Chapter 206 – Psychological Warfare
CHAPTER 206 - Psychological Warfare
Three days had passed since the interview, and it had apparently been a smashing success. Or at least that's what Melody told me. She spoke of ratings going up for the SGNC and other terms I didn't really care about. I was personally just glad it was over. The interview itself hadn't been as bad as I thought, but what came after still bothered me somewhat. Mallory's irrational hatred for trainers looked so visceral to me in that moment when we spoke that it gave me the creeps. Too bad her stupid hate overtook her other good points.
The people at the Poketch Company had tentatively agreed on the raise if I kept up doing good work for them, so that was even better news. Hell, I even got a message from Candice complaining that I hadn't told her that I'd be on TV. I felt bad for leaving her hanging and we spoke for the first time in a while. The ice-type Gym Leader hadn't changed one bit, and she was happy she was going to get more challengers soon now that the worse of winter had passed.
My friends were all proud of me, and Denzel even thanked me for not throwing him under the bus during the interview. I could have spoken about his Budew— hell, I even could have talked about Scyther, but I kept to my own experiences. So long as they had learned and wouldn't do it again like I would, then bygones could be bygones. Plus, Roserade had forgiven Denzel, even if she still gave him a hard time sometimes and Scyther and Cece were making progress.
Yes, Roserade. He'd bought her a Shiny Stone, and now he was completely broke and decided to do more streams to fill up his coffers again. Little Swablu was kind of an enigma for me. She seemed to dislike everyone except Denzel, and even he sometimes wasn't spared by her wrath. One time, he'd tried to put her on the sidewalk and off his head and she bit his finger in retaliation. She was a real cleanliness freak and considered everything that wasn't her trainer's hands dirty.
At least he was treating her right.
"Hello, I'm here to sign up for a gym battle?"
I'd entered Maylene's gym, and I was finally ready for the battle. The soonest I got was in four days, but that was perfectly fine. That was more time to prepare, and Chase hadn't even had his battle yet. We'd have to wait for him before leaving anyway, since we were all traveling together. Mira had handily won her own battle, and Porygon had seen some fighting. The normal type wasn't as powerful as her other Pokemon yet, but the amount of move variety she brought to the table couldn't be underestimated.
I spent the next four days isolated and preparing as much as I could, and the day of the Gym Battle came in a flash.
—
"You ready for this?"
Togetic nodded firmly with a fire lit in her eyes. I caressed her cheek and placed her forehead against mine, and we lay still there for a minute. I heard the cheers of the crowd, signaling that Maylene had probably lost. I was too busy to look at whoever came back in the waiting room. I took deep, slow breaths as I recalled Togetic and she melted in a sea of red around my hand. The Gym Trainer outfitted me with the usual microphone, and I made sure my Poketch Watch was fully visible. Couldn't let my bosses be unhappy.
When I opened my eyes, it was as if I was looking at myself. An objective view of the situation presented itself before me, and I was the calmest I'd ever been. The touch of my clothes against my skin, Tangrowth's Pokeball I had unconsciously grabbed or the feel of my steps against the floor, all of that was gone. It was like I was in a sensory deprivation chamber, and I had only one goal in mind.
What did the girl want?
To execute each step of the strategy flawlessly and win.
What did the girl need to reach that point?
To come at this with the most pragmatic, objective view of the world possible. Maylene was no longer a person. She was an obstacle.
So I felt lighter as I made my way onto the platform. With a step, I shed my morals. With another, I shed my last doubts. With the last, I shed my worries about what people might think of me if this went wrong. I had not come here to play. I came to win using every tool at my disposal, and I would have gone further had I had no monetary or social concerns. Maylene walked onto the platform with a spry step and began to speak.
"Welcome Challenger..."
I ignored her speech and looked at her fingers instead. Not twitching, so she must have had a good time during that last battle. Not good. Her body was relaxed, although it was a little tough to see from here. There was the faintest hint of a smile on her face. She was starting high, so I'd have to bring her crashing down. Annoying. The battle would be a five-on-five with three swaps, as usual. I immediately released Tangrowth onto the field, and Maylene brought out a Sawk. The blue Pokemon flexed and squared himself.
Sawk. Grappler, Aura user, quicker and bulkier than he looks, I recited in my head. Little move variety, most likely brought out to scout out my capabilities. Good at complicated Aura techniques, but might not use them yet.
