“Let me do the talking,” I told Denzel. “You just nod and smile unless he addresses you directly, alright?”
“Got it,” He answered, adjusting the shirt collar around his neck.
I had dealt with an angry father a thousand times before, and that meant I had learned how to diffuse the situation effectively. First, I placed Togepi on the ground and watched as she ran toward the door with a joyous chirp. It had been two weeks since she had seen my dad— the longest she had ever gone without seeing him.
“Grace!” Dad yelled out again as his stomps got louder in the hallway. I could tell exactly when he noticed Togepi because he suddenly stopped walking, then greeted her. His steps were lighter now, so that was part one of the plan completed. There was no way to stay angry with a cute little Togepi at your feet.
He entered the living room with her in one arm and groceries in the other.
“Answer me when I call you, damn it!” He scolded. Dad nodded toward Denzel. “Is this—”
“Togeprrri!” Togepi chirped, waving her hands needily. That meant she wanted a hug.
Dad put down his groceries and obliged her. “So you’re Denzel?” He asked, much calmer.
“Yes, sir,” Denzel answered.
“He has no place to stay, dad,” I started, getting straight to the point. “And his parents aren’t supporting him financially because they disapprove of his decision to participate in the Circuit. It’d be rude not to house him.”
“You could have told me beforehand.”
“You would have said no,” I said.
“Maybe not! You don’t know that,” He said.
I stared him straight in the face, letting him know I could see through his obvious lie.
“Ok, maybe I wouldn’t have,” Dad admitted. “But I pay rent here, so I should decide who gets to stay.”
“Togepi likes him a lot. Plus, she’s just started getting friendly with his Eevee.”
Dad groaned and then looked at Togepi. I could almost see the gears turning in his head, deciding if making his second daughter sad was worth punishing me for my actions. But I knew he couldn’t resist that stare. Nobody could.
“Fine,” Dad sighed. “But I reserve the right to change my mind at any moment. And I don’t want his Eevee on the couch. Fur’s hard to clean up, and since I wasn’t expecting this, I don’t have a lint roller.”
“Yes, yes, yes!” I squealed as I rammed into him with a hug. “Thank you so much dad, you won’t regret it.”
“I already do.”
——
Dad asked us to put away the groceries while he showered, so we did so while letting Togepi and Eevee mingle. Her efforts to get closer to the little furry Pokemon were bearing fruit. Eevee would act angry while she would play around with his fluffy tail, but Denzel told me he secretly enjoyed it. I would still need to show dad Frillish at some point, so I’d also have to figure that out.
“I wouldn’t call that being a softie, by the way,” Denzel said. “His glare was terrifying, and his tone... my dad’s not like that at all.”
“Eh, that’s because you don’t know him,” I said as I placed dad’s beers in the fridge. “I know what makes him tick, so I can plan around whatever made him angry in the first place. Don’t let him know that.”
“Obviously I won’t. But still, it’s usually my mom who yells at me and stuff, and she’s way smaller than I am. I guess I’m just not used to it.”
“My dad wouldn’t hurt a Cutiefly, don’t worry about him. He’ll warm up to you soon enough when I tell him how big of a help you were in the wild,” I smiled. “Plus, notice how he bought all of this food? I bet you he did it because we didn’t have enough food for three people tonight.”
“By the way,” I continued, suddenly getting serious. “This goes without saying, but not a word about what happened at Lake Verity.”
“Oh?” Denzel answered, feeling anger build up inside of him. “Sure, I’ll battle you.”
“Thank you for being a stepping stone for my ultimate goal of becoming the Champion. I just got here, and I need to make a big splash,” He smirked.
“One on one,” Denzel hissed.
“Sounds good to me!”
They each got into position and sent out their Pokemon. Eevee was already out of his ball, so he had sensed his trainer’s anger and was growling in a battle-ready position.
“Your time to shine, Ri,” He said with a bored look on his face as he sent out a Riolu.
The screen counted down and as soon as it hit zero, Denzel barked out the first move.
“Eevee, rush him with Quick Attack and then Sand Attack!”
Surrounded by a white glow, the little brown Pokemon became a blur and dashed toward the Riolu. He had gotten faster, and Denzel struggled to follow him with his eyes now.
“Ah, just deal with it, Riolu. I can’t be bothered.” He said, waving his hand in dismissal.
Denzel clenched his teeth as Eevee used his front paws to throw sand in the Riolu’s eyes. It simply backstepped out of range, and then a small bone grew out of its hand.
“Eevee, keep going! Hit him!” Denzel said.
Eevee listened, and with a jump, he hit Riolu’s torso with Quick Attack. The Riolu, however, didn’t even flinch. He grabbed Eevee’s head, locking him in place.
“Eevee, Bite him! Get out of there!” Denzel screamed, his voice faltering.
With impressive strength, Riolu threw Eevee into the air and slammed him with his bone like a baseball, sending him flying back toward Denzel. It shimmered and rushed forward, positioning himself directly under where Eevee was about to fall.
That was Quick Attack, Denzel thought. So much faster than ours, but what was that bone move?
Denzel snapped out of his thoughts. There was no way for Eevee to dodge what was coming, but maybe—
“Eevee, listen to my voice! Use Baby Doll Eyes!” He screamed. Eevee didn’t move, sending a wave of panic over Denzel’s body. What was going on?
Riolu’s palm shone with a pale blue light, hitting Eevee once again. Denzel couldn’t believe it. His Pokemon was lying unconscious in the dirt, having lost after two attacks. Sure there was the type advantage, but that had been so quick. And Riolu hadn’t even received any commands!
“Well, that was boring. I got my hopes up a little bit after hearing that you were the strongest here, but you’re just as bad as everybody else,” His opponent said, returning Riolu.
Denzel just stayed silent. He couldn’t believe it. The loss wasn’t the issue, the issue was how hard he had lost. He returned Eevee and noticed the small crowd of trainers that had gathered to watch their match. They were whispering among themselves— some of them were even laughing.
“Well, that should be enough. Onto the next arena facility then!” The teen said. He walked off but turned back before leaving the building. “Oh, and the name’s Chase Karlson. Remember it, losers, because you’ll be watching me on the big screen after the first Gym’s sent you packing. See ya!”
The crowd dispersed and people slowly went back to battling. Denzel gnawed on his thumb nail the entire way to the Pokemon Center. He opened up his Poketch and looked up Chase on the forums, hoping that he was some experienced trainer that had signed up for the Circuit again. Deep down though, he already knew the answer. He was fifteen, and it was his first time in the Circuit. There was nothing else on him, but his following had supposedly skyrocketed these past few days after he went around and beat up everything in his path with his Riolu without ordering it a single time during any battle.
How had he gotten so good? Denzel thought.
Failure was a good thing. Something that was always hard to experience but that trainers could grow from. And yet when a loss was so complete and total, without the opportunity to even theorize what had gone wrong, without even entertaining the idea that a battle could have gone a different way, a little thing would start to crawl into your mind. Slowly at first, and then it would become completely unstoppable.
For the first time, Denzel Williams began to doubt himself.
TEAM:
Togepi - Pound, Sweet Kiss, Rollout, Growl, Headbutt
Frillish - Bubblebeam, Night Shade, Absorb, Water Sport