There were two endings to this battle. Two branching paths, and they were not defeat or victory. They had to do with Maylene's state of mind. Either she would be pushed toward the brink, or she would wake up and realize that there was more to battling than staying inside of her comfort zone. I hoped that it would be the latter, but I would not stop myself if it was the former.
"Begin!" The referee yelled.
"Go ahead, baby," I said, my eyes unmoving.
Tangrowth began to trudge along, slowly at first, but he was continuously speeding up. The base of our first pillars rose out of the earth as his eyes shone with Ancient Power. He'd trained so much with the move that he was capable of raising two at a time, and soon the first row was completed.
"Don't let them set up! Go in and Brick Break!" She yelled.
We'd planned for this, of course. I would have been a fool to think Maylene would just let us alter the arena. Angel finished raising the first four rows and crossed into Maylene's half the arena as Sawk sprinted toward him.
"Stun Spore," I said.
Maylene's eye twitched the moment the words left my mouth, but Sawk retreated before the cloud of yellow spores could reach him. His reflexes were just as good as I'd seen, and it was a shame that I hadn't paralyzed him, but just me being able to zone him off of Angel was fine. Tangrowth zigzagged through the arena, and rows G, F, and E quickly erupted from the ground, but Sawk was following close by. Not close enough to get hit or grabbed by Angel, but close enough to keep us on our toes and have Tangrowth in his line of sight.
"Aura Sphere!" Maylene yelled.
"Block it with vines."
Sawk flexed his body, extended his arms and a pale blue ball flew out of his hand. Tangrowth tied as many vines he could into a knot and brought them forward. The Aura Sphere exploded after nearly shredding through the majority of the vines and Tangrowth continued on his path. After another minute, he had created all of their bases. The first fifth of the actual height I needed them to be.
"Enough playing around," Maylene hissed. "Aura Lance!"
Already? I must have been annoying her.
Which meant her mood was souring already. Good. A blue light extended out of Sawk's hand reminiscent of Lucario's Bone Rush, and the fighting type began to wield it like a spear. I already knew that it was capable of extending at least threefold, and it'd easily be able to stab Angel like Lucario had during my battle with Chase. Either way, Tangrowth's job was done for now, so I recalled the grass type. I made sure to wait until right before Sawk hit him with his lance, of course. Taking the joy of striking Tangrowth down from Maylene would make her angrier, especially when she'd only missed by an inch.
I silently sent out Princess and watched as she got to work. Her eyes shone, and with a grunt, the first tower began to extend, as if someone had pinched the top of the structure and pulled it upward. Her sculpting, her masterful control and her intense training had all come to this. Maylene barked out an order, and Sawk sent out a series of Aura Spheres flying toward Togetic, but she fluttered her wings and manipulated the wind to gain quick bursts of speed and dodged, but she unfortunately got hit twice. Both times on her chest. Most of the towers didn't reach the desired height of thirty feet, but the ones closest to Maylene did.
"Wish," I said.
"Will you ever attack?!" Maylene yelled. She stomped a foot on the ground and recalled Sawk as a bright light flew out of Togetic's body and into the sky.
I let her words slide for now and reveled in her anger. If I'd been good enough, I would have mimicked sadness or faked flinched, but unfortunately every time I pretended to act one way, it still looked terribly fake, so I opted to stay calm instead. I wouldn't talk back. Not yet. Maylene sent out an Infernape. I had figured she'd use at least one fire type against me because of Togetic and Tangrowth, and she hadn't disappointed. Infernape wasn't great at Aura, although it had mastered Force Palm. If I had to guess, Maylene had brought her out to attack at a distance. That means Heat Wave, Flamethrower, Focus Blast, I recited in my head.
"Climb those pillars and Flamethrower that Togetic out of the sky!" Maylene yelled.
Infernape sank behind one of the towers and a cry from Togetic let me know she was currently on C2. I saw a glimpse of him jump one row ahead, and it soon became apparent that the fire type would be able to fight in the air thanks to our pillars. That hadn't been according to plan, but I had grown.
No panic came.
I waited until the fighting type stopped. She hung on a pillar supported by a single hand. As soon as she opened her mouth and flames lit up her throat, I sprung to action.
"Ancient Power, make her fall."
Togetic's eyes shone as she flung the small ledge Infernape had been hanging onto. The fire type tumbled and desperately tried to get a grip to stop her fall.
"Air Cutter."
The air below Infernape sharpened like blades and rushed upwards, cutting into the fire type's fur and skin until she bled from a dozen deep cuts. Infernape crashed into the floor and grunted in pain as she scrambled back to her feet. She rolled to the right, narrowly avoiding another Air Cutter and she retreated behind a pillar.
"Strike behind B4," I said.
I internally smiled when I heard her scream again. I hadn't seen the attack, but it had hit, and even Maylene was surprised. After all, Princess was hiding behind one of the towers out of Maylene's line of sight, and she hadn't expected her to be so versatile.
"Fine then," Maylene said. "If you're going to be a coward, I'll stop pulling my punches."
Now the real battle could begin. Twice now, she had spoken, and twice I had ignored her. I would not do so the third.
"Acrobatics and Heat Wave!" Maylene yelled with a sweep of her arm. "Stick to the middle corridor so I can see you!"
Infernape grunted and began to climb twice as fast, flipping and jumping in between pillars while Togetic tried to hit her with Air Cutter. The fire type front flipped and snaked around a tower as the air around her became sweltering. With a slight wave of a hand, it rushed forward and burned all in its path. Princess cried out and quickly hid behind one of the columns, but that wouldn't be enough to protect herself from the wind. She quickly raised a psychic barrier and although some of the hot air slipped past the transparent shield, it protected her from the worst of the damage.
Infernape wasn't stopping, of course. The Heat Wave was continuous and Princess had to focus everything she had on defense.
"Go in and Psychic."
Maylene's eyes widened as Princess exposed herself to the scorching temperatures and flew toward Infernape. I struggled to retain my calm persona when her short fur began to darken and burn, but she wasn't taking damage for no reason. I hadn't forgotten about Wish, and neither had Maylene.
"Flamethrower!" She yelled.
"Extrasensory,"
The air between the two Pokemon grew strange and blurry. The Flamethrower did not simply pass through. Instead, it loosened and became less concentrated. Less potent. Togetic dove through the flames with a mad stare and grabbed Infernape by the throat with Psychic right as Wish returned to her body and healed some of the damage she had taken. Togetic ransacked through Infernape's brain and the fire type bled's nose began to bleed—
I stared at Maylene, my eyes unblinking. Her arm was twitching— hand approaching Pokeball!
"Put her behind a pillar!" I yelled, my words barely coherent. I'd broken my demeanor for the first time.
Togetic grunted and slammed Infernape against one of the stone towers. Maylene had grabbed her Pokeball to switch out, and she did try, but the homing system didn't work that well. It wouldn't be capable of making a turn that sharp. The red light helplessly washed up against the stone.
Maylene's Infernape slowly lost consciousness away from her view. All Maylene could hear was her small groans of pain and Princess finishing the job. She was powerless to do anything. All she could do was watch.
Just like her life outside of this gym.
"Infernape is unable to battle! Leader Maylene, send out your second—"
"You're a terrible person," Maylene interrupted. "Not only are you a coward, but you're a shell of a human. Do you think I don't see you taking pleasure in what you're doing? That Togetic took longer than what was needed to take Infernape down!"
Princess ignored her and simply threw Infernape toward the middle of the arena like a rag so Maylene could recall her, and I didn't miss that tight clench of her fist. She wasn't exactly wrong. Princess had taken longer to finish off Infernape, just like I'd told her to before the battle. Plans were fluid, but beating one of her Pokemon while preventing her from switching out had been my goal from the start. Making her hear the pained noises of her Pokemon was simply a means to an end.
Third time, and another personal insult, I mused. Now I could finally speak. Rebuke her firmly, but politely. Don't rise to her level, make her look like the bad guy. Gaslight, but do not obstruct.
"You've been insulting me and my way of battling since the start of the battle, Leader Maylene," I said. "I'm just trying my best to win the battle. Sorry if I've offended you."
"You—" She spat, but then stopped as she recalled her Infernape and her shoulders sagged.
Now, one of her strongest was going to come out right away to take revenge on Princess. She disliked any Pokemon that didn't fight within her rules, but what I'd done went beyond that. I had essentially assured that she would want to take down Togetic as soon as she could and right away. I rolled my neck when she sent out her Conkeldurr. The hulking fighting type carried two concrete cylinders larger than me in both hands. Not what I had expected, but it made sense. It was one of the most powerful fighting types she had at this badge level and Air Cutter would do terribly against him. Plus, he was so heavy that Princess would never be able to restrain him with Psychic, even if it would deal damage.
And I recalled Togetic immediately. Maylene's face fell.
If you want to play like this, I will not give you an ounce of satisfaction this battle, I thought to myself. It was like I'd pulled the rug from under her. I released Jellicent, who rose high into the sky and instantly summoned a Night Shade. The shadows intertwined until they became a clone, and while the real Jellicent seeped into one of the pillars after a small drop of water fell next to my side of the arena, the Night Shade remained in full view.
Maylene clicked her tongue. "The Night Shade's a distraction. Watch out for the real one! Bulk Up!"
Conkeldurr flexed, and his muscles bulged, growing even further as a dozen veins popped out from under his skin. One thing was for sure, one hit from that and Buddy would disintegrate. We had to play fast and loose with him, which was the plan in the first place. With a silent, ghastly whistle, the Night Shade flew forward and spat out a Water Pulse at Conkeldurr, who raised one of his concrete pillars in front of himself.
The ring of water blew up against the concrete and only dealt minimal damage, but that was fine. The goal of the shade was just to provide support, harass and distract. My eyes drifted to the right side of the arena, where Jellicent had left the tiniest part of his body. The water circled on the floor, meaning that the ghost type was close to his target. Maylene probably believed that she'd be able to see him approach, but she was horribly mistaken.
Maylene's face swung to her left, and I assumed Jellicent was out of the pillar and right behind Conkeldurr.
"Hydro Pump," I said.
I didn't see him actually use the move, but I did see the enormous high-pressurized jet of water dig into Conkeldurr. The fighting type grunted, protecting his face with his huge arms and the Night Shade began to pester him with weakened Shadow Balls instead. The ghostly energy hit the fighting type, but my eyes widened slightly when I saw that Conkeldurr was still moving.
"Throw!" Maylene ordered.
Conkeldurr throw one of his concrete columns at speeds that looked impossible toward Buddy. I didn't see what happened to him, but I did see his remains splatter all over the floor, pillars, and barrier. The Shade quickly floated toward Conkeldurr with a hiss and blew up against the fighting type to buy Jellicent some time to reform. All of the water type's fragments desperately crawled back together and he slipped into the pillars once again.
"Keep your distance," I said.
Attacks like Hydro Pump were the strongest the closer we were, but as it stood, Conkeldurr's throws were faster than they had seemed on camera.
"Rock Slide!" Maylene yelled.
There it was, I internally cursed. The first move I hadn't known about. The tower Jellicent had retreated into collapsed in on itself and forced him out into the open, after which Conkeldurr threw his other concrete column and blew the ghost type up again. Rock Throw would never have been enough to collapse our pillars, but Rock Slide was another story entirely. There were still thirty-five left standing.
"Come back," I said.
Buddy's fragments slowly returned to my side of the arena, and Maylene used the opportunity to order Conkeldurr to go pick up his concrete columns again. As if each glob of water was alive, it rose into the sky and formed into Buddy, who apologized for his weakness. It wasn't exactly his fault. We were going against a Bulked Up Conkeldurr, which was one of Maylene's most physically strong Pokemon. Even if he solidified his body, he would have blown up.
"Another Shade and make it continuously use Poison Sting," I said. "We're using Drown."
I finished the order by flicking my finger downward twice.
Jellicent let out a series of clicks to agree and another Night Shade came to life. The ghostly construct wasted no time and began to spit out sharp darts dripping with poison. Conkeldurr had done away with A2, A3 and B3 when the first darts arrived. Only a few buried themselves into his arm before he retreated behind one of the pillars, but the Shade quickly circled around as many columns as it could to get a good angle on the fighting type. We were forcing him to move and shield himself using his concrete pillars so he wouldn't throw it at Buddy instead. Maylene didn't want to run the risk of one of her strongest fighters being poisoned.
I hadn't even seen where Buddy had gone, but I did know he was somewhere under the floor. I bit the inside of my lip when one of Conkeldurr's pillars almost grazed the Night Shade.
"Enough of this game!" Maylene yelled as she recalled the fighting type.
I stayed silent.
"You think you're real cool, don't you?" She huffed. "Lucario!"
The bipedal fighting type appeared on the field in a flash of red.
"This is serious. No holding back," she added.
Lucario blinked, but then a blue light surrounded him. It danced and spun around his body, as if he couldn't contain the amount of Aura he had at his disposal. This was thankfully a badge-appropriate Lucario, but that didn't mean much when the fighting type was going to go at us like his life depended on it. I contained my excitement as best I could. She expected to steamroll me now, but if I took down Lucario? I would damage her psychologically to such an extent that she would never behave the same way during this battle again.
The Poison Stings from the Night Shade refused to enter Lucario's skin, so the ghost switched up to Shadow Ball instead. A blue bone grew out of Lucario's hand and the fighting type split the attack in two. It didn't even explode. It dissolved with an infuriated scream.
"Drown," I said again.
Jellicent appeared below Lucario's feet and enveloped the fighting type's body as his head swelled to three times its size. It had been a technique we'd developed to take down Team Galactic grunts and Pokemon. Of course, we were using the non-lethal version, where Jellicent wouldn't forcefully enter Lucario's lungs and instead would just swarm him using water TE. The fighting type thrashed inside of Jellicent's head, but Maylene stomped her foot.
"Aura Burst!"
"Leech Seed in that direction!" I ordered. "Keep that column away from them."
It was at times like these that Angel's excellent multitasking came to the forefront. Seven of his vines wrapped around Conkeldurr's pillar and threw it at the corner of the arena. A series of seeds flew out of his body toward where the fighting type had just thrown his pillar from, and dozens of vines slithered forward to actually sense and find Conkeldurr. All at the same time. He was my damn baby, and he was the best Tangrowth in the world.
"You keep that little toy away from him at all costs," I said, more childlike than was necessary.
"Defog!" Maylene said.
Now that the bad visibility wasn't to her advantage, Conkeldurr used his last remaining pillar to clear the air around himself. A powerful gust of wind pushed the dust outward and revealed that two Leech Seeds had landed on Conkeldurr and were slowly draining his energy.
"Good," I said. "Now keep your distance and Power Whip."
Now what, Maylene? I thought. Angel's vine glowed neon green as it slammed into Conkeldurr's shoulder. She couldn't reach us thanks to our speed from the sun, and she couldn't throw her last column to attack at a distance because Angel would simply put it out of reach. The fighting type grabbed onto one of Tangrowth's vines as it dug into his arm, but the grass type simply detached his vine before he could be pulled too far in.
Maylene ordered him to run forward, but Tangrowth always kept his distance. Close enough for him to hit, but not enough for him to get hit.
"Throw the pillar," Maylene muttered. Her arms went limp. She unclenched her fists and her posture slouched a little. Disappointment and dejection transcended annoyance and anger.
I'd done it.
She was broken.
And yet it hurt to see her this way. I finally realized what I'd done, but I would push through. She could still come back from this. She could still grow.
Angel quivered in agony as the last pillar slammed into him at full force, but he threw the structure away from the fighting type and into the opposite corner, just for good measure.
"Collapse the remainder of the towers. As many as you can," she exhaled.
Tangrowth followed, harassing the fighting type as he sent the remainder of the second and third rows crumbling to dust. By the time he was done, deep, bloodied lashes had marred his entire back, arms and face. Conkeldurr used the last bit of strength he had attempting to manipulate the rocks to bury Angel, but he countered his influence with Ancient Power. No longer was he clumsy with the move. His massive amount of practice had brought him far.
"Conkeldurr is unable to battle! Leader Maylene, send out your fourth Pokemon..."
The referee trailed off by the end of the sentence. Maylene wiped her eyes and sluggishly grabbed onto her next Pokeball. I hadn't even brought up her father yet— well, maybe it wouldn't be necessary, then. Plus, pulling out that card naturally would have been a challenge.
"Are you good?" I asked. Tangrowth grabbed Conkeldurr's pillars and threw them in the middle of the arena for Maylene to recall them as well.
"As if you care," she sighed, grabbing her next Pokeball. "I can't have anything, can I? The only time of the day when I try to feel useful, you rip that away from me."
"Look, it's just a twenty-minute battle. Sorry if you feel that way, but someone that you can fit into a box will come along soon."
My words were actually genuine this time, and I was disappointed with her. I understood that all of the stress of being a Gym Leader added up. Hell, I had studied it in detail. Part of me just couldn't understand how she hadn't learned to adapt and have fun— or at least not be brought to the point of tears after one and a half years as a Gym Leader, but I wasn't the one in her shoes. And yet, deep down, I'd wanted her to change from this. To maybe realize that—
"You put me down. They all put me down and think I can't do the job because I'm too young. Because I try to keep people from battling a certain way. Because I'm Maylene. You think you've got me all figured out. All of you. You think you've won, but that's far from being the case," she said. My eyes widened at the sudden burst of life in her tone. Her back straightened, her muscles tensed and blue wisps swam around her as her eyes turned icy blue. "It just makes me want to beat you even more. I'm done crying."
My persona broke and I smiled, interrupting the referee before he could even speak with an outstretched hand.
"Bring it on, Leader Maylene."
She sent out her Sawk once again. He was relatively short, but I knew we wouldn't be able to restrain him. The only reason we'd succeeded with Medicham was because of dark type energy. Sawk would just rip the vines apart. If I could, I would have started setting up to raise the pillars again, but that'd tire both Princess and Angel too much.
"Aura Lance!"
The thin, blue spear manifested in Sawk's hands, and Maylene swept an arm.
"Bulk up and go in. Cut its vines apart!"
"Keep your distance, Angel. Leech Seed."
Tangrowth spat out a dozen little bulbs toward Sawk, and the fighting type's lance extended threefold as he slapped them all away from him with incredible dexterity. Not even one had hit its mark. Sawk flexed, and its rocky segmented skin ground against itself as he massively gained in strength. He turned toward his trainer and saw her state, but quickly spun back to counter the next set of Leech Seed that Angel had thrown out.
A burst of aura exploded at his feet and he blurred forward. Tangrowth took a step back, but he quickly realized that he would get outsped even in the sun. Instead, he ejected every kind of spore out of his body. Purple, green and yellow powder exploded out of Tangrowth, but Sawk didn't even pause.
"The lance extends further than that," I warned. "Slow him with Bind and Giga Drain when you can!"
A dozen vines burst out of Tangrowth's body and snaked toward Sawk. The fighting type spun his lance around like a baton and minced most vines apart, but he grabbed onto one and blue light quickly spread through the appendage like fire. Tangrowth hurriedly detached it and it writhed on the ground until it turned to dust.
"Come on, Sawk! Forward!" Maylene screamed.
There it was. Adapt to your opponents, don't force them into compliance. Another push came, and Sawk slammed Tangrowth's side with his lance. The grass type silently screamed and grabbed onto Sawk's shoulder.
"The weak point is through its vines!" Maylene yelled, causing me to bite my inner lip. Did she know because she'd fought other Tangrowth, or was it something else? "Low Kick!"
Sawk grunted as he flexed and tore through Tangrowth's hold. He hurriedly crouched, held his breath and closed his eyes as he approached. Somehow, he could still see Tangrowth. The fighting type swept his feet and made Angel stumble, then fall before he stabbed him with his lance. Tangrowth squirmed, his eyes darting back and forth wildly as the lance seeped into his true body. He fought harder than I'd ever seen him, slamming Power Whips against Sawk's body and draining as much energy as he could to remain standing.
"Leech Seed!" I yelled.
Sawk broke the vines apart and backflipped away from Tangrowth's limp body. He slammed him with the lance again before too many seeds could pose a risk. The sun weakened, and Angel fell unconscious.
"Tangrowth is unable to battle. Challenger, send out your fourth Pokemon."
I sent out Togetic, who seemed disappointed that most of her pillars were gone. Row 1 and 4 at the edges still remained, however, and so did the majority of the pillars on my side of the arena.
"Fly up and hide!" I ordered.
"No you don't! Collapse the rest of the towers!" Maylene said. "Watch out for— behind you!"
Sawk spun around and narrowly avoided the Air Cutter that Princess had set up. Sawk began to turn the remaining pillars to dust, and I knew something had to change when every Air Cutter was either avoided or dismantled. Maylene managed to catch them every single time, even through pillars. She'd done something related to Aura with her eyes, and she could see Pokemon and attacks even when they were hidden. A mad grin stretched across my face. My entire strategy was null and void, and it was so much fun.
"Thunder Wave!" I ordered.
Togetic fluttered her wings, and thin electric energy flew toward Sawk. The fighting type's body tensed as he glanced toward Maylene, but she did not complain.
"Rock Smash!" Maylene barked.
A blue fist slammed against the ground and rubble, rocks and earth erupted from the impact. The Thunder Wave caught in the debris, but Maylene wasn't done.
"Pole Vault!"
Sawk broke into a sprint, each step propelled by small Aura explosions. He summoned another lance and anchored it across the ground, sending himself barrelling through the air so quickly that he reminded me of her Blaziken or Gallade. I'd underestimated Sawk, but that was fine!
"Submission!"
"Psychic and Dazzling Gleam!" I yelled.
Sawk slowed in the air, but he still reached Togetic and sent her crashing toward the ground. Light emanated from the fairy type as she slowly exploded with a brilliant Dazzling Gleam. The light seared Sawk's skin, but he didn't let go. Both Pokemon fell into the rubble.
"Don't let it back in the air! The wings are a trap, just hit it as hard as you can!"
His body still smoking, Sawk sprung toward Togetic—
"Fairy Wind! Full Power!"
"Aura Sphere!"
The pink wind spluttered as it came to life, but it was so strong that it blew Sawk away. The fighting type planted his lance on the ground and grunted. Fairy Wind was not a constant like we used to do, but it was a series of blasts as powerful as we could make them. Sawk extended a hand, and then a finger. He pointed toward Togetic as a ball of Aura grew from his fingers until it was ten feet wide and then condensed into a single point.
"Moonblast!" I yelled.
A sphere borne of lunar power materialized in front of Princess and dragged stones and dust along with it. The rubble orbited around the attack like satellites as pink dust shimmered around the bright ball. The two moves did not hit each other right away. In fact, both were ridiculously slow, and I knew that to be one of a non-perfected Moonblast's main weaknesses. Aura Sphere and Moonblast joined into a dance and spun around each other, captivating all of us. The space between the two narrowed, and narrowed, and narrowed—
"Move! Get out of there!" I said, snapping out of my daze.
"Endure!" Maylene ordered.
I covered my eyes, and the world screamed.
Pink and blue weaved into each other and created a deafening explosion that broke against the land. All of that rubble from broken pillars flew off in every direction and destroyed everything in sight. The last remaining columns collapsed and a deep crater opened upon the land. I could almost feel the strong gust of winds blow past me, even through the barrier somehow. Princess lay there, burned and unconscious while Sawk stood on his last thread of stamina. The referee went on his usual spiel, but my ears were ringing so loudly I could barely hear him.
"You're up," I said, sending out Pupitar onto some intact land beyond my side of the arena. The rock type shivered inside of her cocoon, excited to finally be in her first gym battle. "Stay focused. Rock Slide."
It didn't take much to finish off Sawk. He'd been barely standing, and the rocks buried him before he could strike back. The final fight would be Pupitar against Medicham. We had the type disadvantage, but type grew less and less relevant as the months passed. What we had that Medicham did not? Weight and size.
"Stomping Tantrum," I ordered. Better start slow and ramp up, slow down the tempo, make her worry and lure her into a false sense of security. We teetered on the edge of defeat, but I would battle like I had all my Pokemon left.
"High Jump Kick!" Maylene yelled. She was smiling, tasting victory. Having fun. "Its weak points are between its segments!"
Sweetheart screamed, and the floor began to shake as Medicham jumped higher than before.
"Smack Down!" I ordered.
The rock came out of the ground like a bullet and broke against Medicham. The fighting type lost her balance and fell to the ground, but it recovered quickly. The problem for Maylene was that Stomping Tantrum had begun again, and the ground type energy exploding below Medicham's feet would slowly whittle her down.
"Psybeam, then Psychic!" Maylene commanded.
I swallowed and wiped the sweat off my face. Medicham instantly raised a hand and summoned a rainbow that slammed into Pupitar's shell. The fighting type kept approaching, braving the harshness of the Stomping Tantrum, but her approaching was good. I waited, waited and waited until Medicham was close enough to strike.
"Fly, Sweetheart."
With a loud hiss reminiscent of a jet engine, the rock type blurred forward as her body shimmered with Iron Defense. Maylene's eyes widened.
"Dodge with High Jump Kick—"
We were too fast. The fighting type wouldn't have time, and she extended her arms instead. A pink light surrounded Pupitar, but the psychic force did not even hamper her. She slammed into Medicham, and I heard a crunch. The fighting type flew off like a ragdoll and crashed against Maylene's side of the barrier. Pressurized gas hissed out of Pupitar's vents as she masterfully landed, skidding across the ground and rubble.
"Medicham is unable to battle! Victory to the challenger!"
Maylene stared at the ceiling and recalled Medicham. The wispy Aura around her disappeared and she struggled to breathe for a few seconds, only being able to inhale small huffs of air. Sweetheart screamed in celebration, and I let her have her moment before I recalled her. I once again became aware of the world around me. Beyond the battle. The usual cheers rang out. What a battle that had been.
Maylene and I stared into each other's eyes for at least thirty seconds. I saw the faintest hint of a smile when she turned away and began to walk up to me on the side of the arena. I did the same. The adrenaline left my body the closer I got to Maylene. She was just as short as I was, and it was easier to empathize with her now that she stood right in front of me and she wasn't just a person on my screen. Maylene tapped on her microphone to make sure it was off and outstretched a hand.
"Congratulations, challenger," she said. I shook her hand. Her grip was strong. "May I have your ID and Pokedex?"
I had already pulled it out, so I handed it to her. She fiddled with the Pokedex, and grabbed a card of her own as well and an orange disk.
"You are now the owner of the Cobble Badge, and I've transferred thirty thousand Pokedollars into your account. I've given you access to the Drain Punch TM, in its unlimited form as well."
"Thank you."
"Grace Pastel," she said. "I still stand by what I said. You used my worries and anxiety against me, and it near got the better of me even if I knew what you were doing, and that pisses me off. I don't think that's an appropriate way to fight. But."
I froze in anticipation.
"I think that I had fun... at the end there. And I apologize for any outbursts and personal insults I threw your way. You did not complain when I used Aura to fight, and I think I should learn to be a better Gym Leader. You were waiting for me to wake up, right? You smiled when I went all out. You even stopped Jason."
I assumed that was her referee. The poor man had had to walk all around the arena to actually see what was happening throughout the battle. "I don't know. My intentions weren't as pure as you think, Leader Maylene. I did use you, and I vowed to continue whether you gave up on the battle or not."
"But you were happy when I did not."
"I was."
Maylene sighed. "Off you go, then. I don't want to see you ever again!"
"Just one thing. Sorry about your Infernape. I think I might have gone too far, my head wasn't all there. I was tunnel visioned on winning."
Maylene's neutral expression turned into a deepset frown, and then a disturbed look as she stared at me like I wasn't human. "Now I really don't want to see you. Your practices disgust me... but thank you for opening up a new door for me. Now go. I despise people like you. You're a manipulator, and you're being rewarded for it. Ugh."
"It is what it is. I'm sorry," I apologized again before leaving.
Unfortunately for me, my win hadn't been as impressive as the one against Fantina. Or maybe it had? I didn't really know. Executives cared more about what the score was after the battle instead of what had gone on during the fact. I could have made the battle easier than it was by adhering to her standards and probably won with a better score, but where was the fun in that? On one hand, she'd almost given up at one point and me screwing with her had made her slip up and make mistakes. On the other, she had come at me with everything she had with Sawk and Medicham. Preventing her from switching bordered on the taboo as well. I walked into the waiting room and sighed.
Princess' Shiny Stone would probably have to wait a while longer.
This fight had been fun from start to finish, but I couldn't deny it had been ugly. People most likely wouldn't know, but I'd essentially become an emotionless monster during the fight. I doubted I'd be able to do the same against other Gym Leaders, which I was grateful for because I didn't know if I'd be able to stop myself. Maylene had just been the perfect storm for me. What better than a teenager unable to fill her shoes left by her father to torment? None of the other Gym Leaders shared her insecurities. Roark apparently had, once upon a time, but he was grown now and I'd already beaten him anyway.
This was the closest I'd come to returning to how I'd been in Shiftry's domain, and that had been the goal, but maybe it would be best to leave battling that extreme to people that had wronged me. This was a sport for people and Pokemon to have fun, after all. Infernape hadn't deserved to get hurt those extra few seconds for my benefit. She had done nothing wrong.
Still,
Beyond the psychological games I'd played on Maylene?
I had learned and grown leaps and bounds.